Markets Priced For Perfection Rarely Get What They ‘Price In’

 | Feb 15, 2017 03:46PM ET

It is almost inconceivable. Just 10 years ago, you could purchase a 3-year Treasury and sock away a risk-free rate of return of nearly 6%. Right now? A paltry 1.5%.

It follows that, today, one must take enormous chances to generate an income stream up and above the pace of inflation. And that’s only if you believe inflation gauges placing the annual rate in the neighborhood of 2%.

For example, let’s assume an individual purchases a 5-year Treasury for its risk free 2% yield. The year-over-year income might maintain the individual’s purchasing power, if the person’s basket does not involve things like medication, health care, education, child care or rent. Worse yet, if the individual’s portfolio is much like the 5-year Treasury itself, the portfolio’s real rate of return would be 0%.

What if the investor wants a real return far greater than 0%? Well, then, he/she would need to take significant chances with money in riskier assets. Stocks, high yield bonds, REITs, MLPs. Indeed, the pursuit of modest reward would come with a high probability of considerable financial loss.

Fundamentally speaking, stocks have rarely been as overvalued as they are here in February of 2017. Forward P/Es for the S&P 500 and the Russell 2000 are already competing with 2000’s tech bubble.