Just the Facts

Just the Facts

I thought we’d take a break for a while from the historical essays
and look at some numbers, especially since I just shelled out big
bucks for the 2003 Ibbotson Associates Yearbook, from which all
of the following is culled.

For the period 1926-2002, Annual Total Returns
[Geometric mean]

Large Company Stocks (S&P 500)…10.2%

Small Company Stocks………….….12.1%

Long-Term Corporate Bonds..……….5.9%

Long-Term Government Bonds..…….5.5%

Intermediate-Term Govt. Bonds……..5.4%

U.S. Treasury Bills……………………3.8%

Inflation………………………………3.1%

Notes:

Small Co. stocks have been measured using various indices over
the years, including most recently the Dimensional Fund
Advisors Micro Cap Fund.

Long-Term Corporates: measured by the Salomon Brothers
Long-Term High-Grade Corporate Bond Index.

Long-Term Governments: a one-bond portfolio consisting of the
20-year Treasury.

Intermediate-Term Governments: a one-bond portfolio consisting
of the 5-year Treasury.

U.S. Treasury Bills: a one-bill portfolio of 30 days.

Inflation is measured by the Consumer Price Index.

Compound Annual Rates of Return by Decade

…………….60s….70s…..80s….90s….00s…93-02

Large Caps….7.8….5.9….17.5….18.2….-14.6…..9.3*

Small Caps…15.5…11.5…15.8…15.1…..0.9….11.6

Inter. Govts…3.5….7.0…11.9….7.2….11.0…..7.3

T-Bills………3.9….6.3…..8.9….4.9…..3.8……4.4

Inflation……..2.5….7.4…..5.1….2.9….2.4……2.5

*Returns on the S&P 500 for the period 1993-2002

1993…10.0
1994….1.3
1995…37.4
1996…23.1
1997…33.4
1998…28.6
1999…21.0
2000…-9.1
2001..-11.9
2002..-22.1

Tidbits

–The last time the CPI was over 3.4% for a single year was 1990. [1987-1990…4.4%-6.1% each year.]

–Ah, the importance of dividends in the old days, like 1975-85, when dividends on the S&P 500 contributed 4.3%-5.7%, annually, of the total return on the index.

More next week, including some figures on Growth vs. Value.

Brian Trumbore