The Start Of A New Investment Paradigm

One of the reasons we founded RBA in 2009 was we thought the US market was entering, perhaps, the biggest bull market of our careers. However, our bullish view at the time was far from consensus.

Skepticism regarding potential returns in the US was understandable because emerging markets had significantly outperformed for a decade, and investors’ attention was squarely focused on those markets’ relative strength. From 2000 to 2010, emerging markets appreciated more than 16%/year, whereas commodities returned only about 6%/year and NASDAQ returned a paltry 1.6%/year. (See Chart 1).

Because emerging markets had so significantly outperformed the US, investors widely assumed the core of any global equity portfolio should be in the emerging markets. Our preference for US stocks was, to say the least, highly unusual.

Chart 1: Performance of Nasdaq, MSCI Emerging Markets & Commodities: 12/31/2000 – 12/31/2010

Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P. For Index descriptors, see "Index Descriptions" at end of document.

Investors naturally extrapolated emerging markets’ outperformance after 2010, but the global economy and global financial markets were in the early stages of a major paradigm shift in which performance reversed and US equities significantly outperformed. From 2010 to present, NASDAQ returned more than 17%/year versus only about 3%/year for emerging markets and -1.5%/year for commodities. (See Chart 2).

Chart 2: Performance of Nasdaq, MSCI Emerging Markets & Commodities: 12/31/2010 – 03/24/2022

Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P. For Index descriptors, see "Index Descriptions" at end of document.

Investors appear to again be looking backward when constructing portfolios. During the 2009-2014 period, investors preferred emerging markets based on past performance. Today, investors’ preference for growth stocks seems to again be based on past performance rather than an objective assessment of future economic and profit fundamentals. As were emerging markets stocks in 2010, US growth stocks today are widely considered a core portfolio holding.