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JPMorgan U.S. Large Cap Core Plus Fund performing well with solid philosophy and consistently applied bottom-up process

Process:

The strategy rests on a solid philosophy and a clearly designed and consistently applied bottom-up process. The ability to leverage the analysts’ insights through both long and short positions makes it distinctive, though small active bets make us somewhat cautious regarding its alpha potential. The strategy aims to capture temporarily mispriced opportunities through consistent use of the analysts’ long-term valuation forecasts. Those derive from an in-house dividend-discount model that is fed by the team’s earnings, cash flow, and growth-rate estimates. The analysts rank stocks in each industry based on their estimated fair value. The managers incorporate these rankings into their stock-picking, expressing modest sector preferences based on their macroeconomic view.

Portfolio:

This benchmark-aware and highly diversified fund held 289 stock positions per end of November 2021, of which 124 are shorts. The long leg of the fund is conservatively managed, with modest bets versus the Russell 1000 Index and an active share of 55%-60%. NXP Semiconductors, Alphabet, and Amazon.com were the largest active positions in the portfolio, with an overweight of around 200 basis points. Rivian was bought in 2021 for risk-management considerations to offset the underweight of Tesla, which the managers never held. Most stocks that are sold short in the 30/30 extension carry a weight of less than 25 basis points.

People:

Growing confidence in the two experienced portfolio managers and the large and seasoned analyst team supporting them leads to an upgrade of the People Pillar rating to Above Average from Average. Susan Bao is an experienced and long-tenured manager on this strategy and is well-versed in the firm’s hallmark investment process. Bao and Luddy have also managed this 130/30 strategy together since the start of the U.S.-domiciled vehicle in 2005 and since 2007 on its offshore counterpart. Steven Lee succeeded Luddy in 2018. Lee brings close to three decades of experience, but most of it was gained as an analyst. Since 2014, he has managed JPMorgan US Research Enhanced Equity, the firm’s analyst-driven long-short strategy, which serves as the blueprint for this strategy’s 30/30 extension. Although portfolio management is collegial, Bao concentrates on consumer, financials, and healthcare, while Lee is the lead for industrial/commodities, technology, and utilities/telecom. While their collaboration is still relatively short, it has already proved fruitful, and the managers have demonstrated their ability to generate alpha from both long and short ideas provided by the analyst team.

Performance:

It has outperformed the Russell 1000 Index on a total return and alpha basis since inception and over shorter time horizons. Since Susan Bao and Steven Lee have comanaged the strategy, a more relevant period to consider, the strategy also outperformed its average peer and the index. However, results were a bit mixed during that period, with a disappointing performance in 2018 offset by successful stock-picking predominantly in 2020 and 2021. The strategy had a good year in 2021, as stock selection in the long-leg and in the market-neutral component contributed positively. Positions in semiconductors, banks, and energy helped.

Table

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(Source: Morningstar)

Price:

It’s critical to evaluate expenses, as they come directly out of returns. The share class on this report levies a fee that ranks in its Morningstar category’s costliest quintile. Such high fees stack the odds heavily against investors. Based on our assessment of the fund’s People, Process and Parent pillars in the context of these fees, we don’t think this share class will be able to deliver positive alpha relative to the category benchmark index, explaining its Morningstar Analyst Rating of Neutral.


(Source: Morningstar)                                                                     (Source: Morningstar)

About Funds:

A growing conviction in the duo that manages JPMorgan U.S. Large Cap Core Plus and its Luxembourg resided sibling JPM U.S. Select Equity Plus, and the considerable resources they have effectively utilised, lead to an upgrade of the strategy’s People Pillar rating to Above Average from Average. The strategy looks sensible and is designed to fully exploit the analyst recommendations by taking long positions in top-ranked companies while shorting stocks disliked by the analysts. Classic fundamental bottom-up research should give the fund an informational advantage. The portfolio is quite diversified, holding 250-350 stocks in total with modest deviations from the category index in the long leg. The 30/30 extension is broadly sector-, style-, and beta-neutral. Here the managers are cognizant of the risks of shorting stocks, where they select stocks on company-specific grounds or as part of a secular theme. For example, the team prefers semiconductors, digital advertising, and e-commerce offset by shorts in legacy hardware, media, and network providers. Short exposure generally stands at 20%-30%, with the portfolio’s net exposure to the market kept at 100%. The strategy’s performance since inception, which still has some relevance given Bao’s involvement, has been outstanding. 

(Source: Morningstar)

General Advice Warning

Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.

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