Altruists who don't care too much about risk (and young people in general) should plausibly use leveraged investing. What's the best way to get leverage?
- Margin borrowing seems like the default solution. I might try it if there's nothing better.
- Theoretically options could be used, but I'm unsure whether they work in practice.
- Supposedly futures offer massive leverage, but I haven't explored the details, and they seem hard to trade yourself. I'd like something I can just buy and hold for a long time.
- Something else?
Ideally, there should be a fund that you just buy into to get leverage, with someone else handling the details. But leveraged ETFs don't work because they're optimized for day trading and as a result lose money for buy-and-hold investors.
Larks, could you explain a bit more?
1) If the EPS growth rate is higher but dividend yield has been lowered a corresponding amount, then aren't expected returns unchanged?
2) If you make the adjustment you propose, is that enough to show normal valuations? My understanding is that according to Shiller PE valuations are about 2x historical norms.
3) Also, there's many other alternative valuation models that currently give similar results to Shiller PE e.g. P/R, Tobins Q ratio, P/E with normalized profit margins.
4) These models are all correlated ~0.8 with 10yr returns, so you'd need to think something pretty substantial had changed for them to break down. [1yr forward P/E, by contrast, has much less correlation with long-run returns]
1) Yes but the Shiller PE will be higher, thereby (incorrectly) reducing its estimate of forward returns.
2) No, I agree the market is at above average valuation, just less extremely so than shiller PE would suggest. Though it looks cheap on Equity Risk Premium measures.
3) Yeah my objection is to the methodology not the conclusion. However I think many of those other methodologies are silly as well; for example, P/R does not make sense from an accounting standpoint (it should be EV/R). Changes in the structure of the economy have made book value metrics les... (read more)