A tremendous shift is coming in the stock market…
I am not talking about a crisis or a bear market – though the market’s volatility last year does play a role in it.
The shift I’m talking about will bankrupt many investors who’ve made gobs of money during this historic bull market over the past 10 years… and make millionaires out of a totally different type of investor.
Anyone with a passing knowledge of stock market history should already know all about the massive shift I’m about to describe…
I’m talking about a shift in the balance of power between two huge investment forces.
Let me explain…
This idea first appeared in 1924, when an investment adviser named Edgar Lawrence Smith published a terse little volume called Common Stocks as Long Term Investments. The book laid out the research Smith had done on the historical performances of stocks and bonds.
Originally, Smith thought he was sitting down to write a pamphlet on the superiority of bonds as long-term investments. He examined decades of stock and bond price data, from 1837 through 1922.
To his great surprise, Smith found that stocks had been the better long-term investment…
Today, this seems like a no-brainer. But back then, it was a tectonic shift in the widespread belief of the day. As Smith wrote…
Common stocks are, in general, regarded as a medium for Speculation – not for Long Term Investment. Bonds, on the other hand, are generally held to be the best medium for Long Term Investment – free from the hazards of Speculation.
Smith compared several baskets of more or less randomly chosen stocks versus high-grade bonds. The result was always the same: Stocks outperformed bonds.
He realized that when companies reinvested earnings into their businesses – rather than paying them out in dividends – stock prices went up over time.
Over the long term, Smith concluded, investors could count on a well-diversified portfolio of stocks to generate substantial capital gains and dividend income superior to the highest-grade bonds. He wrote…
In the selection of securities for investment, we must consider more than the expected income yield upon the amount invested, and may quite properly weigh the probability of principal enhancement over a term of years without departing from the most conservative viewpoint.
The idea of growth as conservative was radical. But by 1929, Smith’s book was a bestseller and “growth investing” was hot, with shoe-shiners and hairdressers trading stock tips and playing the stock market on margin, despite Smith warning investors to avoid “the extreme misfortune” of investing at a market peak.
When the crash of 1929 came, it wiped out thousands of investors, leading the world into the Great Depression.
At the depths of the Depression, another analyst published a radical new view of investing that would change the world forever…
Investor and teacher Benjamin Graham, aided by his partner David Dodd, published Security Analysis, a 725-page, all-encompassing guide to analyzing bonds, preferred stocks, and common stocks the likes of which had never been published before (and has never been published since).
Graham called Smith’s book, which totals 140 pages, a “small and rather sketchy volume.” He made the case that Smith’s book caused investors to focus too much on extrapolating the trend of earnings growth into the future.
Graham said the traditional approach to investing, which focused on “past records and tangible facts, became outworn and was discarded” in the 1920s as Smith’s ideas gained popularity. “The past was important only in so far as it showed the direction in which the future could be expected to move,” Graham said. (That’s the classic mistake of all growth investing: the belief that trees will grow to the sky.)
In Graham’s view, “The Common stocks-as-long-term-investments Doctrine,” a clear reference to Smith’s argument, was based on three ideas…
- “The value of a common stock depends on what it can earn in the future.”
- “Good common stocks will prove sound and profitable investment.”
- “Good common stocks are those which have shown a rising trend of earnings.”
Graham and Dodd immediately pointed out the two weaknesses in these assumptions… They “abolished the fundamental distinction between investment and speculation.” And they “ignored the price of a stock in determining whether it was a desirable purchase.”
Graham was showing the world the flaws of growth investing. What’s more, he advocated replacing it with sensible principles which today are known as “value investing.”
Tomorrow, I’ll show you that over the long term, value trumps growth. But we must conclude with a subtler point today…
Longtime readers of my work know the market tends to shift the balance of power back and forth between growth and value every several years. Growth has outperformed since 2009, and it looks like value is getting ready to take the lead for the next five to 10 years.
This is perhaps the single most exciting moment of my entire career as a value investor and equity analyst.
Value has underperformed growth for 10 years… And we are likely within several months of a major blow-off top of the longest bull run in stock market history.
Tomorrow, I’ll show you why now is the time to start thinking like a value investor – before this huge shift takes hold.
Good investing,
Dan Ferris
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Source: Daily Wealth