PA ANALYSIS: European managers split on crucial financials call

While the European equities story continues to appeal to UK investors, fund managers in the region remain deeply divided on the recovery prospects of its financials stocks.

PA ANALYSIS: European managers split on crucial financials call

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Speaking at Portfolio Adviser’s Europe 2017 event, Invesco Perpetual’s head of European equities Jeff Taylor took a positive stance on banks, and wider financials generally as a traditionally “unloved” sector.

Pointing to strong bottom-up fundamentals, he said prices had been unfairly affected by the uncertain political climate.

He explained: “There wasn’t enough capital in the banks in 2007/08, but the vast majority are comfortably capitalised now, as they deleveraged by selling portfolios of assess, sold businesses, or set up a rights issue, for example.”   

Taylor argued that this generated much liquidity and that loan-to-deposit ratios are only fractionally above 1%, which is very positive.

Chris Garsten, manager of Waverton European Capital Growth, has a quite different perspective. His angle was that he only invests in stocks that have undergone a sea change in the way they were run.

He said: “Traditionally European companies have been run for volume and so the balance sheets are opaque. We are looking for companies that have started to become shareholder friendly by providing earnings visibility.”  

Garsten does not think banks fall into this category.  He said: “Financials had a very poor business model up to the credit crunch, but the problem is they are still being run for growth. You get the idea that they think ‘If I don’t make the loan someone else will’.”

 

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