Growth equities to shine in 2023 if interest rates stabilise

If inflation subsides this year, 2023 could be a strong year for growth equities, according to Raj Shant, London-based managing director and equity portfolio specialist at Jennison Associates, a fundamental equities manager owned by PGIM.

Shant said 2022 has been “a terrible year for growth equity investing, probably the worst in absolute and relative terms for a couple of decades,” in a conversation with Conexus Financial managing editor Julia Newbould on the ‘Market Narratives’ podcast.

This was because an upward drift in inflation expectations through the year was bad for growth equity valuations, with a sharp downward adjustment in prices despite earnings for most growth equities continuing to come through, Shant said.

Consequently, growth equities have lost the valuation premium gained during the pandemic in 2020 as well as during outperformance in 2018 and 2019, and returned to relative valuations that were below the long-term average, he said.

Last year was a very difficult year, but it does mean that we are now going into 2023 at a lower than long-term, average valuation, Shant said, “an environment where the expectations for inflation and interest rates globally may have peaked.”

Sponsored Content

Companies that show the fastest sales and profits growth will be strong contenders to generate the best returns for investors in 2023, he said, if interest rates stabilise or start to be reduced. Whether that will happen is “up to each individual listener or reader to decide for themselves,” he said.

Investing successfully in growth equities requires active investment with strong bottom-up research, Shant said, pointing to Jennison Associates research which shows market expectations for which companies will be the fastest growing companies over the next five years are wrong 80 per cent of the time, when compared with the fastest growing companies in the market over five year rolling time periods.

“You don’t have to be exactly right, you just have to be more right than the market,” Shant said.

Different growth companies can have different characteristics that lead to different risk and reward profiles, Shant said.

What he termed “emerging growers” are younger companies that typically have more upside potential but also more risk and volatility in their growth. These could include cloud-based applications companies which invest in products, R&D and marketing at the expense of short-term profits.

“Stable growth compounders,” on the other hand, are larger companies with more mature growth rates that offer lower volatility and less risk. Examples of these companies are famous global luxury brands, and healthcare companies, Shant said.

In periods where interest rates and inflation expectations are relatively stable, emerging growers will often outperform. But in periods like 2022 where interest rates are rising or the backdrop is more risk-averse, stable growth compounders tend to outperform emerging growers.

Fintech in emerging markets is one of the biggest growth opportunities in the world at present, Shant said, owing to the incumbent banks tending to be more bureaucratic and cumbersome with less investment in consumer experience on their websites, apps and customer service.

Luxury goods also have strong growth prospects owing to emerging middle classes in major markets like India and China, and a desire among younger consumers to get “entry-level luxury goods” promoted by celebrities and influencers on social media.

Electric vehicles are also promising, Shant said, with huge growth over recent years, superior safety and driving experiences and strong environmental credentials, but still extremely low penetration in terms of the global fleet of vehicles.

Leave a Comment

Dutch pension funds face tech reckoning, warns central bank

Dutch pension funds face tech reckoning, warns central bank

The Netherlands' Central Bank has warned the country's pension funds that their €150 billion ($177 billion) investments in tech companies, representing almost 43 per cent of their listed equities portfolios and 8 per cent of their total balance sheet, is at risk from a potential AI bubble.

Sort content by

Found: the “missing link” in the equity risk premium puzzle

As pension funds look at new ways to assess their asset allocation, including the adoption of a risk-premia approach, Simon Mumme delves into the latest thinking on whether markets reward investors for the big swings and roundabouts. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Performance persistence: reverting back to normal

The latest performance persistence study by RogersCasey’s managing director, head of global portfolio solutions, Soonyong Park, which incorporates data from the volatile 2008 period, confirms the lack of persistence of returns in the equity asset management universes, and further, that it is more pronounced when long-term results are evaluated. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

New Jersey leads flight from equities

The New Jersey Division of Investment, which manages the $67.3 billion in state pension funds and was the best-performing US fund last year, has made some dramatic changes to its asset allocation in line with its objective of relying less on public equities for returns.

…. as green investments/sustainability become a focal point

The Yale endowment has a substantial and growing exposure to green investments with allocations in timberland, emerging markets and venture capital including more than $100 million in cleantech. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Magic of maths: harnessing the excess growth from portfolio volatility

In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, some investors are questioning the true diversification in their global equity portfolios and the appropriateness of standard benchmarks. GREG BRIGHT spoke with Adrian Banner, co-chief investment officer at INTECH Investment Management, about these and other issues. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Equity paradigms challenged

A number of new research articles have deunked two universally held beliefs in the investment industry, that shares are a good long-term bet and that economic growth is good for equities. Dr Arjuna Sittampalam, Research Associate with the EDHEC-Risk Institute and editor, Investment Management Review, examines the research. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous