We are long-term investors with the goal of generating consistent risk-adjusted returns for our clients. We seek to identify high-quality companies that we believe can generate above-average rate and duration of growth over the long term, with a focus on consistency of growth. We have found that companies that can generate consistent above average growth often share some common characteristics, which we seek to identify through robust research. Some of these characteristics include the following:
1) Strong competitive advantage in a growing market
2) Unique product or service
3) High barriers to entry
4) Pricing power
5) Ability to expand margins
6) Support of a strong secular theme
|
The support of a strong global secular theme can be a key driver of long-duration revenue and earnings growth and can sometimes counteract macro headwinds when they arise. Our focus on the long-term drivers of company earnings magnitude and duration provides us with an opportunity to identify substantial shifts in market trends. This can help us to unlock value for investors by getting in front of big, secular changes in demand that may benefit these companies. Today, we believe we are in the early innings of some very strong secular growth themes that will change the investment landscape across multiple sectors and create new business opportunities. These themes are set to benefit a spectrum of companies, from the builders of the in-demand products to those responsible for the infrastructure or materials that allow their use, all the way to the companies using these devices to improve themselves through operational advances. Below is a summary of where we are finding some of these exciting investment opportunities.
Where are we finding exciting opportunities in growth equities?
We believe there are both structural and cyclical tailwinds in place that can drive earnings across a broad range of industries during the next cycle. We see several markets expanding and new opportunities arising at a rate unlike anything we have seen over the past decade.
- Artificial intelligence — AI is evolving rapidly and is driving investment in multiple end markets. We are in the early stages of building out the infrastructure that enables AI and believe it is too early to identify the potential new leaders in software or application development. For the moment, one company appears to have a monopoly on GPUs that enable AI and large language learning models. Demand for these chips continues to broaden away from the major hyperscalers to other end markets as companies invest more to determine how AI will impact all parts of their business. As AI moves to the edge, opportunities are being created for other suppliers. While we acknowledge semiconductor demand is cyclical in nature, the broadening of end markets and uses is supporting longer duration growth. The capex around AI build-out is rapidly expanding in multiple areas including data centers, memory, semiconductor capital equipment and power suppliers.
- Data centers — Some of the largest tech companies in the world are embarking on massive capex spending revolving around artificial intelligence, which requires a vast amount of data storage and processing power. US hyperscalers are expected to increase capex significantly, based on company guidance, to support AI-related demand. Global data usage is growing at an increasingly faster rate. The massive amount of data and processing required for AI is accelerating the shift of workflows to the cloud. Investment in AI is driving demand for memory and data storage and the companies that manufacture the components. Increased demand for new AI-enabled data center capacity is directly impacting multiple companies in the industrial sector as well.
- Semiconductors and semi-cap equipment — The increased complexity and ubiquitousness of semiconductors has been a benefit to the semiconductor industry for many years. AI is now adding a tailwind to the robustness of demand. Many of the stocks continue to have reasonable valuations and should continue to see outsized growth for the next several years as more semiconductor content is needed to support the build-out of AI infrastructure. Owning the companies that manufacture the chips can be a great way to gain exposure, lessening specific product risk, which is becoming a bigger problem as certain countries move to protect intellectual property and chips deemed vital to national security.
- Electrification and energy sources — Power demand has essentially been flat for many years. We believe it is entering an era of secular growth. Electricity demand is accelerating from many sources, including data center growth, ancillary AI demand, reshoring, manufacturing activity, the EV transition and fuel source transition. We expect to see power demand rise by about 3% over the next five years.2 Data centers alone are expected to make up 9% of US power demand by 2030 versus 4% currently.3 Due to this growth, demand is starting to exceed supply. Power efficiency, power management and the ability of utilities to deliver the power will be critical. This is driving investment in both energy generation and transmission, which benefits multiple industrial components and systems companies. The electric grid requires upgrades. As global demand grows, it is becoming harder for the large AI players to build new data centers because of the demand they have for power. Many regions of the country are out of excess power. With long lead times, power and transmission are large constraints. We are seeing nuclear facilities that have been closed come back online. Alternative energy sources should see some rise in demand, but reliability is an issue. Independent power producers are interesting because of their ability to source and price electricity from alternative sources. Several geographies are moving back toward nuclear and natural gas companies may also benefit given the abundant US supply.
- Thermal management/cooling — As the demand for data centers grows, so does the need for increased liquid- and air-cooling capacity at these locations, which use a tremendous amount of power and generate a significant amount of heat. The accelerating data center build-out, increased rack power densities and sustainability considerations are driving a shift toward liquid cooling solutions. The HVAC companies should also see above trend growth from these power demands.
- Reshoring, onshoring — Companies across the globe are looking to bring manufacturing capacity closer to home and de-risk supply chains. Capex budgets are shifting back toward physical assets after a decade of under-investment. Reindustrialization, reshoring, electrification and digitization trends are powerful drivers of demand. This is benefiting multiple companies in the industrials and materials space, many that are also benefiting from the themes discussed above.
- Aerospace — Lack of capital investment has led to an aging fleet that can no longer be ignored. In addition, airlines need to become more energy efficient and carbon neutral. This is driving renewed demand for aftermarket and new aircraft. Supply remains constrained due to manufacturing problems across several stages of the supply chain, putting further upward pressure on the supply/demand curve.
- Infrastructure — After decades of underinvestment, there is renewed focus on the deteriorating highways, bridges and general infrastructure in the United States. Federal, state and local budgets have increased significantly, driving renewed demand for companies in the materials and industrial sectors.
- Alternative asset managers — Alternative asset management is one of the few areas of differentiated growth in the financial services sector. The industry is dominated by a handful of players and there are high barriers to entry due to deal structure. Companies are launching new strategies, driving fundraising and accelerating fee growth. Market opportunities are expanding into new geographies and the retail/wealth management channel.
- Life sciences tools — We believe the cyclical headwinds faced by many of these companies because of COVID-19 and disruption to biotech funding are subsiding. Demand has troughed and we see the opportunity for margin expansion as revenue accelerates. We prefer to own the enablers of research and development, which are high-quality companies that can compound earnings over the long term with less product cycle disruption.
Conclusion
We believe we are in the early innings of a broad-based investment cycle that is the most dynamic we have seen in decades. These changes promise to have broad implications across multiple sectors and are creating exciting investment opportunities in our view. This spending will likely drive earnings growth across the multiple themes that we have identified in this paper, which would meaningfully benefit a range of companies in multiples sectors. We see several markets expanding and new ones starting, and our investment team seeks to identify the companies they believe can succeed in these evolving markets.
While we believe that growth equities can continue to perform well for investors, we caution that not all growth companies are created equal and that an active approach may serve investors well over the long term. Investors need to remain disciplined, maintaining a focus on the underlying drivers of company revenues and earnings. Earnings have historically driven stock prices over the long term, and we believe that remains the case. Market trends are normalizing in our view and stocks are reacting to EPS while their correlations decline. Differences in fundamentals are driving differences in stock price returns. Actively managing around the large benchmark weights can add value given the continued dispersion in returns. Forward earnings expectations are starting to broaden out. As equity prices begin to adjust accordingly, we feel that stock selection can have an impact on long-term returns.
Endnotes
1 Source: FactSet. Data as of 30 June 2004 to 28 June 2024. Total returns (net of foreign withholding taxes) are in US dollars for the MSCI All-Country World Growth Index.
2 IEA (2024), Electricity 2024, IEA, Paris https://www.iea.org/reports/electricity-2024, Licence: CC BY 4.0.
3 EPRI. “Powering Intelligence: Analyzing Artificial Intelligence and Data Center Energy Consumption.” Electric Power Research Institute, Inc., https://www.epri.com/research/products/000000003002028905. Published 28 May, 2024.
“Standard & Poor’s®” and S&P “S&P®” are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC (“S&P”) and Dow Jones is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC (“Dow Jones”) and have been licensed for use by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and sublicensed for certain purposes by MFS. The S&P 500® is a product of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, and has been licensed for use by MFS. MFS’ Products are not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, Dow Jones, S&P, or their respective affi liates, and neither S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, Dow Jones, S&P, their respective affi liates make any representation regarding the advisability of investing in such products.
Frank Russell Company (“Russell”) is the source and owner of the Russell Index data contained or refl ected in this material and all trademarks, service marks and copyrights related to the Russell Indexes. Russell® is a trademark of Frank Russell Company. Neither Russell nor its licensors accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the Russell Indexes and/or Russell ratings or underlying data and no party may rely on any Russell Indexes and/or Russell ratings and/or underlying data contained in this communication. No further distribution of Russell Data is permitted without Russell’s express written consent. Russell does not promote, sponsor or endorse the content of this communication.
The views expressed are those of the author(s) and are subject to change at any time. These views are for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a recommendation to purchase any security or as a solicitation or investment advice. No forecasts can be guaranteed. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Diversification does not guarantee a profit or protect against a loss.