The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Internatio­nal stocks seen outperform­ing US in 2020

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NEW YORK: Even though the US stock market continues a record-breaking rally that has sent the benchmark S&P 500 index up nearly 25% for the year, investors appear to be looking elsewhere for better values in the year ahead.

World stock funds brought in Us$8.2bil in investor inflows over the last two weeks, breaking a losing streak that dated back to early September, according to Investment Company Institute data. US equity funds, meanwhile, lost more than Us$10bil in outflows over the last two weeks, extending a retreat that has spanned seven of the last eight weeks.

The move into overseas stocks comes as economic fundamenta­ls appear to be improving in parts of Europe and Asia while US growth looks to be slowing, drawing money away from a market that had been an outperfome­r.

Even with the MSCI All World Country Index, which tracks global equities, nearing record highs set in January, 2018, fund managers and analysts say global stock markets still offer a better chance to outperform U.S. stocks in the year ahead. The cite significan­tly lower valuations after failing to keep pace with the US equity market for much of the last decade.

“We’re starting to see a period where valuation is going to be the driver for future returns,” said David Marcus, chief investment officer at Evermore Global Advisors. He has been shifting more of his portfolio into European stocks such as Belgium-based medical lab equipment maker Fagron NV and French media giant Bollore SA.

The forward price-to-earning ratio for the broad Stoxx 600 index, for instance, is 15.4, well below the 19.3 forward P/E of the S&P 500, according to Refinitiv data.

Any narrowing of that large gap in valuations could be a driver, even for companies that have strong stock performanc­e this year, said Thomas Banks, a portfolio manager for the Federated Internatio­nal Small-mid Company fund who has been increasing his stake in European companies.

He remains bullish on companies such as London Stock Exchange Group PLC and Sweden-based casino game operator Evolution Gaming Group AB, both of which are already up 50 percent for the year to date.

“Some of the higher valuations for US shares has been warranted because the US had a much faster growth rate. But going forward if there’s a trade deal announced or an amicable solution to Brexit, the divergent growth rates could converge again” as US growth slows, said Banks.

The US economy grew at a 1.9% annual rate in the third quarter, down from 3.1% during the first three months of the year. The European Commission expects the economy in the eurozone to expand at an annual rate of 1.2% over the course of 2020, defying market expectatio­ns that growth rates would continue to fall from four-year lows in 2018.

Germany, the eurozone’s biggest economy, grew 0.1% in the third quarter after contractin­g 0.2% in the previous three months, easing fears that the bloc would fall into a recession.

Further declines in the US growth rate will also likely bring down the value of the dollar, which has hovered near record highs and eaten into the returns of investing in overseas markets, Banks said.

Danton Goei, portfolio manager of the Davis Internatio­nal fund, said more attractive valuations are pushing him into Asian stocks and multi-national companies that are positioned to benefit from domestic consumptio­n in India and China.

He is bullish on Chinese companies that are not highly dependent on trade such as tech giant Tencent Holdings Ltd and for-profit educationa­l company New Oriental Education and Technology Group Inc.

“You can see that the trade war has had a very limited impact on their businesses and yet valuations have come down a lot because of the macro concerns. When you have very strong businesses and their valuations are falling for unrelated reasons, that appears like a good buying opportunit­y,” Goei said.

At the same time, he is adding to positions in companies such as French aircraft engine maker Safran SA, which he expects to benefit from growth in the Indian travel market as more consumers enter the middle class. Shares of the company are up 41% for the year to date, yet still trade near their lowest price-to-earnings ratio over the last 12 months.

“The big difference in valuations obviously matters in terms of your likelihood of outperform­ing in the future,” he said.

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