Submitted by Shailesh Kumar of
Value Stock
Guide
Investors are constantly reminded that the markets are efficient
and there is no use trying to beat the market as it cannot be done
on a consistent basis. In fact, we are told, that over 70% of the
mutual funds fail to beat the market, presenting this as an
evidence to somehow imply, in some convoluted logic, that we are
better off handing over our money to the same mutual funds and
invest passively, rather than take control of our own portfolio. I
find this argument even more vacuous, considering that the best
investors and stock pickers, who also happen to manage significant
sums of money, do not usually run mutual funds.
But Is the Market Truly Efficient?
The Efficient Market Hypothesis states that the securities
prices reflect all publicly available information. Trading based on
insider knowledge is illegal, and even if it were possible, not
enough investors would be privy to such non public information to
make any significant impact on the overall returns of any stock. If
Efficient Market Hypothesis were true, wouldn't it imply that no
investor has any particular advantage over any other when it comes
to investing in
stocks
? If security prices immediately adjust to reflect any new public
information than perhaps the only predictor to stock performance is
the amount of risk an investor is willing to take.
Indeed, most financial products available to the investors today
tacitly assume the sanctity of the Efficient Market Hypothesis.
Passive investing,
diversification
and overall market index as a benchmark for performance are all a
result of a blind faith in the EMH. Or to put it another way, if
what you know about the past of the company doesn't matter (since
the stock price already reflects it), and there is no way of
reliably knowing the future of the company, you might as well
invest in a basket of stocks to cancel out individual stock risk
and let your portfolio ride on the market risk alone.
No wonder index funds and passive investing are such easy sells.
The financial industry has all the incentive to continue to promote
the EMH and use it as an excuse for their own incompetence.
History Paints a Different Picture
Many studies on historical performance of stocks classified by
asset classes have shown that over a reasonably long periods of
time small cap stocks tend to out perform large cap stocks and
value stocks out perform growth stocks. Traditionally, this has
been brushed aside by asserting that small cap stocks and value
stocks are riskier than the market so it is not surprising that the
returns are higher. However, a study by Ibbotson Associates (now
part of Morningstar) goes even further and shows that small cap
value stocks outperform all other asset classes on
risk-adjusted basis
.
Professor Greenwald in his seminal book
Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond (Wiley
Finance)
shows that if investors had blindly bought a portfolio of the
lowest Price to Book ratio stocks they would have done better than
the market. Even a slight introduction of a value bias improves
portfolio performance.
So if the Markets are Efficient, How can this be?
Markets are efficient in aggregate and they are also reasonably
efficient for well understood companies with highly liquid stock.
For a large company that has a good number of Wall Street analysts
following it, it is understandable that almost everything that is
known is reflected in the stock price. Liquidity in the stock
ensures that complex computer generated trades continuously work to
exploit any inefficiency that may occur from time to time and
quickly erase it.
However, there are quite a few situations where the markets are
not as efficient and one can find stocks that are truly undervalued
if one is alert. Here are a few cases where this is true
Small cap stocks that are not well followed
- Large institutions such as mutual funds and pension funds tend to
avoid these stocks. Typically these funds avoid buying meaningful
stakes in any company as that comes with additional filing
requirements and the responsibilities of being a large shareholder.
A smaller stake may not make sense for a large fund as any
performance advantage of these stocks will just be a blip on their
overall portfolio. They are also not covered adequately by the Wall
Street as some of these companies are too small to be a investment
banking prospect.
Industry, sector or stock specific bull or bear
market
- In short term, the market overdoes its exuberance or pessimism
for certain sectors or even individual companies. Eventually, the
market does settle at the correct valuation but the discrepancy may
persist for a long time. For example, the real estate bubble lasted
much longer than expected. Even after it was plainly clear to most
market observers that a bubble exists, most institutions could not
simply unwind their positions quickly as that would cause an
immediate market collapse. A retail investor can move much more
quickly than an institution in these situations and take advantage
of the gap between price and value.Certain cyclical industries go
through a boom to bust cycle regularly. Metals, commodities,
shipping, etc are a few examples. If an investor can determine that
the demand of the product is not eroding, but rather the sector is
doing badly due to excess capacity and over supply issues, than it
is just a matter of waiting out until the capacity/supply
imbalances are corrected for the stocks to recover. If you do your
research right, these can be potentially phenomenal stocks to buy
and wait for the cycle to repeat.
Unwanted stocks, special situation stocks
- A stock is sold off by funds when they no longer fit the charter
of the fund. This is generally done regardless of the investment
merit of the stock. When this happens, a small window of
undervaluation is created, that can reward investors handsomely.
The following are some of the few common situations where this
happens:
- A stock leaves a popular index causing all the funds that
invest in this index to sell the stock
- A large company spins off a small division and the funds holding
the parent company are not interested in the smaller spun off
company
- Mergers and acquisitions involving part or all of the acquired
company where the market is not clear about the fundamentals of the
business being acquired
Aggressively marketed stocks
- If there is one example of a situation where sellers are privy to
more information about the company than the buyers are, it is the
IPO market. This is one case where insider selling is legal and it
is not a surprise that the buyers in the IPO markets generally
lose. Perhaps if a sector is witnessing a lot of IPO activity, an
investor might take it as a sign of an overheated market and sell
any holdings in that sector (or avoid it like a plague).
Market inefficiencies create undervaluation that an investor can
buy into. In some other cases, it can also create overvaluation
that an investor can sell into or avoid. It is beneficial for a
self managed investor to be alert for these situations as the
difference in performance between a value biased portfolio and a
market neutral portfolio can be very significant over the life of
the portfolio. Make sure you look for investments outside of the
typical Wall Street research and research the company deeply to
understand its business and prospects. If the stock has been left
for dead, but the business is humming along, it can be a terrific
investment. These are the hidden corners of the market where great
value stocks lie and if you do not look for them yourself, you will
never find them
And this is why Warren Buffett and other investors believe that
the small investors have great advantage over the Wall Street. We
are largely unconcerned with such things as stock liquidity, float,
market caps, etc which often stymie the large institutions. We can
focus solely on the business fundamentals for our investment
decisions.
Submit a Post at Trefis Powered by Data and Interactive Charts |
Understand What
Drives a Stock at Trefi
s