The Jerusalem Post

Hot corporate earnings to keep fire under global rally in growth stocks

- • By SINEAD CAREW

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Don’t look for the outperform­ance of growth stocks to fade any time soon – as long as corporate earnings continue to improve and hopes remain for stronger economic growth.

The Russell 1000 Growth index, which tracks such shares, is up 10.9% so far this year, outpacing the US benchmark S&P 500 stock index’s 6.6% rise and the 2.8% advance of the Russell 1000 Value index.

And it’s not just a US phenomenon. Growth stocks – whose profits are expected to grow at a faster pace than the broader market – are also outperform­ing their value counterpar­ts in Asia and Europe. Still, the appeal of riskier stocks perceived as better positioned to ride an accelerati­ng global earnings tailwind, as opposed to those with a greater cushion of safety, is nowhere as far ahead as it is on Wall Street.

In the United States, an improving outlook for corporate earnings should help keep growth names in vogue, according to John Praveen, chief investment strategist at Prudential Internatio­nal Investment­s Advisers LLC in Newark, New Jersey.

The average estimate of analysts for earnings-per-share growth this year of S&P 500 companies has risen to 11.3% from 10.9% at the start of April, according to Thomson Reuters data, a trend that should continue to blunt concerns about lofty growth valuations.

“When you have an earnings recovery, growth stocks will outperform,” Praveen said. “When you don’t have good earnings, that’s when people are looking for value.”

Hopes for pro-business US policy changes under the administra­tion of President Donald Trump will likely also keep expectatio­ns for economic growth elevated, helping to maintain the case for growth stocks.

“The value stocks have done okay, but growth has done so much better in the anticipati­on we’ll see a pickup in economic growth,” said Paul Nolte, a portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset Management in Chicago. “Companies that are going to be more levered to economic growth tend to be growth stocks.”

“Right now I don’t see a longterm condition for value stocks to outperform growth,” he said.

To be sure, some strategist­s are less convinced that outperform­ance in growth stocks will continue indefinite­ly.

While value stocks, which are cheaper relative to their earnings potential, have tended to do better in slower growth environmen­ts historical­ly, J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s global market strategist David Lebovitz says that trend has been changing.

“It’s not going to be smooth sailing for one or the other,” he said. “We think there’ll be times people are more optimistic about the economy, and in those cases, value can rally. Then you’ll see periods where people are less optimistic about the economy, as we’ve seen over the course of the first quarter.”

‘When you have an earnings recovery, growth stocks will outperform’

If economic trends look better in the second quarter, value stocks will do better, Lebovitz said.

In Asia, the MSCI AC Asia, apart from Japan, growth index is up 18.5% so far this year, compared with a 12.6% gain for the comparable MSCI value index.

Investment in India, traditiona­lly a growth-driven market, has adjusted in recent years as value stocks have narrowed the gap with growth, which still lead, said Jayesh Shroff, a cofounder of investment advisory Cask Capital in Mumbai.

“That is because people were paying a premium for growth, and somehow the growth did not materializ­e,” he said. “That’s why value came back and growth has taken a slight backseat.”

Still, Shroff said as soon as growth returns, he expects investors to switch their focus back from value.

In China, between 2009 and the 2015 stock-market crash, small-cap growth stocks were the market’s darlings, but “a new rotation into value bluechip investment­s started in 2016,” according to Zhou Liang, a fund manager at Shanghai Minority Asset Management Co.

“In 2017, money will flow into blue chips as small caps weaken and lose their luster,” he said.

In Europe, the best outlook for corporate profits in seven years has ignited investor appetite for growth stocks, which are now up twice as much as their value counterpar­ts so far this year, a reversal of the trend seen last year.

As a result, the MSCI Internatio­nal Europe growth Index has jumped 8.9% this year so far, compared with a 4.5% gain for the MSCI Internatio­nal Europe Value index.

With such a big gap between US growth and value stocks, some investors are eying overseas investment­s.

“The entire US market is very expensive. Value investors definitely don’t like to chase expensive valuations,” said Michael O’Rourke, the chief market strategist at JonesTradi­ng in Greenwich, Connecticu­t. “I wouldn’t expect to see a rotation until you saw a correction where both stock types are lower.”

 ?? (Brendan McDermid/Reuters) ?? TRADERS WORK on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last week. Growth stocks – whose profits are expected to grow at a faster pace than the broader market – are outperform­ing their value counterpar­ts in the US, Asia and Europe.
(Brendan McDermid/Reuters) TRADERS WORK on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last week. Growth stocks – whose profits are expected to grow at a faster pace than the broader market – are outperform­ing their value counterpar­ts in the US, Asia and Europe.

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