For the year to the end of October, the FTSE/JSE Shareholder Weighted All Share Index (SWIX) was down 13.6%. Over the last 12 months it was 11.1% lower, including dividends. Investors would have been substantially better off in South African government bonds and cash.
Source: 27four Investment Managers
Even over three years, the SWIX has produced an annual return of just 1%. After inflation, that means performance has been negative.
This illustrates the scale of the sell-off on the local market. Given the weakness in the South African economy, political uncertainty and a negative global environment, investors have largely walked away from the JSE.
However, as 27four Investment Managers chief investment officer Claire Rentzke points out, these kind of short-term pull-backs often create long-term opportunities.
“Over the shorter term it has been a scary picture,” she says. “Markets have been volatile, and investors have been losing money, but we need to be able to look through the noise. As Warren Buffett says, it’s time to be greedy when people are fearful. Right now we are seeing a lot of fear and we think that presents an opportunity to take advantage of assets that have sold off.”
Local prospects
Portfolio manager at 27four, Nadir Thokan, points out that if you compare the JSE to global markets on a price-to-book metric, it is currently at a 20% discount. Even if return on equity only shows a marginal improvement in 2019, which would keep it below the global average, these valuations look attractive.
“You can make the argument that the local market is delivering poorer cash generation and therefore it should trade on a discount,” says Thokan. “But when you start at this discount and have improving return on equity, historically the next 12 months give you a 15% dollar return on average.”
Source: 27four Investment Managers
“The fact that we are on very depressed multiples tells you that there is not a lot of optimism priced into the market, and not a lot of confidence in terms of what companies are going to be able to deliver,” Thokan says. “But if companies marginally outperform these very poor expectations, you could see quite a lot happening because their prices are exceedingly depressed.”
Some analysts might argue that the current multiple is however fair because it is forward-looking. With the South African economy in such a weak state, prospects for local earnings are poor, on top of which many listed companies have made some ill-judged offshore acquisitions that are weighing them down.
But Thokan points out that over the last two years company earnings on the JSE have actually grown at a reasonable rate.
“Yes we are in a technical recession, but we have been in an effective recession for the last decade,” he argues. “If companies were growing their earnings in the last two years, there’s nothing that would seem to indicate that they would have a more difficult time growing their earnings going forward. Even if earnings stay steady at this rate, equity markets are significantly better valued than they were two years ago. You don’t need massive amounts of earnings growth to find value at these levels, given the extent of the sell-off we have seen.”
Source: 27four Investment Managers
What makes the local market additionally attractive in his opinion is that the price-to-earnings differential between the most expensive and least expensive stocks has narrowed significantly. It is now below the long-term average.
“That is telling you that the low quality part of the market and the high quality part of that market are not that different in terms of how expensive they are,” says Thokan. “If you are making an equity investment today, you don’t have to invest only in poor quality companies to find value.”
British American Tobacco, which is one of the most stable earnings producers on the JSE, has fallen over 30%. Shoprite, which is recognised by international fund managers as a world class retailer, has de-rated 25% from its peak.
The uncertainty is priced in
In addition to the attractive valuations locally, Nadir believes that investors are currently placing too much emphasis on recent returns from international markets. While it is true that over the last five years global equities have outperformed the JSE, for the decade before that the JSE delivered substantially better returns.
Investors should therefore be wary of recency bias when allocating their money.
“There is a notion in South Africa that the answer to all your problems is to take as much money as you can offshore because the economy is going down the toilet and our politicians don’t know what they are doing,” says Thokan. “The belief is that we are going to see rand weakness of 10% a year, global markets growing 15% every year, and offshore everything is going to be fine.”
However, while investors should always diversify and keep a portion of their portfolio invested overseas, they should be careful of underestimating the risks elsewhere.
“What this year has taught us is that there is as much uncertainty offshore as there is locally,” Thokan says. “Economists are revising their growth forecasts for the US lower because of things like trade wars, policy uncertainty, and congress being at loggerheads.
“Yes there is a question mark around policy certainty in South Africa, but at least that is reflected in the price,” he adds. “The danger offshore is that there is as much policy uncertainty and yet markets are trading at just below record multiples. That is a dangerous place to be parking the maximum amount of money that you can.”
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