The Three-Factor Model (also known as the 'Fama-French Three-Factor Model') is a powerful tool used to explain stock returns. Think of it as an upgrade to the older, simpler Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). While the CAPM suggested that a stock's return depends solely on its sensitivity to overall market movements (its beta), professors Eugene Fama and Kenneth French noticed this was an incomplete picture. In the early 1990s, they published groundbreaking research showing that two other factors consistently helped explain why some stocks outperform others over the long run: company size and value. By adding these two “premiums” to the market risk factor from the CAPM, their model provided a much more accurate and robust explanation of investment performance. For value investors, this was a landmark moment, as it gave academic validation to the long-held belief that smaller, cheaper companies tend to generate superior returns.
The model's elegance lies in its three core components. It suggests that a portfolio's expected return is a combination of its exposure to these three distinct risk factors.
This is the classic ingredient borrowed directly from the CAPM. It represents the “excess return” of the overall stock market above the risk-free rate (like the yield on a government bond). In simple terms, it's the compensation you get for taking the basic risk of investing in the stock market instead of stashing your cash in a super-safe asset. If a stock is highly sensitive to the market, it's expected to rise more when the market is up and fall more when the market is down.
SMB stands for “Small Minus Big.” This factor is built on the observation that, over time, smaller companies tend to outperform larger, more established companies.
HML stands for “High Minus Low.” This is the factor that really gets value investing enthusiasts excited. It captures the tendency of value stocks to outperform growth stocks over the long haul.
The Fama-French Three-Factor Model is more than just an academic theory; it’s a practical framework that reinforces the core principles of value investing.
No model is perfect, and the Three-Factor Model is no exception. It doesn't explain all variations in stock returns, and in some periods (like the late 1990s tech boom), the value premium seemed to vanish entirely. This led to further research and the development of even more sophisticated models. The most notable successors include:
Despite these later additions, the Three-Factor Model remains a cornerstone of modern finance. It fundamentally changed how we think about risk and return, moving the conversation beyond just market beta and giving investors a powerful lens through which to understand the sources of their investment success.