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Buffett ratio tells us India is currently a great long-term buy; Do PE firms agree?

By Vivek Sinha

  • 18 Jul 2012

If there is one thing that I have learnt from crunching numbers for a good part of my working life, it is that the more you flog them, the higher the probability of statistics screaming and spewing out something which actually makes sense.

A few years ago, I came across the term Buffett ratio, which seemed to make a whole lot of logic at first glance, but has a big ceteris paribus tagged to it. To be fair, let me acknowledge that it probably deserves a discussion only because of the person who suggested it. After all, Warren Buffett is considered by many as the god of long-term investments.

Willy nilly, an upfront disclosure is on order for the use and interlinking of some numbers which could make a purist aghast.

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The origin of the ratio is perhaps sourced to this article in Fortune, written more than a decade ago.

In short, Buffett looked at the data of around eight decades, tracking movements of the market value (or market cap) of all publicly traded securities in the US as a percentage of the country’s business, where gross national product or GNP was taken as a proxy.

For the uninitiated, GNP digresses from the more commonly used term GDP as it captures income by ownership rather than geography. So, if an American MNC produces in India, it is part of GDP but not of GNP and if an Indian multinational produces in Brazil, it is part of GNP but not of GDP.

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Buffett honestly conceded that market cap to GNP linkage has its limitations but added, “It is probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment.”

His talisman was simple: Investors are playing with fire when this ratio approaches 200 per cent or the market cap of listed companies is out of proportion of the total income owned and produced by the citizens and their companies. On the flip side, buying stocks would work well if this percentage shrinks to the region of 70-80 per cent.

The first Molotov cocktail that can be thrown on this is the argument that valuations are, after all, a factor of earnings (that, too, expected future profits) more than revenues and therefore, this is a spurious correlation in the first place. Secondly, a whole lot of the economic output is actually outside of public-listed companies. Thirdly, and this is an extension of the second issue with the ratio, the stock market in India is much less mature compared to the US and so the ratio, perhaps, is more suited for the US (after all Buffett also based his interpretation on US data) than for India.

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Indeed, I would have laughed it off 10 years ago. Here’s why. In December 1999, when the dotcom bubble was arguably at its peak in India, the market cap of the Bombay Stock Exchange was just shy of $185 billion or 44 per cent of the country’s GNP. Was it a good time to buy stocks (not from a very long-term perspective as on hindsight, barring IT firms, one could still have made a killing having invested then and selling now) from a valuation perspective? The answer is: No.

Cut to December 2007 (the last month before it all came crashing down with sub-prime mess) and the Buffett ratio for India stood at 157 per cent. Was it a good time to invest? Definitely no!

So what changed in the eight years to make 2007 a year when the ratio made sense, which it did not in 1999?

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The stock market became much more representative of the economy as hordes of firms went public during the bull run that started in 2002-03 and gained pace in 2006-07. A couple of years ago, I had looked at the data and numbers showed that the revenues of public-listed companies were around two-thirds of the size of the economy. Some goliaths like Coal India listed thereafter.

Surely, one can argue much is outside the public equity market, be it the country’s vast agriculture sector, much of unorganised retail, numerous regional real estate developers and I would guess lakhs, if not millions, of small eateries dishing out Indian curries and so on and so forth.

But with all due respect to my former teacher and currently India’s chief statistician TCA Anant, I would counterpoint that I have serious doubts on how much of these sectors are covered by GDP or, for that matter, GNP. So in many ways, we are even.

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Now let us look at another time point: March 2009, the month when investment pundits across board realised that India was oversold and started buying once again. The Buffett ratio stood at 0.6. Was it a good time to buy? Hell, yes.

So where does it leave us? The Indian stock market is currently at 75 per cent of FY12 GNP. Is it a good time to buy (after all Nouriel Roubini or Dr Doom is still sticking to his prediction of 2013 as the year of 'perfect storm' globally)? I would leave that to readers to interpret, depending on their investment style. But here are a few quick points.

Surely, for short-term investors, it is a factor of many unpredictable variables. These include: What does the world’s most powerful woman (aka Angela Merkel) and her ilk think about the descendants of Alexander (and in future, the home of Salvador Dali or Leonardo Da Vinci or that of Vasco Da Gama); will the rain gods make up after a poor start to this monsoon; how does the RBI governor walk the policy tightrope, balancing growth-boosting rate cuts with (till date unsuccessful) inflation-busting measures; and finally, will the Indian political masters wake up from their stupor.

What about our dear private equity investors? Surely, they were far too risk-averse back in the 2008-2009 bloodbath and understandably so. For one, no one knew where the bottom was and valuations were so volatile that by the time the due diligence was done and the term sheet was signed, value moved up and down like a turbo-charged seesaw (I am not bringing in the PE firms who follow the mutual fund style investments in listed companies, some of whom have made money in the period). Most importantly, there were not too many promoters of good companies looking to raise cash from PE firms at sinking valuations either (besides the distressed assets cases). Therefore, blaming PE firms for not investing won’t be too fair. Then again, public markets are, at best, a proxy to valuations of private firms where much of PE investments happen.

But what about now? Would 2012 turn out to be a good vintage for PE firms from a five-year investment perspective? Surely, deal activity (barring tiny ticket, early-stage investments) has slowed down to first gear.

Even as both could be clubbed as long-term investors, the jury is still out on whether what works for Buffett, whose investment period can be forever, works for PE firms as well. It is tricky to say how long is too long but as Keynes said: In the long run, we are all dead.

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