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UK companies are cheap: the smaller the cheaper

Rory Bateman, head of equities at Schroders, 25/11/2020

Many investors in UK stocks have looked on enviously at the super-sized returns that global stocks, and US stocks in particular, have been able to deliver over recent years.

That all changed this month. As of 18 November, the FTSE 100 returned 14.7 percent since the end of October, as markets responded to the positive news about the potential Covid-19 vaccinations. This eclipsed the 8.2 percent delivered by the FTSE World index of global stocks and the 6.2 percent delivered by the S&P 500 index of US stocks (global and US returns expressed in sterling terms). One swallow doesn’t make a summer and the rebound has come over a pretty short timescale, but is this the wake-up call that investors in UK stocks have been waiting for?

UK stocks are cheap vs global peers 

The scene could well be set for a change in fortunes. Whereas US stocks have rarely been more expensively valued across multiple different measures of “value”, UK stocks are outright cheap, based on data at the end of October. Given that US stocks make up around 60 percent of the global stock market, this is a headwind for typical global stock portfolios. In relative terms, based on the forward price/sales multiple , UK stocks have never been cheaper than global stocks.

However, we believe the real opportunity is for those investors who are prepared to look beyond the big name companies that are so familiar to us all. If we dive down into the mid-sized companies which are in the FTSE 250 index (median market capitalisation of £1 billion, as at 31 October 2020), and even further down into the companies in the FTSE small cap index (median market capitalisation of £216 million as at 31 October 2020), then that is where the greatest potential opportunities are likely to lie.

UK stocks are cheap, UK small caps are even cheaper 

 

Stocks are trading on a multiple of around two-times their forecast sales for the next 12 months– this is 45 percent more expensive than their average of the past 15 years! Large UK companies are much cheaper, trading on one-times sales. This is slightly cheaper than their average of the past 15 years.

UK mid-cap stocks are cheaper still but it is small caps which really stand out. Investors can gain exposure to these companies on valuations of only 0.5-times forecast sales, far less than larger UK companies, which are themselves already much cheaper than their global peers. Small caps are also 17% cheaper than their own average of the past 15 years.

And with stellar growth prospects 

This is not because they are expected to struggle – analysts are forecasting small cap earnings to grow by over 100 percent in the next 12 months (consensus forecast) as they rebound from the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. And then by another 34 percent in 2022, at a time when the earnings of medium-sized companies are also forecast to be growing at over 30 percent a year.

There are obviously risks to the outlook – Brexit and Covid-19, for example – but cheap valuations and stellar growth prospects are a powerful combination.

Fewer legacy issues can make it easier for smaller companies to adapt

What smaller companies lack in financial clout, they can make up for in nimbleness. They often have less baggage than their larger peers, which can make them more adaptable to change. Larger companies are no more able to do a quick change of direction than an ocean liner. Smaller companies are more like a jet ski. Given the particularly uncertain world we live in at present, this could be invaluable.

The big proviso to this is that they need to be financially secure enough to cope through the current difficulties. Many will need to raise new capital to be able to do so. The growth opportunities are there, for those who can take them.

Written by Rory Bateman, head of equities at Schroders

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