Fortune - USA (2019-12)

(Antfer) #1
you see the greatest risks and greatest opportunities in 2020?

BROWN: I genuinely believe that most of the market is expecting
some extreme move out of interest rates. They either think this
whole thing is a fake-out and there’s going to be a bout of inflation,
or that rates are headed to zero. But what if there’s just more of this
as far as the eye can see? There have been 100-year spans where
there wasn’t much volatility in interest rates. So it’s entirely pos-
sible that people with extreme opinions will lose and people that

But you know what? Risk management
isn’t enough to catapult a company into
long-term sustainable growth. So the best
companies are playing offense. They’re taking
market share because they’re helping their
customers become more efficient and more
productive. They’re helping their customers
save money. Saving money never goes out of
style no matter where we are, in a peak or a
trough.

SUBRAMANIAN: We’ve been doing a lot of work
on ESG. If you look at the balance sheet of
the average S&P company, over 70% of assets
are intangible. These are assets that you can’t
analyze using traditional measures, and they
are more tied to reputation, intellectual prop-
erty, and metrics that aren’t necessarily what
we learned about in business school.
So for example, think about a tech com-
pany: How happy its talent is is critical to the
success of that corporation, because the big-
gest risk is brain drain and losing your smart
people to a competitor. We found that the
companies with the best employee satisfaction
scores tend to have higher returns on equity
than their peers with disgruntled staff.

BROWN: I would be careful with that because a
lot of the happiness is based on what the stock
price is doing, and that could turn on a dime
and almost be a coincident indicator. I’m sure
there was a lot of Champagne being popped
all summer long with WeWork.

SUBRAMANIAN: But one of the things we found
is that employee satisfaction is actually a lead-
ing indicator of market performance.

STRANGE: And this workforce is very mission-
driven. The answer to the question “Do I work
for a company whose mission I really believe
in?” is a very good sign of retention.

FORTUNE: A final question for everyone: Where do

ROUNDTABLE


Three Things to Feel Excited

About, and Three to Worry

About, for 2020

GET EXCITED ABOUT


Health care

An aging global popu-
lation means more
demand for medical
devices and tests, and
opportunities for com-
panies such as THERMO
FISHER and DANAHER.

Financials

Their balance sheets
are in far better shape
than before the last
recession, and their
stocks are cheap.

Doing more with less

AUTODESK and
ASPEN TECHNOLOGY
are among the tech
companies helping
industrial companies
conserve resources.

WORRY ABOUT


Corporate debt

A spate of mergers
and stock buybacks
have saddled many
companies with high
debt—and their costs
could rise if interest
rates climb.

A regulation revival

Democratic candidates
are promising tighter
rules on finance and
energy, which could
mean a rough election
year for those sectors.

Indexes gone wild

The dominance of index
funds could exacerbate
market dips by causing
liquidity problems for
smaller companies.

“The best companies are playing offense. They’re


taking market share because they’re helping their

customers become more efficient.” Karina Funk • Brown Advisory
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