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S&P 500 will return just 3% a year for the next decade, top strategist warns

Source: FortuneView Original
businessMarch 18, 2026

Rob Arnott warns that shareholders in U.S. big-caps will make one-fifth the returns over the next 10 years they pocketed since 2016, and those meager gains will barely edge the consumer price index. You may want to take a cold shower, or a shot of tequila, before you hear the convincing logic behind his dour prediction.

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Arnott is the founder and chairman of Research Affiliates, a firm that oversees strategies for nearly $200 billion index funds and ETFs for the likes of Charles Schwab and Invesco. He served as editor-in-chief of the Financial Analysts Journal in the early 2000s, and today comanages the Pimco All Asset and All Asset All Authority funds. He’s also the father of “fundamental indexing,” the practice of weighting stocks by their size in the economy rather than chasing expensive “winners” by ranking according to market cap. At RA, Arnott has bred a think tank in its own right featuring sundry PhDs who apply advanced statistical research to forging benchmark-beating vehicles.

So I check frequently with Arnott to get his take on what those buying into the S&P 500, or baskets of big-cap U.S. stocks, are likely to reap in the years ahead. It’s an especially good time to get a sober reading. The S&P has dropped 4.4% from its record close in January, and the Iran war and jump in oil prices and Treasury yields following the attack are raising a new cloud of pessimism.

An advantage to consulting the sage: Though his predictions are based on a sophisticated analysis of past trends, the future math is basic. In our conversation over Zoom, Arnott stressed that returns have three sources: dividends, growth in earnings (that lift payouts in tandem), and expansion in valuations or P/Es. The last 10 years, he avows, were something of a seldom seen golden age for this trio, but especially profits and multiples. “Overall, U.S. large-caps [as reflected in the S&P 500] produced overall gains of 15.5% a year, an extraordinary number,” says Arnott.

The rub: The fantastic profit and P/E performance over the past 10 years virtually guarantees a rough road ahead

Arnott emphasizes the gap between the historic trends in both profits and valuations, and the S&P’s extraordinary outperformance from mid-March of 2016 through today. Earnings per share waxed at over 11% annually, almost twice their long-term average. The S&P multiple ramped by around one-fifth from the low-20s to roughly 27.5, the current number according to FactSet. “In effect, the big returns were front-loaded by that highly unusual scenario,” says Arnott.

But the high times also foreshadowed today’s downside. Starting at these heights in both metrics, he adds, “has the effect of reducing future returns.” The Wall Street market strategists’ view that anything resembling the last decade’s results are repeatable amounts to a fantasy, declares Arnott. “P/Es don’t always go up without limit,” he says. “In no sensible world is that plausible.” Arnott contends that it’s equally illogical to argue that EPS can keep advancing five points or so faster than their long-term average. As everyone from Warren Buffett to Milton Friedman has pointed out, profits can’t outgrow the economy forever, and after they absorb an unusually large portion of national income, shrink back toward the norm going forward.

Here’s the picture Arnott foresees over the next 10 years. Because stocks are so pricey, the dividend yield now sits at a mere 1.2%, way below its contribution in most periods. (The stats are available on RA’s website under “Asset Allocation Interactive.”) As for profits and P/Es, he cites one of the laws governing markets: reversion to the mean. In the RA scenario, earnings will wax at 5.3%, more or less matching their traditional trajectory, less than half the 2016 to 2026 pace. Add those two components, and you get a “plus” of 6.4% a year. That already sounds mediocre. But the big hit’s a shrinkage in multiples that severely reverses the potent upward push that helped generate those 15.5% returns since 2016. Arnott predicts that valuations will shrink by 3.4 points a year, or 40% by 2036. That pressure would reduce today’s P/E of 27.5 to around 17. Although that sounds extremely slender versus what we’ve seen in recent years, it’s more or less the multiple in the boom years preceding the Global Financial Crisis, and close to the 120-year mean.

All told, the overall S&P 500 should then deliver total annual returns of 3.1% (6.5% from dividends and growth, minus 3.4% from a decline in the P/E). That’s one-fifth the mark for the past decade, and exactly one point better than projected inflation of 2.4%. By 2036, the S&P would stand at 8073, just 21% above its reading of 6672 at the close on March 12.

To gauge just how hugely this outlook diverges from the conventional wisdom, consider that the Wall Street consensus calls for the S&P to end this year at between 7600 and 7650, or less than 6% short of where RA expects the index to finish 10 years h