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The Widest Valuation Gap in History | Rob Arnott on What Investors Are Missing About AI
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Rob Arnott returns to Excess Returns to discuss the biggest questions facing investors today, including the impact of geopolitical conflict, the valuation gap between U.S. and international markets, the long-term investment implications of artificial intelligence, and why extreme spreads between growth and value may present major opportunities. Arnott, founder of Research Affiliates and pioneer of fundamental indexing, explains why AI itself is not necessarily a bubble but many AI stocks may be priced for implausible growth. He also discusses why small cap and value stocks may offer some of the most compelling long-term opportunities in decades, how market narratives drive valuations, and why diversification beyond the U.S. could be critical for investors. Throughout the conversation, Arnott draws on decades of market history to explain how bubbles form, why profit margins tend to mean revert, and how investors should think about positioning portfolios for the next market cycle.
Topics covered in this episode:
• Why Rob Arnott believes AI is real but many AI stocks may be in a bubble
• How market narratives can push valuations far beyond fundamentals
• Why U.S. stocks trade at roughly twice the valuation multiples of international markets
• The widening valuation gap between growth and value stocks
• Why small cap stocks may be one of the most attractive opportunities today
• The massive capital spending required to build the AI ecosystem
• How technological revolutions historically destroy jobs but create new opportunities
• Why investors should learn to use AI tools to remain competitive
• The definition of a market bubble based on implausible growth expectations
• Lessons from the dot-com bubble and the history of dominant technology companies
• Why profit margins tend to mean revert over time
• The long-term outlook for international stocks and diversification
• How fundamental indexing works and why it can create rebalancing alpha
• The concept of the “Trifecta” approach combining value, core indexing, and growth
• The risks of conglomerate premiums and the diversification discount
• Why the largest companies in the market rarely remain dominant over long periods
• How investors should think about balancing growth exposure with cheaper opportunities
Timestamps:
00:00 AI vs AI Stocks: Why Arnott Sees a Bubble
00:01 Introduction to Rob Arnott and Research Affiliates
02:13 The Iran Conflict and How War Impacts Markets
06:41 U.S. Valuations vs International Opportunities
08:50 The Extreme Spread Between Growth and Value
10:00 The Small Cap Opportunity and Index Effects
13:08 The Citrini AI Paper and Long-Term Technology Shifts
14:09 How Technological Revolutions Destroy and Create Jobs
16:00 How AI Is Already Changing Investment Research
20:00 Why AI Tools Are Still Losing Money
23:40 How Investors Should Think About AI Exposure
25:21 Arnott’s Definition of a Market Bubble
27:41 Lessons from the Dot-Com Bubble
28:34 Profit Margins and Mean Reversion
30:34 Technology Moats and Competitive Disruption
32:12 Will Mean Reversion Still Work in Markets?
36:02 The Case for International Stocks
41:39 The Trifecta: A New Framework for Indexing
51:15 Why Expensive Slow-Growth Companies Underperform
56:25 Conglomerate Premiums and Mega Cap Tech
57:00 The Long-Term Case for Value and Small Caps
01:00:00 Why Market Leaders Rarely Stay on Top