- Tech stock outperformance has led systematic investors to
recalibrate their strategies.
- 52% of investors globally have increased their allocation to
Value in the past year.
- Investors are adapting faster to changing market conditions
– 82% cite this as the key driver for pro-active factor
allocation.
- Investors' use of systematic strategies is increasingly
sophisticated, with growing allocations to alternative asset
classes such as real estate and commodities.
ATLANTA, Oct. 28,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- The extraordinary performance of
mega-cap tech stocks has significantly impacted factor returns,
creating both opportunities and challenges for systematic
investors, according to Invesco.
The findings come from Invesco's ninth annual Invesco Global
Systematic Investing Study, Navigating complexity: the rise of
systematic strategies in multi-asset portfolio construction, based
on the views of 131 institutional and retail investors that
collectively manage $22.3 trillion.
It reveals a growing sophistication in investors' use of systematic
strategies as they adapt to complex and fast-changing market
dynamics.
Tech stock dominance requires systematic investing
rethink
Invesco found factors aligned with the success of large tech
companies such as Momentum, Growth, and Quality have performed
exceptionally well over the past year, while Value
underperformed1. Now, concentration risk has driven a
turnaround with more than half (52%) of investors increasing their
allocations to Value in the past 12 months as they seek a potential
hedge.
"The continued growth of U.S. mega-cap technology companies has
led to increased concentration in the global equity markets which
may create unintended risks in multi-asset portfolios," said
Mo Haghbin, Head of Solutions,
Multi-Asset Strategies, Invesco. "Investors are increasingly
adopting systematic strategies to address this challenge, mitigate
concentration risk, and help diversify their portfolios as they
navigate this new environment."
Adaptability has enabled systematic investors to perform
well in this environment. Over the past 12 months, 46% of
systematic investors reported outperformance over both traditional
active approaches and market-weighted strategies, contrasting with
underperformance of just 8% and 6% respectively.
Need for adaptability drives increased sophistication
The need to react quickly has led to increased uptake of
techniques that enable portfolios to immediately adapt to sudden
changes in the macro environment. 80% of respondents cited factor
tilting strategies as very valuable, while 67% highlighted the
importance of asset class and sector rotation models.
The key driver for pro-active factor allocation, cited by 82% of
investors, is the desire to adapt to economic cycles. This is also
reflected in the rebalancing of factors weights, with nearly all
(91%) investors now adjusting their factor weights over time, an
increase from 75% in 2023.
As markets become more changeable, investors' time horizons are
also decreasing. While 40% of investors still assess performance on
a standard 3–5-year time horizon, a third (32%) now use a
2-to-3-year horizon, up from less than a quarter (23%) in 2023.
The rise of alternative asset classes in systematic
portfolios
Invesco found a clear trend towards more diverse systematic
investor portfolios, including a significant uptick in the use of
alternative asset class strategies. The study reveals 40% of
investors now apply a systematic approach to real estate (vs. 31%
in 2023), 36% to commodities (vs. 26% in 2023), and 34% to both
private equity and infrastructure (vs. 32% and 28% in 2023
respectively).
This diversification is enabling investors to build more holistic
and integrated multi-asset allocation models. However, the
application of systematic strategies to less liquid assets can
create challenges, particularly considering liquidity constraints
rank as the first- and fourth- most important considerations for
institutional and retail investors respectively when building
multi-asset portfolios.
Systematic investors are addressing this by using tools such as
liquid proxies2 or derivatives, which enable them to
adjust overall exposure to less liquid asset classes such as real
estate, while retaining the ability to quickly rebalance.
"We're seeing higher allocations to private markets across the
board, specifically within private credit and real estate,"
continued Mr. Haghbin. "The combination of these higher
allocations and increased accessibility to a larger universe of
cost-effective data has led more investors to adopt a systematic
approach to alternatives that allows them to access traditionally
less liquid asset classes more efficiently."
The data revolution continues
Underpinning the rise of increasingly diversified and
sophisticated systematic portfolios is a data revolution
transforming the way investors make allocation decisions. The
availability of increasingly diverse data sources to inform
portfolio allocations has made this possible.
While macroeconomic data (97%), fundamental company financials
(81%), and technical analysis indicators (76%) are most often used,
the integration of alternative data sources is also gaining
momentum, with nearly a quarter (23%) of respondents including
alternative data such as satellite imagery, shipping data, and
weather information in their models.
About Invesco
Invesco Ltd. is a global
independent investment management firm dedicated to delivering an
investment experience that helps people get more out of life. Our
distinctive investment teams deliver a comprehensive range of
active, passive, and alternative investment capabilities. With
offices in more than 20 countries, Invesco managed $1.8 trillion in assets on behalf of clients
worldwide as of September 30, 2024.
For more information, visit
www.invesco.com.
Invesco Advisers, Inc. is an investment adviser; it provides
investment advisory services to individual and institutional
clients and does not sell securities. Each entity is a wholly
owned, indirect subsidiary of Invesco Ltd.
Methodology
Views and opinions are based on
current market conditions and are subject to change.
In this study, all respondents were 'systematic investors',
defined as investors that employ structured, rules-based
quantitative models and algorithms to make investment decisions and
build portfolios. We deliberately targeted a mix of investor
profiles across multiple markets, with a preference for those that
were larger and/or more experienced.
In 2024 we conducted interviews with 131 different pension
funds, insurers, sovereign investors, asset consultants, wealth
managers and private banks globally. Together these investors are
responsible for managing $22.3
trillion in assets (as of 31 March
2024). This core study was supplemented with 20 additional
in-depth interviews with highly experienced systematic
investors.
Institutional investors are defined as pension funds (both
defined benefit and defined contribution), sovereign wealth funds,
insurers, endowments and foundations.
Retail investors are defined as discretionary managers or model
portfolio constructors for pools of aggregated retail investor
assets, including discretionary investment teams and fund selectors
at private banks and financial advice providers, as well as
discretionary fund managers serving those intermediaries.
The fieldwork for this study was conducted by NMG's strategy
consulting practice. Invesco is not affiliated with NMG
Consulting.
1
|
According to the Global Index Returns (Figure 2.1),
Momentum: 35%, Growth: 25.8%, and Quality: 33.9% for relative
factor performance as of March 29, 2024. Past performance is not a
guarantee of future results.
|
2
|
e.g., large-cap equities or government
bonds
|
Media Contacts:
Matthew Chisum |
matthew.chisum@invesco.com | 212-652-4368
Brianna Stokes |
brianna.stokes@invesco.com | 212-323-4588
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SOURCE Invesco Ltd.