Stocks for the Long Run : the Definitive Guide to Financial Market Returns and Long-term Investment Strategies

(Greg DeLong) #1
caution, eventually found themselves far behind investors who had pa-
tiently accumulated equity.^4
The story of John Raskob’s infamous prediction illustrates an im-
portant theme in the history of Wall Street. This theme is not the preva-
lence of foolish optimism at market peaks; rather, it is that over the last
century, accumulations in stocks have always outperformed other finan-
cial assets for the patient investor. Even such calamitous events as the
Great 1929 Stock Crash did not negate the superiority of stocks as long-
term investments.

FINANCIAL MARKET RETURNS FROM 1802
This chapter analyzes the returns on stocks and bonds over long periods of
time in both the United States and other countries. This two-century his-
tory is divided into three subperiods. In the first subperiod, from 1802
through 1870, the United States made a transition from an agrarian to an
industrialized economy, comparable to the transition that the “emerging
markets” of Latin America and Asia are making today.^5 In the second sub-
period, from 1871 through 1925, the United States became the foremost po-
litical and economic power in the world.^6 The third subperiod, from 1926
to the present, contains the 1929 to 1932 stock collapse, the Great Depres-
sion, and the postwar expansion. The data from this period have been an-
alyzed extensively by academics and professional money managers and
have served as benchmarks for historical returns.^7 The story is told in Fig-
ure 1-1. It depicts the total return indexes for stocks, long- and short-term
bonds, gold, and commodities from 1802 through 2006. Total returnmeans
that all returns, such as interest and dividends and capital gains, are auto-
matically reinvested in the asset and allowed to accumulate over time.

CHAPTER 1 Stock and Bond Returns Since 1802 5


(^4) Raskob succumbed to investors in the 1920s who wanted to get rich quickly by devising a scheme
by which investors borrowed $300, adding $200 of personal capital, to invest $500 in stocks. Al-
though in 1929 this was certainly not as good as putting money gradually in the market, even this
plan beat investment in Treasury bills after 20 years.
(^5) A brief description of the early stock market is found in Appendix 1 at the end of this chapter. The
stock price data during this period are taken from Schwert (1990), and I have added my own divi-
dend series. G. William Schwert, “Indexes of United States Stock Prices from 1802 to 1987,” Journal
of Business, vol. 63 (July 1990), pp. 399–426.
(^6) The stock series used in this period are taken from the Cowles indexes as reprinted in Robert
Shiller, Market Volatility, Cambridge: MIT Press, 1989. The Cowles indexes are capitalization-
weighted indexes of all New York Stock Exchange stocks, and they include dividends.
(^7) The data from the third period are taken from the Center for Research in Security Prices (CRSP)
capitalization-weighted indexes of all New York stocks, and starting in 1962, they include American
and Nasdaq stocks.

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