Broker cutbacks boost small-cap opportunities

With the tightening of belts at big stock broking firms in the past couple of years, particularly the firms which are owned by banks, has come an increase in the opportunity set for buy-side researchers.


According to Robert Feldman, portfolio manager and head of global small caps for Pyramis Global Advisors, the “sell side” research departments of broking firms have been cut back and their coverage of the market reduced because of the global financial crisis.

“This has created more opportunities for buy-side research,” he said, meaning the analysis performed by funds managers and in-house teams of big pension funds.

Pyramis, which is Fidelity Investments’ non-US investment manufacturing arm, has the biggest team of analysts of any manager in the world. There are 395 in total, 215 of whom are in the US. The firm has major offices in London, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Singapore, Sydney, Germany, France and Mumbai. It manages about US$2.5 billion in small-cap funds.

The firm has been investing in international (non-US) small-caps for about 15 years and has had a true global fund since 2007.

While some large pension funds have recently looked to expand their in-house active management to include small-caps, Feldman believed that most are very unlikely to go down that route.

Sponsored Content

“You need a vast army of resources, including people on the ground, to do it well, unless you’re running a quant process,” he said.

Small-caps tend to be more locally focused – less international – than large-cap stocks. They also tend to have one main business line which makes them easier to understand than diverse conglomerate companies.

“If you buy GE, you may as well just buy the whole market,” Feldman said.

He believed that emerging-market small-caps would develop into a separate asset class within the next few years as more and more investors were looking to tilt their portfolios towards higher growth regions and away from the developed markets.

The Pyramis funds are broadly sector and region neutral, with value-add coming primarily from stock selection. The average market cap of each stock is $1.8 billion but the manager will buy within the range of $3 billion down to $100 million.

Feldman personally reads every research note written by the analysts on a daily basis – sometimes more than 100 per day.

He said mostly they were updates of stocks which were already invested and he was primarily looking for new ideas. He also tried to personally interact with the analysts as much as possible.

“The informal part of the job is very important too,” he said.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Blinder: a power of paradox at Princeton

Pension funds or any investor holding a slug of long-term fixed income needs to factor in some capital losses soon, says Princeton academic and former vice president of the Federal Reserve, Alan Blinder. “The timing is difficult to predict, but three or 15 months, it doesn’t matter. It is predictable,” he says. “The unpredictable part

UniSuper defies accepted thinking

Mention any asset class to John Pearce, chief investment officer of Australian superannuation fund UniSuper, and he will doggedly set out the good and bad thinking around it. A common source of his ire is the sight of investors herding around a belief based on a lack of rigorous thinking. Good practice for him involves

OTPP deals with underfunding

Even the most successful and well run pension plans are facing underfunding challenges. The $129-billion Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan is the latest to investigate solutions to solve the mismatch between the pension promise and the funds required to meet that, says Jim Leech, chief executive of the organisation . OTPP has appointed a taskforce – chaired

Fewer, bigger funds for UK?

Australia, the US, Canada and Denmark have all done it. Kazakhstan and even Oman are talking about it. Increasingly, public sector pension funds are merging or pooling their assets into fewer bigger schemes. It’s no surprise the debate is gathering momentum in the United Kingdom, ripe for consolidation with a Local Government Pension Fund Scheme

Scenario analysis: applicable to anything?

Attempts to apply a formula to asset allocation based on an asset’s historical volatility and relationship with other assets tend to fail when presented with black-swan events. Equities tend to rise along with commodities except when presented with political events such as the price hikes in oil in 1973 that sent equities into free fall.

Kurtzer on Holy Land of opportunity

The Middle East is in a state of dynamic flux, with positive change manifesting itself in the countries going through an economic and financial revolution as much as a political one. Institutional investors from all parts of the world have a role to play in that revolution, according to former US ambassador to Egypt and

Previous