European exchanges' defensive appeal attracts investors after bank
turmoil
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[April 14, 2023] By
Danilo Masoni and Samuel Indyk
MILAN/LONDON (Reuters) - European exchange stocks stand to benefit from
a spike in volatility surrounding the downfall of Credit Suisse, as some
investors turn towards bourse operators attracted by their defensive
qualities and modest valuations.
The exchanges' share price performance has lagged the region-wide STOXX
600 index by up to 13 percentage points since September, as investors
chased banks, potentially a more attractive trade because of rising
interest rates.
But after a quiet start to the year for trading activity, the turbulence
in March is spurring some investors to shift their exposure as part of a
wider shift away from banking into other sectors.
Spikes in bond and equity volatility could yield positive earning
surprises for exchange companies during the upcoming reporting season,
just when tightening credit conditions risk hitting economic growth,
making defensive businesses like exchanges more attractive.
Exchange operators' shares have outperformed in the past few weeks, with
traders and analysts pointing to signs of investors rotating into
exchanges, partly at the expense of banks. Volume spikes tend to boost
activity across trades processed by exchange operators.
"There's rotation, the most obvious and public example of this is in the
price action," said Andrew Morgan, president at U.S.-based financial
technology provider TS Imagine.
"Exchange operators are data and technology businesses with defensive
utility-like features, while banks are highly cyclical and exposed to
idiosyncratic business model risks".
Equity trades across Euronext, which runs exchanges in seven big
European centres from Paris to Amsterdam and Milan, reached the
third-highest value in the company's history on March 17. Its average
daily traded volumes in March were the highest in a year.
Swiss exchange SIX, at the epicentre of the turmoil around UBS's rescue
of Credit Suisse, had a 44.6% jump in March turnover compared with
February. Cash market turnover at Deutsche Boerse rose 23.7% last month
versus February.
Average daily value traded at the London Stock Exchange (LSEG) rose
12.9% month-over-month in March. Thomson Reuters, which owns Reuters
News, has been a shareholder in LSEG since 2021. LSEG also pays Reuters
for news.
VOLATILITY BOOST
Evidence of any shift could be revealed when filings disclosing how
mutual funds have tweaked their positions are published in a few weeks'
time.
UBS research that uses the bank's prime brokerage data and other sources
showed in April that investor "crowding" in exchange operators' stocks
has been recovering from four-year lows.
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The Euronext stock exchange is pictured
at the La Defense business district in Paris, France, September 30,
2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo
Among financials in Europe, exchange stocks are the most positively
correlated to volatility.
Banking turmoil and option expiries drove the Euro STOXX volatility
index last month to its highest since October in a steep surge that
quickly pared back. The MOVE index, a gauge of fixed-income
volatility, hit 2008 levels and remains high.
"Investors tend to look at the exchanges as defensive names. In
recessionary environments, we tend to see money being allocated
increasingly to the exchanges," said Micheal Werner, senior equity
analyst at UBS in London.
"The number of incoming calls I have had on the exchanges has
certainly increased over the past two or three weeks as people are
working at the allocations within the financial space of their
portfolio," he added.
Werner said uncertainty over monetary policy should keep bond
volatility elevated, supporting exchange stocks, while spikes in
equity volatility tend to be bad for investment banking, M&A and
customer fund flows at big universal banks.
Deutsche Boerse has rallied more than 10% since the bank turmoil
started in March with the collapse of U.S. regional bank SVB.
Deutsche Boerse shares hit a lifetime high on Thursday.
LSEG and Euronext have risen almost 8% and 4% respectively, while
Amsterdam-based market maker Flow Traders, which also benefits from
volatility, is up more than 13%.
Over the same period, European banks have lost around 12%.
Looking to the long term, some investors see the exchange industry
benefiting from data demand.
And exchange valuations are near multi-year lows which suggests any
downside could be limited.
Euronext trades at 14 times 12-month forward earnings and LSEG at 22
times, both an 18% discount to their five-year averages, as per
Refinitiv Datastream.
U.S. rival Nasdaq Inc trades on a multiple of 20, just a 3% discount
to its 5-year average and Intercontinental Exchange Inc which trades
on a multiple of 19, is 4.7% below its 5-year average.
"Beyond being volatility beneficiaries, which makes them attractive
within a diversified portfolio context, we also believe they are
well-placed for data demand and consumption trends," said Thomas
McGarrity, head of equities at RBC Wealth Management. "We continue
to like exchange stocks."
(Reporting by Danilo Masoni and Samuel Indyk. Editing by Jane
Merriman)
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