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“The more certain something is, the less likely it is to be profitable.”
-JIM ROGERS, acclaimed investor and former partner of George Soros

“You can’t buy what is popular and do well.”
-WARREN BUFFETT

 

Small-caps, large prices. It dawned on me in creating that section title how often those of us in the financial industry toss around the terms “large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap”. Normal human beings probably get the general idea but not the essence. To explain, please allow me to bring up another oft-used moniker: blue chips. That’s likely a more familiar term to most investors but what you may not be aware of is that it comes from poker where the highest value chips are blue—or at least they used to be in bygone days. Grizzled market veterans also sometimes refer to smaller companies as red chips, the next level down in the poker pecking order.

In days of less generous overall market valuations, the small-cap cut off point was a billion market capitalization (from which the abbreviation “cap” is derived). Capitalization is calculated by multiplying the price per share by the total number of shares outstanding. Thus, if a company has 100 million shares in existence and the current price per share is $10, then the total market “cap” is $1 billion.

Today, that break-point is generally assumed to be around $2 billion. (FYI, underneath small-caps are micro-caps—those companies with less than $300 million of market value—and at rock-bottom are the nano-caps, with market caps below $50 million; if you’ve never heard of the latter, don’t feel bad—until last week, neither had I!)

For much of US stock market history, blue chips have been considered worthy of a premium valuation relative to smaller, riskier companies. Certainly, that was the case in spades (to use another poker analogy) in the late 1990s. As you can see from the chart below, price-to-earnings ratios (P/Es) were much higher for large caps than they were for smaller companies at that time. Unquestionably, a major factor in this blue chip valuation premium was due to the bubble back then, particularly in large cap tech stocks, but also in some marquee names like GE, Gillette, Coke, and several other former market darlings.

FIGURE 1: LARGE-CAP VERSUS SMALL-CAP P/E 1990 TO 1999 chart-1Source: Evergreen Gavekal, Bloomberg    

But the reality is that since the inception of the official small-cap index in 1979, large- and small-caps have taken turns trading above and below parity with each other—at least until about fifteen years ago.  From then on, it’s been a very different story.

FIGURE 2: SMALL-CAP VERSUS LARGE P/E 1999 TO PRESENTchart-2Source: Evergreen Gavekal, Bloomberg    

As you can see, over most of this new century/millennium, inversion has been the norm, with small-caps generally trading at richer P/Es than the “Big Blues”. It’s certainly reasonable to speculate that the first few years were due to a reversion to the mean, or normalization, after such an extreme upside blow out by the blue chips in the roaring ‘90s. But, just as clearly, it’s fair to wonder if perhaps the inversion reversion hasn’t become something of a perversion.

A big friend for small stocks. Way back when, like in early November, small-caps were undergoing a persistent “de-rating” relative to large-caps. This process had begun in the summer of 2014 when broader indices like the NYSE composite ran out of gas. While the S&P 500, which is heavily skewed toward bigger stocks, had risen by 8.5% from June 30th, 2014 to October 31st, 2016, small-caps were actually down slightly. And, in the brief market shakeout from the summer of 2015 until February of this year, small-caps came down much harder than the S&P, minus 26% versus minus 14%, respectively. However, since the election, the Russell 2000 (the main index for smaller companies) has been a rocket ship. From November 8th, the red chips are up a rousing 14.5% versus the S&P itself up a nice, but much more pedestrian, 6%.

The reason for this recent remarkable underperformance by large compared to small can be summed up by another card game metaphor: the Big Blues been Trumped! The belief that Trumponomics is far friendlier to the red chips than the blue chips has become nearly universal. Much of this view relates to the rally in the dollar which is more of a negative for the multi-national enterprises that heavily populate the large-cap indices like the S&P 500 and, also, the Russell 1000.

Another perceived small-cap advantage, though much more speculative, is that Mr. Trump’s vow to cut the corporate tax rate will benefit smaller companies that don’t take advantage of lower offshore tax systems nearly as much as the big multinationals do. There is unquestionably some validity in this view but it’s a tad premature to treat dramatic corporate tax reform as a certainty.
Even more of a stretch is the belief that somehow small-cap companies are better positioned to benefit from Mr. Trump’s proposed infrastructure plans. This mindset ignores the world-class construction companies that are typically bigger in size and most capable of delivering on large-scale projects.

Yet, for now, only the upside scenario for small-caps is being considered. The quibbles I’ve brought up above are presently as bottom-of-mind as the team that was the runner-up in the 2006 Super Bowl (unless, of course, you are a Seahawk fan). But beyond those touched on above, I think there are some truly serious weaknesses in small-caps’ Kevlar vests. Let’s start with valuations.

Many EVA readers are aware of the Shiller P/E, also known as the Cyclically Adjusted P/E (CAPE). For those that aren’t, this widely-tracked valuation measure essentially takes an inflation-adjusted average of earnings for an index—like the S&P 500 or the Russell 2000—over a trailing ten-year timeframe.

The thesis behind this approach is that it smoothes out the typical extreme cyclicality of corporate earnings. No valuation technique is perfect, including the Shiller P/E. But to many, including your EVA author, it makes more sense than using the simple P/E ratio (and way better than using the so-called forward P/E ratio based on often over-optimistic analysts’ estimates). Just consider that if you relied only on prevailing P/E ratios, you wouldn’t have touched stocks with a barge pole in early 2009, even though they had been crushed. Due to the fact that earnings had totally vaporized back then, the official P/E ratio on the S&P was an absurdly elevated 120! (The profits implosion was not only due to the Great Recession but was also a function of the massive write-offs by financial entities.)

In contrast, the Shiller P/E based on a trailing ten-year average was a reasonable 14 times at the market bottom, one of its lowest readings of the last twenty years. Today, the CAPE is over 28, putting it in the 95th percentile of market history. This means that stocks have been more expensive on this basis less than 5% of the time. But, incredibly, for small-caps, the current Shiller P/E is well north of 40!

That’s a pretty shocking number, but when it comes to the bloated pricing of small-caps these days, there is much more to consider…

Pick a P/E, any P/E. Let’s focus on a more familiar P/E—the one based on current year profits. This isn’t as simple as it seems due to the unusual way Russell—the keeper of the small-cap index—views earnings since it ignores companies that are losing money.
In order to get a more realistic picture of the current small-cap P/E, Evergreen asked the quant whizzes at Ned Davis Research to calculate it using a less charitable methodology. In essence, their analysis produced a P/E ratio of nearly 36 (for geeks, they use an earnings yield approach to adjust for companies losing money; the number they came up with was 2.8%; 100 divided by 2.8 equals 35.7).

Reinforcing this point, Bloomberg states the trailing 12 month P/E ratio on the Russell 2000 is 48. The consensus expects earnings for the small-cap index to increase 50%, 27%, and 23% over the next three years. Anything’s possible, but that’s a scary amount of faith in Trumponomics lavishing bountiful profits on this asset class.

Then there is the issue of how long small-caps have been outperforming large-caps. Small-caps have returned 244%, or 7.3% annually, since 12/31/99 versus 113%, or just 4.4% per year, for large-caps over that time period. Per Ned Davis Research, this stretch of small-cap outperformance is the longest on record.

FIGURE 3: TOTAL RETURN ON THE RUSSELL 2000 SMALL-CAP INDEX (ORANGE LINE)
VERSUS S&P 500 (WHITE LINE) SINCE 12/31/99for-web_figure-3Source: Evergreen Gavekal, Bloomberg

Another way to view how ultra-expensive small-cap stocks are today is to revisit one of our favorite charts on the median price-to-sales ratio.  The “median” aspect means it measures the valuation of the 250th company, based on market capitalization, in the S&P 500—i.e., smack-dab in the middle.  When this number is lower than the overall market, it means that small-caps are cheap versus their larger peers on a price-to-revenue basis.  When it is higher than the market itself, it reflects overvalued smaller companies.  As you can see, on a median price-to-sales ratio the market is in uncharted waters.  On a straight price-to-sales basis (market-cap weighted, as is the S&P, where larger companies have a greater weighting), it’s very high but not as outrageously so.

FIGURE 4ndr_1

FIGURE 5

for-webndr_2

Source: Standard & Poor’s 500 Price/Sales Ratio, Ned Davis Research

Another way to view this disparity is to compare current P/E ratios of small- to large-caps.  Per the chart below, it’s hard to argue that small-caps aren’t at a hefty premium

FIGURE 6: RELATIVE VALUATION OF SMALL-CAPS VERSUS LARGE-CAPSfor-web_chart-from-rob

Source: Merrill Lynch

As is almost always the case, the recent pole-vault by small-caps has caused both speculators and the professional money management community (sometimes I wonder if there is a difference) to become almost unanimous in their anticipation of continuing outperformance.  It’s noteworthy that the last time sentiment was this lopsided was right before small-caps entered a two-year lag phase within its 17-year de-cleeting of the Big Blues.

FIGURE 7: NET SPECULATIVE LONG POSITION ON THE RUSSELL 2000for-web-bwd_chart

Source: Haver Analytics, Gluskin Sheff

FIGURE 8: NET % THINK LARGE-CAP  WILL OUTPERFORM SMALL-CAP
for-webrob-chart-2

Source: BofA Merrill Lynch

Okay, it’s clear that small-caps are in rarefied valuation territory. But maybe they deserve it. Perhaps they are truly ideally suited for the advent of Trumponomics. That’s possible but please reflect on a few qualitative considerations.

As noted by the esteemed research firm BCA (formerly, Bank Credit Analyst), rising domestic wages—a condition we have today—crimps profitability more at smaller firms than is the case for the big multinationals. Also, profit margins are consistently around half as high at small- versus large-cap firms. BCA further notes that from a market performance standpoint, small-caps usually lag when the Fed is tightening and also when risk-aversion surges (the latter is admittedly not a current condition, but that can happen in almost a nanosecond these days).

Barclays strategist Venu Krishna has done some intriguing research on small-caps and found another notable downside. Russell (now owned by the London Stock Exchange) reshuffles its small- and large- (or at least larger-) cap index once a year. If a stock rises dramatically, it can “graduate” into the Russell 1000 Index of bigger companies. Should a company’s share price fall steeply enough, it can get demoted to the small-cap index. According to his analysis, this constant shift of stronger issues into the Russell 1000 and dumping off of the weaker companies into the Russell 2000 costs the small-index about 2.3% per year of return.

But what about the persistent rallying cry that small-caps have a huge advantage when the dollar is upwardly mobile? Krishna points out that Russell 2000 companies derive around 21% of their revenue from overseas versus 33% for the Russell 1000 (overseas sales are higher yet for the S&P 500). Based on his research, this difference has led to a mere 1% outperformance by small-caps when the dollar has appreciated 10%. (Note that since the election the dollar is up 5%.)

The late 1990s are an interesting case in point. The dollar was extremely strong during that era but, as you can infer from figure 1, large companies trounced smaller companies.

Yet another oft-touted benefit is that over many decades they have produced materially higher returns. Although the Russell 2000 small-cap index was only created in 1979, market researchers have gone back as far as 1930 to show small-caps returning over 12.7% per year as opposed to 9.7% for the S&P 500. Yet, there is a price to pay for this additional return: greater volatility. And, as any veteran investment professional knows, volatility is toxic to the typical investor. It causes he or she to add money during boom phases and then bail out in a panicked frenzy during the plunges. This is why many mutual funds with high-but-erratic returns have produced such poor dollar-weighted (i.e., based on when investors buy and sell) performance results.

It goes without saying, but I will anyway, that when small-cap stocks are richly valued versus the overall market, as is the case today, any return advantage is almost certain to be at least partially negated. With such extreme over-pricing today, it’s quite possible the red chips will lag the blue chips—and with more volatility, especially on the downside. In other words, small-caps could be poised to produce the worst of all possible investment worlds.

 

The Price is Wrong. As a habitual—some might say, maniacal—watcher and reader of the financial media, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard pundits tout small-caps on the air and in print since the election. Yet, not once have I heard any of them bring up the valuation realities cited above.

This gets to the very heart of how the markets operate these days when computers chase trends and humans seem incapable of discerning intrinsic value. If a theme—like overweighting small-caps—gets momentum behind it, for whatever reason, prices simply detach from reality for a time. And that time can last a lot longer than one would think rational (I can visualize many of you out there repeating John Maynard Keynes famous line: “The markets can stay irrational much longer than you can stay solvent”).

Certainly, in the short-run, crazy-high valuations count for nothing, as the tech bubble proved in the late ‘90s and many other speculative frenzies have since. But, in the long run, they are everything. Lost in all the recent stock market euphoria is that despite extremely punchy P/Es and price-to-sales ratios for the S&P 500, its total return, as shown in figure 3 on page 3, has been an underwhelming 4.4% per year, including dividends, since 12/31/99. Even small-caps at 7.4% annually over that timeframe have merely matched the total return on a 10-year treasury note and with immensely more risk. Additionally, producing that return has inflated them to the nutty levels shown above. The reason for this is that valuations were ridiculous, particularly for large-caps, in 1999. Returns on both small- and large-caps had been far above normal for the prior 20 years, as you can see in figure 9 below. This left both styles poised for a long period of sub-par results—which is precisely what hapened. Even an unprecedented collapse by interest rates wasn’t able to overcome the return drag caused by extreme overvaluation.

FIGURE 9: THE GOLDEN YEARS FOR STOCKS: RUSSELL 2000 (TOP) & S&P 500 (BOTTOM)
ANNUAL RETURNS 1979-1999lower-chart-tableSource: Evergreen Gavekal, Bloomberg

In the whacky investment world we occupy today, where massive sums of money are pushed around by non-fundamental factors, far be it from me to assert that small-caps can’t continue rising. They most assuredly can; yet if you are an investor versus a speculator/short-term trader, you should be extremely wary of this space. (Full disclosure: I am talking my personal “book”, as I almost always do; I am currently very bearishly positioned on small-caps.)

It’s also important to note that small-caps have broken out to a new high, a development Evergreen respects. However, as many of you know, we also constantly say that we pay much less attention to break-outs late in a bull market.

Admittedly, very few investment professionals agree with us that this nearly eight-year bull run is soon to go the way of all flesh. And, as noted above, when it comes to the far stronger up-cycle in small-cap stocks, there is near unanimity that the best is yet to come. The problem is, to reprise a quote by Gen. George Patton from an EVA earlier this year: “If everyone’s thinking alike, then nobody is thinking.”

It seems clear to us that the omnipresent small-cap bulls aren’t thinking about valuations these days. It’s this devil-may-care attitude that is likely to demonstrate yet again that the devil is in the details, as in those pesky little things like Price/Earnings and Price/Sales ratios. It’s a lesson investors should have learned years ago, but the allure of seemingly easy money is once more proving irresistible, at least until the Trump Jump goes thump.

David_Hay
David Hay
Chief Investment Officer
To contact Dave, email:
dhay@evergreengavekal.com

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OUR CURRENT LIKES AND DISLIKES

See changes in bold.

LIKE

• Large-cap growth (during a correction)
• International developed markets (during a correction)
• Canadian REITs (take advantage of the recent pull-back)
• BB-rated corporate bonds (i.e., high-quality, high yield)
• Cash
• Publicly-traded pipeline partnerships (MLPs) yielding 7%-12%
• Intermediate-term investment-grade corporate bonds, yielding approximately 4%
• Gold-mining stocks
• Gold
• Intermediate municipal bonds with strong credit ratings
• Select blue chip oil stocks (on a pull back)
• Emerging bond markets (dollarbased or hedged); local currency in a few select cases
• Investment-grade floating rate corporate bonds
• Mexican stocks
• High-quality preferred stocks yielding 6%, selling at a discount from par value

NEUTRAL

• Most cyclical resource-based stocks
• Large-cap value
• Short-term investment grade corporate bonds
• Short yen ETF
• Emerging market bonds (local currency)
• Short euro ETF
• Bonds denominated in renminbi trading in Hong Kong (dim sum bonds)
• Canadian dollar-denominated bonds
• Long-term municipal bonds
• Mid-cap growth
• Long-term Treasury bonds
• Long-term investment grade corporate bonds
• Emerging stock markets, however a number of Asian developing markets, ex-India, appear undervalued
• The Indian stock market
• Intermediate Treasury notes
• Select European banks

DISLIKE

• US-based Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) (once again, some small-and mid-cap issues appear attractive)
• Small-cap value
• Mid-cap value
• Small-cap growth
• Floating-rate bank debt (junk)
• Lower-rated junk bonds

DISCLOSURE: This material has been prepared or is distributed solely for informational purposes only and is not a solicitation or an offer to buy any security or instrument or to participate in any trading strategy. Any opinions, recommendations, and assumptions included in this presentation are based upon current market conditions, reflect our judgment as of the date of this presentation, and are subject to change. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. All investments involve risk including the loss of principal. All material presented is compiled from sources believed to be reliable, but accuracy cannot be guaranteed and Evergreen makes no representation as to its accuracy or completeness.