cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Discuss all general (i.e. non-personal) investing questions and issues, investing news, and theory.
Post Reply
User avatar
Topic Author
LH
Posts: 5490
Joined: Wed Mar 14, 2007 2:54 am

cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by LH »

Image

http://www.businessinsider.com/this-is- ... ion-2012-9

I thought this chart interesting as we re-approach the nominal 1500s record.
User avatar
neurosphere
Posts: 5205
Joined: Sun Jan 17, 2010 12:55 pm

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by neurosphere »

I always like to see charts like this which are inflation adjusted. I assume this is simply the index price, right? That is, it does not show the effect of reinvested dividends? Does anyone have a link to a chart of the SP500 WITH dividends and inflation adjusted?
If you have to ask "Is a Target Date fund right for me?", the answer is "Yes" (even in taxable accounts).
User avatar
lauren_knows
Posts: 193
Joined: Mon Jan 28, 2013 2:11 pm
Location: NoVA, USA
Contact:

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by lauren_knows »

neurosphere wrote:I always like to see charts like this which are inflation adjusted. I assume this is simply the index price, right? That is, it does not show the effect of reinvested dividends? Does anyone have a link to a chart of the SP500 WITH dividends and inflation adjusted?
I'm still a fairly novice investor, but I never understood why charts would even exist without taking into account dividends. I mean, that is a major part of the return of some stocks/funds.
41 - Married - 2 kids - Aiming for FI/ER in early 40s - Creator of cFIREsim
User avatar
Oicuryy
Posts: 1959
Joined: Thu Feb 22, 2007 9:29 pm

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Oicuryy »

FRED's graphing tool is fun to play with. Their Wilshire 5000 data is total return.

Image
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=f5h

But I think growth graphs should be drawn with a log scale.

Image

Ron
Money is fungible | Abbreviations and Acronyms
User avatar
neurosphere
Posts: 5205
Joined: Sun Jan 17, 2010 12:55 pm

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by neurosphere »

That's a good idea, to use the Wilshire 5000 as a proxy for SP500 returns with dividends.

And the summary is that the value of the SP500, corrected for inflation, is only nearing its all time high if you take into account dividend reinvestment.
If you have to ask "Is a Target Date fund right for me?", the answer is "Yes" (even in taxable accounts).
Browser
Posts: 4857
Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2012 4:54 pm

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Browser »

Hold the bubbly. I calculated that, in inflation-adjusted terms with dividends reinvested, the S&P 500 would need to be at 1611 today to match the March, 2000 peak, and at 1592 today To match the October, 2007 peak.
We don't know where we are, or where we're going -- but we're making good time.
staythecourse
Posts: 6993
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2011 8:40 am

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by staythecourse »

boknows wrote:
neurosphere wrote:I always like to see charts like this which are inflation adjusted. I assume this is simply the index price, right? That is, it does not show the effect of reinvested dividends? Does anyone have a link to a chart of the SP500 WITH dividends and inflation adjusted?
I'm still a fairly novice investor, but I never understood why charts would even exist without taking into account dividends. I mean, that is a major part of the return of some stocks/funds.
Good question, but a bigger question I have is why do investors even look at the SP500 or wilshire 5000?? Is there anyone who has all their money benchmarked to that index??

It would seem looking at any of these types of arbritrary benchmarks only has negatives, which is INCREASING frame of reference risk.

The fact I follow MPT and diversify AUTOMATICALLY means a random benchmark like these are totally useless.

Good luck.
"The stock market [fluctuation], therefore, is noise. A giant distraction from the business of investing.” | -Jack Bogle
User avatar
baw703916
Posts: 6681
Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2007 1:10 pm
Location: Seattle

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by baw703916 »

neurosphere wrote:I always like to see charts like this which are inflation adjusted. I assume this is simply the index price, right? That is, it does not show the effect of reinvested dividends? Does anyone have a link to a chart of the SP500 WITH dividends and inflation adjusted?
I can only assume that the person who made the chart to take into account inflation but not dividends did so deliberately to make a political point (maybe to buy gold?)

What's interesting is that in broad terms the dividend payout tends to be fairly similar to the inflation rate. The chart of the inflation-adjusted total return is not too dissimilar to just the index value. So just a chart of the index ignoring both inflation and dividends tends to not be too far off the mark, in spite of the obvious methodological flaws.

The coincidence of inflation rate and dividend yield also held in the 1970s: both of them were much higher than they currently are.
Most of my posts assume no behavioral errors.
Valuethinker
Posts: 49038
Joined: Fri May 11, 2007 11:07 am

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Valuethinker »

baw703916 wrote:
neurosphere wrote:I always like to see charts like this which are inflation adjusted. I assume this is simply the index price, right? That is, it does not show the effect of reinvested dividends? Does anyone have a link to a chart of the SP500 WITH dividends and inflation adjusted?
I can only assume that the person who made the chart to take into account inflation but not dividends did so deliberately to make a political point (maybe to buy gold?)

What's interesting is that in broad terms the dividend payout tends to be fairly similar to the inflation rate. The chart of the inflation-adjusted total return is not too dissimilar to just the index value. So just a chart of the index ignoring both inflation and dividends tends to not be too far off the mark, in spite of the obvious methodological flaws.

The coincidence of inflation rate and dividend yield also held in the 1970s: both of them were much higher than they currently are.
I do not have the time, but there might be an academic paper in this!

If you have a friend who is a finance professor, get him to look into this.

The underlying dependencies are:

- dividends are paid out of corporate earnings, which themselves are sorta kinda dependent on inflation (ish). We'd need to look at payout issues ( dividend per share/ earnings per share)

- there may be something about investor expectations, that as long as current income covers them against inflation, they are prepared to hold on to this long term investment that has truly volatile prices

I have nowhere near enough knowledge or skill to investigate this further, but 'coincidence' can turn out not to be.
User avatar
baw703916
Posts: 6681
Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2007 1:10 pm
Location: Seattle

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by baw703916 »

Hi valuethinker,

Actually, I was using "coincidence" in the sense of the two coinciding, i.e. taking on similar values. I agree there might be some deeper reason why this isn't accidental.

I don't really know what that reason might be.

Brad
Most of my posts assume no behavioral errors.
leo383
Posts: 569
Joined: Thu Nov 29, 2007 8:36 pm
Location: Durham, NC

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by leo383 »

Valuethinker wrote: - there may be something about investor expectations, that as long as current income covers them against inflation, they are prepared to hold on to this long term investment that has truly volatile prices
I have thought this many times over the last 10+ years; hanging in there with my stock allocation where it is because I'm at least not being eaten up by inflation.
User avatar
Karl
Posts: 1074
Joined: Sun May 13, 2007 5:52 pm
Location: Milwaukee, WI

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Karl »

LH wrote:Image

http://www.businessinsider.com/this-is- ... ion-2012-9

I thought this chart interesting as we re-approach the nominal 1500s record.
So your purchasing power has doubled over 20 years, a full generation.

While it doesn't include dividends, it also doesn't include a couple other factors that would serve to lower returns: fund expenses & taxes. For the typical fund investor expenses would be a major issue as would taxes given how many funds churn their portfolio for maximum tax inefficiency. Obviously, Vanguard funds aren't typical in either regard.
Rodc
Posts: 13601
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 9:46 am

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Rodc »

One thing I like about the growth with dividends and inflation is I can look at any point and say "Money I invested here has grown", and sometimes "Money I put in here is down". I can see long stretches where money has grown very well and only a few times where money is down, but only down a little.

Of course if we get another crash this year the picture will change, but for now over the last 23 years I have been investing it is a positive picture.
We live a world with knowledge of the future markets has less than one significant figure. And people will still and always demand answers to three significant digits.
Browser
Posts: 4857
Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2012 4:54 pm

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Browser »

Rodc wrote:One thing I like about the growth with dividends and inflation is I can look at any point and say "Money I invested here has grown", and sometimes "Money I put in here is down". I can see long stretches where money has grown very well and only a few times where money is down, but only down a little.

Of course if we get another crash this year the picture will change, but for now over the last 23 years I have been investing it is a positive picture.
Yeh, but not everybody is investing more. There are a few of us trying to live off our portfolios, and it doesn't help when the real value of equities has gone nowhere in 14 years.
We don't know where we are, or where we're going -- but we're making good time.
Rodc
Posts: 13601
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 9:46 am

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Rodc »

Browser wrote:
Rodc wrote:One thing I like about the growth with dividends and inflation is I can look at any point and say "Money I invested here has grown", and sometimes "Money I put in here is down". I can see long stretches where money has grown very well and only a few times where money is down, but only down a little.

Of course if we get another crash this year the picture will change, but for now over the last 23 years I have been investing it is a positive picture.
Yeh, but not everybody is investing more. There are a few of us trying to live off our portfolios, and it doesn't help when the real value of equities has gone nowhere in 14 years.
Yes, I imagine that is true and that current low yields are another blow.
We live a world with knowledge of the future markets has less than one significant figure. And people will still and always demand answers to three significant digits.
User avatar
Topic Author
LH
Posts: 5490
Joined: Wed Mar 14, 2007 2:54 am

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by LH »

neurosphere wrote:That's a good idea, to use the Wilshire 5000 as a proxy for SP500 returns with dividends.

And the summary is that the value of the SP500, corrected for inflation, is only nearing its all time high if you take into account dividend reinvestment.
Well, there is a subtle conflation here amongst posters.

1) The worth of the SP500 on a given day, compared to another given day --- should be inflation adjusted, but not include dividends ( "value of the sp500")

2) The worth of an investor who invested in the sp500 on a given day in the past, up to the current day, should be inflation adjusted, and included dividends. ("value of the sp500" to an investor over given period of time)


The dividends paid out, in the past, by the SP500 is a "sunk cost" in terms of what the sp500 is worth at any given momement in time, they are gone already, past dividends has no bearing on current SP500 level.

So to see if the market is worth, what it was worth at some point in the past, you use an inflation adjusted sp500 chart, that ignores dividends. If you want to see what an investor did in the market, use a total growth chart.

So I would say if you are talking about the current value of the sp500, ie, the amount you would pay to purchase a unit share of it going forward, the past dividends are irrelevant, and even if you say they are relevant to you in your future guess, they are certainly not additive per se.... what would be the start date?

Take PG stock, one does not add up the dividends paid out since inception of PG, add it to current stock price, and say PG is worth that now. One just takes the current price of PG in the market, thats what it is worth. PG comparison to past PG in presence of nonzero inflation needs inflation adjustment, but no addition of dividends.

A proctor gamble investors gain from pg, one would take dividends into account, using start date of investor time, and using weights of stock held at given time, in additive fashion. This would yield a nominal gain, as I think, inflation is ignored in these total return charts.

So to really see ones gain from investing in a point in time in sp500, one would have to use a total return chart, and then adjust it for inflation I think.


Another example from another poster:
"So your purchasing power has doubled over 20 years, a full generation."
I know what he means, and he knows what he means but no, your purchasing power has not doubled, this is a conflation, what has doubled is the cost of buying or worth of selling the market. The chart measures the cost of the market, not "your purchasing power", which, as the poster goes on to state, encompasses fees and dividends. Also, points of entry.

You basically would need to do an Internal rate of return, all input amounts and dates of input, and the ending amount of the account to get what an investors purchasing power actually did. Which encompasses all the fees and such in the IRR black box. Then I think about inflation adjusting.... makes my head hurt. As the input dollars, are worth more than the ending dollars.... one would have to inflation adjust each input, in terms of current dollars, then do an IRR I think.
Rodc
Posts: 13601
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 9:46 am

Re: cpi inflation adjusted sp500 chart

Post by Rodc »

Take PG stock, one does not add up the dividends paid out since inception of PG, add it to current stock price, and say PG is worth that now.
I don't buy individual stocks, but if I did I imagine in deciding a fair price I would need to estimate both expected growth in stock price over time and future dividends over time. That is I would want to estimate total return. So I would not do what you suggest I should not do (ie I agree with the quote), but I sure would not ignore dividend history in the process of deciding on an acceptable price of a stock.
We live a world with knowledge of the future markets has less than one significant figure. And people will still and always demand answers to three significant digits.
Post Reply