Review
Even though the end of the year is arbitrary, it is a good opportunity to reflect on the past and learn for the future. In the past year, we were once again able to see how much the consensus can lead us astray on complex issues. The majority of market participants and economists predicted a negative economic development for 2023. Even our assessment, in hindsight, was not positive enough to do justice to the strong market development. A variety of challenges shaped the economic landscape. The extraordinarily high inflation forced central banks to raise interest rates sharply and pursue a restrictive monetary policy. After a long period of low interest rates, companies, consumers and states were suddenly confronted with rising interest rates and their diverse effects.
Meanwhile, the global supply chain bottlenecks have largely normalized. This has mitigated a major driver of inflationary pressure and allowed central banks to pause interest rate hikes in the second half of the year and adopt a wait-and-see stance. Therefore, an important factor of uncertainty has stabilized, which benefits the valuation of the financial markets. The risk premium of equities over fixed-income government bonds, a measure to judge the attractiveness of equities vs bonds, has therefore remained at a low level despite all the uncertainties. The strong stock market increases reflect, on the one hand, the declining long-term interest rates and the anticipated interest rate cuts by central banks for 2024. On the other hand, corporate earnings for the overall market have continued to grow and have already reached new highs, unlike the stock market. These two factors have made valuations both absolutely and relatively more attractive and have accordingly made the surprisingly positive performance possible. Most companies were able to pass on price increases to their customers and increase sales despite a weakening economy and partly declining sales volumes. A less impressive picture emerges when purchasing power is considered, but nominal growth feels better than nominal stagnation nonetheless.
Statistical context
As active investors, our goal is to invest in the world’s best companies, which not only preserve purchasing power, but also generate a long-term excess return compared to the market. We take into account the comprehensive earning power, which includes earnings growth, dividends, share buybacks and debt. Based on these factors, we regularly scrutinize all listed companies that are eligible for investment. We are always fascinated by how successful many companies generate added value for both customers and owners through innovation and efficiency. When we underpin these fundamental impressions with historical data, we do find it difficult not to look positively into the future. A statistic that supports this feeling is the number of years it takes on average for a portfolio to reach new highs. The graph below shows that balanced mandates reach a new valuation high every three years on average. Especially after strong corrections, it is worthwhile to keep this in mind.
