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AI CAPEX is an incredibly strong theme right now, according to Paul Wimborne, senior fund manager for Pendal’s Global Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund.
“The biggest thing we’ve seen in emerging markets this year – which will also be very important next year – is similar to what we’ve seen in other developed markets: the current strength of the AI capex trade,” says Wimborne.
“There’s a lot of money that has been spent on building out globally hyperscale data centres, and it’s taking up a lot of capacity from these chip manufacturers. They’re doing incredibly well.
“They run monopolistic or oligopolistic positions, and they’re generating huge amounts of free cash flow and returns.”
Pendal’s London-based EM team is invested in Taiwan Semiconductor, Korea’s SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics.
Some of the best-performing stocks in emerging markets have been the memory chip manufacturers, says Wimborne.
When it comes to small caps, the resources sector has done the heavy lifting, says Lewis Edgley, portfolio manager of Pendal’s Smaller Companies Fund.
“The strength has really been in resources and very much driven by gold – that’s has been a very strong theme in the last 12 months,” says Edgley.
Despite a prolonged run in the gold price, he still sees opportunities in the space.
“At around nine times price-to-earnings (PE) you could argue they are continuing to look attractive.
“The small ordinaries average PE is north of 20 times, so they’re less than half the valuation of the average small ordinary stock,” says Edgley.
“But they should be cheap. These are highly cyclical businesses with key drivers that are not in the control of the management teams that run these businesses.
“So our opportunity is to make sure we understand the drivers, we understand what’s in control of the management teams, we understand the thematics that are creating value here, but we don’t get too far over our skis in how we’re positioned for that.”
While it’s good to have adequate exposure to a popular thematic like gold, Brenton Saunders, portfolio manager of Pendal’s MidCap Fund, cautions that avoiding the bad stocks is just as important as picking the right stocks.
“Almost half of the active attribution for the Pendal MidCap Fund in the past year has been not being in stocks that haven’t done well – so avoiding bad stocks as well as choosing really good stocks,” explains Saunders.
“That comes back to research and identifying the stocks that we shouldn’t be in as opposed to just identifying stocks that we should be in.
“I think as active fund managers we have a very strong responsibility for both of those areas when representing these portfolios for clients.”
While gold is expected to continue in favour in 2026, lithium is coming out of a three-year downtrend and rare earths will also likely remain topical, according to Saunders.
“I think gold still has relevance from here in the right stocks. The gold price is high and that’s enabling good companies to continue to add value,” notes Saunders.
“Rare earths has had quite a big tailwind for some time and stocks in that space have done really well, but that’s another thematic that I think will continue to be very topical over the course of the next 12 months.
“Lithium hopefully should, if not rocket exponentially like it has done a couple of times historically, be a more constructive backdrop for lithium companies.