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Geoff Blount: JSE listed companies are average – and here’s the proof

Judging on grants awarded by Remuneration Committees, virtually every JSE-listed company is blessed with well above average executive teams. But research by Geoff Blount (right with his dog Bilbo), managing director of Cannon Asset Managers, suggests that’s a fantasy. In this Thought Leadership contribution Blount argues that over the long term company performance tends to be average – and is driven more by economics than any perceived managerial brilliance. – AH

As humans, we generally like to think we are above average, especially corporate management teams. So stating that all companies are “average” over the longer term might raise a few eyebrows amongst company owners and their management teams. To give this comment some context, we are referring to the ability of companies to sustain above-average rates of earnings growth over time. Indeed, the evidence suggests that this is an incredibly difficult task, and company management may have an uphill battle in overcoming the odds.

Cannon Asset Managers conducted research into the trajectory of listed company earnings in South Africa on rolling 10-year periods, from 1996 to 2013, with interesting results. At the start of each 10-year period surveyed, we broke down the market into 10 baskets (deciles) of shares categorised by their last three years’ annualised earnings growth in real terms (after inflation), from lowest to highest. The chart below depicts our results. For example, decile one (in red) contains the 10% of companies that had the worst earnings growth in the previous three years and decile 10 (in green) is the basket of shares that had the best earnings growth over the preceding three years.


Source: Cannon Asset Managers, Bloomberg

We then tracked the average rolling three-year real earnings growth of each decile over the next 10 years. The companies in decile 10 typically enjoy an average earnings growth of 65% in the previous three years but subsequently trended down rather quickly before “normalising” after three years. On the other side of the spectrum, companies in decile one start with earnings growth of –30% in the previous three years, but then their earnings swiftly rose for the next three years and then remained elevated for a number of years before trending back to average.

From this chart it is apparent that companies that have enjoyed strong recent earnings growth mean revert and, equally, the recent laggards experience a positive and sustained upwards earnings recovery, before reverting to the mean. This picture plays itself out over all the 10-year periods we surveyed.

But if companies generate earnings growth that is similar over the long term, it begs the question “how much should investors pay for these earnings?” Typically, investors pay more for decile nine and 10 shares because of their recent earnings experience (and they are ultimately disappointed), and investors shy away from decile one and two stocks for the same reason, driving their prices down (and they are ultimately pleasantly surprised by their “unexpected” good performance).

And what drives this phenomena of earnings mean reversion? Counter intuitively, it is not strategy or market share, product innovation or neat synergies that ultimately drive earnings. Rather, for the vast majority of companies, the environment in which a company operates dictates how they perform. Across the 25 countries that Cannon has analysed, GDP growth has a strong correlation (0.70 or higher) with earnings growth. Over time the economic result causes the earnings result, and not vice versa.

This is even more the case as companies grow larger.

However, sometimes mean reversion takes longer than expected – we are in one such phase where many decile nine and 10  stocks are enjoying extended growth and even stronger price momentum, pushing them to increasingly expensive multiples. However, to our mind, this is unsustainable, although it is easy to find many reasons which justify owning these popular yet expensive stocks at the moment.

Conversely, it is also easy to find reasons to avoid the unloved decile one and two stocks, whose recent performance continues to disappoint.

However, past history would indicate that earnings do mean revert, and that the words “this time it’s different” are seldom justified.

* Geoff Blount has been Cannon’s MD since 2008 after a decade with Investment Solutions where, as head of research, he helped grow the asset base from R4bn to R180bn. He has B Comm (Hons) from Wits and has worked in stockbroking at Frankel Pollak and at BOE Private Bank.

* For more in-depth business news, visit biznews.com or simply sign up for the daily newsletter.




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