While US stocks have done well, so far, in 2021, the market is caught between two forces, a stronger than expected economy as a positive and worries about inflation as a negative. After a decade of benign inflation, are we ill-prepared for the latter? bit.ly/2RLARxQ
Expectations that inflation will rise are becoming more broad based, as can be seen in both a bond market based measure (T.Bond - TIPs) and consumer surveys. bit.ly/2RLARxQ
Inflation is currency specific, & differences explain why interest rates vary across currencies and exchange rates. Here are expected inflation rates for 2021-26, by country, from the IMF. Given the noise in measuring inflation, take with a grain of salt! bit.ly/2RLARxQ
Higher-than-expected inflation inflicts direct damage on bonds, as rates rise. Their effect of stocks is more complex, with discount rates and cash flows rising, but the net effect, at least in the aggregate, is more likely to be negative than positive. bit.ly/2RLARxQ
The effects of higher-than-expected inflation on nominal & real returns on stocks and bonds can be seen in historical returns over time. Take a look at annual returns in the 1970s (highest inflation) and 2010-19 (lowest inflation): bit.ly/2RLARxQ
Gold and real estate are posited to be inflation-protected, and the evidence is stronger for gold than for real estate, when you look at historical returns. As for cryptos, bitcoin is not behaving like millennial gold yet, but the jury is still out. bit.ly/2RLARxQ
For those who are nostalgic for an era when low PE and PBV stocks delivered superior returns, the silver lining in a high-inflation scenario may be a tilt back, albeit a small one, to old-time value stocks. bit.ly/2RLARxQ
Inflation is here & no one knows whether it is transitory or permanent. If permanent, we could be reverting to more normal inflation, but there is a non-trivial chance that it could be higher. The Fed's happy talk may get in the way of a robust response. bit.ly/2RLARxQ

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More from @AswathDamodaran

11 May
The second leg of the Biden tax plans targets the "rich", with a rollback in the 2017 rate cuts in the highest tax brackets and a doubling of tax rates on capital gains for the 0.3 percenters (making more than $ 1 million in investment income). bit.ly/3blbxp3
If historical stock returns in the US are adjusted for dividend and capital gain taxes, the tax impact wipes out almost 95% of the cumulative payoff. Paying a lower tax rate on dividends & trading less often reduces but does not eliminate the pain. bit.ly/3blbxp3
Prior to the tax rate change, investors are pricing stocks to earn an annual return of 5.73%, pre-taxes, and an after-tax return of 5.01%, with the current tax code. bit.ly/3blbxp3
Read 6 tweets
23 Apr
The equity risk premium (ERP) is the price of risk in equity markets, the receptacle for all our fears. Each year, since 2008, I have updated a paper that includes everything I know about ERP. (Warning: It is 130 pages long...) Here is the 2021 version: bit.ly/2QQd3bB Image
As the ERP rises and falls, it drives what investors are willing to pay for stocks, and what companies demand as hurdle rates. Views on whether it is too high or too low determine whether stocks are collectively under or over valued. bit.ly/2QQd3bB Image
In practice, most analysts and companies estimate equity risk premiums by looking at the past (historical data), but that is not only backward looking, but it yields static and noisy estimates of the ERP, even for a market like the US, with a long history. bit.ly/2QQd3bB Image
Read 6 tweets
21 Apr
As another corporate tax code rewrite looms, both sides of the debate will present opinions as facts. I look at how much US companies pay in taxes, relative to non-US companies. At 25-27%, US statutory tax rates are in the middle of the pack: bit.ly/3v2W9oT
But US companies pay less in effective tax rates than companies elsewhere in the world, largely because of the bloat in the US tax code. bit.ly/3v2W9oT
But the 2017 tax reform act rates is not to blame, for lower taxes. While effective tax rates dropped in its aftermath, taxable income increased, as did cash taxes paid. bit.ly/3v2W9oT
Read 5 tweets
9 Mar
It is hard to believe, but a year ago, we were in the middle of a market meltdown, with no end in sight. My first post on the COVID crisis was on February 26, 2020 and my fourteenth post on the crisis was November 5, 2020. I gather these posts in a paper: bit.ly/3l442qq
If you are looking for an objective, theoretical perspective, this paper will disappoint you. It is data-driven, agnostic about theory, and personal, as I draw on my real-time posts to chronicle my ups and downs during 2020: bit.ly/3l442qq
As markets made their way back in 2020, I use company-level data to chronicle the winners and losers from the crisis, by looking at market cap and operating shifts during the year, and find that the flexible & the young won out over the rigid & the old. bit.ly/3l442qq
Read 6 tweets

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