Risk and Return: Summary Statistics
Illustrations for most of our discussions in the remaining part of this chapter derive
from a database of country market-index returns. We use 10 years of monthly returns
over 2002–2011 for 48 non-U.S. country market indexes as well as the U.S. S&P 500.
This decade stretches from the beginning of the recovery from the bursting of the tech
bubble in 2001, through the low–interest rate boom period that followed and the ensu-
ing financial crisis of 2008, and, finally, to the beginning of the slow recovery from
that crisis.
Analysis of risky assets typically focuses on excess returns over the risk-free rate. This
alone adds a perplexing aspect to international investing, since the appropriate risk-free
rate varies around the globe. Rates of return on identical indexes (as well as individual
assets) will generate different excess returns when safe bonds are denominated in different
currencies. Although our perspective is U.S.-based, our methodology would serve inves-
tors in any country, yet the numbers may differ when applied to risk-free rates denomi-
nated in other currencies.
The tumultuous period we analyze resulted in unexpected low average excess returns,
primarily in developed markets, while most emerging markets continued unabated growth.
This fact alone conveys an important lesson. It provides an extreme example of the general
observation that realized returns are very noisy reflections of investor expectations and
may not provide accurate forecasts of future returns. Past returns do, however, provide an
indication of risk, at least for the near future. While the near-efficient market hypothesis
applies to expected returns (to wit: future returns cannot be forecast from past returns),
it does not apply to forecasting risk. Thus our exercise will allow us to demonstrate the
distinction between what you can and cannot learn from historical returns that evidently
departed from prior expectations.
While active-strategy managers engage in both individual-market asset allocation and
security selection, we will restrict our international diversification to country market-index
portfolios, keeping us on the side of an enhanced passive strategy. Nevertheless, our analy-
sis illustrates the essential features of extended active management as well.
We begin with an investigation of the characteristics of individual markets and then
proceed to analyze the benefits of diversification, using portfolios constructed from
these individual markets. The market capitalization of individual-country indexes can be
found in Tables 25.1 and 25.2 , and the aggregated results for the portfolios are shown in
Table 25.9A . This table also displays the performance of two types of portfolios: portfo-
lios aggregated from country indexes and regional-index portfolios. The performances of
individual-country-index portfolios are shown in Table 25.9B .
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For the aggregated country-index portfolios, we examine a strategy that constructs
value-weighted portfolios of developed and emerging markets based on market capital-
izations at the beginning of 2002. These portfolios are rebalanced after 5 years, in 2007,
based on capitalizations at the end of 2006, and held for another 5 years. (Dividends
are reinvested throughout the 10-year experiment.) Such a strategy is feasible to a large
degree, since many (although, admittedly, not all) country-index portfolios are investable
as index funds or ETFs. Because not all country indexes are investable, this hypothetical
strategy perhaps generates a bit more efficient diversification than is actually possible.
On the other hand, if actually held, these value-weighted portfolios would automatically
be rebalanced to value weights continually. In contrast, we rebalance only once after five
years, which slightly attenuates diversification benefits. On balance, then, we expect these
hypothesized portfolios to perform about as well as a feasible country-based, passive
international strategy.
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