Black is still the dominant color on the market screens this year as equities continue their upward drift. In the midst of first-quarter corporate earnings season, which so far have proved resilient, investors are increasingly concerned that a correction is on the horizon as macroeconomics headlines remain frail. For this month, Executive speaks to Elie Khoury, cheif executive of Berytus Capital and Nour Eldeen al-Hammoury, chief market strategist at Amana Capital for their investment recommendations.
Elie Khoury
Bullish or bearish?
Khoury is conservatively bullish on the markets in the United States and slightly bearish on Europe, as the US enjoys much better fundamentals than Europe. He believes equities will continue their upward trend because, “With central banks from the US to Europe to England pumping all this money, they are inflating everything which is why equity markets performed so well since beginning 2012 until today.” He adds that if the US unemployment and housing picture improves, he will be buying equities more aggressively.
Main concerns?
Khoury’s greatest concern is banks’ exposure to derivatives. “At $188 trillion, this exposure is 14 times the size of the United States’ [gross domestic product]” he warns. In the short term, Khoury is mainly concerned with the economic issues in Spain and Italy; he adds that issues in Greece might resurface in May during the upcoming elections.
Favorite asset classes?
Khoury favors equities. “The summer time will provide us with many opportunities. Markets will correct and investors will get the opportunity to invest,” he says. Khoury’s top sectors to invest in are technology and consumer products.
Specific names?
He likes Pfizer in the pharmaceutical sector, Kraft in the non-cyclical consumer goods sector and Microsoft, Intel and Qualcomm in the technology sector. Khoury also highlights Costco, Home Depot, McDonalds and Starbucks as stocks he would be buying on the basis of their relative weakness to benefit from lower entry points.
MENA equities?
While deterred by the unrest in the region he notes that it is “putting a floor on the price of crude which is good for Saudi Arabia so it is the only country in the region we could be positive on.”
Nour Eldeen al-Hammoury
Bullish or bearish?
Hammoury warns against buying aggressively due to the very slow economic growth and the fact that the United Kingdom is back in recession. “The crisis is not over yet and it needs a minimum of 10 years to solve,” says Hammoury. He does not expect the recent rally in equities to continue and he is awaiting a correction in the markets, as “the waves of the tsunami are still rolling.”
Main concerns?
Hammoury’s largest concern is the oil market, as a “higher oil prices are not good for the global economy.” He is also concerned with the sovereign debt crisis in Europe and the lack of transparency from politicians. “We saw an ‘Arab Spring’, we could see something of the sort in Europe as well,” warns Hammoury.
Favorite asset class?
He would stick to gold and recommends buying between $1610 and $1625 per ounce. Within equities, Hammoury would remain in defensive sectors (such as utilities, consumer goods and telecoms).
MENA equities?
He is not interested in investing in the region at this point, but he does highlight that the abundant cash reserves in MENA governments’ coffers provide support in these turbulent times and “the continuous high prices of oil that will carry on stimulating reserve cash for governments.”
Specific buy?
His top stock globally is Apple. He sees it going to $700 or to $800.
Any name in the MENA region?
He likes Dubai-based Tabreed, also known as the National Central Cooling Company.
