Value Stocks Likely to Outperform Growth in New Macro Regime

 | Mar 02, 2023 06:49

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will meet later in March to decide on the interest rate question for the US economy. With almost zero expectation of rate cuts this year, what does that mean for investors’ stock portfolios?

BlackRock’s weekly report sheds some light on which types of stocks are likely to prevail in the current macro regime.

h2 Key Differences Between Value and Growth Stocks/h2

Typically, growth stocks represent companies with high price-to-earnings ratios yet to generate consistent profits. One should look no further than Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) to see how such expectations play out. Yesterday, TSLA shares were up 92% YTD ahead of Investor Day.

However, since Tesla’s profits have become more consistent, viewing TSLA as a hybrid between growth and value has become more common. The latter may grow slower than growth stocks, but they tend to outperform growth stocks in a macro landscape when the interest rate is rising.

Value stocks have lower price-to-earnings ratios, consistent profits, and higher dividend yields. As such, they are perceived as undervalued and more resistant to shifting macroeconomic winds.

h2 What Exactly Is the Current Macro Regime?/h2

Even though TSLA stock is coming into hybrid mode, the growth part still weighs heavily. In 2022, we saw this in action when the Federal Reserve started interest rate hikes. Tesla’s annual return took a negative dive, at -65%, which is in stark contrast to Tesla’s performance in near-zero interest environments in 2020 (+743%) and 2021 (+49%).

But with TSLA up by +85% year-to-date, does the same macro regime apply?

In its weekly report, BlackRock used the Russell 1000 indicator to chart the last decade related to value vs. growth performance. This stock market index measures the performance of the largest (by market cap) 1,000 publicly traded companies in the US.