Listed infrastructure stocks hit by short-term market moves
The rising interest rate environment is not correlated with lower returns for infrastructure stocks and market overreaction causes short-term underperformance of global listed infrastructure stocks, AMP Capital’s study said.
According to the report titled “Not just a bond proxy” global listed infrastructure was not a bond proxy anymore as sovereign yields rose around the world and the market overreaction led to short-term underperformance of global listed infrastructure stocks compared to global equities.
AMP Capital’s head of global listed infrastructure, Giuseppe Corona, noted that each meaningful increase in sovereign yields since the global financial crisis (GFC) saw global listed infrastructure underperform global equities on a short-term basis before recovering the underperformance within the next 12 months.
“What this shows is a market overreaction to a rising yields environment,” he said.
“A strong correlation between the performance of global listed infrastructure and its cashflow growth shows investors should focus on the underlying assets and their ability to generate visible and growing cashflows, and not be spooked by the dramatics of short-term market moves.”
According to him, investors should also consider the influence of rising yields in the context of listed infrastructure’s sector diversification as some sectors such as utilities, communication, transportation and oil and gas storage transportation were affected by changes to interest rates in different ways.
“Investors should always focus on the underlying assets and their ability to generate visible and growing cashflows because of the strong correlation between the long-term performance of the asset class and its cashflow growth,” Corona said.
Recommended for you
In the latest Meet the Manager profile, Money Management speaks with Michael Skinner, founder and managing director at Blackwattle Investment Partners.
Perpetual has seen AUM rise 6 per cent in the last quarter but the departure of a longstanding JOHCM fund manager led to outflows of $2.2 billion from his strategy.
Global fixed income fund Bentham Global Opportunities has been added to several major platforms, enabling it to be accessed more easily by financial advisers.
Following yesterday’s news about First Sentier Investors closing four investment teams, a second global asset manager has announced it is closing its only dedicated Australian fund.