The Full Montier: Absolute Vs. Relative Value

 | Jan 04, 2013 04:48AM ET

James Montier, one of our favourite thinkers and fellow evangelist for behavioural economics and evidence based investing, published a great report last year entitled, "blog , traditional SAA is hamstrung because there is no mechanism to alter the asset allocation given changes in relative expected returns and risks from each asset class over time. Inconceivably, adherents to this approach would have advocated exactly the same mix of stocks and bonds in December 1999, when stocks were as overvalued as they had ever been in history, as they would have advocated in 1982 when stocks were dirt cheap. We have argued, and Montier apparently concurs, that investors should be constantly aware of whether prospective returns to stocks are high or low, and alter asset allocations accordingly through time.

Montier is a die-hard value investor, so he views prospective returns through this lens. He asserts that investors should only invest in markets when they offer the prospect of reasonable future real returns on the basis of reasonable valuations, and they should avoid markets when they offer low returns. While this seems eminently reasonable, in practice this logic can be very difficult for investors to adhere to because markets can continue to get more and more expensive (or cheaper) for many years, and investors often find it difficult to stand on the sidelines and watch the market shoot into the stratosphere. For example, markets entered a period of extreme valuation by many measures in 1994 and continued to push higher for 6 more years before finally succumbing to valuation levels that were, by some measures, more than twice as high as any other period in history.

For this reason, most wealth managers, institutions, and advisors practice Strategic Asset Allocation, which keeps investors fully invested in their target mix of stocks and bonds at all times. Where active bets are taken in pursuit of better performance, they take the form of relative value approaches where individual securities are selected for portfolios because they have lower valuations than their peers. This approach is starkly different than the absolute value approach described in the previous paragraph because with the absolute value approach, an investor will hold cash when no investments offer strong absolute returns, whereas relative value investors will always be fully invested, even when all investments are expensive and offer low returns.

Absolute Value: A Few Tests

We thought it would be fun to test an absolute value approach per Montier's prescription using our favorite long-term stock-market data source, Shiller's database. The following charts illustrate how an absolute return investor might have fared had he chosen to move out of stocks and into cash where the real absolute valuation of the stock market ended the prior month below a certain threshold. For ease, we chose the cyclically adjusted earnings yield as the valuation metric, which is just the reciprocal of the Shiller PE. We then adjusted the yield value for the realized year-over-year inflation rate to find the real earnings yield. Finally, we used an 'expanding window' approach to find the percentile rank of the real earnings yield to eliminate as much lookahead bias as possible.

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Note that because we are using real earnings yieldrather than nominal earnings yield, markets can get cheap or expensive in three ways:

  • changes in inflation
  • changes in earnings
  • changes in price

As a result, while markets would appear to be quite expensive today based on nominal earnings yield, which is in the top quintile of all values over the past 140 years, the real earnings yield is less extreme because yoy inflation is so low. Should inflation pick up, the real earnings yield will decline, all else equal, which would alter the current state of our model (in stocks or in cash).

Chart 1. Valuation based asset allocation: own S&P500 when valuation