Wednesday , 24 April 2024

Retiring Baby Boomers To Exert Enormous Pressure On Future Interest Rates, Bond Prices & Equity Market Valuations – Here’s Why (+3K Views)

Baby Boomers have been a huge tailwind for equities and bonds fromInterest-Rates the 1980s until today, but now as they exit the workforce and increasingly move into retirement, this monumental demographic shift will exert enormous pressure on interest rates, bond prices, and equity market valuations. It’s going to be a huge wakeup call.

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This is the thesis of Will Denyer at Gavekal Research who we spoke with on our FS Insider podcast last week (see Major Demographic Shift Underway Spells Trouble for Bond Market). Here’s what he had to say:

From 1946 to 1980, we saw a booming population that resulted in increased demand for houses, schools, cars, and a wide range of consumer goods and services. This created a tendency for upward pressure in prices and interest rates.

Boomers entered the workforce en masse and, starting around 35 years of age, Boomers entered their peak production, peak earnings, and peak savings period, which lead to an abundance of production and capital, placing downward pressure on consumer prices and interest rates.

Savings not only bid up the price of bonds while driving down yields but also bid up the valuation of equities. What developed was a long-term bull market in bonds and equities…but we shouldn’t count on that lasting forever.

10 year treasury yield

Turning Point Imminent

Based on global demographic data weighted as judiciously as possible…we are experiencing a turning point right about now. The peak may have arguably already occurred in 2014 or 2015. There’s a significant margin of error and other factors that affect this outcome, but this demographic shift is likely occurring soon. As a result, the secular bull trends we’ve grown accustomed to may not carry forward.

The amount of savings being provided to the system by middle age providers is going to wane relative to demand (The difference now is that demand is skewed to the elderly population and that has interesting implications for inflation.).

Services, Not Goods, Inflation

We’ll continue to see more services inflation and fewer goods inflation, as a result, because the elderly tend to consume more services and fewer goods. Inflation going forward may not accelerate like it did in the 1960s and 1970s but when it comes to investors deciding what to do in terms of interest rates the decline in savings suggests that real rates should rise.

If inflation picks up, it would just exaggerate the trend of rising nominal rates. If it softens, it might counter that trend, and interest rates may not actually rise much in nominal terms…

Equity Multiples Coming Down

The current high equity multiples are partially explained by the 1980s demographic tailwind, but that is reversing. While timing is difficult, structurally, it is expected that over the next several decades we will see equity multiples fall…

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