Growth Stocks’ Leadership Will Be Short-Lived, Ned Davis Predicts

Analysts at the celebrated research shop say value will come to the fore during the upcoming recession.



Growth stocks are leading value this year, but that will not last long, according to Ned Davis Research. That long-expected recession—when it finally hits—and the currently upward-trending interest rates tend to favor value, two of the firm’s leading savants said in a webinar.

“The next several years will be more about value,” said Ed Clissold, chief U.S. strategist at Ned Davis. He pointed to long stretches of time over the past 30 years when value outpaced growth, although sometimes the two were close.

Thus far this year, the S&P 500 growth index has returned 11.2%, and its value counterpart just 4.5%. Tech stocks, the top dogs among growth sectors, sank badly last year but are up by one-third in 2023. In snake-bitten 2022, the growth gauge fell far more than the value one, negative 29.5% versus minus 5.4%.

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Recessions tend to favor value, which often has a more defensive character, Clissold said. “The [next] recession, which keeps getting pushed out, is value’s best chance” to regain the lead over growth, he argued. Coming out of a recession, value should shine with more-quickly-rising earnings, as history has shown, he declared.

Plus other outside factors, such as deglobalization, should hobble growth up ahead, added Rob Anderson, Ned Davis’ U.S. sector strategist. The reason: Expansion overseas, where tech and other growth sectors have thrived, will be narrowed.

Clissold noted that growth’s 2023 rebound, which surpasses value, ended the second-shortest period of value supremacy since tracking began in 1930. The shortest one followed the 1991 Gulf War, a brief conflict that quickly escalated oil prices—energy is a value sector—only for them to deflate with Iraq’s sudden defeat.

One recent oddity is that some tech-oriented growth stocks got hit so badly last year that, despite their 2023 comeback, they are classified as value plays: notably Microsoft, Meta Platforms and Amazon. Meanwhile, Exxon Mobil, a longtime value name as an energy stock, is currently listed in the growth category. “Sector makeups can change pretty quickly” nowadays, Anderson remarked.

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Kosovo Launches Sovereign Wealth Fund

The strategic/development fund will likely be seeded with stakes in six major government-owned companies.



The Republic of Kosovo officially launched a sovereign wealth fund on May 7.

According to financial boutique and pension fund tracker Global SWF, which was invited to the launch and presented a market update to the prime minister of Kosovo, the fund will take the form of a strategic/development fund. It is expected to initially be seeded with stakes of less than 51% in six government-owned companies: Trepča Mines, Kosovo Energy Corp., postal services provider Post of Kosovo, Telecom of Kosovo, infrastructure company KESCO and Kosovo Railways.

In addition to managing the companies, the fund also aims to facilitate foreign direct investment from other sovereign wealth funds. The fund will also likely be governed by a non-executive board set up by Kosovo’s government, comprised of four to six independent members, which could include international advisers.

“The government stands strongly behind this vision of the sovereign fund, believing that such an initiative will result in stabilization of the economy through diversity, creation of profit for the state through wise investments, generating wealth for generations to come,” Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti said in a statement.

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According to a spokesperson for Global SWF, the management team and portfolio of the sovereign wealth fund have not yet been defined. While some assets have been identified to be transferred, they have not yet been valued.

The fund is expected to comprise a relatively small team, according to Emanuel Bajra, a member of the working group set up by the Kosovan government to establish the fund. He told Global SWF that the CEO could be recruited externally to “bring best practices from global capital markets and sovereign wealth funds.” He added that the design of the fund’s governance and accountability is still evolving, “but we are confident it will have no political influence.”

Bajra also said the fund’s intent is to “intensify and solidify” the financial services and mineral sector, which include lithium, gold, chrome and lignite mining.

“Once the fund is established, we can pursue two different routes: either target-specific SWFs to discuss partnerships or go on road shows,” he said. “But this will in any case come after we have absorbed the six major assets and ensure the profitability and financial sustainability of our portfolio.”

Kosovo, a province of the former Yugoslavia, declared its independence from Serbia in 2008. It is recognized by more than half of United Nations member states but cannot join the U.N. due to objections by two permanent members of the Security Council, Russia and China. Kosovo applied for European Union membership in December 2022.

 

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