Richard Saldanha celebrated his tenth anniversary as lead portfolio manager of the Global Equity Income Strategy in November 2023. Here is the journey of the strategy over that decade.
Read this article to understand:
- The potential advantages when investing in global equity income strategies
- The journey of the Global Equity Income Strategy to deliver a decade of consistent outperformance versus the benchmark
- What the next decade will look like for equity income investing
We always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next ten…
A lot can change in ten years.
A decade ago, when Richard Saldanha took over as lead portfolio manager on the Aviva Investors Global Equity Income Strategy, no one could have foreseen the significant events that would shake the world, economies and markets alike over that time.
The chaotic decade encompassed major obstacles for all investors, from political ructions to a global pandemic. Huge intraday swings and relentless volatility in all risk assets became the norm, growing more frequent and intense – culminating in a great number of drawdowns for equity investors. Yet, global equities dramatically grew by 8.2 per cent per annum in that same period.1
A resilient and consistent approach
Over the ten years, Richard and his team successfully guided the Global Equity Income Strategy to deliver a net annual return of 11.2 per cent alongside a compound annual dividend growth rate of nearly ten per cent (Figure 1).2,3 This shows that as a core equity holding, our strategy can play an important role in providing stability and growth to portfolios over the long term.
Figure 1: Delivering income growth
Ten-year annual dividend growth
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results
Note: Representative account. Dividend figures based on quarterly pay-outs in pence.
Source: Aviva Investors, Bloomberg. Data as of December 31, 2023.
Figure 2: Delivering consistent performance
Composite performance
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results
Note: Performance shown for the Aviva Investors Global Equity Income Composite. Inception date of the Strategy is March 31, 2013. See end note for composite disclosure.
Source: Aviva Investors, B-One. Data as of December 31, 2023.
A decade of consistent outperformance of the benchmark
Since Richard became lead portfolio manager in 2013, the strategy (representative account) has consistently outperformed the MSCI All Country World Index over all major time frames, with top decile performance versus peers over three-, five- and ten-year periods as at December 31, 2023.4 Further, it was either the top, or the top-three ranked, performer versus notable peers as at December 31, 2023.5
Richard has been ranked the number one manager in the Global Equity Income category based on total returns over the last two years, and number three over the last five years – a testament to his exceptional track record in this asset class (rankings as of June 2023).6 Here’s how he explains the reasons behind the strong performance of the strategy, the lessons he has learnt over the period, and his expectations for income investing over the next ten years.
Richard Saldanha on equity income investing
A good starting point
There are potentially a few key advantages when it comes to investing in global equity income strategies, one of which is capital protection. Income strategies can offer greater levels of capital protection in periods of market stress. Inflation protection is another. Higher-yielding companies are typically well-established franchises with the ability to support a sustainable and growing dividend. These dividends, re-invested over time in a well-balanced, high-conviction portfolio, can deliver a powerful compounding total return for investors and a hedge against inflation.
Today, investors can find companies that pay and grow dividends across a wider spectrum
Last but not least, diversification. In past years, opportunities for income funds were largely limited to companies in traditional income-paying sectors such as financials, healthcare, consumer staples, energy, utilities and telecoms. Today however, income investors can find companies that pay and grow dividends across a wider spectrum, including non-traditional sectors such as technology and industrials.
Translating advantages into performance
We believe our strategy’s strength lies in the way we select holdings for the portfolios. Our philosophy has been consistent over the decade, looking through short-term market noise, and instead, focusing on free cash flow generation from companies with sustained growth in their dividends, which we believe should offer better protection against volatile markets. We have always focused on companies with attractive growth prospects and sustained returns on capital, but only where we see resilience in the underlying business and a margin of safety in terms of valuations.
For a stock to be included in our portfolios, we focus on three key characteristics: predictability, protection and upside. Predictability in terms of free cash flow compounding and income growth. Protection against the downside through good business models, balance sheets and valuations.
We look for the upside that equity markets deliver over the long term by looking beyond traditional income sectors
Finally, we look for the upside that equity markets deliver over the long term by looking beyond traditional income sectors, aiming to maximise both income and capital growth potential. We seek income from a variety of diversified sources and ensure the strategy invests in companies across the “dividend yielding” and “dividend growth” scale. We believe this maintains a balance in our strategy without the skew towards either growth or value styles witnessed among many of our peers.
A distinguishing feature of our strategy is the move into non-traditional income sectors, giving a higher weighting to resilient industrials (such as elevator manufacturers, information service companies and payroll processors), as well as technology (such as those empowering growth in artificial intelligence, cloud computing and digital payments). This pivot has proven beneficial to performance, with the two sectors’ returns outweighing those of traditional ones, as the global equity market continues to rebound from a difficult 2022. It also helped the strategy’s returns to keep pace during many periods of growth-driven bull markets before central banks started implementing aggressive interest-rate hikes to tame inflation.
Delivering for our clients
We have been able to shield our returns from wider market and economic challenges through the philosophy and investment process outlined above. During the period of rapidly rising interest rates and high inflation since 2022, for example, the businesses in our portfolios were resilient against market volatility and inflationary pressures.
Protection against drawdowns is crucial for any income strategy to be successful
We have also been able to offer clients consistency through market style rotations between value and growth, as well as resilience in income growth. While drawdowns are more frequent than investors may believe or remember – protection against them is crucial for any income strategy to be successful, and ours is no different – our investment in resilient businesses has offered a better defence than the benchmark MSCI ACWI.
Additionally, the ability to keep up with rising markets has been another crucial component of our success to date; we have outperformed both the MSCI ACWI and notable peers over all major time frames in the past ten years. Our strategy has continually grown its income since inception despite certain periods when a vast array of companies cut dividends. The COVID-19 period is a prime example of this resilience; during the pandemic, 95 per cent of the names we held either maintained or grew their dividends, with one exception (which in the event reinstated them very quickly).
The future is all about megatrends
While, through our tried and tested processes, we aim to continue to deliver positive outcomes going forward, we are thinking about the next decade and what it will bring for equity income investing. It is certain that in addition to company fundamentals and macroeconomic factors, investors hoping to successfully navigate the challenges of the coming years will need to pay close attention to global megatrends.
Among the most important of these shifts is demographic change. While it is not easy to predict what lies ahead, it seems clear that the rapid ageing of populations in advanced economies will lead to a significant increase in demand for income. This weight of capital, searching for investments that generate the highest levels of returns, is likely to spur changes in many industries.
Electrification will likely be one of the biggest growth opportunities across industries
Another key megatrend: electrification. This will likely be one of the biggest growth opportunities across industries given the numerous requirements for development, expansion and modernisation, along with the necessity to transition away from fossil-fuel power sources. Similarly, the rise of artificial intelligence technology, which now forms part of our daily lives, promises substantial changes in many sectors, including autonomous vehicles, healthcare and agriculture. Climate mitigation efforts are also set to transform the fortunes of several sectors.
We believe that through our robust research process, we should be able to find more companies combining strong dividends and protection (the traditional cornerstone of income investing) with capital growth in this new environment. The Global Equity Income team is backed by a fully integrated analyst and environmental, social and governance (ESG) team who contribute and challenge investment recommendations from the beginning, allowing us to identify candidates for investment outside of traditional income sectors and differentiate from our peers.7
These capabilities should come into their own at a time of volatile markets, high interest rates and macroeconomic uncertainty. We believe an allocation to our Global Equity Income Strategy can offer investors the potential for long-term capital growth through a more resilient approach that aims to defend against the challenges of this uncertain environment while also capturing the potential upside when it presents itself.
Global Equity Income Strategy
A concentrated and high-conviction strategy that aims to deliver an income yield of 125 per cent of the MSCI All Country World Index, while growing both capital and income.