New Research from GMO on Value Investing’s “Lost Decade”

The performance of U.S. value stocks over the last decade has led many to wonder whether the value premium has been completely eroded. New research from Boston-based Grantham Mayo Van Otterloo (GMO) shows that this was due to changes in relative valuations that favored growth over value, but now value stocks are priced attractively.

Relative valuations refer to the difference in metrics, such as price-to-book ratios, between value and growth stocks.

From January 2009 through June 2019, while the S&P 500 Index returned 14.3% per annum (total cumulative return of 307%), the Fama-French large-value and small-value research indexes returned 11.6% per annum (total cumulative return of 215%) and 12.5% per annum (total cumulative return of 245%), respectively. (Fama-French data is from Ken French’s website.) I took a deep dive into this issue in my June 4, 2019, post at Alpha Architect. I also specifically looked at the relative valuations of small-value stocks in my August 8, 2019, article for Advisor Perspectives – demonstrating that, from a historical perspective, there is no evidence of overcrowding in small-value stocks, and in fact they look relatively cheap.

The research team at GMO contribute to the discussion with their analysis of the performance of the value premium – decomposing the relative returns of cheap stocks in order to understand what has driven this change in performance. They began by examining the gap in growth rates of value companies relative to the market. They noted that while value companies (cheap stocks) have historically had lower growth rates in book value, sales and gross profits, nothing has been exceptional about the most recent period.

In other words, there is no indication that a structural shift has occurred that has disproportionately hurt cheap stocks’ historical growth.