Laggard

Laggard

A laggard is a stock or security that is underperforming relative to its benchmark or peers. As an example of a laggard, consider stock ABC that consistently posts annual returns of only 2 percent when other stocks in the industry post average returns of 5 percent. Holding a stock that returns 2 percent instead of one that returns 5 percent costs you 3 percent each year. Unless there is some solid reason to believe that a catalyst will lift shares of a stock that has historically lagged its competition, continuing to hold the laggard costs money. A better strategy may be to to buy fewer shares of an institutional-quality stock that’s rising soundly, rather than thousands of shares of a cheap stock.

A laggard underperforms its benchmark, in terms of an investment's returns.

What Is a Laggard?

A laggard is a stock or security that is underperforming relative to its benchmark or peers. A laggard will have lower-than-average returns compared to the market. A laggard is the opposite of a leader.

A laggard underperforms its benchmark, in terms of an investment's returns.
If an investor holds laggards in their portfolio, these are generally the first candidates for selling.
Investors may mistake a laggard for a bargain, but these will carry excess risk.

Understanding Laggards

In most cases, a laggard refers to a stock. The term can also, however, describe a company or individual that has been underperforming. It is often used to describe good vs. bad, as in "leaders vs. laggards." Investors want to avoid laggards, because they achieve less-than-desired rates of return. In broader terms, the term laggard connotes resistance to progress and a persistent pattern of falling behind. As an example of a laggard, consider stock ABC that consistently posts annual returns of only 2 percent when other stocks in the industry post average returns of 5 percent. Stock ABC would be considered a laggard.

If an investor's portfolio contains laggards, these are most likely to be sold off first. Holding a stock that returns 2 percent instead of one that returns 5 percent costs you 3 percent each year. Unless there is some solid reason to believe that a catalyst will lift shares of a stock that has historically lagged its competition, continuing to hold the laggard costs money. The reason for a laggard's subpar performance is usually specific to the company. Maybe they lost a big contract. Maybe they are currently dealing with management or labor issues. Maybe their earnings are eroding in an increasingly competitive environment, and they haven't found a way to counteract the trend.

Risks of Buying Laggard Stocks

How does a stock become a laggard? Perhaps the company continually misses earnings or sales estimates or shows shaky fundamentals. Lower-priced stocks also carry more risk because they often feature less dollar-based trading liquidity and exhibit bigger spreads between the bid and ask prices.

Everybody loves a bargain. But when it comes to investing, a cheap or laggard stock may not be the best deal. You could very well end up getting what you paid for. While a stock share at $2, $5 or $10 may seem like it has lots of upside, most stocks selling for $10 or less are cheap for a reason. They have had some sort of deficiency in the past, or they have something wrong with them now.

A better strategy may be to to buy fewer shares of an institutional-quality stock that’s rising soundly, rather than thousands of shares of a cheap stock. Top mutual funds and other big players prefer companies with sound earnings and sales track records, and share prices of at least $15 on the Nasdaq and $20 on the NYSE. They also prefer volumes to be at least 400,000 shares a day, which allows funds to make trades with less impact on the share price.

Related terms:

Certificate of Deposit (CD)

A certificate of deposit (CD) is a bank product that earns interest on a lump-sum deposit that's untouched for a predetermined period of time. read more

Index Fund

An index fund is a pooled investment vehicle that passively seeks to replicate the returns of some market indexes. read more

Nasdaq

Nasdaq is a global electronic marketplace for buying and selling securities. read more

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)

The New York Stock Exchange, located in New York City, is the world's largest equities-based exchange in terms of total market capitalization. read more

Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio

The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is the ratio for valuing a company that measures its current share price relative to its per-share earnings. read more

Rate of Return (RoR)

A rate of return is the gain or loss of an investment over a specified period of time, expressed as a percentage of the investment’s cost. read more

Relative Return

Relative return is the return an asset achieves over a period of time compared to a benchmark.  read more

Tenbagger

A tenbagger is an investment that appreciates to 10 times its initial purchase price. read more

Weak Sister

"Weak sister" is slang for an undependable or weak link that threatens to undermine an entire system. read more