Subscribe
Sign up for timely perspectives delivered to your inbox.
With stock dispersion once again at the fore, offering greater potential for uncorrelated returns, Portfolio Manager Luke Newman asks if this is the ingredient that absolute return investors have been waiting for.
As we move further into 2024, we believe investors will face a complicated series of chain reactions, with the convergence of forces including inflation, a higher cost of capital, failing consumer strength and geopolitics.
2024 has been called the year of the ‘pivot’, where central banks have gained the upper hand, in terms of managing inflation. The question has now firmly turned to the pace and timing of any rate cuts. Alongside this shift in direction for monetary policy, we have also seen a major shift in market structure that transforms the picture within equities, characterised by greater dispersion in performance (you can see the very clear trend in Europe, for example – Exhibit 1).
Source: Morgan Stanley, Factset, Bloomberg, 19 February 2019 to at 19 February 2024. Compares stock dispersion in the MSCI Europe Index with expected market volatility, as indicated by the Euro Stoxx 50 Volatility Index (VSTOXX), over three- and six-month rolling periods. Past performance does not predict future returns.
We are seeing valuations re-establish themselves to more rational levels, where companies are not able to take on huge volumes of debt as easily as they have. The higher cost of capital from borrowing is an important theme, and one that is very different to what we have seen in recent years.
In our view, this environment allows bottom-up fundamental stock picking strategies to differentiate themselves. If we are correct, market dispersion is going to be an important characteristic to consider on both the long and the short side. Investors will need to think very hard about how and where they deploy their capital, at a regional, sector and stock level.
Whenever we talk about opportunity, AI has to be part of the conversation. It is hard to identify a company almost anywhere in the world where there won’t be some kind of first- or a second-order implication. There are so many areas that could potentially be disintermediated by AI at a lower cost, although this is not just a revenue issue.
There are clear social implications as well, in terms of how AI can enhance the productivity of human workers – but also how many of them it can replace. Related to that, we think those businesses that lack the flexibility to be able to shift away from employing large labour forces, or which have underinvested in their operating model, are more likely to face issues. This could provide an opportunity on the short side.
It might seem less counterintuitive, but we also believe that some types of businesses that are hoping to monetise an AI proposition may end up struggling, potentially in areas such as music, or education. If we consider what assumptions have been made for revenue, pricing and profit margins, some perceived AI winners could arguably end up as potential short positions if we see their views as overoptimistic.
Elsewhere, one of the areas that we are paying most attention to for potential shorts is industrials. Cost management and efficient investment will be key given their direct impact on profits. We are paying close attention to situations where a company’s capital expenditure is coming under pressure as a knock-on from higher discount rates.
At a regional level, we do not believe that domestic UK and Europe is as bad as prices would seem to indicate. We suspect that with investors paying more attention to valuation, Europe might seem to offer more opportunity than the US on a relative basis. The environment remains challenging, but a lot of bad news seems already priced in. That does not mean you can just blindly run around buying perceptually ‘cheap’ stocks, or short expensive ones. But if you can find a strong catalyst, it looks like a supportive environment for stock picking.
From an absolute return perspective, we are still seeing a lot of excesses unravelling, particularly in the US, where companies have been more eager to take advantage of ultra-low rates and loose monetary policy. While potentially advantageous for those companies looking to grow, the unwind can be painful.
This is an environment where there is no substitute for hard work. Industries and individual companies will come under increased scrutiny to address the timing, scale and cost of potential refinancing. Investors need to identify potential pressure points that could end up as more expensive debt or lead to share dilution from new equity issuance.
We recognise the potential impact of tighter financing in areas like electric vehicles – more broadly, any high-ticket item that requires financing is under a lot more pressure. The hurdles are also getting bigger for any new competitor looking to take market share in an industry, a potentially favourable situation for incumbent businesses with strong balance sheets that are able to self-finance.
When it comes to absolute return (or any form of liquid alternatives, for that matter), it is important to always marry long-term investment views with a realisation that bouts of unexpected volatility are never far away. While we can talk about the broader improved environment for equity stock picking, it should be placed in context against more current concerns, from uncertainties over the pace or timing of any potential interest rate cuts, through the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza, to industry-focused concerns about the impact of AI and obesity drugs. All of these factors have injected volatility and uncertainty into the market. These are not irrational concerns – there are risks for supply chains, the cost and availability of particular resources, borrowing costs, etc.
A lot has been going on, and it has been fast and furious. But at least the market volatility we have seen has been more rational and understandable. As an active investor, it is possible to harness these factors, if you judge them correctly, either in terms of seeking to mitigate risks, or to try and capitalise. When you have rational markets, valuation matters. That is a potentially huge advantage for active managers.
Balance sheet: A financial statement that summarises a company’s assets, liabilities and shareholders’ equity at a particular point in time.
Monetary policy: The policies of a central bank, aimed at influencing the level of inflation and growth in an economy. Monetary policy tools include setting interest rates and controlling the supply of money.
MSCI Europe Index: An index that shows the performance of large and mid-sized companies across 15 developed countries in Europe.
Euro Stoxx 50 Volatility Index (VSTOXX): An index that measures the near-term expected volatility in the European stock market.
Volatility measures risk using the dispersion of returns for a given investment.