ECONOMICS & FINANCE - BLOG
Nudging people to invest in the stock market could reduce wealth inequality.
Currently one of the greatest sources of inequality is the huge disparity between the returns from holding stocks and holding cash. Interest rates are extremely low so that they hardly compensate for inflation, while stock markets are booming. Finance theory would argue that people should invest a significant fraction of their wealth in a diversified portfolio of stocks, as investing in the stock market will be compensated by a risk premium. The size of this risk premium is a question of debate but, if the past is a good predictor of the future, one could expect to earn a 5 percent risk premium above the risk-free rate, which at a risk-free rate of 2 percent translates into 7 percent per year. At 7 percent, an investor is expected to double her wealth every 10 years. The fact remains, however, that a large number of individuals don’t invest in stocks, they save their money instead. The poor, however, are net borrowers; poverty is alleviated by lower interest rates. In order to reduce poverty, one should not increase interest rates but improve the asset allocation of those who can save by encouraging investment in equities. But this idea is typically met by two concerns. It’s not about how much you know When I ask people why they don’t invest more in stocks the typical answer is that “I know nothing about the stock market”. The implication is that you must be smart to invest in stocks and that wealthy people can hire advisors so that they make better investment decisions. So, the rich will always earn higher returns than the poor. This view is supported by Thomas Piketty in his famous book “Capital in the Twenty First Century”. On page 447, he gives the example of university endowments. He ranks endowments by their size and concludes “the greater the endowment, the larger the return”. He explains this by the fact that the wealthier endowments can afford to pay the salaries of top portfolio managers but the smaller ones cannot. Hence his conclusion that the stock market is not a level playing field. However, Barber and Wang (2013) examined the performance of university endowments during a 21-year period ending in 2011. They conclude that the superior performance of some endowments is purely a result of differences in risk taking, not the result of the quality of the portfolio manager. This result is consistent with the asset management literature which shows that most actively managed funds don’t beat their risk-adjusted benchmark. So, an investor who invests in a diversified portfolio through an index Exchange Traded Funds (which means low fees) can earn the same risk-adjusted return as the wealthy who have allocated their funds to actively managed portfolios. The poor performance of most portfolio managers explains the growing importance of ETFs, seen in Figure 1. Figure 1 image: https://knowledge.insead.edu/sites/www.insead.edu/files/images/2017/11/valuewalkfortheo.jpg
Theo Vermaelen is a Professor of Finance at INSEAD and the UBS Chair in Investment Banking, endowed in honour of Henry Grunfeld. He is programme director of Advanced International Corporate Finance, an INSEAD Executive Education programme.