Monday, July 15, 2019

The Agony of Hope Postponed, by a Value Investor


https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-agony-of-hope-postponed-by-a-value-investor-11563109380


Value investors are known for being a hardy bunch, willing to buy into beaten-down stocks that everyone else thinks are a disaster. But cheap stocks have underperformed horribly over the past 12 years, and even some fund managers who specialize in buying them wonder in private if the technique no longer works. Could value be dead?
I’m a natural value guy, and not just in stocks. I like bargains, and will trek across town—or to today’s equivalent, the third page of the search engine—to find them. Over the long run of history, bargain hunting in stocks has won out, by a lot. So before paying up to buy expensive stocks on the grounds they will get even more expensive, I want to know why this time is different.
Value LagsCheap, or ‘value,’ stocks have lagged far behind growth stocks in recent years.MSCI USA Investable Market indexesSource: RefinitivNote: With dividends reinvested
%GrowthValue2003’04’05’06’07’08’09’10’11’12’13’14’15’16’17’18’19-50050100150200250300350400450500GrowthxAug. 1, 2012x108.22%
The dire years have produced plenty of theories for why value hasn’t worked of late. Perhaps markets are more efficient than they used to be, as algorithms take the emotion out of investing. Perhaps the rise of capital-light companies means traditional value metrics such as price-to-book don’t work any more. Or perhaps superlow interest rates favor fast-growing companies, and so punish struggling value stocks, which tend not to have a convincing story to tell about the future. Value investors often argue that the poor performance is just one of those things that has to happen from time to time, because if it was easy, everyone would do it.

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The investors who picked the expensive growth companies in the past decade got it right. They frequently claim that this time it really is different. The new technologies that traded at high multiples of book value, of earnings, and of sales, showed themselves worthy. Companies such as Apple Inc., Microsoft Corp. , AlphabetInc. and Facebook Inc. have grown to become the biggest stocks in the world by making a ton of money.
One firm that uses value among several approaches to investment thinks we’ve seen this before—the last time a major disruptive technology caught on.
The 1920s and 1930s for investors bring to mind the 1929 stock-market crash. Chris Meredith at Stamford, Conn.-based O’Shaughnessy Asset Management points out it was also the period when the automobile shifted from early takeup to widespread deployment, bringing mass production and distribution of consumer goods.
The Value of ValueValue stocks again trade at a significant valuation discount to growth stocks on many measures, includingprice to forward earnings.Forward price/earnings ratioSource: RefinitivNote: Russell 1000 indexes
.times earningsGrowthValue2002’03’04’05’06’07’08’09’10’11’12’13’14’15’16’17’18’19051015202530ValuexApril 2, 2012x12.027 times earnings
General Motors and the Standard Oil companies were the leading stock-market disrupters of the time, trading at valuation premiums to “old” industries such as steam-driven railroads, utilities and shipbuilding. Their disruption looks very like today’s: the period from 1926 to the late U.S. entry into World War II in 1941 was the last time value underperformed for as long as  it has since its June 2007 high. Data from Prof. Kenneth French at Dartmouth’s Tuck School of Business shows value stocks have lagged behind on average 5 percentage points a year behind growth stocks since then, just worse than the same period up to the summer of 1939.
Mr. Meredith uses the framework developed by academic Carlota Perez, which shows how previous technological revolutions followed similar patterns of boom and bust, then a multiyear intermediate phase when the winners are established, before maturity. The internet age only really reached this intermediate phase with the development of the iPhone, launched in 2007 just as the financial crisis was starting.
From 1926 to the war, the cheap value portfolio is crammed with utilities, the stocks that had led the electrification revolution but had become mature and dull. The go-go growth stocks were in manufacturing, with few of them cheap enough for value buyers to pick.
There’s a similar industry bias today: value has heavy exposure to banks and other financial stocks, which helped it outperform before the crisis but dragged it down since. This time, the go-go growth stocks are mostly in the technology sector (although Amazon is a retailer), where value has little exposure.
Value investors clutching at straws might hope that the online takeover is virtually complete, with the internet giants moving into the “synergy” phase where the new technologies boost the economy, while the excitement they once generated wears off. Meanwhile, old industries might start to benefit by adopting parts of the new technologies, just as beaten-up coal railroads became stock-market winners when they shifted to diesel trains.
I find the historical comparison compelling. But it isn’t so obvious that we’re at the end of the internet disruption yet. The big shift that allowed value to start performing again after World War II was that the disruption was done, and the old industries had vanished or adjusted to cope.
Widening DivideCheap ‘value’ stocks have fallen farther behind expensive ‘growth’ stocks since June 2007 than over anysimilar period* since the 1920s.Annualized total return on U.S. value portfolio minus growth portfolioSource: Prof. Kenneth French*Rolling 143-month periods; latest data May 2019
.percentage points1940’50’60’70’80’902000’10’20-10-5051015Dec. 1989x5.061 percentage points
It’s true that music retailers have gone the way of horse-drawn transport, and the bookshops that are left have shaken up their business models. There are also signs of the tech giants competing with each other, not just gobbling up old industries, such as Amazon’s entry into advertising. Many old-tech business models have changed, too, to fit better in a world of online competition; meanwhile governments are under pressure to rein in or tax the big tech winners. Against that, the big tech companies are investing heavily in technologies that could disrupt yet more industries.
What keeps me clinging on to the value creed is that all of this is priced in, and then some. Back in 2007 value stocks had had a great run, and were less of a bargain compared with growth stocks than any time since the mid-1980s, according to Vitali Kalesnik, director of research for Europe at Research Affiliates. They are now much cheaper than usual compared with growth stocks (although the gap was bigger still in the dot-com bubble), so there’s a better chance that the bad news is already recognized.
Write to James Mackintosh at James.Mackintosh@wsj.com