The ugly unloved
attractions of natural resource shares: James Saft
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[September 13, 2016]
By James Saft
(Reuters) - If investing in commodities
involves taking a bet against human ingenuity, than buying natural
resource equities is hedging that bet by going long productivity
gains at the same time.
That’s because, unlike building exposure to raw commodities, if you
buy the shares you get that exposure while also capturing
improvements that producing companies make in their reserves, their
processes and their overall gains in efficiency.
There is no getting around it: the move by large investors into
commodities over the past 10 to 15 years has not been what they
hoped. Attracted by a track record of lower volatility and low
correlation with equities, investors have been stung as their own
presence in commodities markets cranked up both effects. In other
words, once big investors got into commodities, those assets started
to behave like the rest of the financial markets, a point borne out
by research from the Bank for International Settlements. (http://www.bis.org/publ/work420.pdf)
As well, that old bugbear human ingenuity has been working very
effectively, driving down the price of energy due to advances like
fracking and the discovery of new reserves.
The S&P Natural Resources index, although up 15 percent over one
year, has recorded annualized losses of 5.85 percent over five and
1.34 percent over 10 years.
It says something about the beaten down and despised nature of
natural resource stock investing that Jeremy Grantham and Lucas
White of value investors GMO titled a note advocating them “An
Investment Only a Mother Could Love.”
Ugly they may be, but resource stocks are reasonably priced by many
metrics and offer diversification and inflation protection (a trait
which will look particularly attractive if inflation ever returns
and bonds and stocks are hit).
“Here’s an investment that delivers equity-like returns with low to
negative correlations with the broad equity market over long periods
of time,” Grantham and White write.
“Hedge fund investors generally accept lower-than-equity returns in
order to gain access to uncorrelated returns, so getting equity
returns with low to negative correlations should be very exciting.
In fact, it’s not obvious that you need to know anything else in
order to get excited about investing in commodity producers.”
(https://www.gmo.com/docs/default-source/research-and-commentary/strategies/equities/global-equities/an-investment-only-a-mother-could-love-the-case-for-natural-resource-equities.pdf)
GMO notes that not only have energy and metals stocks outperformed
the rest of the U.S. stock markets over the past 46 years, but a
combined portfolio of half resources/half the rest outperforms with
markedly lower volatility.
THE DEVIL OF DEFLATION
Commodity stocks have dramatically outperformed their products over
the long term. While oil has risen just 0.5 percent annually in real
terms since 1925, oil and gas company shares have gone up more than
8 percent a year, adjusted for inflation. In industrial metals the
pattern is the same over the same time horizon. Copper is up 0.2
percent annually, in real terms, and aluminum is down 1.7 percent,
but industrial metals have returns of 8.6 percent.
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Crude oil storage tanks are seen from above at the Cushing oil hub,
appearing to run out of space to contain a historic supply glut that
has hammered prices, in Cushing, Oklahoma, March 24, 2016.
REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
That not just because of gains in efficiency but more broadly because the market
offers a considerable equity risk premium for those who hold natural resource
shares. Investors are shy of natural resource shares, which, as we’ve seen
recently, can see huge volatility in the prices of their products, as well as
being levered to economic cycles. That’s kept a lid on valuations and driven up
the equity risk premium.
Buying into natural resources at a time of very low inflation and, in large
parts of the global economy, the threat of deflation, is not an easy thing to
do. As well, there are concerns, well reflected in current prices, that future
economic growth will be tepid, especially in places like China which have been
huge consumers of raw materials the past 20 years.
The flip side of this fear is that natural resources stocks do offer some
inflation protection.
Resource equities have not only protected against inflation historically, but
have actually significantly increased purchasing power in most inflationary
periods. During the last eight episodes of U.S. inflation over 5 percent,
natural resource shares have returned more than 6 percent a year while the S&P
500 lagged inflation, thus destroying purchasing power, by 1.6 percent.
Remember too that, for good or ill, this time will be different. We’ve never
emerged from an episode of low inflation like this, one which came along with
massive central bank asset buying and the resulting inflation of valuations of
financial assets.
Not only would bonds be hammered by inflation, as they always are, but the broad
stock market may underperform its past results during inflation, as equities
feel sharply the removal of central bank support.
A bit of diversification into an ugly, unloved sector may well pay off.
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.
At the time of publication James Saft did not own any direct investments in
securities mentioned in this article. He may be an owner indirectly as an
investor in a fund. You can email him at jamessaft@jamessaft.com and find more
columns at http://blogs.reuters.com/james-saft)
(Editing by James Dalgleish)
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