Home Breadcrumb caret podcast Breadcrumb caret Advisor To Go Breadcrumb caret Equities Group 20 SUBSCRIBE TO EPISODE ALERTS Access the experts when you need them For Advisor Use Only. See full disclaimer Powered by Choosing Large-Cap Stocks Amid Rising Rates The market has seen significant sector dispersion this year. October 12, 2022 4 min 09 sec Featuring Tiffany Li From Rothschild Asset Management Related Article Text transcript Tiffany Li, director at Rothschild & Co Asset Management. In terms of the impact of rising interest rates on large cap stocks, we see multiple compressions on long-duration stocks, especially within the technology sector. While rising rates are often good for banks, the threat of a looming recession has weighed on many within the sector. And more recently, we had some companies in many sectors highlight foreign exchange headwinds from currency movement, particularly the stronger U.S. dollar. Regarding adjustments made to our portfolio, we have made relatively few portfolio changes this year. However, we have turned back some of our energy exposure on substantial out-performance of that sector. We also trimmed some of our holdings in aerospace and defense, and shifted our exposure in that industry incrementally towards aerospace. We also found new investment ideas in the media, medical equipment, and technology sector. Lastly, I already mentioned that a June rebalance of a benchmark led us to trim down our healthcare services holding, and add to our technology holding. In terms of which sectors provide opportunity, as a result of our bottom-up approach given by stock selections, the portfolio is overweight manufacturing, energy, and healthcare. For manufacturing, we’re over weight with aerospace and defense, where we see attractive risk and reward given escalating global geopolitical tensions and company-specific product cycles that way. In terms of capital cost, we own a few sectors that are growing relevant to infrastructure spending, as well as some [inaudible 00:02:04] industrial. For energy, we believe the supply in that picture is still constricted. We can’t simply flip a switch to increase supply. The energy stocks we hold, do have attractive relative valuation, and generate a lot of free cash flow, at around $80 oil. Within healthcare, we’re over weight in health care services and pharmaceuticals. For our pharmaceutical holdings geared towards value, we also hold down growth in appearance that provides better balance in the portfolio. But backing up for a sec, at a higher level, while we had hoped this year would mark a return of stock picking, so far it’s a market primarily dominated by the macro and significant sector dispersion. We remain committed to maintaining a balanced portfolio, especially during times of inflection points and low conviction. Oftentimes during periods of [inaudible 00:03:05], great companies can become very unbalanced as investors politely head for the exit in an effort to be with exposure. With the material drawdown across the U.S. equity market cap section during the first half of 2022, we believe the bargain bin is once again filling up with great companies, particularly within the cyclical and growth sectors. We believe it’s approaching the time to take a more patient view of the quality secular compounders that offer superior long-term growth, return and growth process. As such, we continue to believe that a balanced portfolio, good representation to attractively valued large-cap stock, that carry cash flow above the internal need, have high returns on capital, and enjoy competitive advantages, appears as the most effective way to generate consistent alpha for our clients across market cycles. Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo Related Podcasts Equities Canadian Stock Picks by Sector Best opportunities can outperform regardless of economic backdrop, senior portfolio manager says. Featuring Craig Jerusalim | May 27, 2024 From 12 min 28 sec | Related Article Equities Bull Energy Market Has Room to Run Amid net-zero transition, oil won’t go out with a whimper, portfolio manager says. Featuring Daniel Greenspan | May 6, 2024 From 10 min 32 sec | Related Article Equities Market Opportunities Amid Improving Economic Growth Balanced portfolio delivers over long term, multi-asset manager says. Featuring Michael Sager | April 22, 2024 From 10 min 47 sec | Related Article
Group 20 SUBSCRIBE TO EPISODE ALERTS Access the experts when you need them For Advisor Use Only. See full disclaimer Powered by Choosing Large-Cap Stocks Amid Rising Rates The market has seen significant sector dispersion this year. October 12, 2022 4 min 09 sec Featuring Tiffany Li From Rothschild Asset Management Related Article Text transcript Tiffany Li, director at Rothschild & Co Asset Management. In terms of the impact of rising interest rates on large cap stocks, we see multiple compressions on long-duration stocks, especially within the technology sector. While rising rates are often good for banks, the threat of a looming recession has weighed on many within the sector. And more recently, we had some companies in many sectors highlight foreign exchange headwinds from currency movement, particularly the stronger U.S. dollar. Regarding adjustments made to our portfolio, we have made relatively few portfolio changes this year. However, we have turned back some of our energy exposure on substantial out-performance of that sector. We also trimmed some of our holdings in aerospace and defense, and shifted our exposure in that industry incrementally towards aerospace. We also found new investment ideas in the media, medical equipment, and technology sector. Lastly, I already mentioned that a June rebalance of a benchmark led us to trim down our healthcare services holding, and add to our technology holding. In terms of which sectors provide opportunity, as a result of our bottom-up approach given by stock selections, the portfolio is overweight manufacturing, energy, and healthcare. For manufacturing, we’re over weight with aerospace and defense, where we see attractive risk and reward given escalating global geopolitical tensions and company-specific product cycles that way. In terms of capital cost, we own a few sectors that are growing relevant to infrastructure spending, as well as some [inaudible 00:02:04] industrial. For energy, we believe the supply in that picture is still constricted. We can’t simply flip a switch to increase supply. The energy stocks we hold, do have attractive relative valuation, and generate a lot of free cash flow, at around $80 oil. Within healthcare, we’re over weight in health care services and pharmaceuticals. For our pharmaceutical holdings geared towards value, we also hold down growth in appearance that provides better balance in the portfolio. But backing up for a sec, at a higher level, while we had hoped this year would mark a return of stock picking, so far it’s a market primarily dominated by the macro and significant sector dispersion. We remain committed to maintaining a balanced portfolio, especially during times of inflection points and low conviction. Oftentimes during periods of [inaudible 00:03:05], great companies can become very unbalanced as investors politely head for the exit in an effort to be with exposure. With the material drawdown across the U.S. equity market cap section during the first half of 2022, we believe the bargain bin is once again filling up with great companies, particularly within the cyclical and growth sectors. We believe it’s approaching the time to take a more patient view of the quality secular compounders that offer superior long-term growth, return and growth process. As such, we continue to believe that a balanced portfolio, good representation to attractively valued large-cap stock, that carry cash flow above the internal need, have high returns on capital, and enjoy competitive advantages, appears as the most effective way to generate consistent alpha for our clients across market cycles. Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo