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Principles of Finance: Unit 6, Historical Rates of Return 5 Views
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Description:
Today, we're discussing historical rates of return in this soon-to-be historic Shmoop video.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance a la shmoop historical rates of return....
- 00:07
alright well someday in a deserted parking lot with nothing around you [Car alone in a parking lot]
- 00:11
drive slowly for fifty feet using only your rearview mirrors to guide you our
- 00:17
lawyers look like they're about to pass out now that we've asked you to do this [Lawyer collapses]
- 00:21
so maybe just think about doing it anyway you drive really or virtually in
Full Transcript
- 00:27
the parking lot looking in the rearview mirror you get a decent sense of what's
- 00:32
behind you but it's really hard to tell what's ahead and if your parking lot is [Car driving and man is struck by car]
- 00:36
like most you'll see a line of concrete tire hubs or bollards in neat little
- 00:41
rows behind you and you have great comfort driving in parallel seeing them
- 00:45
tick off behind you one two three yeah until you hit a tree when you pull your [Man in car and airbag deflates]
- 00:50
head out from the airbag deployment well you'll notice that you've long since
- 00:54
left the parking lot and run into trouble that's kind of how the history
- 00:58
of investing works you think you're in a parking lot looking at old data in the
- 01:04
history of how companies did in this era and that era until you realize you're [A packed car parking lot]
- 01:09
not in a parking lot and yeah bad things happen and a good way to get killed is
- 01:13
to drive fast around that parking lot believing that the parking lot continues [Car driving fast in a deserted parking lot]
- 01:18
forever all right for clarity our little allegorical lots can be bull markets
- 01:23
bear markets, markets of low liquidity, markets of high liquidity Asian Tiger
- 01:28
driven markets tech bubbles and any other vibe which lulls investors into [Investor being hypnotized]
- 01:33
thinking that this parking lot is a steady-state infinite thing and will go
- 01:38
on you know forever and ever and ever and there's no trees so remember all of
- 01:42
the above when you think about the notion of historical returns there's a
- 01:47
great little company called Ibbotson that tracks all this data take a gander
- 01:50
check the numbers and a few things you will note large cap companies are those
- 01:55
valued above say twenty billion dollars grow slower than small cap
- 01:59
companies, does this make sense? large cap companies have already found
- 02:04
their market their markets maturing and they simply can't grow at the 100%
- 02:08
a year rate that they were able to grow when they were young pups like [Smartphones appear on a table]
- 02:12
how many cell phones can one person own anyway by the same token
- 02:16
large cap companies don't die as often or as quickly as small ones they do die [Large cap company headstones]
- 02:20
r.i.p Nokia Yahoo Toys R Us Sears and who knows someday Google and or Amazon
- 02:27
note that at one point Nokia was the largest market cap company in the world
- 02:31
and then through overly conservative management who was out of touch with a [Person with a briefcase of nokia appears]
- 02:36
rapidly changing marketplace died a painful slow death nearly taking their
- 02:40
entire country down with them yeah thank you Apple...
- 02:43
well does it make sense that large cap companies are less volatile or have less
- 02:48
data than small ones yes but maybe not for all the reasons you'd guess large
- 02:53
caps are simply big fat ships that are hard to turn but they're pretty stable [Large cap company ship in the ocean]
- 02:57
in storms so that's an obvious one but large caps also usually have
- 03:01
2excess capital" that is they don't generally carry a ton of debt if
- 03:06
any and in a volatile market a company with no debt and maybe lots of net cash
- 03:10
will generally bounce a lot less than a company leveraged five times debt to [5X EBITDA boat appears]
- 03:15
cash flow and partly because of the strong balance sheets well large caps
- 03:19
often pay a dividend which helps stabilize them as well small caps just
- 03:24
want growth so they keep their dividend and reinvest in product and stuff like
- 03:28
that well another force here is the
- 03:30
international market small caps tend to be domestically based not necessarily
- 03:35
just in the US but in the country in which they were started like Alibaba [Alibaba.com by Chinese map appears]
- 03:39
was a small cap at one point in China large caps have usually had time to be
- 03:44
globally exposed so that when one economy is falling off the shelf and
- 03:48
another one's usually doing okay and by the time that Savior economy is starting
- 03:52
to die in the seven-year cycle the initially dying economy is recovering [7 year boom/bust cycle graph appears]
- 03:57
it's kind of a you know portfolio of company progress well the overall effect
- 04:01
is to mollify beta or volatility in the company's results smooth sailing kind of
- 04:06
boringly upward which is just fine for most investors alright well so that's a [Boat sailing by in the ocean]
- 04:11
stock market you don't want to drive only looking in the rearview mirror you
- 04:14
got to think about where you're going yeah GPS that's the key now think about
- 04:18
stocks versus bonds as it relates to historical rates of return if you're
- 04:23
really just not frisky then bonds are probably going to be your preferred [Man discussing bonds]
- 04:27
investment meal... you have a bunch of choices think
- 04:29
corporates like junk bonds and standard corporate bonds
- 04:33
you also have muni bonds if you're wealthy anyway and you pay a lot of
- 04:36
taxes and immunities you know that are tax free and then there's government bonds
- 04:40
for the really nervous Nellie's out there so that's some risk really not
- 04:43
much risk and pretty much no risk that's how they sort of categorized there [No risk, some risk and not much risk bonds appear]
- 04:48
Is no risk low volatility good well usually no at least not over time
- 04:53
if small caps compound as mid to high-teens
- 04:58
something like that 12-15 percent maybe more and large caps compound in the 10
- 05:02
percent zone well then you can think of corporate bonds as compounding maybe in
- 05:07
the mid single zone like 4-5 percent with muni bonds and government
- 05:11
paper in the mid to low single zones like 1-4 percent
- 05:16
something like that and over time compounding at such a low rate is
- 05:19
actually crushing to your overall wealth if you're giving up four points of
- 05:24
compounding per year remember that rule of 72 thing it'll tell you that in [Rule of 72 appears]
- 05:29
eighteen years because 72 divided by four is eighteen you'll have half of the
- 05:33
nest egg that you would have had have you been willing to suffer the potential [Nest egg cracks and cash appears]
- 05:38
volatility of the next up level of risk and yes this is a massive over
- 05:43
generalization but it's just for structural illustration of how you want
- 05:47
to think about risk and reward here yes you could have bought a given large cap
- 05:50
when it was a twenty billion in valuation only to see it 10 years later
- 05:54
be worth a trillion dollars and yes Apple we're looking at you but those are [Apple headquarters appears]
- 05:58
rare and they don't reflect the category delineation we're trying to illustrate
- 06:01
here we're talking about the overall markets of stocks and bonds
- 06:05
why are bond such a "dangerous" investment to make yeah you remember
- 06:08
inflation well that's right usually bonds after-tax for individual investors [Balloon inflates]
- 06:14
well they don't even beat inflation so over time your dollars buy less and less
- 06:19
for you so that's a problem and here's a chart of the S&P 500 through 2018 and
- 06:25
here's path A, B and C and yeah we have no crystal balls how high or low can you [Person covering hand over crystal ball]
- 06:32
go..... [Man dancing]
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