Equity Outlook: Invest in the Best, Avoid the Rest

We are often asked why we prefer investing primarily in U.S.-based businesses. This is an important question to consider, particularly since countries like China, Brazil, and India have all experienced rapid and sustained economic growth over the past few decades, and they each are home to companies that meet our quality growth criteria.

In this outlook, we explain why we believe the benefit of investing internationally, even in rapidly growing economies, often does not outweigh the risk. We use China as a case study for this discussion, but many of the observations we make about China apply to other countries as well. Our analysis reinforces our view that the U.S. continues to provide the most attractive investment environment, and our country’s persistent population growth appears to be an additional and underappreciated advantage that could last for decades.

China: Exceptional Growth Has Not Translated into Superior Returns

China is in many ways the poster child for well-managed, rapid economic growth, yet equity returns in the country have lagged those in the U.S. for the past 20 years.

Starting in 1978, a succession of Chinese leaders made significant reforms to China’s economy and opened the country to outside investment and increased trade, culminating in China’s joining the WTO in 2001. More recently, an escalating trade war with the U.S. and the EU have dented trade, but the Chinese economy continues to grow.

Amazingly, real GDP growth (which adjusts for inflation) in China since 1978 has been positive every single year, and real GDP has grown at roughly 9% annually over that period. Real GDP per capita (which measures the economic benefits adjusting for population growth) has exploded, growing over 10% annually since 1978.

As a result, nearly 800 million Chinese escaped poverty over the last 40 years. China now has the second largest economy in the world, after the U.S. Adjusting for purchasing power parity, which considers currency effects by country, China actually has the largest economy in the world.