The S&P 500's equity risk premium is sitting at just 2.3 percentage points—pretty tight, but here's the thing: it's still above water. That means stocks are fundamentally offering better value than parking cash in the 10-year Treasury right now. Not exactly explosive upside, but in this environment, relative advantage matters. The data paints a clear picture: equities still have the edge over fixed income when you're thinking about risk-adjusted returns.
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HodlKumamon
· 2h ago
A premium rate of 2.3 percentage points... Honestly, this is a signal for dollar-cost averaging. Not explosive but steady, much better than just lying in government bonds(◍•ᴗ•◕)
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GateUser-40edb63b
· 01-10 21:52
2.3 percentage points? With such a small difference in return, risking the stock market is really a bit hard to bear.
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digital_archaeologist
· 01-10 17:57
2.3 percentage points? This margin is too thin, feels a bit risky.
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APY追逐者
· 01-10 17:55
2.3 points is indeed a bit stingy, but it's still better than just lying in the Treasury.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 01-10 17:42
2.3 points? What can this advantage do, still have to gamble.
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GasSavingMaster
· 01-10 17:42
2.3 points, barely acceptable, but that's all we can expect.
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ChainMemeDealer
· 01-10 17:39
2.3 percentage points? Is this premium really enough? It feels like just betting on the subsequent market trend.
The S&P 500's equity risk premium is sitting at just 2.3 percentage points—pretty tight, but here's the thing: it's still above water. That means stocks are fundamentally offering better value than parking cash in the 10-year Treasury right now. Not exactly explosive upside, but in this environment, relative advantage matters. The data paints a clear picture: equities still have the edge over fixed income when you're thinking about risk-adjusted returns.