Monday, February 18, 2013

Jeremy Grantham on Investing in a Low-Growth World

You never know where Jeremy Grantham, head of GMO, quarterly newsletter will appear. This past quarter for Q4 2012 appeared front and center in the editor's section of Barron's.  I have also enclosed a link to a PDF version here located on the GMO website.

As usual Grantham's newsletters are always extremely insightful but can also get quite lengthy.  Below is a few bullet points that we took away from his piece this quarter.

  • For there to be a stable equilibrium, assets, including entire corporations in the stock market, must sell at replacement cost. If they were to sell below that, no one would invest and instead would merely buy assets in the marketplace cheaper than they could build themselves until shortages developed and prices rose, eventually back to replacement cost, at which price a corporation would make a fair return on a new investment, etc.
  • The history of market returns completely supports this replacement cost view. The fact that growth companies historically have underperformed the market – probably because too much was expected of them and because they were more appealing to clients – was not accepted for decades, but by about the mid-1990s the historical data in favor of "value" stocks began to overwhelm the earlier logically appealing idea that growth should win out. It was clear that "value" or low growth stocks had won for the prior 50 years at least.
  • In the meantime for us at GMO it means emphasizing care and maintaining a heightened sense of value discipline, not only in stock selection, as the whole world is once again bid up over fair value in a way so typical of the post 1994 era, but also in forestry and farmland. GMO has investments in those areas too and recognizes the need to sidestep overpricing by emphasizing the nooks and crannies. Fortunately there are more nooks and deeper crannies in forests and farmland than there are in almost any other area, certainly including stocks.
  • When one combines the apparent determination and influence of those who do the bullying with the career risk and short-termism of the bullied and the desire of the general public to believe unbelievable good news, these overpricings can go much further and the Fed can win another round or two. That's the problem. A clue to timing would be when we begin to hear more passionate new era arguments: profit margins will always be higher; growth will snap back to 3% for the developed world; and new ones I can't think of … maybe "when the discount rate is this low the Dow should sell at, perhaps, 36,000." In the meantime, prudent managers should be increasingly careful. Same ole, same ole.

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