Gulf News

Investment mantra with Dubai stocks

- BY SAMEER LAKHANI Special to Gulf News The writer is Managing Director at Global Capital Partners.

For the investment industry, there is a sense of déjà vu. After a terrible 2022, the debate has reignited between not only active and passive management, but also about what distinguis­hes value investing from ‘quality’ investing. Most crucially, the question asked is how these principles can be applied to Dubai in its capital and asset markets.

Value investing, in the hands of most practition­ers, has morphed into a simplistic approach of investing in stocks with low valuations. Looking at history, we know this to be fallacious. If we look at valuations of well-known global stocks in 1973 (when inflation started to skyrocket after the first oil shock), you would have paid 281 times earnings for L’Oreal, 126 times for Colgate or 63 times for Coca Cola. In all of these cases, you would have achieved a return in excess of 7 per cent annually over the next 30 years, and beaten the index.

Curiously, none of these companies were considered ‘disruptors’ or high-growth companies even then. In none of the above cases would the companies have been classified as ‘cheap’, and yet investors would have outperform­ed any passive ETF investment model. Why? The answer lies in the fact that all of these companies had returns on capital that were increasing, and were companies that returned capital to their shareholde­rs on a regular basis.

Cushioned against market cycles

Two important factors stand out here: first, in bull markets, where a rising tide lifts all boats, highly leveraged business models will inevitably outperform the more ‘boring’ counterpar­ts.

The temptation here is to switch to the ‘disruptors’, or business models that emphasise change over return on capital employed.

The second is, when sentiments change (as they did on 2022), high quality and discipline­d companies have nothing to recover from.

When we look at Dubai, and more specifical­ly the recent spate of IPOs, the return on capital invested — as well as dividends — have been the key variables highlighte­d, but a look under the surface reveals a strong cash generation engine that in insulated from the cyclicalit­y that affects most other sectors. More critically, the return on capital invested for Salik, Dewa, Empower, Tecom and Taaleem exceeds the not only the rising cost of capital, but, more importantl­y, is inoculated from traditiona­l concerns regarding oil prices variabilit­y.

We know that growth is a strong component of valuation, which is why we have seen internatio­nal fund flows increase dramatical­ly.

Best placed for a decade’s worth of growth

The recent D33 goals announced by Dubai underpin the growth paradigm of the city for the next decade. We know that growth is a strong component of valuation, which is why we have seen internatio­nal fund flows increase dramatical­ly. With increasing informatio­n disseminat­ion regarding the performanc­e of local companies, the competitio­n for investment allocation has intensifie­d. In this sense, the business case model for the retail investor is not an either/or approach. but a diversific­ation to companies that will grow sustainabl­y over the next decade.

There will be many more disruptors that will undoubtedl­y enter the fray, including some from the UAE. And there will even be a case to be made to buy into some companies whose valuations have fallen significan­tly. However, the fact remains that over long periods (say, over a decade), where the future is virtually unknowable, the process of constructi­ng investment portfolios has to account for business models that generate returns on capital on a sustainabl­e basis. Rather than your friendly neighbourh­ood start-up that relies on capital injections on a periodic basis.

Dubai has staked its claim to achieving the status of global financial centre within a decade. This reach for growth will reflect in company valuations, and hence capital market activity and outperform­ance are a natural outcome of this. For individual­s and institutio­nal investors alike, it would be unwise to bet against it.

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