Friday, June 28, 2013

Q3 Investment Committee Meeting Summary

We held our third quarter Investment Committee meeting on June 27. There was general agreement on a number of issues following our meeting, namely: we believe the U.S. economy continues in a slow but stable recovery; we believe inflationary pressures remain low; we continue to hold a positive view towards equities; we believe equity market leadership is shifting from a value/yield focus to growth; and general agreement that investor psychology toward interest rates is shifting to the view that a more sustained rise in rates is increasingly probable.   

Our longer-term view towards equities remains positive. We believe stocks should continue to perform well in a rising interest rate environment as long as 1) inflation remains moderate and 2) Fed policy remains gradualistic. We think leadership in stocks is shifting away from yield-oriented or value, to growth.  We think growth stocks can do better in a rising interest rate environment because of their perceived ability to grow both earnings and dividends at an above average pace.

Within equities, we meaningfully changed our allocation in favor of growth. We eliminated our holdings of higher yield stocks and added new positions in technology and dividend achiever stocks. These groups have the attributes of very large cash positions, attractive valuations, and large growing cash flows which place them in a position to grow dividends at an above average rate. We also increased allocations to small and mid-cap growth, which have historically delivered higher returns than large caps and we expect should do well in an environment that favors growth.

Within bonds, we reduced our exposure to intermediate bonds, slightly increased our exposure to short-term bonds, and repositioned our long-term bonds by substituting preferred stocks for long corporates. The preferreds provide a significant boost in yield and have demonstrated lower volatility. Our allocations to intermediate and long-term bonds are now at the low end of our allocation range while our allocation to short term bonds is neutral within our allocation range.  

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