The Midweek Sun

Ninety One punts Asian stocks over JSE

- Business Day

Ninety One, which has about R3-trillion in assets under management (AUM), is boosting the offshore equity exposure in some of its flagship funds as SA’s stagnant economy reduces the appeal of local equities despite their attractive valuations.

While the Cape Townheadqu­artered fund manager is allocating more capital offshore, it is channellin­g much of that to emerging markets in Asia as it bets the region will benefit from a consumer-led recovery in China, which has now abandoned its zero Covid-19 policy.

Ninety One is also underweigh­t US equities as it believes the world’s largest economy is heading for a slowdown, making its relatively expensive stocks less appealing on a medium-term investment horizon.

Hannes van den Berg, cohead of SA equity at Ninety One, says the group entered 2023 with offshore equity exposure of just less than 30percent in its equity-only and multi-asset funds, but has since increased that to about 37percent . It is now looking to raise that even closer closer to 40percent in the short to medium term, with 45percent being the maximum amount local fund managers can allocate to offshore assets under SA’s pension fund regulation­s.

“In this fight for capital, SA Inc stocks like banks and retailers have unfortunat­ely turned into a funder for other global stocks. The SA market may be attractive­ly priced but there are reasons for that: the low growth profile and sociopolit­ical concerns,” Van den Berg said in an interview. “We’ve increased our offshore equity allocation­s across our equity-only and multi-asset products. But we’ve got an underweigh­t equity allocation for the US. We’re more favourable on Asia ex-Japan.

“Everyone thought the China reopening would only happen in the second half of this year but it actually kicked off on the first quarter already, which has led to a consumer-led recovery that we think will benefit the Asia ex-Japan region,” he said. “That’s created an opportunit­y for emerging market investors.”

Relatively well

The JSE All-Share Index has held up relatively well in the face of an uncertain global backdrop characteri­sed by worldwide inflationa­ry pressures and consequent rate hikes, along with ongoing supply chain constraint­s and a surge in energy prices in the wake of the war in Ukraine.

However, with load-shedding showing no signs of abating and everyone from the Reserve Bank to the IMF predicting near-zero growth for SA in 2023, there appears to be limited scope for further equity market gains over the next six to 12 months. On top of that, the cumulative 425 basis points in interest rate hikes by Reserve Bank have left SA consumers reeling as they battle with rising costs of living driven by food price inflation, higher energy costs and ongoing administra­tive price hikes.

“There’s quite a lot of concern about the state of the SA consumer,” said van den Berg.

Prescient Investment Managers, which oversees about R130bn in assets, is another fund manager that is also less sanguine about SA stocks, though it has a “neutral” position locally. That’s despite the JSE All Share Index trading on a comparativ­ely cheap price:earnings ratio of 10.8 times, compared with a long-term average of 15.4 when measured since 1995.

“If we were a purely valuedrive­n investor that only looked at share price valuations we’d be buying SA. But that’s not always a reason to buy — for us there are other factors to consider,” Prescient’s CIO Bastian Teichgreeb­er told Business Day. “The balancing factor in favour of SA shares is that they are cheap. Unfortunat­ely, SA is characteri­sed by very weak economic fundamenta­ls, poor sentiment and negative financial conditions due to the rising interest rate cycle.”

Teichgreeb­er says the Reserve Bank may go so far as institutin­g two more 25 basis-point rate hikes over the next six months after the most recent inflation print came in at 7.1percent for March. That was the 11th consecutiv­e month it has remained above the upper limit of the Bank’s 3percent -6percent target range.

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