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"Persistent outperformance of U.S. equities" from "valuation expansion" not fundamentals

edited July 18 in Other Investing
Over at M* Larry Swedroe looks at AQR research.

I'll cut to some factoids he mentions:
For the 35-year history ended December 2024, they found that US equities outperformed non-US developed markets by 4.7% per year, with 3.8% attributed to relative valuation expansion, 1.1% to real EPS growth, negative 0.6% to dividend yield differential, and negative 0.3% to real interest rate differential.
They found that to justify current valuations, US equities would need 2.2% higher annual real earnings growth than non-US peers over the next decade—well above the historical 0.3% edge.
From the end of 2008 through 2024, the US dollar rose in value relative to the euro from 0.72 to 0.92, an increase of almost 29%.
Well, what's it all about? I suppose it depends on your feelings about recency bias vs. mean reversion. After all, US indexes are setting records ain't they?

Comments

  • edited July 18
    "Persistent outperformance of U.S. equities" from "valuation expansion" not fundamentals" would also have been a good headline back in 2007 just before the market collapse.
  • Boy is valuation expansion a great phrase: no more punchbowl, greater fool, froth, bubble, overbought ... 4th-highest SP500 p/ ever and 2nd-highest Shiller. Party on.
  • @Old_Joe, so true, just before the market collapsed. Took several years for us to fully recovered. Only asset stay afloat was cash, but we had a small allocation.
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