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Value Stocks: Are Investors Underweight and Unaware

Despite historical outperformance over the long term, value stocks remain underweight in many portfolios. With markets favoring growth and technology stocks, are investors overlooking key opportunities in undervalued assets

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Thomas Edward Grant
Thomas Edward Grant
Senior correspondent, global finance & wealth trends
Last updated: 12 August 2025 (IST)

Thomas Edward Grant is a senior correspondent specialising in global finance and wealth trends. Thomas Edward Grant has reported for over fifteen years on migration of capital, covering Europe, the Middle East and Latin America.

In a market dominated by technology and momentum-driven growth stocks, value investing appears to have taken a backseat. Many institutional and retail investors remain underweight in value stocks, prioritizing sectors like AI, cloud computing, and fintech. But with rising interest rates and economic uncertainties, the question arises: Are value stocks the hidden gems of 2025?

Historically, value stocks—companies trading below their intrinsic worth based on fundamentals—have offered long-term outperformance, lower volatility, and steady dividend income. However, in recent years, growth stocks have overshadowed their value counterparts, leading to portfolio underweighting in critical sectors like industrials, healthcare, and financials.

1. Understanding Value Stocks: Why They Matter

Value stocks represent companies with strong balance sheets, stable earnings, and low price-to-earnings (P/E) or price-to-book (P/B) ratios. These stocks are often found in sectors such as:

Financials (JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America) Consumer Staples (Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola) Industrials (Caterpillar, 3M, Honeywell) Energy (ExxonMobil, Chevron)

While growth stocks tend to outperform in bull markets, value stocks often deliver resilience during economic downturns. The recent economic shifts—higher interest rates, inflation concerns, and slower growth—could signal a potential resurgence of value investing.

2. Market Trends: The Shift Toward Growth & Tech Stocks

Over the past decade, growth stocks, led by FAANG (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, Google) and AI-focused companies, have dominated market gains. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite have seen record highs due to investor enthusiasm for technology and innovation-driven companies.

AI and Semiconductor Boom: Companies like Nvidia (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) have surged due to artificial intelligence (AI) demand. Cloud & SaaS Growth: Firms like Microsoft (MSFT) and Salesforce (CRM) continue to lead in digital transformation. E-commerce & Consumer Tech Expansion: Amazon (AMZN) and Tesla (TSLA) remain dominant in online retail and electric vehicles.

This trend has caused capital outflows from traditional value sectors, resulting in underweight allocations for financials, energy, and industrials.

3. Federal Reserve Policy & Its Impact on Value Stocks

One of the key catalysts influencing stock performance is Federal Reserve monetary policy.

Interest Rates & Inflation: Higher rates generally favor value stocks, as they tend to have stronger fundamentals and predictable cash flows. Bond Yields & Market Rotation: Rising bond yields often trigger a shift from growth to value stocks, as investors seek stable returns.

Despite these factors, investors have continued to chase high-growth sectors, leaving many value stocks undervalued.

4. Why Value Stocks Are Underweight in Portfolios

1. Short-Term Growth Bias

Many fund managers prioritize stocks with high revenue expansion and innovation-driven narratives. This leads to an overweight position in technology and momentum stocks at the expense of value-oriented sectors.

2. Passive Investing & Index Funds

The rise of passive ETFs and index investing has concentrated money into a few high-growth companies, reducing capital flow into undervalued stocks. Top-heavy indexes like the S&P 500 have increased exposure to tech giants, further marginalizing value stocks.

3. Market Sentiment & Retail Investors

Retail investors favor speculative assets, such as cryptocurrencies and meme stocks. Social media trends and short-term trading strategies have shifted focus away from value investing principles.

5. Investment Opportunities in Value Stocks

Despite being underweight in many portfolios, value stocks present compelling opportunities for long-term investors.

Top Value Stocks to Watch in 2025

Financial Sector:

JPMorgan Chase (JPM) – Strong earnings, rising net interest income. Bank of America (BAC) – Resilient balance sheet, potential rate cut benefits.

Consumer Staples:

Procter & Gamble (PG) – Defensive play with consistent dividend growth. Coca-Cola (KO) – Steady revenue growth, global market presence.

Industrials & Energy:

Caterpillar (CAT) – Infrastructure spending boost. Chevron (CVX) – Stable dividends, strong cash flow.

Why Now? The Case for Value Investing

Valuations are historically low compared to growth stocks. Interest rates favor financial and industrial sectors. Dividend yields provide passive income, a hedge against volatility.

6. The Road Ahead: Will Value Stocks Make a Comeback?

As the market evolves, analysts predict a rotation into value stocks due to economic shifts, Federal Reserve policies, and global demand for stability.

Key Catalysts to Watch:

Fed’s next interest rate decision Earnings reports from major industrial and financial firms Consumer confidence and economic growth indicators Potential regulatory changes affecting technology and energy sectors

While growth stocks remain dominant, historical data suggests that value stocks outperform over extended periods. For investors seeking long-term wealth preservation and steady returns, allocating capital to undervalued assets could be a strategic move

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