The Government Expects Shares To Soar

Published in Investing on 8 May 2012

The official forecast is for a near-10%-a-year return from shares for the next five years.

One saying often attributed to Nobel Prize-winning Danish physicist Neil Bohr is: "Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future."

Although this quote has also been attributed to wise-cracking baseball coach Yogi Berra and several other satirists, it seems fitting from the mouth of one of the fathers of quantum mechanics.

The perils of prediction

Of course, the big problem with prediction is that the future is both uncertain and unknowable. As a result, many leading economists and investment pundits get crucified by their worst predictions.

For example, who remembers Dow 40,000 by David Elias, who expected the Dow Jones Industrial Average to leap to 40,000 by the year 2016? With the Dow currently standing at around 13,000, it would have to more than triple over the next four years for Elias to be hailed as a visionary.

Likewise, few investors are fooled by investment banks' FTSE 100 forecasts for the year ahead. From experience, it seems that most analysts simply take one year's final close for the Footsie, add 10% and then round up to the nearest 100 for the next year's outcome.

OBR = Our Bold Remark

Nevertheless, despite this well-established trend for forecasters to come a cropper, economists, stock-market commentators and investment analysts keep on guesstimating the future.

Indeed, following the May 2010 general election, the coalition government created the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), an independent forecasting unit tasked with making official predictions about the UK's public finances.

As it happens, I was trawling through the OBR's latest fiscal forecasts last Friday, looking for data on taxes and spending, when I came across an interesting table.

Forecasting the FTSE All-Share index

Tax yearFTSE All-ShareChangeChange (%)
2010/112885--
2011/122917321.1
2012/1331382217.6
2013/1432901524.8
2014/1534651755.3
2015/1636621975.7
2016/1738662045.6

It's important for the OBR to predict where the UK stock market will go, as share prices govern how much capital gains tax, inheritance tax and stamp duty investors pay each year. Thus, the OBR predicts that equity prices will rise from their present level 'in line with nominal GDP'.

In short, the OBR expects the FTSE All-Share index to rise in line with economic growth plus inflation added together. Hence, it forecasts strong growth in share prices in 2012-13 (7.6%), followed by rises of between 4.8% and 5.7% for a further four years.

Overall, the OBR expects the FTSE All-Share to rise by a third (33%) over the coming five years, which equates to compound growth of 5.8% a year. Add in a forecast dividend yield of, say, 3.8% a year, and you're looking at a forecast return of 9.6% a year for five years.

Funny forecasts

While this near-10% yearly return from shares sounds attractive, the OBR's predictions are pretty silly.

As we know, history shows that share prices do not go up steadily in nice, straight lines. Instead, they zigzag about, sometimes making huge spikes up and down. For example, the path of the stock market in the Noughties traced a giant 'W', as prices crashed, soared and crashed again, before bouncing back in the spring of 2009.

Therefore, I would take the OBR's forecasts concerning the stock market with a huge pinch of salt. They are massively more likely to be wrong than right, plus they look suspiciously optimistic to me, given the ongoing crisis in the eurozone. Indeed, I suspect that they are the product of political optimism, rather than any genuine belief in a sustained recovery in equity markets.

Finally, I would caution investors to be wary of all 'official' predictions, as state-run organisations have incredibly poor prediction records.

For example, in December 2003, the Bank of England changed its inflation target to be 2% or below, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index (CPI). Since then, the Bank has missed this target 67 out of 99 times, so its success rate is a mere 32%. In other words, the Bank has been wrong on inflation twice as often as it has been right.

Like Professor Bohr -- one of the greatest geniuses of the 20th Century -- said, prediction is very difficult. Thus, the OBR's optimism on share prices could well turn out to be more of a 'sell signal' than a 'cry to buy'!

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> Cliff's family portfolio includes FTSE All-Share trackers.

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Comments

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FunkyIndexFinger 08 May 2012 , 3:49pm

It does appear extremely optimistic when you consider that dividend income is on top of this growth (the way it was expressed in the article, it seems that is what is being suggested).

I wonder if they should have a word with the FSA regarding whether their projection figures would have to be reduced substantially to match the mid projection rates that the FSA require to be used in illustrations.

Most people would consider the FSA projection rates as unrealistically high.

iaincu 08 May 2012 , 6:16pm

This article is very misleading on the inflation target - 2% is the average target, not 2% or below. Since the B of E has to write to the Chancellor to explain a deviation of 1% in either direction it could be said the target is to keep inflation within 1% - 3%. 3% or below might be excusable shorthand, but 2% or below is just wrong.

Someone might also comment on the difference between a target and a prediction. The B of E has recently been predicting that inflation will stay above target for a period while it keeps interest rates low regardless to try to encourage growth - whether that and QE works or not is another topic.

apprenticeDRL 08 May 2012 , 8:27pm

The Government expects shares to soar?

Well thats the kiss of death on the stock market then :)

jaizan 08 May 2012 , 9:21pm

Generally governments would struggle to forecast that night follows day.

goodlifer 08 May 2012 , 9:58pm

Probably apocryphal tale about Carnegie or some other legendary billionaire.
Asked by the lift boy "What's the market going to do, Sir?"
"It'll fluctuate, boy, it'll fluctuate."

Now you know!

RobinnBanks 10 May 2012 , 12:47am

I think it was J.P.Morgan, goodlifer.

J. Paul Getty's quote for success was, 'Rise early, work hard, strike oil'

namron101 10 May 2012 , 11:04am

Apart from anything else, this OBR projection is inconsistent with even the very long term evidence.

Between 1899 and 2010, UK nominal GDP rose at 6.2% per year. UK share prices (from Dimson et al) rose at just 4.6% per year.

The passive investor in large cap shares doesn't 'share' fully in economic growth - by definition, he owns the industrial dinosaurs, rather than the new businesses that will drive some of the future growth, and capture its benefits.


AlysonThomson 10 May 2012 , 12:24pm

So the fall of the Footsie to 5500 will be the start of that, then?

Possak 10 May 2012 , 7:02pm

iaincu is right: the BoE isn't bad at predicting inflation, it's bad at controlling inflation. This is arguably more important, and is as likely to be due to lack of useful tools (QE and base rate seem to be about it) as it is to error.

andrew97d 10 May 2012 , 9:44pm

So, does this mean that the OBR already know that base rate will stay at 0.5% until 2018 ?.

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