A New Era in US Financial Markets

A New Era in US Financial Markets

Dr. Bryan Taylor, Chief Economist, Global Financial Data

           A lot has changed during the past three years.  The United States and other developed countries have gone through two bear markets because of Covid in 2020 and rising interest rates in 2022.  Bond markets have suffered the worst bear market in US history.  Inflation has risen to levels not seen since the 1980s and the Federal Reserve has rapidly raised interest rates from close to zero to five percent.  All of this will have a dramatic impact on the returns to stocks and bonds in the 2020s. The US may spend the rest of the decade recovering from the bear markets of the past three years.

               Financial markets may be entering into a new era.  The period between 1945 and 1981 saw bond yields rise steadily while the period from 1981 to 2019 saw interest rates steadily fall.  Interest rates bottomed out at 0.32% in March 2020 and have risen since then.  Rising inflation has led to rising interest rates.  Forty years of declining interest rates may give way to another period of rising interest rates and slower growth as businesses face the consequences of more government intervention in the economy.

Data Sources

               We use the GFD-100 Index to calculate returns to stock markets in the United States between 1792 and 2022.  The GFD-100 is the most extensive index for United States stocks available anywhere.  The GFD-100 index is revised in January of each year.  It uses the largest stocks in the United States from 1792 until 1825, the 50 largest stocks from 1825 until 1850 and the 100 largest stocks from 1850 to date.  The index is capitalization-weighted and only includes liquid stocks that trade on a regular basis.  Stocks from all regional exchanges and the over-the-counter market are included.  This gives the index broader coverage than other indices which ignore the financial sector up to 1976. 

We use the GFD Indices for Bonds and Bills to calculate fixed-income returns. The GFD Index for Bonds is based upon the returns to the Federal Government’s 10-year bond.  Before World War I, individual bonds with a maturity of 10-years or more are used to calculate the total return.  Three-month Treasury Bills are used for the Bill index.  Before 1920, there is no data on the yield for Treasury bills, so we use the minimum of the Federal government bond that is closest to maturity or the yield on commercial paper in New York City. 

Real Stock Returns to Stocks, Bonds and Bills

 

Figure 1.  GFD US-100 Price Index, 1792 to 2022

Figure 1 provides information on nominal returns to stocks in the United States between 1792 and 2022.  There was little change in stock prices in the 1800s.  During the 1800s, most of the return to equities came through dividends, which consistently paid 5% or more until World War II. 

Table 1 looks at returns to US stocks, bonds and bills after adjusting for inflation. Returns are provided by decade, by financial era (Napoleonic Wars (1792-1815), Transportation Revolution (1815-1848), Free Trade (1848-1873), Gold Standard (1873-1914), World Wars (1914-1945), Keynesianism (1945-1981), Globalization (1981-2019) and the current era (2019-present)) and time periods from the past to 2022

The table also provides a measure of the Equity Risk Premium (ERP) and the inflation rate. The return to bonds differed significantly between the 1800s and the 1900s.  In the 1800s, bonds provided a positive return every decade, but in the 1900s, bonds provided a negative return after inflation in six of the ten decades.  The reason for this difference is the combination of inflation and Fed intervention.  The Fed has not been the best friend of fixed-income investors as they have discovered during the past two years.

Years

Stock Price

Stock Return

Bond Return

Bill Return

ERP

Inflation

By Decade

           

1791-1799

-6.15

-0.65

-1.57

2.03

0.94

3.04

1799-1809

1.5

8.93

9.69

5.75

-0.63

0

1809-1819

-5.15

1.17

6.32

5.26

-4.37

0.34

1819-1829

2.78

8.79

8.75

6.53

0.04

-1.94

1829-1839

-3.3

3.17

1.25

2.45

1.71

2.04

1839-1849

1.45

9.35

10.9

8.86

-1.25

-2.7

1849-1859

-2.68

5.21

4.22

3.86

0.85

1.55

1859-1869

-0.11

8.21

1.65

0.91

5.8

4.19

1869-1879

4.87

12.76

7.6

7.24

4.3

-2.24

1879-1889

0.99

6.62

6.05

3.38

0.48

0

1889-1899

4.23

10.24

4.25

2.44

5.17

0.13

1899-1909

3.7

9.02

-0.79

0.71

8.86

2.39

1909-1919

-5.03

0.51

-6.12

-4.76

6.34

7.34

1919-1929

9.65

15.56

7.22

5.42

6.98

-0.94

1929-1939

-1.58

3.96

6.82

2.97

-2.41

-2.04

1939-1949

-2

3.68

-2.8

-5.13

5.99

5.36

1949-1959

12.06

17.98

-1.99

-0.22

18.16

2.22

1959-1969

1.71

5.3

-0.17

1.67

4.91

2.52

1969-1979

-4.83

-0.61

-1.32

-0.91

0.65

7.36

1979-1989

8.47

12.72

8.15

4.27

3.79

5.1

1989-1999

17.57

18.44

5.47

2.19

11.01

2.93

1999-2009

-7.3

-5.26

4.21

0.23

-8.21

2.52

2009-2019

10

12.77

2.57

-1.29

8.91

1.75

By Era

           

1791-1899

-0.19

6.07

5.07

4.03

0.95

0.36

1899-1999

3.34

7.57

1.3

0.51

6.18

3.18

1999-2022

0.88

2.95

1.43

-0.69

2.05

1.49

1792-1815

-2.99

3.23

3.36

3.28

6.42

-0.12

1815-1848

0.26

6.21

7.45

6.03

5.95

-1.15

1848-1873

-0.73

6.41

2.15

2.72

7.19

4.18

1873-1914

2.39

7.76

3.81

2.52

5.24

3.80

1914-1945

1.5

7.14

1.81

-0.05

5.57

5.24

1945-1981

1.36

5.54

-1.85

-0.37

4.13

7.53

1981-2019

6.66

8.73

5.25

1.13

1.94

3.30

2019-2022

0.86

2.51

-8.66

-2.13

12.23

4.92

To Present

           

1791-2022

1.43

6.4

2.92

2.02

4.9

3.39

1899-2022

2.88

6.69

1.24

0.28

3.71

5.39

1919-2022

3.58

7.18

2.12

0.7

3.48

4.96

1949-2022

4.37

7.34

1.65

0.63

2.84

5.59

1969-2022

4.61

6.37

2.89

0.78

1.68

3.37

 

Table 1.  United States Real Returns to Stocks, Bonds and Bills, ERP and Inflation by Decade and Eras

Bondholders received negative real returns for four decades in a row, in the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s as rising bond yields reduced bond prices. Because of this, fixed-income investors were little better off after inflation in 1980 than they had been in 1900.  Between 1980 and 2020, however, bondholders received a positive return, though cash saw a net loss after inflation. Fixed income has suffered large losses since 2020 and inflation has beaten cash. There seems little reason to believe that either bonds or bills will beat inflation in the 2020s. On the other hand, declining bond yields in the 1980s to 2010s generated positive returns to bondholders.  Since the yield on bonds has increased during the past two years, fixed-income investors will no longer be able to benefit from falling interest rates to generate continued positive returns.

Bonds outperformed stocks in the 2000s and 2010s, but with the losses to government bonds during the past two years, this is no longer true.  This is because bondholders benefitted from the capital gains produced by falling interest rates. Although the 10-year bond yield can provide an accurate measure of the return to fixed-income investors over the next decade, no similar measure exists for shareholders. The return to equities will depend upon the business cycle. Since the equity risk premium has been around 2%-3% historically, you would expect no more than a 7% return to equities over the next ten years, and possibly less. 

Between 2020 and 2022, stocks returned 2.5% while bonds and bills have both been beaten by inflation. Since equities have provided double-digit returns after inflation in three of the last four decades, it will take time for investors to adjust to the prospect of lower returns.  Although losses in the bond market of the magnitude of the past two years are unlikely to continue, investors will spend the rest of the decade just recovering from these unprecedented losses.

The 30-year Cycle for Stocks

               The stock market has been moving in 30-year cycles since the 1890s.  Now that the 2010s have finished, we can examine the data and see if this pattern has continued.  And it has! Table 1 provides the real returns to stocks, bonds and bills in each decade since the 1890s.   As you can see, the stock market provided double-digit returns every 30 years, in the 1890s, 1920s, 1950s, 1980s and 2010s. Each of those decades was preceded by a decade in which there were inferior returns, in the 1880s, 1910s, 1940s, 1970s and 2000s.  In fact, both the 1970s and 2000s provided investors with negative real returns to stocks over the course of the decade.

With the exception of the 1990s, each of those decades was followed by lower returns to equities, but with a positive equity risk premium.  It appears that this pattern will be repeated in the 2020s.  Given the fact that there have already been two bear markets in the United States since 2020 and one of the worst bond bear markets in history, lower returns to stocks and a positive equity risk premium over the course of the decade are both likely.

               Bond returns have shown a declining pattern over the past four decades and this is likely to continue in the 2020s. Given the level of the losses to fixed-income in 2021 and 2022, the total return to government bonds during the 2020s is likely to be negative.  Real returns to bonds would have to be 4% per annum for fixed-income investors to break even during the 2020s and this seems unlikely.  The 30-year cycle is likely to continue during the 2020s.

The Equity-Risk Premium

               Figure 19.4 shows the 10-year rolling Equity Risk Premium from 1792 until the present. There were significant periods in the 1800s where the ERP was negative and bonds outperformed stocks; however, this occurred less often during the 1900s.  The periods when the ERP was negative reflected more on the poor performance of stocks during those years than the strong performance of bonds. For the most part, the ERP was consistently positive during the 1900s.  The only exceptions were the 1930s and the 1970s when stocks performed poorly. The 1950s provided the highest ERPs in history as the economy recovered from World War II.  

Because of the bear markets of 2000 and 2008 and the strong performance of bonds, the ERP reached its lowest levels in history during the 2000s and 2010s.  The ERP has bounced back and with little chance of fixed-income investors receiving high returns, the ERP should remain positive for the rest of the decade.  The ERP will turn negative only if stocks produce negative returns in the decade to come, which seems unlikely.

 

Figure 2.  United States 10-year Equity Risk Premium

Bull and Bear Equity Markets

The United States has gone through a number of bull and bear markets. Using the GFD-100 Index as the basis for our calculations, there have been 18 bear markets in the United States since 1792.  If you use the S&P Composite, there have been 23 bear markets since 1871.  The Dow Jones Industrials has gone through 22 bear markets since 1885 and the GFD/Dow Jones Transports has gone through 28 bear markets since 1832.  The record of bull and bear markets since 1871, as registered by the S&P Composite is provided below:

Date

Value

Change

Date

Value

Change

Cause

     

05/31/1872

5.19

61.68

Panic of 1873

06/30/1877

2.74

-47.21

06/30/1881

6.58

140.15

Long Depression

08/31/1896

3.81

-42.10

6/17/1901

8.53

123.88

Panic of 1893

11/9/1903

5.85

-31.42

10/9/1906

10.23

74.87

Rich Man's Panic

11/15/1907

6.1

-40.37

11/19/1909

10.6

73.77

Panic of 1907

10/31/1914

6.63

-37.45

11/20/1916

10.55

59.13

World War I

12/19/1917

6

-43.13

7/16/1919

9.64

60.67

Fear of Entering War

8/24/1921

6.26

-35.06

9/7/1929

31.86

408.95

Post WWI Recession

7/8/1932

4.41

-86.16

9/7/1932

9.31

111.11

Great Depression

2/27/1933

5.53

-40.60

7/18/1933

12.2

120.61

Bank Holidays

3/14/1935

8.06

-33.93

3/10/1937

18.68

131.76

Post-Election Fall

3/31/1938

8.5

-54.50

11/9/1938

13.79

62.24

1937 Recession

4/28/1942

7.47

-45.83

5/29/1946

19.25

157.70

World War II

6/13/1949

13.55

-29.61

8/2/1956

49.75

267.16

Post WWII Recession

10/22/1957

38.98

-21.65

12/12/1961

72.64

86.35

Kennedy Crisis

6/26/1962

52.32

-27.97

2/9/1966

94.06

79.78

Viet Nam

10/7/1966

73.2

-22.18

1/5/1973

119.87

63.76

OPEC

10/3/1974

62.28

-48.04

8/25/1987

337.89

442.53

Carter

12/4/1987

221.24

-34.52

7/16/1990

369.78

67.14

1987 Crash

10/17/1990

294.51

-20.36

3/24/2000

1527.46

418.64

Iraq

10/9/2002

776.77

-49.15

10/9/2007

1565.15

101.49

Internet Bubble, 9/11

3/9/2009

676.53

-56.78

2/19/2020

3386.15

400.52

Financial Crisis

3/23/2020

2236.7

-33.95

1/3/2022

4796.56

114.45

Coronavirus

10/12/2022

3577.03

-25.43

     

Ukraine and Inflation

Table 2.  Bull and Bear Stock Markets in the United States, 1792 to 2019

The worst bear market was the 1929-1932 bear in which the market declined by 86%.  There have been four bull markets in which prices rose by over 400% in 1921-1929, 1974-1987, 1990-2000 and 2009-2020.  There is no pattern in the length and size of either bull or bear markets because they are built on expectations and economic performance.

Government Bond Yields