Fortune - USA (2019-12)

(Antfer) #1

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FORTUNE.COM // DECEMBER 2019


accessories, has a new designer in place who
could spark sales with new products. It’s also
one of the cheaper luxury consumer stocks out
there. Gautrey says he wouldn’t be surprised if
Burberry saw a bump of 50% or more in share
price: “If things go well, it could be there
within 12 months.”

EMERGING MARKE TS


In China, India, and Southeast Asia, the
middle class is here to stay.

B


ETWEEN TRADE TENSIONS in Asia
and near-recessionary condi-
tions in Europe that have hurt
companies that export their
goods there, international equi-
ties have had a tough run. After two years of

retailer is seeing consistent demand from an
older, affluent demographic for DIY prod-
ucts—a trend many investors believe would
be resistant to any downturn. Watts notes that
Home Depot has grown its dividend over the
past five years and has posted revenue growth
of almost 6% in the past 12 months.
Another big-box retailer, Target, has con-
tinued to prove it can thrive in an e-commerce
universe. Target is poised to grow revenue next
fiscal year by 3%—small change in some indus-
tries but a healthy jump for a retailer.

Bold Bet
EVEN IF U.S. GROWTH were to slow down, it
wouldn’t keep the fast-growing affluent de-
mographic in countries like China, Brazil, and
Indonesia from spending on luxuries. Schrod-
ers’s Gautrey sees an upside in British retailer
and “turnaround story” Burberry. The brand,
known for high-end trench coats and myriad

STOCKS AND FUNDS


HOW FORTUNE DID


The Best Kind of ‘Upside Surprise’


kept that trend alive.
We got market-beating
returns from Face-
book, Alphabet, and
Amazon—but we have
doubts that the party
will last much longer.

Financial Folly

We foresaw that a vol-
atile year would mean
more business for bro-
kerages and traders;

Asia Ascendant

Some of our best-
performing picks were
in Asia, where fast-
growing middle-class
populations drove
big gains for Meituan
Dianping (the “Grub-
hub of China”) and
Hong Kong casino op-
erator Melco Resorts
& Entertainment. And
while tariff battles hurt

we didn’t realize how
much technological
changes and competi-
tion would hurt their
profits. Shares in TD
Ameritrade fell 25% as
a zero-commissions
battle eroded earnings
across the brokerage
industry. Options- and
futures-trading giants
CME Group and CBOE
were also laggards.

Healthy Returns

In a year when health-
care stocks in general
underperformed, we
reaped big returns on
two innovators whose
products won approval
from the FDA: Exact
Sciences, which makes
noninvasive colorectal
screening tests, and
Vertex Pharmaceuti-
cals, which develops
therapies for cystic
fibrosis. —MATT HEIMER

some semiconduc-
tor makers, our picks
Taiwan Semiconduc-
tor and U.S.-based
Texas Instruments
returned 48% and 30%,
respectively.

Ever Bigger Tech

U.S. tech giants have
generated a huge share
of the past decade’s
stock gains, and 2019

A YEAR AGO, OUR INVESTMENT TEAM believed that rising interest rates and grim
trade tensions would be a drag on the stock market. We predicted that when it came
to earning steady returns, the best offense would be a good defense. As it turned
out, U.S. stocks did just fine—and senior writer Jen Wieczner’s “Safety Meets
Strength” portfolio did even better. Over 12 months, her 30 stock picks averaged
returns of 20.2%, including dividends, compared with 14.4% for the S&P 500. An
interesting footnote: Seven of our nine non-U.S. picks beat the S&P, even as global
stocks in general lagged American ones. Here, a roundup of our hits and misses.
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