Updated December 11, 2016
Given that I haven't posted on this subject for nearly a year, and given that the United States stock indices continue to rise into the stratosphere despite signs that the economy is not particularly strong, I thought that it was a good time to revisit the concept of Tobin's Q aka the Q Ratio.
Given that I haven't posted on this subject for nearly a year, and given that the United States stock indices continue to rise into the stratosphere despite signs that the economy is not particularly strong, I thought that it was a good time to revisit the concept of Tobin's Q aka the Q Ratio.
Tobin's Q (aka the Q
Ratio) was developed by 1981 Economic Nobel Laureate James Tobin, who spent his academic career at
Yale University. Tobin's Q can be used as a measure to predict
whether capital investment by businesses will increase or decrease with Q being
the ratio between the market value of an asset and its replacement cost.
Basically, Tobin hypothesized that companies should be worth what it
costs to replace them. In other words, the total stock market value of
a company should not exceed the value of its assets. Therefore, the
ratio of the total market value of a company is divided by the total asset
value of that same company to give us Tobin's Q. Here is the formula that
gives us Tobin's Q:
Tobin's Q
(Q Ratio) = Total Market Value of a Company
Total Asset Value of a Company
While it seems logical
that the Q Ratio would be 1 (i.e. a one-to-one relationship between total
market value and total asset value), this is not the case. Here is an
explanation by Andrew Smithers, telling us why the long-term average of the Q Ratio is less than one:
"The long-term
average value of Q is below 1 because the replacement cost of company
assets is overstated. This is because the long-term real return on corporate
equity, according to the published data, is only 4.8 percent, while the long-term
real return to investors is around 6 percent. Over the long-term and in
equilibrium, the two must be the same. The major cause of over-valuation
of assets is almost certainly due to their economic rate of depreciation being
underestimated."
If we take Tobin's Q to
its ultimate level, it can be used to cover the entire U.S. corporate world by
using the Federal Flow of Funds data from the Federal Reserves quarterly Z.1 Financial Accounts of the United States with
the latest release on September 16, 2016. The data used to calculate
Tobin's Q can be found on Table B.103 Balance Sheet of Non-financial Corporate
Business or on the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank's FRED database. Using
the Federal Reserve's database, FRED, Tobin's Q can be calculated by
dividing Non-financial Corporate Business; Corporate Equities
Liability Level by Non-financial Corporate Business Net Worth Level which
gives us this graph:
What is interesting to
note is what happened to the Q Ratio during the massively overvalued stock market during the tech boom that took
place during the end of the 1990s and into the early 2000s. We all know
how that story ended, don't we? Back to the present, at the end of Q2 2016, the Q Ratio sat at
0.97, 38.4 percent above the arithmetic average of 0.701 when we look at data
going all the way back to 1945.
Unfortunately, as you can
see, the data provided by the Federal Reserve is not exactly current, showing
us what happened to the Q Ratio only until the end of the second quarter of 2016.
On the Advisor Perspectives website, Jill Mislinski
provides us with a more up-to-date look at the Q Ratio using changes in the price of the
Vanguard Total Market ETF as a surrogate for the Fed's Corporate Equities -
Liabilities value. As such, here's what the current Q Ratio looks like to
the end of November 2016:
According to Ms.
Mislinski's calculations, the peak Q Ratios deviated from the 116 year
arithmetic mean as follows:
Ms. Mislinski's
calculations show that the Q Ratio currently sits at 51 percent above the mean
and is now in the vicinity of the range of the historical peaks, excluding the
Tech bubble peak.
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