Is it a bad time to buy stocks?
Our answer may surprise you. Bizarrely, although it could be bad news for stocks in general, it won’t be bad news for all stocks.
The next twelve months will continue the trend from the last twelve months. It will continue to be a stock-pickers market. But rather than investors picking blue-chips for yield, the action will come in the small-cap sector.
Yesterday we showed you the chart of the Emerging Companies Index against the financial stocks index. Here it is again:
Over the past six months dividend-paying financial stocks have taken off in anticipation of falling interest rates. At the same time investors ditched small-cap stocks and most other growth stocks.
But now that investors have got their yield play, what’s next?
Interest rates are low, and they’ll stay low for the foreseeable future. The knock on effect is lower dividend yields.
Most investors don’t realise that. Most investors look back to the 6%, 7% and 8% dividend yields of the 2000′s and think those days are still here.
They’re not. Just as the days of high-interest bank accounts are over (for the foreseeable future) so are the days of high dividend yields.
Why is that?
It’s a simple fact of investing that all investments trade relative to other investments. Put simply, if one income producing investment is riskier than another income producing investment, then the riskier investment should provide a higher income.
The higher income is your reward for taking on more risk.
But dividend yields aren’t static. They change as the market changes. So when bank deposit rates fall, investors look for higher returns elsewhere. This can result in investors buying shares, which pushes up the share price and therefore lowers the dividend yield.
You’ve seen that same scenario play out in the bond market as investors looked for the safety of bonds, which drove up bond prices and drove down bond yields (bond prices move inversely to bond yields).
We believe things are about to change. As dividend yields reach their new ‘norm’ investors will start looking at growth assets. And one of the biggest beneficiaries of this change looks set to be the biggest growth assets – small-caps.
But here’s the thing, large-cap stocks and small-cap stocks have reacted differently on the Aussie market than on the US market.
Look at the above chart again. There’s a 30 percentage point difference between large and small-cap stocks over the past year. Now look at the relationship between large and small-cap stocks in the US over the same period.
Below is a chart of the US Dow Jones Industrial Average (blue line), and Dow Jones US Small-Cap Index (red line):
Of course there are a whole bunch of reasons why Aussie small-caps haven’t done as well as US small-caps.
The strong Australian dollar doesn’t help small-cap exporters, and because most resources are priced in US dollars it means fewer Aussie dollars when companies repatriate revenues and profits.
Another reason is that Aussie interest rates stayed higher than interest rates elsewhere in the world. Australia is also more affected by what happens in China…and for most of this year the Chinese economy has been on the ropes.
All of that has contributed to investors skipping growth stocks and heading into safer dividend stocks.
But despite these factors, companies tend to adapt. That’s the nature of capitalism. Companies that can’t adapt soon fail. Companies that can adapt replace them.
And because investors have ditched growth assets so savagely, it has created a sea of beaten-down, under-valued, and risky stocks.
It’s our bet that as investors look to boost their returns this is the end of the market they’ll look at. In anticipation of this, we have more open positions on the Australian Small-Cap Investigator buy list than at any point over the past two years.
And it’s not just the typical stocks you’d expect to find in a small-cap portfolio. Yes, there are resources stocks, but less than half of them are in energy or raw materials.
The others are in property, finance, media and technology. Some pay dividends, some are growth, and a couple of them offer a mixture.
Right now we believe small-caps have hit rock-bottom, and that as we head into 2013 a combination of the fabled Santa Rally and investor recognition of extremely cheap valuations will see growth assets (especially small-cap growth assets) begin to recover.
As we always tell our small-cap subscribers, it’s not risk free, but if things go as we expect there could be some spectacular returns in the coming months.
Cheers,
Kris
From the Port Phillip Publishing Library
Special Report: The Fuse is Lit
Daily Reckoning:
Why the Australian Dollar is Not as Strong as You Think
Money Morning:
Central Bank Prints More Money – No One Cares
Pursuit of Happiness:
The One Industry Where the State and Government Excels
Australian Small-Cap Investigator:
Why Invest In Small-Cap Stocks? And Why Now?