2023-03-28

Inflation-Adjusted Possibilities

If the Fed can't or won't stop inflation, the inflation-adjusted losses on the market indexes may erase the entire 40-year bull market. A drop to the 1966 inflation-adjusted DJIA seems like a lock to me in any major bearmarket. It is about a 69 percent loss down to the 1500 area onthe S&P 500, the 2000 and 2007 topping area (I used DJIA for any data before the 1980s because it was the most watched index then), that I think can be hit in nominal terms during a front-loaded bear market. The longer a bear takes to unfold, the more losses will be made up of lost purchasing power. That might sound nuts, but consider the CPI-adjusted low in 1982 matched where the DJIA was in 1947.
The CPI is about 300 right now. What if the CPI hits 500, about 60 percent inflation, over a decade. Multiply the CPI by 30 to get 15,000, matching the inflation-adjusted peak in 1966. Zero inflation-adjusted gains not including dividends. You may point out the dividend gains aren't too shabby and you're right, that's a lot of compounding. However, we are looking ahead. Do you want to suffer that loss while only collecting about 1.6 percent yield on the S&P 500 Index? Also, bonds can compound too. If inflation rises, 10-year treasuries will be paying substantial interest, possibly as much as the 8-percent investment return target many investors and institutions default to.

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