Why the market is ‘not stupid’ for underestimating value stocks

In This Article:

Research Affiliates Founder & Chairman Rob Arnott joins Yahoo Finance to discuss why he believes value stocks will provide a 5-10% return, the effects of COVID in the market, and the expected growth of stocks in the coming quarters.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: First, we have a treat for all you longer term investors out there that love value stocks. Here with us now is investing pioneer Rob Arnott, the founder and chairman of Research Affiliates. Rob, I know you're very busy traveling around. Thanks for taking some time to come on with us this morning. Really enjoyed your latest piece of research. I encourage everybody to check it out on your site. I sent it to a lot of my friends here. You are calling-- you say that value stocks could return 5% to 10% over the next decade. Make the case.

ROB ARNOTT: Well, that would be 5% or more over the market, not just 5% or 10%. The market is very fully priced. Value stocks are not. We're in one of the only businesses in the global macro economy where people hate a bargain. Imagine if Tiffany's put out a banner sign saying post-COVID sale, everything marked up 20%, and people were bashing down the door, trying to get in. Well, that's the way it is with stocks around the world.

One thing people forget is that just like a stock can go up and down relative to its fundamentals, a strategy can, too. And so value stocks were priced back in 2007 about 1/4 as expensive as growth stocks, a 4 to 1 ratio. They tumbled by August of 2020. They'd fallen to 1/13 the price of growth stocks, cheapening by 70% relative to growth but underperforming by 58%, only 58%. So a huge shortfall, but it's smaller than the amount by which they got cheaper. If they rebound back to a 4 to 1 ratio, you would see value outperform growth by upwards of 200%.

So that's what we're looking at in terms of the magnitude of the route for value investing and the magnitude of the opportunity for those willing to buy in today.

JULIE HYMAN: So Rob, I guess--

BRIAN SOZZI: Rob, how do you--

JULIE HYMAN: Oh, sorry, go ahead, Sozz.

BRIAN SOZZI: I'm just saying-- yeah, real quick, Julie-- Rob, how do you define a value stock?

ROB ARNOTT: There's a lot of ways to define them. The classic academic approach is to use price to book value. Now, that's very flawed in today's economy because so much of what we sell is services. And intellectual property and brand, R&D, all represent assets of a company. And they don't reflect in a book value.

So one of the things that we've done is to look at price to book value adjusted for intangibles. It works about twice as well as classic price to book. Price to sales ratios, price to earnings ratios, price to dividends plus buybacks-- these are all good measures of whether a stock is cheap or expensive.