When
consensus recognises the changing fortunes of an underlying business
and upgrades ratings, it pays to be among the early birds in
investing in such a business.
Savvy
investors buy stocks
for the long term with an aim to beat market returns over a period of
time. It not only takes skill to identify such counters among the
myriad choices available, but also disciplined investing.
While
the strategy of ‘going with the flow’ and buying/selling stocks
as most other investors/traders are doing is common, it takes skill
to identify stocks and a lot of courage to make an investment
decision that is contrary to the popular trend. Swimming against the
tide is a risky proposition and may/may not yield the desired result.
A
recent study by Motilal Oswal Research reveals that by investing in
stocks for which consensus recommendation has changed from ‘net
sell’ to ‘net buy’ as soon as they have been upgraded, and then
holding them for 12 months, an investor would have earned an average
return of 21.1 per cent.
The
brokerage looked at instances of change in consensus rating from ‘net
sell’ to ‘net buy’ over 2006-2019 across BSE-100 constituents.
A change in consensus rating from ‘net sell’ to ‘net buy’
implies a change in consensus rating from less than 3 (<3) to
greater than 3 (>3).
"Our
analysis suggests that over a longer term, neutral-to-moderately
popular stocks deliver a significant outperformance, even bettering
the performance of the most popular stocks. In 1QFY20, the most
popular stocks performed the best, beating the benchmark, whereas the
neutral to moderately popular stocks delivered the third best
return," the report says.
Does
a contrarian
investing strategy yield better results? An analysis Essentially,
these are stocks that have been ignored, have negative news flow and
are battling short-to-medium-term challenges. Typically they have
consensus popularity rating of <3.
"Marginal
earnings surprise, an improvement in news flow and beaten down
valuations are some of the factors that result in popularity scores
moving closer and then upwards of 3 (net buy). These stocks are yet
to become over-owned/most popular names on the street," the
report says.
Simply
put, the investment philosophy suggests that when consensus
recognises the changing fortunes of an underlying business and
upgrades ratings, it pays to be among the early birds in investing in
such a business.
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