Trustnet Magazine Issue 9 July 2015 | Page 26

IN THE BACK STOCKS OPPOSITE ATTRACTION Henry Dixon, manager of the GLG Undervalued Assets fund, has been looking for stocks that represent the antithesis of bonds with a negative yield W hile absolute value has not been a feature of the equity markets for a little over two years, the relative value argument versus bonds has been pronounced. However, even this is now coming under threat. This is firstly a result of the combination of rising prices and falling earnings, which cannot continue indefinitely. Secondly, and perhaps more pertinently, we have had a meaningful rise in bond BANKS ARE CLEARLY UNPOPULAR, but their profit potential as rates normalise is significant. This is most evident in their sizeable deposit bases which are delivering little revenue given the current level of interest rates. RBS recently announced plans to retreat from investment banking and eventually it should look similar to and be valued on a par with rival Lloyds. On price to book, the shares trade at 0.9x tangible book value versus Lloyds at around 1.6x book. This value gap of about 75 per cent looks increasingly unsustainable. 24 yields, which also serves to undermine the attraction of most equities. On the subject of fixed income, it is our view that negative bond yields will in time be judged extremely harshly, even when compared with previous bubbles. The key question therefore is what is the opposite of a bond with a negative yield? To our mind, it is the cheapest and shortest-duration assets that we can find. AMLIN, THE LLOYD’S OF LONDON INSURANCE BROKER, is currently out of favour and finds itself trading on 11x earnings with a yield of approximately 6 per cent. Further to writing insurance, the company has more than five times its market cap in short-term investments. These, it almost goes without saying, are yielding next to nothing. The company will therefore enjoy a material uplift in profits if there is even a modest interest-rate rise, and should these climb to half the level they were at before the financial crisis, its profits could double. TULLETT PREBON, THE INTERDEALER BROKER, finds itself trading on 11x earnings, offering a 4.6 per cent yield and with approximately 20 per cent of its total market cap in net cash. The business model yearns for volatility, but of course this has been in short supply given the activity of central banks. However, it would be wrong to assume central banks can maintain stability indefinitely and we are therefore of the opinion that Tullett Prebon’s shares are cheap, taking into account the broker’s cyclically depressed earnings. trustnet.com