Time Is On My Side – Equities For The Long Run

 | Feb 15, 2017 14:50

Originally published by BetaShares

We all know the equity market has its ups and downs. Bullish runs are often interrupted by sharp corrections or extended bearish periods, even amid little change in fundamentals. With so much ‘noise’, how should investors be thinking about their equity investments? I studied the historical data to try to get some answers about longer term investing in the share market. Turns out, like Mick Jagger famously said, “Time is on my side”.

One of the most obvious ways that investors try to deal with market volatility is via diversification. The idea here is that diversification helps investors reduce the volatility of their investment returns through spreading their investments across securities with less than perfect positive correlation. However, there are limits to diversification benefits, notably during particularly severe financial shocks, where returns between seemingly uncorrelated assets converge. Another way to reduce volatility in investment portfolios is to increase cash holdings, which provides a cushion against a blow to equity portfolios. The tradeoff, however, is ‘cash drag’, which undermines returns when the market is rising (which historically has been the majority of the time). Another solution is to just wait it out.

In the short-to-medium term, the broad equity market can be quite volatile but as investment horizons are lengthened, this volatility compresses as cycles are levelled out. This may be obvious, but as a recent BetaShares blog post pointed out, it’s easy to get trapped in the mindset of ‘short-termism’ or investment myopia. We know staying the course in a diversified index irons out short term fluctuations, but it’s worth seeing just how much.

h2 The Australian sharemarket – a case study /h2

Since 1980, the ASX All Ordinaries has experienced some sharp bouts of volatility, particularly through the lens of a 12-month holding period. The worst drawdown (between November 2007 and November 2008) was -42%, while the strongest rally (between July 1986 and 1987) was +86%. In addition, most observations fell between +1.9 and +22.7 percent, suggesting not only significant dispersion, but a fairly large “tail”, or reasonably large number of years of extreme shocks. But what if our investment horizon is greater than 1-year? Let’s crunch the numbers.

h2 All Ordinaries Accumulation Index – Annualised Returns for Various Holding Periods* /h2