“Empirical evidence suggests that value stocks outperform over the long term, even if growth has out performed value in recent years.” Bankrate
Recently, growth stocks, such as Microsoft, Amazon, Tesla and Apple, have handily outperformed value names. But it’s not always that way, and many seasoned investors think value will once again have its day, though they have been waiting on that day for more than a decade.
The difference between the two approaches are:
- “Growth investors look for $100 stocks that could be worth $200 in a few years if the company continues to grow quickly. As such, the success of their investment relies on the expansion of the company and the market continuing to value growth stocks at a premium valuation, as measured by a P/E ratio maybe, in later years if the company continues to succeed.”
- “Value investors look for $50 stocks that are actually worth $100 today, not in a few years, if the company continues its business plan. These investors are typically buying stocks that are out of favor now and therefore have a low valuation. They’re betting on the market’s opinion changing to become more favorable, pushing up the stock price.”
“Value investing is based on the premise that paying less for a set of future cash flows is associated with a higher expected return,” says Wes Crill, senior researcher at Dimensional Fund Advisors in Austin, Texas. “That’s one of the most fundamental tenets of investing.”
Growth investing and value investing differ in other key ways, too, as detailed in the table below.
Many of America’s most famous investors are value investors, including Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger and Ben Graham. Still, plenty of very wealthy individuals own growth stocks, including Amazon’s founder Jeff Bezos and hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman, and even Buffett has shifted his approach to become more growth “at a reasonable price” oriented as of late.
Yet, sometime in the future, and unfortunately no one can forecast when, it appears guaranteed that value will outperform growths as an investment for a long period of time.
Typical investing wisdom might say that “when the markets are greedy, growth investors win and when they are fearful, value investors win,” says Blair Silverberg, CEO of Capital, a funding company for early-stage firms based in New York City.
If you’re an individual retail investor, it is wise to stick to fundamental investing principles or otherwise consider buying a solid index fund, such as the S&P 500 that takes a lot of the risk out of investing.
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