Is Value Ready to Break Out?

Recs

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Something extraordinary happened this year. Something so extraordinary, it has happened on only four other occasions since 1927. Something that over the past 40 years has made investors bags of money.

Value stocks are down for their second straight year.

That's it?
Control your excitement, and I'll tell you why this is so significant.

Value stocks are often the cheapest stocks in the market, because they trade at depressed prices in relation to their revenue, earnings, or book value. They can be cyclical companies, such as homebuilder Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL), or companies just going through a rough patch, such as Whole Foods Market (Nasdaq: WFMI).

But that cheapness belies their actual worth. Numerous studies have shown that these bargain-basement stocks outperform their showier and more expensive counterparts. In fact, according to Eugene Fama & Kenneth French, stocks with low price-to-book value ratios outperform stocks with high ratios by 4.3 percentage points annually.

Can't keep 'em down
Value stocks don't get knocked down often, and they rarely stay down for long. Neither the savings and loan crisis of the late 1980s, the Asian financial crisis of 1997-1998, nor the economic recession of 1990-1991 could knock these stocks down for two straight years. Not even the stagflation hydra of the late 1970s could do that.

According to Fama & French, large-cap value stocks have fallen for two consecutive years only five times in the past 100 years:

  • Great Depression: 1929-1932
  • World War II: 1939-1941
  • Arab oil embargo: 1973-1974
  • Collapse of the Internet bubble: 2001-2002
  • Collapse of the housing bubble: 2007-2008

It's rare, but this kind of marketwide value depression is a golden opportunity.

The snap-back effect
See, when value stocks recover, they do so with a vengeance. They return to the outperformance that has made them the darlings of many of our most legendary investors.

The following are the returns for value stocks after they fell for two straight years:

  • 1931 return: -58% (1932: -3%, 1933: 117%)
  • 1941 return: -1% (1942: 34%)
  • 1975 return: 56%
  • 2003 return: 35%
  • 2009 return: ?

I can't predict when value stocks will recover from the current financial crises, but this data suggests that you want to be invested when they do -- because their performance will probably dwarf even their usual outsized gains.

Yes, it's tough to buy right now. It might even be worse than you think for a while. But I believe the market will recover, and you'll want to profit from that recovery. And that means buying solid companies that have the capacity to ride out this market turbulence.

Bargains are out there
Even in uncertain times like these, famous value investors are seeing extreme buying opportunities. Warren Buffett said recently that this is the time to buy. Ever curious, I used the stock screening tool on Motley Fool CAPS to search for some highly rated large-cap stocks with high dividend yields and low price-to-earnings multiples. I came up with the following list, which could be a good starting point for further research:

Company Name

CAPS Rating (5 Max)

Market Capitalization

Dividend Yield

Price-to-Earnings Ratio (TTM)

Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW)

*****

$25.0 billion

6.2%

9.8

Vodafone (NYSE: VOD)

****

$100.6 billion

10.5%

7.6

Veolia Environnement (NYSE: VE)

****

$12.9 billion

11.4%

8.7

GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE: GSK)

****

$105.2 billion

4.7%

10.8

Telefonica (NYSE: TEF)

****

$96.2 billion

5.0%

7.2

Data from Motley Fool CAPS as of Nov. 5, 2008.

The Foolish bottom line
The market is dreadful right now, but it's creating the conditions for remarkable returns when it recovers. And that means it's time to buy.

At Motley Fool Inside Value, we're seeing a lot of compelling opportunities, including stocks trading at substantial discounts to their intrinsic value. If you'd like to find out what we're recommending now, take a 30-day free trial to Inside Value. You'll get all of our recommendations, including our five best bets for new money now, as well as a discount cash flow calculator you can use to find values of your own. Click here to get started -- there's no obligation to subscribe.

This article was first published Sept. 11, 2008. It has been updated.

Fool analyst Andrew Sullivan has no financial position in any of the stocks mentioned in this article. Veolia Environnement, GlaxoSmithKline, and Dow Chemical are Motley Fool Income Investor selections. Whole Foods Market is a Motley Fool Stock Advisor pick. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On November 06, 2008, at 12:52 PM, Gryphon433 wrote:

    The dividend on VOD is only $1.49; so the actual yeild is slightly above 8%. It may well be raised, but for now $1.49 is the base rate.

    The dividend on VE is $1.89. Last year VE distributed an additional special dividend which it will not do this year.

    So, this is why the Motley Fool is called M0tely Fool. Their work is often inaccurate and sloppy.

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Related Tickers

11/20/2009 4:00 PM
WFMI $26.36 Down -0.61 -2.26%
Whole Foods Market… CAPS Rating: ***
GSK $41.53 Up +0.06 +0.14%
GlaxoSmithKline pl… CAPS Rating: *****
DOW $27.93 Down -0.15 -0.53%
The Dow Chemical C… CAPS Rating: ****
VOD $22.51 Down +0.00 +0.00%
Vodafone Group Plc… CAPS Rating: *****
TEF $85.65 Down -1.55 -1.78%
Telefonica S.A. (A… CAPS Rating: ****
VE $34.28 Down -0.06 -0.17%
Veolia Environneme… CAPS Rating: *****
TOL $20.02 Down -0.49 -2.39%
Toll Brothers, Inc… CAPS Rating: *

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