Risk Premia Forecasts: Major Asset Classes -- February 2, 2016

 | Feb 02, 2016 06:19AM ET

The expected risk premium for the Global Market Index (GMI) remained subdued in January. GMI — an unmanaged, market-value weighted mix of the major asset classes — is projected to earn an annualized 2.9% return over the “risk-free” rate in the long term. (For details on the equilibrium-based methodology that’s used to generate the forecasts each month, see the summary below.) Today’s revised estimate, which is based on data through last month, matches the projection in the previous month’s update .

Adjusting for short-term momentum and longer-term mean-reversion factors (defined below) raises GMI’s current ex ante risk premium slightly to 3.0%, based on data published through the end of January.

For the first time in recent history, there’s a narrow gap between GMI’s risk premia forecasts and the index’s trailing performance over the last three years. That’s due primarily to weakness in market returns in recent months. GMI earned an annualized 3.2% risk premium for the trailing 3-year period through January 2016. That’s now in line with the GMI’s implied performance for the years ahead. In other words, GMI’s recent performance is no longer posting sharply higher results vs. expectations. Although any one point forecast should be considered cautiously, recent GMI projections suggest that multi-asset class strategies in general will generate comparatively subdued results vs. the performance record in recent years. That’s been a theme in this column for much of the past year (see this April 2015 update, for instance) and the outlook remains intact in today’s update.

Here’s a summary of the current risk premia projections for GMI and the major asset classes that comprise the benchmark: