Investment Strategy In The Last Quarter Of 2022

Positioning for the fourth quarter investment strategy, Kenanga gives investors an overview of how it views the economy and market in the last three months of 2022.

The research house is reducing its year-end FBM KLCI target by 5% to 1,500 pts from 1,580 pts to reflect the prospect of extended higher interest rates globally that weighs down on equity valuations.

FBM KLCI’s earnings is projected o grow by +11.6% in 2023 backed by the full-year impact of the reopening of the economy and international borders, robust domestic demand, and a low base in 2022 due to Cukai Makmur. It also acknowledges that there could be downside risk to our earnings forecast in the event the global economy slips into a sharp slowdown or recession.

If the current hyperinflationary cycle is to follow the symmetrical pattern in the past (particularly in 1974 and 1979-1980), it may take at least another 12-18 months before the current hyperinflationary cycle in the US (and the world as a whole) could come to an end. In Europe, while gas prices have come off by >40% since hitting a peak in August 2022,
they are still >10x higher than the levels seen in 2019, resulting in widespread curtailment of production in energy-intensive industries such as steel, aluminium, zinc, fertilizers, cement and pulp & paper.

Meanwhile, global supply chain disruptions are still far from over with the zero-Covid policy still being in full force in China, more so, ahead of the consequential 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in mid-October 2022.

Kenanga advocates for investors to seek refuge in domestically-driven sectors amidst rising external headwinds. Government policies of strengthening support to domestic demand and economic activities—since the outbreak of Covid-19, through the pandemic recovery phase—will be reinforced in the coming Budget 2023 on 7 October 2022.

Banks are the best proxy for Malaysia’s resilient economy, in particular, domestic consumption. Similarly, the earnings of telcos will be supported by domestic consumption and spared the external headwinds. Meanwhile, automakers/distributors have strong earnings visibility underpinned by order backlogs sizeable enough to keep them going for the next 7-8 months.

Kenanga believes mid-market retailers will continue to do well given their customer base that is skewed towards the M40 group of which spending power is less impacted by the high inflation given a healthy household balance sheet. It believes investors should build a position in contractors ahead of the 15th General Election (GE15). There is a strong case for the government to embark on counter-cyclical fiscal pump-priming to shield the economy from the external slowdown.

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