KEY TAKEAWAYS:
- When a company doesn't grow per share value at an acceptable rate, we consider the stock to be a value trap.
- To avoid value traps, we seek cheap stocks of companies that are run by an experienced management team committed to creating value for its shareholders.
- We use proprietary analysis to differentiate between changes in company value and stock market price, adding to our positions when the price falls more than is justified.
- Price often reflects short-term, non-fundamental forces rather than long-term impacts on a business' worth.
- Some of our current outperformers were once detractors that we added to at attractive prices.
Long-term success requires the discipline to stick with a solid, time-tested process even if results aren't on target for the short term. Our investment team knows that they won't be rewarded or penalized based on short-term stock price movements, but rather on how well they followed our process. At Harris | Oakmark, we believe our process will result in more stocks that go up than down, and the magnitude of our winners should exceed that of our losers.
Over the last decade, international markets have underperformed U.S. markets and value funds have underperformed growth funds. The U.S. dollar has also appreciated 30%, providing another headwind to returns. For international value funds, absolute returns have been hard to come by. We realize this outcome can invite second-guessing an allocation to the asset class.
We have gone through tough periods before. If we were to stack every monthly factsheet of the Oakmark International Fund (the “Fund”) on the table, there would be 371 sheets of paper. A historical analysis of all those factsheets reveals that 35% of them had three-year returns that lagged the MSCI World ex -U.S Index. They also reveal, however, that across all rolling periods the Fund outperformed the Index by at least 2.5% and posted greater than an 8% return. Without being dogmatic, it's critical that we stick to our investment process during periods of underperformance, rather than make wholesale changes to our process.
HOW WE AVOID VALUE TRAPS
As value investors, a knee-jerk reaction can be to scoop up stocks when they fall. The risk is a stock that appears cheap may be cheap for a reason.
When a company doesn't grow per share value at an acceptable rate, we consider the stock a value trap. The term is primarily applied to structurally disadvantaged companies that currently trade at low multiples. To avoid value traps, we seek cheap stocks of companies that are run by an experienced management team, committed to creating value for its shareholders.
When conducting meetings with management teams, we offer the following advice: Run your business to maximize long-term value and invest excess cash in your highest return opportunities, and share repurchase. If you do, the stock price will take care of itself.
After we've purchased a stock, we utilize any new data as it becomes available to see if the stock still fits under our valuation thesis. Our investment team employs several tools and methods to assess value creation and we track estimated business value from the time the stock goes on our approved list. We expect value to grow as time passes, but if we turn out to be wrong, we want the path of least resistance to be selling a stock that isn't meeting our fundamental expectations.
PRICE OR VALUE? HOW WE DEFINE A KEEPER
About 40 years ago, we formalized a process of challenging an analyst's assumptions used to value an approved list company and coined it the Devil's Advocate (DA) review. Our team of 20+ analysts scour the approved list for a company whose value they think the stock selection group should reconsider. They write a Devil's Advocate report on a firm's top holding by researching and presenting reasons to change our valuation assumptions. When a stock is “DA'd”, a member of the investment team publishes a bear or a bull case on the company and reprices the business.
After a written rebuttal report is distributed by the defending analyst, the stock selection group meets for a debate and vote to determine the company's fate. It either remains on the approved list or is removed. Though most holdings stick—the bar is high for getting into the portfolio in the first place— the process routinely persuades the defending analyst to take a second look.
In 2023, a period of underperformance for the Oakmark International Fund, the number of Devil's Advocate reports tripled over the previous year. Through this process our team examined company-specific issues at Worldline (XPAR:WLN, Financial), Prudential (PRU, Financial) and St. James's Place (LSE:STJ, Financial). The additional rigor applied to the top five detractors for the Fund gave us conviction to add to each on weakness, year to date.
We use discipline and thorough analysis to differentiate between changes in company value and the stock market price. Price often reflects short-term, non-fundamental forces rather than long-term impacts on a business' worth.
When a stock price falls more than our estimate of company value and our team's process reaffirms our conviction in the business, we add to it — often at extremely attractive prices. Though this can cause a blip in short- term performance, we remain convinced this is the correct approach for long-term investment returns.
For example, companies that were once detractors to the Fund — such as Glencore (LSE:GLEN, Financial) and Mercedes-Benz (XTER:MBG, Financial) — have witnessed turnarounds that transformed them into top contributors.
THIS PERIOD REMINDS US OF THE PAST
The last three-year period has landed the Oakmark International Fund performance in historic company alongside the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), the Covid shutdown and the “dotcom” boom. The current three-year period has certainly had macro headlines that caused concern, including Russia's invasion of Ukraine, inflation, the end of lower for longer interest rates and the emergence of artificial intelligence.
The silver lining is that those periods led to strong relative performance. As shown in the chart, after the “dotcom” bubble popped, the economy emerged from the GFC, and Covid fears abated, the Fund was rewarded for its conviction.
In the investment business the line between early and wrong can be blurry, and which side we are on today will only be obvious with hindsight.
We are deploying the same investment philosophy and process since the Fund was founded in 1992. Today, we're excited by the relative cheapness of the Oakmark International Fund and see similarities with previous periods when our poor relative performance was followed by substantial outperformance of index funds. Thank you for your patience.
Past performance is no guarantee of future results. The performance data quoted represents past performance. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. Total return includes change in share prices and, in each case, includes reinvestment of dividends and capital gain distributions. The investment return and principal value vary so that an investor's shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than the original cost.