Warily Projecting Near-Term U.S. Stock Market Returns

 | Aug 30, 2022 03:08PM ET

Whenever I update CapitalSpectator.com’s predicting market risk is more reliable in the shorter run vs. longer-run scenarios – the opposite for projecting returns.

Despite the limitations and caveats, demand is always high for estimating what the market might deliver in the near term. The question is whether there are reasonable models for developing perspective on that horizon? Yes, although much depends on your definition of “reasonable.”

If you’re willing to go down this rabbit hole, there are several paths to consider for U.S. equities. One that’s on my short list is using the performance spread via short- and longer-term historical windows. Reliability is in the eye of the beholder, and so caveat emptor applies. But in the cause of estimating some rough numbers for deciding which way the wind’s blowing there’s a case for using performance spreads as a first approximation. Think of it as a calculated risk with a non-trivial degree of noise.

The first step is calculating rolling returns for the 1- and 10-year periods for the S&P 500 Index (note: the 10-year performance is annualized). The reasoning: the 1-year return is volatile relative to the 10-year performance, a mix that serves as a rough proxy for mean reversion in market action. A dive in the 1-year return below the relatively stable 10-year result tends to be followed in short order by a spike above (and vice versa). It’s not perfect and there are plenty of periods when this relationship period is weak. But for relatively deep spikes and dives in the 1-year performance, it’s a useful framework for monitoring market activity with an eye on estimating the probability of what we’ll see in the near-term future.