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Last week we talked briefly about some of the problems surrounding Social
Security, and especially the possibility that the deficit problems may be
worse than we thought because of the trend towards (on average) living
longer.
But a large part of the current debate misses what I think should be the
real point, and that point is the focus of this week's letter. Everyone
assumes that if they work hard and save they will be able to retire. While
a sad number of people do not plan for retirement, those who do make
assumptions about what type of retirement they will be able to afford with
their savings, pensions and Social Security based upon historical
performance of the markets.
But past performance is not indicative of future results. Today we are
going to look at a study which suggests that past performance might in fact
be highly misleading. That is because the conditions which created that
past performance have changed dramatically, and that is going to have a
great affect upon the retirement plans of the Boomer Generation.
Bill Gross of PIMCO, commenting on this topic last week made these
comments, which helps us put the topic in perspective:
"Rob Arnott of Research Affiliates LLC, sub-advisor of PIMCO's all asset
strategy and a co-collaborator with Peter Bernstein on several articles
about risk and future asset returns, has advanced what I consider to be the
most realistic take on Social Security and Medicare trust funds. Pre-
funding these systems, he argues, 'is basically irrelevant.' And (in my own
words) it matters little whether the system is pre-refunded with Treasury
bonds or privately held stocks. The fact is that both of these financial
assets represent a call on future production. If that production could
possibly be saved, like squirrels ferreting away nuts for a long winter,
then Treasury IOUs or corporate stocks might make some sense. But they
can't. Future healthcare for boomer seniors can only be provided by today's
teenagers, twenty-somethings, and even the yet to be born. We cannot store
their energy today for some future rainy day. Nor can we save food,
transportation, or entertainment for anything more than a few years
forward. Each must be provided by the existing generation of workers for
those who have retired and are presumably incapable of working."
I wrote on the studies Gross is referring to in my book, "Bull's Eye
Investing." Given the current debate over Social Security, I think it
pertinent to reprint this section from chapter 10 which deals with
retirement issues (with a few updates) and then offer a few comments.
Quoting from the book:
Retirement in an Aging World
There are numerous forces that impact the economy, our investments, and our
lives, but none is more fundamental than demography: the study of the
characteristics of human populations, such as size, growth, density,
distribution, and vital statistics.
The popular concept of demographics is wrapped up in our ideas about the
baby boom generation. A huge cohort of children born after World War II
caused all sorts of changes, positive and negative, in our society. As this
group gets older, there will be even more changes that must inevitably
occur. And it is not just the United States, but nations throughout the
world that have their own aging problems. As we will see, our problems are
mild compared to those of Europe and Japan, a situation that has serious
implications for the world economy. But there are also nations where the
median population is getting younger, and this presents a different set of
problems and opportunities.
The aging of America and the world will affect us as almost no other issue.
Most other factors have a great deal of volatile possible futures
associated with them. How the nation ages is already in the cards.
Demographically speaking, we know what the future holds. Now let's look at
how that will affect our economy, investments, and possible retirement.
Is Retirement in Your Future?
First, we turn our attention to the question of retirement: Will the boomer
generation be able to retire on time? Will Social Security go bankrupt? Is
Harry Dent, author of The Roaring 2000s, right when he asserts that we will
have a boom until approximately 2008 to 2009 because boomers are saving and
spending? And then watch as things go bust (an actual depression) because
boomers start selling stocks and retiring?
(There are two caveats to which all must agree prior to reading this:
First, you cannot shoot the messenger--meaning Robert Arnott, Anne
Casscells, and especially me. Second, I am distilling a lengthy paper with
a great deal of backup data into a few pages. Do not hold Arnott and
Casscells, "Demographics and Capital Market Returns," Financial Analysts
Journal (March/April 2003), responsible for my efforts.)
We will look at the conclusions first, explain why they came to be, and
then explore the implications.
First, the good news: The boomer generation is going to live longer and be
healthier than any previous generation. Each succeeding generation, as did
our fathers, has lived longer than their parents and will continue to do
so.
The bad news is that boomers, on average, who are expecting to retire at 65
will not be able to do so. Your individual situation is up to you, but the
average boomer will work until at least age 70, and probably 72 or 73. The
good news, again, is that we are all healthier. I, for one, do not intend
to retire at 70 or even 75. Again, this is an average, and with proper
planning many will be able to retire earlier, should they so desire.
(Richard Russell has been writing the Dow Theory Letters for 45 years, and
now writes daily! He is my hero, going strong and writing more brilliantly
than ever at 80. I shall not imitate him by getting up at 3 A.M., however,
even in my dotage. I consider him one of the most insightful and savvy
financial writers of our times. You can subscribe at
www.dowtheoryletters.com.)
Second, this delayed retirement is not a financial problem, but a
demographic problem. Thus the solutions are not simply financial, such as
save more money or raise Social Security taxes.
Third, Social Security is not the primary problem. Long before we get to
the predicted funding crisis of 2017 or 2029 or 2040 (depending on which
politician you listen to), we have a market driven demographic crisis.
Finally, I am going to suggest this is not a crisis at all, in the true
sense of the word. It is merely an adjustment in expectations. It may even
be a blessing.
Fantasy Island
Arnott and Casscells contend that the markets will force this increase in
the retirement age. (See Figure 10.1 below.) This will happen whether or
not politicians adjust the age for Social Security benefits. To explain
what they mean by the market forcing the boomer generation to retire later,
I am going to resort to a simplistic analogy. We will examine the merits
and weaknesses of the analogy afterward. As you read, please know I am
aware of many weaknesses in the story, but am trying to get over a major
point that is critical to this argument. (The numbers I use are for
illustration purpose only, to help you understand the concepts. They are
not meant to be literal.)

Figure 10.1 Retirement Age with Look-Ahead, 1950-2050 (If Average of
Retiree-Only Dependency Ratio and Adjusted Dependency Ratio Is Held
Constant)Source: Robert D. Arnott and Anne Casscells, "Demographics and
Capital Market Returns," Financial Analysts Journal (March/April 2003), p.
27. Copyright 2002, Association for Investment Management and Research.
Reproduced and republished from Financial Analysts Journal with permission
from the Association for Investment Management and Research. All rights
reserved.
Economists like to use an island economy to illustrate a point, and I will
do so as well. Let's assume an island where 15 percent of the people are
retired, 65 percent of the people are working, and 20 percent of the
population are children. The elderly and the children depend on the workers
to produce the goods and services they need, in addition to the goods and
services the workers need. That means there is a ratio of about two workers
for each dependent. The retired swap assets they have saved for the
services they need.
Now, let's add something to the water that makes workers want to have more
children. Slowly, over time, the number of dependents per worker goes up.
The population now needs even more goods and services. Each worker can be
more productive, and that helps, as they create more ways to produce goods
cheaper and faster. Fortunately, whatever has been added to the water also
makes people stay healthy longer, so that people can work a little longer.
It is not much longer, just a few years, but it makes enough of a
difference to keep things progressing.
The reason working a little longer makes such a difference is that the
retired population consumes about three times as much in goods and services
as the children do. So even though the percentage of the children in the
population rises, it does not require nearly as much community effort to
produce the needed goods and services for the young as it does to support
the retirees. The combination of increased productivity and the older
workers working a little longer makes for generally increasing prosperity.
Notice that it is not the amount of money the retired population has saved.
The critical factor is that someone has to do the work so that things and
services can be bought. Society produces X amounts of goods and services.
If there is more demand for these goods and services by retired people than
actual goods and services produced, then:
- The prices of these goods and services go up, or
- The value of the assets the retiring generation wants to trade for
services and goods goes down. If every retired person tries to sell the
same general assets in order to purchase goods and services, there are
fewer buyers of the assets and the prices of the assets go down.
If supply of overall goods and services drops, then prices will rise.
Retirees require goods and services. If there are not enough goods and
services to meet demand, prices will rise. This will make it difficult for
people to afford to retire on their savings, and thus they continue to
work.
The earlier adult generation on our island has to work just a little longer
to have enough assets to retire on and produce the goods that society
needs. Because they work longer, they produce more goods and services,
which has the effect of holding down prices and allows them to save more
for retirement.
Now, an interesting thing begins to happen 18 years or so after the miracle
drug is added to the water. Their kids begin to enter the workforce, and
the number of dependents actually falls, as more kids enter the workforce
than the number of people who decide to retire. The retirement age actually
rises slightly even as those retiring live longer. Thus there are more
workers producing goods and services.
Then another funny thing happens. Someone changes the water again, and the
boomer generation stops having as many kids per family as their parents
did. Because there were so many in the boomer generation, there were still
lots of kids, just not as many per family. Even as more and more of their
parents retire, the ratio of dependents to workers does not change.
The boomer generation continues the tradition of their parents and becomes
increasingly more productive. The amount of goods and services needed to
maintain the population does not get out of proportion to the number of
workers. Things become stable.
The parents of the boomers, as they retire, exchange their savings for
goods and services produced by the boomers and their children. The workers
are willing to take these assets at ever-increasing prices for their
products, because there is plenty to go around. This is partially because
there is not a lot of demand from young dependents.
Then it becomes time for the boomers to retire. Most of them have been
saving for retirement. Knowing they are going to need their savings for
retirement, they slowly begin to get out of riskier investments long before
the time comes for them to actually retire. But they still expect to retire
at the age their parents did, or around 65, even though they expect to live
at least five years longer, and 15 years longer than their grandparents.
But the boomers have made one big miscalculation. They forgot to have
enough kids to support their retirement. So as time goes on, the working
population has to produce more goods and services just to keep everybody
supplied. The number of dependents per worker rises by 50 percent, until
there are only 1.5 workers for every retiree/dependent.
The workers see the time they have to work rise each year, just to produce
everything that is needed. This gets old very quickly (pardon the pun). The
remaining workers get tired of working 60-hour weeks, instead of the 40-
hour weeks their parents worked, just to produce the same amount of needed
goods and services.
The workers go to the boomer generation and say, "We want more for our
work. Either give us 50 percent more money for what we produce or we are
going to give you 33 percent less goods and services for what you give us.
But we will not work 60 hours a week any longer for the same amount of your
assets as we once took for only 40 hours. If you don't like this, you are
quite healthy and can work a little longer before you retire. Take it or
leave it."
The boomer generation is quite upset. This isn't the deal they thought they
had. They had been promised by their leaders they could retire at 65. Now
they find they do not have enough assets to pay for the goods and services
they need. It does not matter how much they have saved. There are only so
many goods to go around, and the workers set the price of the goods, plus
they have control over the prices they are willing to pay for the assets
the boomer generation has spent a lifetime saving.
There is only one solution, as the boomers need the goods and services to
live. They have to go back to work.
Supply and Demand Is the Main Culprit
Before we can examine the implications of the story and data, you must get
in your mind one main point: This problem is one of supply and demand. It
has nothing to do with how much a generation saves or how much a generation
gets on Social Security.
Crudely, if there are more rabbits than wolves, you will see an increase in
wolves. If there are not enough rabbits, you will see a decrease in wolves.
There is a balance in nature, and there is also a balance in economics.
Arnott and Casscells show that when you look at the dependency ratio (the
number of workers for each dependent) and adjust for the fact that it takes
more to support a retired person than a child, there is a strong
correlation and in fact a causation between the average age of retirement
and the number of workers still in the workforce.
As the parents of the boomer generation have retired, there have been fewer
children demanding resources so that the dependency ratio of workers to
children and retirees has been stable. That trend stops in a few years, and
they predict the average age of retirement will begin to increase, starting
in just a few years and rising to 69 by 2015 and over 70 by 2020, and, if
the ratio holds, to 73 by 2050.
Literally, if every one of the boomer generation retired at age 65, there
would not be enough people left in the workforce to deliver the pizzas,
provide health care, supply police services, and so on. Ironically, one of
the bright spots of this report is that it means unemployment for the next
generation will probably go down over time as more and more people retire
and others must take their places.
In places or countries with shortages of workers, labor costs go up. That
means the labor component of goods and services goes up, which raises
prices and/or lowers profits.
This process will play out over the next four decades. It will be slow and
inexorable. Even dramatically increased productivity, beyond even today's
explosive growth, will only mitigate the force of this trend.
The boomer generation will demand goods and services, and because there are
not enough workers, the economy will not be able to supply enough goods and
services, and workers will demand more of the saved assets of retirees for
what they produce. This can come as increased prices for the production, as
a drop in the value of the saved assets, or both. That means either an
inflation in prices or a deflation in wealth or a combination of the two.
If today one share of Cisco will buy you a meal at Denny's, will it buy you
a meal in 2020? People investing in Cisco today hope that the price of
those shares will rise to where it will buy several meals. They expect
stocks to rise 7 percent a year. However, in 2020 when there are not enough
workers to produce everything retirees want, the law of supply and demand
means that it will take more Cisco shares to buy a dinner than we currently
plan on. Unless, of course, we can find more workers.
(end of book quote)
The Necessity of Absolute Returns
This underscores the importance of one of my primary investment themes:
this is the era where investors should be seeking absolute returns. Let's
revisit one of the last paragraphs:
"The boomer generation will demand goods and services, and because there
are not enough workers, the economy will not be able to supply enough goods
and services, and workers will demand more of the saved assets of retirees
for what they produce. This can come as increased prices for the
production, as a drop in the value of the saved assets, or both. That means
either an inflation in prices or a deflation in wealth or a combination of
the two."
You must have a strategy that will allow your portfolio to outperform
inflation. But you must also be hedged against a deflationary drop in the
prices of your assets. For most investors that means the stock market. That
is why I am against an investment philosophy which says you should be a
long term buy-and-hold investor of index funds for the rest of this secular
bear market cycle. If you have 40-60 years before retirement, you will have
time to recover. However, if you want to retire in the next 20 years, and
are depending upon not only your principal but some hypothetical compound
number to provide that retirement, I think there is substantial risk in
such a relative return strategy.
A properly executed absolute return strategy will allow you to both beat
inflation and hedge your investment portfolio against this secular bear
market cycle. I certainly expect you to be able to retire and prosper in
the coming years. It is going to be an exciting time.
If you would like to learn more about what I mean, and if you can deal with
a little shameless plug, I suggest you read my book, Bull's Eye Investing.
I lay out a clear case why we are in a secular bear market cycle like 1966-
1982. If you had an absolute return strategy as outlined in my book you
would have done well. You can go to www.absolutereturns.net to read more
about the book, or go straight to www.amazon.com/bullseye and buy a copy.
Puerto Vallarta, Connecticut and Home
As you get this I am on a well deserved break for a few days in Puerto
Vallarta. I have just about recovered from that nasty cold I picked up in
New York a few weeks ago. Nevertheless, I will hazard another trip to the
north, going to Connecticut the week I get back to a conference geared on
teaching me how to think inferentially, then to New York for a quick
meeting and home. Then a funny thing happens. I am home for a whole month!
I had to delay my London trip to April.
That also means I will be in town for spring break. It would be nice if all
seven kids could get the same spring break, rather than a few here and
there, but it will be fun anyway.
Did anyone notice that spring training starts in a few weeks? Last fall, my
Texas Rangers had to say "wait till next year" sometime in September. Now
next year is here, but we still look like we will have no pitching help.
The ground crew is beginning to work on the field outside my office window
at the Ballpark in Arlington. Soon they will begin the annual ritual of
replacing the infield dirt. I have never understood why they seem to
replace the dirt every year, but the level of attention to detail on the
playing field is amazing. They bring in an army to take out the old dirt
and bring in the new, carefully folding and mixing and pounding it into
place. But the ball does bounce evenly. If we invested our money like they
take care of the grass, we would all retire millionaires.
Have a great week and take some time to plan for your own future even while
you take pleasure in the present. Retirement is not the goal, it is just
part of the trip. Make sure to enjoy as much as you can the first time, as
we don't get to do it again.
Your anticipating the crack of the bat analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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