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February 2025 / ASSET ALLOCATION

When Valuation Fails

Investors need a fresh approach to relative valuation signals

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    Understanding why investment strategies fail can provide valuable insights and help improve future investment approaches. To that end, we studied the failure of the relative valuation signal, which is used in many tactical asset allocation models.

    Value and growth stocks often are distinguished by their book‑to‑market (B/M) ratios. Book value represents the company’s worth according to accountants, while market value represents investors’ perceptions based on future earnings prospects. Stocks with high B/M ratios typically are viewed as “cheap,” putting them in the value universe, while those with low ratios are “expensive”—a trait associated with growth companies. However, valuing a company is a complex task and requires forecasting future earnings potential and assessing risk.

    Please refer to the full paper for specific study results and additional details on the methodology. On the web at: troweprice.com/content/dam/aem-email/ss/americas/pdf/2024/JPM_when_valuation_fails_Americas.pdf. The analysis performed is not based on actual investments. The analysis is for research purposes only.

    From July 1926 through 2023, stocks with high B/M ratios outperformed those with low B/M ratios by an arithmetic average of 4.2% per year.1 This return premium could be explained as compensation for risk, given that value stocks historically have tended to be more cyclical.

    However, the value style has persistently underperformed since the 2008–2009 global financial crisis (GFC). As a result, over the past 20 years the value return premium has disappeared, with growth stocks outperforming value stocks by an average 1.4%2 during that period, despite their low B/M ratios.

    The apparent disappearance of the value premium has challenged tactical asset allocators who seek to use relative valuation metrics to overweight cheap and underweight expensive asset classes. This approach faces two big challenges:

    • It isn’t easy to catch turning points in relative valuation performance, which typically require some sort of external catalyst.
    • Secular changes can create value traps. Relative to growth stocks, value stocks have gotten steadily cheaper over the last 20 years—a disheartening trend for investors counting on mean reversion.

    Our study examined the implications of the failure of mean reversion for the value premium.

    Study methodology

    Our study examined the implications of the failure of mean reversion for the value premium. We did this by back‑testing 24 hypothetical portfolio scenarios that sought to overweight value stocks when they appeared relatively cheaper than growth stocks and vice versa. These hypothetical scenarios were derived from the size and style portfolios identified by Eugene Fama and Kenneth French in their 1993 paper, “Common Risk Factors in the Returns of Stocks and Bonds.”3

    Each hypothetical scenario represented a different approach that a portfolio manager might take to valuation signals. Four of the scenarios focused on the rolling average of relative valuation over various periods. The other 20 were based on relative valuation percentiles. If the signal favored either value or growth, the hypothetical portfolio was fully allocated to that style. If the signal was neutral, the portfolio was assumed to be invested in a 50%/50% neutral mix. The relative valuation signal was lagged by one month.

    Evaluating the results

    For our study, we also developed a new methodology to evaluate back-tested performance. Traditional statistical measures are silent on the sensitivity of a model’s performance to the choices of look‑back periods and portfolio construction methodologies.

    Our approach, which we call Data Mining Confidence Bands, complements traditional metrics. The upper and lower bounds of the bands correspond to the 10th and 90th percentiles of a scenarios hypothetical performance in any given month. Thus, they show the probable range of hypothetical performance at the 80% significance level. By not cherry‑picking a favorable combination of hypothetical trading parameters, we believe this approach increased the transparency of our results.

    Study results

    We found that the back‑tested scenarios delivered modest excess returns relative to the neutral mix after accounting for assumed trading costs. For purposes of the analysis, “outperformance” and “alpha” are the back-tested scenarios performance relative to the neutral mix.4

    A quarter of the hypothetical scenarios underperformed the benchmark over the full period. Most of the underperforming scenarios were characterized by long look‑back periods—suggesting that investors should avoid comparing current valuations with the distant past.

    The tectonic shift in style performance since the GFC highlights this lesson. Over the last 20 years, the average information ratio (IR) that we calculated across the 24 hypothetical scenarios indicated that that the effectiveness of the relative valuation signal disappeared in the last two decades.

    Taking momentum into account

    We also tested whether accounting for momentum could have enhanced hypothetical performance, using 10 different momentum signals favoring whichever style (growth or value) outperformed the neutral mix in the recent past. The objective was to "buy" the relative valuation signal only if momentum supported it. The momentum signal also was lagged by one month.

    We found that momentum adjustments improved the hypothetical performance of the relative valuation signals considerably. The most successful signals measured momentum in terms of trailing 6‑ and 12‑month relative returns and the difference between 12 and 36‑month relative returns. The worst outcome was based on rolling 36‑month relative returns. This indicated that such a horizon likely is too long to capture momentum.

    Momentum would have helped our hypothetical scenarios avoid value traps. Nonetheless, it was not enough to counter the structural headwinds in the post‑GFC era. The average IR over the last 20 years was still low and close to the bottom of the historical range even after controlling for momentum.

    What happened to value?

    In our view, the underperformance of value stocks since the GFC can largely be attributed to technological advancement and the accounting treatment of intangible assets.

    Growth companies, especially technology companies, tend to invest heavily in intangibles such as research and development. This can make their market value appear overvalued relative to their book value. Earnings and cash flows for many growth companies also have been understated because intangibles are immediately expensed. Accounting practices have not adapted to this shift.5

    Business fundamentals, like valuations, also have trended rather than mean reverted. Profitability in the growth universe steadily improved relative to the value universe over the past two decades as major tech platform companies operating in a digital world demonstrated sustained and exceptional growth.

    Conclusions

    Relative valuation models have failed over the last 20 years, partly due to technological progress and static accounting practices. However, while challenges remain, tactical allocation based on relative value is not dead. But it does require a more sophisticated approach, in our view.

    Instead of following a rigid approach, we believe investors will need to make their own judgments about a variety of factors, including accounting adjustments, fundamental research, an understanding of technology trends, and macroeconomic and market sentiment indicators.

    IMPORTANT INFORMATION

    This material is being furnished for general informational purposes only. The material does not constitute or undertake to give advice of any nature, including fiduciary investment advice. Prospective investors are recommended to seek independent legal, financial and tax advice before making any investment decision. T. Rowe Price group of companies including T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. and/or its affiliates receive revenue from T. Rowe Price investment products and services. Past performance is no guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.

    The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may get back less than the amount invested.

    The material does not constitute a distribution, an offer, an invitation, a personal or general recommendation or solicitation to sell or buy any securities in any jurisdiction or to conduct any particular investment activity. The material has not been reviewed by any regulatory authority in any jurisdiction.

    Information and opinions presented have been obtained or derived from sources believed to be reliable and current; however, we cannot guarantee the sources' accuracy or completeness. There is no guarantee that any forecasts made will come to pass. The views contained herein are as of the date noted on the material and are subject to change without notice; these views may differ from those of other T. Rowe Price group companies and/or associates. Under no circumstances should the material, in whole or in part, be copied or redistributed without consent from T. Rowe Price.

    The material is not intended for use by persons in jurisdictions which prohibit or restrict the distribution of the material and in certain countries the material is provided upon specific request. 

    It is not intended for distribution to retail investors in any jurisdiction.

    Issued in Canada by T. Rowe Price (Canada), Inc. T. Rowe Price (Canada), Inc.’s investment management services are only available to non-individual Accredited Investors and non-individual Permitted Clients as defined under National Instrument 45-106 and National Instrument 31-103, respectively. T. Rowe Price (Canada), Inc. enters into written delegation agreements with affiliates to provide investment management services.

    © 2025 T. Rowe Price. All Rights Reserved. T. ROWE PRICE, INVEST WITH CONFIDENCE, and the Bighorn Sheep design are, collectively and/or apart, trademarks of T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.

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    Key Insights
    • Although the value style of equity investing has provided a return premium over the long run, that premium disappeared over the past two decades.
    • U.S. value stock underperformance since the 2008–2009 financial crisis appears to stem from technological change and accounting practices for intangible assets.
    • Relative valuation is still viable, but investors should consider the need to incorporate momentum, adjust for accounting, and follow technological trends.