BusinessMirror

US fund managers sticking with old playbooks vs Covid

-

COVID-19 upended almost everything, including the trajectory of the US economy, which sank into one of the worst recessions in history and then rebounded into the fastest expansion in decades.

One thing that barely changed this whole time? Profession­al stock pickers’ tastes.

Active fund managers still favor stable growth stocks over cheap ones and are avoiding economical­ly sensitive shares like banks and energy, just as they did during the market’s tumble in March 2020. Except for a growing aversion to industrial firms, managers’ preference­s across sectors are almost identical to what they were almost 16 months ago, data compiled by Bank of America Corp. show. In fact, almost three-quarters of the same beloved stocks remain in their portfolios.

“It’s mystifying how much the world has changed in the year, but how little the average portfolio has changed,” Savita Subramania­n, Bofa’s head of US equity and quantitati­ve strategy, said by phone. “My sense is that the buy side looked at the last 10 plus years and thought to themselves, ‘yes, the economy is recovering off the bottom from the exogenous shock of the health scare, but we’re not necessaril­y off to the races.’”

A case can be made that few traders see the spread of Covid-19 as a permanent game changer. Some have called the pandemic just an interrupti­on in a prolonged regime of subdued growth. If anything, they say, the shutdowns accelerate­d trends already in place, like the shift toward automation and online spending. This would explain the continued affection for internet and software shares.

Earlier this year, hedge funds—those that make both bullish and bearish equity bets—boosted their exposure to cyclical shares that benefit from an economic expansion, but have pared those bets more recently. As a result, their cyclical positionin­g fell toward levels seen in the aftermath of the pandemic crash.

At long-only funds, while their relative cyclical exposure has risen to 17 percent from 11 percent in March 2020, it represents a bullish tilt that Bofa calls “minimal.”

The cautious stance is understand­able. Value stocks, a class dominated by cyclicals, trailed growth in 11 of the last 12 years. But recency bias can be dangerous.

Marko Kolanovic, the chief global market strategist at Jpmorgan Chase & Co. warned in May that money managers who have spent the bulk of their careers profiting from deflationa­ry trends need to quickly switch gears or risk an “inflation shock” to their portfolios.

Giorgio Caputo, senior fund manager at J O Hambro Capital Management, agrees. Massive public spending on infrastruc­ture and the willingnes­s by the Federal Reserve to allow the economy to run hot could mean more industrial-led growth, he notes.

“Many managers are probably still waiting for definite proof that the next decade’s growth could be more cyclical,” Caputo said. “The risk for many investors is that they may be caught flat-footed.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines