Published on Jul 25, 2016
Investors
will need to be more selective in their stockpicking because modest
economic growth of about 2% will not lift the entire market going
forward, said Ronald Sanchez, chief investment officer at Fiduciary
Trust Company International. "The stock market has done well as a whole
since the Great Recession, but now we are experiencing a transition
where we need to pick stocks that do well in different environments,"
said Sanchez. "Much more selectivity needs to be a focus for investment
managers." Fiduciary Trust Company International is the $74.8 billion
wealth management unit of Franklin Templeton . Sanchez said a 2% economy
is nothing new, but previous economic cycles have conditioned investors
to expect a stronger rebound and ramp-up in growth. In his view, the
absence of a strong recovery range can be attributed to the difficulties
associated with digging out of the banking crisis to the regulatory
environment, subdued productivity and aging demographics. In his
opinion, the modest pace of economic expansion means this cycle could
have durability and longevity. The U.S. economy has been expanding for
82 months, but at least three other cycles since 1950 have lasted longer
and were much more vigorous. "Leading economic indicators have been
improving since 2010 but have not yet returned to their pre-crisis
levels, possibly because the recession was so deep and the economic
recovery so gradual. So this cycle may still have room to run," said
Sanchez, adding that in this unusual environment, businesses have been
"slow to ramp up capital expenditures but quick to take advantage of low
interest rates to repurchase stock and engage in other forms of
financial engineering." Putting it all together, Sanchez said he is
exercising a "high degree of selectivity", by searching for companies
that appear to offer high-quality management teams, healthy balance
sheets and durable growth potential. "We are investing in a 'market of
stocks' rather than the stock market," said Sanchez. "Companies that can
perform well in a 2% economy do exist and we are determined to find
them."
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