Investment Strategies
Geneva-Based Apricus Smiles On Equities, Is Underweight Bonds Amid Market Squalls

The EAM in Geneva sets out its investment views, including that it is overweight equities and thinks evidence points to a market that is trying to find a floor.
Geneva-based Apricus Finance is
overweight equities, commodities and gold as inflation runs hot
and is underweight fixed income, the organisation said in its
monthly outline of investment positions.
The external asset management firm (also interviewed by this news
service
here) explained its overweight equities stance by arguing
that “recent, extremely volatile behaviour is usually typical of
the market trying to establish a bottom.” It thinks that there
has been a peak in bearishness among retail investors. It also
argued that corporates are “healthy and investing.”
Wealth management firms are trying to judge asset allocation at a
time when global equities have been pressured by worries about
inflation; hence higher central bank interest rates, and the
risks that supply chain disruptions, aggravated by the Russian
invasion of Ukraine, could presage a recession.
“Central banks catching up with running hot inflation, the
continued Zero Covid Policy in China, the war in Ukraine and
people enjoying the return to normality post pandemic – with
increased use of services – all contributed to the market
fall in April, led lower by US technology and ‘new economy’
companies,” the firm said in a note.
“Just one year ago, many pundits declared that the pandemic had
accelerated the ongoing trend of digitisation, streaming and
tele-everything, and that there was no coming back. With the
complete reopening of the economy, consumers found themselves
enjoying shopping in person once again, travelling, dining out
and being groomed at the hairdresser instead,” it
continued.
“Company quarterly announcements from Docusign, Amazon, Netflix,
Teladoc or Lyft, highlighted a sharp deceleration in revenue
growth, (for Amazon, this being to levels last seen 20 years
ago), or a sharp deceleration, or even loss, in the number of
paying subscribers/users. Amidst extreme volatility, market
reaction has been devastating, as quality tech companies started
repricing for lower growth, while the so-called non-profitable
tech sector started to discount the high probability of never
actually reaching positive free cash flows or positive earnings,”
it said.
Within its overall overweight stance on equities, Apricus is
overweight Continental Europe, neutral UK, underweight US,
neutral Japan and overweight Asia.
Bonds: the firm is underweight on the area as a whole, and
specifically underweight high-yield debt in euros and dollars.
However, it is overweight investment grade euro debt and dollar
bonds, and underweight sovereign bonds. It has long positions on
global inflation-linked securities, US municipal infrastructure
bonds, hybrids and Asian bonds.
In currency terms, its portfolios are fully dollar hedged, and it
has a long position on gold.
Among other details, the firm noted that the recent sharp fall in
cryptocurrencies probably added fuel to selling high-quality tech
stocks, as these are very often held as collateral for margin
trading.
Apricus said the behaviour of cryptos suggests that they are not
assets for turbulent times, such as economic and geopolitical
crises, or as inflation hedges.