Style-Box Update: Value Vs. Growth

Brian Gilmartin, CFA profile picture
Brian Gilmartin, CFA
10.07K Followers

The style-box update as of 11/16/18 is actually a little late: for some reason, the update wasn't made for September 30th. It is typically done every 6 weeks for readers.

The big change since mid-August is that mid-cap and small-cap "value" styles have not held their value as much as would otherwise be expected for "value" segments. In fact, mid-cap value has fallen roughly 8% and small-cap value 11% since mid-August. Growth has fallen more in percentage terms but is still at a substantial performance premium in large-cap and small-cap segments.

In mid-cap, the growth style's performance premium has narrowed considerably since 2017 and throughout 2018. I'm not sure why that is happening.

The Bloomberg Barclays Aggregate (the bond market equivalent of the S&P 500) is now roughly flat in terms of total return over the last 23 months.

Summary/conclusion: Even with the crushing of FAANG stocks in the 4th quarter, large-cap growth continues to be the best returning style-box asset class as of mid-November, 2018. It was 2016 where we saw a substantial performance premium by value over growth, and then since 2017, that flipped back to growth. In 2016, there was Brexit and then there was the US Presidential election.

Looking at charts of the 10-year Treasury yield and the US dollar (UUP) in 2016, it was a tale of two halves to the year: the US dollar was weak, and the 10-year Treasury rallied to its 2012, 1.38% yield retest, and then after Brexit and after the US Presidential election, the 10-year yield and the US dollar rallied rather sharply.

Is there causality between 2016 and the value style outperforming that year? I certainly can't draw that conclusion.

The point might be don't give up on value yet. It will have its day in the sun once again.

This article was written by

Brian Gilmartin, CFA profile picture
10.07K Followers
Brian Gilmartin, is a portfolio manager at Trinity Asset Management, a firm he founded in May, 1995, catering to individual investors and institutions that werent getting the attention and service deserved, from larger firms. Brian started in the business as a fixed-income / credit analyst, with a Chicago broker-dealer, and then worked at Stein Roe & Farnham in Chicago, from 1992 - 1995, before striking out on his own and managing equity and balanced accounts for clients. Brian has a BSBA (Finance) from Xavier University, Cincinnati, Ohio, (1982) and an MBA (Finance) from Loyola University, Chicago, January, 1985. The CFA was awarded in 1994. Brian has been fortunate enough to write for the TheStreet.com from 2000 to 2012, and then the WallStreet AllStars from August 2011, to Spring, 2012. Brian also wrote for Minyanville.com, and has been quoted in numerous publications including the Wall Street Journal.

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