“When I look at the market going forward, the key element is this underpinning of strong corporate earnings,” says equity portfolio manager Rob Lovelace. “This growth has been evident for the last three years, and it doesn’t look like it’s slowing down.”
Here are three equity market themes we are focused on for the remainder of the year and beyond.
1) The AI freight train shows no signs of slowing
In the race for AI supremacy, five hyperscalers — Amazon, Alphabet, Meta Microsoft and Oracle — have committed to investing $650 billion this year on data centres, a historic level of spending that does not appear to be slowing. “These investments are being led by some of the most profitable companies the world has seen,” says equity portfolio manager Mark Casey. “As long as the technology keeps advancing, I expect they’ll continue to invest.”
Indeed, total global investment in AI infrastructure and AI related products could reach $30 trillion over the next decade, eclipsing China’s industrial boom of the early 2000s, considered by many to be the largest in modern history. That boom reshaped global trade, labour markets and politics, suggesting AI may be much bigger than a sector story.
“In the first half of the year, the Iran war seemed to block out the sun,” Casey says. “But I think AI still is the sun in the sense that it is potentially the highest impact technology in a generation and the most significant force in the economy.”
All the spending has translated into soaring demand for advanced semiconductor makers like NVIDIA and Broadcom as well as semiconductor foundries like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and networking companies like Cisco Systems, for example.
With technology advancing so rapidly and the build-out likely stretching years into the future, the epicentre of demand could shift among various hardware suppliers. That is why selective investing is essential, Casey adds.
2) Look beyond US borders for magnificence
Think the AI story is the exclusive domain of US tech giants? Think again.
Just as the Magnificent Seven have led US markets, seven companies that play a key role in the AI revolution are also dominating emerging markets. TSMC, Samsung Electronics and SK hynix are common names, but lesser-known companies MediaTek and Delta Electronics are also asserting leadership. Tencent and Alibaba have access to the largest market in the world by operating in China.