The market places a high value on a company’s growth. Companies generally grow through productivity gains or through investments, such as an acquisition. The market doesn’t appear to discriminate between these different types of growth, even though expansion from investment is often agglomeration and not organic growth.
Using data from more than 1,500 companies from 1975 to 2004, the researchers found that in the long run the market does place a higher value on productivity-driven growth. However, the market also places a positive value on investment-driven growth. The researchers further found that productivity growth is undervalued and that investment-driven growth is overvalued.
Balachandran and Mohanram used these findings to develop a trading rule ¾ essentially, going long on companies whose growth is driven by productivity gains and going short on those whose growth is driven by investment. The researchers found that this trading rule delivers average annual hedge returns of 9.2 percent.



