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Growth vs. value investing styles

If you’re investing in stock mutual funds, you might hear the terms growth or value used to describe the investment style of the fund or the fund’s manager.

Value funds buy stock in companies that have financial problems, are underperforming their potential, or are out of favor with investors. Value funds seek out these stocks because their depressed prices can make them a good value — provided the issuing company can stage a comeback.

Growth funds, on the other hand, use an investing style that concentrates on stock issued by new or small companies that already have a strong upward momentum. The strategy is to invest in companies with rapidly growing earnings with the hope that they will continue to grow.

Because the stocks in growth funds tend to be expensive — or have a high price-to-earnings ratio — growth funds are generally considered riskier than funds that follow a value investing style. Value funds also tend to be less volatile.

Both value and growth investing styles, which can describe the approach of individual investors as well as fund managers, can produce strong results — or falter — but rarely at the same time. As a general rule, value investing tends to pay off in bear markets, when stock prices are depressed, and growth investing is an approach that works best in quickly rising bull markets.

     
   
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