HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceWhy value funds aren’t strictly going by valuations

Why value funds aren’t strictly going by valuations

Value-styled funds don’t just pick stocks with a low price-earnings ratio

December 18, 2020 / 09:18 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

What’s wrong with value funds?

Over the last several years, the rally in the equity markets narrowed as investors focused primarily on high-growth stocks, and shares of high-quality firms despite trading at high valuations. So, value stock picking as a strategy got left behind. But, as earnings visibility got lower and after the pandemic struck, uncertainty around corporate profitability only got worse.

Story continues below Advertisement

Value investing, in simple terms, is a strategy of stock selection where investors actively look for stocks where the current market price does not represent the fundamentals of the company. In other words, the stock trades at a price lower than its intrinsic value, as analysed by investors.

While this strategy fared very well between 2000 and 2010, it has lagged significantly in the last 3-5 years. The table below shows that value funds haven’t been able to beat the Nifty 50 returns over the medium term.