Tuesday, December 20, 2011

The Little Stuff Matters


In Search of the Lost Decade

For several years analysts have been complaining about a “Lost Decade” for stocks. Judging by the big U.S. stock market indices, the market has been flat for 13 years. But the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Standard & Poors 500 reflect primarily the performance of large companies. 

The picture is much different if one looks at the broader stock market. According to an analysis by Standard & Poors, over the 10 year period from March 24, 2000 (the peak of the tech boom) to December 2, 2011, the S&P 500 declined by 19 percent. 

As we’ve noted, the index counts big companies more heavily. Just 10 of the 500 companies account for 20 percent of the performance.

If instead you weight each company in the index equally, the index would have climbed by 66 percent. To put this in actual dollar terms, if you had invested $10,000 in the S&P 500 on March 24, 2000, you would have had only $8,100 left at the end of the decade. If you had put equal amounts into each of the 500 stocks included in the index, your investment would have grown to $16,600 --- more than double the $8100 if invested in the S&P 500.

This isn’t an esoteric discussion about constructing indices. It points out the dramatic benefits of diversification.  Most people acknowledge that no one can predict the future. If that is so, no one will know whether to hold big companies or small ones, U.S. banks or Asian telephone companies.

Investing with wide global diversification increases the chances that the investor will own the stocks that do best. Over time owning the winners helps more than owning the losers hurts. Often, a small sector or a few individual stocks can greatly influence a large portfolio over a decade.

In the recent decade, an analysis by Bloomberg showed that energy and resource stocks appreciated dramatically. After a twenty year bear market for oil stocks from the 1980 peak, energy stocks rallied by 242 percent in the five years after October 2002 while material producers appreciated by 162 percent.

Meanwhile some of the biggest companies, which had done the best in the 1990s, suffered throughout the decade. General Electric, once the most valuable company in the world, dropped by 67 percent during the decade. Cisco Systems, a miraculous growth stock in the 1990s, at its peak was also the most valuable company in the world and appeared to be heading to be the first “trillion dollar company.”  Cisco has dropped by 82 percent over the decade to $100 billion.

Most U.S. investors, whether by design or chance, now tie their fate to the largest U.S. companies. According to S&P, some $1.3 trillion is indexed to the S&P 500 while $5.6 trillion is benchmarked to the S&P 500, one-third of total U.S. stock investments. If one counts “closet indexers,” the totals are even higher.

It could be that big U.S. stocks have been in the dog house long enough. Their valuations appear much cheaper than those of smaller companies. Small companies have had a good run and nothing lasts forever.  Perhaps Emerging Markets or other international companies will take the lead. Energy stocks might drop or precious metals might pick up the mantle.

But the clearest lesson from this data is that by placing all your eggs in one basket, whether it’s the largest U.S. stocks or precious metals, investors can end up with egg on their face. True diversification means participating in wide sectors of the global economy. Some funds buy thousands and thousands of different stocks spread out around the globe.  Over time, being widely diversified has typically lowered risk and given greater appreciation.   

(Calculations by Standard & Poors, http://www.standardandpoors.com/home/en/us; Bloomberg.com, Dec. 5, 2011, “No Lost Decade for Equal-Weight S&P 500,” http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-05/no-lost-decade-for-s-p-500-as-market-value-bias-masks-66-rally-since-2000.html)