- Why borrowing to invest is a bad idea [2]
- Borrowing to invest is expensive [3]
- Tax and costs will eat up returns [4]
- You can’t bank on an expected return
- The risks of buying mark to market investments on margin [5]
- Why it’s almost always a bad time to borrow to invest [6]
We’ve previously looked at how interest payments, other costs and taxes will reduce your expected return if you borrow to invest.
But banking on the stock market to deliver an expected return is risky, even over 20 years — and here ‘expected return’ includes simply “more money than I put in, taking into account interest and charges”.
When we began this series on borrowing to invest [1], I said that you might see 10% a year from investing your borrowed money into the stock market, before costs.
And it’s true, you might. That’s the long run average return here in the UK and the US, give or take a bit.
But you might easily invest your borrowed money just before a bad spell for shares, and only get 5% a year.
According to my copy of the latest Barclays Capital Equity Gilt Study that I last dusted off when we looked at corporate bond returns [7], there have been several times over the past 110 years when UK equities have failed to deliver a positive real return on investment over 20 years, let alone their expected return.
At such times, you’ll not break even after costs and charges.
Worse, you might invest at a truly terrible time, and lose a lot of money.
Just look at Japan for a worst-case scenario.
Anyone who borrowed to invest when Japan’s Nikkei stock market index hit 38,957 in 1989 is sitting on a 75% loss over the past 20 years. A terrible loss, but even worse if you spent those 20 years paying double because of interest.
Do I think awful Japanese-style returns from shares are likely if you invest today?
No, I think the fact that corporate and government bonds having beaten equities [7] over 20 years suggests we might see a decade of double digit gains for shares [8].
But I’d be very cautious about borrowing any money to bet on it, beyond perhaps trickling money into tax-sheltered investments instead of paying down a mortgage (which is effectively the same thing as borrowing to invest).
An expected return is not a smooth return
Remember also that the stock market is volatile. You might see average returns of 10% or more for 19 years, only to suffer from a stock market crash the year before your repayment becomes due.
Perhaps in the 21st year the market bounces back, just to rub it in.
Too late — you repayment date has passed!
I can’t think of much worse than borrowing £100,000 on an interest only basis, paying interest on it for 20 years, and then not having enough to repay the capital outstanding at the end.
Sure, you could try to cleverly lock in gains over the decades and so on. Remember though that this will wrack up more costs, and that the usual drawbacks of market timing and over-trading still apply. You’re actually likely to reduce your expected returns this way, according to academics.
Short-term borrowing is madness
Most of this series is about borrowing to take advantage of long-term returns from the stock market.
As we’ve seen, it might be marginally profitable, but there are plenty of risks, and you can’t expect to make more than a couple of percent extra a year, even if it all works out.
That’s worth having – but much less than the rough-and-ready initial calculations would imply.
In contrast I’ve barely looked at borrowing to invest over the short-term, because I think there’s no case for it.
Anyone who has lived through the past decade and seen two bear markets where stock markets fell 50% should know exactly why borrowing over five to ten years is simply gambling.
If you invest your own money over the long-term, you can afford to ride out the ups and downs.
But if you’re investing other people’s money over the short-term, you’re at the mercy of the whims of the market — and you could easily end up owing money to your lender after selling (or being forced to sell) your investments.
I’ll go into more detail on this problem of market volatility [9] when gearing up in the next part in the series, so please do subscribe [10] to keep in the loop.
In the meantime, the mathematically inclined amongst you could check out this link [11] that was kindly sent in by a reader from Australia.
In his country, borrowing to invest (gearing) is apparently sold quite hard to private investors. But:
Once you start to borrow, there is a sharp increase in the volatility of the portfolio. For example, a 50% loan to value ratio sees returns increase by 1.7% to 14.78%, with portfolio volatility increasing to 40.35%.
In other words, for enduring a doubling of volatility, you get just 1.7% in extra returns.
The figures would be pretty similar for the UK and the US, and underline why mixing short-term investing and borrowing is like mixing alcoholic drinks – exciting at the time, but dangerous and likely to end in tears.
They also underline how the extra returns are hardly worth the risk.
Concluding thoughts on expected returns
The takeaway as I see it here is that expected returns from the stock market are fine for long-term investment planning, but not a rock solid basis for planning how you’ll repay debts, further undermining the case for borrowing.
With a cheap enough loan you’ve got a good chance of doing okay over 20 years if you borrow to invest in the stock market and keep costs low, but there are definitely no guarantees [12].
Over the short-term, it’s madness.