The factors likely to see Aussie stocks outperform in H2

T.Rowe-Price/equities/

20 June 2022
| By Laura Dew |
image
image image
expand image

Australian stocks are set to see relative outperformance in the second half of the year, according to T. Rowe Price, despite difficulties in the first half.

The ASX 200 had lost 15.3% since the start of the year to 17 June, reflecting a global downward trend where the S&P 500 had lost 23% and the FTSE 100 had lost 6%.

In a mid-year equity outlook, Randal Jenneke, head of Australian equity, said he was optimistic this trend would reverse in the second half thanks to several macro factors.

“We believe Australian stocks look set for further relative outperformance in the second half of the year. Australia will likely benefit from increased exports of liquid natural gas and coal to Europe due to tighter sanctions on Russian energy. At the same time, more fiscal stimulus to support growth in China could help to support the price of iron ore, even as the global economy slows.

“We think it is better to prepare for slowing growth and rising recession risk in 2023 rather than dwell on what stares us in the face today (higher inflation).”

He said value stocks were likely to feel the most pressure and that quality growth stocks were the ones likely to perform better.

T. Rowe Price had increased its exposure to consumer staples and healthcare at the expense of other cyclical parts. Attractive stocks included US-dollar earners ResMed, Aristocrat and commodity firms like Rio Tinto and Allkem. On the other hand, it was underweight Australian banks which it felt it had the potential to weakly sharply in six to 12 months.

“We expect quality growth stocks to come back into favor later in 2022 as policy rates stabilise and long term yields decline. Having reduced exposure to many of these growth companies in 2021, we have considerable scope to take positions higher. In our view, this could help the portfolio to strive to perform well as markets move beyond their current inflation and interest rate fears to refocus on the issue of slowing growth, both domestically and globally.

“After a period of stagflation, we believe recession risks will come to dominate equity markets in 2023. We believe it is better to prepare for what is likely to come in 2023 (slowing growth and rising recession risks) rather than to dwell on what stares us in the face today (higher inflation).”

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

The succession dilemma is more than just a matter of commitments.This isn’t simply about younger vs. older advisers. It’...

1 week 2 days ago

Significant ethical issues there. If a relationship is in the process of breaking down then both parties are likely to b...

1 month ago

It's not licensees not putting them on, it's small businesses (that are licensed) that cannot afford to put them on. The...

1 month 1 week ago

AMP has settled on two court proceedings: one class action which affected superannuation members and a second regarding insurer policies. ...

2 days 16 hours ago

ASIC has released the results of the latest adviser exam, with August’s pass mark improving on the sitting from a year ago. ...

1 week 5 days ago

The inquiry into the collapse of Dixon Advisory and broader wealth management companies by the Senate economics references committee will not be re-adopted. ...

2 weeks 5 days ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND
Powered by MOMENTUM MEDIA
moneymanagement logo