rsmCanuck wrote:
Yes I was assuming 3% inflation long term; so 4% real returns going forward.
Well........the total return for the PP was a little over 5% total for 2012-2013. To me that's clearly a negative real return even if the CPI increase is a little below that over those two years.
The current bond portion is clearly in negative real yield territory (even by CPI standards I think), especially if you throw taxes in there.
The US stock market (VTI) has an earnings yield about 25-30% lower than non-US stocks (VEU). It's about 5.5% vs. 7.1% I think.
I think we either need 3-4 more years where the PP either breaks even with inflation or runs a little lower.....or we need a
major down year before it gets on track to real returns again. Of course anything can happen in any individual year. 2014 is looking good and may end up great. Where will that leave it for 2015 and 2016? Will you stick with it then? It will look even worse if rates go lower and stocks go higher.
I don't see how the US stock market is going experience major gains on a nominal basis without serious inflation. That will crush the bond portfolio most likely which is double the stocks. Maybe gold will go berserk but it will take an awful lot to squeak out a real return with stocks so expensive already and interest rates near rock-bottom.
Another scenario is deflation. Maybe the USD gains purchasing power of 2-3% over a year or two. I don't think the central banks or governments will allow this and even if they did that means gold will probably go down and stocks almost certainly will be slaughtered. It might even mean higher long-term rates if globally investors expect the central banks to fight it with inflation or perceive the government's ability to pay as compramised due to a major recession.
Doubtful real return in a deflationary scenario either.
So that leaves the status quo. CPI of 2% or so.......inflation to me and many is clearly higher, more like 5-7% or more, to others the CPI is accurate. Not likely to beat it by 4% any time soon imo.