How Investors Can Avoid the Value Trap
What is the value trap in investing?
What is the value trap in investing?

The term “value trap” can be used to describe stocks or other investments that may seem like a bargain but shouldn’t be taken at face value. Knowing how to spot a value trap and how to build a portfolio using a value investing approach can minimize risk. Here’s what you need to know about value traps.

What Is a Value Trap?

A value trap is a stock that seems undervalued, but isn’t. The stock may have all the earmarks of a value stock: Low price to earnings ratio, low price to book ratio or a high dividend yield. As a result, it signals to value investors that it’s potentially a good buy. The trap comes when the stock doesn’t perform as the investor expects.

This is the fundamental nature of value investing. In other words, investors buy undervalued stocks and hold onto them for the long term. The goal is to identify stocks that the stock market undervalues. Then, you add them to your portfolio and wait for them to appreciate in value. The payoff comes when you sell those stocks later for more than their purchase price.

With a value trap, that payoff never comes. While the stock may look undervalued, its value assessment is actually correct. As a result, the stock’s value may change very little over time. In other words, you won’t reap big returns. In the worst-case scenario, the stock’s value actually declines. Consequently, you could take a loss by selling stocks for less than what you paid for them.

How Value Traps Happen

What is the value trap in investing?
What is the value trap in investing?

A value trap often indicates a lack of transparency or information about the company’s fundamentals.

For example, a company could look great on paper with strong cash flow and low price to earnings ratio. But those things could overshadow high-interest debt or other liabilities that make the company less profitable. If the company can’t bring its balance sheet back in line, the value trap is set.

A value trap situation also can occur if a stock is tied to an industry in a boom period of the business cycle. Investors may see a low stock price, relative to competitors, and assume  it’s a bargain. As the industry’s boom peaks, earnings may increase across the board. As a result, investors assume that translates to value. When the boom ends, however, earnings and the stock price can deflate.

Remember the old investing rule: Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results. In some cases, an investor focused on prior results may buy into a value trap. They assume the company will maintain its market share and grow in value. That can backfire, however, if the company gets squeezed out by new competitors. Similarly, existing competitors can develop new technologies, products or services to expand their customer base.