Stocks Vs. Bonds: Negative ERP Indicates It May Be Time to Rethink Your Allocation

 | Mar 26, 2024 19:58

The roaring US stock market has delivered red-hot gains in recent history, but at the expense of future returns. That, at least, is one interpretation via earnings-yield and dividend-yield models that estimate the ex-ante equity risk premium (ERP). Based on a specific run of number crunching, this pair continues to estimate a negative ERP.

The pushback is that artificial intelligence (AI) and related technology innovations have changed the calculus. Maybe, but even wide-eyed optimists should consider the recent decline and fall of two flavors of estimating what stocks will deliver over the so-called risk-free rate in the years ahead. These forecasts aren’t destiny, but surely they’re relevant discussion points.

For this exercise, I’m running the numbers two ways: the earnings-yield model (EYM) and the dividend-yield model (DYM). The 10-year US Treasury yield is the “risk-free” rate. There are other choices, of course, and so results will vary, depending on your preferences. But this is an obvious way to start, if only as a baseline.

For EYM, I’m using the trailing S&P 500 earnings yield less the 10-year US Treasury yield. The formula for DYM draws on the frameworks of the Gordon Growth Model and Dividend Discount Model, which boils down to taking the current dividend yield and adding a growth estimate. There are several variations for estimating growth — let’s use the rolling 10-year growth rate for the US economy (based on real GDP). The assumption here is that the stock market’s dividends will grow in line with economic activity over the long run.

Running the numbers shows that both EYM and DYM are estimating the equity risk premium as modestly negative. In fact, the current estimates mark the first time we’re seeing a sub-zero equity risk premium in many years (except for a brief period for EYM during the 2008 financial crisis).