Stop the Bickering: It's Not Growth vs. Value, It's Growth and Value
Value funds and growth funds are like records by Bob Dylan and Marvin Gaye: They're clearly different, but your collection isn't complete without both.
just starting to reverse field. At the same time, the battered Nasdaq has popped up 15% this month, giving sagging growth funds a jolt. With this in mind, now is a good time to remember the hard lesson we learned during the past two mercurial years: For the vast majority of fund investors it makes sense to own both growth and value funds, not one style to the exclusion of the other. "Value and growth styles move in cycles and over the past two years those cycles have been particularly dramatic. Unless you're able to somehow predict these cycles, you should own both styles," says Bryan Olson, a director at Charles Schwab's Center for Investment Research. The average big-cap value fund, which has about 10% of its money in tech stocks, is flat so far this year, while the average big-cap growth fund, with a third of its money in tech stocks, is down almost 13%. But as recently as 1999, when the average big-cap growth fund trounced its value counterpart by more than 30 percentage points, some argued there was no reason to bother with value funds. Market breezes and investor sentiment tend to back one style or the other in cycles, but the two styles have remarkably similar returns over the past 10 years. The average big-cap value fund, for instance, has a 13% annualized gain over the past decade with its average growth counterpart earning just half of one percentage point less.| Value or Growth? Hard to say one style has trounced the other, given their returns over the past 10 years. |
| Source: Morningstar. Returns through April 27. |
ratio, we find that growth topped value in seven of the past 10 calendar years. The average big-cap growth fund lorded over its value peers, except for the past two years. | That Last Step is a Doozy If you only owned growth funds, the past couple of years haven't been great. |
| Source: Morningstar. Returns through April 27. |
| Ebb and Flow Value and growth styles have traded leadership, but it hasn't been easy to predict how long one would lead the other. | ||
| Cycle | Value | Growth |
| Q1 1975 to Q3 1979 | 20.9% | 10.5% |
| Q4 1979 to Q4 1980 | 16.9 | 32.2 |
| Q1 1981 to Q3 1985 | 15.2 | 8.1 |
| Q4 1985 to Q1 1987 | 39.3 | 43 |
| Q2 1987 to Q1 1989 | 7.1 | 1.2 |
| Q2 1989 to Q4 1991 | 11.1 | 23.2 |
| Q1 1992 to Q2 1994 | 10.4 | 0.8 |
| Q3 1994 to Q2 2000 | 18.3 | 29.5 |
| Q3 2000 to Q1 2001 | 3.4 | -37.3 |
| Returns through March 31, using the S&P 500 Barra Growth and S&P 500 Barra Value indices as benchmarks. Source: Schwab Center for Investment Research. | ||
| Ouch Growth funds have provided a bit more pop, but not lately. And their dips have been much, much steeper. | ||
| Volatility | ||
| Avg. Large-Cap Value fund | Avg. Large-Cap Growth fund | |
| Worst Quarter | -15.9% | -22.1% |
| Worst Year | -5.6 | -36.5 |
| 5-Year Beta | 0.77 | 1.13 |
| Returns and data through March 31. Source: Morningstar. | ||
| What a Little Value Can Do Splitting your stock investments between each style would've given you the same returns with less risk than a total commitment to growth. | ||
| Volatility | ||
| 100%: Avg. Large-Cap Growth fund | 50%: Avg. Large-Cap Growth fund 50%: Avg. Large-Cap Value fund | |
| Worst Quarter | -22.1 | -14.2 |
| Worst Year | -36.5 | -19.8 |
| 5-Year Beta | 1.1 | 0.95 |
| Returns and data through March 31. Source: Morningstar. | ||
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