How Long is the Long Run?

Geoff Considine’s article last week, The Retirement Portfolio Showdown: Jeremy Siegel v. Zvi Bodie, highlighted an important issue that has been at the center of academic debate for several decades: How long must one be invested in the equity markets to have full confidence that they will earn superior returns (as compared to bonds) and overcome the risks of bear markets?

Considine cited two divergent views – those of Jeremy Siegel, who argues for an equity-centric portfolio virtually regardless of investors’ time horizons, and those of Zvi Bodie, who says equity investors are always at risk and would be better off with Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) as the core holding in their portfolios. Considine showed that, as we expect, returns are greater from stocks than from bonds when we extend the time horizon from one to 10 years. But risk increases too – although the probability of stocks outperforming bonds is greater over 10 years than over a single year, the magnitude of potential losses is greater over the longer time frame.

What if the time horizon is extended further? Most retirement-oriented investors have horizons of greater than ten years. Is there a time horizon at which the risks of equity investing (both the probability and the magnitude of potential losses) decreases to the point where equities become a far more compelling choice than bonds or TIPS?

A look at the historical data

Industry consultant Ron Surz provided me with some data that helps answer this question. The following table shows the worst and best outcomes for stocks and bonds over various time horizons:

Worst drawdowns in real terms from January, 1926 to December, 2008


Months

Years


1

3

6

9

1

5

10

20

25

Stocks

-30%

-45%

-52%

-66%

-68%

-66%

-44%

4%

48%

(date)

9/31

5/32

5/32

5/32

6/32

5/32

9/39

3/82

7/82

Bonds

-10%

-16%

-26%

-28%

-27%

-43%

-40%

-49%

-49%

(date)

10/79

2/80

2/80

3/80

3/80

9/81

9/81

9/81

9/81

60/40

-18%

-28%

-35%

-48%

-50%

-43%

-34%

-16%

-12%

(date)

9/31

5/32

5/32

5/32

6/32

5/32

9/74

3/82

6/82



Best rallies in real terms from January, 1926 to December, 2008


Months

Years


1

3

6

9

1

5

10

20

25

Stocks

42%

91%

100%

80%

162%

363%

488%

1,689%

3,433%

(date)

4/33

8/32

8/33

11/33

6/33

5/37

5/59

3/62

6/57

Bonds

15%

23%

30%

32%

35%

91%

137%

215%

290%

(date)

12/08

12/08

12/82

3/83

10/82

9/86

2/42

9/01

9/06

60/40

25%

53%

61%

57%

109%

239%

220%

808%

1,407%

(date)

4/33

9/32

9/33

9/33

6/33

5/37

6/42

6/52

5/57