As themes take hold: the trick is not to pay too much

Thematic investment strategies are easy enough to understand but not so easy to implement. The curse of the thematic manager is the curse of overpaying.

The strong performance of most emerging markets compared with developed markets in recent years has fuelled interest in thematic strategies. The rise of the East and relative decline of the West is, after all, one of the biggest and most obvious themes for pension funds which invest globally.

But when you introduce a requirement to pay only up to ‘fair value’ to get on board with the theme, the path gets much more difficult to find, let alone travel on.

TONY GLEASON

According to Tony Gleason (pictured), New York-based managing director and co-portfolio manager in Neuberger Berman’s global thematic opportunities team, the big risk in thematic investing is to pay too much for growth. It is important to be able to identify undervalued stocks within the theme, he says.

The resulting process for Neuberger Berman, which has about $500 million in its global thematic strategies, involves spending 30 per cent only of the time, or less, on thematic discovery and the rest of the time on deciding what a stock is worth. The team travels extensively looking for investable themes and the stocks to implement them.

The firm, which launched its main thematic fund in 2003, also comes up with some unusual themes.

Sponsored Content

“Most thematic managers would not sit here and tell you, as I’m doing, that coal is great,” Gleason says. “We own five coal stocks.”

The theme to which coal stocks belong is to be long in the things that China is short of.

While agreeing with the likely growth prospects for emerging markets over the next five to 10 years, Gleason says the Neuberger team looks to contain the portfolio’s risk and still be different. It looks to dissect the drivers of change and work out the best ways to profit from this. The themes have to be investible.

“For instance Cuba is going through a lot of change at the moment,” Gleason says. “They’ve just laid off 80 per cent of all government employees … But how do you play that?”

The big current themes for Neuberger Berman are:

  • lLong on what China is short of – oil, copper, coal, platinum group metals, iron ore and gold supplies remain challenged
  • emerging market consumption – discretionary spending kicks in at $3,000 per capita disposable income; hyper-growth in penetration rates of autos, travel, technology, and even clean-burning natural gas
  • agriculture – demand for food rising and high-quality farmlands are shrinking, requiring improved productivity
  • inflation – the end of cheap oil and potential for monetary debasement
  • manufacturing productivity and technical innovation – higher wages in developing countries driving growth in factory automation; modernisation and industrialisation in emerging markets is a structural trend
  • capital flows from the West to the East – potential for expansion of multiples in Asian stockmarkets; focus on financial services companies with emerging markets exposure; seek beneficiaries of global growth.

The Neuberger thematic strategy holds between 45 and 60 stocks, with a bias, compared with the ASCI ACW Index, towards medium and smaller stocks. It has outperformed the MSCI ACWI by an average of about 5.0 per cent a year after fees since inception (2003) and the MSCI World by 6.5 per cent.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

The Queen’s speech with Norges cures stuttering Regent St

The UK Crown Estate, which as the name suggests manages the assets and estate of the Crown, has entered into the second joint venture with an institutional investor in as many months. Norges Bank, which manages the 2,908 billion kroner ($498 billion) Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global, has purchased a 150-year lease on a 25

Life’s a beach for hedge funds in Caymans

The US-based Hedge Fund Association, which last year opened a UK chapter in competition with the established Alternative Investment Management Association, has now started a Cayman Islands offshoot. HFA announced this week that the new chapter was a response to demand from Cayman-based hedge fund participants and reflected the importance of the zone as a

Corporate governance program victim of new allocation model at CalPERS

CalPERS’ outperforming internal corporate governance investments program will be challenged by the fund’s new capital allocation model, according to a review of the program by consultant Wilshire.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

As hedge funds recover lost ground, the big are getting bigger

The hedge fund industry has taken a well-publicised caning over the past few years but, as the dust starts to settle on the global financial crisis, some interesting and probably long-lasting trends are emerging. Principle among these is a massive increase in concentration of mandates among the larger hedge funds.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Investor behaviour erodes performance

Performance is eroded by institutional investors’ decisions around hiring and firing managers according to the preliminary results of a behavioural study by Boston University that links qualitative factors such as committee characteristics with earlier empirical research on performance.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Investors win with new hedge fund fee model

Hermes BPK, the hedge fund-of-funds (HFoF)  provider majority-owned by Hermes Fund Managers (which itself is fully-owned by the UK’s largest pension fund, the BT Pension Scheme), has completed work on an innovative performance fee model which will allow investors to clawback any unearned performance fees.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous