Markets often distinguish growth from value, but for an equity,
growth defines value. For most stocks, this can be seen by the close
relationship between the organic revenue growth being delivered by a
company and the implied growth rating being discounted by the share's
operating FCF yield. A problem however arises when trying to price in an
above market growth rate in perpetuity or worse, a growth rate higher
than the cost of equity. Markets understand the impossibility of
sustaining both scenarios so will inevitably reach out to some sort of
horizon point where the valuation will revert back to discount a market
average, or below, rate of growth. The question for investors therefore
is whether there is a systematic relationship between this mean
reversion point and a group's trading performance over a realistic
forecasting horizon.
The encouraging
news for the investor is that markets do seem to behave rationally in
the way they reach out to a valuation horizon and in a way that can also
be incorporated into a predictive tool. Markets value stocks on a near
term horizon of <18 months unless organic revenue growth exceeds
double the market average, from which point the horizon point is
progressively extended in direct relationship to relative organic
revenue growth. Instead of scratching your head over whether a PE ratio
of 150x or 200x is cheap or dear, view your 'super-growther' from a
growth prism and one can start to see how markets have really been
discounting their growth prospects. This can only be seen at
www.growthrater.com and is included in our valuation algorithms.
An example can be seen with Amazon.com and a chart that is available for registered users at:
https://www.growthrater.com/growthrater/#/horizons
The
chart looks at the mean reversion profile of how far out the markets
are reaching in their valuation horizons to bring the company's growth
rating back to a market average. The orange line is the company's
organic revenue growth rate with the green bars being the number of
months that the markets are effectively reaching out to revert the
growth rating to a market average. A correlation and Rsq is also
included in the chart on these two series - currently approx 0.75/0.56
on the period selected, which is not too shabby. The blue bars denote
the forward reach that is calculated automatically within my valuation
algorithm. As you can see, I have a max horizon of 50 months as a
cut-off which is less gung ho than obviously the market at present is
reaching out by, although I have been through too many bubbles to be
comfortable in pushing the envelope.
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