Gulf News

Don’t fear the euro: investors stick with European stocks

Some fund managers say falls in regional stocks are overdone

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The surging euro has played spoilsport with what had become global investors’ top trade this year — buying European equities — though for some recent weakness in stocks offers a chance to reshuffle portfolios and stay invested.

Fund managers, betting on diminishin­g political risk and confidence that the region was leaving behind years of economic sluggishne­ss and flatlining corporate profits, pumped money in the first five months of this year into cheaply valued stocks, particular­ly those that stood to benefit from a global recovery.

However, major stock indexes peaked at two-year highs in May and have suffered selloffs through the summer as the euro kept rising, fuelling worries that profits at the region’s large exporters would suffer as their competitiv­eness takes a hit.

In August European equity funds even suffered their first weekly outflows in many months, as the euro strengthen­ed to levels that caught many by surprise.

But some of the world’s top funds say the falls are overdone and the euro’s strength underscore­s the region’s better prospects, so that shares of domestical­ly focused companies could offer rich rewards.

“I used to own a lot of exporters but that’s changed,” said Fidelity’s Bill Kennedy, who has been managing the $10 billion (Dh36.7 billion) Fidelity Internatio­nal Discovery Fund since 2004.

Bets made

Kennedy has already made his bets by adding to his portfolio more banks, builders and materials firms that he reckons will take advantage of a domestic Investors lulled by the long downward slide in price swings across global equities and government bonds are about to get a rude awakening as both asset classes are entering “dangerous volatility regimes,” according to Societe Generale.

A study of 12-month expected global equity volatility going back to 1994, weighted for more recent results, shows current low levels occur less than 2 per cent of the time, analysts led by Head of Global Asset Allocation Alain Bokobza said in a September 12 report.

“The current level of equity volatility is very similar to what we saw in February 2007,” he said. “Investors could gear their portfolios for a potential rise in volatility by raising cash (euros) and reducing US equity.” recovery in the region.

“The strengthen­ing euro is a sign of improved confidence ...

The reality is that interest rates are going up because people are more confident and that’s a good thing,” he said.

Strength in the euro not only helps many firms reduce costs of imported goods but historical­ly it has lifted returns for offshore investors, such as Kennedy.

Stocks ranging from builder Vinci and carmaker Renault in France to German real estate firm Vonovia and Italian retail bank Intesa Sanpaolo are among the top picks for analysts and investors.

They make more than 80 per cent of their sales in Europe, which is witnessing a string of upgrades to economic forecasts as domestic demand bolsters the recovery. The European Central Bank has lifted its 2017 Eurozone GDP growth estimate to 2.2 per cent from 1.9 per cent previously.

Yet the sudden spikes in the euro have clearly shown their market-moving potential this summer when the scale of overweight Europe rose close to the highest levels ever.

Data from EPFR Global showed redemption­s from European stock funds hit six-month highs in the last week of August when the euro peaked above $1.20 (Dh5.24) for the first time in two and a half years.

Exchange-traded funds tracking the Eurozone blue chip index were among the hardest hit as two-thirds of all Europe Equity Funds recorded outflows or no flows, EPFR said.

Opportunit­ies abound

“Despite euro strength and upgrades to GDP forecasts, domestical­ly focused euro area stocks have so far not materially outperform­ed,” Barclays strategist­s led by Dennis Jose said.

Like Fidelity, the British investment house believes that banks and materials are the sectors to bet on and, if the past is any guide, a strong currency is a good omen.

Historical­ly, a strengthen­ing euro has been a crucial component for European outperform­ance, Barclays wrote.

Following the initial eurorelate­d stress, European stocks showed signs this month they can weather the swings, raising the prospect that the focus could soon turn to company fundamenta­ls.

When ECB President Mario Draghi last week outlined concerns about currency volatility, the euro spiked higher again but European equities largely shrugged off the move.

“I believe the correlatio­n (euro up/European stocks down) is largely emotional and it is bound to vanish,” said Alessandro Balsotti, head of asset management at JCI Capital.

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