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						Wall Street weekahead: U.S. funds focus on media stocks, 
						banks to find value as mid-caps rally
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		 [March 16, 2019]   
		By David Randall 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - The S&P 400 Mid-Cap 
		index has surged to its best start to a year since 1991, both rewarding 
		fund managers and forcing them to work harder to seek out bargains in a 
		group that is now the most expensive part of the U.S. market based on 
		their historical averages.
 
 The rally in mid-cap stocks - companies with a market valuation between 
		$2 billion and $10 billion - has come during a broad rally in global 
		stock markets as investors price in a resolution in the trade talks 
		between the United States and China and fewer interest rate hikes by the 
		Federal Reserve.
 
 Mid-caps are up 14 percent for the year to date and sport an average 
		price-to-earnings ratio of 16.9 times forward earnings, for their 
		highest valuation premiums to small-cap stocks since 2017, according to 
		Bank of America Merrill Lynch research.
 
		 
		
 Yet fund managers from Janus Henderson, Hotchkis & Wiley, and Fairpointe 
		Capital are among those who are still finding values by concentrating on 
		financial, energy and media stocks and eschewing the high-priced real 
		estate investment trusts and utility companies that make up nearly a 
		fifth of the benchmark index.
 
 "The window for the big bargain bin was the fourth quarter and that was 
		about it," said Kevin Preloger, a portfolio manager of the $3.3 billion 
		Janus Henderson Mid Cap Value fund. "We're looking for companies that 
		have good balance sheets and good cash flow, but the tough part is 
		reasonable valuations."
 
 Preloger's fund is finding them in financial companies such as M&T Bank 
		Corp and Hartford Financial Services Group Inc that are increasing their 
		stock buybacks at the same time they have been beating analysts' 
		earnings expectations. Shares of M&T, for instance, are up 20.8 percent 
		since the start of the year and trade at a forward price-to-earnings 
		ratio of 11.8.
 
 "Financials are the cheapest sector in the space, and their earnings are 
		also growing," Preloger said.
 
 Stanley Majcher, a portfolio manager of the $1.4 billion Hotchkis & 
		Wiley Mid-Cap Value fund, is buying into overlooked financial and energy 
		stocks because he considers them less risky than utility companies or 
		REITs with higher valuations.
 
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			Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 
			New York, U.S., March 13, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
            
			 
"Energy is very out of favor and there's a perception that it's a risky business 
because oil prices are likely to be low for a long period of time because of the 
market share war between OPEC and the U.S.," he said. "But we see low volatility 
of demand and more discipline on the supply side."
 Among its largest holdings, Majcher's fund has several energy companies, 
including Whiting Petroleum Corp, Kosmos Energy Ltd and Ophir Energy PLC, 
according to Morningstar data, with mixed results for the year to date. Shares 
of Whiting are up 12.4 percent year-to-date, while shares of Ophir are up nearly 
53 percent over the same time.
 
 Thyra Zerhusen, a portfolio manager of the $2.6 billion AMG Managers Fairpointe 
Mid Cap fund, said her fund is finding opportunities in media stocks such as 
broadcast company Tegna Inc, which was spun off of Gannett Co, magazine and 
local broadcasting company Meredith Corp, and New York Times Co, all of which 
should see a significant boost in revenues from the 2020 presidential and 
congressional elections, she said.
 
 "With everybody running for president, the political advertising goes to these 
smaller market stations. Newspapers are almost non-existent now," except for the 
New York Times, which continues to grow its digital subscriptions, she said.
 
 She is also adding opportunistic positions in companies such as Westinghouse Air 
Brake Technologies Corp, which completed its merger with the transportation unit 
of General Electric Co on Feb. 25. Shares of the company are up 2.9 percent 
year-to-date, and remain 35 percent below where they were trading six months 
ago.
 
 "We're trying to add stocks where there may be a short-term problem hitting the 
share price but the long-term outlook looks okay," she said.
 
 (Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Leslie Adler)
 
				 
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