Growth stock comeback fuels Cathie Wood's ARK funds
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[June 29, 2021] By
David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A more than 10% surge
in growth stocks since the start of the quarter is fueling a comeback in
star stock picker Cathie Wood's ARK funds, which posted some of the
worst declines among all U.S. equity funds over the first three months
of the year.
The ARK Innovation fund, which is managed by firm founder Wood, gained
3.5% on Monday and is now up 4.3% for the year to date, highlighting a
nearly 31% comeback since hitting its May 13 low. Prior to its recent
rally, the fund had been down by as much as 9% for the year.
Driving the gains are declining fears of runaway inflation and the
failure of U.S. bond yields to follow through on their dramatic
first-quarter rally, accelerating a rotation back in to the sort of
hyper-growth stocks that helped Wood post the best returns of all
actively managed mutual fund managers in 2020 tracked by Morningstar.
Monday's move was also helped by breakthroughs in gene editing announced
on Saturday which boosted the shares of several biotech companies Wood's
firm holds in several of its funds, including its flagship Ark
Innovation fund.
"Investors have been rewarded for staying loyal to ARK and their
long-term growth strategies as fears of rising interest rates were
diminished," said Todd Rosenbluth, director of mutual fund research at
CFRA. "ARKK has significantly outperformed the broader market in the
past month and is now in the black after being down double digits."
Among Wood's holdings are Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc, which is up
22.1% since its March low, and Intellia Therapeutics Inc, which rallied
more than 50% on Monday after posting positive interim data over the
weekend from its ongoing early-stage trial for its genome editing
candidate, NTLA-2001.
Overall, the Russell 1000 Growth index is up 11.4% since the start of
the quarter, nearly triple the 4.6% gain in the Russell 1000 Value index
over the same time. Those gains have come as the price of lumber and
other commodities has fallen from multi-year peaks, helping ease
investor concerns over spiking inflation.
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A man points at a computer screen showing stock information in this
illustration photo taken in Bordeaux, France, March 30, 2016.
REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/Files
The Federal Reserve took many investors by surprise with a more hawkish turn at
its most recent policy meeting, sending the yield of the benchmark 10-year
Treasury below 1.5% on expectations that the central bank would be less tolerant
of rising inflation. That has helped bolster tech and growth stocks, as rising
yields threaten to erode the value of their longer-term cash flows.
Despite ARK's recent gains, the performance of its flagship fund remains in the
bottom 100th percentile among U.S. mid-cap growth funds, according to
Morningstar data.
Whether the fund continues its recent hot streak will largely depend on the
direction of the 10-year Treasury yield, said Jim Paulsen, chief investment
strategist at the Leuthold Group.
"There's a high correlation between the 10-year and whether it's growth or value
overall," as lower yields eat in to the profits of cyclical stocks such as
financials, he said. While growth stocks are outperforming now, Paulsen remains
skeptical the rally will continue.
"Growth is going to be really strong in the economy this year and next and I
don't think we have seen the last of the inflation scare," he said.
(Reporting by David Randall in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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