Expert Guidance:
Managing expectations
Home > Investment Choices: Stock > Managing expectations > Inflation & return
   
Managing expectations
1. Managing expectations
2. Investor expectations
3. Understanding risk
4. Inflation & return
Inflation & stocks
Inflation-adjusted returns
5. Irrational exuberance
6. Market benchmarks
7. Hindsight is 20/20
 
Print and Go Printer
 
INVESTOR TOOLKIT
Dictionary
Calculators & Worksheets
Games & Quizzes
Market Research
Email a Friend

Inflation & return

When evaluating the potential return on your investments, it's important to look at the impact of inflation on the returns of different classes of securities. If your investment isn't outpacing inflation, then the purchasing power of your capital is shrinking rather than growing.

For example, the yield on Treasury bills has never been lower than it was in 1938, at -0.02%. However, after accounting for the impact of inflation, 1946 was the worst year to be invested in T-bills. Although the yield was a very modest 0.35%, the inflation rate that same year was over 18%. That means that in terms of actual buying power, the value of a T-bill investment dropped by over 17%.

The picture changes slightly over the long term. Between 1926 and 2003, Treasury bills returned 3.8% compounded annually, before accounting for inflation. But the real rate of return — or inflation-adjusted return — was only 0.8% annually. What this means is that while a dollar invested in Treasury bills in 1925 was worth $17.66 by the end of 2003, in terms of actual buying power it was worth only $1.72 by 2003.

These figures demonstrate that while investing in T-bills may be a sound technique for preserving capital, historically they have fallen short as growth investments. In fact, over the long term their return has barely outstripped inflation.


 
Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, The Wharton School
         
   
BACK  

 

 
 
Copyright | Contact Us | Link to Us | About Us | Partners | Privacy | Site Map