Do These Country ETFs Provide Better Value Than U.S. Stock ETFs?

 | Mar 12, 2013 03:18AM ET

Over several decades, I have produced content for radio, television, magazines and web sites. And one of my longest-standing themes has been the silliness surrounding what constitutes a article that presented a country-by-country breakdown for current and median 10-year price-to-earnings ratios (a.k.a. CAPE or cyclically adjusted P/Es). The authors provided evidence that the best investment returns in U.S. stocks occurred when buying and holding U.S. stocks for a decade at the start of a calendar year when the average cyclically adjusted P/E was 30% below the median.

Now, as much as the value-seekers believe that there is a holy grail in finding good things to buy-n-hold, I recognize that the mathematics of compounding require unemotional methods for risk reduction. Collapses, crashes and market catastrophes tend not to discriminate. Indeed, for all the attention placed on the S&P 500 approaching its highs of 2007, investors who minimized exposure to the 2007-2009 disaster were more likely to recover in 1-1 1/2 years… rather than 5 1/2 years.

Nevertheless, it may be reasonable to assume one is taking a calculated risk when he/she invests in a country that is currently 25%-30% below its median cyclically adjusted P/E. Here, then, are 5 countries with roughly 25 years of data (or more) that meet this valuation criteria… and a few prominent countries that might be considered “overvalued.”

Country 10-Year P/Es: Recent And Median