Stock Market Patiently Waiting for Mean Reversion
Stock-Markets / Stock Markets 2014 Sep 15, 2014 - 06:20 PM GMTBy: Frank_Holmes
 So far this year, small-cap growth stocks  have surprisingly been lackluster. After 2013, when it gained a scorching 38.8  percent, the Russell 2000 has delivered a tepid 0.62 percent year-to-date  (YTD).
So far this year, small-cap growth stocks  have surprisingly been lackluster. After 2013, when it gained a scorching 38.8  percent, the Russell 2000 has delivered a tepid 0.62 percent year-to-date  (YTD).

Performance has been so poor, in fact, that  the spread, or bifurcation, between the 12-month return residuals of small and  large caps is at its widest since the dotcom bubble of the late 1990s and early  2000s. This bifurcation is one of the largest since 1975. 
According to Morgan Stanley, we’re in the  worst beta-adjusted period for small-cap stocks since the late 1990s. The  12-month return in August for small-caps was -9.7 percent, placing it in the  bottom 6 percent of any 12-month period since the mid-1970s.  
 
 
  The bifurcation is more than apparent when  you compare the year-to-date (YTD) total returns of the big boys (those in the  S&P 500 Index and Dow Jones Industrial Average) to their little brothers  (those in the Russell 2000 and S&P SmallCap 600 Index). The Russell, though  it led the other indices in March, has failed to reach a new record high, which  the S&P 500 and Dow managed to achieve in the last couple of months.  

Are  We on the Verge of Another Bubble?
  We don’t think so. History shows bubbles  are associated with excessive leverage and lofty valuations. That is not the  case this time.
  In July, Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet  Yellen stated in her semiannual report to Congress that small caps appear to be  “substantially stretched,” even after a drop in equity prices at the beginning  of the year.
  There may be some truth to Yellen’s remark,  an ideological echo of former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan’s now-famous “irrational  exuberance,” his description of investors’ rosy attitude toward dotcom startups  of the late 1990s and early 2000s. 
  Much of the valuation gap has evaporated.  Looking at the price/earnings to growth ratio—20x for the Russell 2000 and 18x  for the S&P 500—small caps have slightly higher yet reasonable multiples  and may offer better long-term growth prospects.
  Mean  Reversion to the Rescue
  The recent underperformance among small  caps has been a headwind for a few of our funds, most notably our Holmes  Macro Trends Fund (MEGAX), whose benchmark, the S&P 1500 Composite,  tracks the performance of not just large- and mid-cap U.S. companies, but  small-cap as well. With a bias toward small-cap companies, the fund has  underperformed compared to last year, when such stocks were doing well.
  Because small caps tend to have higher beta  than blue chips, you would expect them to outperform in a generally rising  market—which we’re currently in. So it appears that a major rotation out of  these riskier, more volatile stocks has inexplicably occurred, leading to the  wide bifurcation between small and large companies.  
The good news is that, based on 20 years of  historical data, stocks in the Russell 2000 tend to rally in the fourth quarter  and continue steadily until around the end of the first quarter. Over this  20-year period ending in December 2013, the Russell has generated an impressive  annualized return of approximately 10 percent.

Whether or not this fourth-through-first-quarter  rally will recur in 2014 and early 2015 is impossible to forecast. What can be  said, however, is that prices and returns do tend to revert back to their mean  over time. 
  I discussed this concept in full last month  in the second part of my “Managing Expectations” series, “The  Importance of Oscillators, Standard Deviation and Mean Reversion.” Although  small caps are underperforming right now, the concept of mean reversion suggests  that they’ll return to their historical relationship with large caps  eventually—just as they did following the dotcom bubble.
  In his 2006 book The New  Rules for Investing Now: Smart Portfolios for the Next Fifteen Years, investor James P. O’Shaughnessy  makes the case that small stocks have a performance advantage over large stocks  simply because, well, they’re small. This  might sound like circular logic, but as he writes: 
  “A company with  $200 million in revenues is far more likely to be able to double those revenues  than a company with $200 billion in revenues. With large companies, each  increase in revenues becomes a smaller and smaller percentage of overall  revenues. Small stocks, on the other hand, have a much easier time delivering  great percentage growth in revenues and earnings.”
O’Shaughnessy examined every 20-year  rolling time period beginning each month between June 1947 and December 2004.  That’s 691 20-year rolling time periods. What he found is that “small stocks  outperformed the S&P 500 84 percent of the time.”
If O’Shaughnessy’s research is accurate, it seems very reasonable to be optimistic in the long term. It would be myopic to look only at the Russell 2000’s recent underperformance and impulsively rotate out of small caps without also considering the decades’ worth of data showing the growth that can be achieved.

  
  Why  It’s Important to Have Your Funds Actively Managed
  Comparing index funds to actively managed  funds, Kiplinger  columnist Steven Goldberg wrote last month: “[I]ndex funds are designed to  give you all the upside of bull markets and every bit of the downside of bear  markets. Only good actively managed funds can protect you from some of the pain  of a bear market.”
  We at U.S. Global Investors agree with  Goldberg’s attitude toward good active management. Although MEGAX might be temporarily  underperforming right now as a result of the sentiment-driven and disappointing  performance of small-cap stocks, we’re confident that they will eventually  revert back to their historical pattern as fear over Fed tightening settles  down and fundamentals prevail.
  In the meantime, we will continue to apply our  dynamic management strategy of picking stocks in the fund using the 10-20-20  model: we focus on companies that are growing revenues at 10 percent and  generating a 20 percent growth rate and 20 percent return-on-equity. This  approach has served us very well in the past and enabled us to select the most attractive  growth-oriented companies for our clients.  
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  A  Note on the Strong U.S. Dollar and Gold
  As I explained in a recent  Frank Talk, a strong U.S. dollar could spell trouble for commodities such  as gold, which tend to have a historic inverse relationship to the dollar. 
When the dollar does well, investors often choose to store their money in paper rather than bars. Though September is statistically the best month for gold, with the dollar rising almost two standard deviations above its mean, this month might not be kind to the yellow metal and other commodities.
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By Frank Holmes
  
  CEO and Chief Investment Officer
  U.S.  Global Investors
U.S. Global Investors, Inc. is an investment management firm specializing in gold, natural resources, emerging markets and global infrastructure opportunities around the world. The company, headquartered in San Antonio, Texas, manages 13 no-load mutual funds in the U.S. Global Investors fund family, as well as funds for international clients.
All opinions expressed and data provided are subject to change without notice. Some of these opinions may not be appropriate to every investor.Standard deviation is a measure of the dispersion of a set of data from its mean. The more spread apart the data, the higher the deviation. Standard deviation is also known as historical volatility. All opinions expressed and data provided are subject to change without notice. Some of these opinions may not be appropriate to every investor. The S&P 500 Stock Index is a widely recognized capitalization-weighted index of 500 common stock prices in U.S. companies. The NYSE Arca Gold BUGS (Basket of Unhedged Gold Stocks) Index (HUI) is a modified equal dollar weighted index of companies involved in gold mining. The HUI Index was designed to provide significant exposure to near term movements in gold prices by including companies that do not hedge their gold production beyond 1.5 years. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is a free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure equity market performance in the global emerging markets. The U.S. Trade Weighted Dollar Index provides a general indication of the international value of the U.S. dollar.
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