The Sunday Drive - 01/05/2025 Edition [#144]
Musings and Meanderings of a Financial Provocateur
đđŒ Hello friends!
Greetings from Saratoga Spring, NY!!! đ
Welcome to 2025! Let's get it started off right by enjoying a leisurely Sunday Drive around the internet.
đ¶ Vibin'
No particular theme for this week, just a good song Iâve always loved. Itâs been covered by many artists over the years, but this one is my favorite. This week Iâm vibinâ to Tom Jonesâ rendition of Treat Her Right. EnjoyâŠ
đ Â Quote of the Weekâ
âItâs the human desire in all of us to want to make life better for somebody else. It makes you feel larger. It makes you feel part of the whole human race.â
â Doris Kearns Goodwin
đ Â Chart of the Week
This weekâs Chart compares the performance of growth versus value stocks across the U.S., Eurozone, and U.K., as represented by their respective MSCI indices. From December 2023 through December 2024, we see U.S. growth stocks leaving their value counterparts and the broader Eurozone and U.K. indices in the dust. The gap widens dramatically in late 2024, and U.S. growth stocks significantly outperformed their value and non-U.S. peers over the year.
Now, letâs zoom out a bit and talk about what this means for investors. The dominance of U.S. growth stocks (think tech behemoths and innovation-driven companies) isnât exactly breaking newsâtheyâve been leading the charge for years. But this weekâs Chart tells a subtle and interesting story. U.S. growth stocks are on fire and their valuations are stretched. Meanwhile, non-U.S. value stocks (particularly in the U.K. and Europe) are flatlining, which might look boring but screams âopportunityâ if youâre hunting for relative bargains.
Why Consider Decreasing U.S. Growth Stock Exposure?
Letâs start with the elephant in the room: valuation. U.S. growth stocks are trading at high multiples. Their forward P/E ratio stands at 22.3, placing it in the 95th percentile of historical valuations. History tells us these names can be vulnerable in environments of rising interest rates or slowing economic growth. If those tailwinds (e.g., low rates, massive liquidity) reverse, the downside risk is significant.
Additionally, concentration risk is real. The U.S. equity market is heavily dominated by a handful of mega-cap growth namesâApple, Microsoft, NVIDIA, etc. Diversifying into areas where valuations are more reasonable (read: non-U.S. markets) could be a smart move, potentially reducing overall portfolio risk.
The Case for Non-U.S. Value Stocks
Non-U.S. value stocks, particularly in Europe and the U.K., are trading at deep discounts compared to their U.S. growth counterparts. Theyâre also heavily weighted toward sectors like financials, energy, and industrialsâsectors that tend to shine in periods of rising interest rates, higher inflation, or economic recovery.
Moreover, currency dynamics could work in U.S. investorsâ favor. The dollar has been exceedingly strong, but if it starts to weaken, investments by U.S. investors in foreign markets could get a nice currency tailwind, boosting returns.
Growth vs. Value in a Global Context
This isnât just about geography. Itâs about style diversification. For portfolios heavily tilted toward U.S. growth due to relative outperformance, they are likely overexposed to a narrow slice of the market. Allocating more to international value stocks can balance that out, providing exposure to sectors and geographies that might thrive in the next market cycle.
To summarize: By reducing exposure to frothy growth stocks and reallocating to non-U.S. value stocks, investors can hedge against concentration risk, benefit from attractive valuations, and position their portfolios for a changing market environment.
Sources:
âą Goldman Sachs
âą MSCI
âą Currency Effects on International Investing
đ Interesting Drive-By's
đ Forward Motion
đĄ Warren Buffettâs Essential Golden Rule
đ€ Why This Entrepreneurial Journalist Doesnât Fear AI
đ° Ben Grahamâs New York City Duplex
đł A Scientist Says Humans Will Go Backwards in Time Within Just 5 Years
đđŒ Parting Thought
If you have any cool articles or ideas that might be interesting for future Sunday Drive-by's, please send them along or tweet 'em (X âem?) at me.
Please note that the content in The Sunday Drive is intended for informational purposes only, and is in no way intended to be financial, legal, tax, marital, or even cooking advice. Consult your own professionals as needed. The views expressed in The Sunday Drive are mine alone, and are not necessarily the views of Investment Research Partners or Cache Financials.
âI hope you have a relaxing weekend and a great week ahead. See you next Sunday...
Your faithful financial provocateur,
-Mikeâ
If you enjoy the Sunday Drive, I'd be honored if you'd share it with others.ââ
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Tom Jones has some moves in that vid!