The logic of the de-equitisation trade | 股票低迷成大势,背后原因几何? - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT英语电台

The logic of the de-equitisation trade
股票低迷成大势,背后原因几何?

Shrinking stock markets and an especially wide valuation gap between bonds and shares made the trend inevitable
股市萎靡加上债股间巨大的估值差距,使得股票交易的没落似乎不可避免。
00:00

The writer is a former chief global equity strategist at Citigroup

In 1998, Citigroup poached a team of equity professionals, including me, from HSBC James Capel. I got a pay rise and three months off in the south of France. Legend has it that John Bond, then HSBC chief executive, put in an angry phone call to Sandy Weill, his counterpart at Citi, saying back off. Those were the days.

This hiring spree reflected Citi’s desire to lead the “equitisation” of Europe. Investors were piling into equity funds. Private and state-owned companies were listing on stock markets. A global telecom, media and tech stock boom was in full swing. As continental Europe adopted the dominant Anglo-Saxon economic model, the revenue opportunities for investment banks seemed endless. They were not — a brutal bear market made sure of that.

The global stock market stabilised in 2003. Many market participants, including myself, hoped for a “great rotation” out of bonds back into equities. This would close the valuation gap that had opened up between the two asset classes. 

While it is always tempting to tell clients what they want to hear, it dawned on me that a great rotation was unlikely. New accounting rules for pension funds encouraged them to move further into bonds. Regulatory changes for insurance companies made it harder to hold equities. Retail investors, burnt as the late 1990s bubble burst, were not coming back soon.

If the valuation opportunity couldn’t be exploited by conventional investors, other arbitrageurs would emerge. Companies could raise cheap capital in the bond market to buy cheap shares in the equity market, either their own via a share buyback or those of another company via a takeover. Private equity, then a small player in the finance industry, also looked well placed.

The retirement of old, listed shares through takeovers or buybacks started to exceed the issuance of new shares in primary or secondary issues. Stock markets began to shrink. With a typical lack of imagination, I gave this theme a name: de-equitisation. This clumsy, ugly word made my career.

Other agents of the de-equitisation trade emerged. Activist investors bullied unloved listed companies into spinning off assets and buying back shares. Indeed, de-equitisation was never just a financial trade, it was also a governance trade. That’s why it struggled to take hold in Japan — even with languishing share prices, Japanese companies always found it easier to resist shareholder pressure to realise value.

Central banks never really understood de-equitisation. They hoped that cutting interest rates and buying bonds would stimulate capital expenditure, but easy money stimulated more financial engineering than real engineering. A political backlash seemed inevitable. The US has introduced a tax on share buybacks, although to little effect.

There has been much soul-searching about shrinking stock markets, especially in the UK. Many factors have been blamed, such as onerous reporting requirements and a stunted tech sector, but I think the explanation is simple. Domestic institutional investors shifted out of equities into bonds, partly via the adoption of liability-driven investment strategies, opening up an especially wide valuation gap between the two asset classes. De-equitisation was inevitable. Even with the latest interest rate increases, UK de-equitisers can still borrow at 6 per cent in the corporate bond market to buy assets on a stock market generating an earnings yield of 9 per cent. It makes little sense for listed companies to issue more equity or unlisted companies to float.

Some UK companies have chosen to list in the US, where the equity culture is more robust and valuations higher. But even here, de-equitisation has taken hold. Available stock in the US public market has shrunk by about 1 per cent a year since 2000. Even the tech sector has shrunk, with huge buybacks from the likes of Apple countering issuance elsewhere. This marks a big difference from the late 1990s bull market. In 1999-2000, the US tech sector equitised by 29 per cent; in the 2021-22 bubble that figure was only 3 per cent. Maybe that’s why the Nasdaq is more resilient this time — the oversupply of tech equity is less extreme.

The US equity market now trades on a similar (earnings) yield to the corporate bond market, so the de-equitisation trade looks less compelling. But I do not expect it to disappear completely.  

As for me, I was the last of those HSBC exiles to leave Citi. I should have followed my research all those years ago and switched out of public into private equity. I didn’t. However, the de-equitisation trade still makes sense, especially in Europe. Maybe it’s not too late.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

央行行长们的新年计划

决策者应承诺公布“中性”利率水平的估计值。

马斯克会成为英国民粹政党的政治捐赠人吗?

科技行业亿万富翁正在“认真考虑”向奈杰尔•法拉奇领导的英国改革党捐款。

Lex专栏:本田和日产要用越野思维来解决电动化挑战

传统汽车制造商与其试图建立电动汽车制造规模,不如另辟蹊径。

Lex专栏:投资者厌倦了“画饼式”能源转型公司

无论战略多么高瞻远瞩,股东的耐心都会被消磨殆尽。

在特朗普执政期间,加密货币监管需要经过深思熟虑的重新审视

期待已久的公共政策支持可以提升美国在区块链技术、人工智能和加密货币领域的领导地位。
1天前

特斯拉努力避免取消马斯克薪酬方案的高昂成本

如果这家电动汽车制造商和首席执行官被迫放弃2018年的交易,他们可能会面临超过1000亿美元的会计和税务费用。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×