Corporate Insiders Are Betting On A Reversal In The Relative Downtrend In Value Versus Growth jessefelderMarch 11, 2020 Every day I go through all of the insider buying and selling filed with the SEC the day before. (InsideArbitrage.comandOpenInsider.comare my two favorite sources for this information.) It’s mainly a way for me to try to find good investment ideas as nobody knows the true value of a company’s shares better than those running it. There are times, though, when it helps me to see larger trends emerging in real time. For example, last month Inoted on twitterthere was a great deal of insider selling across a large number of different companies in different industries. Since that time stocks have fallen into the fastest correction in history, so I guess that helps to validate the value of this data. Earlier today, I noted on twitter that much of thisselling has now dried upand thatinsider buying has expandedin both volume (dollar amounts) and in breadth (number of companies). This would seem to be a very bullish signal. However, when you look at the companies and sectors where the buying is concentrated they skew heavily towards those that now fall into the “value” category rather than the “growth” one. This would suggest that, rather than making a call on the broad market, insiders seem to be betting on a reversal in the long-standing downtrend in the value-to-growth ratio. While the chart above plots just the past few years, this trend really began back in 2007. For more than a decade, value stocks have underperformed growth, marking one of the most difficult times for value investors in history. From a technical perspective, though, it appears this trend is now ripe for reversal. On the shorter-term time frame, this downtrend was broken last fall. The ratio has now fallen back to test the trend line from above. A reversal higher here would be very positive for long-suffering value investors and insiders seem to be backing that play in a big way. https://thefelderreport.com/2020/03...s-growth/?mc_cid=e9276d765c&mc_eid=c364a221ff
We're now triggered off at ~2575, down 900 points from the ATH 3 weeks ago. What has that done for the [ever-maligned] p/e? S&P p/e is now ~19, compared to a historic average of <15, or a post-1990 average of ~20. The S&P CAPE (Shiller p/e) is now ~24, compared to a historic average of <17, or a post-1990 average of ~25. We're ABOUT where we should be. Supposed to be a big ol' fright. My conclusion: in a year's time, we'll be wondering what this corona-petro-neuralgia was all about. ((Apologies for cross-posting...but Value vs Growth seems a quite timely topic!))