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Thomas Mullaney's avatar

Past performance paragraph needs work.

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Alex Tolley's avatar

Firstly, what exactly is Shiller's diversified stock portfolio. It certainly seems to have a lot more growth in the early years than say the S&P500, so is that growth due to high dividend payouts? The 1929 crash is hardly noticeable in his portfolio, yet huge in index prices. [Should those stockbrokers not have jumped?]

If your portfolio had stocks that went bankrupt or were merged in the year of holding, how do you buy them to rebalance the portfolio? A merger has already extracted that value for the "winners". An index just replaces that stock with a new "up and comer".

We do know that stocks are riskier than treasuries, and that junk bonds are riskier than treasuries. What exactly is the acceptable risk premium? Is it just a judgement of the participants, or some sort of pareto value for the slope of the risk premium?

Not everyone has the same investment goals. Pension funds need as much predictability as possible, so bonds are the preferred vehicle. That reduces bond returns if there is competition for the bonds. Historically defined pension plans were a major buyer of such investments. That has changed since those plans have largely disappeared except for government employees.

Bottom line is that I am not confident that the claimed "excess risk premium" is real and may be an artifact of index construction and other factors. Shiller is in effect claiming the market is inefficient. I don't believe it. If it was, there would be a lot more equity investors making out like bandits on the quiet.

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