10 Reasons to Stay Invested in Equities

1. Equity markets generally rise over time.

It can be unnerving to ride the roller coaster of market volatility, and there are still formidable risks ahead. But the facts speak for themselves: equities have historically paid off for patient investors in the form of long-term price appreciation. In fact, trying to get in and out of the market can be costlier than sticking it out through challenging times, which we address in point #10 . While the S&P 500—the standard bearer of US large-cap equity performance—has experienced periodic bouts of volatility throughout history, the long-term upward trend is clear (Display).

2. For long-term investors, equities are still the best way to grow capital.

Fixed-income allocations are a foundational component of a diversified investment strategy and can provide ballast when equity markets take a turn for the worse. Over an extended period, however, stocks still provide more attractive long-term growth potential. In fact, looking at rolling 10-year periods from 1990 to present, large-cap stocks outperformed US investment-grade bonds roughly 80% of the time, while large-cap global stocks outperformed global investment-grade bonds more than three-quarters of the time (Display).

3. Interest rates are still relatively low, while stocks appear reasonably priced.

Although interest rates have risen sharply over the past two years, they’re quite low from a historical perspective (Display). And while higher rates could put the brakes on economic growth, we believe there’s little risk that rates will climb to the highs seen in the early 1980s. Currently, fed funds futures imply that the fed funds rate will top out slightly above 5% by mid-2023. Even in the context of higher rates, however, the earnings yield of stocks exceeds both its own long-term average and the 10-year Treasury yield (Display). Translation: we believe stocks still look reasonably priced relative to bonds.