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The headlines driving Aussie equities | Falling USD should lift EMs | Where to find opportunities in theme-driven markets
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Here are the main factors driving the ASX this week, according to Aussie equities analyst and portfolio manager ELISE MCKAY and reported by head investment specialist CHRIS ADAMS
Read Pendal’s latest weekly equities overview.
Share prices are increasingly moved by popular themes like AI disruption, trade wars, and tariff fears – without regard to company fundamentals or long-term valuations.
As a result, quality Australian companies with sound outlooks and predictable cash flows are being indiscriminately sold off.
That’s creating opportunities for active fund managers, Pendal’s head of equities Crispin Murray told Morningstar’s 2025 investment conference in Sydney last week.
“We believe this is creating more distortions in the market. It means the amplitude of mispricing is greater, and it lasts longer.”
Global market dislocation means the ASX has a range of industrial companies with predictable cash flows and returns that have been sold down and offer opportunities for investors, he says.
“One example is CSL – one of Australia’s largest, most successful companies. Five years ago it was running high – at an over-40 multiple. It’s now down to about 22 times earnings,” he says.
Fears of the impact of tariffs on CSL are misplaced, assuming the company doesn’t do anything to respond – “and I think that’s where the market’s overreacting,” argues Crispin.
“We think the risk on the tariff front is being overstated, and that’s what’s providing you the opportunity.” Pendal owns CSL.
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Some analysts have described a pattern of a weaker dollar and rising bond yields in the US as a ‘classic emerging markets crisis’.
“As veterans of actual emerging crises dating back to 1994, we consider that view to be wildly overstated,” writes Pendal’s EM team in their latest analysis.
In spite of volatility and weakness in core US financial markets, the currencies of almost all emerging markets strengthened against the US dollar in March and April. Meanwhile bond yields fell for the majority of major EMs.
“Emerging markets are driven by two major global drivers: international capital flows and international trade.
“A weaker dollar represents capital flowing out of the US and into the rest of the world – and a weaker dollar has consistently been positive for emerging markets over the past 30 years.
“Although evolving tariff policies threaten a downturn in global trade, the message from financial markets is that investor uncertainty about US economic policies is a clear positive for emerging economies and for investors in emerging markets.”
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This month’s divergence in US and China rates policies wasn’t just a curiosity for money managers, observes Pendal’s head of income strategies, Amy Xie Patrick.
“It’s a study in contrasts, a reflection of deeper structural differences, and a reminder that policy effectiveness doesn’t always come wrapped in transparency or even democracy,” says Amy in her latest markets analysis.
On May 7, the US Fed left rates unchanged despite growing political pressure. Meanwhile, the People’s Bank of China delivered another dose of stimulus.
“One central bank faced market criticism over its non-committal guidance,” notes Amy. “The other moved swiftly and silently, without needing to justify its decision.
“Perhaps the most contrarian yet valuable takeaway is that less policy guidance may be a good thing.
“By avoiding the hard task of forecasting far into the future, we free ourselves from unhelpful narratives may that turn out to be false.
“By focusing on getting it right rather than always being right, we’re able to preserve the flexibility to change course when the fundamentals change.”
Read Amy’s full article here
June 25, 2025
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July 26, 2023
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The outperformance of America’s Magnificent Seven tech megacaps will come to a halt in 2024, paving the way for a return to market leadership for small and midcaps stocks, says Pendal’s Christopher Lees.
Big tech dominated markets in 2023, with the so-called Magnificent Seven – Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla – collectively outperforming global equities by 73 per cent.
But as the earnings and price performance of the tech stocks begins to peak, the market baton is set to be passed back to a fast-recovering small and mid-caps sector, says Lees, who manages Pendal’s Global Select fund.
“2023 was an extraordinary year. But we expect the Magnificent Seven to start underperforming the overall index in 2024. This really could be the beginning of a new trend change – a ‘vice versa’ where small and mid-cap stocks outperform mega caps,” says Lees.
THE record-breaking $US6 billion sale of the Washington Commanders NFL team last month is the latest in a rush of billion-dollar transactions involving trophy sporting teams.
If you can choose the right sporting “franchise” to buy, the returns are eye-watering.
Our head of global equities Ashley Pittard hasn’t bought any sporting teams recently.
But like the most successful sport transactions, Ashley focuses on what he calls “franchise assets”.
“Franchise assets – companies that are number one or two in their space or are monopoly or duopoly business – are highly valued among investors at the moment,” Ashley says, pointing to the tech leaders dominating Wall Street.
“The lesson for investors is that you want to be selective, and you want to be concentrated when investing.”
“You also want to be defensive because there are uncertainties in the world around the macro-outlook and credit.”
If you experienced shoulder-to-shoulder tourist crowds during a recent overseas holiday, you might be wondering how to get exposure to the fast-recovering travel industry.
One way is via plane manufacturers says Pendal global equities PM Ashley Pittard.
Ashley recently attended the 2023 Paris Air Show during two months of travel, where he met company executives across Europe.
More than 1000 new plane orders were announced at the show, demonstrating the rude health of the two major manufacturers, Boeing and Airbus, says Ashley.
“Demand for planes is very, very strong,” Pittard says. “The backlog for the industry is about 8000 units which is about the next ten years of production.
“China is slowly opening up again, albeit slower than Europe. There is also a sustainability trend – airlines are getting rid of older planes and buying new, more efficient options. And there is also higher airline yields – more people are flying.”
Bank of America last week became the first big Wall Street bank to reverse its recession call.
Are they right?
“Given the strong capital expenditure numbers we’re seeing in the US June-quarter earnings season, it’s going to be very hard for the US to have a recession this year,” says Ashley Pittard, who heads up Pendal’s global equities investment team.
“What you are seeing in the earnings numbers, and what you have seen the entire year, is that capital expenditure is accelerating – 15 per cent in the current quarter, year-on-year, and 14 per cent in the first quarter.”
“It’s very hard to have a recession when your capital expenditure is so high,” Ashley says.
In terms of numbers, US company earnings have beaten estimates by about four per cent, and by one per cent on sales.
Turmoil among global banks over the past six weeks has created opportunities for investors, with Swiss-based UBS and Wall Street giants JP Morgan and Wells Fargo the top picks, says our head of global equities Ashley Pittard.
“You want to invest in a bank that’s one or two in its market, and has high-quality management,” Ash says.
“Bank stocks can go down in a crisis environment, but the quality banks don’t go broke – that’s a key point.”
Banks should do well in coming quarters as they reprice credit and achieve higher margins, he argues.
“If we fast-forward through the year, there’s no doubt there’s going to be a recession in the US.
“The yield curve will steepen and that’s good for banks because they borrow short and lend long and they should get a wider spread.
“That should feed back in a couple of years into higher earnings.”
Don’t worry about a US recession, says Pendal’s head of global equities Ashley Pittard.
Instead, get set for a decade of growth underpinned by a rebound in capital spending as US businesses re-build their domestic supply chains.
Capital expenditure is a critical driver of economic growth, says Ash, who manages Pendal Concentrated Global Share Fund.
The Biden government this month opened applications for US$53 billion in manufacturing subsidies under the CHIPS and Science Act, which seeks to boost semiconductor and high-tech manufacturing.
Already, US$138 billion of capital spending has been committed from companies including Intel, Samsung and Texas Instruments.
“It’s just like Warren Buffett says: never bet against America.”
The macro-economy – inflation, growth, employment – drives top-line sentiment among investors, observes our head of global equities Ashley Pittard.
But earnings in sectors and companies drive the valuation of specific stocks, he says.
Take Facebook owner Meta, which gained 25 per cent last week after a better-than-expected result. Then the stock fell back sharply, albeit briefly, when strong US labour force hinted at further rate rises.
Overall, the latest quarterly US reporting season is looking better than expected at the halfway point, says Ashley.
Earnings growth is down about 3 per cent “which is marginally better than what was forecast”.
Ash believes it’s time to “take a little bit of money off the table” when it comes to energy stocks.
“It’s highly, highly likely that there’s going to be a US recession this year,” says our head of global equities Ashley Pittard.
“But there’s a difference this time around because of robust capital expenditure.
“It’s clear this recession is going to be shallow. Invest through it, because valuations are compelling.
“There’s been a de-rating of the market and we are going to have earnings growth when we get out of this downturn.”
Which sectors? “Last year we were pushing the Covid losers – financials and energy – and they’ve done very well,” says Ashley.
“Going forward you still want some of those names, but also you need some of the 2022 losers.
“Names like Amazon, Netflix and other media streaming assets. You want to have Covid losers plus selective 2022 losers.”
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