Key points
- Dispersion on the rise: The shift from a regime of secular stagnation to one of reflation is contributing to both a broadening of global earnings growth and significantly higher dispersion in company results and performance.
- Alpha over beta: Along with driving heightened dispersion, the new regime is likely to suppress broad market performance relative to recent decades. This reflects a shifting opportunity set in favor of alpha return sources over beta.
- Investing for a new era: BlackRock’s Global Equity Market Neutral Fund (BDMIX) takes advantage of higher dispersion to generate uncorrelated alpha—seeking to provide investors with the dynamism and differentiation that’s needed to navigate a changing market environment.
The post-COVID era has marked a shift from decades of stagnant economic growth to a regime of reflation characterized by positive nominal growth and structurally higher inflation (and interest rates).
The below series of charts illustrates the impact of this shift through the lens of corporate earnings. The first chart shows that in the ten years following the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), prior to the pandemic, depressed levels of nominal growth meant that only a small number of tech companies (known as the “Magnificent 7”) were able to significantly grow their earnings.
Excluding the Magnificent 7 in the second chart highlights that during that time, operating income for US companies—along with their peers in Europe and Japan—essentially flatlined. By the time COVID hit, earnings were no higher than they had been in 2007 immediately prior to the GFC. This has begun to change as inflationary pressures have re-emerged in the post-COVID world, with average company earnings now breaking to the upside.
The final chart in the series reveals that a further important nuance of the new regime can be observed in notably higher cross-sectional dispersion in earnings.
Why might this be the case? Reflation and the return of positive nominal growth can provide more runway for earnings expansion in fundamentally strong companies. The ability to pass on higher prices to customers varies across companies. Additionally, some companies are better than others at capturing nominal revenue growth in bottom line earnings. At the same time, this enhanced opportunity set comes with challenges like a higher cost of capital and muted policy support relative to recent decades that can expose vulnerabilities in companies with fundamental weaknesses. The result is a wider range of potential outcomes, and a significantly enhanced investment opportunity set relative to the one that stock pickers faced for much of the previous cycle.
Fundamental dispersion translates to return dispersion across stocks
In the pre-COVID period, dynamics like zero interest rate policy and quantitative easing both suppressed return dispersion and lifted broad equity market performance. This meant that static market index exposures and strategies tilted towards beta generated strong absolute and risk-adjusted returns.
Now, a higher rate regime sets the stage for more moderate equity beta performance and higher security dispersion as returns are more closely tied to individual company characteristics like earnings growth and profitability rather than broadly benefitting from the previous ‘rising tide lifts all boats’ macro environment.
Dispersion creates an expansive opportunity set for long/short equity investors
But a more challenging backdrop for market beta doesn’t mean a lack of investment opportunity. In a world of higher dispersion, it means that the opportunity set is shifting towards a richer environment for generating alpha through security selection.
Beyond selecting the winners of the new regime, managers that invest both long and short can deploy security selection insights to harness dispersion as a return source. This can be done by positioning long/short portfolios to reflect expected return differences across the investment universe, taking long positions in expected relative winners and short positions in expected relative losers. This approach seeks to generate returns in the cross-section of markets, exploiting the spread in performance between long and short holdings in an environment where absolute market returns may be more muted.
Within BlackRock’s Global Equity Market Neutral Fund (BDMIX), we analyze over 7,000 global equities each day through a data-driven process that informs our long/short portfolio positioning. A relatively even split of long and short investments results in a net market exposure of close to zero, greatly reducing the influence of market direction on performance. Instead, returns are driven by our ability to forecast relative winners and losers as opportunities emerge—targeting an uncorrelated alpha return stream. In 2023, we saw this in practice as the strategy delivered a 14.58% return (versus 5.09% for the category benchmark) with just a 0.07 correlation to the S&P 500 Index.1
Evolving portfolios with uncorrelated alpha
Economic and market dynamics have shifted post-COVID. Dispersion in company fundamentals and stock returns is rising, and static beta exposures may face headwinds relative to recent decades. This environment introduces an expansive opportunity set for strategies like BDMIX that can take advantage of higher dispersion to generate uncorrelated alpha—helping to evolve investor portfolios for a new era.
1 Source: Morningstar as of 12/31/23. Category benchmark is the Morningstar Equity Market Neutral Category.
Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal.
Key risks of BDMIX: This fund is actively managed, and its characteristics will vary. Stock values fluctuate in price so the value of your investment can go down depending on market conditions. International investing involves special risks including, but not limited to currency fluctuations, liquidity, and volatility. These risks may be heightened for investments in emerging markets. The issuers of unsponsored depositary receipts are not obligated to disclose information that is, In the United States, considered material. Investing in long/short strategies presents the opportunity for significant losses, including the loss of your total investment. Such strategies have the potential for heightened volatility, and in general, are not suitable for all investors. The fund may use derivatives to hedge its investments or to seek to enhance returns. Derivatives entail risks relating to liquidity, leverage and credit that may reduce returns and increase volatility. The fund may engage in active and frequent trading, resulting in short-term capital gains or losses that could increase an investors tax liability. Short-selling entails special risks. If the fund makes short sales in securities that increase in value, the fund will lose value. Any loss on short positions may or may not be offset by investing short-sale proceeds in other investments. Investing in small- and mid-cap companies may entail greater risk than large-cap companies, due to shorter operating histories, less seasoned management, or lower trading volumes. Fixed income risks include interest-rate and credit risk. Typically, when interest rates rise, there is a corresponding decline in bond values. Asset allocation strategies do not assure profit and do not protect against loss.
This information should not be relied upon as research, investment advice, or a recommendation regarding any products, strategies, or any security in particular. This material is strictly for illustrative, educational, or informational purposes and is subject to change. This material represents an assessment of the market environment as of the date indicated; is subject to change; and is not intended to be a forecast of future events or a guarantee of future results. Reliance upon information in this material is at the sole discretion of the viewer.
The information and opinions contained in this material are derived from proprietary and nonproprietary sources deemed by BlackRock to be reliable, are not necessarily all-inclusive and are not guaranteed as to accuracy. As such, no warranty of accuracy or reliability is given and no responsibility arising in any other way for errors and omissions (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence) is accepted by BlackRock, its officers, employees or agents.
Index performance is shown for illustrative purposes only. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot invest directly in an index.
Prepared by BlackRock Investments, LLC, member FINRA.
©2024 BlackRock. Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved. BLACKROCK is a trademark of BlackRock, Inc. or its affiliates.. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
A message from Advisor Perspectives and VettaFi: To learn more about this and other topics, check out our podcasts.
© BlackRock
More Volatility/Downside Protection Topics >