Value Stock Funds Are Lacking Value

 | Feb 09, 2022 04:25PM ET

Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) is a conservative and highly regarded consumer staples company with a 180-year track record. The company produces many globally admired consumer brands, some of which we share below.

Does being a great company with financially conservative values make PG a value stock? It is tempting to answer yes, as most large-cap value stock funds hold a sizeable stake in PG.

PG trades at key valuation ratios (P/E, P/B, and P/S) greater than the S&P 500. PG’s annualized revenue and earnings growth rates are 3.7% and 4.3%, respectively, over the last five years. Over the same period, the S&P 500 Index has grown revenue and earnings at more than double PG’s rate.

Per the gurus of value, Benjamin Graham and David Dodd, a stock should have good prospects and low valuations ratios to be classified as value. They believed investors should buy stocks with undervalued assets and that those assets, in time, would appreciate to fair value.

PG has overvalued assets and weaker than market growth prospects. Why then is PG considered a value stock by most investors and a top ten holding in many value funds?

As we will show you, the term value has been grossly misapplied in recent years.

Whether or not PG is a value stock is irrelevant. What is relevant is whether “value investors” using value stock mutual funds and ETFs own what they think they are buying.

Passive Investing Distorts Value/h2

In 2016, we wrote Passive Negligence , the first in a series of articles comparing active and passive investment management styles and the effects passive investing has on markets.

Per the article:

“Passive index strategies are all the rage. Investors desperate for “acceptable” returns are investing in funds whose value is directly linked to stock market indices. Unlike active funds, indexed funds do not perform investment analysis and are not looking for sectors or companies that offer greater return potential than the market. They do one thing, and that is replicate a particular equity index.”

True active investors seek individual stocks that meet qualifications they deem as valuable.

Passive investors rely on indexes, funds, and ETFs to do the research for them. We offer caution to these investors who only check to see whether the word “value” is in a fund’s name.

The Vanguard Value Stock Index Fund Admiral Fund/h2

Let’s delve into one of the largest value funds as a proxy for how large funds define value.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

Per Vanguard, Vanguard Value Index Fund Admiral Shares (VVIAX) “invests in stocks of large U.S. companies in market sectors that tend to grow at a slower pace than the broad market; these stocks may be temporarily undervalued by investors.”

The fund is massive, with an aum of over $140 billion. VVIAX is likely the only large-cap value option for quite a few 401k plan participants.

The table below from Vanguard shows the fund’s top ten holdings, accounting for about a fifth of the fund. We examine these ten stocks and judge if they are genuinely value stocks.