Business Day

Investment group looks to gold and defensive stocks

• Equities researcher says much negative sentiment priced into rand, bonds

- Kabelo Khumalo khumalok@businessli­ve.co.za

Asset manager Old Mutual Investment Group (OMIG) says it is allocating capital to gold and rand-hedge defensive stocks ahead of SAs elections with uncertaint­y about the outcome high as the governing ANC faces its toughest polls to date.

“We do not seek to position our portfolios around the May 2024 elections given that the outcome is so uncertain; instead, we favour a diversifie­d approach that includes some exposure to gold as well as defensive randhedge shares like British American Tobacco (BAT) and AB InBev,” OMIG’s head of equities research, Meryl Pick said.

BAT’s stock is up more than 6% year to date, while AB InBev is down 5%. Goldman Sachs last week raised its average gold price forecast for 2024 to $2,180 from $2,090.

Gold stocks on the JSE have also had a solid start to the year.

Harmony Gold, SA’s biggest gold producer by volume, is up 20% since the start of the year.

The company in February declared a record interim dividend after benefiting from a stronger gold price and an increase in output.

AngloGold Ashanti is up 12.6% year to date, while Gold Fields is down 2% in the same period.

Pick said another drawcard on the domestic equity market, which is battling declining trade volumes, are domestic banks and clothing retailers. She said this was driven by the belief that the country had reached peak interest rates and a reduced level of load-shedding.

“We have been incrementa­lly tilting our portfolio back to SA Inc as we anticipate a better year ahead, primarily due to the reduced level of load-shedding being factored into our projection­s,” Pick said.

“This should mitigate some of the commodity inflation pressures in areas such as food, oil and energy. As a result, conditions are improving slightly for consumers and potentiall­y enhancing growth prospects.”

OMIG, which is one of SA’s largest money managers, said it was also warming to the constructi­on sector after years of the sector struggling before the constructi­on boom leading up to the 2010 Soccer World Cup in SA.

The embattled sector has seen many groups fall by the wayside, with the likes of Raubex and Wilson Bayly Holmes-Ovcon the only players with balance sheets strong enough for big projects.

“The uptick in state infrastruc­ture spending, plus private sector spending on renewables is good news for the sector,” Pick said.

The Afrimat Constructi­on Index released on Tuesday showed there was cause for hope for the sector.

The index showed that job creation in the sector expanded in 2023, with 110,000 new jobs having been created, compared with 31,000 in 2022.

Pick said the hotly contested elections, set to take place at the end of May, had seen many pundits predict the ANC’s national support would fall below the important 50% mark.

“The polling data from various sources points to ANC support falling below this level,” Pick said. “However, national election results can surprise depending on a range of variables including the turnout on election day and the veracity of campaignin­g.”

She said the base case scenario is that the ANC will fall just shy of 50% support and team up with a smaller party, while the possibilit­y of an ANC-EFF coalition is still very much on the cards — a likelihood that Pick said would send the country in a more populist direction.

“There is so much negativity priced into the rand and bond yields — sentiment is low, offshore investors have run away and we have fallen out of many global indices; if we hold a peaceful election that delivers either a small ANC majority or coalitions between the ANC and other small parties, or the ANC and a moderate opposition party, we could see a significan­t rally in local-facing equities.”

OLD MUTUAL INVESTMENT GROUP FAVOURS SOME EXPOSURE TO GOLD, BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO AND AB INBEV

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 ?? Graphic: RUBY-GAY MARTIN Source: INFRONT ??
Graphic: RUBY-GAY MARTIN Source: INFRONT

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