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Jim Jubak

Jubak's Journal11/23/2009 8:50 PM ET

Another lost decade for investors?

Since 1999, the S&P 500 has been a loser, and the next 10 years could be just as grim. But with new strategies, you can position yourself well for the decade to come.

[Related content: stocks, China, Brazil, Jim Jubak, ETF]
By Jim Jubak

The past 10 years have been a lost decade for many investors.

If you had invested $10,000 in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index ($INX) in October 1999, a decade later you would be looking at a loss of more than $900. Lock your money up in stocks for 10 years and lose 1% a year? It's not supposed to work that way.

So what about the next 10 years? It might be just as grim for many investors, who are still sitting on portfolios that are likely to make the next decade as unrewarding as the last.

But it doesn't have to be that way.

Let's rewind to 1999 and imagine that instead of putting all your money into an S&P 500 fund you had invested in China -- say, by buying into Matthews China (MCHFX). Instead of a 1% annual loss, you would have seen an average annual compounded return of 18.17% for each of the next 10 years.

Of course, few people recognized way back then that China would be the investment story of the decade. Let's say that instead you had simply bought into a mutual fund that invested broadly in emerging markets, such as the T. Rowe Price Emerging Markets Stock Fund (PRMSX). Your average annual compounded return for the 10-year period would have been 12.06%.

Ready to have a good cry?

  • If you had invested $10,000 in the S&P 500, as many people did, you would have been left with just $9,090.52 after 10 years.
  • A $10,000 investment in T. Rowe Price Emerging Markets would have grown to $31,225.27.
  • And a $10,000 investment in Matthews China would have grown to $53,097.29.

And you know what's even worse? Ten years ago, the conventional wisdom preached diversifying a stock portfolio by putting a hunk of money into overseas markets and a piece of that into emerging markets.

Simply following the prevailing common wisdom 10 years ago and putting 10% of your money into emerging stock markets would have turned your 1% annual loss on a 100% S&P 500 portfolio into a small gain, leaving you with $10,357.53. That's a not-so-hot 0.35% average annual compounded return.

But a gain is always better than a loss, and getting a $1,267 swing to the good on a $10,000 investment just from making one easy-as-falling-off-a-log asset-allocation decision is a pretty decent return.

Anybody who doesn't think $1,267 is real money is welcome to send it to me.

A question of balance

You can't go back in time and redo your underexposure to overseas stocks, in general, and emerging-markets stocks, in particular, but you can try not to make the same mistake in the next 10 years.

All the evidence, though, is that U.S. investors are about to do it to themselves again.

The U.S. share of the global stock market is falling as other countries build larger economies and deeper capital markets. In 2004, U.S. capital markets accounted for 53% of the value of all shares in the world that were free to trade, according to Standard & Poor's. (Many shares in markets such as China and India are locked up under government control and aren't free to trade.) By 2007, that percentage was down to 44%, and by 2008 it had fallen to 41%.

Video: Is it time for a market correction?

Asset allocation by U.S. investors hasn't kept pace with that change. Depending on what group of investors you measure, U.S. investors have somewhere between 2% and 20% of their equity portfolios in overseas stocks. Among 401k investors, about 12% of their stock portfolios are in overseas stocks.

If you simply look at the makeup of the world's equity markets, U.S. investors are heavily overweighted in U.S. stocks and seriously underweighted in foreign stocks.

Continued: The rise of developing nations

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Tuesday, November 24, 2009 7:25:27 AM

Jim,

Like many middle class "investors", my company provides a 401(k) plan.  It is one of the better ones (Principal Group) as far as costs go.  However, these plans need a major overhaul to allow REAL diversification.  No Precious metals/commodities/Energy.  Foreign investment is basically Europe and Japan - no emerging markets.  A lame bond fund that tried to get tricky and beat the averages.  There usual excuse - these types of funds are too tricky for you. 

Tuesday, November 24, 2009 7:33:46 AM
Did Jim take into account dividends?  Also, most fund managers would make the necessary changes to avoid this scenario-like getting out of an index fund etc.  The point was well made - and that is to constantly be vigilant of your portfolio and make changes when necessary.
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 8:08:39 AM
My portfolio have 30% in overseas and commodities equities and 35% in bonds, the rest in U.S. equities.  I am looking to increase overseas exposure to 35%, and reduce U.S. to 30%.
This portfolio seems to be working - NO big and wild swings.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009 8:19:40 AM
One big problem is the crooks who run the mutual funds and their fees. They make the easy money-we take the risk. I agree with Jim on emerging markets but beware of etf fees,close end fees and mutual fund fees. They love to overcharge on foreign funds and laugh all the way to their mansions. Compound the fee overcharge for 10 years and we are ahead of the game instead of the sucker.
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 8:25:30 AM
Smoke and Mirror's on equities a few well placed out-of -the money Crude call options had them all beat!!
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 8:32:17 AM
I'm always troubled by the term "emerging markets" when in fact the U.S. is the primary target market for these emerging economies. U.S. dollars are invested there to produce cheap goods that are then sold to U.S. consumers, thus further draining our domestic economy. These dollars can only return to us when they are 'spent back' for our exports, or in the worst case scenario our gold mightt be demanded as payment if the dollar falls too low in value. Investing in these Asian markets will do nothing but hasten the economic collapse of the U.S. Our demise is the political aim of China and will accomplish it without firing a shot if we continue with the 'Walmartization' (Chinafication) of our economy. Shame on us.
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 8:57:30 AM
I bought 22,000 dollar's worth our company's stock in 1991. In 1996 we started an ESOP. The funds grew very well and in 2004 I retired, in 2005 I sold my first shares. In 2009 I sold my last amount of shares.  The 22,000 had become 1,012,000.00 dollars. I will be            59 1/2 next month
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 9:03:01 AM
Everything looks good AFTER the fact. The big word is...IF you would have done this or...IF you would have done that, etc.  Well...IF a frog had wings it wouldn't bump its ass when it hopped.  Anybody can make a good market call when the move is over!
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 9:05:37 AM

I fail to understand how people live in this country. Slovak friends come to this country with nothing but the shirt on their back.  Why is their home paid off and better off financially than most Americans?  Slovak friends did not get any money from government as some may think.  People don't live within their budget, want a high end life style.  In 1999, I bought 2 year old Mercury Sable for $11500.  New Sable was $19000.  The car runs great with 145k miles.  It makes no sense spending big bucks on car depreciating in value.  I am not cheap but careful with money.  In 2001, I bought house for $142k and $200K in the bank.  House paid off in 5 years, tax deductions weren’t worth it.  I am 48, never married, electrical engineer, net worth ½ million.  I was not born with silver spoon in my mouth.  Woman said, “It is not how much you earn. It is how much you save.”  I save $3000 /month.  Last year bank savings interest was $8000.  Credit cards paid off to avoid interest charges.  I support my mother on fixed income. I know first hand what it means to struggle but cannot show any sympathy.

 

I heard plenty of cries from unions.  Engineer said, "The unions are driving manufacturing out of this country. The unions put themselves out of a job."

 

I watched Japanese work like robots in the plant.  I do not feel sorry for the unions, with all the strikes and demands.  They got what they deserve.

 

I work in heavy equipment business. Japanese bought the business.  Many jobs lost, from accounting to engineering, product support, IT, etc.  Engineer said, "We were bought and sold 9 times in 30 years. Every owner had respect for what we did.  Now the Japanese own it, they have no respect for us."

Japanese engineers were laughing at our product in the plant.  They sat in our offices learning the business and taking the technology back to Japan.  Woman lost job for the third time because of the Japanese.  Second time she lost job in fiber optics business.  Japanese didn't know how to make seamless cable.  They bought the business, copied the patent.  The business was sold and lost her job.

Our government does nothing to protect our jobs.

 

Japanese hate the white race.

Keep buying foreign cars, dumb ass Americans !

Muslim friend said, "America is showing signs of cracks."

 

America owes China ~ $800 billion.

Each year the interest is ~ $50 billion.

China will be next super power.

 

I knew a family on welfare and food stamps.  His wife said to my mother, "You work ?"  Mother said, "Of course I work.  I have bills to pay.  I have to buy food."  The woman on welfare had cable TV, diamond rings on her fingers, and $ 50000 debt on 5 credit cards.  Bankruptcy court reduced debt to $ 5000.

#10
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 9:54:26 AM
Thank you. Finally I don't feel like the odd man out. In 1994, my target investment strategy was 25% foreign/international. By 2002, it was 40%. By 2007, it was 60% foreign/international. Sure my stocks lost value when the 2008 downturn came, but the international investments were still almost double what I paid when I started buying them. BTW, I am elderly and retired. So don't you go thinking that it is just the young people who are forward thinking.
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