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  • Welcome to Charts that Count.

  • It's one of the oldest debates in stock market investing.

  • Is it better to own companies that

  • are generating lots of cash now and to buy those companies

  • cheaply?

  • Or is it better to own companies with great growth potential

  • that will generate lots of cash further into the future?

  • This is the debate known as value versus growth.

  • If you look at this chart you'll see

  • that the growth stocks have solidly outperformed value

  • stocks over the last decade.

  • $100 invested in the growth index

  • a decade ago has returned over $350

  • as tech stocks like Amazon and Apple have outperformed.

  • The same $100 invested in the value index,

  • which features cyclical stocks in banking and in energy,

  • has returned less than $250.

  • Why have growth stocks outperformed so spectacularly?

  • Part of the reason is that over the last decade

  • interest rates have fallen.

  • And when interest rates fall the discount applied to future cash

  • flows goes down.

  • In other words, lower rates means money tomorrow is worth

  • more, hence the outperformance of stocks

  • with great future growth potential.

  • Recently, however, the trend has reversed.

  • This is the same chart we just looked

  • at but over a much shorter time span, just a few months.

  • And as you can see, here, it's the value stocks

  • that have outperformed, returning

  • almost twice what the growth stocks have provided.

  • Interestingly, there are two almost opposite interpretations

  • of what this reversal may mean.

  • The first interpretation is optimistic.

  • The value stocks are outperforming

  • because of optimism about the performance

  • of cyclical stocks, again, such as banks and energy companies.

  • If the economy is going to continue to be strong,

  • then these cyclical stocks should do well.

  • The second interpretation is much more pessimistic.

  • On this view, the outperformance of value

  • of companies that generate more cash now

  • is a reflection of pessimism.

  • In other words, investors frightened

  • about the economic future are moving towards companies

  • that have the cash today.

  • What we have then is a case where

  • there's been a clear reversal of trend,

  • but the interpretation is anything but clear.

Welcome to Charts that Count.

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