Russell and State Street bullish on equities

Asset consultants Russell Investments and State Street Global Advisors (SSgA) are both bullish on the Australian economy and equities, in particular, with Russell tipping industrials and a return of 10 per cent this year.

Industrials will be the clear favourite with fund managers, said Russell’s associate portfolio manager, Scott Bennett, while telecommunications and utilities will languish.

SSgA’s chief economist, Christopher Probyn, predicted that the local economy would grow 3 per cent. Inflation may rise to 2.7 per cent but would stay in the Reserve Bank’s target zone for the medium-term.

Both Russell and State Street said the recovery would be a robust V-shape, or a lacklustre U due to the longer-term fallout from the financial crisis.

Shares, both local and overseas, would continue to be the favoured asset class, according to Russell’s Bennett, with funds neutral on A-REITs and cash, and bearish on Australian bonds. Bennett’s comments were based on Russell’s quarterly survey of 40 Australian fund managers.

Russell and State Street differed on consumer spending with Russell bearish on the sector’s prospects, but State Street more sanguine and upbeat on its resiliency.

Sponsored Content

The high hopes pinned on consumer discretionary spending were deflated by the Reserve Bank’s two hikes in interest rates and flagging of more to come, said Russell’s Bennett. “The proportion of managers factoring in a decline for the sector was up from 9 per cent to 30 per cent,” said Bennett.

“Little doubt appears to be cast over mortgage repayments making a painful dent in already stretched household budgets,” he added.

In contrast, State Street’s Probyn said fiscal and monetary policy provided substantial and timely support while credit market conditions remained relatively healthy. “Private domestic demand proved resilient [and] exports benefited from China’s ongoing strength,” he said.

Overall, sentiment is positive but interest rates are making a dent, Bennett said, and 54 per cent of managers were predicting a return of 10 per cent or more for the calendar year. Single digit growth was predicted by 30 per cent of managers while a prolonged double-dip was anticipated by 14 per cent. Fortunately, only 2 per cent believe the fall would be worse than 10 per over the year.

In local equities, industrials led the pack with 84 per cent of managers bullish on this sector, followed by materials in second place, at 62 per cent. This sector had struggled in relative terms, said Bennett, losing close to half its market capitalisation in the second part of 2008 and underperforming again in last year’s market rally.

For the other sectors, manager expectations were: consumer discretionary in third place (60 per cent), financials 4th (59 per cent), information technology 5th (54 per cent), energy 6th (51 per cent), consumer staples in equal 7th place with healthcare (39 per cent), telecommunications 8th (27 per cent each), and utilities 9th (18 per cent).

In both telecommunications and utilities, managers further downgraded their expectations and pessimism about utilities reached a new low because the sector’s usefulness as a defensive play – which was very effective in latter 2008 – was lost when the recovery story began to dominate investor preferences.

“While this continues,” Bennett said, “utilities will likely remain on the sidelines.”

Interest rates loomed large in managers’ sentiments on A-REITs, Australian bonds, and cash.

For A-REITs, rate rises were bad news. Managers expect the highly-leveraged property trusts sector to experience more pressure from higher borrowing costs. “Many trusts have a fine balancing act in place that enables them to service their debt,” Bennett said, “but it wouldn’t take an awful lot to upset that balance.”

Consequently, 42 per cent of managers were bearish on A-REITs, compared with the previous quarter’s 23 per cent.

Bonds were looking limp also, as the inverse relationship between yields and prices played out. Most managers (71 per cent) saw no upside over the next 12 months.

Cash was the only asset class to benefit from the rate rises, propped up by the prospect of higher yields with no corresponding capital losses, Bennett said. “Managers’ bullish views have quadrupled since June this year, up to 33 per cent.”

Both State Street and Russell were cautiously optimistic about the Australian economy overall. State Street’s Chris Probyn expected a “solid” expansion of 3 per cent “although below the long run trend, suggesting that a moderate output gap will persist into the medium term”.

Russell’s Scott Bennett shared this caution, but the “downside will almost certainly be less severe than for the remaining G20 countries. And, at the moment, that relative advantage is enough to sustain fund managers’ optimistic sentiment towards Aussie shares, and international investors’ demand for the A$.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

How to avoid being the butt of a carbon price joke

Executive director of the Asset Owners Disclosure Project and business director of the Climate Institute, Julian Poulter, aruges the progress of carbon legislation in Australia is a wake-up call to asset owners around the globe. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

What price is right for a low carbon future

Australia’s lower house of Parliament passed a carbon tax yesterday. It prices carbon at $23 a ton. India’s carbon tax is 80 rupees (about $1) a ton. So what is the appropriate price of carbon? According to Robert Litterman in his Financial Analysts Journal editorial, it is a complex equation that should reflect fundamental uncertainty

Déjà vu as Wilshire warns CalPERS of ARS portfolio risks

CalPERS’ absolute return strategies program is over-reliant on quantitative tools, inadequately staffed and may be overweight in certain strategies and risks, according to Wilshire’s annual review of the portfolio.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Investors have more than just voting in their engagement armoury, study finds

Institutional investors are using just a fraction of the “weapons” they have at their disposal when they engage with companies, and need to use the entire proxy proposal process better, Rob Bauer told attendees at a recent PRI conference.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

DiNapoli defends DB schemes

New York State Comptroller, Thomas DiNapoli, has defended public defined benefit schemes, saying that they are not a drag on state government finances, are sustainable and form a vital part of the US economy.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Funds seek the elixir of scale

The investment firepower and cost savings promised by economies of scale have enraptured the Australian superannuation industry. This has instilled in some funds an urge to merge in order to enjoy the benefits of being large. However some investment chiefs believe that bigger size brings a new set of problems that can undermine performance.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

Previous