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FIVE at FIVE AU: ASX finishes flat; analysts pick healthcare, technology and telecoms as 2024 growth sectors

Published 11/12/2023, 04:02 pm
Updated 11/12/2023, 04:30 pm
© Reuters FIVE at FIVE AU: ASX finishes flat; analysts pick healthcare, technology and telecoms as 2024 growth sectors

The ASX had another rollercoaster of a day, climbing to 7,226 points in early morning trade before slowly losing ground.

The bourse finished up just 0.6 points up today, settling at 7,195.5 points in total.

Sectors mirrored the mixed performance of the market, with Energy enjoying a 1.19% boost even as Materials shed 0.70% and Utilities 0.56%.

The market was weighed down by the mining sector, with companies like Sayona Mining and Bellevue Gold taking share price hits of about 6% during the day.

Best-performing stocks were Credit Corp Group Ltd, up 3.69%, and Magellan Financial Group, up 3.57%.

Overall, the ASX has gained 1.73% over the last five trading days and is currently sitting 4.92% off its 52-week high.

As for commodities, oil reversed some losses today, with West Texas crude gaining 2.33% (still down 4.19% for the last five days) alongside a boost for nickel of 3.4%.

Gold, silver and platinum fell between 1-3% (although gold is still up 11.57% for the year) while the base metals enjoyed modest gains of about 1%, bar tin and zinc which both fell marginally.

Economic and earnings growth “hard to come by” in 2024

Ausbil Investment Management executive chair, co-founder and chief investment officer Paul Xiradis offers his 2024 economic outlook and the sectors he expects to see growth in for the new year.

“Our reading of the economy is that with economic growth harder to come by in 2024, so will be the case for earnings growth,” Xiradis said.

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“However, there are several areas where we expect to see growth.

“The market is currently balanced on edge, between a negative view based on household spending that is being impacted by high inflation, higher rates, utilities and food costs; and a positive outlook that sees households adjusting because of a relatively resilient economy and a cushion of excess savings.

“In cyclical sectors, there are some names that still stand out, but overall, we remain cautious. We favour earnings growth from GDP agnostic sectors and stocks, and quality leaders with demonstrated operational and pricing leverage.”

Decarbonisation

“Decarbonisation remains a key driver of Australia’s markets, with positive ramifications for the metals and mining, and energy sectors,” Xiradis pointed out.

“Critical metals and commodities will benefit across the long rotation from fossil fuels to renewables in the great decarbonisation and the electrification-of-things, driven by the building and upgrading of electricity transmission and storage infrastructure, with the steady switch from combustion and fossil fuel power to renewable electricity generation.”

Banks & financial services

“Banks are a leveraged play on the economy, and for that reason, they tend to track the path of economic growth,” Xiradis explained.

“On a net basis, banks are now faced with higher funding costs with the normalisation of monetary policy, although there is likely a lessening of competition on rate offerings for the lending segment of the market.

“This should see reduced pressure on net interest margin throughout the year.

​“Furthermore, the better-than-planned balance sheet provisioning for bad and doubtful debts is expected to be benign as the unemployment rate remains stable at around current levels, and less than the 4.5% estimated by the RBA.

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“While we see 2024 as a trough period for margins and volumes, and hence earnings, strong capital levels will continue to support sustainable dividend yields.

“General insurers have performed well as interest rates have normalised, and we expect topline growth to remain elevated through premium growth. Both these factors have been positive for the general insurance sector.

“When rates begin to fall, growth will be driven by premiums and claims inflation.”

Technology

“The ASX is now offering quite a unique range of tech names and opportunities, in online services, data centres, AI, data security and many other areas. The S&P/ASX 300 has around 33 technology names, across diverse areas of business,” Xiradis highlighted.

“Higher rates had punished the technology sector in general but with rates now stabilising at a more normal setting, the outlook is improving again for technology companies, particularly those with pricing power, strong and defendable markets and globally addressable opportunities for expansion, and which are also already cash flow positive and profitable.

“Australia has some impressive technology-driven firms operating across different sectors that are global leaders in what they do and have huge addressable marketplaces, such as Block, Xero, Altium, Carsales.com, REA, Domain Group, Webjet, Life360, Megaport, WiseTech Global and NextDC.

“We are expecting to see some rerating of quality information technology stocks, especially those that are earnings positive and have strong EPS growth outlooks.”

Earnings

“Earnings growth will be harder to find, but we still expect there to be pockets of growth. On aggregate, we see earnings growth for FY24 at a similar level to FY23,” Xiradis predicted.

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“There is room for some upward surprise in certain sectors as Australia’s economy remains relatively resilient and is operating near full employment.

“On EPS growth, FY23 earnings growth was slightly down, which compared to FY21 (+30%) and FY22 (+21%) where earnings were driven by massive fiscal and monetary stimulus, represented a huge stall in earnings growth as the market adjusted to the normalisation of rates.

“If FY23 could be described as a ‘growth pause’ in earnings, we would suggest FY24 will be another flat year of earnings growth that can best be described as a ‘consolidation’ as balance sheets and P&Ls normalise for a future where interest rates are more normal, and only genuine growth in earnings matters.

“In aggregate terms, the market is expecting negative earnings growth to June 30 financial year 2024. On balance, we see risks to the upside relative to consensus driven by better than forecast commodity prices, particularly for the bulks and energy.”

Which sectors?

“In the non-resource sectors, better earnings growth outcomes are likely in the health care, technology, telecommunications, commercial services and to a lesser extent the banking sector,” Xiradis said.

“Higher interest rates have had an adverse impact on structured and highly leveraged businesses given rising funding costs.

“Sectors that had been impacted by the sustained higher rates included infrastructure, through the long duration impact on cashflow income streams; and REITs, through rising cap rates, lower occupancy rates, higher funding and high levels of indebtedness relative to adjusted lower NTA.

“While rising rates had punished technology names across 2022, the plateauing and normalisation of rates as well as cost-out programs saw them re-rating in 2023.

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“Ausbil sees technology as a potential earnings rerate in FY24, however, as most are long-duration growth assets, the impact will be variable.

“We expect pressures on valuation multiples overall, particularly for non-profitable tech stocks. We are selective, and favour tech with underlying sustainable cashflows with strong and growing earnings.

“Value is also emerging in quality REITs, particularly those with exposure to data centres and housing given population growth.

“Certain names within the infrastructure space are also offering value following the recent downward adjustment in prices.

“The overall valuation of the Australian equity market is currently sitting close to long-term average multiples on a suppressed earnings outlook.

“Despite this, our conclusion on earnings growth opportunities heading into calendar 2024 is that the average never really tells the story on its own.

“Consensus currently expects earnings contraction in FY24 of -4.0% for the S&P/ASX 200, then a return to earnings growth of +4.7% in FY25.

​“However we believe that earnings growth well above the system can be achieved in some sectors in FY24, and through key quality opportunities looking ahead.”

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