Portfolio | Australia’s stock market to find fortune as ‘lucky country’ enters ‘lost decade’
Credit Suisse analysts tip 16.5 per cent rise in benchmark equities index
The ‘lucky country’, a popular residence and investment choice for Hongkongers and mainland Chinese, is not looking so fortunate these days.
Australia has entered a “lost decade” argues a new report by Credit Suisse analysts; a structural slowdown that’s spread from the mining industry, hit by a collapse in commodity prices, to the housing market. The benchmark ASX 200 equities index rose just 1 per cent last year and is down 5 per cent this year, with a weakening Australian dollar a major negative for overseas investors. And yet some economic retrenchment might paradoxically be good news for stocks, the same analysts suggest.
“Lost decades have often followed periods of excessive investment and Australia seems to have already started its own,” Credit Suisse analysts Hasan Tevfik and Damien Boey wrote. “With a subdued backdrop we believe the future direction of stock indices should largely depend on how companies respond to the current sustained period of weak growth. We anticipate that Australia Inc will continue to cut costs, conserve capital and consider (mergers and acquisitions) to generate returns for its shareholders.”
Targeting a 2016 year-end level of 6,000 points for the ASX 200 – a 16.5 per cent up side from Friday’s close – the two analysts also expect Australian firms to use cheap debt to finance share buybacks and are recommending long positions on miners Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton, blue-chip banks Westpac and Macquarie, and energy players including AGL Energy.
On the downside, the Swiss bank suggests shorting Melco Crown casino shareholder Crown Resorts given the struggling Macau economy, as well as retailer Woolworths for having “little strategic direction”, among others.
It’s an ambitious growth target for the ASX index and assumes a benign growth outlook that jars with recent economic data.
A 9.2 per cent plunge in third-quarter private capital expenditure was much worst than a 2.5 per cent consensus estimate and “the absence of any real signs of a transition from mining investment to non-mining investment is a big worry” wrote Paul Dales at research group Capital Economics.