AI chip giants warping Asia’s stock picking game


Concentration risks: A woman walks past a Samsung Electronics store in Seoul. Samsung and SK Hynix comprise 55% of South Korea’s Kospi, defeating the purpose of tracking a benchmark to represent a diversified portfolio. — AFP

SAM Konrad’s stocks are having a fantastic year, thanks to artificial intelligence (AI)-fuelled rallies in Taiwan and South Korea, but his fund is so top heavy with winners, he now needs to ditch his best performers.

“We have been forced sellers of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), Samsung and MediaTek,” said Konrad, investment manager for Asia Equity Income at Jupiter Asset Management, of the chip-making stocks, which have respectively gained 52%, 159% and 184% so far this year.

Just three large Asian tech firms – TSMC, Samsung and South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix – now account for almost a third of MSCI’s Asia Pacific ex-Japan Index, creating concentration risks that many active portfolio rules deem too high.

Forced selling across active funds like Konrad’s is one of several side-effects of a rally that is riding mainly on the explosion of a handful of companies.

That, in turn, has created distortions across the market while the forced selling has added to pressures on the battered South Korean won.

According to HSBC, TSMC is the biggest portfolio underweight among Asian and global emerging-market funds, as the region’s record-breaking rally distorts its equity benchmarks and portfolio managers struggle to keep up.

The double-edged nature of concentration risks has also been seen during recent steep sell-offs, with South Korean stocks sliding 12% and Taiwan down 6% in the last three sessions from their record highs as investors fret about AI valuations.

Expectations of runaway growth in profits have led to TSMC occupying 41.5% of Taiwan’s TAIEX, and Samsung and Hynix comprising 55% of South Korea’s Kospi.

This means these indexes are largely bets on one or two stocks – defeating the purpose of tracking a benchmark to represent a diversified portfolio.

That makes beating these benchmarks even more difficult for active managers.

The degree of concentration “creates structural challenges,” said Herald Van der Linde, head of equity strategy for Asia Pacific at HSBC in Hong Kong, in a research note.

“As equities continue to outperform, funds will find it increasingly difficult to add exposure, reinforcing a cycle of forced selling and enlarging underweight positions even amid strong fundamentals.”

What’s more, many of the best-performing alternatives to these three stocks are still tied to the AI theme, meaning sector diversification hasn’t helped returns.

Information technology stocks have led the region with explosive gains, but other sectors like consumer staples and healthcare have lagged, according to Goldman Sachs.

The same is true at a country level, the bank said: While the MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan index is up 27% year-to-date, excluding South Korea and Taiwan, it is down 4%.

This dynamic is not new, having unfolded in the United States where the so-called Magnificent Seven technology stocks comprise about a third of the S&P 500 index and have lured investor cash from active funds into passive, market or theme tracking funds.

In Asia, the concentration is more extreme, has unfolded more quickly and turbocharged the trend toward passive funds.

Over the last five years, Asia’s active funds have seen US$269bil of cumulative outflows, while passive funds have drawn in US$510bil, with a quarter of that coming in just the last six months, according to BNP Paribas’ analysis of EPFR data.

“The size of recent inflows into the region’s passive funds has no precedent across the last 10 years,” said William Bratton, head of cash equity research for Asia-Pacific at BNP Paribas Securities.

In response, stock pickers have headed further down the AI supply chain, buying smaller-cap companies while emphasising the benefits of investing strategies that do not passively follow lopsided market indexes.

Isaac Thong, senior investment director for Asian equities at Aberdeen Investments, has for example recently added ASMPT and Grand Process Technology Corp, both mid-sized suppliers to chipmaking firms.

Jupiter’s Konrad prefers larger stocks and has nearly half of his fund allocated to Taiwan and South Korea.

He owns shares in electronics-makers Hon Hai and Quanta, as well as SK Hynix, with his largest position in chip designer MediaTek.

“Our funds are very different to the benchmark, and the way we invest very different to our peers, which we think has helped us to outperform,” he said.

In Asia, concentration risk has become more pronounced than it was when Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent were market darlings and made up 37.14% of the narrower MSCI China benchmark at their peak in October 2020.

The turbulence that is driving in fund flows is also unprecedented in scale.

Rebalancing in foreigners’ portfolios drove a record US$27.9bil outflow from South Korean equities in May, exchange data showed, while at the same time Nomura has tracked an unprecedented US$20.4bil year-to-date inflow from US-domiciled funds into South Korea and Taiwan.

“The relentless rally since April has increased concentration risk in Asian equities that we have never seen before,” said Rupal Agarwal, Asia quant strategist at Bernstein. — Reuters

Gregor Stuart Hunter and Ankur Banerjee write for Reuters. The views expressed here are the writers’ own.

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