The value-vs-growth debate has dominated investment commentary for 50 years. It's the wrong framing. Value and growth are not opposing strategies; they're two dimensions of the same evaluation. Every stock is somewhere on both axes. The interesting question isn't "value or growth?" — it's "where is the mispricing on either axis right now?"
This post walks through what value and growth actually mean (the textbook versions and the practical versions), what the rolling-window data shows, why 2015-2022 created the false binary, and what a serious hybrid looks like.
The textbook definitions
Value investing: buying stocks whose current market price is meaningfully below an estimated intrinsic value, with a margin of safety. Originated with Benjamin Graham's Security Analysis (1934). Identifies stocks via low P/E, low P/B, high FCF yield, high dividend yield. Buy and hold until price converges to fair value or the thesis breaks.
Growth investing: buying stocks whose underlying business is growing fast enough that the future earnings power justifies a higher current multiple. Originated with Philip Fisher's Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits (1958). Identifies stocks via high revenue growth, high earnings growth, expanding market share, high R&D intensity. Buy and hold while growth continues.
In the textbook framing, these are opposed: value buyers focus on the denominator (cheaper price), growth buyers focus on the numerator (faster expansion of earnings). The textbook framing has been wrong since at least 1972, when Buffett bought See's Candies at a P/E of 14 — value-by-multiple, growth-by-trajectory.
What value and growth actually mean today
In 2026, the labels have become institutional shorthand for fund categories, which has corrupted the underlying meanings:
- "Value funds" (Russell 1000 Value, etc.) are now mostly energy + financials + industrials by construction (they screen on low P/E/P/B which over-weights cyclical sectors)
- "Growth funds" (Russell 1000 Growth) are mostly tech + healthcare + consumer-discretionary (they screen on high earnings growth which over-weights software-heavy sectors)
The fund-category definitions are not what Graham or Fisher meant. Real value investors today own quality compounders (Visa, Mastercard, S&P Global) that look like "growth" stocks on traditional screens but whose actual cash-flow trajectories are calculable, predictable, and being mispriced relative to durability. Real growth investors today own established platforms (Microsoft, Adobe, ASML) where growth has slowed to mid-teens but pricing power is so strong the current multiple is still defensible.
The actually-useful re-framing: every stock has a quality score and a current-price score. Both matter. The mispricing exists when these two scores diverge from what the market is paying.
The 15-year rolling-window data
Replications of pure-value vs pure-growth portfolios show:
- 2000-2007: pure value beat pure growth by ~5-7 percentage points annualised. Post-bubble recovery, energy and financials repriced sharply.
- 2008-2014: roughly tied, with high volatility.
- 2015-2022: pure growth beat pure value by ~6-9 percentage points annualised. The "FAANG era" — software, platforms, low-interest-rate-juiced multiples.
- 2022-2023: pure value beat pure growth by ~10+ points (one-year window) as rising interest rates compressed long-duration growth multiples.
- 2024-2025: pure growth recaptured the lead, partly on AI rally.
Two takeaways: (1) the leadership flips frequently and is unpredictable, (2) the magnitude of the leadership matters — 2015-2022's growth dominance was structurally larger than most prior cycles, which is why the value-is-dead narrative got loud.
The 25-year combined return: value and growth are roughly tied at the all-cap level. The differences are in WHEN, not in long-term magnitude.
Why 2015-2022 created the false binary
A specific set of conditions amplified growth's outperformance:
1. Zero interest rates. Low discount rates math-mechanically push up the present value of distant earnings. Growth stocks have more distant earnings, so they benefit disproportionately. When rates rose in 2022, the effect reversed sharply.
2. Passive flows into mega-cap tech. As index funds grew, they bought market-cap-weighted, which over-weighted whatever was already large. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon got more passive bid; cheaper value names got none.
3. Software-platform economics arrived at scale. Microsoft, Adobe, Salesforce, ServiceNow — these businesses genuinely earn structural rents at scale that no traditional value framework anticipated. The "growth" outperformance was partly a re-rating of these businesses' actual long-term economics.
4. The cheap-stocks pool got worse. As passive flows lifted large-caps, the relative cheapness in small/mid-cap value names was real but the businesses themselves had often deteriorated (retail, traditional media, traditional auto). Cheap-and-genuinely-undervalued became rare.
The combination created a 7-year period where every value-style fund underperformed and every "growth" fund crushed it. The "value is dead" thesis got pushed hard. The truth is more boring: a 7-year regime that benefited one style ended in 2022, and the style debate has been less one-sided since.
What a serious hybrid actually looks like
Sophisticated investors today don't pick value OR growth. They pick businesses with documented quality (the Buffett-style filter) at prices that offer reasonable expected returns (the value-style filter). This is the "quality at a reasonable price" or "growth at a reasonable price" approach — what Peter Lynch called GARP.
A practical hybrid framework:
1. Filter for quality first. Sustained ROIC, stable margins, conservative balance sheet, growing FCF. This is the "what kind of business is it" question.
2. Then evaluate price. Owner-earnings yield, DCF margin of safety, multiple-vs-history. This is the "is the price reasonable" question.
3. Don't penalise growth as a category. A 15-percent-grower with stable margins and a defensible moat at fair multiple is a better long-term position than a 2-percent-grower with collapsing margins at a "cheap" multiple. Growth that compounds is part of the value, not separate from it.
4. Don't pay for hypothetical growth. A 40x multiple on a story stock with no profits is not growth investing; it's faith investing. Past growth is informative; promised growth is mostly noise.
invest-like.com's multi-framework consensus encodes this exact hybrid. Buffett's framework (quality + price) is one of seven applied; Greenblatt's Magic Formula (quality + price) is another. The 5+/7 consensus tier holds the stocks that simultaneously look like quality businesses AND have defensible current prices — the actual hybrid output rather than a fund-category label.
Who wins in 2026
The honest answer: nobody knows. The 2024-2025 growth resurgence has been driven by AI-specific repricing of mega-cap tech. The question of whether that repricing is justified by future free cash flows is still open. Some of it almost certainly is (cloud infrastructure compounding); some of it almost certainly isn't (peripheral AI-themed names with no earnings).
What the data does say:
- Multi-framework hybrid approaches have outperformed both pure value and pure growth over rolling 5-year windows since 2015. The intersection-of-disciplines effect is structurally robust.
- Pure value has the best long-term Sharpe ratio (return per unit of volatility); pure growth has the best absolute return in growth-friendly regimes; hybrid has the best risk-adjusted compounding across regimes.
- Bear-market drawdowns are usually shallower for value-tilted portfolios; bull-market rallies are usually larger for growth-tilted ones. A 60/40 or 70/30 split between the two reduces the regime-specific drawdown risk.
For a retail investor in 2026, the most defensible position is: 50-70 percent in a broad-market index fund (which gives you both value and growth exposure at index weights), 20-40 percent in framework-screened individual picks (multi-framework hybrid), 5-15 percent in cash for opportunistic deployment during drawdowns.
Common questions
Is value investing dead? No. The 2015-2022 underperformance was a regime, not a permanent state. Rolling 5-year returns since 2022 have been roughly tied. Pure-value advocates were wrong to dismiss growth; growth-only advocates are wrong to dismiss value. The hybrid approach has been right both ways.
Should I switch from value to growth? Probably not, if you've committed to a strategy. Style-switching mid-cycle is the surest way to underperform both — you tend to switch right after a style has run hot, which is when it underperforms next. Stick with your discipline and let the regime cycle around.
Are growth stocks always more volatile? Not always, but often. Growth stocks have longer-duration cash flows, which are more sensitive to interest-rate changes. In rising-rate periods, growth stocks fall harder. In falling-rate periods, they rise harder.
Can I do both? Yes. The simplest hybrid is a 50/50 split between a quality-tilted ETF (like SPHQ or QUAL) and a value-tilted ETF (like VYM or IUSV). The cleaner hybrid is an active multi-framework approach like the 7-framework consensus.
Further reading
Educational only. Not investment advice.