mercredi 10 juin 2015

Why low rates are not good for equity returns

ONE of the most common bullish arguments for equities is that interest rates are low. The value of a share is the sum of its future cashflows, discounted back to the present day; as rates fall, the discount rate declines, so the present value must rise.

Rather than get bogged down in the theory straight away, let us start with the practice. At a recent Economist conference, we were lucky enough to have a talk from Elroy Dimson, best known for this work at the London Business School, but now at Cambridge's Judge School. Professor Dimson is well-respected for his work in market history and he produced this data on the relationship between real rates and future equity returns. The numbers cover 20 separate countries over a period of 113 years (1900-2012) and so are pretty authoritative. He split the data into eight sections; the lowest 5% and the highest 5% of real rates and the six bands of 15% between. The figures below show the subsequent annualised real returns from equities over 5 years.

                                  Returns

Lowest 5%                    -1.2% 

Next 15%                      3%    

Next 15%      ...Continue reading

Source :Business and finance http://ift.tt/1F89fPx

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