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Why balance sheets matter for dividend investors


INDUSTRY VOICE: Leverage can be an investor’s best friend or worst nightmare. Though companies may borrow to expand, indebted companies can suffer when markets are under pressure. Lyxor ETF looks at company leverage, balance sheet strength and why it matters for income investors.

Find out more about quality income strategies

What rising bond yields mean

When interest rates and bond yields rise, and markets and economic direction take a turn for the worse, it tends to be the weakest elements in the economy – typically those companies with the greatest amount of debt – which suffer first.

Rising bond yields don’t automatically mean equity losses. Historically rising rates have (at least initially) been accompanied by a rally with both asset classes driven on by improved economic conditions. Only in the later stages of the cycle do they have a negative impact. The last time there was a switch from a positive to negative correlation between equities and bond yields (1960s/1970s), it coincided with bond yields pushing past the 5% barrier. We’re a way off that, so investors should still have a decent cushion before rates become a problem – but stretched valuations in some parts of the world mean a little caution is merited. 

More: Quality income ETFs from 0.19% Ongoing Charge

Correlation between S&P500 and 10-yr treasury yields since 1900

Source: Lyxor AM International, Shiller. Rolling 5-year period, monthly data a  at 01/05/2018.

In our view, global economic conditions are still improving (albeit more slowly), so your choice rests between switching out of bonds and into suitable equities or sitting tight until losses on your bond portfolio eventually force you to move. If you are going to hold bonds, you have to believe economic conditions won’t improve; deflation will set in and central banks will make ever more desperate attempts to drive yields lower.

Those wary of making seismic asset allocation changes may be tempted to switch from low quality bonds to high quality equities – a change which puts balance sheet strength before anything else. Finding them isn’t as simple as it might be however.

Europe’s lowest cost treasury ETFs: ongoing charges from 0.07%

Not buying buybacks

Many companies have tried to exploit the low yield environment by re-leveraging in order to grow but changing conditions leave some more exposed than others. Tech companies aren’t significantly at risk because their balance sheets are often cash rich but the same can’t be said elsewhere, especially where companies have engaged in massive stock buybacks – something which, in our view, destroys shareholder value more often than not. Over time, those companies tend to be the weakest and cheapest (relative to their peers) in the market. Their price momentum is weak and they generally have ‘below average strength’ balance sheets. Selling this balance sheet risk, and focusing on companies with shrinking debt and improving fundamentals, makes sense at a time like this.

Now enter quality income funds, which value balance sheet strength highly in their investment process. True, the kinds of stable businesses these strategies hold haven’t necessarily enjoyed the irrational exuberance that’s driven markets so much higher in recent years. But they might be a better bet for what comes next…

Why balance sheet strength matters

The nature of these businesses means their earnings are predictable, rather than cyclical, so they are rarely seen as fashionable. In fact, quality income stocks’ main source of relative performance is the drawdown protection they offer when markets are stressed. Handily, they also offer another way of countering rising inflation – dividends tend to track inflation higher, unlike fixed rate securities.

Over the long term, QI equities have delivered similar returns to high yield credit. Drawdown too is similar but the overall risk/return profile is better; with higher return and lower volatility for QI equities.

Maximum drawdown/loss on global assets since 1990 (%)

Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Portfolio presented assumes no transaction costs. Source: SG Cross Asset Research/ Equity Quant, Factset, data as at 31/12/2017

Where you can find “good” balance sheets

Despite being close to its 20-year average, US leverage is far higher than we saw in the run-up to the 2008-09 crisis. In Europe, levels are even higher. Interest coverage in both regions is weaker than it was, despite recovering global earnings and artificially low yields.

Leverage ratios suggest most eurozone country indices are in line with long-term averages, but this is not true of the US or UK. We still find the most leveraged companies in Spain and Italy but France, is now less geared than the US or UK equity markets. Interest coverage ratios show significant improvements in France and Germany (excluding financials) since 2017, but it’s different on the periphery. Spain’s coverage has improved, but is no better than it was prior to the 2008-09 financial crisis; Italian companies have yet to improve their solvency at all. In fact, the opposite is true despite the supportive environment.

Why Lyxor for quality income?

Our five quality income generators target only the most robust and stable businesses in the developed world, helping you step forward with your eyes firmly on the horizon.   We range across broad global markets, as well as strategies specific to Europe, Japan, the UK and US – with TERs starting from just 0.19%, making them some of the most cost effective income generators your money can buy.

View Lyxor’s quality income range at LyxorETF.co.uk

THIS COMMUNICATION IS FOR ELIGIBLE COUNTERPARTIES OR PROFESSIONAL CLIENTS ONLY

TERs correct as of 29 May 2018. All views & opinion, Lyxor Equity & SG Cross Asset Research/ Equity Quant team, as at 15 May 2018 unless otherwise stated. Past performance is no guide to future returns.

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