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Robert Cole
Last Updated : Jan 20 2013 | 2:39 AM IST

Even as downtrodden world indices point to deep disquiet among investors, valuations of individual stocks vary widely. Fishing the bottom for low-rated bargains is one way forward. Shareholders may be better served by forking out for higher class equities.

The world’s 200 largest quoted stocks trade at an average 11.5 times of expected forward year earnings, according to Thomson Reuters’ Starmine database. The average hides a broad range, even excluding outliers. BP, the UK oil giant, trades on a multiple of 6. L’Oreal, the cosmetics company, sits at nearly 18 times earnings estimates, looking 12 months forward.

Stocks priced below average are sure to attract the attention of bargain hunters, especially when the averages themselves are modest by historical standards. But, a Morgan Stanley research published on October 17 supports the ageless wisdom that investors often get what they pay for, and that it is often worth paying premium prices for premium quality.

Often, but not always. Morgan Stanley looks back to the Nifty Fifty stocks of the 1960s. The companies were supposed to offer high growth and low risk, and enthusiasts argued the companies (Proctor & Gamble, IBM and Polaroid were on the list) were all but certain to grow enough to justify any valuation.

For a while, it all worked out well. From 1964 to 1972, the Nifty Fifty companies produced better earnings growth than US peers and their share prices outperformed the S&P index by 15 per cent a year.

However, enthusiasm became excess. The Nifty Fifty price-to-earnings ratio topped 40 at the height of the bull market which preceded the stock market rout of 1973-74. In the later 1970s, Nifty Fifty shares underperformed.

The current market looks more like 1964 than 1972. Of the 200 largest quoted companies around the world, a top-notch group of fifty are on course to deliver an average increase of 20 per cent in earnings over the next 12 months. These shares trade on a forward P/E ratio (calculated by Starmine) of 13. Even if the analysts’ estimates are too optimistic, there appears to be good value in this new generation Nifty Fifty.

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First Published: Oct 21 2011 | 12:16 AM IST

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