What's happening now?
Those working in the financial industry since the start of this century may be forgiven for believing that bond yields always fall and that growth stocks always outperform. However, we have now seen that bond yields can rise (and rise sharply) and 2022 showed that the value factor can outperform growth (and other factors). In fact, I believe that the downtrend in bond yields is now over, and I would expect something approaching normal cyclical variation.
Hence, I expect a more level playing field between growth and value than we have seen over recent decades. Some phases of the economic cycle will favour growth, and some will favour value (we find that value typically outperforms other factors at the start of an economic and market cycle).
In 2024, 10-year government bond yields rose on either side of the Atlantic, so it should come as no surprise that our value factor index has outperformed growth in both the US and Europe. Indeed, among our factor indices for the US, value has only been beaten by price momentum. In Europe, it has also been outperformed by the low volatility and quality factor indices.
However, we emphasise that value has outperformed growth (despite the continued focus on artificial intelligence (AI) related stocks). Over 2023 the strong performance of growth was explained by the emergence of AI tools, which boosted technology stocks in the US.
Even better, we expect economies to accelerate during 2025, helped by rising real incomes (as price inflation is now lower than wage inflation) and falling central bank interest rates. As mentioned above, we find that the value factor tends to perform best in the early stages of economic and market upswings.
Though we have not recently seen recession, it could be that a move to higher rates of growth could produce an “early cycle” feel. Lower central bank interest rates would normally be accompanied by lower long-term bond yields, but I suspect that will not be the case this time (due to the economic acceleration that I foresee). Hence, growth will not get the benefit of falling yields.