Following a good year globally for the high-quality stocks that
we favour, valuations in certain parts of the market have started
to look stretched. However, we believe some investors have been far
too quick to dismiss whole categories of the market as expensive,
ignoring the strong competitive advantages and positive long-term
growth profiles of high-quality businesses within these
sectors.
This is particularly the case with technology companies, where
the explosive gains of the so called 'FANG' stocks, Facebook,
Amazon, Netflix and Google (now Alphabet), have been well
documented. Over the past 12 months, we have slightly reduced our
exposure to some technology names where valuations have looked
pricey.
But we believe other technology stocks are by no means expensive
and could even perform better in 2018 than they did in 2017. The
simple fact is that if we thought a stock was expensive in respect
to its long-term growth prospects we would not hold it.The key is
to be as stock specific as possible, focusing on the fundamentals
of individual names rather than sectors as a whole.
Microsoft is a good example of why stocks need to be judged on
their own merits. Contrary to what might be expected, it is not on
the very high multiples many people associate with technology
giants. At the time of writing, on a price/earnings basis Microsoft
was trading on around 30 times, which makes it neither cheap nor
expensive.1 Moreover, as the company achieves traction
in its cloud business, Azure, it is one of the stocks that might
well perform more strongly in 2018.
When assessing competitive advantages, we look for companies
protected by economic moats. So, it is positive to see that
long-term users of Microsoft's desktop software and servers are
sticking with the company they are familiar with when looking for a
cloud-computing solution. For the past several quarters, Azure has
been growing much faster than Amazon Web Services, the leader in
the cloud infrastructure market.2 The trust many users
have in the Microsoft brand has created an economic moat
reinforcing the business's competitive advantage.
Over the past 12 months, we have slightly reduced our
exposure to some technology names where valuations have looked
pricey. But, we believe other technology stocks are by no means
expensive and could even perform better in 2018 than they did in
2017.
Regulatory threat
The biggest risk to the growth of the likes of Amazon, Facebook
and, possibly, Microsoft over the next 12 months is not their
valuations, but instead a growing political and regulatory
threat.
Governments worldwide are searching for ways to more heavily tax
and control the tech giants. The British chancellor Philip
Hammond's plans, announced in the November Budget, to consider
taxing technology companies based on their sales in the UK could be
a harbinger of things to come. Calls for tighter regulation have
amplified since the recognition that Russian interference in
Facebook and Google may have influenced the US election result in
2016.
Regulatory risk, not just in the UK but globally, is why
Alphabet, on a P/E of 36 times at the times of writing,1 is in our
view cheap. The threat of tighter regulation in the tech space is a
factor we will be keeping a close eye on in 2018.
Emerging opportunities
We will also be watching developments in India, which is a
market that we are very bullish on in the long term. India's
economic growth slowed in the past year after November 2016's bank
note demonetisation drive stifled activity in cash-dependent
sectors. Similarly, July's introduction of a Goods and Services Tax
(GST) caused disruption as businesses initially struggled to
adapt.
Now these events are in the rear-view mirror, we expect a
re-acceleration of growth, fuelled in part by the introduction of
the GST, which has cut red tape and will increase tax revenues.
Whether the economic pick-up results in significant share price
gains for Indian companies in 2018 has yet to be seen, but it is
positive longer term.
Given that our investment approach is bottom up, our decisions
tend not to be too driven by macro factors. But India looks like a
macro opportunity that it would be unwise to ignore. Likewise, the
hugely significant demographic shifts taking place globally also
present an opportunity.
In much of the world - India being one of the few exceptions -
populations are ageing fast, ensuring that the outlook is positive
for healthcare stocks. Any companies that help take costs out of
the healthcare system look particularly well placed to benefit. In
2015, the overall share of the US economy devoted to healthcare
spending was a staggering 17.8%.3
We are bullish on India where we expect to see a
re-acceleration of growth, fuelled in part by the introduction of
the Goods and Services Tax which has cut red tape and will increase
tax revenues.
Committed to quality
Our high-conviction approach to investing focuses on identifying
the world's best quality companies with sustainable competitive
advantages that deliver persistent, reliable and repeatable
results. I make no claim to be able to predict whether quality
stocks overall will have a good 2018 on global markets.
The strong performance of high-quality growth over the past year
was partly a catch-up effect. Right after the November 2016 US
election, high-quality growth did poorly relative to small cap and
value as investors sought out cheap, economically-sensitive names.
But as hopes fizzled that Donald Trump could enact reflationary
policies that would substantially boost US economic growth, the
growth style of investing returned to the fore.
Such shifts in sentiment happen frequently and I have no idea
whether quality will outperform value again in 2018. However, I am
confident that the high-quality global companies we favour are best
placed to prosper on a multi-year view.
1Financial Times: 28 November 2017.
2 CNBC: Microsoft Azure is growing faster than AWS and
big brands are behind the expansion, 28 October 2017.
3CMS.gov: National Health Expenditure Data,National
Health Expenditures 2015 Highlights.
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