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THE INVESTOR CENTRE

OLDFIELD PARTNERS

High Octane

Current conditions mean that many

companies are attractively priced

At its lowest point, the

MSCIWorld Indexhad

fallen 24% from its peak

MIDOCEAN

Joint manager: Strategic Income

Volatility provides opportunities to

purchase stocks at risk-adjusted prices

US high-yieldmarket

sawmost volatile

period since 2008/09

ORCHARD STREET

Property

Focus on prime locations as

secondary sites suffer

Demand for good

qualityUKproperty

remains positive

Jim Wiant and Michael Apfel

D

espite the headlines about

uncertainty related to economic

growth and Brexit, ongoing occupier

demand for good-quality UK

commercial property remains positive.

There has been little speculative

development in most markets for the

past eight years and there is nothing in

the current development pipeline to

suggest oversupply will become a

problem in the near term.Yet occupiers

are focusing on best-in-class properties,

resulting in a polarised market,with

the better properties flourishing and

secondary properties suffering.The

limited supply of new property has

created supply shortages in some

markets,which by Q4 2015 had led

to rental values increasing at the rate

of 4% per annum.

The St. James’s Place Property fund

is invested in prime stock and has a low

vacancy rate of 7%versus the industry

benchmark of 8.7%. But, volumes of

sales in the investment market have

slowed.InQ1we invested £172million,

which included the acquisition of

garden centres let on 25-year leases to

Wyevale Garden Centres, a prime

office building in Newcastle, and a

mixed-use scheme in an excellent

location in central Birmingham.

I

n Q1, the US high-yield market saw

one of the most volatile periods

since the 2008/09 financial crisis,

down as much as 5.13%.

Since then,US high-yield has staged a

significant rally and is now comfortably

positive for the year.Dovish central

bank policy combinedwith incremental

improvements around global concerns

such as oil,Chinese andUS growth, and

European banks led risk assets to come

back into favour among investors.

High-yield benefitedwith record

inflows over a four-week period.

The Fed’s unexpected decision to

cut its interest rate projections by 50

basis points and to two hikes expressed

an inherently more dovish tone.The

Fed’s plan should be supportive of US

and global growth, and therefore risk

assets. In addition, fears of a US

recession are fading,which should also

be a positive for high-yield bonds.

While the severity of market volatility

may dissipate in the short term,we

believe macro headlines will continue

to impact the markets over the

medium term. Similar to our strategy

in Q1,we intend to take advantage of

future volatility to purchase positions

at attractive risk-adjusted prices.

T

his was a turbulent quarter,

the depths being reached on 11

February, before a strong

recovery.At

its lowest point, theMSCIWorld Index

had fallen 24% from its peak inMay

2015.A recent table in the

Financial

Times

recorded the nine bear markets

for the US since 1957. From the point

at which a bearmarket was declared – a

fall of 20% from the peak – the average

return over the next year was 10%.

Falling markets make people gloomy

about the future, but the general

experience is that after a 20%fall,which

already reflects the reasons for gloom,

returns are good.That has beenour view.

An average is only an average,and this

could be one of those times whenworse

follows.A great deal hinges on the US

economy: is recession on the way or

not? Very low interest rates would be

an unusual precursor to recession; and

employment levels, housing and car

sales are all

strong.We

doubt the US

economywill go into reverse in the near

future; and it seems to us that currently

recession is embedded in the valuations

of many companies which, in its

absence, are extremely attractively

priced.We

include in this the oil sector,

where we believe that the present oil

price is unsustainably low.

Richard Oldfield

Philip Gadsden

THE INVESTOR

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