Concentrated Portfolios Benefit from Persistent Growth Stocks
In our opinion, for long-term investing, stability of earnings growth is the key to success. We believe companies that can grow their earnings per share by more than 10% a year over three to five years are excellent candidates. According to our research*, from 1989 to 2019, global companies that delivered such consistent earnings growth over three years outperformed the market by 2.2% a year on average; those that did it for five years delivered excess returns of 3.5% a year.
These companies are also hard to find. Over the last 30 years, only 64 global companies on average managed to deliver 10% growth per annum over three years, while only 13 did so over five years. Holding a small number of companies like these in a concentrated portfolio can produce powerful results, in our view.
Pandemic Quashes Near-Term Growth
Today, finding long-term growth is especially challenging. Given the uncertainty about the pandemic and the global recession, perhaps it’s unrealistic to target 10% earnings growth. And if you can’t find that, is the rationale behind a concentrated portfolio of persistent growth stocks still valid?
We think it is, for three reasons. First, this year’s earnings collapse doesn’t necessarily mean the long-term outlook is severely compromised. Second, consensus forecasts suggest many companies are still expected to grow earnings by more than 10% per year. Third, a select group of high-quality companies have even stronger potential.
Long-Term Forecasts Point to Recovery
Nobody can deny the challenges facing companies this year. As countries locked down economies to contain the spread of COVID-19, the 2020 earnings per share forecast for MSCI World companies plunged by 24% to about US$0.96 at the end of June (Display below, left).