Risk Premia Forecasts: Major Asset Classes | 2 August 2018

 | Aug 02, 2018 06:51AM ET

The expected risk premium for the Global Market Index (GMI) edged higher in July, inching up to an annualized 4.9% — slightly above the major asset classes.

Adjusting for short-term momentum and longer-term mean-reversion factors (defined below) reduces GMI’s ex ante risk premium to an annualized 4.6%.

Note that both projections are modestly below GMI’s historical performance for the trailing 10-year period through last month. The benchmark posted a 5.5% annualized risk premium during the decade through July 2018, which is modestly above the current expected long-run forecasts.

The forecasting engine for the estimates is an equilibrium methodology (defined below) that uses risk (return volatility), the relationship of assets (return correlation), and an assumption of GMI’s expected market pricing of risk (Sharpe ratio) as inputs. The data is based on historical market results starting in December 1997. The “risk-free” rate is defined as the yield on zero-to-three-month Treasury bills.

For the market components of GMI, the unadjusted projections for risk premia currently range from a slight 0.2% annualized gain for US investment-grade bonds to a strong 8.5% increase for equities in emerging markets.