Northcape Capital’s Fleur Wright is still kicking herself for not owning market darlings Nvidia and Novo Nordisk, the maker of the weight loss wonder drug Ozempic, before shares of those companies rocketed in 2023.
They were already on the money manager’s radar.
In Nvidia’s case, the global equities team owned the stock at the launch of the fund in 2019 at around $US4 apiece. But it sold in 2023 just before the chipmaker’s big announcement on generative artificial intelligence that turned out to be a watershed movement for the company (and the sharemarket).
It was a valuation call – Nvidia was already trading at around 60 times earnings – and while the team got back in soon after in the third quarter, the sale still weighs heavily despite riding its surge since then.
“It wasn’t easy at the time,” Wright tells The Australian Financial Review of buying back Nvidia’s shares. “But I think it made it easier because we’ve got three different people questioning the decision, and you’re making a call.”
Wright manages the global equity fund with two other portfolio managers, Theo Maas and Wendy Herringer, and senior analyst Calvin Lim.
“Nvidia has still been our number one contributor since inception,” she says. “I don’t like a share price that’s gone up a lot – I grew up on a farm, so I like to get a bargain – but you have to go away and do the work and take a long-term view, and then I think that allows you to take advantage of the opportunities.”
Still, being under exposed to the Magnificent Seven US tech stocks has cost it performance. The fund has underperformed the benchmark for the past 18 months or so.
“We didn’t have enough of those mega seven stocks when they were really ramping. It’s annoying because there are some good businesses there, but they are quite correlated,” Wright concedes. “We wanted to have more diversified exposure.”
Northcape has since closed its underweight to a more neutral position and is bullish on the next stages in AI’s development.
“If you think that ChatGPT was only launched in November 2022, we are still in 1995 by internet terms so it’s super exciting because there’s just so much out there,” Wright adds.
It also owns Microsoft, Google parent Alphabet – “we still think it’s got a lot of IP in that business, it will be one of the winners” – and US software giants Salesforce and Adobe. “We’re still looking for that killer application in software for AI.”
Novo Nordisk was another tantalising close call.
Not least because Wright met with the drugmaker just before the fund launched in 2019 and had even scribbled in her notebook that “if they get this obesity thing right, this will be amazing”.
But the fund sat-out the initial explosion in demand for the weight-loss drugs known as GLP-1s after successful drug trials of Ozempic in 2023.
“Annoyingly we missed that, but again I’m not too concerned,” she says. “It’s never too late for these things. You hear about these amazing ideas, and you’ll get the opportunities, and they’ll continue to grow.”
The fund has even been buying up more Novo Nordisk shares in the pullback.
“It’s not dissimilar to AI,” she says of the Ozempic phenomenon. “The opportunity is just so, so big, it’s staggering – 45 per cent of Americans are obese.”
Novo Nordisk, she adds, is a direct play on the thematic with just 1 per cent of the potential population using the GLP-1 drugs today.
“You don’t even need to have much imagination, it could get to 8 per cent or something if the forecasts are right... I don’t want that to be the case, but you only need a fraction of that to see value in the shares.”
For all the missed opportunities in AI and Ozempic (at least at the beginning), there have been other trends where the Northcape team have been in the right place at the right time.
Like investing in America’s ailing stormwater and sewage systems and owning stocks exposed to the $US2 trillion of investment that the government has earmarked for infrastructure, green energy projects and the local semiconductor industry.
It’s what Wright refers to as America’s “industrial renaissance” with investments in the mega projects only just starting to break ground now.
So it bought US-listed Advanced Drainage Systems which makes plastic pipes for stormwater drains and septic systems.
Since Northcape bought the stock in 2023 the share price has almost doubled and has much further to run, according to Wright, as concrete pipes fast coming to the end of their life are replaced and new roads, schools and communities are built that need such plumbing.
“We see them as a direct play on that capex growth that’s happening in the US,” she adds.
Another good call has been investing in United Rentals, the largest rental equipment company in the US that first came on to its radar in 2019. Northcape bought the stock in 2020 and has watched the shares rocket more than 700 per cent from a low in the pandemic.
According to Wright, smaller companies will struggle to provide the equipment needed to build big infrastructure projects like roads and data centres, so she expects United Rentals to keep stealing market share. It already stands at 17 per cent of the market.
“It’s a great opportunity there, and the stock is trading well below the market multiple.”
Wright is confident that the fund is back on track after 18 months of catch-up. Now that it has built up exposure to the US mega caps, it is looking for companies that are flying under the radar particularly in the mid-cap part of the market.
As the US continues to cut interest rates, the sharemarket will start to broaden out so Northcape has been adding to its approved list of stocks.
Online vehicle auction services provider Copart is the latest addition – the shares have more than doubled in the last five years – but it has not started buying shares. Yet.
“They are another random company that many people won’t have heard of, but they completely dominate in that space,” Wright says.
“There are a lot of opportunities in the mid-caps because everyone has been focused on the large caps, so it is nice to look in that area,” she adds.
Wright is among the lineup at this year’s Sohn Hearts & Minds investment conference in November, which will be held in Adelaide for the first time. The Australian Financial Review is a media partner of Sohn Hearts & Minds.
This article was originally posted by The Australian Financial Review here. Licensed by Copyright Agency. You must not copy this work without permission.
Nick Moakes, the chief investment officer of the $72 billion Wellcome Trust, told the conference that too many investors were banking on a return to the ultra-low interest rates that prevailed over the past decade.
Eleven rock stars of international and local funds management took to stage – each tasked with picking and pitching one company whose shares will take off over the next year.
Stock pickers have been punished for betting against the US. The choice between consensus and contrarianism on American exceptionalism is now harder than ever.
Don’t overlook down and out silver miners, legacy skincare brands ready for a revival and a big financial company suffering from a severe case of shareholder wealth destruction. That was the message from top fund managers, company founders and super funds at the Sohn Hearts & Minds investment conference in Adelaide on Friday.
The major stockpicking conference is on tour for the third time in its nine-year history – at the same time as the supercar championships come to town.
Among the stock picks and stunts at the Sohh Hearts & Minds event, Howard Marks and Nick Moakes provided investors with long-term rules for playing markets.
Renowned technology leader Paul Bassat predicts emerging artificial intelligence companies will disrupt sectors and overtake established incumbent companies just as rapidly as the seismic shifts that took place when the internet emerged in the mid-1990s.
Bitcoin is the ‘gateway drug’ for the cryptocurrency industry, which is now seeing the end of its time in ‘regulatory purgatory’, says one of the sector’s strongest billionaire backers and former Kamala Harris campers.
Ellerston Capital portfolio manager Chris Kourtis has put his biggest bet on embattled Perpetual – picking one of the most hated stocks on the ASX – that he believes will soon be the ‘cheapest listed asset manager of scale in the universe’.
At Sohn Hearts & Minds, Northcape Capital’s Fleur Wright this gives a rare opportunity to buy a high quality company at an attractive price.
Corporate Travel Management will return to its former glory as the global travel industry gets back to normal after the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Rikki Bannan.
Every year, the country’s top equities investors make their way to the Sohn Hearts & Minds Investment Leaders Conference to pitch their best ideas for the year ahead.
Australia and the rest of the world must adjust to a new Trump presidency that will deliver an expected bull market but also disruption, with the leader in waiting prepared to “create pain” to get his way, speakers at the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference warned.
Admiral Mike Rogers, who headed the National Security Agency during Mr Trump’s first term and who worked closely with the then president, says Australia must prepare to make the case about key aspects of its alliance with the US to the transactional new president.
Hearts & Minds Investments chair Chris Cuffe is hoping for the six-year-old fund, which gives 1.5 per cent of its assets to medical research charities each year, to grow to more than $1.5bn in the next five years.
Friday’s Sohn Hearts & Minds conference will be the first time a group of significant global fund managers have spoken to an Australian investor audience about their views on the New World Investment Order under Trump 2.0.
Local space entrepreneurs are attempting to take a slice of SpaceX’s business, as demand for launch services far outweighs supply.
He was the first presenter at the very first Sohn Hearts & Minds conference at the Sydney Opera House in 2016, and now Adelaide fund manager David Prescott is hoping the event’s first foray into his home city will help to put it on the radar of some of the world’s leading investment experts.
Bitcoin’s bounce to record highs in recent days is only the beginning of a fresh surge higher for cryptocurrency, says US billionaire Mike Novogratz.
But influential New York-hedge fund manager Ricky Sandler will turn to Europe for his next stock pick at the upcoming prestigious Sohn Hearts & Minds Conference this year.
As Donald Trump claims victory, markets are signalling that his administration could unleash a wave of inflationary pressures. Can stocks keep defying rising bond yields?
The concentration risk in global stock indexes that has built up during the strong rise over the past year must now be a key consideration for global investors, according to Vihari Ross.
The portfolio manager says defensive stocks pose a bigger risk than the magnificent seven for investors that are overexposed to the American sharemarket.
With one eye on Beijing’s efforts to revive the Chinese economy, Mr Mehta is sticking to his well-worn strategy: he’s hunting for companies across Asia that aren’t battling intense competition and have management teams focused on costs, cash generation and high payouts to shareholders.
Beeneet Kothari of Tekne Capital Management says the best investments are made when you’re uncomfortable. He’s about to prove just that.
Mr Kothari, who was talking ahead of his fifth appearance at the annual Sohn Hearts & Minds conference in Adelaide on November 15, said a Trump presidency would be a force for deregulation in the US economy.
IFM Investors executive director Rikki Bannan believes this year could be a good one to invest in some select small cap stocks in Australia, including in the consumer sector.
Chris Kourtis of Ellerston Capital plans to tip one of the “most hated” stocks in Australia when he presents at the 2024 Sohn Hearts & Minds Conference in Adelaide.
The renowned value investor is preparing his stock selection for the Sohn Hearts & Minds Conference. It’s not Star Entertainment.
Alex Pollak’s funds management company Loftus Peak rode the Nvidia wave and he is now looking at more opportunities in disruptive industry stocks.
Sumit Gautam is the Founder of Scalar Gauge and speaks with Equity Mates ahead of his appearance at the Sohn Hearts and Minds conference.
When Northcape Capital’s Fleur Wright first visited Nvidia in 2018 there was no hint of the generative AI boom that erupted in 2023, but it turned out to be her biggest win.
Northcape Capital’s Fleur Wright is still kicking herself for not owning market darlings Nvidia and Novo Nordisk, the maker of the weight loss wonder drug Ozempic, before shares of those companies rocketed in 2023.
Tech investor Sumit Gautam carefully avoids the word bubble when describing the investor frenzy surrounding the rise of artificial intelligence, but warns there are dangers of getting caught up in the hype.
Two billionaires and their companies – Canada’s Constellation and ASX-listed WiseTech – have soared in the past decade. Others worry things are about to turn.
The chief investment officer of the massive charitable fund raised almost $3 billion at ultra-low rates. Sometimes the long view can be the most profitable.
In this episode, co-founders Matthew Grounds AM and Guy Fowler OAM discuss their journey in building Hearts & Minds and its philanthropic model that has donated nearly $70 million to medical research.
The chief investment officer of the London-based $71bn Wellcome Trust, Nick Moakes, has a simple rule for the trust’s investment team: “Never invest with anyone who is or has been or should have been in prison.”
Howard Marks says investors must ignore manic depressive markets and focus on the bigger picture. Rates will be higher for longer and that will bring pain – and opportunity.
For billionaire investor and Oaktree Capital co-founder Howard Marks there’s little point in predicting whether the sharemarket is in bubble territory or where the market goes from here. That’s the enemy of long-term investment.