Checking Investment Biases Heading Into Election

This month, Goldman Sachs made headlines with a fresh forecast projecting the S&P 500 will see 3% in annualized returns in the next decade. The outlook stopped many of us in our tracks, because it's a far cry from where we’ve been.

A look at the S&P 500’s returns in the past decade explain why we’ve been so bullish, with annualized returns sitting around 13%. Look at this chart:

S&P 500 Index 10-Year Daily Chart

S&P 500 Index 10-Year Daily Chart

Source: Macrotrends

Suddenly, confidence in soft landings and another wave of equity performance gave way to headlines everywhere warning us of an upcoming “lost decade” or “dead decade” given Goldman Sachs’ outlook.

Across market commentaries, we were called to put our biases in check — recency bias, domestic bias — which could be leading us to more risk exposure than the macro backdrop may warrant going forward. Is Goldman Sachs right? Should we brace for low returns?

The tough thing about forecasts is that they are educated guesses, but guesses nonetheless. No one has a crystal ball. But we do know that strong U.S. equity performance has led to concentration risk.