Experts Forecast Stock and Bond Returns: 2021 Edition (2024)

When I last compiled investment firms’ long-term asset-class return forecasts, in April 2020, most of the companies surveyed were feeling at least somewhat sanguine about stocks’ prospects. Equities had fallen sharply in the first quarter of 2020, and several of these firms cited attractive valuations as a likely contributor to better returns ahead.

Nine months and a series of strong stock and bond returns later, however, and bullish forecasts for the U.S. equity market are scarce. Bond-market bulls are few and far between, too. While a 60/40 portfolio composed of U.S. large caps and investment-grade bonds has been tough to beat over the past decade, most of the firms in our survey are forecasting constrained returns for those asset classes going forward. One glimmer of hope is that each of the firms is forecasting better returns for foreign stocks than U.S.-domiciled companies. Firms differ on whether emerging-markets or developed-markets stocks have more upside potential today, however. Whereas a year ago many of the firms believed that emerging markets would enjoy better returns than developed markets, several believe that a strong recovery in emerging-markets equities in 2020 diminishes their upside potential going forward.

How to Use Them Predicting the market's direction, especially over the short term, is tricky, and some investors might be inclined to dismiss asset-return forecasts altogether. But return expectations can be useful--and are arguably even mission-critical--when setting up your financial plan. After all, you need to plug in some type of long-term return assumption when deciding whether your savings rate and time horizon are appropriate given what you'd like to achieve. And if you're retired, being realistic about return expectations is also essential when determining an sustainable withdrawal rate. Low return expectations for U.S. stocks and bonds are a key reason that retirement researchers like Wade Pfau believe that new retirees should be conservative with their withdrawal percentages.

Before you embed these or any other return forecasts to into your plan, however, it's important to bear in mind that these return estimates are more intermediate-term than they are long. The firms I've included below all prepare capital markets forecasts for the next seven to 10 years, not the next 30. As such, these forecasts will have the most relevance for investors whose time horizons are in that ballpark, or for new retirees who face sequence-of-return risk in the next decade. Investors with very long time horizons (20-30 years or longer) can reasonably employ long-term historical returns, but they may want to haircut them a little bit to incorporate what could be a tough next decade.

It's also important to note that the parameters for these return estimates vary a bit; some of the return expectations are inflation-adjusted, while most are not (nominal). In addition, some of the experts forecast returns for the next decade, while others employ slightly shorter time horizons. The firms also vary in their approaches to formulating the forecasts, though most rely on some combination of valuations, current yields, and earnings growth and inflation expectations to arrive at return expectations. Finally, it’s worth noting that the market is always moving, so expect these forecasts to be pretty ephemeral, too.

Experts Forecast Stock and Bond Returns: 2021 Edition (1)

BlackRock Highlights: 5% 10-year expected nominal return from U.S. equities, 7% 10-year average expected return from European equities, 6.4% average expected return from emerging markets equities, 0.8% for U.S. aggregate bonds (September 2020). All return assumptions are nominal (non-inflation-adjusted).

Given that both U.S. stocks and bonds performed well in 2020, it’s not surprising that BlackRock has lowered its return-assumptions for these asset classes in the decade ahead. While the firm was forecasting returns of roughly 6% from U.S. large caps in September 2019, that forecast was down to 5% a year later. In keeping with lower yields, the firm’s 10-year outlook for U.S. aggregate bonds also declined by nearly a percentage point, to 0.8% on a nominal basis.

BlackRock continues to be more sanguine in its outlook for international stocks, assuming nominal 10-year returns of 6% for emerging-markets equities and 7% for European stocks over the next decade. BlackRock reserves its highest return expectations for private equity: It’s expecting an average nominal return of nearly 17%, albeit with a huge amount of variability/uncertainty, over the next decade. BlackRock’s capital markets assumptions are easy to use and the time frames are adjustable, allowing investors to adjust the time horizon to suit their own.

Grantham Mayo Van Otterloo (GMO) Highlights: Negative 5.8% real (inflation-adjusted) returns for U.S. large caps over the next seven years; negative 3.5% real returns for U.S. bonds; 0.4% real returns for emerging-markets equities; 0.2% real returns for emerging-markets debt (Oct. 15, 2020).

In keeping with the firm’s reputation as perennially pessimistic about plain-vanilla equities and bonds, GMO’s seven-year forecast for U.S. stocks and bonds isn’t pretty. It expects a real (inflation-adjusted) loss of roughly 6% from U.S. large caps over the next decade, and U.S. and hedged non-U.S. bonds to experience losses in the neighborhood of 4%. All of those return expectations are appreciably worse than what GMO was forecasting in late 2019 and in April 2020. Even emerging-markets equities, one of the few pillars of strength in GMO’s forecast in years past, are forecast to land only modestly in the black over the next seven years. That represents a sharp turnabout from late 2019, when GMO was expecting a 4.5% real annualized return from emerging-markets equities over the next seven years. The firm’s sole pocket of enthusiasm remains the value slice of emerging-markets equities: Its real return expectation of 9% remains roughly where it was a year ago.

JPMorgan Highlights: 4.1% nominal returns for U.S. equities over a 10-15 year horizon; 2.5% nominal returns for U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds over a 10-15 year holding period (December 2020).

JPMorgan’s Long-Term Capital Markets Assumptions report provides a good deal of data, as well as thorough background on the firm’s economic and market forecasts, which are based on qualitative and quantitative inputs. As with all of the other firms, JPMorgan has reined in its return expectations for U.S. stocks owing to higher valuations: The firm’s expected returns over the next 10-15 years dropped to just 4% from nearly 6% a year ago. Return assumptions for developed-markets equities are a touch higher, though: about 5% for European and Japanese equities and 6% for U.K. equities. The firm's return expectations for emerging markets equities have dropped a bit from the 2020 forecast but are still at a robust 7.2% in U.S. dollar terms.

On the fixed-income side, the firm is employing low return assumptions of just 2.5% for U.S. investment-grade corporates, thanks to low starting yields, and even lower returns for U.S. government bonds. JPMorgan is more optimistic in its outlook for high-yield bonds, however: While return expectations for the next 10-15 years have decreased by 40 basis points, they’re still at 4.8%. The firm is also enthusiastic about the prospects for emerging-markets hard-currency debt, forecasting a return of 5.2%.

Morningstar Investment Management (forthcoming in Morningstar Markets Observer) Highlights: Negative 0.1% 10-year nominal returns for U.S. stocks; 1% 10-year nominal returns for U.S. aggregate bonds (Dec. 31, 2020).

The Morningstar Investment Management team’s forecast for U.S. equities leans toward the pessimistic side of our collected forecasts: While it isn’t expecting sizable losses like GMO, it’s still expecting a slightly negative return from U.S. stocks on a nominal basis in the decade ahead. MIM’s outlook for non-U.S. stocks is sunnier: a 4.8% return (nominally) for developed-markets equities and 4.5% for emerging-markets equities.

MIM expects U.S. aggregate bonds to land in the black--albeit just slightly--on a nominal basis over the next decade. Owing to tightening yield spreads, the firm’s outlook for high-yield bonds has declined sharply over the past three months. Whereas it was forecasting a nearly 4% return from high yield in September 2020, its 10-year expected return as of December-end was just half that.

Research Affiliates Highlights: 2% nominal (negative 0.2% real) returns for U.S. large caps during the next 10 years; 1.1% nominal (negative 1.1% real) returns for the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Dec. 31, 2020; valuation-dependent model).

Research Affiliates' expected returns model is customizable and fun to use. Whereas most firms show expected returns for five or six asset classes, the Research Affiliates model gets more granular, allowing users to home in on smaller segments of the stock and bond markets. Better yet, it’s updated monthly, incorporating more recent market action.

Not surprisingly, the firm’s return expectations for U.S. stocks and bonds have declined from a year earlier, so much so that it expects that both will land in negative territory in real terms over the next decade. The firm is more optimistic in its expectations for non-U.S. stocks and bonds, however. Its valuation-dependent model is forecasting a whopping 7.9% nominal (5.7% real) return from emerging-markets equities over the next 10 years and 6.3% nominal (4.1% real) for the MSCI EAFE index of developed-markets stocks.

Vanguard Highlights: Nominal U.S. equity-market returns in the 3.7%-5.7% range during the next decade; 7%-9% returns for non-U.S. equities; 0.75%-1.75% expected returns for U.S. fixed income (December 2020).

Whereas most of the firms ratcheted their equity return expectations downward from where they were at the outset of 2020, Vanguard maintained the same general return targets in its forecast for 2021 and beyond that it did last year. The headline is that the firm is expecting better performance from non-U.S. equities than U.S. equities over the next decade, mainly owing to foreign stocks’ lower valuations and higher dividend yields. Vanguard is also expecting value stocks to outperform growth.

Experts Forecast Stock and Bond Returns: 2021 Edition (2024)

FAQs

Will bonds do well in 2024? ›

As inflation finally seems to be coming under control, and growth is slowing as the global economy feels the full impact of higher interest rates, 2024 could be a compelling year for bonds.

What is the expected market return for the next 10 years? ›

It's all about valuation

It analyzes historical data to try and predict what returns will be over the next 10 years. According to this model, U.S. equities are set to produce annualized returns of just 4.7% in the next decade. That's a huge slowdown from the past decade.

What is the forecast for stock and bond returns? ›

Highlights: 5.2% 10-year expected nominal return for U.S. large-cap equities; 9.9% for European equities; 9.1% for emerging-markets equities; 5.0% for U.S. aggregate bonds (as of September 2023). All return assumptions are nominal (non-inflation-adjusted).

What is the average stock and bond return? ›

The 95-year average rate of return on stocks, as measured by the S&P 500, with reinvested dividends is 9.80%. During that same period, Baa corporate bonds returned an average of 6.68% and 10-year US Treasury bonds delivered an average 4.57% return.

What is the stock market outlook for 2024? ›

As a whole, analysts are optimistic about the outlook for stock prices in 2024. The consensus analyst price target for the S&P 500 is 5,090, suggesting roughly 8.5% upside from current levels.

What is the 10 year yield forecast for 2024? ›

We are revising up our end-2024 and end-2025 forecasts for the 10-year Treasury yield by 25bp, to 4%. This reflects recent changes to our projections for the federal funds rate.

What is the 10 year outlook for the stock market? ›

Our 10-Year Stock Market Outlook

Our stock market forecasting model, which incorporates dividend yield along with other measures, currently points to a 10-year annualized return range of approximately 4.0% to 5.3% for the S&P 500® Index.

What is the stock market projection for 2025? ›

That suggests the S&P 500 could trade to 6,000 by August 2025, and to as high as 6,150 by November 2025. But in the short-term, amid the ongoing weakness in stocks, Suttmeier said investors should keep an eye on potential support levels for the S&P 500 at 5,000 as well as a range from 4,600 to 4,800.

What is the outlook for the US Treasury in 2024? ›

We expect the 10-year US Treasury yield to fall from its 23 November level of 4.41% towards 4% in June 2024. This is because the US economy could experience a mild recession in early 2024, possibly leading to rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve (Fed) that would likely cause a steepening of the US yield curve.

What is the 10 year bond rate forecast? ›

The US 10 Year Treasury Bond Note Yield is expected to trade at 4.30 percent by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 4.17 in 12 months time.

When should I switch from stocks to bonds? ›

During a bear market environment, bonds are typically viewed as safe investments. That's because when stock prices fall, bond prices tend to rise. When a bear market goes hand in hand with a recession, it's typical to see bond prices increasing and yields falling just before the recession reaches its deepest point.

Will bonds ever be a good investment again? ›

There are indications that interest rates may start to fall in the near future, with widespread anticipation for multiple interest rate cuts in 2024. Falling rates offer the potential for capital appreciation and increased diversification benefits for bond investors.

Is a 7% return on investment good? ›

General ROI: A positive ROI is generally considered good, with a normal ROI of 5-7% often seen as a reasonable expectation. However, a strong general ROI is something greater than 10%. Return on Stocks: On average, a ROI of 7% after inflation is often considered good, based on the historical returns of the market.

What is the return on bonds right now? ›

The current composite I bond rate is 4.28%. This includes a 1.30% fixed rate and a 1.48% inflation rate.

What is the historical return on stocks and bonds? ›

You should also understand the historical returns of different stock and bond portfolio weightings. The historical returns for stocks is between 8% – 10% since 1926. The historical returns for bonds is between 4% – 6% since 1926.

What is the global bond outlook for 2024? ›

Total OECD government bond debt is projected to increase to USD 56 trillion in 2024, an increase of USD 30 trillion compared to 2008. At the end of 2023, global corporate bond debt reached USD 34 trillion and over 60 per cent of the increase since 2008 came from non-financial corporations.

What is the outlook for emerging market bonds in 2024? ›

Expecting another strong year in 2024

Following large front-loaded new issue supply, EM IG spreads are now at attractive levels versus U.S. credit, setting up EM debt for outperformance. Our 2024 macroeconomic base case features slowing inflation and growth cushioned by Fed rate cuts.

What is the future of the bond market? ›

Why it matters: We see the potential for better risk-adjusted returns for bonds than stocks. Vanguard's forecasts show there's a 50% chance that U.S. aggregate bonds will return about as much over the next five years as U.S. equities— 4.3% for bonds versus 4.5% for stocks—with one-third of the median volatility.

What is the credit market outlook for 2024? ›

In 2024 we remain positive on the credit market, anticipating strong total returns and continued demand from yield and duration buyers. Investors are looking to add high-quality duration and to move away from short-maturity investment solutions, made less attractive by major central banks' expected interest rate cuts.

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