Growth stocks extended their lead over Value stocks last week. $VUG has beaten $VTV by 30 percentage points this year (+32% vs +2%). Given the scale of its recent outperformance, the Nasdaq looks a little overextended here.
macro-ops.com/whales-are-dumping-megacaps-dirty-dozen/
Our strategy has underperformed the MSCI World index ($SWDA.L) this year by 1 percentage point. This is mostly due to to the difficult environment for Value stocks. The strategy has outperformed both US and International ($EFV) Value stock indices.
If the strategy continues to outperform Value stock indices, it is in our view likely that significant outperformance over the MSCI World index will be achieved over the coming decade. The reason is that the value spread – the difference in the valuations of Growth and Value stocks – remains high, which has been a positive signal for Value stocks in the past.
alphaarchitect.com/2023/02/valuation-spreads/
A long stretch of our track record (2005-2014) was achieved by doing value investing in the microcap (very small) stocks space. Some previous research has found that value investing does not work as well in the larger companies that we invest in today, perhaps due to the larger companies being more competitively priced.
However, a recent paper argues that Value investing has historically worked with larger companies just as well as with small companies.
alphaarchitect.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/AA-JBISFactorInvesting22LongOnlyValueInvesting.pdf
“Smaller is not always better”, says the paper. We do think small-cap stocks tend to have more pricing errors than large-cap stocks, but those errors are becoming smaller year after year due to increased competition. Because of this, our strategy today tries to outperform the market not just through stock selection, but also by taking on macro exposures that others do not want.
2023 performance YTD
@triangulacapital +13.5%
$SWDA.L +14.9%
Portfolio changes
None