Forget inflation. Forget oil prices. Forget Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. Forget layoffs in the tech sector. Forget the yield curve.
When I sat down to write about what worked for investors in 2022 and what didn’t, I came to a simple conclusion. Put very simply, what worked was price.
Price mattered in 2022. Or, if you prefer, “value” mattered.
If you bought inexpensive assets a year ago you did OK, even despite the market rout. If you bought expensive assets…well, not so much.
The biggest winners of the year were, of course, those who owned energy stocks. The Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF XLE,
And sure, Putin and the energy crisis were a big part of that.
But…another huge part was that a year ago oil stocks were really, really, really cheap. Take bellwether Exxon Mobil XOM,
So oil stocks began 2022 really cheap. And as value investors like to say, “good things happen to cheap assets.” Sooner or later someone who bought big oil stocks at knockdown prices was going to make out. Putin’s war sped up the process, but it wasn’t the only factor.
(Incidentally, in the second half of 2020 Exxon was booted out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA,
Or take inflation-protected U.S. Treasury bonds, known as “TIPS.” You’d think, wouldn’t you, that these would have boomed when inflation took off. Not a chance. TIPS had a dismal year. The broad-based Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities VAIPX,
What was going on? Well, a year ago TIPS were really, really expensive. All along the yield curve they sported negative “real” or inflation-adjusted interest rates—which is another way of saying that if you bought them back then you were guaranteed to lose purchasing power over the life of the bond.
Nuts? Well, the market didn’t like it. While inflation took off, TIPS tanked. By October, the same bonds were sufficiently cheap that you could lock in long-term real rates of nearly 2%. By historic standards that is pretty reasonable. And at that point they bottomed out.
And then there were stocks.
A year ago, futuristic “growth” stocks were in the stratosphere and boring, profits here-and-now “value” stocks were in the dumps: Nobody wanted them. The price gap between the two was as high as it was during the madness of the first dot-com bubble. Tesla TSLA,
Toyota began 2022 valued at less than 10 times the previous year’s earnings. Tesla? Oh, 400 times.
So there is no great mystery why Tesla has lost about three quarters of its value since then, while Toyota is down just over 20% (And still looks pretty cheap, actually, on around 10 times last year’s earnings.)
Or why the most popular U.S. “growth” stock index, the Nasdaq Composite QQQ,
And the indexes don’t tell the whole story. When I look through the list of U.S. mutual-fund managers who actually made money for their clients last year, “value” managers dominate the list. Those who hunted for bargain stocks found the best opportunities.
White shoe Boston money managers in 2020 launched a special hedge fund (for the rich and institutions) which bought the “cheap” stocks and sold short—bet against—the expensive ones. Returns last year? Up 20% (through the end of November).
I’d mention bitcoin and “NFTs,” but as far as I can tell any price for them is too much. NFTs are completely worthless. And I am still waiting for someone—anyone—to give me an actual reason why we need these digital coins, let alone why a year ago they were “valued” collectively at $3 trillion.
Sorry, crypto fans. To quote the famous poker player Herbert Yardley, I wouldn’t bet on this stuff with counterfeit money.
Personally, I’ve always seen the appeal of buying cheap “value” stocks in the hope that they will become more expensive (or just pay out big dividends). I’ve never really been able to get my head around the idea of buying wildly expensive “growth” stocks in the hope that they will become even more wildly expensive. There is plenty of data to argue that over the long-term buying low has usually been a better strategy than buying high. But to each their own. People who bought high made a lot of money from 2017 to 2021.
What does this mean for 2023? Casey Stengel made the only worthwhile comment on predictions: Never make them, especially about the future.
But it’s still possible, at the very least, to see which assets appear cheap and which don’t. The U.S. stock market, for example, trades at 17 times forecast earnings: The figures for Tokyo FLJP,
The U.S. stock market, as measured by a long-term measure known as Tobin’s q, is twice its historic average valuation. Meanwhile, I notice the real yields on TIPS have been creeping back up lately. The bonds that mature in 2045 now offer a guaranteed return of 1.75% a year above inflation for the next 22 years.
All of these assets may get even cheaper in the months ahead. Nobody knows. But it’s hard to argue they are expensive now. They are certainly better value than they were a year ago.
Source: finance.yahoo.com