It’s a concept that pros understand but that many individual investors have not been taught.
Nick Murray counsels us to be owners, not lenders, in terms of the way we invest.
Bond investors, the lenders in this example, only ever get principal back and their interest payments – and over long stretches of time their after-tax, after-inflation profits from this activity are nowhere near what they could be had they owned equity.
Owners (equity investors) on the other hand, have a share in the future productivity of the enterprise – a much greater potential payout over time than bond interest and the return of their original capital – but they endure greater risk in order to earn this (the No Free Lunch principle).
This is not to say that bonds have no use or that equities will always do better. But it is a good way of understanding the tradeoffs we make when there is a long horizon ahead of us and we’re trying to maximize the potential of our investment dollars.
Sometimes, you’re getting a free ride as an owner – 2013 was a great example of that. But on days like yesterday, you had to earn your equity risk premium. You had to grit your teeth and watch some 400 points get ripped out of the Dow Jones in the blink of an eye.
In life, earning stuff is sometimes preferable to having everything handed to you. It feels better on the other side of whatever ordeal you’ve gone through and it builds character. Pat yourself on the back for not panicking.
[…] two single day drops of 20% and 61 daily drops of at least 5%. Also, the recent volatility is a helpful reminder of the equity risk premium. Meanwhile, recent market turbulence isn’t throwing Richard Fisher off course: “‘a market […]
[…] we get paid handsomely over time to endure volatility and market declines (Josh Brown says it best here). The risk of Central Banks being unable to bail us out is just that, a risk. One possibility […]
I’m a New York City-based financial advisor at Ritholtz Wealth Management LLC. I help people invest and manage portfolios for them. For disclosure information please see here.
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RT @ritholtz: Why Stock Investors Get Paid by @ReformedBroker http://t.co/IQh2hSPjT2
RT @ritholtz: Why Stock Investors Get Paid by @ReformedBroker http://t.co/IQh2hSPjT2
Why Stock Investors Get Paid by @ReformedBroker http://t.co/Ry6PaYY8hu
“Why Stock Investors Get Paid by @ReformedBroker http://t.co/mE0vRIhBBf” Exactly right (except a 9% mkt return over 3% bill rate = 6% ERP)
RT @ritholtz: Why Stock Investors Get Paid by @ReformedBroker http://t.co/IQh2hSPjT2
Succinct and right on RT@ritholtz: Why Stock Investors Get Paid by @ReformedBroker http://t.co/V3pcIui7DN
[…] Brown writes why stocks earn the returns they […]
@ReformedBroker explains Why Stock Investors Get Paid:
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Why Stock Investors Get Paid by @ReformedBroker http://t.co/sFtiyj4EiV
[…] two single day drops of 20% and 61 daily drops of at least 5%. Also, the recent volatility is a helpful reminder of the equity risk premium. Meanwhile, recent market turbulence isn’t throwing Richard Fisher off course: “‘a market […]
RT @behaviorgap: Why Stock Investors Get Paid http://t.co/chLTiYh3jX from @reformedbroker //Investors tend to forget this fact in volatile …
RT @behaviorgap: Why Stock Investors Get Paid http://t.co/chLTiYh3jX from @reformedbroker //Investors tend to forget this fact in volatile …
RT @behaviorgap: Why Stock Investors Get Paid http://t.co/chLTiYh3jX from @reformedbroker //Investors tend to forget this fact in volatile …
[…] we get paid handsomely over time to endure volatility and market declines (Josh Brown says it best here). The risk of Central Banks being unable to bail us out is just that, a risk. One possibility […]