Financial Times Europe - 19.10.2019 - 20.10.2019

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19 October/20 October 2019 ★ FT Weekend 15


MARKETS & INVESTING


B I L LY N AU M A N— NEW YORK


Teekay Shuttle Tankers’ attempt to
float a green bond has partially run
aground with investors balking at
the notion that a company specialising
in oil tankers can qualify for
eco-friendly financing.


The Bermuda-headquartered company,
which owns one of the world’s largest
fleet of ships that transport oil from
offshore drilling sites, issued its green
bondthis month.
It was seeking between $150m and
$200m to finance the construction of
four new fuel-efficient tankers but fell
short, raising just $125m.
The cool reception comes despite the
fact that the bond qualifies for a tax
incentive from the Norwegian govern-
ment. The bond was brought to market
by Danske Bank, Nordea, SEB and DNB
Markets and pays a igher coupon thanh
the market average for high-yield debt.
Teekay’s struggle to raise capital is a
rarity in the green bond market, which
has been especially hot this year. Global
issuance has been on arecord-setting
pace nd many of the securities cominga
to market have been oversubscribed by


investors. The fundraising shortfall was
largely attributable to investors being
“skittish” over the notion that Teekay
could be considered green, said Maria
Christina Dikeos, head of global loans
contributions at Refinitiv. “Looking at
this, [investors] were like ‘hold on, we
are actually funding tankers which will
fundamentally enable a company to
transport fossil fuels’,” she said.
Teekay’s sale highlights an ongoing
struggle to define terms in the world of
sustainable finance. The London Stock

Exchange announcedlast week hat itt
was tightening its standards on green
bonds and the EU is working to publish
anofficial taxonomy o helpt efined
different types of sustainable assets but
there is currently no et of rules.s
“Because there is no industry stand-
ard, anyone can issue a bond and call it
green or sustainable,” said Ray Dhirani,
head of corporate stewardship, finance
and extractives atWorld Wildlife Fund.
In the case of Teekay, the bond was
rated as “light green” by Cicero, a sus-
tainability analytics company.
To qualify for the green bond label,“
the assets financed by the green ondsb
must show significant impact,” said
Nina Ahlstrand, head ofsustainable
finance at DNB Markets. “What quali-
fies as green is not necessarily, nor
should it be, binary.”
Many investors want reen financingg
to beavailable ut their reluctance isb
rootedin the non-green nature of
Teekay’s business, arguedJames Rich of
Aegon Asset Management. “Just
because you’re shipping more effi-
ciently does not change the fact you’re
selling a product that’s contributing to
global greenhouse gas emissions.”

Commodities


Oil tanker group’s green bond triggers


scepticism and fundraising shortfall


C O L BY S M I T H— NEW YORK

Strategists say the recent steepening of
the US yield curve might be shortlived,
warning that it could invert again if the
Federal Reserve fails to deliver enough
interest rate cuts to soothe investors
and stave off a slowdown.

Investors worry about an inversion of
the yield curve — in which shorter term
rates are higher than longer term ones —
because of its power as an economic
indicator. The curve has inverted before
every recession of the last half century.
Fears of a downturn eased this month
after a widely watched portion of the
yield curved turned positive following
months of inversion.
Thursday’s yield on the three-month
Treasury bill was 8 basis points lower
than that for the benchmark 10-year
bond — after being as much as 51bp
higher.
The two-year Treasury yield was 16bp
lower than that on the 10-year after
inverting earlier.
Investors grew more optimistic as the
US and China reached a tentative trade
truce and Brexit negotiators moved
closer to striking a deal with their EU

counterparts over Britain’s relationship
with Europe.
The Fed’s announcement last week
that it wouldbuy $60bn of Treasury
bills er month to help ease cash short-p
ages in the overnight lending markets
also helped pull short-term yields lower,
analysts said.
But Scott Mather, a managing director
at Pimco, said the forces that drove
longer dated yields above those on the

short end of the curve — the “mini-deal”
with China, as he described it, and the
Brexit eadlines — could reverse andh
the bond market could revert to where it
was a few months ago.
Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strat-
egist at Charles Schwab, said much
hinged on theFed. “The signal from the
inverted yield curve was that Fed policy
was too tight,” she said.
She warned that the yield curve could

re-invert if the Fed failed to deliver on
the interest rate cut widely expected at
the end of the month. Traders were cur-
rently pricing in an 82 per cent probabil-
ity the Fed will trim its benchmark pol-
icy rate another quarter-pointthen — its
third cut this year — with at least one
more cut expected in 2020.
Splits have deepened since the sum-
mer between Fed officials over the
future path of monetary policy, with
Esther George, Kansas City Fed
president, and Boston’s Eric Rosengren
pushing back on the need for cuts in the
face of fresh US economic data that does
not scream, “oh, we need a big rate cut”,
said Ms Jones.
Given this rift and the Fed’s past reluc-
tance to ease aggressively, Matthew
Hornbach, the global head of interest
rate strategy at Morgan Stanley, said the
recent steepening of the yield curve
should be viewed with “caution”, as the
Fed was unlikely to provide enough
accommodation to appease investors.
“If the market is pricing in two more
25bp cuts over the next year, the Fed
needs to deliver more than that,” he
said. “Nothing to me suggests the Fed is
going to be more aggressive.”

Fixed income


Fears over US yield curve inverting


again if Fed fails to deliver rate cut


‘The signal from the


inverted yield curve
was that Federal Reserve

policy was too tight’


Teekay owns one of the world’s
largest fleet of ships transporting oil

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R O B I N W I G G L E S WO RT H


In a small basement office near Portman
Square in London, wedged between the
Grazing Goat pub and the Red Sun
Chinese restaurant, a handful of egg-
heads are attempting to code a robotic
Warren Buffett.
The small team at start-up Havelock
London has an ambitious mission — to
mesh computer science with the Sage of
Omaha’s “value investing” principles.
Havelock was founded last year by the
former chief investment officer of Win-
ton Capital Management — one of the
biggestquantitative hedge funds n thei
industry with $23bn in assets. But the
start-up is ploughing a different furrow
from most other algorithmic investors.
Instead of trading in and out of stocks
at a moment’s notice, or trying to ride
hot market themes like Winton,
Havelock’s chief executive Matthew
Beddall wants to build a system more
akin to a computer-powered private
equity firm, going deep into a small
number of companies.
Paraphrasing Mr Buffett’s mentor, the
famed value investor Benjamin
Graham, he said quants typically try to
make money out of the market’s short-
term “voting machine”.
Havelock, on the other hand is
attempting to profit from the market’s
longer term “weighing machine”.
“Traditionally, quants are a mile wide
and an inch deep — we try to be a mile
deep and an inch wide,” said Mr Beddall,
who spent 17 years at Winton, latterly as
chief investment officer. “With the rise
of quantitative investing, the market’s


attention span has shortened and short-
ened. We want to build better models to
value businesses.”
Quants have been in the ascendant
over the past decade with algo-powered
hedge funds like Renaissance Technolo-
gies,DE Shaw, Two Sigma and Bridge-
water enjoying inflows as much of the
rest of the industry struggles.
Half of last year’s top 20 hedge funds,
ranked by thefees paid o managers,t
were primarily quantitative — and
several of the remainder use at least
some strategies based on algorithms.
Even traditional mutual fund groups
likeFidelity,T Rowe Price nda Capital
Group re spending huge sums on tech-a
nology n an attempt toi enhance the
abilities f their portfolio managers.o
The results are not always good with
the solid performance mostly concen-
trated in the biggest funds. Only 11 per
cent of US equity quant funds have man-
aged to beat their benchmarks this year,
according to Bank of America.
Some analysts said that, with quants
increasingly mining real-time feeds of
alternative data — such as credit card
sales, app downloads, satellite images,
social media chatter and mobile phone

geolocation — the entire investment
industry is speeding up.
The catch is that the profitability of
many of these signals tends to decay
rapidly, forcing funds into a never-end-
ing hunt for new ones.
However, that may have opened up
richer opportunities for investors with a
longer term horizon, said Savita Subra-
manian, head of US equity and quantita-
tive strategy at BofA in New York.
She estimated that valuations explain
nearly 90 per cent of the S&P 500’s
returns over a 10-year horizon — better
than any other factor that the bank’s
analysts pored over.
There is little evidence that average
turnover and holding periods are chang-
ing significantly, said Yin Luo, a senior
strategist at Wolfe Research. But he
agreed that there may be rich pickings
in longer term strategies. “It’s much less
crowded,” he said. And this is what
Havelock wants to exploit.
Mr Beddall joined Winton immedi-
ately after graduating from the Univer-
sity of Southampton with a BA in math-
ematics and computer science, and it
was Winton founderDavid Harding
who first introduced him to the value

investing principles of the Berkshire
Hathaway chief.
Havelock’s six employees currently
track 38 companies and are adding just
one company a month, they said, to
ensure analytical rigour.
The investment group builds models
to value these businesses using a combi-
nation of human judgment and algo-
rithmic analysis and, once the model is
constructed, Havelock trades largely on
autopilot. The £14m fund was launched
in August 2018 and has returned 5 per
cent since then, roughly double the gain
of the MSCI World index over that
period. Fees for investors are capped at
0.99 per cent of assets a year.
Havelock was satisfied with the initial
performance but admitted itsvalue-
oriented approach ad been a headwindh
in a market that prefers faster growing
but pricey companies.
Value investors prefer cheaper stocks,
either measured by earnings or assets
versus their share price. “Buying expen-
sive stocks doesn’t make much sense at
this point but it’s the most expensive
things that have done the best over the
past 12 months,” said Mr Beddall.
Combining the systematic investing
approach of quants with a longer term,
deep-research value investing style is
tricky. Quants said it was much easier to
use statistical sciences to predict near-
term performance of a security —
whether over a day or a millisecond —
than over the next year, given the vast
amount of factors that influence a com-
pany’s performance.
But Mr Beddall remained optimistic
that combining these two approaches is
feasible. “It’s not impossible, it’s just a
little harder,” he said. “If you look at
what Buffett’s done, he looks at what
companies might be worth, rather than
what they’re going to do in the next
quarter.”

Algo-powered Havelock tries


to replicate famed investor’s


principles with longer strategy


‘With the
rise of

quant
investing,

the market’s
attention

span has
shortened’

Warren Buffett
is renowned for
his successful
‘value investing’
approach
Nati Harnik/AP

Asset management. uant fundsQ


Buffett bot aims to crack


the value investing code


R O B I N W I G G L E S WO RT H— OSLO

Fidelity is ramping up its cryptocur-
rencycustody usiness, hoping to profitb
from the scarcity of big, regulated insti-
tutions in the chaotic orld of digitalw
assets, according to Abigail Johnson, the
investment group’s chief executive.
The Boston-based financial group,
which has $2.8tn of assets under man-
agement, announced the launch of
Fidelity Digital Assets last autumn,
promising “enterprise-quality custody
and trade execution services” for hedge
funds, family offices and financial advis-
ers dabbling incryptocurrencies.
Fidelity started adding clients in the
first quarter and is engaged in a full roll-
out of its custo dy and trading
services for digital assets — a boon to
what is a fragmented and complicated
industry, Ms Johnson told theFinancial
Times in a rare interview.
“If you’re either interested or techni-
cally adept, then it’s not really that big of
a deal but, compared to everything else
that you do in terms of financial rela-
tionships that you have with either a
bank or a brokerage firm... it’s just
more nascent. It’s just not developed.”
Ms Johnson, chief executive of the
group since 2014,sees Fidelity’s crypto-
currency custody service as abig selling
point, pointing to stories of thumb
drives lost and holders passing away

without sharing their digital keys with
relatives. “There are people out there
with significant amounts of wealth in
cryptocurrencies, probably bitcoin,
and they’re looking for somebody to
hold those coins for them because in the
event of their passing.. you’ve got to.
have a plan to be able to get those coins
to somebody else,”Ms Johnson said.
Coinbase, a crypto currenc y
exchange, already stores billions of
dollars worth of digital assets on behalf
of its customers. Last year, it also
launched its owncustody business orf
third parties. But Coinbase “is still a
company that most people had never
heard of and they don’t have the existing
relationships with the independent
advisers”, said Ms Johnson.
Fidelity Digital Assets has filed an
application to operate as a limited-
purpose trust company with the New
York State Department of Financial
Services, which would enable it to serve
an even broader range of institutions.
Fidelity’s experiments in cryptocur-
rencies and blockchain, the technology
that underpins bitcoin, were initially
“just for fun”, Ms Johnson said.
The company explored several poten-
tial avenues, even setting up a small bit-
coin mining operation in 2014 that cost
$200,000.Eventually, Fidelity settled
on custody as the best launching pad.
Ms Johnson was confident valuablea
business could be built. “It’s not going
away. As long as the value is there,
people will look to preserve that value.”

Crypto asset


Fidelity ramps


up digital


currency


custody arm


‘It’s not going away. As


long as the value is there,
people will look to

preserve that value’


Growth stocks have trounced value stocks over the past decade
Indices rebased

Source: Refinitiv













     

MSCI World Value

MSCI World Growth

OCTOBER 19 2019 Section:Markets Time: 10/201918/ - 18:07 User:stephen.smith Page Name:MARKETS1, Part,Page,Edition:USA , 15, 1

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