Vantage Point: Investing for Alpha  

What next for equity income?

  • To understand the factors that have driven equity market performance in recent years
  • To describe the challenges facing equity income managers in the years ahead
  • To explain how monetary policy impacts equity income investing
CPD
Approx.30min

Chris Murphy, who runs the Equity Income fund at Aviva Investors, says: “Investors need to realise that the decade after the global financial crisis was a specific era, and certain stocks and strategies performed well then, but we are in a different era now.

"Some of the more growthy areas of the market did very well not just because the expectation was that interest rates would stay low forever. But we are at the start of a new era, and when people realise that, they will be more attracted to defensive shares.”

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Despite his view being that interest rates and bond yields will be higher, he has not been tempted to take significant positions in the commodities sector, which often benefits from that climate.

He says: “In order to deliver a positive return for clients, we try to invest in companies that have long-term income prospects. So, for example, there might be a commodity company out there that pays out a fixed percentage of its profits every year. 

"That might look predictable, but if the profits vary hugely from year to year, as they often do with commodity prices, then the yield is not sustainable.”

At present, he says he is finding better value outside the large cap parts of the market now, but within the FTSE 100 his preference is for companies in areas such as utilities. 

Murphy says that while utilities are a traditionally defensive sector of the equity market, “many of the companies there are trading quite cheaply because the market has feared the impact of windfall taxes. And while there are windfall taxes, the impact of those taxes on those companies has not been penal.”

In terms of portfolio construction, Brady says he prefers to buy single country funds rather than global equity mandates. 

“I think the value we add for a client is in terms of doing the asset allocation ourselves. It is part of our process to be targeted in our exposure," says Brady.

"But in terms of the future outlook, I think dividends contributed far too much of the returns from dividends between 2000-10, but since the end of the financial crisis, dividends were a lot lower, and that’s why a targeted approach is needed.”

Ciaran Mallon, UK equity fund manager at Invesco, says for clients who have defensive income as a priority, then “diversification across sectors and geographical regions is the key”.