TIP070: GLOBAL VALUE INVESTING AND CLONE INVESTING

W/ MEB FABER

17 January 2016

On today’s show, co-founder and CIO of Cambria Investment Fund, Meb Faber, discusses a global value investing approach with Preston and Stig. Although the US stock market has recently dropped significantly at the start of 2016, Meb suggests the market might still have more to fall. Meb also reveals how he is invested, and which returns he expects for US and emerging stock markets in the years to come.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • In which regions the international value investor should look in 2016.
  • Why Meb Faber thinks the US is not in a bubble, but is still overvalued.
  • What the Ivy Portfolio is, and how you can beat the market by investing with the greatest investors in the world.
  • Why the best asset allocators in the world recommend the same asset classes for the optimal portfolio.
  • If Japan is something Meb Faber is looking into after the recent crash in their stock market.

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CONNECT WITH STIG

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Intro  00:41

Broadcasting from Bel Air, Maryland, this is The Investor’s Podcast. They’ll read the books and summarize the lessons. They’ll test the waters and tell you when it’s cold. They’ll give you actionable investing strategies. Your hosts, Preston Pysh and Stig Brodersen!

Preston Pysh  01:05

All right, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh. I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Denmark.

We have a guest on the show that a lot of people have been requesting by name on our forum and on Twitter. They’re saying you’ve got to get this guy on the show, and it is Mr. Meb. Faber.

Meb is the Co-founder and Chief Investment Officer of Cambria Investment Management. And he has written a couple of different books. He also manages all the ETFs, separate accounts, and private investment funds out at Cambria. But Meb has written three different books. He’s written “Shareholder Yield,” “The Ivy Portfolio,” and “Global Value.” And I can tell you how I came in contact with Meb. And Meb has been on Barron’s, New York Times, New Yorker, all these different, high profile national news networks or media networks.

I came in contact with Meb the first time, not through like Barron’s or anything, but I was watching YouTube. He was giving this speech about value investing and more specifically global value investing. And I’m listening to this speech and I said, “This guy gets it. This guy understands what he’s talking about.” And ever since I’ve been following you closely, Meb. I’ve been watching some of the blog articles that you write, and you’re just a wealth of information. And what I like is you share that with your community. You put it out there for a lot of people to comment on, and you’re just sharing your knowledge. That’s the thing that we appreciate. And we’re so excited to bring you on the show. So, I just want to personally welcome you. And I know Stig wants to welcome you as well to The Investor’s Podcast. We’re just thrilled to have you here.

Meb Faber  02:39

Great to be here. It’s a pleasure.

Preston Pysh  02:41

So we watched this video of you giving this speech at Google and you were talking about value investing, and I was impressed with this. I want you to describe in generic terms just so our audience can understand your approach to the international value investing approach.

Meb Faber  02:58

Okay, well value investing is nothing new. It’s been around for probably hundreds of years. But in the modern terms, at least 100 years, Ben Graham is often seen as the father of security analysis, at least in the US on stocks. And so, he wrote a couple of books many of your listeners will be familiar with, and he was also a professor and a mentor of Warren Buffett.

One of the things he used to do is attempt to value stocks and securities. And one of the ways he did it was he looked at earnings and would often average those earnings over longer periods, like five to seven years, to be able to get a fundamental anchor from which to value a security. And the benefit of the longer-term perspective is that it had investors or the ability to look at the security through both recessions as well as expansions and be able to come up with a fundamental value and hopefully purchase that security at discount. Well, many people have practiced that methodology over the years. It’s been very successful, both in academia as well as practitioners.

Another professor, 80 years later, or 70 years later, Robert Shiller, a recent Nobel laureate professor at Yale. He published a white paper and then some books, basically applying the same logic to the stock market as a whole and said, “Can we average out a stream of earnings?” In his case, he did 10 years, probably just because a nice round number, adjusting for inflation so that you can compare apples to apples and call it the cyclically adjusted price to earnings ratio with a lot of people call the Shiller or 10 year PE ratio or the CAPE ratio now.

What he found is that it’s not rocket science, valuation works. And when you buy a market as a whole, and you know, look out 10 years, the less you pay for something, so the cheaper the CAPE ratio, the higher your future returns are, and the more you pay for something, the lower your future returns are.

And so, the average over time in the US is around 16, 17. When you hit a bit of low, as low as five, and a high is high as 45 in the late 90s bubble. Just for visual, we are right around probably 24 now, after this recent correction. But what we wanted to do is we said, “Look, this works great in the US. Why not apply it to all the markets in the world?” And so we were the first, in my knowledge, to go out and build this for 45 developed and emerging countries. Other companies do it then track it now such as Research Affiliates, and Star Capital, where you can get free updates of the CAPE ratio, but it turns out it works just the same way in foreign markets as it does in the US, that you want to buy cheap markets and avoid the expensive.

Preston Pysh  05:50

Yeah, and Meb, it’s funny you should mention Star Capital because I can just pull up some numbers from the site and I’ll be sure to link to them in the show notes. And if we rank them just solely based on the CAPE ratio, we can see that Russia appears to be the most attractive choice. And the CAPE ratio is 4.6, which is low, if you compare that to, to the US, which was 24. And them not being the highest in the world with 40. So, I’m just thinking, does that mean like, everything else equal, we can just go in and buy, say Russia, perhaps a few more short Denmark and the US perhaps?

What was good and bad news, you know, it’s boring to say, but the US is expensive, but it’s not a bubble. It’s not terrifically expensive. And being an *inaudible, all that it means in the future expected returns are expected to be lower than normal. And that doesn’t make for great TV and probably doesn’t make for great podcasts either. But it’s the reality and there’s a future spectrum of returns and if you’re a value investor and investor in general, you know that the future is not perfect. And so, despite the fact you have a high valuation, US stocks could easily go up 40% next year, and that happened in the past, but it does improve your odds. And it changes the probabilities in the future. So, if you buy a market that’s expensive, the chances are higher that you’re going to have a big fat loss or drawdown going forward. And when the markets are cheap, you have sort of that margin of safety.

There are so many caveats to this, of course.  We often talk about it that it’s similar to a poker player or blackjack player who’s sitting at a table, and may do something dumb like a hit on an 18 versus when the dealer has a six. They pull your hair out and say, “Why would anyone ever do that?” And of course, there’s the one idiot that does that at some point and gets a three and gets 21.

So markets can go up when they’re expensive. So, that’s the bad news, the US is expensive. The good news is most of the rest of the world is reasonably priced too cheap. So, the foreign developed indexes around I think 16, the foreign emerging after the shellacking of the past year is down around 13. And if you look at the bucket of the cheap 25% countries, you have a valuation of around nine, which is the lowest that buckets been since the bottom in 2008 It touched around that area in 2003. And then before that, back to the early 80s.

Preston Pysh  08:15

We’ve said this on the show before, but if people are listening to this and you’re hearing the numbers that Meb is throwing out there. So, if he would throw out a 10, as far as the Shiller PE, in general terms, the easiest way to figure out what the yield is that we’re referencing, you just take one divided by the number that we’re saying. So, if it’s a 10, then that would be about a 10% return. So, you could take one divided by 10, it gives you a 10% return. If it’s a 15, you’d go one divided by 15, you get a 7.5% percent return.

So just as a rule of thumb, just so you guys can equate these numbers with actual yields as he’s throwing out the different markets. Meb, I’ve heard you talk about this in some of your other interviews, and I think it’s important for you to highlight this for our audience. But can you talk about the bias that domestic investors have for equities in their own country?

Meb Faber  09:01

So I’ve been giving a variation of this speech over the past year, a couple of years. And if the audience is small enough, I’ll pass around a piece of paper and ask one question, “I’ll say, what percentage of your stock allocation? So we’re excluding real estate bonds, commodities, currencies, everything else, just your stocks? How much do you have in the US?” And almost every time I gave this speech in Phoenix and Tucson last week, and I said, “I guarantee you the number is going to be very close to 70.” And sure enough, in both towns, the number was 69%. And what that’s called is home country bias, where if you look at the world market cap portfolio… So, this is simply if you bought every stock in the world measured by its size, you would end up with roughly half in the US and the US is the biggest market. So, that should be your starting point.

If you’re an agnostic investor, John Bogle Vanguard indexer, you would say, “My starting point is half in the US.” But in the US, obviously, investors put way more around 70% because it’s comfortable. It’s what’s familiar. This isn’t just a US bias. It happens in Italy, it happens in the UK, it happens in Australia, it’s even more odious in those countries because their market caps are even smaller: 10%, 5%, 3%. But so that should be the starting point. And then if you move forward from that, if you’re a value investor to say, look, the biggest problem with market cap weighting is that you overweight high-value companies and countries.

So a good example is that in the 80s, Japan hit the highest CAPE ratio we’ve ever seen, almost a value of 100. Bbiggest bubble in stocks we’ve ever seen, double our internet bubble in the 90s. And at the time, Japan was half the world market cap. You have a massive drag on performance and all the research shows that market cap waiting while it is the market, it simply has no connection to value whatsoever. And so, you often put too much in the big markets. And studies show that investing in the largest company in the S&P 500, for example, underperforms the S&P by about three percentage points a year. That’s true also in every sector. So, if you just exclude or break that market cap link, you could sort stocks based on any other measure letters of the alphabet value, where the CEO went to college, and all of those are going to outperform market-cap weighting. So, as applied to the global landscape, certainly a lot of the countries are much cheaper than the US.

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