Whatever approach an investor uses it is all about the odds. Thinking like a poker player is keyOddson.
Fair enough sinner although from the charts I just looked at it seems the outperformance has only been since mid to late 2010.
Also I wasn't probably precise enough with what I said, the research I was presented with showed that value investing outperformed over the longer-term and not over 1-3 year periods.
If you look at those same index's you've shown since 1/1/2001 the value index has outperformed the growth index by almost double.
79.73% vs 40.11%
Or if you look back as far as google finance would let me - 4/8/2000 the value index had also outperformed the growth index by even more:
102.85% vs 19.07%
This leads me to believe that while the growth index is outperforming value at the moment since the GFC, i'd like to see how it has gone maybe 4-5 years from today.
EDIT: Note the index's are made up in a similar fashion to the research I was presented with - This index uses Price to Book (essentially the inverse of Book to Market as i've said before in here) and also only uses the small cap area.
Goid point Odds-on and to think I have been thinking Odd - Son when I see your name.:
I guess the Tom Knapp link between and the superinvestor speach and Tweedy Browne is not lost on you.
So pretty well all here are still nutting out their plan
No one has portfolio returning a long term profit.
Definitely not only since 2010. This is a secular change in the market which began distinctly with the Quant blowup in 2007.
Growth Vs Value
with the benefit of hindsight
Motorway
It is unsur- prising that, when the dispersion in valuation multiples widens, usually growth concurrently beats value, and vice versa. At the peak of the tech bubble in early 2000, after a stellar period for growth stocks, Valuation Dispersion had widened more than at any time in U.S. capital mar- kets history.11 This laid the foundation for seven consec- utive years of success for value investors. Then, after this seven-year winning streak for value stocks, the dispersion of valuation multiples was nearing all-time lows. This, in turn, laid the foundation for the debacle that occurred in value stocks from 2007 to early 2009.
Thanks for the great article motorway, I think kermit might find the chart titled "Exhibit 1" rather interesting in lieu of the discussion of 'outperformance'...
There are a few here like me hat can tell from people's postings if they trade or not and of those if they are profitable .
So pretty well all here are still nutting out their plan
No one has portfolio returning a long term profit.
Read in context.
I didnt mean the whole world.
Well I'm confused. I thought you were arguing structural change and Kermit cyclical. That report deficiently adds weight to the growth-value cycle.
You can see the "Exhibit 1" chart to see what I mean, there is a longer cyclical relationship which was happening just fine for a long time.
View attachment 46693
At the end of the chart, the cycle breaks down (magnitude blowout which indicates very high instability of the 'kernel').
The outperformance which kermit mentioned, unfortunately is only the result of the mean reversion from that blowout. Cyclical outperformance of either growth or value would have been many many orders of magnitude smaller.
Are you saying Kermit drew his conclusions by only looking at data since 2000? Maybe Kermit can clarify.
Question: If its stating that value is better found when the dispersion is wider does that indicate that if your very selective in your 'value' investments and only invest when there is deep deep value with large MOS that this is a perfrect situation for you to outperform?
It simply states wide value dispersion indicates during the next 'cycle' value premium will ....
The study reinforces that over the long term too much is paid for growth irrespective of whatever the value-growth cycle may be doing. The skew is in favour of value. Growth will have relatively smaller periods of outperformance when the cycle is most favourable.
Are you saying Kermit drew his conclusions by only looking at data since 2000? Maybe Kermit can clarify.
Essentially tech/a the figures I posted means that even if your picking the middle of the pack or possibly even the worst of the 'value' stocks your still going to beat the middle of the pack or worst of regular or particularly growth stocks. (From memory the standard deviations were all pretty similar).
How on earth does this help the investor/trader who has to value HIS portfolio
Are you suggesting you trade the INDEXES?
Any papers around on that?
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