Published by Gbaf News
Posted on February 8, 2017

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Published by Gbaf News
Posted on February 8, 2017

By Jaisal Pastakia, Investment Manager at Heartwood Investment Management
European equities has been an unloved market over the past year, with performance lagging the US, UK and emerging markets. While it remains an out-of-consensus trade, recent developments have reinforced our view to maintain an overweight equity position to this region for the following reasons:
Inevitably, though, the political calendar in 2017 complicates this investment thesis, as event risk is likely to be at the forefront of global investors concerns. While political headline noise will contribute to short-term swings in investor sentiment, the main support for European equities is that we are now seeing real, fundamental economic improvements across the region, accompanied by prospects of stronger company pricing power and profitability.
Of course, there is further to go and the region’s governments are making slow progress to implement structural economic reforms. However, the improvements already seen should help to ameliorate some of the populist forces in key countries facing elections this year – the Netherlands, France, Germany and possibly Italy. Moreover, we take some comfort from the market’s response in the second half of 2016 to key political events, when investors looked through both the Spanish elections and the Italian referendum to focus on perceptions of stronger global growth prospects.
There is also a risk that investors become overly pessimistic about politics. The most likely outcomes in the Netherlands and Italy (if we are to seen an election here) are coalition governments due to their proportional representation systems, which would maintain the status quo. In Germany, there appears to be no credible opposition candidate to Chancellor Merkel and any headway on the migrant crisis should help to consolidate her support. In fact, the main opposition party, the SPD, has been making some gains in recent opinion polls but at the expense of extremist parties.
So this leaves France. Marine Le Pen is likely to be one of the final two candidates in the second round of elections. Under this scenario, we would look to the 2012 election as a precedent, when the centre left and centre right coalesced to support Francoise Hollande against Le Pen. We believe this could happen again to block the extremist movement. If so, there could be a realistic prospect that France could elect a ‘change’ candidate in favour of reforming the economy.
Investing in European equities is not necessarily for the faint-hearted, but we believe there is scope for this market to outperform this year.
By Jaisal Pastakia, Investment Manager at Heartwood Investment Management
European equities has been an unloved market over the past year, with performance lagging the US, UK and emerging markets. While it remains an out-of-consensus trade, recent developments have reinforced our view to maintain an overweight equity position to this region for the following reasons:
Inevitably, though, the political calendar in 2017 complicates this investment thesis, as event risk is likely to be at the forefront of global investors concerns. While political headline noise will contribute to short-term swings in investor sentiment, the main support for European equities is that we are now seeing real, fundamental economic improvements across the region, accompanied by prospects of stronger company pricing power and profitability.
Of course, there is further to go and the region’s governments are making slow progress to implement structural economic reforms. However, the improvements already seen should help to ameliorate some of the populist forces in key countries facing elections this year – the Netherlands, France, Germany and possibly Italy. Moreover, we take some comfort from the market’s response in the second half of 2016 to key political events, when investors looked through both the Spanish elections and the Italian referendum to focus on perceptions of stronger global growth prospects.
There is also a risk that investors become overly pessimistic about politics. The most likely outcomes in the Netherlands and Italy (if we are to seen an election here) are coalition governments due to their proportional representation systems, which would maintain the status quo. In Germany, there appears to be no credible opposition candidate to Chancellor Merkel and any headway on the migrant crisis should help to consolidate her support. In fact, the main opposition party, the SPD, has been making some gains in recent opinion polls but at the expense of extremist parties.
So this leaves France. Marine Le Pen is likely to be one of the final two candidates in the second round of elections. Under this scenario, we would look to the 2012 election as a precedent, when the centre left and centre right coalesced to support Francoise Hollande against Le Pen. We believe this could happen again to block the extremist movement. If so, there could be a realistic prospect that France could elect a ‘change’ candidate in favour of reforming the economy.
Investing in European equities is not necessarily for the faint-hearted, but we believe there is scope for this market to outperform this year.