European Fund Mgrs See Equities As Good Bet For Recovery
By HENRY E. TEITELBAUM Dow Jones Newswires
PARIS -- With European equity markets still in full retreat as the fourth quarter begins, a fund manager would seem very brave or foolish to be betting on a bounce.
And most aren't, at least not until they see shares stabilize.
But while clearly not immune from weakness elsewhere on the globe, fund managers say European shares remain among the best bets in the medium term, benefiting from corporate restructuring, low interest rates, a developing equity culture and a decent level of economic growth.
"We think there is very good value in the market, which is not too far from the bottom," said Philippe Alter, chief investment officer for CCF Capital Management in Paris. But he added, "We are looking for less volatility in the market before coming back."
Alter said that for him to feel confident investing in European equities, he would like to see daily average market volatility fall to the 1%-to-2%-range from the 5%-range where prices currently fluctuate.
European stocks were hit harder than the U.S. in the third quarter, with the Dow Jones Stoxx Index of 50 leading European securities falling 16% in the period, compared with 13% for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
The market selloff in Europe was as unexpected as it was dramatic.
Jean Francois de Laulanie, director of investment strategy at Societe Generale Asset Management in Paris, explains that until July, turmoil that had gripped Asia and Japan and was even starting to hurt the U.S. was relatively easy to ignore in Europe because of companies' low exposure to the region.
But one month later, the crisis in Russia hit much closer to home. "The Russia crisis was like a bomb," he said. "People began to think Europe could be the same as Japan and the U.S."
That's when U.S. pension funds, with their heavy placement capacity, began to significantly liquidate their European share holdings, Societe Generale's de Laulanie said.
"What is small for a U.S. pension fund is quite large for European stocks," he said, noting that France and Germany each account for only about 4% of the global equity market.
Beyond these investors, CCF Capital's Alter said European balanced funds that "were overweight stocks relative to the benchmark went back to equal" weightings, while stock market funds moved toward defensive positions by dumping shares in riskier companies.
Societe Generale's de Laulanie said that during September, selling of European stocks took on a new dimension after profit warnings were issued at Royal Dutch Shell NV (RD) Alcatel SA (ALA), and Royal Philips Electronics NV (PHG).
"People began to be skeptical of earnings forecasts in Europe," de Laulanie said. The recent near-collapse of Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) "is adding uncertainty" to the mix, he added.
The remedy, as de Laulanie sees it, are "reliable" earnings figures, which may not start to become available for another month or two. In the meantime, he said, "we could still have some big volatility," and until that starts to decline, "we don't suggest fund managers jump back into the market."
Chris Wheeler, European sales and marketing director for Guinness Flight Hambro, a U.K.-based asset management company recently acquired by South Africa-based Investec Group, says companies themselves could do more to support stock prices by boosting merger and acquisition activity and following through on share buyback programs they have recently announced.
"What tends to happen in Europe is they announce it, but then don't do it," Wheeler said.
Nevertheless, he too sees the European market as near buying levels.
"We do think there is a strong case for being bullish on equities," he said. "What we're looking to do is buy on dips" while waiting for the investment pendulum to "start to swing a little more in the other direction."
Guinness Flight's Wheeler said central banks in Europe could help calm market fears of slowing growth by following the Federal Open Market Committee example in cutting rates. The FOMC on Tuesday cut its Fed funds rate by 0.25 point to 5.25%, while the Bundesbank on Thursday left its repo rate at 3.30%.
But even without rate cuts, European growth remains on a reasonably solid footing, fund managers say.
"The bulk of earnings growth in Europe is from domestic demand," Societe Generale's de Laulanie said. "We don't see any probability of a big slowdown in 1999." European gross domestic product growth is expected to fall to an average 2.8% next year from 3% in 1998, the International Monetary Fund said Thursday. But that would still be well above the rate in most of the rest of the world.
While waiting for calm to return, CCF's Alter notes an encouraging sign in the behavior of French retail investors, whom he says have largely stayed the course in their stock investments.
"So far we have seen very few redemptions by individual investors," he said. If anything, Alter said the kind of volatility that has hit stock prices in Europe should encourage new fund inflows by convincing investors that "it's very dangerous to be in a single stock."
Guinness Flight's Wheeler said he's encouraged by the behavior of German retail investors, who "have caught the equity bug" in recent years and are now buying stocks through life insurance, mutual funds and defined contribution products to save for their retirements.
Beyond these changes, he draws encouragement from money market and longer term yields that are still falling.
"Long-bonds yields have been doing very well," Wheeler said, but with the yield on a 10-year German bund at 3.80%, he asked "how much further can they go?."
-By Henry E. Teitelbaum, 33-1-5300-0303; hteitelbaum@ap.org
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