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Macquarie Wealth Management: 19 May 2020 Investment Strategy Update: Why we are less worried about valuations

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How expensive is the Australian Equity market?

The Australian equity market’s (12-month forward) P/E multiple has surged during the recent market rally to almost 18x (from its 23rd March low of 12.3x) and is closing in on its recent market peak P/E of 18.7x.



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This has led to calls that the market is overvalued and that the “disconnect” with economic and earnings fundamentals will need to be corrected by a market decline. We don’t agree with this simple assessment.

The rally from March 23 has pushed valuation metrics to levels which are concerning – we do not dispute this.

Because a lot of “hope” is now in the price of risk assets, this makes the near-term risk-reward outlook poor. But this does not necessarily mean equities are on the cusp of a correction. Rather it means that the cushion for disappointment is low. We don’t see anything out of the ordinary with the rebound in the market and/or the resulting sharp increase in valuations. We think there are several factors that investors must keep in mind when assessing the valuation outlook for the equity market.

1. Equity market prices are a forward-looking indicator. Earnings lag the turning point in the market and hence during economic downturns, it is normal to see a sharp rise in the P/E multiple.

2. The recent surge in the P/E reflects the market’s belief that the collapse in earnings is only temporary. Using longer term earnings expectations (12-24 months) the P/E multiple is meaningfully lower and much closer to levels seen between 2014-2018.



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3. Valuations are not a good predictor of short-term returns, but they are a much better predictor of long-term returns (i.e., 10 years). Buying equities on an elevated P/E says more about the return an investor is likely to get out through 2030 than out through year end 2021.

4. Equities have traded expensively since 2014 (when they normalized post the European debt crisis) but relative to other assets (bonds in particular) they do not look excessive particularly given the latest rally in bonds which has pushed yields below 1%.

5. On a cyclically adjusted PE multiple (using earnings over a 10-year period) which adjusts for short term fluctuations, the Australian market is trading well below the long-term average. In other words, while the PE looks expensive on near term earnings, the valuation has corrected substantially on a through the cycle measure.

6. The market PE ratio hides a widening valuation dispersion within the market. As the market has rebounded, the premium paid for “growth” stocks has continued to widen versus “value” stocks. Thus, there are large parts of the Australian market that are looking relatively cheap despite the rally.



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Do lower rates post COVID-19 justify a higher P/E?

Post the GFC, valuations for risk assets have been higher than the pre GFC long term average. In part, this reflects the decline in bond yields and their impact on the cost of capital. With interest rates likely to be even lower in a post COVID-19 world, does this justify an even higher valuation multiple for equities? All things equal it should, but it might take time for risk premiums to fall and/or earnings growth rates to normalize. We think it is more likely that companies which benefit from COVID-19 disruptions will trade on higher multiples and that this will result in greater valuation dispersion within the index rather than a higher aggregate index multiples, for the near term.



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Which stocks are screening “cheaply” on a ‘cyclically-adjusted’ basis?

Just as the market’s P/E looks high using near-term earnings but looks more benign using ‘medium term’ earnings, so the same analysis can be applied at a stock level. We run the following stock screen:

  • ASX200 stocks rated Outperform within the Macquarie coverage universe;
  • We take FY22 forecast EPS as ‘normalised’ EPS. We apply a ‘haircut’ of 15% to the FY22 EPS forecast.
  • We then calculate a ratio of FY22 EPS (adjusted) to FY19 EPS. We screen for stocks with a ratio above 0.95 (which signifies earnings resilience)
  • We sort by P/E based on FY22 adjusted earnings relative to the 3 year average of the 2-year forward P/E.
  • The results are listed below. This is not a recommended list.



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Investment Conclusions:

  • The Australian market P/E is high versus history, but the valuation is a better guide for long term returns than short term performance.
  • Our preferred “through the cycle” P/E measure has corrected dramatically through the coronavirus correction and is now well below average levels.
  • The Australian market is characterized by an extreme level of valuation dispersion. Certain stocks/sectors (healthcare, technology, industrials) are trading at record premiums while others are trading at record discounts (financials, property, materials).
  • Given the rally, we approach the equity market with some caution, but we remain buyer on weakness for a market that is in a consolidation phase, but which should be meaningfully higher in 12 months.
  • We recommend investors raise any equity underweight positions back to at least neutral with excess cash drip feed into the market during periods of weakness.



Jason and the Investment Strategy Team

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The report was finalised on 18 May 2020
Recommendation definitions (Macquarie Australia/New Zealand)
Outperform – return >3% in excess of benchmark return
Neutral – return within 3% of benchmark return
Underperform – return >3% below benchmark return
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