Investors are unwilling to back smaller companies and other less liquid parts of the market, says the Henderson Opportunities Trust manager.
The collapse of Woodford Investment Management and the shuttering of his funds is still causing issues for other fund managers almost five years later, according to James Henderson.
The biggest consequence of the Woodford scandal, in which the disgraced fund manager invested heavily in unquoted or illiquid stocks – ultimately leading to the firm being unable to pay back investors who were trying to withdraw their money – is that investors now place a premium on liquidity.
This will cost them, however, when illiquid areas of the market such as smaller companies start to recover.
That’s what Henderson and co-manager Laura Foll are preparing for in their Henderson Opportunity Trust. It was hit harshly by investors’ attitudes turning sour towards the alternative investment market (AIM) three years ago, as the chart below shows.
Performance has dwindled somewhat in the past decade as well, with the vehicle slightly underperforming the rest of the IT UK All Companies sector over the past 10 and five years.
But Henderson is excited about the opportunities in AIM, as he explained below. He also discussed how much the economic backdrop impacts a company’s success and why there’s no such thing as a forever-stock.
Performance of fund against sector and index over 3yrs
Source: FE Analytics
What is the fund’s process?
We invest in a diverse list of stocks that often aren't in the mainstream. We're looking for the forgotten, unloved stocks and this always brings in a medium- and small-company bias to the fund.
We use different valuation methods for different areas of the market. We have a recovery theme going on at the moment and for a recovery stock, we're looking for turnover and not wanting to pay much for it.
Another area is tomorrow's winners. These are the often small companies that we believe will be more substantial in the future, so we're looking at prospective turnover and how they're compounding their earnings.
Why should investors pick your fund?
It's meant to be a real mixer in people's portfolios. We don’t see it as a one-stop shop, but as complementary to other things investors hold, as there won't be much crossover with more index-orientated funds.
Admittedly, it's a difficult fund to choose. The alternative investment market (AIM) hit a brick wall three years ago, which hasn’t helped. There aren't many funds looking in that area anymore and since Woodford’s funds imploded, there has been a real pressure on liquidity.
People may be paying too big a premium for liquidity. In the investment trust structure, we can take a slightly longer view and buy some illiquid stocks, because that's where the valuation discrepancy is greatest. That's where the excitement is and the recovery will come through.
How much is the performance of recovery stocks linked to the economic recovery of the UK?
Companies can achieve great things even with headwinds. Last year, Marks and Spencer recovered despite the cost-of-living crisis. The recession was very mild, but it still would have been a headwind and being one of the biggest names on the high street, it could go against the general economic climate.
If you provide excellent services or products, the overall economy doesn't really matter, and that'd be very much the case with some of tomorrow's winners as well, for example alternative energy stocks.
Whatever happens in the economy, if you're beginning to answer the energy problem so that people can move away from fossil fuels, it doesn't really matter what happens to the overall economy or interest rates: you're going to have a good business.
However, a bank is more closely tied to the economy, obviously.
Does this mean there are inherently good companies that you could potentially hold forever?
The lifecycle of companies is getting shorter and people don’t stay at the top of the tree forever. I would be careful about paying high P/Es [price-to-earnings ratio] for companies that are performing well. It's a very competitive world and there will always be people taking on the person at the top.
With the internet and things like price comparison websites, a company that starts to fail, doesn't have the best product, or is not giving the best service, is found out quicker than it used to. That's why we rotate out of the successes over time and into things that are more challenged, companies that are losing today that can recover.
How does this impact portfolios and turnover?
You need to be moving on a bit quicker than in the past. I can't envisage buying a share and thinking I'll never sell it. Turnover used to be about 15% and now it'd be closer to 25%. Average holding periods are also shorter, every five or six years we're turning things over. There are fewer forever stocks now.
Is Warren Buffett wrong then with his hold-forever philosophy?
In the English market, there aren't stocks like Coca-Cola. Every company that's been at the top in the UK has also declined over time. Vodafone was once a huge percentage of the UK index – while it’s still a very popular product, it's been dreadful for a long time.
However, even Coca-Cola wouldn’t be a forever stock. The world moves on even for it.
What were the best and worst calls of the past 12 months?
Our timing with Rolls Royce, which became the biggest holding in the fund, was lucky. It recovered much quicker than I thought it would. It was bought between £1.10 and £1.20 and the price now would be over £4.10. I've reduced it this week.
Our biggest drawdown last year was Zoo Digital, which does the dubbing for film productions. With the writer strike, it was hit big and then since it's opened up again, it hasn’t got back the amount of work it had before, as production companies do more in-house dubbing.
It has a good management team, but the area is much more difficult. The share price has been falling and we have cut it. The share price has fallen from £1.50 to £0.50.
What do you do when you’re not managing funds?
I’m very excited about getting into Bologna later in the month, as we've lent a picture to a show just outside Bologna on the pre-Raphaelites and Botticelli. They're showing how the Italian masters influenced English Victorian painters.
Multi asset funds have the potential to weather storms while making strong returns.
Picking when to get into stocks, bonds or alternatives is no easy feat. Market timing is notoriously difficult at the best of times but many think of it in the context of equities: when should I buy UK stocks or sell my US companies?
Now imagine trying to get the mix of assets right as well and it is easy to see how DIY investors can go disastrously wrong.
Sometimes investors can be overwhelmed by the choices on offer. Yet in investing, like many aspects of life, perhaps the simplest answer is also the most practical solution.
Multi-asset funds were designed to be a one-stop shop for savers who want to put their money to work but had no clue as to how to navigate financial markets. These funds typically invest in three core areas – equities, bonds and alternatives.
Research this week from Aegon Asset Management highlighted the fickle nature of markets, showing how varying asset class returns can be in each calendar year over the past decade.
It is a chart I have written about before, but thought worth mentioning again this time around for the inclusion of a multi-asset fund.
The fund selected in the below chart sits in the IA Mixed Investment 20-60% Shares sector, the second lowest risk multi-asset sector based on the potential amount the funds can hold in equities.
In theory therefore, investors would expect the returns to be far behind equities – given that this is the area that should make the most money over the long term. And this is true. Annualised returns over the 10-year period are far behind global equities.
But that is not the full story. Looking back over the past 10 calendar years, it shows that, more often than not, multi-asset funds can be in the top half of the performance ranking, beating global equities several times over the decade.
It also highlights that the annualised return matches the returns of UK stocks, while its risk-adjusted returns (the amount of potential loss versus potential gain) is pound for pound the same as global stocks.
In other words, although the returns have been lower, the volatility has also been dampened, meaning investors had a much smoother ride.
Source: Aegon Asset Management
The fund in question is the Aegon Diversified Monthly Income fund, which has been the seventh best performer over the past decade in its 104-fund strong sector.
Some may argue therefore that these figures do not represent the average fund and would require investors to pick one of the top performers – something which is incredibly hard to do without the benefit of hindsight.
Yet its five-year numbers are much closer to average. Even only looking over the past five calendar years, the portfolio has been above average in all apart from 2020, when Covid caused myriad issues for fund managers.
At my age (31 at the time of writing), I am in the somewhat advantageous position of only needing to put my money into equities. Most of my savings are for the long term, either retirement or as part of a rainy day fund that hopefully will remain untouched for several years.
But as I get nearer retirement (or needing the money for other reasons) and diversification and asset class selection becomes a much larger consideration – as will protecting my hard-earned savings – I will seriously consider moving my money to a multi-asset fund.
More than 94% of the trust’s share buybacks so far were carried out on Wednesday.
The Scottish Mortgage investment trust went on a shopping spree this week, buying £311m worth of its own shares in just one day – the largest buyback since its two-year budget of at least £1bn was announced in March.
Paying £8.95 per share, the company bought back 35 million shares on Wednesday, following up with a more modest £3.5m purchase on Thursday. Prior to this, the average purchase before this had only been worth approximately £2.8m per transaction.
The scale of this move means that 94.1% of the trust’s buybacks so far were carried out on this day, taking Scottish Mortgage approximately one third of the way the announced £1bn buyback programme.
Source: Trustnet, HMRC
The goal of this scheme is to narrow the trust’s discount, which was north of 14% in mid-March. Although the efficacy of buybacks has been brought into question by some, results seems to have arrived for the Baillie Gifford flagship trust, which is now trading at a 6% discount.
Scottish Mortgage’s discount
Source: Trustnet
Scottish Mortgage commercial director Stewart Heggie said the board and managers of the trust remain “resolutely committed” to facilitating trading around net asset value (NAV) and maximising returns for shareholders.
“Since the announcement of the buyback programme, the discount has narrowed by around 10 percentage points, which has contributed towards a share price return of 45% over the past year,” he concluded.
UK GDP grew by 0.6% in the first quarter of 2024.
UK GDP rose by 0.6% in the first quarter of the year, exceeding the Bank of England’s 0.4% expectations and indicating the end of the short-lived technical recession that gripped the country at the close of 2023.
This figure marks the UK's strongest quarterly GDP growth since before the pandemic and is also the first time in nearly three years that UK GDP has outpaced both the US and the Eurozone.
The service and production sectors rose 0.7% and 0.8% respectively in the first quarter of the year, spearheading the economic growth and offsetting the decline in construction.
As such, today’s GDP figures coupled with yesterday’s inflation numbers suggest the UK economy is turning a corner.
However, David McCreadie, CEO of Secure Trust Bank, stressed that growth forecasts anticipate the economy to plateau.
He added: “Attention now shifts to the Bank of England, given the sustained pressure on households and businesses stemming from elevated interest rates. A rate cut would provide an added impetus to the economy by reducing borrowing costs for businesses.”
However, Charles Hepworth, investment director at GAM Investments countered that the Bank of England may be less inclined to cut rates into an economy that is growing faster than expected. He explained that both inflation and wage growth dynamics will need to abate to make a June rate cut a “distinct likelihood”.
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, added that although the figures are encouraging, the cut to National Insurance and the increase in the national minimum wage which took place in April have yet to come through to consumer spending and their impact remains to be seen.
She warned: “Those green shoots we’ve heard so much about since the start of the year have sprouted nicely, but it will only take one spring storm to damage the burgeoning flowers.”
Meanwhile, the FTSE 100 hit new all-time highs this morning, although it might not have much to do with domestic macro-economic factors.
Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, concluded: “Given its international horizons, this has little to do with the UK’s better-than-expected GDP growth and is largely being driven by strength in the resources space where higher metals prices and the promise of M&A are helping to stoke share prices.
“The next key test of the index’s new-found vim and vigour will likely come next week in the form of US inflation figures.”
Dan Nickols, who leads Jupiter’s UK ‘smid’-cap team, will leave the firm on 30 June 2024.
Dan Nickols, head of Jupiter Asset Management’s small and mid-cap UK equities team, will retire on 30 June 2024. He is lead manager of the £426m Jupiter UK Smaller Companies fund and the £120m Rights and Issues Investment Trust and is an FE fundinfo Alpha Manager.
Matt Cable will replace him at the helm of both strategies. He has co-managed the Rights and Issues trust with Nickols since Jupiter won the mandate in October 2022. Cable joined Jupiter in 2019 and has more than 15 years of investment experience, garnered at M&G Investments and Schroders.
Tim Service, who has worked with Nickols for almost 20 years, will replace him as head of Jupiter’s ‘smid’-cap team and will be a supporting manager on the fund and trust. Service has been at Jupiter since 2007 and was previously a UK equity fund manager at Merian Global Investors. Earlier in his career, he was an analyst at JPMorgan and ABN Amro.
Nickols joined Jupiter in 2020 when it acquired Merian, where he led the UK small and mid-cap team. Before that, he worked at Albert E Sharp, Morgan Stanley and Deloitte and Touche.
Jupiter UK Smaller Companies has a strong long-term track record but has struggled during the past five years, trailing the IA UK Smaller Companies sector and the Numis Smaller Companies index. It peaked at £1.5bn in assets under management in September 2021 when it was the most popular fund in its sector but has been in outflow mode since then, shrinking to one third of its former size.
Fund vs sector and benchmark over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
The fund suffered in 2022 as central banks rapidly hiked rates, putting the small and mid-sized growth-oriented companies in its portfolio under pressure.
As Bestinvest managing director Jason Hollands explained: “This was down to the strong growth style bias being hit hard during a period of rising interest rates and borrowing costs. It is also a relatively concentrated portfolio for a small-cap fund, with circa 56 holdings, which does leave it more vulnerable to stock-specific risk than more diversified products.”
Trustnet looks at funds within the IA Europe Excluding UK and IA Europe Including UK sectors that have been run by the same manager since at least 2004 and have achieved top-quartile returns over the past three years.
European equities may not be as popular as their North American peers, but they are proving to be a more fertile ground for seasoned managers. While no veteran manager in the IA North America sector has been able to make top-quartile performance in recent years, four have achieved this feat across the IA Europe Excluding UK and IA Europe Including UK sectors.
Below, Trustnet researched the European funds that have been managed by the same person since 2004 or earlier and have produced top-quartile returns over the past three years, showing those who have been through it all and continue to make top returns.
One of the two funds in the IA Europe Excluding UK sector reflecting our criteria is Artemis SmartGARP European Equity, which has been managed by Philip Wolstencroft and Peter Saacke since 2001 and 2002 respectively. The latter is leaving the firm at the end of June however to become a maths teacher.
The fund’s investment process is based on Artemis’s proprietary tool “SmartGARP”, which aims to help the managers spot reasonably valued companies with superior fundamental growth.
As such, companies matching the market capitalisation and liquidity requirements are assessed against eight factors, including macroeconomics, investor sentiment, growth, valuation, estimate revisions, momentum, accruals and environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors.
Each company is then assigned an overall score, with 100 being the highest possible mark. However, only those scoring above 90 will be considered for inclusion in the fund.
The result is that none of the benchmark's heavyweights are among the fund’s top 10 holdings. Moreover, GSK is the only 'Granolas' stock in the fund, also constituting an off-benchmark position as it is listed in the UK.
While the fund has shined in recent years, long-term performance has been strong as well, with the fund also sitting in the sector’s first quartile over five years and in the second quartile over the past decade. Yet, this has come at the price of a higher volatility than its peers.
Performance of funds over 3yrs (to last month end) vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
The second fund in the IA Europe Excluding UK matching our requirements is Waverton European Capital Growth, which has been steered by FE fundinfo Alpha Managers Charles Glasse and Chris Garsten since 2001.
They look for ‘wealth-creating’ companies, operating in favourable business environments and trading at attractive valuations.
The fund is concentrated, with the top 30 holdings accounting for 98% of the portfolio according to FE Analytics. The managers do not bet the house either on the Granolas as it just holds three of them (out of 11): Nestle, Novartis and Sanofi.
Long-term performance has been good as well, as Waverton European Capital Growth sits in the top quartile of the sector over five and 10 years.
It has also been one of the least volatile funds in the IA Europe Excluding UK sector both in recent years and over the past decade.
Two veteran managers in the IA Europe Including UK sector also outpaced their competitors over the past three years.
The first one is Laurent Nguyen, who has been at the helm of Pictet Quest Europe Sustainable Equities since 2002 and also delivered top-quartile performance over 10 and five years.
ESG factors are a core element of the strategy, with the manager seeking to invest in companies with low sustainability risks and to avoid those involved in activities that negatively impact society or the environment.
Unlike the two previous funds, Pictet Quest Europe Sustainable Equities takes a bigger punt on the Granolas, with Novartis, Novo Nordisk, L’Oreal and GSK all appearing in the top 10 holdings.
Both short- and long-term performance have not come at the expense of higher risk, as the fund has consistently been one of the least volatile in the sector. It also boasts one of the highest Sharpe ratio, indicating investors have been fairly rewarded for the amount of risk taken.
Performance of funds over 3yrs (to last month end) vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
Finally, Michael Barakos is another European veteran manager to have delivered top quartile returns over the past three years.
He has been managing JPM Europe Strategic Value since 2004 and was joined by Ian Butler in 2014 and Thomas Buckingham in 2017. Together, they look for attractively valued sound companies.
As such, the fund is currently overweight insurance, bank and automobiles & component sectors, with Mercedes-Benz being the latest addition to the portfolio. The decision was made as a result of the German car company’s announcement of a new share buyback.
Conversely, JPM Europe Strategic Value recently sold UK bank NatWest due to disappointing third-quarter results and financial year 2023 guidance last year.
While short-term performance has been good, the fund has suffered over the past decade, as the value-style of investment has been generally out of favour in that period. As such, it sits in the bottom quartile over 10 years and in the third over five years.
The fund has also been more volatile than its sector peers, both over the short- and long-term.
Toys, social media, gaming and music are all ways children can invest in the things that interest them.
UK savers have an infatuation with cash, particularly parents, the majority of whom are placing their children's Junior ISAs (JISAs) into cash rather than investing in stocks and shares.
In fact, more than 60% of JISAs are held in cash. This flies in the face of conventional wisdom, which suggests that people with long time horizons should put their money to work in riskier assets as they have more time to make money.
But there is a certainty with cash returns, while stocks can lose money. One way to help get over this hurdle is to encourage children to be interested in investing, according to Dan Coatsworth, investment analyst at AJ Bell.
This is crucial, as the more money built up for a child in their early years, the easier it should be financially for them to deal with some of life’s big milestones when they become an adult, he said.
He suggested a “spend some, save some” approach, as a “fair way to let the child deploy some of the cash while also subtly teaching them the importance of putting money away for another day”.
As they get older, Coatsworth said introducing concepts such as interest on savings and teaching them patience for bigger rewards will stand them in good stead for later money issues.
Children are likely to be more engaged if parents get them involved with investment decisions. Picking companies that make the things they like can be a great way to encourage the younger generation to put their money into assets that can make higher returns.
“A child might be more willing to put some of their money into certain companies, or funds that invest in them, if they are familiar with their products and services, and you explain that they could potentially make money if these companies do well,” he said.
“For someone of primary school age, it might be the companies which make their toys, favourite meals or drinks, or the creators of their cherished games.”
For example, Lego is an “obvious choice” when considering toy manufacturers. Unfortunately, the company is privately owned and you cannot buy its shares.
“Instead, choices of listed companies relevant to this theme include toy workshop operator Build a Bear; Hasbro, which owns Nerf and Peppa Pig; and Barbie and Hot Wheels owner Mattel,” Coatsworth said.
As they get older, interests may have moved on to things such as mobile phones, social media, fashion, music or gaming.
“Apple is likely to be a phone brand many children aspire to own, with the iPhone often considered to be a must-have product. Apple’s shares trade on the US stock market and can easily be bought by a UK investor and held in a Junior ISA,” said Coatsworth.
For music lovers, streaming service Spotify’s shares trade on the US stock market and can be included in a Junior ISA. It is one of the biggest music streaming platforms and makes money by charging users a subscription fee or carrying third party advertising.
Meanwhile, film buffs might wish to consider the parent companies behind such platforms as Amazon Prime, Apple TV, Disney, Netflix and Paramount Plus, which are all on the US stock market.
For social media users, US-listed Meta owns WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook – the first two names are likely to have “considerable appeal” to teenagers, said Coatsworth.
“Snap is the other ‘biggy’ in the social media world with oodles of children using its Snapchat app. Its shares also trade on the US stock market,” he noted.
Meanwhile, although TikTok is owned by Chinese group ByteDance meaning its shares are not available directly, there are investment trusts and funds that have a stake in the company, including UK-listed Scottish Mortgage.
For gamers, he suggested VanEck Vectors Video Gaming and eSports ETF, where big holdings include Switch console maker Nintendo, Roblox and Take-Two, whose franchises include Grand Theft Auto.
Kazakhstan, the world’s ninth largest country, offers an array of eclectic and appealingly priced opportunities.
At first glance, frontier markets have delivered remarkably similar returns to the more established emerging markets over the past decade, but that simplistic view masks vast underlying differences between the two asset classes.
While a quick snapshot today shows comparable long-term numbers, the reality is that frontier performance is lowly correlated to emerging market equities, as well as far less volatile. The same is true between frontier and developed market performance.
In fact, to the surprise of many people, the MSCI Frontier index has been less volatile than even the MSCI Europe and Japan indices over the past decade. The low correlation and volatility are primarily due to decreased foreign investor activity within frontier markets.
With global growth expected to remain elusive in 2024, the world’s developing lower-income countries are expected to lead the way in growth terms over the coming year and beyond. This should not be surprising, considering that 16 out of the world’s 20 fastest-expanding economies over the past decade have been countries classified as frontier.
But despite continually improving fundamentals and the diversification qualities of the frontier universe, investors continue to underappreciate the eclectic and appealingly priced opportunities available in these often-misunderstood economies. In addition, the high degree of market inefficiencies arguably makes this equity investment class exceptionally suitable for active investing.
As such, we believe it is vital to regularly go on the road and visit the diverse countries within frontier to get a better understanding of the broader opportunities and risks within these untapped economies, as well as deepen our awareness of the unique corporates within.
If there was one part of the frontier universe far beyond the current gaze of investors, it would be the former Soviet republics in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. However, we continue to be encouraged by the investment opportunities within this vast part of the planet, which is why our team took a visit to the region last year.
Visible optimism abounds in Kazakhstan
While Kazakhstan is the world’s ninth-largest country by size, it has a small population of just 20 million people. Impressively, Kazakhstan's GDP per capita has risen tenfold to nearly $12,000 over the past two decades, primarily as a result of the development of the country’s commodity markets. However, the country also boasts a well-educated population – with a literacy rate of almost 100% – and relatively good infrastructure.
A turning point for the country came in 2019, when corruption-plagued leader Nursultan Nazarbayev – the first president of Kazakhstan – stepped down and was replaced by Kassym-Jomart Tokayev. While corruption remains a major issue, Tokayev has made strong strides in removing loyalists of the prior regime from top government and corporate posts.
On our trip, we visited Kazakhstan’s futuristic capital Astana, as well as the country’s commercial centre of Almaty, which sits at the foot of the majestic Trans-Ili Alatau mountains. While improvements remain in their infancy, it was encouraging to see how eager the government and corporates were in terms of elevating standards. On the ground, virtually everyone was excited about the prospects of this new era.
The top holding within our frontier markets portfolio is Kazakh financial group Kaspi, which is also the largest company in the MSCI Frontier Markets index. Kaspi’s super-app is the largest consumer-focused ecosystem in the country – with services in payments, marketplace and fintech. In fact, this is one of the most advanced digital eco-systems in the world where consumers easily can pay for items in-store, order groceries, renew their driver’s license or view their digital passports.
In January this year, Kaspi joined the Nasdaq after a $1bn share sale, which valued the entire company at more than $17bn, which has since then rise to nearly $22bn.
We met with the chief executive officer of Kaspi on our visit and continue to be impressed by his vision and the company’s growth plan execution, as well as capital allocation track record. We believe the valuation remains cheap and consensus estimates still underestimate Kaspi’s potential, particularly as it looks to grow beyond its current borders.
In addition to Kaspi, we have positions in several other Kazakh companies – including Kazatomprom, one of the world’s largest producers of natural uranium, Halyk Bank, the largest savings bank in the country, and London-listed Central Asia Metals, a mining company with operations in Kazakhstan and North Macedonia.
While we remain optimistic about the outlook for our Kazakh investments, it is important to remain vigilant to the risks, particularly as the country shares long borders with both Russia and China, who are competing for resource wealth and political influence. However, so far Kazakhstan has played its geopolitical cards in a well-balanced manner.
Unlocking value in off-benchmark Georgia
Our frontier team also visited the Georgian capital Tbilisi on our trip to the region. This small dynamic economy, which only boasts a population of about four million, has performed well over the longer term, driven by its oligopolistic banking sector.
The war in Ukraine has resulted in a huge influx of highly skilled Russian and Ukrainian IT developers into Georgia, which has propped up the economy and the currency. Surprising to many, the economy has risen by 25% in US dollar terms since the outbreak of the Ukraine war.
While not in the MSCI index, we characterise Georgia as a ‘regular frontier’, as its reasonably robust economic drivers are offset by political and geopolitical risks.
Our meetings with the country’s central bank and Ministry of Finance reinforced our view of the conservatively managed Georgian economy. It maintains a fiscal deficit below 3%, public debt/GDP is below the government cap of 40% and the current account deficit has shrunk to 3% of GDP.
We have exposure to the country through London-listed Georgia Capital – which has a diverse portfolio spanning pharmacy, insurance, renewable energy, water utilities and a large stake in Bank of Georgia. While the company trades on a NAV discount of more than 50%, we are optimistic about the strength of many underlying assets of Georgia Capital and expect the company to continue unlocking value over time.
Johannes Loefstrand is portfolio manager of the T. Rowe Price Frontier Markets Equity strategy. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.
UK, European and emerging market equities could have their moment in the sun if the Fed doesn’t cut interest rates.
Markets outside the US will come to the fore if the Federal Reserve fails to cut interest rates this year, according to experts, who suggested investors might want to look outside of the world’s largest market if the central bank remains on its heels.
The market was quite upbeat at the end of last year, expecting the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates early in 2024, triggering a Christmas rally. Yet, things didn’t pan out as expected, with US inflation proving stickier than expected. Therefore, the question is now whether the Fed will cut rates at all in 2024.
For Peter Dalgliesh, chief investment officer at Parmenion, this change in expectations will have a big impact on equities, especially in the US.
He said: “The higher for longer backdrop of interest rates is likely to place increased challenge on the sustainability of growth and corporate earnings, raising risk of a de-rating in equity multiples, especially in longer duration sectors.
“As a result, care in identifying asset classes and sectors trading on attractive valuations and with a high confidence in being able to meet or exceed expectations is key.
He suggested US equities “look vulnerable to a pause” in the current climate, while the cheaper valuations and relatively low expectations for Europe, UK and the emerging markets mean stocks in these parts of the world look more attractive.
The caveat is the expected future direction of the dollar, with a sustained strength in the US currency usually correlating with a reduction in risk appetite – a headwind for non-US growth assets.
Dalgliesh added: “The dollar index remains some way below its 2022 highs with recent strength appearing to stall suggesting that investor risk appetite may be beginning to broaden.”
While a ‘no cuts this year’ scenario will likely impact investor sentiment across the board, Richard Carter, head of fixed interest research at Quilter Cheviot, believes bonds would suffer more than equities.
This would be in line with the dynamics in place since the beginning of the year. While equities have been generally more resilient, the higher-for-longer narrative has hampered the performance of bond indices.
Performance of indices YTD
Source: FE Analytics
To hedge against the risks of the higher-for-longer scenario, Carter pointed to very short duration bonds, cash and sectors that benefit from higher rates such as banks.
However, with government bonds yielding over 4%, Dalgliesh sees them as an attractive source of income and a way to protect a portfolio against downside risks in the event of a growth shock stemming from the delayed effects of tighter monetary policy.
He explained: “The continued inversion of the yield curve suggests this remains a possibility and shouldn’t be totally ruled out.
“In the same way with equities, care is required within corporate bonds having seen spreads narrow towards their historical lows, with a focus on quality, balance sheet strength and cashflow generation a necessity.”
Yet, Tom Becket, co-chief investment officer at Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management, is not overly worried about a no cuts scenario. While rate cuts would probably be helpful for most markets, he is not convinced they are necessary.
He said: “Bond prices are 'about right' and equity markets are marching to the beat of the economy's drums. Whilst the economy is ok, corporate profits are growing and inflation is moving in a progressively downward direction, we think the outlook for both bonds and equities is solid, but unspectacular.”
What if the Fed hikes rates again?
As US inflation has proved more persistent than expected, the market is fearing that the Fed might hike interest rates again, although Jerome Powell recently indicated that the US central bank is unlikely to move in this direction for now.
Dalgliesh explained: “Growth would need to be materially stronger and broad based for rates to move higher. It is widely acknowledged that real rates are already restrictive, so to move them even higher would require very strong data to be seen.”
However, if the Fed was to throw a curveball at the market and hike rates, the impact would likely mirror the no cuts scenario, leading to a weaker bond markets and volatility in equities, according to Carter.
In this situation, Dalgliesh expects value style equities, emerging markets, commodity as well as mid- and small-caps to play catch up as those asset classes have been beaten up out of fear of a recession.
There’s a real risk the economic cure ends up being worse than the disease.
The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) has voted to maintain the Bank Rate at 5.25%, postponing the much-awaited rate-cutting cycle further into the year.
The vote had a majority of 7 to 2, with two members preferring to reduce the rate by 0.25 percentage points to 5%. The tougher line prevailed, however, leaving interest rates at their 16-year high.
The outcome was priced in as a 95% chance earlier today, as noted by Tom Hopkins, senior portfolio manager at BRI Wealth Management, but markets are increasingly worried about the impact on the economy.
Nicholas Hyett, investment manager at Wealth Club, said that while the central bank continues to diagnose persistent inflation as the major danger facing the UK economy, “there’s a real risk the economic cure might end up being worse than the disease”.
“It’s an increasingly delicate balancing act. In this murky picture, the inclination is to sit on the fence a little longer, especially since cutting too early risks sinking sterling and kick starting another bout of inflation,” he said.
“Leave interest rate cuts too late though and the Bank risks accidently cratering the economy in its eagerness to get inflation under control. The MPC’s two dissenters clearly think that risk is growing.”
Inflation is now expected to return to around the 2% target in the near term, before rising again later in the year. Quilter Investors investment strategist Lindsay James said a process of gradual rate cuts “may soon begin” and that inflation is now close to being under control.
“Inflation is less likely to spike given energy prices are well off their highs and storage levels remain robust after a mild winter,” she said.
“Focus can thus turn to supporting economic growth at a time when the UK economy is struggling to escape the orbit of a growth rate that is effectively zero.”
While this feels significant, she also said it’s important not to get ahead of ourselves, noting that markets have been “a little giddy” in recent quarters about the prospect of interest rate cuts.
“The floodgates won’t simply just open. Central banks have a tendency to be fairly conservative and so expectations for just two rate cuts by year end look reasonable.
“Slow and steady will be the order of the day when the time comes for the Bank of England to start cutting,” she concluded.
Short-term factors make the region attractive, while valuations remain unchallenging.
European equities have been unloved for some time, making almost a third of the returns of their US counterparts over the past decade. As a result, Eurozone stocks are trading at a 20-30% discount to the US.
This is despite recent strong performance. Over the past six months the Euro Stoxx index has been the best major equity market, up some 19.2%, pipping the S&P 500 by 2.5 percentage points.
It raises the question of whether investors should dive into the resurgent market while they can still take advantage of the relatively attractive valuations on offer.
Sources: JP Morgan Asset Management, FTSE, IBES, LSEG Datastream, MSCI, S&P Global, data to 6 May 2024
Some, but not all, of the valuation gap can be explained by the American economy’s greater productivity and the US market’s larger weighting to tech stocks, said Niall Gallagher, manager of GAM Star European Equity. US companies spend twice as much as their European peers on capital expenditure and research and development (as a percentage of cash flow), he added.
Meanwhile, war in Ukraine has weighed upon the European market and China’s slowdown (European stocks rely heavily on exporting to Asia) has impacted some companies heavily.
However, with inflation coming down, energy prices cooling, rate cuts on the horizon and China starting to recover, the stage may be set for a European resurgence.
Trustnet asked some of the best-performing European equity managers, all of whom have been nominated for the FE fundinfo Alpha Manager of the Year awards, whether this a good time for investors to shift focus from the new world back to the old.
Europe is well placed to benefit from a near-term cyclical upswing
Frederic Jeanmaire, manager of the CT Pan European Focus fund, thinks many of the tailwinds holding Europe back for the past couple of years are dissipating.
“Interest rate rises that followed the inflationary impact of the Ukraine war are petering out, energy prices have fallen from their peaks and inflation is coming under control faster than in the US,” he said.
John Bennett, who manages Janus Henderson Investors’ Pan European and Continental European strategies, agreed. “In the near term, Europe as an export-oriented group of economies is coming back in favour, as the interest rate cycle is about to turn and macroeconomic lead indicators are improving,” he said.
“Europe is an early cycle trade. It shows in stock performance. European equities versus the S&P 500 are on fresh three-month relative highs. Europe is making multi-year highs versus the MSCI World ex-US index. After almost two years of steady outflows from Europe, the region is beginning to see inflows again.”
Indeed, UK investors ploughed £471m into European equity funds in April 2024 alone, Calastone’s Fund Flow Index found.
Europe vs S&P 500 and MSCI World ex-US over 3 months
Source: FE Analytics
Giles Rothbarth, who manages the BlackRock European Dynamic and BlackRock Continental European funds, also believes Europe could be about to experience a “near-term cyclical upturn”.
“The European equity market today provides the broadest opportunity set we’ve seen in decades – benefitting from a diverse range of themes, such as innovations in health care, energy efficiency and the growing need for higher compute power,” he noted.
“We believe European companies are well positioned to benefit from improving capital expenditure and investment. We can observe this in growth forecasts, with earnings expected to accelerate – a trend happening in end markets that have been depressed due to market shocks in recent years.”
Deglobalisation could play to Europe’s strengths
Two related factors driving that growth are onshoring and fiscal spending. Deglobalisation has already sparked a record amount of fiscal spending in the US and this is likely to continue as geopolitical tensions persist.
Bennett thinks this trend will create opportunities for stock pickers. “Enablers of deglobalisation (think industrial automation, digitalisation, electrification and construction materials firms) could thrive,” he said.
“We could also see a political shift in favour of populist/pro-labour policies, from both traditional 'left' and 'right' ends of the political spectrum. This could mean stronger wage inflation and greater labour market friction.”
These forces, as well as higher borrowing costs, are creating an environment where the strong are likely to get stronger. “Large incumbents across many industries (such as brewing, food catering and enterprise software) could see their already dominant positions enhanced as the end of virtually 'free' money tempers the threat of disruption by unprofitable start-ups,” Bennett said.
Old world stocks possess unrivalled heritage
Franz Weis, manager of the Comgest Growth Europe Compounders fund, thinks that focusing on Europe’s relatively cheap valuations is missing the point – the quality and long-term heritage of Europe’s companies are what makes them so attractive.
“The beauty of Europe is the heritage of its companies and the quality which often comes with it. The companies we’ve assembled in Comgest Growth Europe Compounders fund are on average 130 years old,” he explained.
“It is very difficult to find such companies in the much younger emerging markets and even in the bigger US market, which is dominated by the comparatively young tech industry. Even Microsoft, one of the oldest tech companies, is only 49 years old.”
Some of the world’s strongest consumer and luxury brands are based in Europe, including Hermès (founded in 1837) and Ferrari (founded in 1939). Both of these companies are unique, he said. “They keep supply tight, have a strong new business pipeline and continuously develop their brands with a long-term view.”
Another example is the high tech and precision engineering industry. “You can find a lot of gems in Europe built on a strong heritage and protected by strong moats. Carl Zeiss is a company which is 208 years old and has developed unique precision optical technology for centuries,” Weis said.
“Carl Zeiss also delivers high precision optics to ASML, the Dutch giant supplying the lasers crucial for global semiconductor manufacture, allowing it to do EUV lithography.”
Jeanmaire concurred. Within industrials and aerospace, Airbus is an example of “European know-how leading to long-term enduring competitive advantage,” he said.
“Europe also contains several outstanding consumer goods brands distributing their product globally. Inditex, the owner of Zara, boasts strong brand and supply chain advantages over its competitors,” he added.
Three reasons to buy Europe
Gallagher also said there are plenty of reasons to invest in Europe other than attractive valuations.
First, “there is a greater sectoral diversity across European stock markets in contrast to the US where technology is so dominant,” he said. Second, “Europe could be said to have a more value bias, such that if the markets shift towards a less benign global growth outlook, value could come back into favour.”
And finally, European companies offer greater geographical diversity. They earn half their revenues from outside of Europe on average and have more exposure to Asia than US companies.
Fran Radano will continue to manage the portfolio with the support of Janus Henderson’s US equities team.
The board of The North American Income Trust has selected Janus Henderson as its new investment manager. The appointment will take effect in the third quarter of the year, pending the trust’s passing of the continuation vote.
This decision comes after a review of its existing management arrangements with abrdn and engagement with several other management groups.
The North American Income Trust’s board highlighted Janus Henderson’s “large and well-resourced” North American analyst team as a benefit for shareholders.
Board members expect this switch will lead to the creation of a portfolio of high-quality companies, characterised by revenue, earnings and dividends growth as well as to the reduction in the investment trust’s management fee.
Current manager Fran Radano will remain at the helm of the trust. He resigned from his role at abrdn and has agreed to join Janus Henderson where he will be supported by a team of 36 US equity analysts.
Dame Susan Rice, chair of The North American Income Trust, said: “Radano has managed the company’s portfolio for over 10 years and we believe that working closely with Janus Henderson’s broad and experienced equities desk in the US will bolster his ability to continue to find attractive investment opportunities in the North American market.
“Janus Henderson has strong credentials in North American equity income investment and we believe that this will lead to improved NAV performance while maintaining the company’s attractive dividend.”
The US equity team at Janus Henderson manages £180bn of assets and consists of 15 portfolio managers headed by head of US equities Marc Pinto.
Performance of investment trust over 10yrs vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
Over the past decade, The North American Income Trust has lagged both its benchmark and the IT North America sector, having only outpaced Middlefield Canadian Income Trust. It also sits at the bottom of the sector over five years.
Ewan Lovett-Turner, head of investment companies research at Numis Securities, said the move was “interesting”, noting that shareholders should benefit from a 13 basis point reduction in fees. Janus Henderson is also waiving three months’ worth of fees for shareholders while the trust moves across.
“However, some shareholders may have been hoping for more radical changes, given underwhelming relative performance under abrdn,” he said.
“It will be interesting to see if this is enough to stimulate additional demand with the shares currently trading at a 14% discount.”
The firm’s UK strategies have underwhelmed, but Asia and fixed income are flourishing.
Investment styles go in and out of favour and funds’ performance ebbs and flows accordingly. Within the natural swings of the market, however, fund houses have specific sector expertise that will shine through at times when another segments of the offering may languish.
In this new Trustnet series, we aim to explore just that, highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of different asset managers in specific areas. This week, we begin with Jupiter.
On a company level, latest results haven’t been particularly encouraging, with pre-tax profits falling by £48m to £9.4m in 2023 on the back of £2.2bn in net outflows, as the firm announced in February.
Money has flowed out of Jupiter’s most recognised vehicles, with Jupiter UK Special Situations shedding £300m and Jupiter Global Value £115.7m, as star manager Ben Whitmore announced his departure from the company, leading analysts to drop these strategies from their best-buy lists.
People also withdrew £263.8m from the Jupiter Income Trust, as Trustnet highlighted before, and the departure of Chrysalis Investments and its managers Richard Watts and Nick Williamson also led to an £800m reduction in Jupiter’s assets under management (AUM).
These departures hit the company hard, despite hiring veteran names such as Adrian Gosden and Chris Morrison, who joined Jupiter from GAM at the start of the year, and FE fundinfo Alpha Manager Alex Savvides from JO Hambro Capital Management, to take over Whitmore’s funds.
From a performance perspective, it is in the UK where Jupiter’s funds have struggled the most. Whitmore’s Jupiter UK Special Situations is the only domestic fund in the asset manager’s suite to have outperformed the market over the long term, while all other IA UK All Companies and IA UK Equity Income strategies in the Jupiter stable have underperformed their peers.
Facing a particularly harsh environment, the UK small-cap team, who ran the sector’s most popular fund back in 2021, have suffered from outflows ever since, as investors turned their back on UK equities in general and UK small-caps in particular.
The Jupiter UK Smaller Companies, UK Smaller Companies Equity and UK Smaller Companies Focus funds have underperformed both the IA UK Smaller Companies sector and the Numis Smaller Companies index over the past 12 months, three and five years.
Jupiter UK Smaller Companies Equity and UK Smaller Companies Focus did surpass the average peer in the past decade, however, as the table below illustrates. They are managed by Matthew Cable and David Cameron-Mowat, respectively.
Source: FE Analytics
All three strategies also featured in Trustnet's 'bang for your buck' series, where they stood out with the lowest alpha scores of the past five rolling years, meaning that they haven’t been able to add extra returns on top of their benchmark.
The biggest of the three funds, Jupiter UK Smaller Companies, is run by FE fundinfo Alpha Manager Daniel Nickols and used to be the most popular fund in its sector, peaking at £1.5bn in assets under management (AUM) in September 2021 and then going on to experience significant outflows.
According to Rob Morgan, chief analyst at Charles Stanley Direct: “The fund became a bit of a victim of its own success.”
Known for his “multi-cycle experience and intimate knowledge of the UK small-cap market”, Nickols has endured “an exceptionally tough period”.
Performance problems mostly stemmed from a wretched year in 2022, when growth-orientated smaller companies faced the sudden and significant headwind of much higher interest rates.
Bestinvest managing director Jason Hollands said that “in large part, this was down to the strong growth style bias being hit hard during a period of rising interest rates and borrowing costs”.
“It is also a relatively concentrated portfolio for a small-cap fund, with circa 56 holdings, which does leave it more vulnerable to stock-specific risk than more diversified products.”
In this respect, the fund was impacted by its exposure to fashion brand Boohoo and e-commerce retail company THG, formerly The Hut Group, as their previously stellar performance went into reverse gear, Hollands explained. Neither are in the portfolio any longer.
Morgan remained positive on the strategy, however, which is now running “a more manageable level of assets”. With £400m under management presently, the fund has become “a lot easier to manoeuvre”.
“The managers have a good opportunity to turn performance around in a UK smaller companies market where there are surely bargains to be found. It is understandable that investors are disillusioned with the fund, but the manager’s experience remains a significant attribute, and I would not be at all surprised to see performance turn around,” he said.
The other Jupiter smaller companies funds are run by the same team and have experienced similar performance issues, though again Morgan thinks this could turn around.
“A lower interest rate environment might favour the strategies, for instance, and over a multi-year period stock selection could once again add value.”
However, for investors considering adding to the sector, Morgan preferred the BlackRock UK Smaller Companies trust.
The £2.3bn Jupiter Strategic Bond managed by FE fundinfo Alpha Manager Ariel Bezalel was also a chink in Jupiter’s armour, failing to rise above the fourth quartile of performance over the past decade.
Nonetheless, it remained popular among investors and consumer platforms, with Hargreaves Lansdown, interactive investor and Barclays all rating it in their respective best-buy lists.
The performance of the Strategic Bond fund was the exception in an otherwise successful suite of fixed income products, which has so far been a success story.
The Jupiter Monthly Income Bond fund in particular has never fallen below the first performance quartile over one, three, five and 10 years, with the Jupiter Financials Contingent Capital and Jupiter Emerging Market Debt fun also standing out positively, as the table below shows.
Source: FE Analytics
Another area where Jupiter has gone from strength to strength is Asia, particularly the India desk, with the Jupiter India Select and Jupiter India funds consistently anchored in the top performance decile of the IA India/Indian Subcontinent sector and alternating each other as the first and second best performer of the whole peer group in the past five and three years as well as 12 months.
Hargreaves Lansdown analysts recognised Avinash Vazirani, who is in charge of both strategies, as one of the few managers with a long record of investing in India and were impressed with his commitment and willingness to invest in areas of the Indian market overlooked by others.
The multi-asset Merlin range has also been more successful than not, with many winners, such as the Jupiter Merlin Growth and the Balanced Portfolio, and only Jupiter Merlin Income and Growth Select in the bottom quartile of its respective sector.
Short-term underperformance due to deviating from the herd can sow the seeds for future growth, JOCHM global equity Alpha Managers argued.
A well-designed portfolio should include investments that do well in different contexts – there's nothing scarier than all your funds going up at the same time, because they might also crash simultaneously.
Investors who own the JOHCM Global Opportunities fund haven't had this problem – its diversification and value style have meant it behaved quite differently from the rest of the market, and kept it struggling against its sector and benchmark while other strategies flourished. But this underperformance is a virtue, according to FE fundinfo Alpha Managers Robert Lancastle and Ben Leyland, who find silver linings to their track record.
“There's virtue in underperforming – not necessarily per se, but in doing something different. For the majority of the past year, five years, perhaps even 10, many in our industry have herded towards the same place, so there's a virtue in avoiding the herd,” said Leyland.
Instead, Lancastle noted the pair prefer to "sow seeds" in areas (or fields) that may not be producing any returns at present. "It's fine to have a field full of things that are at the harvest stage, but if everything is aligned to that, you end up with a big brown patch of ground after the harvest," he said.
This boils down to the age-old debate of jam today or jam tomorrow. “We are sacrificing some of our returns trying to sow future seeds. Ultimately, if you're owning things with low momentum in a market that has high or rising momentum, you're going to have quite a big gap in performance."
The £624m Global Opportunities fund failed to beat the MSCI All Country World index in the past 10, five and three years and remained in the third quartile of funds in the IA Global sector over 10 years and 12 months.
The strategy fell into the fourth quartile over five years but picked up over three years, when it was second quartile – thus beating the average fund in its sector.
Rayner Spencer Mills Research (RMSR) analysts rated the fund for "having demonstrated the characteristics you would expect given the investment process” and praised the managers for their discipline in applying their investment process through thick and thin.
They particularly appreciated the managers for being willing to hold above-average cash levels to use only when stocks become more attractively valued.
“The strategy is not suited by momentum or out-and-out growth phases in the market but can deliver outperformance in most market conditions and especially when investor focus is on valuation,” they said.
The managers made clear that they don’t like underperforming, but accept underperformance over certain time periods “in the expectation that it is there to diversify and to protect the downside as and when the environment changes”, according to Leyland.
Performance of fund against sector and index over different timeframes
Source: FE Analytics
The team invests in lowly valued quality companies with a high-conviction, benchmark-unconstrained approach. Value investing has been out of fashion in the past decade, with the exception of 2022, when it went through a short-lived revival. But, according to Leyland, 2022 showed that conditions do change, as they are doing again right now.
“We've moved away from a trend phase towards a transition phase. Even within the technology sector, the dynamics are changing and shifting away from software and services towards infrastructure, and elsewhere in the market towards real-world companies,” Leyland said.
“As we go through that process, assuming that what has worked well for the past 10 years is going to work well for the next 10 years would be naïve. That isn't to say that every investor should sell everything that's done well for them and buy everything that's done badly, but they do need to think about portfolio balance and make sure they’re not overexposed in one particular direction.”
Lancastle and Leyland achieve diversification by avoiding “flavour of the month” stocks and sectors.
Healthcare for example has been going sideways or even downwards recently, but this is the area where the managers have taken the most action – or, to continue the gardening metaphor, where they have been sowing seeds as a long-term opportunity.
Companies such as Thermo Fisher in the US, Merck in Germany or Fujifilm in Japan have all seen earnings headwinds as a result of the biotech-related destocking cycle and a post-Covid earnings hangover, but there are many opportunities in the long-term.
“Tailwinds have to do with demographics and the need for innovation and new drugs to improve healthcare outcomes without increasing costs,” said Leyland.
“Outsourcing also caught our eye, particularly in contract drug manufacturing, where there is an increasing trend for drug development companies to rent the capacity from someone else rather than owning it themselves.”
Finally, the managers also have their eyes on consumer staples – an area “worth considering but premature to be taking action in”.
“Some staples companies have struggled to pass price increases through in order to defend margins and profits, but there will be some that are currently misperceived as lacking pricing power but will then reassert themselves,” said Leyland.
“When that happens, the market will extrapolate and we like it when that happens. When people are making sweeping statements about something, we get to be selective and take the babies out of the bathwater.”
Identifying the profitable beneficiaries of AI, as well as those that may stand to lose, will be the key to active management outcompeting passive strategies.
Is every stock that makes up the ‘Magnificent Seven’ equally magnificent, or are some more equally magnificent than others?
The latter looks increasingly true. For while our obsession with the Magnificent Seven creates the illusion of a big tech collective, our analysis of consensus earnings expectations reveals a growing performance disparity that puts into question whether ‘magnificent’ is – at least for some of the group – a bit of an overreach.
Before we debate it, let’s step back. Why are the Magnificent Seven so magnificent in the first place?
Excluding these stocks from the S&P 500 charts an answer. Consensus earnings expectations for 2025 in the ‘S&P 493’ have declined 2.4% in the past three months; at the same time, the Magnificent Seven have seen a 5.4% rise. With such significant earnings outperformance, it’s little wonder that the seven were responsible for around a third of global market returns last year.
However, not everyone in this pack is cycling at the same speed. Nvidia fronts the peloton with consensus earnings expectations indicating a 320% year-on-year surge to 2025, reflecting its dominance over the semiconductor industry.
Still within view is Amazon’s 49% rise in its 2025 earnings forecast. Microsoft and Alphabet fall short with their respective 8.1% and 8.3% upticks, while Apple (experiencing a 6.2% decline) and Tesla (plummeting 38.5%) are pedalling backwards.
Perhaps the ’Magnificent two-to-three’ isn’t quite as catchy. But the disproportionate influence of Nvidia’s earnings performance and the recent decoupling of Apple and Tesla from the pace-setters does challenge the idea of the Magnificent Seven as a collective force.
And crucially – not least for those that see the Magnificent Seven as a proxy for exposure to the artificial intelligence (AI) theme – this divergence raises the red alarm that investing in the moniker (without respect for their differentiated business models, end markets and varying degrees of interfacing with AI) is misleading and potentially dangerous.
Generalisation and its intrinsic biases is our pivotal concern. It is humanity’s condition to draw parallels in an effort to simplify complex and highly dispersed outcomes. There is a proverbial graveyard of private capital lost in long-forgotten themes and endless obituaries of companies that bandwagon on ‘hype’ but that have not delivered sustainable, profitable growth.
You don’t need to look further than the dot-com bubble to find examples of this kind of adrenaline-fuelled reductivism – and the poor stock selection it produces.
Investors looking to exploit important trends such as AI must therefore be discerning in their stockpicking strategies. Rather than lulled into the false sense of security granted by collective exposure, it is for portfolio managers to look past the moniker and target companies benefitting from AI where new sources of demand generate long-term, high-margin growth opportunities that are indicative of a profitable and enduring market shift.
Similarly, investment portfolios should not bet the house on just one market trend or source of demand – investors must diversify risk and seek out multiple sources of structural demand growth. This means seeking out exposure to different end markets, different customer types and sources of demand that are uncorrelated to one another, to reduce portfolio risk.
For example, we observe a growing need for more robust cybersecurity in the face of growing malicious activity from state-sponsored and criminal actors. Enterprises must safeguard consumer data and protect against ransomware attacks, while also managing increased remote working and the effective ‘fractionalisation’ of their networks. Governments need to secure systems to prevent matters of national security ending up in in the wrong hands.
Fortinet is well placed to benefit, selling cybersecurity solutions that offer incredible value and strong performance to businesses and governments.
We typically avoid the pharmaceutical sector due to the unpredictable nature of drug discovery and expiring patents. However, tapping into the structurally growing research and development spend in global pharmaceuticals is possible through software that manages increasing data volumes in clinical trials and streamlines mission-critical aspects such as regulatory reporting, quality and safety. Many customers are upgrading from outdated, in-house legacy processes.
Veeva, a specialist in pharmaceutical software, is well positioned to capitalise on strong long-term growth and without the risks associated with betting on individual drugs.
And in software development, engineers are utilising co-pilot programs that assist in writing, correcting and enhancing code, which could lead to significant efficiency gains and increased output, though it may also reduce the demand for computer programmers.
Be it chatbots replacing customer service agents in sectors such as banking, utilities, communications and online retail, or AI’s role in writing tasks and its effects on journalism, marketing, advertising and law, there exists a potentially infinite cosmos of applications for AI.
We can’t yet determine with certainty where its role as a productivity tool begins and its potential replacement for labour ends. But we can already see glimmers where AI can unlock capacity for higher-value activities – particularly in replacing repetitive manual tasks.
To that end, AI is undoubtedly reshaping various industries by boosting efficiency and productivity. Not unlike what we’ve witnessed throughout history, technological advancements are again changing the face of productivity. While impact will vary across sectors, opportunities to tap into this shift extend well beyond the veneer of the Magnificent Seven.
Identifying the long-term, profitable beneficiaries of AI, as well as those that may stand to lose, will be the key to active management once again outcompeting passive strategies. While there will be many winners in the broad adoption of AI, investors should maintain a balanced approach, emphasising diversification. Rigorous research and stock selection remain essential components of leveraging emerging trends for sustainable long-term gains.
Simon Steele is head of the Fiera Atlas Global Companies team and Harald Karlsson is an investment analyst. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.
Experts explain how different macro-environment conditions impact the UK blue-chip index.
UK equities are having their moment in the sun, with the FTSE 100 recently reaching an all-time high and even outperforming the mighty S&P 500 over the past three months.
Although the UK stock market continues to grapple with a range of structural issues, the recent strong performance may herald brighter days for London-listed equities.
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said: “Can the FTSE 100’s run of form continue? Can the current momentum tempt more companies and more investors to look again at London?
“It seems churlish to speak of the woes the index has struggled with when there’s such optimism in the air, but there’s no better time to fix the roof than when the sun is shining.”
Performance of indices over 3 months and 10yrs
Source: FE Analytics
Signs of improvements in the UK economy may explain this recent exuberance, but the FTSE 100’s sectoral makeup – rich in energy, resources, pharmaceuticals and banking stocks – also played a role. This mix offers investors support during economic downturns, periods of uncertainty and times of risk aversion.
Jason Hollands, managing director of Bestinvest, said: “Other factors driving the FTSE 100 bounce are perhaps less cheery in nature. Heightened tensions in the Middle East with the risk of a regional war between Iran and Israel breaking out imminently, have propelled both oil and precious metal prices higher.”
The FTSE 100 also exhibits less sensitivity to the ‘higher for longer’ narrative that has recently resurfaced regarding interest rates.
The UK blue-chip index already showed its ability to cope with higher interest rates in 2022 when it held its ground as inflation surged dramatically, forcing central banks to hike rates several times. In contrast, the US market, rich in long-duration stocks (such as the tech names), experienced a significant downturn.
Although rate hikes are still seemingly off the table, rate cut expectations have been tempered dramatically since the start of the year.
Dan Coatsworth, investment analyst at AJ Bell, explained: “Higher rates are negative when calculating the present value of future cash flows – put simply, investors suddenly lost their appetite for ‘jam tomorrow’ stocks and instead became hungry for ‘jam today’ stocks where the equity story is about making profits in the here and now, not about the sharp increase in profits expected in the future.
“The FTSE 100 has lots of ‘jam today’ style names such as tobacco producers and consumer staple businesses, hence why the UK market in this situation suddenly became more attractive than the US.”
Performance of indices in 2022
Source: FE Analytics
However, Rob Morgan, chief investment analyst at Charles Stanley, noted that this lack of ‘jam tomorrow’ in structural growth areas as well as the overrepresentation of economically sensitive sectors in the index could become a headwind if interest rates fall “in a more rapid and synchronised fashion than anticipated”.
As approximately three quarters of the index constituents earn revenue outside the UK, he also noted that a strong pound would negatively impact FTSE 100 companies with international operations. However, he stressed that a strong currency would also have positive implications for the domestic economy.
Bargain opportunity or value-trap?
Despite the recent outperformance, the FTSE 100 remains cheap compared to indices from other developed markets, which may be of interest to bargain investors.
Hollands said: “Although the UK’s blue-chip index is near a record high in point terms, this is certainly not an indication that UK-listed shares are now expensive. Far from it.
“A better measure is where shares prices are in relation to expected earnings and in this respect the market is cheap both compared to global equities – with UK shares trading at a price-to-earnings ratio around 37% lower than global equities – and their long-term median valuations.
“At such giveaway valuations, expect to see continued bids for UK-listed companies by overseas buyers – the number of takeovers of UK public companies reached the highest level in a decade last year – but cheap valuations are also spurring many companies to launch share buybacks, which should boost shareholder returns.”
However, Morgan warned that the cheapness of UK equities is a “double-edged sword”. While it presents "exciting" valuation opportunities for contrarian investors in the short term, the long-term outlook is more concerning as UK companies continue to move their listings abroad in pursuit of better valuations, and investors are selling domestic equities en masse.
For instance, outflows from UK equities reached £8bn in 2023, according to figures from Calastone. In March of this year, British investors withdrew another £823m, marking the 34th consecutive month of net selling for UK equity funds.
Morgan said: “In the long run, a shrinking pool of listed companies that is potentially biased towards less appealing businesses, and those that are simply too big to be swallowed up, is an unhealthy picture for investors.
“A potential longer-term risk is the UK market simply failing to maintain its significance to global investors. Continuing to attract companies to list in the UK and encourage investors to allocate capital is vital, but it remains in doubt.”
How to pair a FTSE 100 tracker
For investors tempted to give domestic equities another chance, a FTSE 100 tracker is likely to be the first port of call. However, due to the concentration of the index and the overrepresentation of specific sectors, they might want to pair it with an active fund to get greater diversification and potentially better long-term returns.
For that purpose, Alex Watts, investment data analyst at interactive investor, suggested Fidelity Special Values, managed by FE fundinfo Alpha Manager Alex Wright.
Watts explained: “The flexible mandate permits bottom-up stock selection across the FTSE All-Share, allowing a 20% overseas allocation. Manager Alex Wright looks for undervalued companies and is willing to take contrarian positions where a company is out of favour. Accordingly, the aggregate valuation across the portfolio of 11.5x earnings is lesser than valuations of the broader market.”
While the manager holds well-known FTSE 100 names such as Aviva, Imperial Brands and Reckitt Benckiser, the portfolio has a small- and mid-cap bias, as this is the part of the UK market where Wright perceives the greatest degree of mispricing.
Performance of investment trust over 10yrs vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
For similar reasons, Rob Morgan picked Man GLG Undervalued Assets, managed by FE fundinfo Alpha Managers Henry Dixon and Jack Barrat.
The fund also follows a value-oriented approach, buying undervalued stocks with the anticipation that their merits will be recognised over time, resulting in a positive re-rating of their share prices.
Morgan said: “The fund has an established, disciplined process with an emphasis on financial strength, good cash generation and operational momentum to avoid potential ‘value traps’. As well as diversification from a tracker it could provide a good-quality standalone fund for UK exposure.”
Performance of fund over 10yrs vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
Finally, Ben Yearsley, director of Fairview Investing, explained there are two possible paths to explore when looking to pair a FTSE 100 tracker.
One is to take the plunge and look at opportunities in the small-cap space. In which case, he recommended Artemis UK Smaller Companies, a top quartile fund over 10, five and three years.
Performance of fund over 10yrs vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
The other way is to go global with either a global tracker or an active fund such as Blue Whale Growth to counterbalance the “value” bias of the FTSE 100.
The platform’s clients continue to buy into growth and tech funds in April.
Hargreaves Lansdown has called on investors to check the US tech exposure in their portfolios and consider diversifying into other parts of the market.
The growth investing style – especially US large-cap tech stocks – has dominated the market for most of the past decade thanks to ultra-low interest rates after the 2008 financial crisis and, more recently, the rise of artificial intelligence.
This is made clear in the chart below, which shows that the Nasdaq – the US index with a high concentration of technology companies – has made a total return more than three times greater than the broader MSCI AC World index over the past 10 years.
Performance of indices over 10yrs
Source: FinXL
Over the same period, the MSCI AC World Growth index has gained 282.6% while its value counterpart is up just 134.3%.
However, Hargreaves Lansdown has cautioned investors against blindly pouring more money into these stocks despite their strong returns in 2024 as well.
The platform’s fund sales figures for April show tech funds remain popular with its investors, as Fidelity Global Technology appears in the most-bought funds among ISA, Junior ISA and Lifetime ISA clients.
In addition, growth funds such as Rathbone Global Opportunities, Fundsmith Equity, Baillie Gifford American and WS Blue Whale Growth – which have US tech giants among their top holdings – are found in the most-bought funds.
Source: Hargreaves Lansdown
Emma Wall, head of investment analysis and research at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “While it is good to see some diversification in these selections, there is still a definite growth-bias and tech funds feature across all the different ISA wrappers.
“This is an area of the market that has driven returns in the past 18 months. Momentum is often a key determiner of retail fund flows, but we would encourage investors to be mindful not to double down on portfolio biases.
“Check your existing exposure to the US and tech; it has likely grown as those markets and sectors have outperformed and rather than adding new money to these allocations, look to diversify by geography, sector or asset class depending on your investment goals, horizon and attitude to risk.”
A similar trend can be seen among Fidelity International’s Personal Investing clients, as Fidelity Global Technology and L&G Global Technology Index are among the platform’s most-bought funds in April.
Ed Monk, associate director at Fidelity International, also struck a cautious note about investors backing large-cap US tech stocks in the expectation that all of them will continue to outperform.
“The top seven companies, known as the Magnificent Seven, have been driving much of the gains for the year – but returns from the group are not evenly spread between them, with losses being registered by Tesla and Apple so far in 2024,” he said.
Global, US and European equities are in, emerging markets and the UK are out.
Equity funds raked in £5.2bn this ISA season (from 15 February to 5 April 2024), more than five times their 2023 intake (£981m), making 2024 the best year of ISA investments recorded by Calastone.
During the month of April, investors poured £1.9bn into equity funds, the 13th highest month in Calastone’s nine years of data. This followed a record first quarter with £7bn of equity inflows.
Passive funds tracking US and global equity indices were the main beneficiaries of investors’ renewed appetite for risk. This is a consistent trend as investors have favoured indexing for 16 consecutive months, having earlier shown a marked preference for active funds in 2021 and 2022.
Passive equity funds have garnered £14.9bn since January 2023, while active equity managers have suffered outflows of £7.3bn.
Net equity inflows during ISA season (£m)
Source: Calastone Fund Flow Index
Global equity funds enjoyed £1.5bn of inflows in April. US portfolios, which make up the lion’s share of global indices, took in almost as much as global funds, with £1.3bn of inflows. European equity funds received £471m. UK and emerging market portfolios were out of favour, however, shedding £665m and £162m, respectively.
Investors have been relentlessly selling down UK equities, which have been in outflow mode for 35 consecutive months, losing a cumulative £21.3bn.
April marked a reversal of fortunes for emerging markets funds, however, which had been gathering inflows for 18 months.
Equity funds’ monthly net inflows
Source: Calastone Fund Flow Index
Meanwhile, investors pulled £100m out of safe-haven money market funds as they gravitated towards riskier equities, marking the first month of net selling since January 2023. Mixed asset funds started to take in money after 11 months of outflows but property funds were subjected to continued selling pressure.
Investors also added £422m to fixed income funds in April, despite poor performance.
Edward Glyn, head of global markets at Calastone, said: “The bond markets had another rough month. The benchmark US 10-year yield rose relentlessly during April, ending the month at 4.68%, up by half a percentage point since the end of March, setting the tone for bond markets around the world. Investors are nursing losses on the £1.7bn of bond-fund purchases they made between November and March.
“Meanwhile inflows to bond markets show that steady and accumulating losses are not deterring new capital – this is not unreasonable as there are substantial gains to be made when interest-rate expectations turn a corner and high yields mean investors can lock in historically high income levels now for the long term.”
Hedge funds expect AI to disrupt Keywords Studios, which provides services to the video games industry.
A new company has entered the list of the UK’s 10 most shorted stocks: Keywords Studios, which provides creative services to the video games industry, including art and audio recording.
GLG Partners, Gladstone Capital Management, Marble Bar Asset Management and SFM UK Management are all betting against the stock, according to the Financial Conduct Authority.
Keywords Studios’ share price fell off a cliff last year. Although it started to recover in late December and January 2024, it subsequently resumed its downward trajectory, as the chart below shows.
Share price performance over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
The Hollywood actors’ strikes dealt a $20m or 2.6% blow to Keywords Studios’ revenues last year.
Currency fluctuations also had a negative impact on revenues. Keywords Studios was established in 1998 in Leopardstown, a suburb of Dublin, but it has grown by acquisition and now operates in 26 countries. It completed five acquisitions in 2023 alone.
Fears that artificial intelligence might disrupt Keywords Studios’ business also weighed on the share price.
Despite all of these factors, the company’s annual results, announced in March 2024, were upbeat. Chief executive officer Bertrand Bodson said: “In what was a difficult year for the industry, we delivered resilient performance in 2023 and we continued to grow our market share and industry leadership position.”
It joins long-time targets abrdn and ASOS among the 10 most shorted UK-listed companies, while Petrofac remains the most shorted stock, as the below table shows.
Source: Financial Conduct Authority
The market’s obsession with the Magnificent Seven is short-sighted, Alpha Managers warn.
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to create huge growth opportunities but the tricky part for investors will be discerning which companies stand to benefit the most – and they may not necessarily be the Magnificent Seven.
To that end, Trustnet asked some of the best performing US equity managers (all of whom have been nominated for the FE fundinfo Alpha Manager of the Year awards) whether the market got too carried away with AI hype and whether they are finding better value elsewhere.
AI has torn up the rule book
Tom Slater, who manages Baillie Gifford American and Scottish Mortgage, said generative AI has created new rules and new business models, which for investors will require new ways of evaluating stocks.
“A technology’s architecture can determine the strategies and business models open to a company. This dynamic is often underappreciated,” he said. The cloud and mobile internet era favoured a small number of dominant giants but going forward, “AI dictates a new set of rules regarding what is possible”.
“We have yet to determine the limits of this technology or how quickly it will continue to improve. The applications and the impacts will get more dramatic the longer we stay on the current trajectory of progress. For the growth investor, things are just starting to get interesting,” he observed.
“Where we find signs of traction, we must be prepared to embrace ‘growth at an unreasonable price’. This means that for the eventual winners, the opportunity will be massively underestimated, and the others will have been vastly overpriced.”
To find those winners, Slater is looking for companies that are still run by their founders, as they can react in ”radical ways” if they believe it is in their long-term interests, he said.
“Tobias Lütke at the e-commerce platform Shopify pivoted from building an infrastructure for online deliveries to focusing on AI within Shopify’s core products, to ensure it remains competitive. David Bazucki at gaming platform Roblox is growing its population rapidly, helped by real-time AI-powered translation removing communication barriers amongst users worldwide.”
Within healthcare, several companies are using technology to provide better standards of care to patients while lowering costs to healthcare systems, he continued, highlighting Moderna and Inspire as two portfolio holdings with significant potential.
Slater thinks excessive attention has been paid to the Magnificent Seven, making this “a particularly rewarding time to search for growth outside of the noise.”
The hallowed seven are only ‘magnificent’ if you pretend 2022 didn’t happen
Aziz Hamzaogullari, founder, chief Investment officer and portfolio manager of the Growth Equity Strategies team at Loomis, Sayles & Co., said investors have become too short-termist when it comes to the Magnificent Seven, noting their performance last year was on the back of a disastrous 2022.
“The market’s obsession with the Magnificent Seven over the past year is emblematic of the pervasive short-sightedness that characterizes much of our profession. Their 2023 price performance was only magnificent if you pretend 2022 didn’t happen,” he said.
In 2022, the shares of each of the seven names declined between 26% and 65%, meaning that over the entire two-year period, an equal-weighted portfolio made up of just the select few US stocks would have made a cumulative return of just 8%.
“Of course, most investors did not experience even this return, because they define risk in terms of price volatility. As a result, we saw many of our peers sell those names in 2022 only to add back higher after much of the rebound had occurred in 2023,” he said.
Loomis, Sayles' Growth Equity Strategies team owns six of the seven (it has never owned Apple) but these are long-term investments with an average holding period of 12 years.
“We believe their strong and sustainable competitive advantages, attractive industry dynamics, compelling cash flow generation, visionary management teams and secular growth drivers will enable them to remain leaders,” he explained.
Returns from the Magnificent Seven in 2022 and 2023
Sources: Fidelity International, LHS Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research, returns in dollars.
There is life beyond the Magnificent Seven
Rosanna Burcheri, manager of Fidelity American Special Situations, said the US equity market has broadened out since the start of this year and a whole range of companies look attractive.
Several names have a return on invested cash flow above 25% including Aon, Lowe’s and McKesson. Companies with earnings per share growth for 2024-25 above 25% include Intel and Baker Hughes.
“The message is that there is life beyond the Magnificent Seven and there are an amazing amount of companies you can invest in,” she said.
A value strategy such as Fidelity American Special Situations offers diversification against the concentration of the benchmark in mega-cap tech, she suggested. Buying stocks at more attractive valuations also bakes in a margin of safety in case the market falters.
Arriving late to the party is risky
James Bullock, portfolio manager of the Lindsell Train North American Equity fund, believes technological advances will create wealth for investors but it is impossible to know the full impact of AI yet.
“History suggests that when a small number of stocks have driven performance, arriving late to the party is risky. Like the pandemic-induced shift to digital in 2021, AI has been the engine of optimism for many of these companies over the past year, though it is easy to forget that 18 months ago it was feared as a ‘Google-killer’,” he pointed out.
“As longer-term investors, we wonder whether it really was, or is, possible to know AI’s eventual impact, evolution and regulation.”
Bullock has found plenty of companies outside the Magnificent Seven that are benefitting from technological advancement.
“We view ownership of differentiated intellectual property and data as one of the more predictable ways to profit from its increased use. Fund holdings Adobe, Intuit, Verisk, S&P Global, CME, Visa, Equifax, Amex and PayPal all possess unique, industry-leading datasets serving important and growing end markets,” he explained.
Tech stocks will continue to benefit from strong tailwinds
Like Lindsell Train and Loomis, Sayles, the GQG Partners US Equity fund has a substantial technology allocation and is also overweight in the communication services sector. The fund’s managers, Rajiv Jain, Brian Kersmanc and Sudarshan Murthy, expect companies in these sectors to continue benefitting from “fundamental improvement, increasing product demand and upside from recent advances in generative artificial intelligence (AI) applications”.
They are also overweight utilities as they believe “demand for power is inflecting higher in certain areas of the US due to increased consumption”.
Schroders’ global value team is increasing its exposure to the US, where it has found a range of ‘deeply out of favour’ companies at ‘exceptionally attractive’ valuations.
Schroders’ global value team has an explicit mandate to invest in the cheapest parts of the global equity market so it may seem counterintuitive that the team has doubled its US exposure in the past two years. The US is arguably the most expensive region in the world and has been one of the best performing markets.
America’s rally has, however, been concentrated in a handful of headline-grabbing stocks and below the surface are some “genuinely cheap businesses,” said Simon Adler, who co-manages the £818m Schroder Global Recovery fund.
“US markets have been dominated by a small handful of companies and the companies we’ve been buying have performed horribly. Horrendous performance. And we've been buying shares on very, very attractive valuations. We bought a number of US businesses that are deeply out of favour,” he said.
Adler and his colleagues have invested in several US companies on single digit Shiller price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios. The Shiller P/E ratio consists of the share price divided by the average of 10 years of earnings, adjusted for inflation. It is designed to smooth out short-term earnings volatility.
Even so, the fund’s US exposure is still fairly low at 30%, compared to 71% for the MSCI World index.
This year, Adler has invested in the US department stores Best Buy and Macy’s, La-Z-Boy reclining chairs, computer retailer HP and healthcare stocks Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb. Last year, he bought shares in recruitment firms Adecco and Manpower, as well as Sally Beauty.
“Whilst the US looks very expensive at aggregated market levels, beneath the surface there are a lot of companies that have been really difficult performers and have done terribly, that we've been able to buy into at exceptionally attractive valuations. We think on our five-year average holding period we can make great returns for our clients,” he said.
These stocks have fallen out of favour for a variety of reasons. “The healthcare companies we're in have got some really popular drugs that are losing exclusivity and the stock market can be very short term about that,” Adler explained.
With Best Buy and Macy’s: “Store-based retail is clearly not as popular now when everyone buys things online. Those businesses have got quite difficult outlooks but that is more than compensated for by the share price. So it's not that we're deluded and think that everyone's going to shop in department stores for the rest of their lives, but we think the stock market has dramatically exaggerated the decline of those stores.”
Adler hopes that the American companies in which he has recently invested will go through a similar renaissance to his Japanese portfolio.
“Two or three years ago, we bought a bunch of Japanese companies that were deeply out of favour and they have come dramatically into favour. We were buying them at some of the cheapest valuations we've ever seen” he said.
“We bought Nippon TV at an extraordinarily attractive valuation, it was almost unbelievable. Now it's doubled since then, but that’s because it was coming from such a low base. It doesn't mean it's necessarily expensive today.”
In addition to Schroder Global Recovery, Adler also co-manages Schroder Global Equity Income and Schroder Global Sustainable Value Equity. All these funds have between 10% and 15% in Japan.
The Japanese companies he owns were cheap because they had “enormous cash balances and enormous cross holdings in other companies that they'd held for many years and the perceived wisdom was that would never be returned to shareholders”.
However, the Japanese government and the Tokyo Stock Exchange have enacted reforms to improve corporate governance and increase shareholder returns, and their efforts are starting to bear fruit.
“The businesses that were moribund for decades and everyone had given up on are now flavour of the month,” Adler concluded.
Companies that build things in the real world (rather than the digital one) are set to thrive.
If software has been the pre-eminent source of growth over the past 20 years, perhaps physical hardware will replace it as the main source of growth for the next two decades.
We believe that gritty, physical companies that build things in the material world – gravel producers, plastic pipe makers, electrical contractors – are poised to thrive as advanced economies confront the urgent need to reconstruct everything from highways to power grids.
We also think there will be an epic swing towards the material world as the US legislates for a jaw-dropping $2.2trn to be spent over the coming decades upgrading the country’s tired infrastructure.
Eaton, an electrical contractor, typifies the opportunity. In a recent update, the American-Irish company totted up all the building projects announced in 2022 in the US and Canada. It came up with a total of $860bn in planned megaproject spending – about three times the normal rate. We think this is a 10-year-plus period of abnormally high growth for the likes of Eaton.
The unusual level of growth is already putting strain on a limited supply of skilled labour. Comfort Systems USA employs roughly 15,000 people and installs heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems.
Historically, about half of the Houston-based company’s revenue was booked by the start of the year. That has surged to 90% as customers pay upfront to ensure access to Comfort’s highly trained workforce.
Other key shortages are developing in raw materials, which also brings opportunities. An example is Martin Marietta Materials, an owner of quarries that produce construction aggregates, such as sand and gravel. As builders scramble for supply, prices for those aggregates are soaring at their fastest rate in decades.
Yet Martin Marietta doesn’t have to worry about new competition emerging any time soon because getting permits to develop a new quarry typically takes five years, and that is before you even start constructing the quarry – it’s probably seven to 10 years before you actually begin to produce materials.
Look closer and it’s not just traditional building materials that should get a lift from the infrastructure boom. Innovators, including Advanced Drainage Systems, should also benefit. The Ohio-based company has developed plastic storm drains that are lighter and faster to install than conventional concrete ones.
Advanced Drainage is one of North America’s leading plastic recyclers and makes storm drains that last 100 years. It’s a faster, cheaper, greener alternative that could be a winner over a long infrastructure boom ahead.
To put the scale of that projected spending in perspective, it is helpful to look to historical precedent. The Marshall Plan was a world-shaping US initiative to rebuild post-war Europe’s shattered economic infrastructure. It was worth about $170bn in today’s money. In comparison, the $2.2trn stimulus laid out in the past few years of legislation amounts to the equivalent of 13 Marshall Plans.
A good chunk of this massive outlay will go towards fixing the US’s crumbling roads, bridges and water systems. In its most recent assessment in 2021, the American Society of Civil Engineers said 43% of US public roadways were in poor or mediocre condition. It noted that somewhere in the US, a water main breaks every two minutes on average.
Much of the current installed base was built during the boom times after the Second World War. It is badly in need of renewal.
However, it’s not just the need to patch up the disintegrating legacy of the past that is propelling today’s infrastructure boom. It also reflects how Washington wants to re-orient the US economy.
Covid-19 exposed the fragility of global supply chains. It demonstrated how easily a crisis could shut down far-flung manufacturing networks and cause shortages of crucial components.
US policymakers on both sides of the House are now determined to make their national economy more resilient. They want to encourage industries to make products domestically rather than relying on China as the go-to manufacturing destination. Increasing friction between Washington and Beijing has added a further note of urgency.
Notably, the US no longer wants to depend on Taiwan as the sole source for many key computer chips – the island’s proximity to an increasingly militant China makes it just too vulnerable.
The Inflation Reduction Act adds a further large sum of money for green energy. It aims to foster the installation of more wind turbines, solar panels and electric vehicles. That, in turn, boosts the need for smarter, more adaptable electrical grids to connect new power sources to homes and factories.
Could a change of administration in Washington disrupt this happy course? We believe that a spending U-turn is unlikely. Much of the recent legislation passed with bipartisan support.
Furthermore, the need for infrastructure spending is based on long-term trends difficult for any administration to ignore, such as the need to replace ageing roads and the shift to green energy.
Moreover, we see many of the same trends playing out in Europe and argue that an infrastructure boom could also happen there. Investors searching for a new theme should take heed: it’s time to get physical again.
Spencer Adair is the investment manager of Monks Investment Trust. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.
The Bank of England and ECB will be ‘stuck’ with higher rates despite low inflation.
Interest rate cuts have been much talked about all year and some central banks such as the Bank of England (BoE) and the European Central Bank (ECB) seem poised to finally alleviate the pressure on consumers by dropping rates as early as next month.
But there is a finite amount of cuts they can make before they will be forced to stop, according to managers at Aegon Asset Management, who warned that some central banks could be stuck with higher-than-optimal interest rates despite lower inflation and anaemic economic growth.
All will depend on the US Federal Reserve, which opted to hold rates in the 5.25-5.5% range this week following another higher-than-expected inflation print last month.
Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, noted chair Jay Powell “refrained from explicitly indicating that rate cuts were imminent this year or suggesting that rates had reached their peak, as he had previously stated”.
This week, Darrell Spence, economist at Capital Group, outlined three reasons why the Fed won’t cut rates this year and Nick Chatters, a member of the global rates team at Aegon, noted that expectations for rate cuts have certainly come down since the end of last year.
“Coming into 2024 we had six cuts priced in, we now have just over one,” he said. This is because the data has been puzzling, with inflation proving stickier than many had hoped.
Indeed, the Federal Reserve has told markets that it will only move if it has confidence that inflation is sustainably moving lower – something that has yet to take place. “In fact it has gone sideways,” said Chatters.
“The problem at the moment is the inflation data is consistently surprising to the upside. If that continues it makes the case for the Fed to keep rates on hold for longer than expected and I would put the possibility of another hike as a non-zero probability, although still low.”
There is also the election to contend with, he added, noting the Fed is in a “lose-lose” situation. Whether it cuts rates or does not, “someone is going to have a problem with it”.
But these dynamics of sticky inflation and political pressure are not evident elsewhere. Indeed, based on lower inflation figures, the ECB has indicated it will cut rates in June.
“The inflation and economic data in Europe looks worse [than the UK] but the trajectory for the data such as the Purchasing Managers Index is rising,” Chatters said, noting that this gives the ECB the ammunition to cut now, although it has yet to lay out its plans post June.
Meanwhile he said the Bank of England “would like to [cut] if the data suggests it can”. He expects a “big drop” in headline inflation next month perhaps even below 2%, which would be “optically important for the market”.
But neither the BoE nor ECB can move much without the Federal Reserve, according to Chatters. “They can start but there is only so far they can push up rates. They can’t keep going without the Fed.”
Vincent McEntegart, co-manager of the Aegon Diversified Income strategies, agreed. It means we could end up in the “bizarre” scenario where UK inflation falls below 2% and economic growth remains relatively anaemic at under 1%, yet interest rates continue to hover around 4.5%.
Moving without the Federal Reserve “would devalue the pound and create inflation”, he argued, as savers would move their money to the countries where they can get the best returns on their cash – in this case the US, where rates will be higher.
This would cause the pound to drop, increasing the costs of importing goods from overseas – particularly commodities which are also priced in dollars.
“A strong dollar causes problems. All commodities are priced in dollars for example, so the price of oil goes up and so inflation rises. It means the Bank of England and ECB are stuck with higher rates because the Fed can’t cut its rates,” said McEntegart.
Chatters added that the ECB and BoE “can get away with two cuts without the Fed” but would struggle to go much further.
He suggested that investors need to consider a new long-term ‘terminal’ rate for interest rates of 3.4% in the UK and 4% in the US – much higher than historical rates and above central bank forecast. “At the moment to get the terminal rate lower you will need to see much quicker progress on inflation,” he said.
The youngest investment trust is striving to grow its assets under management to get on the radar of a wider investor base.
Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets has approached Asia Dragon for a merger, as the investment trust seeks to expand following its launch last year.
This move may seem unconventional, as the £34.4m Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets is significantly smaller than its acquisition target, whose assets under management soared to £607.6m after the merger with its stablemate abrdn New Dawn last year.
However, analysts at brokerage firm Numis believe this initiative makes sense as the Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets needs to grow to become relevant to a wider investor base.
They said: “The management group has a strong following and has successfully grown Ashoka India through asset performance and issuance from £45.6m at launch to c.£380m net assets.
“In addition, it has started strongly with Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets delivering NAV total returns of 14.7% versus a return of 9.5% from the MSCI Emerging Markets index since launch in May 2023.”
According to Martin Shenfield, chair of Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets, 56% of shareholders in Asia Dragon support the initiative. Yet, he stressed that there has not been “any meaningful engagement” with the board of Asia Dragon.
For the analysts at Numis, it is “easy” to understand why shareholders in Asia Dragon are interested in this offer when looking at the performance of the trust. It consistently ranks at the bottom of the IT Asia Pacific sector across all of the standard investment periods and also lags its benchmark.
Performance of investment trust over 5yrs and 10yrs vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
They added: “It is also unusual to see an aggressive M&A approach as they have historically been hard to achieve, particularly for an equity investment company, which can mount the defence of returning capital at close to NAV.
“However, these proposals already include a 50% exit for Asia Dragon shareholders and the Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets annual redemption facility means investors that wish to could exit in full at NAV less costs will be able to in December.”
JISAs could have made 10.6% a year from global equities or just 2% from cash.
More than 60% of junior ISAs (JISAs) are held in cash, meaning that families are missing out on gains they could potentially make from investing in the stock market.
Wealth manager Quilter calculates that the UK’s child savers have lost out on £3.4bn by sheltering in cash rather than investing in the stock market since JISAs were introduced in 2011.
Quilter has assumed a 2% annual return from cash accounts since 2011 because although some cash accounts offer double that amount currently, the past decade or so includes many years of ultra-low interest rates.
By comparison, the average fund in the IA Global sector has returned 250.8% in total or 10.6% on an annualised basis since JISAs became available on 21 November 2011.
Parents and grandparents across the UK have invested an average of £530m in JISAs every year since 2011. These accounts are now worth £5.6bn, having generated a 2% compound annual return from cash since 2011, Quilter said.
Had the JISAs been funnelled into global equity funds instead they would now be worth £9bn (based on the IA Global sector peer group) – hence the £3.4bn shortfall.
Ian Futcher, a financial planner at Quilter, said: “Given interest rates have been relatively high recently due to inflation, many heads have been turned by attractive junior ISA cash saving rates. People perceive cash as risk free despite inflation decreasing its real terms value and choose not to face the potential volatility inherent to the stock market even though it has historically given better returns.”
Sheltering in cash means that child savers “miss out on the miracle that is compound growth,” he continued, as JISAs have long enough time horizons to ride out periods of short-term volatility in equity markets.
Tim Bennett, head of education at wealth manager Killik & Co, added that confusing saving with investing is a classic but costly mistake.
“The difference between these two key words is simple – saving is putting cash away, whereas investing is all about buying and holding securities, such as bonds and equities,” he explained.
“The problem with confusing the two is it can lead to people keeping too much cash to one side and underinvesting. Over time, this leads to inflation-driven wealth erosion.”
For parents considering moving their JISA out of cash and into the stock market, Trustnet asked several experts about the right mix of investments for a JISA and which funds to choose.
Research by ARC reveals the impact of high inflation on investors’ real wealth.
The typical investor’s portfolio currently has the same value after inflation it did in 2016 despite stock markets across the globe reaching new record highs, research by Asset Risk Consultants (ARC) suggests.
The investment consultancy found inflation has “dented” the value of private client portfolios after it caused the real wealth of the typical sterling private client investor to fall by 15% from its 2021 peak. This was compounded by the re-adjustment of bond yields in 2022, which resulted in a “one-time downward shift” in the wealth of investors.
Graham Harrison, chairman ARC Group, says: “Thinking that recovery in nominal terms means their portfolio is back on track is accepting an illusion. This may make an investor feel more comfortable when their portfolio recovers to a previous numerical high, but the ‘real’ question is at what point previous purchasing power recovers.”
Source: ARC
The analysis is based on the performance of the firm’s ARC Sterling Steady Growth Private Client Index (based on the most common risk profile run by discretionary investment managers), adjusted for inflation. This can be seen above.
Since inception, the index has made an annual real return of 4% but the recent dip means it needs to achieve returns of 7.3% over inflation per year for the next decade for real wealth to be restored to the trend line.
Investors make regular withdrawals from their portfolios should consider whether now is the time to “tighten their belts” as the sustainable withdrawal level is probably around 20% lower today than it was at the start of the decade.
In addition, ARC suggested investors take another look at their investment risk appetite and asset allocation mix given the changes in the investment backdrop.
“Over the past decade, the optimal portfolio consisted solely of equities, a viewpoint encapsulated in the acronym TINA (There Is No Alternative), as equities were driven ever higher by excess liquidity and bond yields moved to ultra-low or even negative levels,” Harrison finished.
“The 2020s are surely going to be the decade when TARA (There Are Reasonable Alternatives) once again comes to the fore. The return of positive real interest rates in bond markets means that multi-asset class investing should once again offer both risk diversification and positive real returns.”
Five RLAM global equity managers are establishing a boutique.
The top-performing Royal London Global Equity Select fund is so popular it had to soft close, barring the door to new investors, but now that its three portfolio managers are leaving, anyone with money currently in the fund faces a tough choice.
Should they stick with the £803m fund or follow its managers, Peter Rutter, James Clarke and Will Kenney, who are establishing a new boutique? The same choice awaits investors in the £4.9bn Royal London Global Equity Diversified fund, which the trio also manages.
They will be joined at their new venture by Nico de Walden, who manages the £1.2bn Royal London Global Equity Income fund, and Chris Parr, who runs the £369m Royal London US Growth Trust. The team has already secured financial backing from Australian multi-affiliate firm, Pinnacle Investment Management.
Stick don’t twist
Ben Yearsley, director of Fairview Investing, and Jason Hollands, managing director of Bestinvest, think investors in RLAM’s global equity range should remain there for now.
Hollands said the portfolios are unlikely to change dramatically in the short term and, besides, there are not many other comparable options. “The approach on these funds was very distinct and there aren’t highly similar funds that spring to mind,” he noted.
The investment process centres upon the life cycle stages of a company. Rutter and his colleagues define companies according to whether the business is accelerating, compounding, slowing and maturing, mature, or in a turnaround situation. Slowing and maturing businesses tend to pay higher dividends and although the fund’s holdings are split across the stages, this is the only area where it is overweight versus its benchmark.
Global Equity Select, a concentrated portfolio of 44 holdings, will pass to Mike Fox, head of sustainable, who Hollands and Yearsley both rate.
“Fox is a veteran fund manager with a very strong track record on the Royal London Sustainable Leaders fund (which is on the Bestinvest best-buy list) although it is focused on UK equities,” Hollands said.
Yearsley agreed: “He is a top quality investor so I’ve got no qualms with sticking with that fund even though the Select fund hasn’t got a sustainable mandate.”
RLAM’s chief investment officer Piers Hillier, meanwhile, is taking over the Global Equity Diversified fund and Yearsley noted he would give him “the benefit of the doubt”.
“The diversified fund has done an excellent job over the long term and gives decent equity exposure at a low cost. It’s arguably their flagship so why would they do anything to jeopardise the long-term excellent performance?” he said.
Performance of funds vs sector and MSCI World over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
Fold don’t hold
On the other hand, Chelsea Financial Services is selling its holdings in the Global Equity Income fund, said managing director Darius McDermott.
“Royal London has built an incredible franchise, due in large part to the expertise of the outgoing team. Their departure creates uncertainty regarding the future direction of these funds,” he explained.
In a similar vein, FE Investments was conducting due diligence on the income fund with a view to investing but has decided against going ahead. Analyst Zach Ryan and Sophie Turner said the individual portfolio managers and their investment philosophy were the key selling points.
FE Investments had originally wanted to invest in Global Equity Select but as it was soft-closed, Global Equity Income was another way to access the team’s intellectual property. It was a good fit because the analysts were looking for a global income fund with a slight value bias.
Another attraction of Global Equity Income is, unlike many other income funds, it has a meaningful allocation to the US – not a typical income market because American companies tend to prioritise share buybacks and capital gains over dividends.
Ryan said the fund’s performance has been “absolutely exceptional, across the board, through time”. Not only has it captured the upside during value rallies but it has held its own through periods when growth stocks were in the ascendancy, outperforming other value-biased funds. It has also exceeded its target to deliver a yield 20% higher than the benchmark.
Performance of fund vs sector and benchmark since inception
Source: FE Analytics
Watch and wait
Yearsley is not an advocate of following the outgoing managers to their new venture on day one because “we know so little about it”. This includes the types of funds they will run, how available they will be and when they will launch.
The main question for Turner and Ryan is how much of the investment process can be brought to Pinnacle given that RLAM owns the intellectual property rights.
It is impossible to predict whether the investment process will perfectly translate and whether the fund managers will have all the programmes they need, the right financial support, and whether the risk committee at their new firm will act in the same way as RLAM’s, Ryan said.
Hollands also thinks investors should wait and see how the portfolio managers get on in their new set-up. “They have great track records but how they will fair in a new and perhaps very different environment needs to be considered. We would want to understand the new set-up, resources and whether the approaches will be the same or differ,” he said.
“For example, the Royal London Global Equity Select fund has a quantitative element to the process and those proprietary tools – and the person who built them – remain with RLAM.”
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