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Stocks for the Long Run by Jeremy J. Siegel
41 of 49 people found the following review
helpful:
Outdated. Do not buy the author's
hypothesis uncritically, March 24,
2002
This is an outdated, but still useful introductory
investment book. I would like to warn that the book
definitely does not pay enough attention to the
valuation and bad case scenarios: the real truth is
that in case of worst case scenarios investors
retire before they can enjoy any sizable return from
their stock holdings "in the long run".
Siegel's ability to objectively analyze data is
extremely limited and the whole book smells with data
mining.
The book also most definitely underemphasizes the
pain stock investors suffer after a crash. Moreover
typical for the book "exponential" charts like the
one on the cover conceal the brutal reality of
periods like Japan's multi-year recession.
Beating the good bond portfolio "in a long run" is
far from easy outside of periods of "irrational
exuberance". In the case the investor faces a
decline (or fairly flat decade) for stocks in the
second half on their twenty years 401K investment
cycle it requires a proper mix of cash, bonds and
stocks as well as some successful trades. In no way a
pure 100% stock portfolio and cost averaging can
secure retirements funds for baby boomers. In this
sense the book is extremely dangerous: it sells
unscientific, snake oil salesman style advice to baby-boomers under the
disguise of academic respectability.
Let's assume that the person was born in 1950,
started to invest 10K a year at the age of 40 into
401K account and will be employed till the
retirement age. With a simple 100% bond portfolio
and 6% average return at the age 65 he/she will have
~$550K. With 100% investment into S&P 500 and
assuming after year 2002 an average return of 5%
with 10% declines in 2008 and 2013 this investor
will get ~$450K: a noticeable difference.
The author also ignores a typical investors behavior
during the bubbles: IMHO worst-case scenario are
amplified by the fact many individual investors were
lured into stock market exactly before the downturn
(bear market of March 2001 - March 2002). An
investor that switched all his money into S&P in
March 24 2001 (when the index was 1521) in March 22,
2002 needs ~30% upswing just to break even. And a
single year with 20-30% gain of S&P 500 may not
repeat until his retirement. Unfortunately this is
pretty realistic case for many individual investors.
The second important point missed by the author is
that while the stock market cannot be accurately
timed, buying stocks at high valuations is an
invitation to low future returns. Robert Shiller
(the author of Irrational Exuberance, 2000) argued
that twenty year returns following market peaks in
P/E ratios had inflation adjusted annual returns
-0.2%-+1.9%. Smithers and Wright (Valuing Wall
Street, 2000) came to pretty similar conclusions. In
such cases stocks fail to outperform inflation
protected bonds. And twenty years is what most
investors have to create 401K retirement fund. One
needs to understand that the US economy might be
paying the costs of "irrational exuberance" for some
years to come.
All-in-all the book was definitely influenced by the
US stock bubble and as a typical "raging bull" the
author definitely exaggerates potential returns of
an all-stock 401K portfolio and ignores subtle
problems. For example, it completely ignores an
important problem of "share inflation" that has come
in forms ranging from stock splits to extravagant
options awards for executives or excessive issuance
for acquisitions. It ignores Enron-style effects
when along with fake earning reports the U.S. market
has been flooded with shares sold by executives and
there were not enough buyers to absorb the flow.
Although book provides a useful framework for the
investor, do not buy the "Stocks for the Long Run"
hypothesis uncritically.
For those investors that are ~50 years old, it is
important to understand that the book does not take
into account far reaching economic consequences of
potential low annual returns on their stock market
investments in the last decade before their
retirement.
Other insightful reviews of Siegel pseudo-scientific theories
The Role of Luck in Siegel's
Success, April 24, 2005
An absolute disappointment. This is a classic
example of misreading the formula that made you
successful in the first place. Sequels are
usually bad, in this case Siegel's are bad. The
reviews and cover quote by Warren Buffett are
misleading, and I seriously doubt whether the
reviewers read the book. There is nothing new
here. Undervalued stocks (value stocks) have
been touted as being superior forms of
investment for a long time. Eugene Fama, and
others, have produced fantastic research in this
area. I found the book to be self aggrandising,
offering no original contribution and totally
out of character relative to the first book. The
data mining is significant, and to suggest that
tried and true is the way forward simply because
the past delivered such a pattern is foolhardy.
Give this book a miss.
54 of 144 people found the following review
helpful:
BAD INSIGHTS UNDERLYING A BAD BOOK,
March 15, 2005
Jeremy Segal has put forth what he must consider
to be the remarkable research that stocks that
pay dividends outperform those that do not. He
then ignores the effect of taxes, includes the
benefit of hindsight in cherry picking his
choices and then covers those errors with a
surplus of data mining.
He makes no
apology for his other bad book
Stocks for the Long Run, which too pretended
that stocks going up and down 40% or more four
times within four years is not something to
worry about because a Wharton professor who
forgets to include taxes in his analysis thinks
so.
The problem with Jeremy Siegal and his cohorts is
this: they are trying to stretch a discredited
theory about efficient capital markets well past
its stretching point. In that task,
they have
the support of the mutual fund industry, which
too would love people to close their eyes and
keep buying the same amount of stock at the same
time every month. In other words, the book is
the work of a panderer and lobbyist for the
mutual fund industry, and is no more interesting
than say reading about solving the problems of
terrorism from a lobbyist for Tazer or any other
equipment manufacturer.
Like all lobbyists he
too has independent affiliations.
What makes the book particularly bad on its face
is exactly that, its cover, which has citations
from Warren Buffet and Robert Shiller, who in
their main success have discredited the very
theory underlying Jeremy Segal's book. Nothing
smacks of contradictions more than an author in
the sunset of his career running for
endorsements from the very people who have
eviscerated the conclusions of that career.
This is a bad book with bad insights from a bad
professor of finance. If anyone disagrees, they
may do well to answer the simple question: if
the tried and true does trump over the bold and
the new, and if you love dividends, why buy
stocks at all sherlock. Buy REAL ESTATE (which
is the index fund with lessor volatity and which
by definition is where all profits ultimately
show up, especially if you want to avoid the
bold and the new). And if he loves stocks only,
don't REITS pay the highest dividend anyway, so
why spend part of the book about the coming
fiscal crisis and not the highest paying
dividends.
Finally, PLEASE DONT WRITE BOOKS WHERE THE
INVESTMENT ADVANTAGE IS 2%.
IT IS NOT WORTH THE
UPS AND DOWNS OF 1987, 1989, 1994, 1998, 2000,
2001, 2002.