Cyclical Stocks are shares in companies whose fortunes are tied to the rollercoaster of the economy. Think of them as the 'fair-weather friends' of your portfolio. When the economic sun is shining and people are spending freely, these companies thrive. Their sales and profits soar, and their stock prices often follow suit. However, when economic clouds gather and a recession looms, they are often the first to feel the chill. These are typically businesses that sell 'wants' rather than 'needs'—things we desire but can postpone buying when times get tough. This category includes automakers, airlines, luxury brands, and construction firms. Unlike their steady counterparts, Defensive Stocks, their performance swings in harmony with the broader business cycle. Understanding cyclicals is less about perfectly timing the market and more about recognizing where we are in that cycle and finding resilient businesses that can weather the inevitable storms.
The life of a cyclical stock is a dance with the economy's four-step rhythm: expansion, peak, contraction, and trough.
A key challenge is that the stock market is a forward-looking machine. Cyclical stock prices often fall before a recession is officially announced and start to rise before the green shoots of recovery are obvious to everyone. Trying to perfectly time these movements is a fool's errand.
Cyclicality isn't just one flavor; it permeates several key sectors of the market.
This is the classic cyclical sector. It's all about non-essential goods and services people buy when they have extra disposable income. When budgets tighten, the new car, the fancy dinner, and the family vacation are the first things to go.
These are the companies that build the economy's backbone. Demand for their products and services is a direct reflection of broader business investment and construction activity.
These firms provide the raw ingredients for economic growth. When factories are churning out products and new buildings are going up, demand for basic materials soars.
While some banking is stable, many financial services are highly cyclical. In a booming economy, or bull market, trading volumes increase, deal-making flourishes, and loan demand is strong. In a downturn, loan default rates rise and investment activity dries up.
For a value investor, cyclicals are a fascinating, and often treacherous, hunting ground. The key is to avoid the common traps and focus on fundamental value through the entire cycle.
The biggest mistake investors make is buying cyclical stocks when they look 'cheap' and selling them when they look 'expensive'. This is often the reverse of what you should be doing.
As the legendary Benjamin Graham taught, you must treat Mr. Market as a manic-depressive business partner. His mood swings are most extreme with cyclical stocks, offering you foolishly high prices in a boom and ridiculously low prices in a bust.
Because trailing earnings are so volatile, the P/E ratio is a deeply flawed metric for the valuation of cyclical stocks. Instead, a prudent investor should focus on more stable measures:
The goal is to buy a competitively strong business (one with an economic moat) when it's on sale due to temporary economic headwinds, and then have the patience to wait for the cycle to inevitably turn in your favor.