Isn’t one possible solution to the equity puzzle just that US stocks have outperformed expectations recently? Returns on an index of European stocks are basically flat over the last 20 years.
Over 20 years that’s possible (and I think it’s in fact true), but the paper I cite in the post gives some data which makes it unlikely that the whole past record is outperformance. It’s hard to square 150 years of over 6% mean annual equity premium with 20% annual standard deviation with the idea that the true stock return is actually the same as the return on T-bills. The “true” premium might be lower than 6% but not by too much, and we’re still left with more or less the same puzzle even if we assume that.
Isn’t one possible solution to the equity puzzle just that US stocks have outperformed expectations recently? Returns on an index of European stocks are basically flat over the last 20 years.
Over 20 years that’s possible (and I think it’s in fact true), but the paper I cite in the post gives some data which makes it unlikely that the whole past record is outperformance. It’s hard to square 150 years of over 6% mean annual equity premium with 20% annual standard deviation with the idea that the true stock return is actually the same as the return on T-bills. The “true” premium might be lower than 6% but not by too much, and we’re still left with more or less the same puzzle even if we assume that.