Robeco, The Investments Engineers
blue circle

08-08-2023 · インサイト

Do investors score with football stocks?

As anticipation builds for the new football season, we delve into the risk and return dynamics of football club stocks.

    執筆者

  • David Blitz - チーフ・リサーチャー

    David Blitz

    チーフ・リサーチャー

  • Matthias Hanauer - Researcher

    Matthias Hanauer

    Researcher

  • Nick Mutsaers - Researcher

    Nick Mutsaers

    Researcher

Although the majority of football clubs are privately held, enough are publicly listed to warrant in-depth exploration. These stocks might not be on every investor's radar, largely due to their low market capitalizations. This means their financial and economic impact is limited, which prevents their inclusion in mainstream stock indices.

However, their unique nature makes for an intriguing case study. For example, in October 2004, the stock price of Arsenal's "Invincibles" spiked by an impressive 67% after the team achieved an unbeaten streak of 49 games. Conversely, Juventus experienced a 45% drop in May 2006 following the revelation of the "Calciopoli scandal".1

Generally, a club's revenue is heavily tied to their on-field performance, where the line between success and failure is often razor-thin. Unlike conventional firms, football clubs tend to focus less on maximizing shareholder dividends, instead opting to reinvest earnings into their teams to enhance their potential for winning future matches and titles.

Data

Our aim was to identify the most significant football stocks in terms of market capitalization, not only today, but also historically to avoid survivorship bias.2 Our sample consists of 26 football stocks from across a dozen European countries, typically competing in their respective local premier leagues. This includes well-known clubs such as Manchester United, Arsenal, Borussia Dortmund, Juventus, Olympique Lyon, and Ajax. A comprehensive overview of the included football stocks is given below in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Sample of listed European football clubs

Figure 1: Sample of listed European football clubs

Source: Robeco, STOXX. The figure visualizes our sample of listed European football clubs: Aalborg, AFC Ajax, Aarhus, AIK Fotboll, Arsenal, AS Roma, Benfica, Besiktas, Borussia Dortmund, Brondby IF, Celtic, FC Porto, Fenerbahçe S.K., FK Teteks, Galatasaray, Juventus, Kopenhagen FC, Lazio Roma, Manchester United, Newcastle United, Olympique Lyon, Ruch Chorzow, Silkeborg IF, Sporting Lisbon, Tottenham Hotspur, Trabzonspor.

Our sample spans from January 1997 to March 2023, offering over a quarter-century's worth of data. We gathered return and market cap data for each individual stock and constructed a football index by determining the capitalization-weighted average return of the available stocks at each point in time.

Initially, our football stock count is a mere 6, but the index gradually diversifies. Until 2005, the index is significantly influenced by Manchester United, with an average weight exceeding 40%. After Manchester United's delisting in 2005, the index becomes more balanced, a trend that persists even after Manchester United is relisted in 2012.

Low risk or high risk?

Our first analysis focuses on the risk associated with football stocks. The two most important risk measures are volatility and beta. For most stocks, these risk measures align closely, i.e., low-volatility stocks also tend to be low-beta stocks, and high-volatility stocks also tend to be high-beta stocks.

This relationship is illustrated in Figure 2, which classifies all MSCI Europe index constituents into three volatility buckets and three beta buckets independently.3 The graph demonstrates that most stocks fall along the diagonal from front left to rear right (blue bars), while stark differences between volatility and beta (red bars) tend to be quite rare.

Figure 2: Distribution of MSCI Europe constituents in volatility and beta groups

Figure 2: Distribution of MSCI Europe constituents in volatility and beta groups

Source: Robeco, Refinitiv. The figure shows the distribution of MSCI Europe Index constituents in volatility and beta groups. To be included in the sample, we require at least five years of available return data. The sample period is January 1997 to March 2023.

However, football stocks exhibit very different risk characteristics. As shown in Figure 3, most football stocks simultaneously display a high volatility and a low beta, a very unusual combination. The high volatility means that share prices fluctuate widely, but the low beta indicates minimal co-movement with the market. In simple terms, the prices of football stocks go all over the place, but in their own unique way. Depending on the definition of risk, this makes them both low-risk and high-risk stocks at the same time.

Figure 3: Distribution of European football stocks in volatility and beta groups

Figure 3: Distribution of European football stocks in volatility and beta groups

Source: Robeco, Refinitiv. The figure shows the distribution of Europe football stocks in volatility and beta groups. The football stocks are sorted into three volatility buckets and three beta buckets based on the same breakpoints as in Figure 2. The sample period is January 1997 to March 2023.

The return of football stocks

The return of the aggregate football index versus the MSCI Europe index by calendar year is shown in Figure 4. Return variations of 20% or 30% in a single year are no rarity, underlining the high volatility of football stocks. The low beta of football stocks is apparent in years like 2008 (global financial crisis) and 2022 (tech crash), when football stocks massively outperformed the market, demonstrating their rather uncorrelated behavior.

Unfortunately, large underperformances have been considerably more frequent (48% of the years) than large outperformances (just 30% of the years). Over the full sample, the return of the football index lagged the market by almost 6% per annum.

Figure 4: Calendar year return of football clubs versus MSCI Europe

Figure 4: Calendar year return of football clubs versus MSCI Europe

Source: Robeco, Refinitiv. The figure shows the return spread between European football stocks and the MSCI Europe Index. Portfolios are value-weighted and updated monthly. The constituents of the football portfolio are presented in Figure 1. The sample period is January 1997 to March 2023.

We have published extensively on the low-risk anomaly - the phenomenon that low-risk stocks deliver market-like (or superior) long-term returns with substantially lower risk, whereas high-risk stocks generate poor long-term returns despite their high risk.4 The same conclusion applies regardless of whether volatility or beta is used as a risk measure, which is unsurprising given their usual high correlation.5 However, football stocks, due to their contrasting volatility and beta characteristics, present a unique opportunity to assess which metric is a more important determinant of expected return.

To this end, we compare the long-term return of the football index with the returns of volatility- and beta-sorted portfolios in the MSCI Europe universe. We consider value-weighted tertile portfolios for volatility and beta estimated on daily data over a one-year lookback period. Figure 5 shows that the low-risk anomaly is clearly present among European stocks. In terms of long-term return, the low-volatility and low-beta portfolios come out on top, while the high-volatility and high-beta portfolios end up last. Although volatility seems slightly more potent than beta, the differences are small. This is consistent with the extensive literature on the low-risk anomaly.

Figure 5: Cumulative performance of football, volatility, and beta portfolios

Figure 5: Cumulative performance of football, volatility, and beta portfolios

Source: Robeco, Refinitiv. The figure shows the cumulative excess return over the risk-free rate of European football stocks and stock tercile portfolios based on 260-day volatility and beta. Portfolios are value-weighted and updated monthly. The constituents of the football portfolio are presented in Figure 1. The investment universe of the tercile portfolios consists of the MSCI Europe Index constituents. The sample period is January 1997 to March 2023.

Turning to the portfolio of football stocks, we observe that they have the worst performance of all. In fact, their long-term cumulative excess return has been negative, meaning that an investment in football stocks underperformed even risk-free cash holdings. Given their extensive short-term return fluctuations and disappointing long-term average return, football stocks bear more resemblance to high-risk stocks than low-risk stocks. Thus, the high volatility of football stocks appears to be a better indicator of these stocks' performance behavior than their low beta. So when volatility and beta conflict, the evidence from football stocks suggests that investors should let volatility prevail over beta.

クレジットに関する最新の「インサイト」を読む

ロベコのニュースレター(英文)に登録し、最新のインサイト記事をいち早くご覧ください。環境に配慮したポートフォリオ構築にも役立つ情報をお届けします。

最新情報を受け取る

Football stocks as lottery tickets

A common rationale for the low-risk anomaly is that speculative investors willingly overpay for risky stocks due to a preference for lottery-like properties, i.e., a chance to hit the jackpot.6 Our sample contains some striking examples of this. For instance, Borussia Dortmund returned 138% in the 2010-2011 season when they unexpectedly clinched the championship after a long dry spell, Celtic returned 159% in the 2006-2007 season when they secured the national title and made it past the group stages in the Champions League, and Fenerbahçe generated a whopping 190% return in the 2007-2008 season when they reached the quarter-finals of the Champions League.

However, much like lotteries yield more losers than winners, the occasional big payoffs of some football stocks go hand-in-hand with poor returns in many other periods. Thus, while football stocks might be great for a lucky few who happen to choose the right club at the right moment, most investors end up disappointed.

Of course, die-hard fans might derive a certain non-financial utility from investing a small part of their wealth in the clubs they passionately support. However, from a purely financial perspective, the analysis in this article demonstrates that, despite their seemingly attractive low-beta characteristics, football stocks are generally not a desirable long-term investment opportunity.

重要事項

当資料は情報提供を目的として、Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V.が作成した英文資料、もしくはその英文資料をロベコ・ジャパン株式会社が翻訳したものです。資料中の個別の金融商品の売買の勧誘や推奨等を目的とするものではありません。記載された情報は十分信頼できるものであると考えておりますが、その正確性、完全性を保証するものではありません。意見や見通しはあくまで作成日における弊社の判断に基づくものであり、今後予告なしに変更されることがあります。運用状況、市場動向、意見等は、過去の一時点あるいは過去の一定期間についてのものであり、過去の実績は将来の運用成果を保証または示唆するものではありません。また、記載された投資方針・戦略等は全ての投資家の皆様に適合するとは限りません。当資料は法律、税務、会計面での助言の提供を意図するものではありません。 ご契約に際しては、必要に応じ専門家にご相談の上、最終的なご判断はお客様ご自身でなさるようお願い致します。 運用を行う資産の評価額は、組入有価証券等の価格、金融市場の相場や金利等の変動、及び組入有価証券の発行体の財務状況による信用力等の影響を受けて変動します。また、外貨建資産に投資する場合は為替変動の影響も受けます。運用によって生じた損益は、全て投資家の皆様に帰属します。したがって投資元本や一定の運用成果が保証されているものではなく、投資元本を上回る損失を被ることがあります。弊社が行う金融商品取引業に係る手数料または報酬は、締結される契約の種類や契約資産額により異なるため、当資料において記載せず別途ご提示させて頂く場合があります。具体的な手数料または報酬の金額・計算方法につきましては弊社担当者へお問合せください。 当資料及び記載されている情報、商品に関する権利は弊社に帰属します。したがって、弊社の書面による同意なくしてその全部もしくは一部を複製またはその他の方法で配布することはご遠慮ください。 商号等: ロベコ・ジャパン株式会社  金融商品取引業者 関東財務局長(金商)第2780号 加入協会: 一般社団法人 日本投資顧問業協会