8月12日,美股大盤股再次大漲,標普500指數(shù)在當日后市交易中再創(chuàng)歷史新高,超過了此前創(chuàng)下的3386點的紀錄,這也讓很多華爾街人士相信,不久美股還將迎來更大漲幅。(隨后標普500指數(shù)出現(xiàn)小幅回落,收于3380點,合計上漲1.40%)。
不過對嚴肅的分析型投資者來說,有一個問題是不得不考慮的——美股無視疫情影響逆勢上漲,甚至已經(jīng)漲到了歷史新高。如果你在這種情況下買進,會不會影響未來10年的收益?
如果我告訴你,未來10年,標普500的年平均回報率最高才不過2.4%,你會怎么想?你大概不愿意相信,當然這也是可以理解的。你可能會說,我是一個無可救藥的悲觀主義者,根本看不到股市的“新常態(tài)”——大型科技公司的盈利能力已經(jīng)上升到了一個新高度;美聯(lián)儲總是會救市的;美國還有幾萬億美元正準備涌入股市。另外,雖然美國國債收益率走低了,但投資者們只會繼續(xù)買下去,反正他們的錢也沒有其他地方可以投。你可能經(jīng)常聽交易員和CNBC、??怂股虡I(yè)頻道的分析師們談勢頭、談技術(shù)面、談投資者心理,如果你從他們那里沒有聽到類似的悲觀言論,你很可能會認為我以上所說的都是扯淡。
但毫無疑問,你肯定同意,如果買一籃子大盤股,每年的收益卻只有2.4%,這肯定是一筆不劃算的投資。畢竟前10年,標普500的年收益率能達到14%左右,2.4%只是它的六分之一。畢竟光是房價、車價乃至一切物價平均每年都得上漲2%左右,你還得省錢給孩子攢教育基金、給自己攢養(yǎng)老錢。這樣一算,勉強能跑贏通脹率的投資肯定是劃不來的。
但如果你無視當前的炒作和喧囂,而是看看歷史上利潤的增長率通常是多少,以及當歷史上出現(xiàn)像這樣的高估值低股息的情況以后都會發(fā)生什么,你就會明白,為什么2.4%確實是一個合理的預期。銳聯(lián)資產(chǎn)管理公司(Research Affiliates)的首席投資官克里斯·布萊曼說:“你可以假設這個數(shù)字高出或低出一兩個點,但這就是最可能的結(jié)果了?!变J聯(lián)公司主要為嘉信理財和太平洋投資管理公司(Pimco)等金融機構(gòu)提供投資策略管理,它管理的共同基金和ETF基金總規(guī)模達1450億美元。
以下是銳聯(lián)公司對標普指數(shù)未來走勢的看法。銳聯(lián)的分析師在金融學術(shù)界浸淫極深。他們首先關注的是決定遠期回報的三個因素——股息、收益增長,以及“估值”或者市盈率的變化。布萊曼指出,如果市盈率保持不變,那么可以計算得出,總收益將等于股息加上收益增長。
由于標普指數(shù)的價格上漲速度遠遠快于收益增長,股息率已經(jīng)下降到了目前的1.9%,這還不到長期平均水平的一半,而且遠遠低于2015年底的2.3%的水平。那么第二個驅(qū)動因素,也就是利潤增長,能多快地補充股息的微薄貢獻?根據(jù)銳聯(lián)預測,標普500的每股收益增長率將僅為每年3.3%。雖然這個速度顯著低于過去30年的5%左右的水平,但這卻是近130年以來的常態(tài)。布萊曼指出:“利潤增長是均值回歸的,如果它們長期高于正常水平,它們就會傾向于回歸歷史趨勢?!?/p>
布萊曼補充道,每股收益的增長要比經(jīng)濟整體利潤的增長慢得多,這里有一個基本原因?!斑@就像GDP和人均GDP的區(qū)別。人均GDP的增長要比GDP增長得慢,這是因為GPD的增長有一部分原因是由于人口的增長?!蓖?,每股收益的增長也比總體收益慢,因為新股票的增長速度快于總利潤的增長。另外,新的公司還在不斷挑戰(zhàn)守成的公司,使得標普500指數(shù)中會有更多的股票分攤同樣的銷售額和利潤。另外,未上市的新進者也會從守成型的上市公司手中攫取利潤,這也限制了后者提高每股收益的速度。
現(xiàn)在讓我們做一下加法。1.9%的股息率,加上3.3%的每股收益增長率,可得年回報率為5.2%。但現(xiàn)在還需要引入我們的第三個重要因素——估值。在理想的狀態(tài)下,5.2%的回報率,需要標普500的市盈率一直保持在當前的高水平上。只有這樣,標普500才能給出5%左右的回報率。
而在布萊曼看來,更有可能的情況是,未來10年,市盈率會從當前水平上回落,理由同上——隨著時間的推移,一種重力將會拉動主導股市上漲的因素回歸到歷史正常水平。根據(jù)銳聯(lián)計算,在3390點的歷史高位上,標普500的市盈率已經(jīng)達到30倍,這遠遠高出了130年來的歷史基準(大約15%至20%之間)。布萊曼說:“我們認為,市盈率會下降一半,回歸到長期水平,盡管現(xiàn)在離那個水平還有很遠。”因此銳聯(lián)認為,10年后,也就是到2030年年中的時候,標普500的市盈率大概會穩(wěn)定在25倍左右,不過這仍然是一個很高的數(shù)值。
不斷縮水的市盈率,將抵消每股收益3.3%的漲幅中的大部分,實際漲幅大約只會有股價的0.5%。所以綜上所述,投資者將從股息中獲利1.9%,從資本收益中僅獲利0.5%,合計2.4%。
布萊曼表示,大多數(shù)華爾街人士都會質(zhì)疑銳聯(lián)的預測,指責它太過悲觀,畢竟多年以來,利潤的漲幅都比他預測的3.3%高了兩三個百分點,而且這種軌跡看起來是能一直持續(xù)下去的。對此布萊曼解釋道:“請記住,我們的預測并不是說每股收益會在很長時間內(nèi)持平或下降,抵消多年來高于平均水平的增長。但這種情況以前確實發(fā)生過很多次,而且現(xiàn)在造成了額外的危險?!?/p>
布萊曼指出:“勞動力和資本獲得經(jīng)濟產(chǎn)出的比例,并非出于一種自然力量,而是出于一種社會選擇?!彼硎?,美國的政治氣候通常對大型的高利潤企業(yè)很不友好,而是更注重獎勵工人,特別是那些工資漲幅低于利潤漲幅的企業(yè)工人。“民主黨的一些聲音已經(jīng)注意到,企業(yè)利潤的增長遠遠快于經(jīng)濟的增長,尤其是工資的增長,他們打算改變這種狀況?!绷硗?,現(xiàn)在越來越少的科技巨頭已經(jīng)占據(jù)了越來越多的收入比例,他們也成了共和黨民粹勢力口誅筆伐的主要目標。保守派的批評人士指責亞馬遜、蘋果和Facebook等科技巨頭涉嫌利用壟斷力量欺騙消費者。美國兩黨在利潤問題上的分歧,對標普500企業(yè)的回報率來說,很可能是一個不祥之兆。
我們對未來的預期之所以如此悲觀,恰恰是因為美股創(chuàng)紀錄的巨幅上漲,雖然它最近讓各路分析師、專家和市場分析師欣喜若狂。然而要想讓投資者像前幾年那樣從股市 上獲得大量回報,只有一條路才能做到——股價來一次大跌,一跌跌到解放前,接下來就苦盡甘來了。)(財富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:Min
8月12日,美股大盤股再次大漲,標普500指數(shù)在當日后市交易中再創(chuàng)歷史新高,超過了此前創(chuàng)下的3386點的紀錄,這也讓很多華爾街人士相信,不久美股還將迎來更大漲幅。(隨后標普500指數(shù)出現(xiàn)小幅回落,收于3380點,合計上漲1.40%)。
不過對嚴肅的分析型投資者來說,有一個問題是不得不考慮的——美股無視疫情影響逆勢上漲,甚至已經(jīng)漲到了歷史新高。如果你在這種情況下買進,會不會影響未來10年的收益?
如果我告訴你,未來10年,標普500的年平均回報率最高才不過2.4%,你會怎么想?你大概不愿意相信,當然這也是可以理解的。你可能會說,我是一個無可救藥的悲觀主義者,根本看不到股市的“新常態(tài)”——大型科技公司的盈利能力已經(jīng)上升到了一個新高度;美聯(lián)儲總是會救市的;美國還有幾萬億美元正準備涌入股市。另外,雖然美國國債收益率走低了,但投資者們只會繼續(xù)買下去,反正他們的錢也沒有其他地方可以投。你可能經(jīng)常聽交易員和CNBC、??怂股虡I(yè)頻道的分析師們談勢頭、談技術(shù)面、談投資者心理,如果你從他們那里沒有聽到類似的悲觀言論,你很可能會認為我以上所說的都是扯淡。
但毫無疑問,你肯定同意,如果買一籃子大盤股,每年的收益卻只有2.4%,這肯定是一筆不劃算的投資。畢竟前10年,標普500的年收益率能達到14%左右,2.4%只是它的六分之一。畢竟光是房價、車價乃至一切物價平均每年都得上漲2%左右,你還得省錢給孩子攢教育基金、給自己攢養(yǎng)老錢。這樣一算,勉強能跑贏通脹率的投資肯定是劃不來的。
但如果你無視當前的炒作和喧囂,而是看看歷史上利潤的增長率通常是多少,以及當歷史上出現(xiàn)像這樣的高估值低股息的情況以后都會發(fā)生什么,你就會明白,為什么2.4%確實是一個合理的預期。銳聯(lián)資產(chǎn)管理公司(Research Affiliates)的首席投資官克里斯·布萊曼說:“你可以假設這個數(shù)字高出或低出一兩個點,但這就是最可能的結(jié)果了?!变J聯(lián)公司主要為嘉信理財和太平洋投資管理公司(Pimco)等金融機構(gòu)提供投資策略管理,它管理的共同基金和ETF基金總規(guī)模達1450億美元。
以下是銳聯(lián)公司對標普指數(shù)未來走勢的看法。銳聯(lián)的分析師在金融學術(shù)界浸淫極深。他們首先關注的是決定遠期回報的三個因素——股息、收益增長,以及“估值”或者市盈率的變化。布萊曼指出,如果市盈率保持不變,那么可以計算得出,總收益將等于股息加上收益增長。
由于標普指數(shù)的價格上漲速度遠遠快于收益增長,股息率已經(jīng)下降到了目前的1.9%,這還不到長期平均水平的一半,而且遠遠低于2015年底的2.3%的水平。那么第二個驅(qū)動因素,也就是利潤增長,能多快地補充股息的微薄貢獻?根據(jù)銳聯(lián)預測,標普500的每股收益增長率將僅為每年3.3%。雖然這個速度顯著低于過去30年的5%左右的水平,但這卻是近130年以來的常態(tài)。布萊曼指出:“利潤增長是均值回歸的,如果它們長期高于正常水平,它們就會傾向于回歸歷史趨勢。”
布萊曼補充道,每股收益的增長要比經(jīng)濟整體利潤的增長慢得多,這里有一個基本原因?!斑@就像GDP和人均GDP的區(qū)別。人均GDP的增長要比GDP增長得慢,這是因為GPD的增長有一部分原因是由于人口的增長。”同理,每股收益的增長也比總體收益慢,因為新股票的增長速度快于總利潤的增長。另外,新的公司還在不斷挑戰(zhàn)守成的公司,使得標普500指數(shù)中會有更多的股票分攤同樣的銷售額和利潤。另外,未上市的新進者也會從守成型的上市公司手中攫取利潤,這也限制了后者提高每股收益的速度。
現(xiàn)在讓我們做一下加法。1.9%的股息率,加上3.3%的每股收益增長率,可得年回報率為5.2%。但現(xiàn)在還需要引入我們的第三個重要因素——估值。在理想的狀態(tài)下,5.2%的回報率,需要標普500的市盈率一直保持在當前的高水平上。只有這樣,標普500才能給出5%左右的回報率。
而在布萊曼看來,更有可能的情況是,未來10年,市盈率會從當前水平上回落,理由同上——隨著時間的推移,一種重力將會拉動主導股市上漲的因素回歸到歷史正常水平。根據(jù)銳聯(lián)計算,在3390點的歷史高位上,標普500的市盈率已經(jīng)達到30倍,這遠遠高出了130年來的歷史基準(大約15%至20%之間)。布萊曼說:“我們認為,市盈率會下降一半,回歸到長期水平,盡管現(xiàn)在離那個水平還有很遠?!币虼虽J聯(lián)認為,10年后,也就是到2030年年中的時候,標普500的市盈率大概會穩(wěn)定在25倍左右,不過這仍然是一個很高的數(shù)值。
不斷縮水的市盈率,將抵消每股收益3.3%的漲幅中的大部分,實際漲幅大約只會有股價的0.5%。所以綜上所述,投資者將從股息中獲利1.9%,從資本收益中僅獲利0.5%,合計2.4%。
布萊曼表示,大多數(shù)華爾街人士都會質(zhì)疑銳聯(lián)的預測,指責它太過悲觀,畢竟多年以來,利潤的漲幅都比他預測的3.3%高了兩三個百分點,而且這種軌跡看起來是能一直持續(xù)下去的。對此布萊曼解釋道:“請記住,我們的預測并不是說每股收益會在很長時間內(nèi)持平或下降,抵消多年來高于平均水平的增長。但這種情況以前確實發(fā)生過很多次,而且現(xiàn)在造成了額外的危險?!?/p>
布萊曼指出:“勞動力和資本獲得經(jīng)濟產(chǎn)出的比例,并非出于一種自然力量,而是出于一種社會選擇?!彼硎?,美國的政治氣候通常對大型的高利潤企業(yè)很不友好,而是更注重獎勵工人,特別是那些工資漲幅低于利潤漲幅的企業(yè)工人。“民主黨的一些聲音已經(jīng)注意到,企業(yè)利潤的增長遠遠快于經(jīng)濟的增長,尤其是工資的增長,他們打算改變這種狀況?!绷硗?,現(xiàn)在越來越少的科技巨頭已經(jīng)占據(jù)了越來越多的收入比例,他們也成了共和黨民粹勢力口誅筆伐的主要目標。保守派的批評人士指責亞馬遜、蘋果和Facebook等科技巨頭涉嫌利用壟斷力量欺騙消費者。美國兩黨在利潤問題上的分歧,對標普500企業(yè)的回報率來說,很可能是一個不祥之兆。
我們對未來的預期之所以如此悲觀,恰恰是因為美股創(chuàng)紀錄的巨幅上漲,雖然它最近讓各路分析師、專家和市場分析師欣喜若狂。然而要想讓投資者像前幾年那樣從股市 上獲得大量回報,只有一條路才能做到——股價來一次大跌,一跌跌到解放前,接下來就苦盡甘來了。)(財富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:Min
Big cap stocks just scored another triumph when the S&P 500 hit an all-time record in late afternoon trading on August 12, passing the previous high of 3386 and inspiring the Wall Street bulls to forecast more great gains ahead. (The index then pulled back slightly to close up 1.40% at 3380).
But here's the question for serious, analytical investors: How do you handicap what you'll reap over the next decade if you buy in today, at these newly-notched, pandemic-defying, record high prices?
What would you think if I told you that the best bet is an annual return for the S&P of 2.4%? You can be excused for not wanting to believe it. You might brand me a hopeless naysayer who's clueless to the new market realities–– that Big Tech has raised profitability to a new plateau, that the Fed will always ride to the rescue, that trillions of cash sits on the sidelines poised to jump into stocks, or that, hey, with Treasury yields in the dumps, investors will just keep buying 'cause they have no where else to go. You'll wonder if such a bleak forecast can possibly make sense, when you haven't heard anything remotely this depressing from the traders and market strategists on CNBC and Fox Business who report from the trenches on every shift in momentum, technicals and sentiment, and mostly like what they see.
But you'd doubtless agree that buying a basket of big caps likely to give you 2.4% a year is a lousy investment. That's one-sixth of the annual return of around 14% reaped over the past ten years. After all, the price of everything you pay for from cars to PCs to rent is bound rises at around 2%, and as for a building college funds for the kids and a fat nest egg for retirement, a portfolio that barely tops inflation won't come close to delivering what you'll need.
But if you ignore the current fog of hype and momentum, and focus on what history tells us about how fast profits normally grow, and what follows when valuations are this lofty and dividends this puny, you'll see why 2.4% is indeed a reasonable forecast. "You can make assumptions that make that number a couple of points higher or a couple of points lower, but starting at these prices, that's the most likely outcome," says Chris Brightman, chief investment officer at Research Affiliates, a firm that oversees strategies for $145 billion in mutual funds and ETFs, for firms including Charles Schwab and Pimco.
Here's how Research Affiliates, whose analysts hold strong grounding in academic finance, views the S&P's future trajectory. They start with the three components that determine future returns: the dividend yield, the growth in earnings, and the change, if any, in the "valuation," or price-to-earnings multiple. As Brightman notes, if the P/E remains constant, the math dictates that the total gain will equal the dividend yield plus the growth in earnings.
Because the S&P prices have risen much faster than earnings, the dividend yield has fallen to a current 1.9%. That's less than half the long-term average, and well below the 2.3% as recently as late 2015. How fast can the second driver, profit growth, wax to compensate for the slender contribution from dividends? Research Affiliates predicts that EPS will expand at just 3.3% a year. Though that's a lot lower the the mid-single digit performance of the past three decades, it's the norm over the past 130 years. "Profits growth is mean-reverting," says Brightman. "When they've been higher than the norm for a long period, they tend to go back closer to the historic trend."
He adds that earnings-per-share grow much more slowly than that overall profits in the economy for a basic reason. "It's like GPD versus GDP per capita," he says. "GDP per person grows more slowly than GDP. That's because part of GDP growth is growth in the population." Likewise, EPS trails overall earnings because new shares grow faster than total profits. New companies are constantly challenging the incumbents, adding to the shares in the S&P that are divvying up same sales and profits. Or, private newcomers grab earnings from the entrenched, publicly-traded players, restraining how fast they can lift their EPS.
Let's add it up. A dividend yield of 1.9% plus EPS growth of 3.3% gives an annual return of 5.2%. But embedded in that forecast is an important assumption regarding our third driver, valuation. A best-case, 5.2% return mandates that today's elevated P/E keep hovering at the same, rarefied heights. Only then will the S&P provide that mid-single digit return.
For Brightman, it's much more probable that the current P/E retreats over the next decade, for the same reason jack-rabbit earnings will slow: Over time, a kind of gravitational force pushes the factors governing stock market gains back towards their historic norms. At the record close of 3390 (ck), Research Affiliates puts the S&P 500's P/E at 30. That's far above the 130 year benchmark in the mid-to-high teens. "We assume that the multiple will go halfway back to its long-term level, though far from all the way back," says Brightman. Hence, Research Affiliates posits that the S&P 500's P/E a decade from now, in mid-2030, will settle at around 25, still a high number.
That shrinking multiple will erase most of increases in EPS of 3.3% a year, leaving only tiny annual gains of around .5% in the share price. So all told, investors would reap 1.9% from dividends, and just half a point from capital gains, for a total of our 2.4%.
Brightman adds that most on Wall Street will dispute Research Affiliates' forecast as far too downbeat, in part because profits have been expanding two to three points faster than his 3.3% a year for so many years the trajectory looks permanent. "Keep in mind," he explains, "that we're not predicting that earnings-per-share will go flat or fall for a long time to compensate for so many years of above average growth. But that's happened many times before, and poses an additional danger now."
"The share of the economic output provided to labor and capital is not a force of nature it's a social choice," notes Brightman. The political climate, he adds, is unusually hostile towards big profit makers, and shifting towards better rewarding workers who've seen their pay rise far more slowly than profits. "A vocal base of the Democratic Party has noticed that profits have grown much faster than the economy and especially wages, and mean to change that," he says. What's more, an increasingly narrow group of tech giants now account for a giant share of earnings, and they're prime targets for the populist wing of the Republican Party. Conservative critics are blasting the likes of Amazon, Apple and Facebook for allegedly using monopoly power to bilk consumers. That bi-partisan war on profits could bode ill for returns come.
The dynamic that's made the future look so barren is the giant, record-smashing run-up, precisely what's now winning kudos from analysts, pundits and market strategists. Only one journey will enable today's buyers to garner the kind of gains investors have reaped over the past few years: A steep fall in prices, in a round-trip back to near the levels where all the fun began.