Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Investing 7 Year Time Horizon

It is good to know the performance over a 74 year period or 60 year period or a 10 year period. How do you invest if you have a 7 year time horizon? To answer the question, we will look at the minimum return, maximum return, and percentage of time for a positive return for a Small Cap Stock Index, Large Cap Stock Index, Long Term Bonds, and Short Term Bonds in the book Investments.

We will look at the time period from 1926 - 1999, to include the Great Depression and 1940-1999 to reflect a more normal period. It depends if you want a true worst case or a more normal environment.

Time Period 1926 - 1999

Investment/Min Return/Max Return/% Positive Return
Small Stocks/-9.48%/49.83%/96%
Large Stocks/-0.15%/25.08%/99%
Long Bonds/-1.10%/15.34%/99%
Short Bonds/-0.29%/10.63%/93%

Time Period 1940-1999

Investment/Min Return/Max Return/% Positive Return
Small Stocks/-7.24%/38.79%/96%
Large Stocks/-0.15%/25.08%/98%
Long Bonds/-1.10%/15.34%/98%
Short Bonds/0.19%/10.63%/100%

What conclusions can we draw from this data:
  1. The data during 1926 - 1999 looks a little wierd as the % positive return for short term bonds is the lowest.
  2. The minimum return data shows mixed results. Small stocks which gave the best long term performance had the worst numbers. Short term bonds, long term bonds, and large stocks are close.
  3. The maximum return data shows that stocks outperform bonds. Small stocks that had the most negative minimum return value has the largest maximum value indicating the most volatility. Large cap stocks and long term bonds got closer together.
  4. The percentage of time that a positive return had mixed results. Short term bonds had the highest value and got to 100% during the 1940-1999 period. The rest of the data is about the same in the 96% - 99% range except for short term bonds in the 1926 - 1999 period.
  5. If you are an aggressive investor that only has a focus on the maximum gain stocks outperformed bonds by a wide margin.
  6. Bottom Line: Large cap stocks, long term bonds and short term bonds are looking very similar.


If you have a child going to college in 7 years you should be looking at mutual funds that contain large cap stocks, mutual funds that contain long term bonds, and short term bonds or a money market account. Remember that the tuition payment is due when the tuition payment is due, regardless of what happens in the stock market.

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