Tag Archives: finance
Glamour Stocks And Anchoring On The Changing P/E
Glamour stocks – Over the long-term, value investing as a style outperforms growth (if you’re looking for the evidence to support this statement, you can find it here , here and here ). We’ve known this to be the case for the past five decades. Why then does growth remain a popular strategy? This question formed the basis of a recent study conducted by Anderson, Keith P. and Zastawniak, Tomasz. The results of the study were published at the end of October in a paper entitled, Glamour, Value and Anchoring on the Changing P/E . Citation: Anderson, Keith P. and Zastawniak, Tomasz, Glamour, Value and Anchoring on the Changing P/E (October 23, 2015). Available at SSRN . Glamour, Value and Anchoring on the Changing P/E It has been known since 1960 that a portfolio of low P/E ‘value’ shares will produce better returns than a portfolio of high P/E ‘glamour/growth’ shares (Nicholson, S.F. 1960. Price-earnings ratios. Financial Analysts Journal, 16(4): 43-45.). Many studies have attempted to establish why this is the case but most of these studies have had one key flaw. Indeed, the studies in question have all revolved around the belief that value shares are riskier than glamour shares, which isn’t true. Shleifer and Vishny (Lakonishok, J., Shleifer, A. & Vishny, R. 1994. Contrarian investment, extrapolation, and risk. The Journal of Finance, 49(5): 1541-78.) concluded that value shares are not fundamentally riskier than glamour shares and they went on to give one possible behavioral explanation as to why investors may prefer glamour stocks: they want to appear more prudent. In other words, because glamour shares have been going up in the period before buying, their acquisition is easier to justify. Anderson, Keith P. and Zastawniak, Tomasz argue that a different behavioral explanation is behind the value/glamour split – a well-known feature of investors’ own bounded rationality: anchoring . “Investors may anchor on the P/E ratio currently attached to a stock when they invest in it. Having bought the stock, they expect the P/E to change slowly, if at all. As time goes on, the P/E decile changes, and different prospects for returns attach to each decile. If there is a differential drift in the P/E and hence returns between value and glamour stocks that is not expected by investors, this could account for why glamour investors end up disappointed.” – Glamour, Value and Anchoring on the Changing P/E . (click to enlarge) (click to enlarge) Glamour stocks vs. value Source: Brandes Institute titled, ” T he Role Of Expectations In Value And Glamour Stock Returns. ” Glamour stocks: Three questions With this hypothesis in place, Anderson, Keith P. and Zastawniak, Tomasz focused their research on answering three fundamental questions: Is there justification for the P/Es of value and glamour shares to change at different rates and the fact that value shares outperform glamour shares? What are the observed changes in P/Es and the returns that attach to them, and do investors’ decisions appear to be affected by anchoring ? Can glamour shares’ returns match or exceed those of value shares over any time period? With respect to question one, the study finds that by applying option pricing theory and Merton’s model to prices, and thus P/Es, of value and glamour shares can indeed be expected to move differently. The answer to question two is that glamour shares give three times the returns of value shares if they stay in the same decile, but they have a much greater tendency to move decile, which seems to be the reason behind value’s historical outperformance. Moreover, glamour investors appear to be underestimating the tendency of their shares to change P/E decile by at least 18%. This helps answer question three. Based on the study’s research, glamour investors will be subject to unimpressive returns whatever their time horizon. Glamour stocks: Key findings The major findings of Anderson, Keith P. and Zastawniak, Tomasz’s paper are rather interesting. The paper concludes that the main reason many investors continue to buy glamour shares is because they perceive the high P/E ratios of glamour stocks to be more permanent than they really are. A result of investors’ own behavioural bias of anchoring on the high initial values. However, glamour stocks whose P/E remained elevated throughout the study did outperform value stocks over the same period. Nevertheless, the tendency for the P/E of glamour stocks to change suddenly, and without notice, explains why glamour investors have, and will continue to see poorer returns than those following a value strategy. Disclosure: None
RSX: What Happened?
Summary RSX enjoys a rally while oil prices continue to fall. Political developments are the main reason for this. Fundamentally, Russia is under increased pressure due to falling oil. Earlier in October, I wrote an article discussing what worked and what did not work in my initial Market Vectors Russia ETF (NYSEARCA: RSX ) bear thesis. What interested me most was why RSX gained more support than I expected. I arrived to the conclusion that the combination of capital inflow and stronger ruble played a role in RSX’ relative strength. Nevertheless, I remained bearish on RSX. My bearish view on oil played a key role in this thesis. RSX’ top holdings Surgutneftegaz ( OTCPK:SGTPY ), LUKOIL ( OTC:LUKFY ), Tatneft ( OTCPK:OAOFY ) and Rosneft ( OTC:RNFTF ) are directly dependent on oil prices. Banks Sberbank ( OTCPK:SBRCY ) and VTB Bank are dependent on oil indirectly, as weaker oil leads to weaker Russian economy. Polyus Gold ( OTCPK:OPYGY ), Uralkali, Polymetal ( OTCPK:AUCOY ) get hurt by low commodity prices. This list can go on and on… However, as I’m writing this article, RSX gained 6.6% in two days, while oil prices remained under pressure – WTI is trading near $42 per barrel and Brent is trading below $44 per barrel. So, what happened? French tragedy boosted outlook for Russia G-20 leaders met after the horrific terrorist attacks in Paris. The sense of urgency made them turn to Russia, seeking to unite efforts on war with terrorism. The change of tone towards Russia was so dramatic that S&P even stated that new developments could help lift sanctions and boost Russia’s credit rating. In a separate event, Russia proposed Ukraine to pay off its $3 billion of debt by $1 billion per year starting from 2016. Russian also wanted U.S. and E.U. guarantees for Ukraine’s debt. If this deal is executed, it will effectively mean a new emission of Russia’s dollar-denominated debt. Currently, the country is cut from capital markets because of sanctions, so such a development will be a major breakthrough. Russia will become investable again. This was probably what went in the heads of fund managers when they looked at their exposure to Russia (there was little if any, I suppose). So, they just pushed the buy button regardless of oil prices. This is a bet that sanctions will be lifted by mid-2016, boosting the troubled economy. Is it sustainable? In the past few days, I’ve been thinking about whether my own perception of the Russian economy disturbs me from some “real picture”. Perhaps, all the bad news – poor economy, falling oil, various inefficiencies – are already priced in RSX and I’m just stubborn not to admit it. There is such a possibility. However, I don’t think the current rally will be sustainable unless oil prices actually rebound. The first reason for this is the Russian ruble – it became too strong in recent days. After a long and hard debate, Russian government approved the country’s budget for 2016. The main variable in the budget is the price of oil, which is denominated in rubles. The ruble-denominated price that Russia expects to get in 2016 is 3165. As I am writing this article, the ruble-denominated price of Brent oil is 2837 – way too low for the budget. As Russia’s reserve fund could run empty by 2016, according to the Ministry of Finance, the Central Bank may be forced to do something about the ruble if it stays strong. The only viable way is to cut the key rate, which stands at 11%. At the same time, the Fed might finally raise the rate, boosting the dollar and further hurting commodities. The combination of these two possible events will be detrimental to Russian securities. The recent enthusiasm in RSX may be short-lived as investors realize how much of a burden are low oil prices to both Russian oil producers and the economy in general. There’s most likely a long way before sanctions are lifted, and please remember this is politics – you can smile and say one thing and do the opposite. I think there are fundamental reasons to be very concerned about the Russian economy. However, in the light of recent events, anyone interested in shorting RSX should proceed with caution. Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.