Why Brexit Is Good For Value Investors
Hello again investor pals, today we’re going to
talk about Brexit, but fear not! I come baring good news.
The value investing strategy is dependent on purchasing companies that are trading below their intrinsic values, whether this is due to bad press, going out of style or a depressed market.
We are going to use the FTSE All Share as our basis for the entire UK market in this example. As you can see from the below graph of the FTSE All Share, we have suffered some pretty severe troughs in the last 40 years; Black Monday 1987, the bursting tech bubble in early 2000 and the housing market crash in 2008.
FTSE All Share price 1980-2018
Source: Yahoo Finance.
However, when looked at over the long term, the average share price has increased 7-8% per year since 1980. If we compared a monthly deposit of £100 into a piggy bank versus into a FTSE All Share Index fund starting in 1980, instead of having £45,700 you would have £277,563.40. Compound interest; it is magic.
Remember, that means the £100 was deposited EVERY MONTH, come rain or shine, market bulls and market bears. If you deposited your money only when the market was doing well, you might end up just buying on those mountain peaks right before the crashes. If you’re only buying when the market is expensive you are going to miss out on the biggest gains when it recovers. That means buying even when everyone else is uncertain.
There are a lot of rumblings at the moment about what will happen after Brexit, when the next financial crash will occur and how the American trade war will affect the UK. The truth is; no one knows how it will affect the UK market. The benefit of a long-term, value-investing strategy is that ultimately it doesn’t matter. We are going to be investing the same amount into the market either way! At the end of the day Brexit will look like a blip on that chart just like all the others, the market will go on and the price will continue to rise just as it has for the last 100+ years. The only difference is how many companies are trading at a discount to their intrinsic value, right now there are a lot!
UK Average P/E Ratio Aug 2017-Aug 2018
Source: www.ceicdata.com
We have discussed the P/E (price/earnings) ratio in the Start Investing blog before; it is an indicator of how expensive the market is in general. As you can see the average P/E ratio of the UK market has been driven down by Brexit uncertainty this year from 27 to 13. Comparing this with the US market, currently sitting at >25, the UK market is looking pretty cheap.
Rather than trying to time the market, which has been shown over and over again to be impossible, we will keep investing every month into good companies with strong financials. We will buy dividend-paying stocks with a margin of safety and we will hold for the long term. Tune out the noise, stick to your principals.
If you want to follow our investing strategy, we offer access to our monthly stock picks at www.startinvestinguk.com/subscribe.
If you want to keep one finger on the UK stock market’s ever-bounding pulse, subscribe to our mailing list here.
Until next time,
Stay Calm, Don’t Buy Bitcoin.
Joe




