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						U.S. fund managers trim bank stocks on profit worries
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		 [September 01, 2018] 
		 By David Randall 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S.-based mutual fund 
		managers worried about the outlook for bank earnings have been trimming 
		financial stocks from their portfolios, although some value-oriented 
		portfolio managers and analysts said they still see attractive 
		opportunities in the sector.
 
 The average U.S. based mutual fund reduced its stake in financial 
		companies by nearly 1.1 percentage points in the second quarter to 
		approximately 14 percent, the largest one-quarter decline since at least 
		2013, according to Goldman Sachs.
 
 The move away from banks, insurance companies, and mortgage lenders came 
		as the financial sector has underperformed the broad S&P 500 benchmark 
		index by more than 5 percent since April.
 
 Many fund managers believe banks have already hit peak earnings. One red 
		flag is that the U.S. Treasury yield curve has been flattening as 
		short-term yields rise in anticipation of U.S. interest rate hikes from 
		the Federal Reserve while long-term yields fall on worries about 
		economic growth and trade tensions. This situation generally squeezes 
		bank profits.
 
		 
		Some investors worry long-term yields might eventually dip below 
		short-term yields. Such a yield curve inversion that can signal a 
		looming recession.
 "The flatter the yield curve the harder it is to make money," said Ian 
		McDonald, co-leader of the financials research team at Janus Henderson 
		Investors, which oversees $370.1 billion in assets under management, 
		adding that "funds are looking around and saying that if we're going to 
		see weaker growth then we need to get out of financials."
 
 The spread between the yield of two- and 10-year U.S. Treasuries 
		<US2US10=RR> is trading around its flattest in 11 years. Rising 
		short-term rates raise a bank's borrowing costs, while falling long-term 
		rates limit how much they can charge for loans.
 
 Yet McDonald said large-cap banks like JPMorgan Chase and Co <JPM.N>, 
		Bank of America Corp <BAC.N>, and Citigroup Inc <C.N> remain attractive 
		even if the sector overall does not. The major banks have been investing 
		in online platforms and mobile apps, making them more appealing to 
		millennials and less dependent on costly branches, he noted.
 
 "The U.S. retail banking industry is moving from the post-crisis phase 
		of risk management to the fintech phase of managing customer 
		experience," he said.
 
 Ben Kirby, portfolio manager of the $15.4 billion Thornburg Investment 
		Income Builder fund, said his fund has been moving more into European 
		banks such as ING Groep NV <INGA.AS>, prompted in part by a recent 
		sell-off in shares following the steep decline of the Turkish lira. The 
		Turkish currency has plunged more than 40 percent this year due to 
		increasing tensions with the United States and concerns that the 
		country's central bank is losing its independence under President Tayyip 
		Erdogan.
 
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, 
U.S., August 31, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
 
"The U.S. has been the market darling for the last 10 years, and that's led to 
valuations that are a bit more stretched and an economic cycle that is a bit 
more mature," Kirby said. "Whereas in Europe it's earlier in the cycle and 
growth is accelerating more."
 Overall, companies in the S&P 500 financial sector trade at a trailing price to 
earnings ratio of 14.5 and are up 2.2 percent for the year to date, according to 
Thomson Reuters data. The broad S&P 500, by comparison, trades at a trailing P/E 
of 22.06 and is up nearly 9 percent over the same time.
 
 Investors have retreated from financials as well, with the Financial Sector 
Select SPDR, an ETF that tracks financial stocks in the S&P 500, losing $1.7 
billion in outflows over the last 4 weeks, according to Lipper data.
 
 Though banks have stronger balance sheets than at the start of the financial 
crisis 10 years ago, "we're having a hard time finding anything to get excited 
about in financials," said Tom Plumb, manager of the $29.7 million Plumb Equity 
Fund.
 
 Instead of banks, Plumb has his largest positions in credit-card and payment 
companies Visa Inc <V.N> and Mastercard Inc <MA.N>, continue to grow as more 
retail purchases are made online rather than in physical stores, he said.
 
 "It's a mistake to get off a big macro secular trend too early," he said.
 
 Kyle Martin, an analyst at Westwood Holdings Group, a Dallas firm with $21.6 
billion in assets under management, said that rising interest rates and the 
flattening yield curve could point to a recession in 2020, meaning financial 
stocks are less attractive.
 
 Investment bank Houlihan Lokey Inc <HLI.N> looks attractive despite the prospect 
of declining economic growth given its focus on middle-market mergers and 
acquisitions, which should see above-average deal activity as the threat from 
technology disruption grows, he said.
 
 
 
"Banks are clearly safer than they were 10 years ago," he said. "At the same 
time, they will see a decline in earnings soon and it's easy for a fund manager 
to not have those listed on a client statement if we go into another crisis."
 
 (Reporting by David Randall; Editing by David Gregorio)
 
				 
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