US Stocks Are Expensive, These Countries Are Not

While we have stepped back from the meme stock craziness of 2021, US stocks remain quite expensive by historical standards, with our Cyclically Adjusted Price to Earnings (CAPE) ratio at almost twice its long-run average:

Source

Even at a high price, US stocks could still be worth it, and I certainly hold plenty. But I also think it it a good time to consider the alternatives. US Treasury bond yields are the highest they’ve been since 2007. But there are also many countries where stocks are dramatically cheaper than the US- and not just high-risk basket-cases, but stable “investable” countries.

There are several reasonable ways to measure what counts as “expensive” for stocks in addition to the CAPE ratio I mention above. The Idea Farm averages out four such measures to determine how expensive different “investable” (large, stable) country stock markets are. Here is their latest update:

MSCI Investable Market Indices:

Source: The Idea Farm Global Valuation Update

You can see that US stocks are expensive not only relative to our own history, but also relative to other countries, lagging only India and Denmark. That means that much of the world looks like a relative bargain, with the cheapest countries being Colombia, Poland, Chile, Czech Republic, and Brazil.

Of course, sometimes stocks, just like regular goods and services, are cheap for a reason: they just aren’t that good. They might be cheap because investors expect slow growth, or a recession, or political risk. But if you don’t share these expectations about a cheap stock (or country), that’s when to really take a look. I certainly did well buying Poland after I saw they were the cheapest in last year’s global valuation update and thought there was no good reason for them to stay that cheap.

I like that the chart above provides a simple ranking of investable markets. But if you wish it included more valuation measures, or small frontier markets, you can find that from Aswath Damodaran here. Some day I hope to provide a data-based, rather than vibes-based, analysis of which countries are “cheap/expensive for a reason” vs “cheap/expensive for no good reason”, featuring measures like industry composition, population growth, predictors of economic growth, and economic freedom. For now you just get my uninformed impression that Poland and Colombia seem like fine countries to me.

Disclosure: I’m long stocks or indices in several countries mentioned, including EPOL, FRDM, PBR.A, CIB, and SMIN. Not investment advice.

*Abbreviations:
CAPE: Cyclically Adjusted Price Earnings – a valuation measure that uses real earnings per share (EPS) over a 10-year period to smooth out fluctuations in corporate profits that occur over different periods of a business cycle.
CAPD: Cyclically Adjusted Price Dividends – a valuation measure that uses dividends over a 10-year period to smooth out fluctuations in corporate profits that occur over different periods of a business cycle.
CAPCF: Cyclically Adjusted Price Cash Flow – a valuation measure that uses cash flow over a 10-year period to smooth out fluctuations in corporate profits that occur over different periods of a business cycle.
CAPB: Cyclically Adjusted Price Book – a valuation measure that uses book value over a 10-year period to smooth out fluctuations in corporate profits that occur over different periods of a business cycle.

7 thoughts on “US Stocks Are Expensive, These Countries Are Not

  1. Joy Buchanan's avatar Joy Buchanan August 17, 2023 / 12:53 pm

    I’m not looking up links right now, but Tyler has said and written in several places about US stocks. If you have cash (think trade surplus China), where else are you going to put that money? Looking around the world, there aren’t many better options than the US gov’t and US private sector.

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  2. Scott Buchanan's avatar Scott Buchanan August 21, 2023 / 7:49 pm

    Nice information, thanks.
    I think one reason that US stocks keep commanding a high P/E is that US economy just keeps on growing, appreciably faster than most developed countries. And with other countries, there seem to be ongoing governance etc issues that affect investibility of companies there, even if the GDP is growing.
    There is a saying I heard some twenty years ago, which still seems applicable, “Brazil is the country of the future — and always will be”.

    Warren Buffett’s advice is don’t bet against America (i.e. American economic growth/stability). My portfolio has been kept somewhat diversified with some international and small cap stocks, but I would have been better off following his advice and socking it all into a large cap US S&P 500 fund and leaving it there.

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  3. Mike's avatar Mike December 9, 2023 / 4:49 am

    Great article! I would add Pakistan to the investable bargains.

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    • James Bailey's avatar James Bailey December 12, 2023 / 9:14 am

      I think its not included here because its considered a “frontier” market rather than “emerging”. Plan to do another post for “frontier markets”

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      • Michael Boller's avatar Michael Boller December 16, 2023 / 4:08 am

        Yes, I think that’s the case. The problem with frontier markets is that many of them are not investable.
        It would be also interesting to see what the situation is with the currency. Is a country’s currency undervalued or overvalued? Undervalued would be better for the export economy, among other things. So far, however, I don’t know of any useful, simple currency analyses (perhaps the GDP adjusted Big Mac Index, but in my opinion this is not very precise).

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