Growth Vs. Value Stocks? Take Our Blind Taste Test

 | Sep 16, 2020 07:26AM ET

Given limited resources, it should be no surprise that we aim to maximize the value of our everyday purchases. In most cases, we seek to optimize between acquiring the best product at the most reasonable price.

Intriguingly, most investors do not apply the same discretion when investing their hard-earned wealth. Think about the problem: we seek value when we spend our wealth, but few seek value in protecting and growing their wealth.

In this article, we give a blind taste test. From this, we hope to show you how the lack of discernment, blindly picking stocks based on cache, and yesterday’s momentum is winning out over the logic of maximizing value through prudent intellectual rigor.

h2 Blind Taste Test/h2

Imagine going to your favorite winery and being presented with three bottles of wine. The bottles do not have labels or prices. You smell each wine’s aroma and then take a sip from each bottle. After the tasting, you decide to buy the bottle of wine you like the most.

The vintner then shares with you the price of each bottle. Taste and cost are the two factors that you must weigh to make a decision. Wine snobs may disagree, but to be honest, do you need anything more to buy a bottle of wine? While impossible to quantify, most people will unknowingly compute a ratio of sorts comparing the taste to price. The ratio will likely dictate the decision-making process.

Our wine buying calculus may look something like the table below. The taste scale is from 1 to 10, 1 for the worst, and 10 for the best.