Three quarter time score check: 2023 a low-scoring year, but most asset classes are positive and ahead of inflation.
Ashley Owen (CFA)
Wanderer on this cosmic accident 'Earth', wonderer on the nature of humans, their motivations and actions, ponderer on financial markets and their gyrations, guide and custodian of people's wealth and financial security.
Despite constant doom and gloom in the media headlines this year, most asset classes are actually ahead in 2023. More importantly, most are ahead of inflation.
Returns from all types of assets, including cash, vary widely from year to year. All types of assets, even so-called ‘defensive’ assets go through periods of negative returns, and sometimes several negative years in a row.
Today’s chart shows total returns (ie including income) from two dozen of the main types of investment assets per calendar year since the start of the century. Returns above the red line are positive, below are negative.
This is designed primarily for Australian investors, so returns from international assets come in two flavours – hedged AUD, and un-hedged AUD, as marked.
(A table of benchmarks for each asset class/segment is included at the end of this article)
Portfolios and Inflation
Below the main table are returns from a typical simple ‘70/30’ portfolio (35% Australian shares, 35% developed market shares (50% of which is FX hedged), 10% Australian bonds (50/50 government/corporate), 10% global bonds (also split 50/50 government/corporate), and 10% cash, with all?holdings rebalanced yearly).??
All returns are before fees, so you can deduct a fraction of a percent from returns, as all of these are available in the form of very low-cost ETFs. (Fees on passive ETFs range from around 0.05% for share ETFs, and from around 0.10% for bond ETFs).
At the bottom we show Australian CPI inflation per year.
2023 score card – to end of September
Most asset classes are positive so far this year, and most are head of inflation (marked in red).
Although Australian CPI inflation is running at 6% on an annualised basis, it is around 3.3% for the year to date because the running rate is slowing, after peaking at 7.9% in 2022.
Inflation for the full 2023 year is likely to be in the order of 5%.
The half dozen asset classes with negative returns so far in 2023 are mainly fixed rate bonds, REITs and infrastructure – all of which have been hurt by rising interest rates, particularly at long end (bond yields).
Aussie small companies have also lagged badly this year, with many being hurt by rising short term interest rates squeezing margins, without the pricing power of many large companies.
Asset class returns since 2000
The overall table looks like a random patchwork quilt of returns, with no apparent rhyme or reason. There different winners and losers each year, with returns from every type of asset jumping around from year to year.
Some quick observations:
Most frequent HIGHEST returning assets
The asset types with the most years with the highest returns are:
Most frequent LOWEST returning assets
Asset types with the most years with the lowest returns are:
Average returns since 2000
The far right column shows average annualised returns over the period since the start of 2000.
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So far this century:
It is notable that global corporate investment grade bonds (hedged) beat development market shares (unhedged). So too did Aussie Hybrids (grossed up). This is mainly because of the poor performance of US, European and Japanese shares in the 2001-2 ‘tech-wreck’.
Portfolio construction
Good portfolio construction is not about trying to pick the best asset classes each year or trying to avoid the worst.
Nor is it about chasing last year's winners (hoping for a momentum effect), or last year's losers (hoping for a contrarian or reversion effect). These strategies almost always destroy wealth.
Good portfolio construction is about selecting the right mix of assets so that the portfolio as a whole has the greatest probability of achieving each investor’s long-term goals, within their tolerance for risk and volatility (ups and downs along the way), and liquidity requirements.
Inflation
To far right of the table we see that over the whole period, every type of asset has beaten CPI inflation, except for USD cash (in Australian dollars).
Sample portfolio returns
On the pro-forma returns from the simple 70/30 portfolio, these returns are before fees, and they assume no ‘alpha’ and no asset allocation changes, just setting the initial ‘strategic’ asset allocation and then re-balancing back to this each year.
Key outcomes for portfolios:
Overall average returns of 8.0% pa this century (before ETF fees)
Asset classes and sectors, and benchmark index for each:
We will report on full year returns for 2023 in January.
Thank you for your time – please send me feedback and/or ideas for future editions!
See also:
This is just my view of the facts as I see them. It is certainly NOT ‘advice’ or a recommendation to buy, hold, or sell any stock or security or fund. My aim is to provide dispassionate information, insights, and informed analysis for portfolio managers and advisers.
As always, take your own time, do your own research, form your own views, and seek professional advice based on your own individual goals, needs and circumstances.
Please read the disclaimers and disclosures below.
Very impressive way of presenting data/information!