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? For Financial Professional Use Only Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation For Financial Professional Use Only Long-Term Analysis Conquers Wrong Turn Paralysis Morningstar Investment Management Europe Ltd February 2017 Note from the CIO As the world attempts to understand the motives of Donald Trump and his circle of followers, it is worthwhile acknowledging that we have been here before. Contents 2 Key Convictions 3 Equity Market 7 Fixed Income 11 Currency 14 Fundamental Considerations & Risk 21 Investor Behaviour 24 Summary “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us”. - Charles Dickens 1859 writing in ‘A Tale of 2 Cities’ Dickens was talking about the French that were becoming demoralised in the years leading up to the 1789 French revolution. There are parallels that can be drawn to the situation today, and one can’t help but ponder what Dickens would be saying about the emergence of Donald Trump if he was alive today. Investing in 2017 is undoubtedly challenging as we live in a world dominated by political headlines and stretched valuations. We find economic optimism that is cyclically robust but structurally challenged, causing us to further consider the implications of downside risks, inflationary shocks and ‘quality’ factors. Dan Kemp Chief Investment Officer EMEA With the above in mind, we are pleased to share some insights into the following themes: × Does the size premium explain the long-term mid-cap outperformance? Nobel prize winning research by Fama and French created a logic to support small-caps as superior investments. We look under the hood and find that it is not as conclusive in the U.K. as many expect. × Inflation and European politics: what does a long-term investor do? We explore fixed income markets under the lens of rising inflation and European instability. × Can Trump talk down the US dollar? And will it act as a store of value if the share-market How to Use this Report This report is intended to showcase the investment philosophy used by Morningstar Investment Management Europe Limited when we run our managed portfolios. Within this document, the reader will find many references to valuation-implied returns, which encompasses our extensive proprietary research into capital markets. We invite professional readers to generate ideas and challenge the content herein. crashes? Donald Trump has made his opinion clear that the US dollar is “too strong” for his liking. We explore the validity of the US dollar as a recipient of any ‘flight to safety’ and find that it may not always have the protective properties we have come to expect. × How should a valuation-driven investor rebalance? As markets move and portfolios diverge from the desired exposures, one must consider the optimal method of rebalancing. We believe that autorebalancing has inherent weaknesses, and tie in our knowledge of value traps into our methodology. × What happens to equity markets in conflict? Data from the World Wars and the French revolution show that equity markets are resilient through conflict, but capable of painful drawdowns. × Lessons from neuroscience: which parts of the brain are the best for investors? Training our brain to ‘focus on focus’ could help overcome the long list of behavioral deficiencies we deal with. Page 2 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 2 of 26 Page 2 of 26 Page 2 of 26 Key Convictions Long-term outlook of the global asset allocation team Exhibit 1 The global asset allocation outlook shows pockets of danger and opportunity. Overall Conviction Notes United States Low We remain focused on valuation pressures, which pose downside risk in the long-term. Europe ex-U.K. Medium The European landscape offers both risk and opportunity. Selected exposure appears warranted. U.K. Medium U.K. equities are being influenced by currency shifts. From a valuation perspective, there is moderate appeal. Japan Medium Japanese equities are falling in fundamental appeal, but are similarly influenced by currency. Low Unlike other parts of developed Asia, Australian equities offer a poor long-term outlook. Emerging Markets Medium to High Emerging markets remain segmented, however in aggregate we see broad opportunity. U.S. Treasuries Low to Medium Valuation-implied returns are improving from very low levels. U.S. TIPS Low to Medium One of very few defensive assets offering decent prospects (albeit still low in absolute terms). U.S. Credit Low to Medium Similar to Treasuries, the prospects are improving from low levels. Asset Class EQUITIES Australia FIXED INCOME Euro Treasuries Low European bond yields remain low in absolute and relative terms. This asset still looks unfavourable in a long-term context. European Credit Low Face similar valuation constraints and with heightened credit quality risks. U.K. Gilts Low U.K. gilts retain a low conviction despite the recent rise in yields. Australian Treasuries Australian treasuries offer a relatively attractive return by fixed income standards. High Yield Low to Medium We have seen our high yield conviction tapered as spreads tighten. Emerging Market Debt Medium to High Remains attractive on a relative basis. The composition of currency exposure remains important for risk purposes. Low Offers an attractive yield but outlook requires caution. REIT’s offer poor return prospects in both relative and absolute terms. Real Estate SPECIAL MENTIONS Medium European Financials Medium to High The valuation backdrop remains appealing, even on a risk-adjusted basis. Although we note some of this value has now been captured. Pound sterling Medium to High Sterling still appears undervalued in fundamental terms despite the implications of Hard-Brexit. Source: Morningstar Investment Management, conviction levels confirmed at 31/1/17. Page 3 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 3 of 26 Page 3 of 26 Equity Market Valuations Quality and size offers an interesting angle Exhibit 2 The evolution of our long-term expectations remains segmented by sector (10-year valuation-implied returns, real % per year). 6.0% Sector return expectations continue to show divergence, which is creating opportunities. We can see a recent deterioration in many sectors, which dampens our conviction going forward 5.0% Telecommunications 7.0% 4.0% % Return Page 3 of 26 3.0% 2.0% Energy Healthcare Financials Utilities Consumer Staples 1.0% 0.0% Materials Info Technology Industrials -1.0% Consumer Discretionary -2.0% Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation, at 31/1/17 As investors attempt to make sense of lofty valuations and political uncertainty, the question of ‘quality’ has become increasingly prominent. Debates around quality are framed in several ways, but more recently the discussion has concentrated on the apparent decoupling of large stocks and their smaller counterparts. This phenomenon is best illustrated in the U.K. where mid-caps (as defined by the FTSE 250 index) have outperformed the large-caps (FTSE 100) by more than 100% over the past 15 years. Many have concluded that a size premium genuinely exists in the U.K. because the companies underlying the FTSE 250 index grow earnings at a superior rate to large companies. But to conform to this theory, it is worth re-iterating what is meant by the size premium and to investigate the underlying composition of the index. Why it is useful to question the size premium as a blanket solution The size premium was described by Nobel laureate Eugene Fama and his fellow researcher Kenneth French who identified the fact that smaller companies consistently provided higher returns than large companies over long periods of time. This insight has become one of the most widely used inputs into the asset allocation process and accounts for the fact that most equity funds have a structural bias towards smaller companies. Page 4 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 4 of 26 Page 4 of 26 Page 4 of 26 While we respect the foundations and logic that underpin this body of research, as investors, it is important to note that not all performance is attributable to a ‘single factor’. Just as French and Fama have since found that there are at least five factors that influence performance (size, value, market risk, profitability, investment, and possibly a sixth as Cliff Asness - Fama’s student - wants the momentum effect included), we can’t explain all the performance by any one factor. Equally, as investors, we need to look beyond simple mathematical relationships and understand the fundamental drivers of these results. This understanding is embedded in Morningstar’s ‘building blocks’ approach to estimating returns. Rather than simply estimating a total return of an asset class, we divide asset returns into the key fundamental drivers and scrutinize each of these individually. By doing this, we believe that we gain a better estimate of the overall return of the asset class and are less dependent on historical relationships and heuristics. It is this approach that causes us to question the superior performance of mid-cap on the basis of size alone. Where our analysis of the FTSE 100 versus FTSE 250 performance gets interesting We find that the outperformance of mid-caps in the past decade (especially in the U.K. but also in Europe and to a lesser extent the U.S.) has been mostly attributable to the difference in earnings. Exhibit 3 The earnings trend has seen a remarkable difference between mid-caps and large-caps. The question is whether this is a sustainable advantage. Is the outperformance due to mid-cap strength or large-cap weakness? Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 When we think about the drivers of earnings, it is necessary to go beyond the headlines and look at whether the profitability is being driven by revenue growth or profit margins, as the latter tends to have a tighter baseline and is harder to sustain as a competitive advantage. What we find is that the attribution in the U.K over the past 15 years weighs heavily in favour of profit margins, which have diverged dramatically relative to revenue growth. Exhibit 4 Underlying earnings have been driven by profit margin expansion. This is seen to be a mean reverting series so caution may be required. A large portion of the earnings advantage is explained by profit margins rather than revenues Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 Page 5 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 5 of 26 Page 5 of 26 Page 5 of 26 Perhaps due to this profit margin growth, we have also witnessed valuation measures such as the cyclically-adjusted price-earnings ratio and price to sales ratio increase at a faster rate than their large counterparts as investors increasingly price in a continuation of this trend into the current price. Exhibit 5 A valuation premium exists for mid-caps. This typically exists due to a perceived ‘quality’ advantage, although it is not clear this exists in the U.K. FTSE 250 xIT 22.50 A value premium also exists, although it is not clear if this is justified 20.00 17.50 15.00 12.50 10.00 May/2009 Aug/2009 Nov/2009 Feb/2010 May/2010 Aug/2010 Nov/2010 Feb/2011 May/2011 Aug/2011 Nov/2011 Feb/2012 May/2012 Aug/2012 Nov/2012 Feb/2013 May/2013 Aug/2013 Nov/2013 Feb/2014 May/2014 Aug/2014 Nov/2014 Feb/2015 May/2015 Aug/2015 Nov/2015 Feb/2016 May/2016 Aug/2016 Cyclically-adjusted Price-Earnings Ratio FTSE 100 25.00 Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 In order to justify these higher prices, we would typically expect the underlying companies to have a superior business model and consequently be of higher ‘quality’ than its peers. This is something value investors need to be mindful of, as a bias towards low margins could lead unaccustomed value investors to favour poorer quality companies. In an ideal world, we want to be informed by quality, with the assessment of ‘fair value’ acting as a hurdle rate and accounting for the greater stability of cash-flows. Bringing this back to the mid-cap versus large-cap debate Knowing that we should adjust for quality, it may be possible to explain the mid-cap superior earnings growth by looking at the sector exposures of the FTSE 250 and comparing this to the FTSE 100. If the mid-cap superiority would be explained in this chart, we would see a clear bias in sector exposure towards ‘higher quality’ industries. However, as we can see below this is only marginally the case. Exhibit 6 A break-down of the ‘quality’ by sector shows mixed results within mid-caps. We see a slight ‘quality’ advantage in aggregate, although this is mostly attributable to high industrials exposure. FTSE 250 versus FTSE 100 Overall quality differential slightly favours mid-caps Total 'Higher Quality' Exposure Total 'Lower Quality' Exposure Financials Energy Utilities Materials Telecommunications ‘Lower quality’ mid-cap exposure is concentrated in financials Consumer Discretionary Industrials Healthcare Consumer Staples Information Technology -15.0% -10.0% -5.0% 0.0% 5.0% % Sector Exposure vs FTSE 250 Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/1/17 ‘Higher quality’ mid-cap exposure is concentrated in industrials 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% Page 6 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 6 of 26 Page 6 of 26 Page 6 of 26 Looking forwards, not backwards The question in a forward-looking context is whether the FTSE 250 could be expected to deliver superior performance going forward. What we find is a situation that is not so clear cut. While the FTSE 250 has delivered superior earnings growth over the past 15 years, the fact a large portion of this has been derived by stretching profit margins is of some concern (especially given the ‘quality’ element is not particularly convincing based on our initial findings). We also have the issue about Brexit, especially as the pound sterling experiences abnormal volatility and influences bottom-line earnings. As only 25-30% of large-cap revenue is derived onshore, a rebound in sterling would hurt the FTSE 100 far more than the FTSE 250, which obtains approximately 50% of its revenue domestically.1 Of course, the same applies in reverse. In addition, there are concentration issues that must be understood by investors. As one such example, the top 10 holdings in the FTSE 100 account for approximately 43 per cent of the exposure versus just 11 per cent for the FTSE 250. Therefore, mid-caps provide greater diversification benefits at a stock selection level. 2 What lessons can be applied? To make the analysis simple to absorb, we can boil any outperformance advantage to a few key variables in a forward-looking context. In order for the FTSE 250 outperformance to be repeatable and the apparent size premium to be maintained, we would need to see: a) Profit margins continue to expand (highly unlikely); b) The pound sterling to rebound (potentially likely, albeit with further drawdown risk); c) Cyclically-adjusted price-earnings multiples to further expand (unlikely); or d) An alternative ‘factor’ influence pricing. It is worth disclaiming that our team are undertaking further fundamental digging at a sub-industry group level (for example, mid-cap financials are very different to a large-cap bank), as well as the continued work around pound sterling valuations amid Brexit. Withstanding the above, the early evidence is unconvincing that the mid-cap space will continue to act as a superior investment on the basis of size alone. 1 2 Source: FT Adviser on 16/2/17 Source: FTSE Russell factsheet at 31/1/17 Page 7 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 7 of 26 Page 7 of 26 Page 7 of 26 Fixed Income Valuations European instability and why inflation is important Exhibit 7 Valuation-Implied Returns over the next 10-Years (% per year in real terms after inflation). We have watched the evolution of our return expectations decline markedly in 2016 before improving in recent months. 0.5% 0.0% U.S. Treasury -0.5% Australian Treasury -1.0% Euro Treasury -1.5% Japan Treasury -2.0% Sterling Gilts -2.5% Return expectations remain negative across the majority of the government bond universe, despite the recent improvement in yields. -3.0% -3.5% Jan-16 Feb-16 Mar-16 Apr-16 May-16 Jun-16 Jul-16 Aug-16 Sep-16 Oct-16 Nov-16 Dec-16 Jan-17 Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation, at 31/12/16 Regular readers will know that Morningstar have had ongoing concerns about the durability of fixed income returns for a considerable period, especially among developed world government debt (including treasuries, gilts, bunds, and so on). Our basis for this has been the rapid deterioration of yields and the recognition that the downward trajectory was simply unsustainable in a long-term context. We knew it would require patience, but as long-term valuation-driven investors it was a luxury we could afford to persist with. The question that remained among pundits was the catalyst that would be required for a long-term reversal. For an extended period, we had deflationary threats, continued monetary stimulus and record low cash rates. These were all conducive to the ‘lower for longer’ rhetoric and kept bonds in favour among many investors. Yet, with inflation expectations having shifted and bond yields spiking higher last November/December, we have witnessed an interesting dynamic that requires global thought. Page 8 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 8 of 26 Page 8 of 26 Page 8 of 26 So, what can we expect from here? As contrarian investors, is it time to add to government bond exposures? And if so, which part of the market offers the best prospects? Any assessment of fixed income markets in a forward-looking context require a knowledge of the likely moves in inflation, cash rates, yield curve changes and default risks. These components of returns are fundamental to our thinking. When viewed in this way it is clear that the key risk to fixed income returns are a normalisation of real interest rates (after inflation) rather than a sustainable rise in inflation. It is therefore somewhat surprising that the threat of inflation is garnering more attention in the media and among pundits than real interest rates. While it is possible that this reflects a lack of fundamental rigor among market participants, it is more likely to be caused by the ‘availability bias’ - a well-known tendency to focus on the most discussed drivers of returns and ignore other determinants. In this case, it is far easier to debate the possibility of a rise in inflation rather than become embroiled in the rather arcane study of bond mathematics. However, investors must armor themselves against this bias in order to avoid the trap of forecasting something that is unknowable in nature. Therefore, a key message is that investors need to focus on empirical data and understand the components that make up a government bond yield both now and into the future. While sparing readers of the complexity that underlies our approach to these building blocks, below we depict the net outcome of our long-term expectations for U.S. treasuries. This acts as a potentially useful proxy for our broad global government bond assessment, especially given the fact U.S. treasuries make up 35% of the world government bond index. It also goes some way to explaining our dire return expectations from developed world government bonds. Exhibit 8 The evolution of yields have played to the ‘lower for longer’ rhetoric. Looking forward, our analysis shows the long-term yield could expand (this is subject to ongoing review and may change as our analysis evolves). 16.00 14.00 Our assessment is for bond yields to rise further from current levels. This means we continue to lack conviction in this space. 12.00 10.00 8.00 6.00 4.00 2.00 Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/1/17 Jan/2038 Jan/2035 Jan/2032 Jan/2029 Jan/2026 Jan/2023 Jan/2020 Jan/2017 Jan/2014 Jan/2011 Jan/2008 Jan/2005 Jan/2002 Jan/1999 Jan/1996 Jan/1993 Jan/1990 Jan/1987 Jan/1984 Jan/1981 Jan/1978 Jan/1975 Jan/1972 Jan/1969 Jan/1966 Jan/1963 0.00 Jan/1960 % 10-Year Government Bond Yield 18.00 Page 9 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 9 of 26 Page 9 of 26 Page 9 of 26 European political risk and its impact on markets The United States is not the only market facing political risk. All eyes are now turning to Europe and the impact of European instability on bond markets. As European markets make up approximately 31% of the global bond market (37% if we include the U.K.) it is little wonder investors are nervous.3 With Greek debt remarkably high and the relationship with the IMF in flux, the media are having a field day. There are also key elections in Holland, France and Germany in the coming year (Italy may also have a general election), all of which is placing the European Union under a considerable amount of scrutiny. Given this anxiety and a wide range of potential scenarios over the next decade, we believe it is prudent to maintain an element of conservatism in our calculations. At present, we find a fair yield for U.S. treasuries is approximately 3.6% in real terms and we have been actively engaging in fundamental research to determine what the European ‘fair yield’ should be. What can an investor do to make a risk-adjusted view? To start this analysis, it is important to reiterate we are not interested in predicting the exact series of events that would lead to a black swan scenario in Europe. However, we are very interested in what any trigger event would mean to our fair value calculation and any impairment that could take place. An example would be Marine Le Pen winning the French elections. What would happen to French bond yields? Would a credit rating agency downgrade France and other countries in the block? Is the high existing debt level sustainable under such a scenario? Could we expect inflation to increase further and would bailouts be required? These are the types of questions we want to comprehend, and as a means of structuring such analysis we maintain a fundamental risk scorecard that retains a long-term perspective. The central idea is to obtain an impartial view of the developments. We do this by actively scoring our fundamental analysis on both the level and rate of change of factors such as growth, fiscal policy, external accounts, debt levels, inflation, socioeconomics and other financial vulnerabilities. This also includes analysis of the country ratings assigned by the prominent rating agencies. Our job is to avoid the temptation of front-running the rating agencies and instead to comprehend the relationship between the rating they assign and the spread. Exhibit 9 Ratings agencies have aggressively reduced the credit outlook among some European exposures in recent years, especially for Spain, Italy and Greece. Country Ratings Standard & Poors United States AA+ Stable Aaa Stable AAA Stable AA Negative Aa1 Negative AA Negative BBB+ Stable Baa2 Stable BBB+ Stable AAA Stable Aaa Stable AAA Stable United Kingdom Spain Germany France Italy Greece Fitch AA Stable Aa2 Stable AA Stable BBB- Stable Baa2 Negative BBB+ Negative B- Stable Caa3 Stable CCC N/A Source: Trading Economics at 31/1/17 3 Moody's World Government Bond Index factsheet, at 31/1/17 Page 10 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 10 of 26 Page 10 of 26 Page 10 of 26 We find that the ratings assigned at a country level are a useful measure of yield spreads, which help guide our view on a regional basis. Of interest, we can see the rating for France is considerably higher than that of Italy and Spain, despite the impending political risks. This feeds our analysis, as we determine the spreads between these countries and the higher rated sovereigns of the U.S. and Germany. As you’ll see in the chart below, there is some dispersion, but generally, there is a good relationship between credit quality and spread – even when comparing corporates to sovereigns. One point to note is that this analysis does not consider the difference in maturities of those indexes, which could explain some of the dispersion. % Spread Exhibit 10 The relationship between the credit rating of a country and the spread can be powerful information when determining the fundamental risk being priced into bond markets. Ratings and spreads are closely aligned across the universe Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 16/2/17 Where are we putting our fixed income exposure? To bring it all together, we do not proclaim to have inside or expert knowledge on the longevity of the European project. We can have personal opinions like everyone else, but these are immaterial to our thinking at an asset allocation level. To get around this temptation, we adopt a common language to determine conviction levels on asset classes. Below are the four pillars we use and our stance between U.S. and European debt: Absolute Valuation: Compare valuation-implied return to unconditional fair return – U.S. treasuries with a low-to-medium conviction versus European treasuries with a low conviction. Relative Valuation: Compare valuation-implied returns of an asset class with the opportunity set – U.S. treasuries with a medium conviction versus European treasuries with a low conviction. Contrarian Indicators: Investor positioning, expectations and sentiment – U.S. treasuries with a low-to-medium conviction versus European Treasuries with a low conviction. Fundamental Risk: The monitoring of risk is not designed to be precise or reliant on one particular metric. We have higher conviction in undervalued assets that should have a limited drawdown potential – U.S. treasuries and European Treasuries are both mildly concerning and we generally lack conviction in either market helping to reduce the risk of a permanent loss of capital. Page 11 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 11 of 26 Page 11 of 26 Currency Valuations Trump and the US dollar: Where will it go? Exhibit 11 Valuation-implied returns over the next 10-Years (%per year in real terms after inflation) shows the US dollar remains expensive. 4.00% 3.00% US dollar overvalued 2.00% 1.00% 0.00% -1.00% -2.00% US dollar undervalued -3.00% South Africa China Mexico Norway Sweden Taiwan Turkey Malaysia United Kingdom Romania Japan India Poland Colombia Denmark Korea Canada Hungary Eurozone Russia Czech Republic Chile Singapore Hong Kong SAR Switzerland Thailand Brazil Peru Philippines Australia Israel New Zealand Indonesia Page 11 of 26 Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation, at 31/12/16 Currency markets are incredibly complex at a day-to-day level, although they make far more sense over long time horizons. The US dollar is an interesting case in point, where Donald Trump is seemingly having a tantrum about the strength of the US dollar against global peers. While this short-term noise should be largely ignored (such sentiment comes in waves and will revert to fundamentals in the long-term) we find Donald Trump’s view of the US dollar opens up a fascinating conversation around whether it offers protective elements to a portfolio. Why the US dollar is overvalued Currency is influenced by countless amounts of factors, but most center on one premise: the purchasing power differential between one country and another. For this reason, we use a process that analyses inflation deflators and purchasing price parity (PPP), where we can understand currency valuations in a long-term context. We find that on this basis, the US dollar is currently overvalued in a long-term context against 23 of the 33 currencies we measure. This includes the majors such as the pound sterling, euro and the yen. On face value, this would lead a rational investor to avoid US dollar exposure in many instances. Page 12 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 12 of 26 Page 12 of 26 Page 12 of 26 Yet, there are two important elements that require further thought. First, a large margin of safety is required in currency analysis, especially over shorter time periods. Our analysis has found that drawdown risks tend to be high regardless of the valuation backdrop, which differs greatly from markets such as equities. The second component, which is far more comprehensible, is the concept of a ‘flight to safety’. We want to know whether US dollar exposure may help deliver diversification benefits at a portfolio level, especially if equity markets turn sour. While these long-term valuation measures (along with the home bias of the investor) are the primary driver of currency exposure in the portfolios, it is also worth considering the role that currency can play as a ‘safe haven’ asset during periods of high volatility. How protective is the US dollar to a portfolio? Below we look at the 10 worst stock-market crashes over the past 50 years and across three key markets – European equities, U.K. equities and U.S. equities. The analysis includes the 2008 financial crisis, the 2000 tech wreck, the 1987 flash crash, the 1974 oil embargo and other key events. We can see the broad reaction from a currency perspective, showing any protection available to an investor. Exhibit 12 Protection for U.K. investors may be available by holding Swiss francs or US dollars. 1974 2003 2009 1987 1981 1990 1994 1978 2015 1998 80.00% Currency protection is inconsistent % Return (peak to trough) 60.00% 40.00% 20.00% 0.00% -20.00% -13.96% -12.72% -10.15% -9.18% -8.02% -7.76% -27.27% -40.00% -39.77% -38.44% -60.00% -80.00% -65.95% MSCI United Kingdom NR US Dollar Swiss Franc Yen Euro Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 Exhibit 13 Protection for European investors is often limited and inconsistent in practice. 2003 2009 1974 1988 1990 1998 1995 2016 40% Same inconsistency applies in Europe 30% % Return (peak to trough) 20% 10% 0% -10% -20% -30% -40% -50% -60% MSCI Europe Ex UK GR USD US Dollar Swiss Franc Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 Yen Pound Sterling 1997 1981 Page 13 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 13 of 26 Page 13 of 26 Page 13 of 26 Exhibit 14 Protection for U.S. investors is very difficult as currency volatility can be rampant. 2009 2002 1974 1987 1982 1998 1990 1978 1980 1978 40% 30% % Return (peak to trough) 20% 10% 0% -10% -20% -30% Currency protection is a difficult consideration for U.S. investors -40% -50% -60% S&P 500 TR USD Swiss Franc Japanese Yen Euro Pound Sterling Source: Morningstar Direct, Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 What can an investor do with this information? From a portfolio construction perspective, it is important to know your currency exposures. This requires a fine balance between any conviction in your long-term currency valuation and the protective properties that the currency may provide. Based on historical crises, we can see the Swiss franc has been an effective diversifier in most instances, however the US dollar is less convincing. How this transpires into the future will be interesting to see. We have the so-called trifecta of a strong economy, strong stimulus and strong corporate earnings – all lifting sentiment for U.S. denominated assets and the US dollar. However, these factors may well prove to be cyclical, meaning we could see a rapid reversal of both the positive sentiment towards both the US dollar and potentially even U.S. equities. This current short-term positioning is noted below, and is worthwhile monitoring as a contrarian indicator. Exhibit 15 Currency sentiment of the majors vs US dollar. From a sentiment perspective, we can see the US dollar has a net long position in place, while the positioning against the euro intensifies. Currency Sentiment: Majors vs USD EUR JPY GBP CHF CAD AUD MXN NZD USD European euro Japanese yen British pound sterling Swiss frank Canadian dollar Australian dollar Mexican peso New Zealand dollar US dollar Long Positions Short Positions Percentile Percentile ($Bil) ($Bil) 16.9 89.0 22.9 31.6 2.9 25.1 9.0 49.0 3.0 6.4 8.0 78.7 0.9 10.9 2.7 58.0 3.5 89.0 2.8 26.4 5.1 75.4 3.8 40.6 0.8 38.0 2.2 58.7 2.5 98.0 2.4 92.2 53.9 40.6 35.5 58.0 Source: Commitment of Traders Report, Goldman Sachs, at 10/02/17 There is positive sentiment towards the US dollar Page 14 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 14 of 26 Page 14 of 26 Page 14 of 26 Fundamental Considerations Rebalancing and value traps: care is required Even if an investor has the perfect valuation-driven asset allocation model, there is still scope for error when it comes to execution. One of the key elements that any investor must consider when managing a portfolio is when and how frequently to ‘re-balance’ back to ‘target’ weights. While this subject is both important and hotly debated, we have found no academic work to support the view that there is an optimum rebalancing period. Therefore, while we remain open to the discovery of a reliable systematic approach to rebalancing, we believe that rebalancing requires significant thought and a best execution policy should be open to change. Rebalancing principles and Warren Buffett The key element of a diversified portfolio is the fact that asset prices move in different directions, especially when allocating between negatively correlated assets such as equities and bonds. This aspect of capital markets can help reduce the volatility of a portfolio that is broadly spread across asset classes, although does reduce our exposure to our best ideas. By virtue, this can lead to a misalignment between the desired asset allocation and reality. Rebalancing is therefore an essential part of a valuation-driven philosophy. Left unchecked, our exposures will not resemble our best ideas. Yet, executed too aggressively or regularly and we expose the portfolio to unnecessary turnover (taxes and fees) and the potential for drag. We have witnessed this in practice, with Warren Buffett a master but countless others failing miserably as they seek to topup positions that are in structural decline. Exhibit 16 The relationship between price and fair value is the principle that guides valuation-driven investing. However, it does open potential issues regarding value traps. Source: Morningstar Investment Management Page 15 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 15 of 26 Page 15 of 26 Page 15 of 26 ‘Averaging down’ is simple but not easy The subject of averaging down is one of the biggest challenges for valuation-driven investors to tackle. In essence, it is the art of obtaining the lowest cost base possible. For example, say an investor buys an asset today and it falls by 40% tomorrow. Should they buy more of it? For value investors, the general wisdom is that you should definitely buy more so long as their conviction in the long-term fair value of the asset remains. It was this exact concept that Warren Buffett referred to when he famously said, “Whether we're talking about socks or stocks, I like buying quality merchandise when it is marked down”.4 If you must be early, make sure it is right The key challenge is that ‘early’ and ‘wrong’ are often indistinguishable in the initial stages of a valuation-driven investment. An investor who is ‘early’ should increase their capital commitment as the probability-adjusted gain increases (much like a poker player should). However, if that investment is ‘wrong’, they should accept their losses and move on. This is what we tend to call value traps and are the nemesis of an auto-rebalancing policy. At this point, it is worthwhile reminding that as a valuation-driven investor, you conform to the basic principle that you might be early to the party. After all, you are buying an investment today because it is cheap and no one else wants it (yet). By undertaking this exercise, there are no guarantees someone will want it next week, month or even year. Hence the reason value investors often emphasise the word ‘patience’. Value traps are dangerous but potentially identifiable As an example of a rebalancing policy gone wrong, many investors in the 1990’s never anticipated the progression of digital cameras, nor that Kodak would be left behind in that progression. By buying into Kodak in 1997, 1999 or 2001, they would have experienced a value trap first hand. Exhibit 17 A classic value trap was Kodak. After an extended period of price gains, it famously collapsed as the industry evolved. Value traps are dangerous when rebalancing Stock Price (US dollars) Source: Google Finance The problem is that Kodak was in structural decline, but very few understood that at the time, and a fixed rebalancing policy would have led investors to continually bid up this exposure only to find it halve, halve and halve again. In the case of Kodak, an auto-rebalancing policy would be a terrible idea. 4 Source: Berkshire Hathaway 2008 Shareholder letter Page 16 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 16 of 26 Page 16 of 26 Page 16 of 26 What can an investor do to avoid value-traps? The process of identifying these value traps is beset with behavioural challenges and something every value investor can do better. They tend to cluster under the following situations: Leveraged businesses that succumb to debt constraints. Every time the investment falls in price, the debt as a percentage of the investment rises. This can cause a perfectly good business to be a value trap based on a poor capital structure alone. Business with poor cashflow management. Fundamental analysis should usually help an investor avoid such a circumstance, however if a Board decides to undertake a monumental capital expenditure program when they don’t have the cashflow to support it, they risk destroying the value of the business. Situations undergoing structural change. This is the most common at an asset class level, which can evolve via comprehendible means (an ageing population or industry in structural decline) or via rapid disruption that is less probable (wiped out via technological advancements). Of the major behavioural deficiencies we experience, the most important for value trap identification are likely to be the endowment effect and overconfidence. Specifically, investors tend to overvalue what they already have and this often skews their assessment of the resulting news flow. This is often due to over-confidence in the original buying decision and therefore less likely to change our assessment of fair value as it evolves. Said simply, we seek confirmatory evidence to support our view that something is cheap. However, we must also be aware of the availability bias that tends to lead humans to extrapolate current trends. The more an asset price falls, the more likely we are to sell. Therefore, the worst situations occur when an impatient investor aggressively adds to a position in the early stages of a decline and then loses confidence at the lowest point, maximising the permanent loss of capital. Said simply, the endowment effect can be damaging as we view fair value, while the availability bias causes us to ignore any fair value calculation. Both biases must be controlled if an investor wants to successfully and consistently identify value traps. Bringing this into a rebalancing policy The major lesson from the above is that an auto-rebalance policy can be a potentially dangerous policy. It is what we would consider ‘lazy’ portfolio management as it leaves end-investors open to significant transaction costs as well as value traps. Therefore, given these weaknesses, we believe portfolios should not be subject to rebalance schedule as such. Instead, portfolio managers should be provided with the tools and accountability to monitor portfolios continuously and have any rebalancing decisions formally challenged by a Portfolio Committee. This review should include both quantitative and qualitative assessments of the portfolio to make sure it continues to reflect the best thinking and avoid unnecessary turnover. Investing is all about harnessing the long-term power of compounding. Page 17 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 17 of 26 Page 17 of 26 Page 17 of 26 To bring this to life, we consider rebalancing using the following considerations: Look at performance through the lens of fundamentally expected returns rather than recent past performance. Consequently, a price fall appears as an improvement. This engenders a probabilistic approach to capital allocation and encourages averaging down. Actively seek contrarian positions by treating an asset class and its popularity as a negative relationship. Undertake deep fundamental research in an attempt to identify potential value traps and avoid them. Peer review all convictions and investment decisions to try to avoid confirmatory bias. A Portfolio Committee, in particular, is designed to pick holes in a proposal rather than provide a balanced assessment. Focus on long term performance to reduce any focus on short term returns and consequently enable patience as one can hold positions that are moving against them. Have formal and informal limits on the maximum amount of capital one can commit to positions in order to reduce the impact of errors. Undertake quarterly portfolio reviews to identify instances of the endowment effect. Mock those that make forecasts. Portfolio Alignment in a Managed Portfolio Context The final point we would make on rebalancing is in a managed portfolio context. As visibility of underlying clients’ actual portfolios can often be unknown, drift must be measured at the model portfolio level. The drawback of this approach is that it is grounded on the assumption that all investors were invested at the last rebalancing point. In reality, new clients are regularly joining the portfolio management service and consequently the actual drift they experience may be different from the model. This is especially true when clients join the service during periods of high asset price volatility. In order to address this misalignment, we believe the entirety of a portfolio should undergo rebalancing when portfolio changes are made, whilst maintaining an ambition to keep costs as low as possible. We believe that this balances the interests of both new and existing investors with the underlying objective of the portfolio. Page 18 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 18 of 26 Page 18 of 26 Fundamental Risk What happens to markets during a War? As a part of our structured learning program, Morningstar have a monthly book club that explores topics that both support and challenge our asset allocation thinking. For February, the book was ‘Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits’, written in 1958 by Phil Fisher, which is a classic among qualitative and quality-focused investors. One question that arose in our review of the book was the concept of conflict (such as wars) and how markets react under the prevailing uncertainty. While we are not in the business of predicting macro events, we appreciate that many investors are concerned about the rising geopolitical conflict and would like to understand what this might mean to equity markets. While it is practically impossible to determine in a forward-looking context, we can explore what historically occurred in the U.S. during the two World Wars (highlighting changes to dividends, earnings and market prices) as well as U.K. equity performance during the French revolution. World War One World War One S&P 500 Dividends Earnings Bond Yields Inflation 3% 28% 75% 7% 65% Change from 1914 - 1918 Exhibit 18 World War One experienced a strong wave of earnings growth followed by a reversal as the war progressed. Overall, the market saw a subtle gain despite an 11% drawdown in 1917. S&P 500 Dividend Earnings 3.00 2.50 Normalised at 1 2.00 1.50 1.00 0.50 11% maximum drawdown Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 Sep/18 Jun/18 Mar/18 Dec/17 Sep/17 Jun/17 Mar/17 Dec/16 Sep/16 Jun/16 Mar/16 Dec/15 Sep/15 Jun/15 Mar/15 Dec/14 0.00 Sep/14 Page 18 of 26 Page 19 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 19 of 26 Page 19 of 26 Page 19 of 26 World War Two World War Two S&P 500 Dividends Earnings Bond Yields Inflation 29% 19% 25% 0% 31% Change from 1939 - 1945 Exhibit 19 World War Two saw a rather significant 32% drawdown between 1939 and 1942. However, as the war progressed, prices rebounded strongly. S&P 500 Dividend Earnings 1.70 Normalised at 1 1.50 1.30 1.10 0.90 0.70 32% maximum drawdown Jun/45 Dec/44 Mar/45 Jun/44 Sep/44 Mar/44 Sep/43 Dec/43 Jun/43 Dec/42 Mar/43 Jun/42 Sep/42 Mar/42 Sep/41 Dec/41 Jun/41 Dec/40 Mar/41 Jun/40 Sep/40 Mar/40 Sep/39 Dec/39 0.50 Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 French Revolution – 1789 to 1799 (U.K. equities) Exhibit 20 The French revolution carried strong market momentum, before experiencing a significant 40% drawdown between 1792 and 1798. However, a strong recovery helped pull the market back into positive territory. 4.0 French Revolution commencement Index level £ 3.5 3.0 40% maximum drawdown 2.5 2.0 Sep/99 Dec/98 Mar/98 Jun/97 Sep/96 Dec/95 Mar/95 Jun/94 Sep/93 Dec/92 Jun/91 Mar/92 Sep/90 Dec/89 Jun/88 Source: Morningstar Investment Management calculation at 31/12/16 Mar/89 Sep/87 Dec/86 Mar/86 Jun/85 Sep/84 Dec/83 Mar/83 Jun/82 Sep/81 Dec/80 Mar/80 1.5 Page 20 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 20 of 26 Page 20 of 26 Page 20 of 26 Lessons from conflict periods We are reluctant to draw too many conclusions from the analysis; however, one clear insight is that equity markets do not automatically crash as many would assume. In fact, in all three periods, equities actually rose modestly through the entirety of the period, despite large drawdowns occurring at some point through the conflict. There appear to be valuation considerations at play in this analysis too, which could have an effect. For instance, during world war one the cyclically-adjusted price-earnings ratio (CAPE10) was 10.5x and ended at 6.3x (normal P/E went from 13.8x to 8.0x), which would be considered a bargain by today’s standards. During world war two, we saw a similar development as the CAPE went from 15.1x to finish at 12.9x (normal P/E went from 14.6x to 14.8x), again very low by today’s standard.5 Therefore, the key takeaway is to ignore the temptation to forecast and instead focus on the fundamentals of underlying investments. While we have seen large drawdowns in each of the major historical conflicts, the net result is that markets eventually follow the fundamental drivers. 5 Source: Robert Shiller’s publicly available data via Yale University portal Page 21 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 21 of 26 Page 21 of 26 Investor Behaviour Focus on focus: activating the prefrontal cortex Quite possibly the most famous quote of the past 15 years on investing is “be fearful when others are greedy and greedy only when others are fearful”6. Of course, this was written by Warren Buffett as a way of demonstrating his contrarian behavioural philosophy, yet most investors can attest to the difficulty of implementing his wisdom. In the ups and downs of life, people are often required to face complex financial decisions – whether they should save, spend or invest at a simplistic level - and the final decision is heavily influenced by risk, probability, prior experience and social interactions. This often leads to gut reactions and the ‘F’ word (‘feeling’), which are common emotional responses among individuals trying to understand the best way forward. The question we pose is whether it is right to trust your gut? What can we do to make better decisions? For this, we can draw on some lessons from high performance training and neuroscience. High Performance Training is Teaching us the Wrong Things We are usually taught that the learning cycle follows a simple trajectory, whereby time and performance are positively correlated. Exhibit 21 The relationship between time and performance is generally seen to be positive. However, for investors, there is a subtlety that should make us favour ‘conscious competence’ as opposed to ‘unconscious competence’. Unconscious Competence Conscious Competence Performance Page 21 of 26 Conscious Incompetence An investors sweet spot Unconscious Incompetence Time Source: Morningstar interpretation of work initially developed by Gordon Training International 6 Source: Berkshire Hathaway 2004 Shareholder letter An athletes sweet spot Page 22 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 22 of 26 Page 22 of 26 Page 22 of 26 The typical example is a tennis player. Roger Federer can hit a backhand winner without really thinking about what he is doing, and this unconscious competence is said to be the elite mode of thinking, forming the key to peak performance. However, in the investing world, unconscious competence opens us up to a long list of behavioural deficiencies that can become counterproductive if left uncontrolled. To understand this further, we explore four sections of the brain, the first two of which are generally good for investing and the latter two mischievous. 1. The Rational and Reflective: Prefrontal Cortex The prefrontal cortex is the most reliable part of our brain and the area we want to reinforce most of our analytical output – it is known as the brain’s boardroom. It is what helps people think, communicate, restrain actions, learn from mistakes, control memory and ultimately make rational decisions. It is also known as the ‘reflective brain’. It has many strengths and has a distinct ability to identify fair offers and to reject unfair offers. However, it is not without weaknesses. The prefrontal cortex has a limited capacity, meaning it can only process a certain amount of information at any one time (recall when you forget someone’s name just after meeting them). It is also known to prefer instant rewards over future rewards, and is known to react to fear and greed, albeit in a more controlled manner than in our automated areas of the brain. 2. The Long-Term Memory: The Hippocampus We all have a relative or friend that has an exceptional long-term memory. But while their trivia skills may be the show, it can also help them collect the dough. Successful investing and experience are considered to be highly correlated, and a strong long-term memory helps provide perspective during the market cycles and inevitable setbacks. It is also known to change in size depending on how often it is exercised, so teaching our mind to focus on long-term analysis can potentially help investment performance. 3. Irrational Fears: The Amygdala This section of the brain is responsible for irrational fears such as arachnophobia and can easily influence illogical decision making. It is the area of the brain that makes contrarian investing so difficult in practice, even when we know it works in theory. In an investors case, this is usually triggered among a crisis, creating an overwhelming sense of fear that leads an investor to stray from their preferred investment style. 4. Greed is Good: The Nuclei Accumbens The brain’s reward center is a powerful phenomenon, but tends to have an irrational impact on investment decision-making. It is the reason the rich want to get richer, even if they have enough money to comfortably meet their long-term needs. The reason this reward center is so powerful and hard to control is that it is responsible for feelings of happiness. Creating a roadmap for behavioural performance The question is whether a roadmap is possible on the best way to turn on our brains in the right areas and dull out the prohibitive ones. Page 23 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 23 of 26 Page 23 of 26 Page 23 of 26 This focus on the conscious makes a lot of sense, and is backed by a healthy and growing amount of scientific grounding. In this regard, there are a few techniques that can be used effectively, and while this list is not exhaustive and somewhat theoretical, it should help to identify potential areas to improve our behavioural biases. As you read this list, we encourage you to think about your behaviour during the financial crisis and whether you remained disciplined in your analytical thinking throughout. Lesson 1 – Lifelong learning – London cab drivers are said to have a larger hippocampus (long-term memory) than an ordinary person, and the size of the hippocampus is highly correlated to the amount of experience they have. Therefore, if one wants to build on their investment strength, learn as much as you can about financial market history and the long-term drivers of returns. Lesson 2 – Make investment decisions when calm – there are many problems with stress and its impact on performance. Firstly, it is important to minimise unnecessary exposure to fear-related anxieties via the amygdala. Even in the prefrontal cortex, stress can reduce working memory performance. Sleep is incredibly important in this regard. Lesson 3 – Enjoy the process – positive thinking is known to increase activity in the prefrontal cortex. Therefore, typical exercises such as laughing, expressing gratitude and focusing on positive stories can supposedly help create the ideal mindset before making investment decisions. Lesson 4 – Turn on the mind – there are multiple ways to increase dopamine in the prefrontal cortex, including caffeine. This is known to significantly reduce impulsivity and may help performance. However, excessive amounts of dopamine are said to destroy blood flow to the prefrontal cortex and can also create in imbalance in our reward systems. Lesson 5 – Put yourself in the future – by taking your perspective to a different place, you are forcing your mind to be reflective. A great question to tackle is something akin to “in 5 years’ time, what would cause me to sell this investment?”. Once again, this activates the prefrontal cortex. Lesson 6 – Avoid the drama – gossip and confrontation fire up the amygdala and sends the prefrontal cortex off course. If it is possible, any negative feedback loops should be held off until the investment proposal is structured. Lesson 7 – Write your synopsis on paper and present it - writing words and reading aloud are both shown to be effective ways to activate the prefrontal cortex, which can promote rational decision making. A portfolio committee can help manifest this into a sound investment process. Page 24 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 24 of 26 Page 24 of 26 Page 24 of 26 Summary Finding purpose in a challenging market We certainly live in interesting times. While the world order appears to be potentially in jeopardy, equity markets continue their upward trail. If only the fundamentals were supportive of such strong moves. As we reflect on the state of markets, we advocate that investors decouple their thoughts about the state of the U.S. political/economic landscape and instead direct more of their attention on portfolio fundamentals. We continue to believe many of the global markets are overvalued relative to their long-term fair value, although selective pockets of opportunity endure. By understanding our behavioural idiosyncrasies as well as the relationship between the underlying exposures of equities, fixed income and currency, it is our hope we can preserve capital when we need to most while maximising the risk-adjusted return. It is this adherence to a pragmatic process that will help us navigate any macroeconomic setbacks on the horizon and meet the needs of our end-investors. "The noblest question in the world is ‘What good may I do in it’?" - 7 Benjamin Franklin7 Memoirs of the life and writings of Benjamin Franklin, written by himself in 1818 Page 25 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 25 of 26 Page 25 of 26 Page 25 of 26 About Morningstar Investment Management Europe Drawing on our core capabilities in asset allocation, manager research and portfolio construction, Morningstar Investment Management Europe Limited creates customised investment solutions to help financial institutions meet investor needs. We have both a global point of view and local market expertise, delivered through an international network of experienced investment professionals who specialise in serving regional markets. When building investment offerings, we benefit from access to quality information from one of the largest investment databases, as well as patented methodologies, intuitive technologies and decades of ground breaking research. Our independence and strong investor focus allow us to develop solutions that help clients stand out within their markets. Our clients include many of the top wealth management firms, insurance companies, banks, asset managers, and retirement plan providers. Our investment processes incorporate the rich heritage of Ibbotson Associates, a leading independent asset allocation provider offering investment advisory services, retirement advice programs, and customised research. Ibbotson applies academic research to create real-world solutions for financial institutions. Ibbotson was founded in 1977 and is a Morningstar company. Disclosures The information contained in this document is the proprietary material of Morningstar Investment Management. Reproduction, transcription, or other use, by any means, in whole or in part, without the prior written consent of Morningstar Investment Management, is prohibited. The information, data, analyses and opinions presented herein do not constitute investment advice; are provided solely for informational purposes and therefore are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. The opinions expressed are as of the date written and are subject to change without notice. Except as otherwise required by law, Morningstar Investment Management shall not be responsible for any trading decisions, damages or other losses resulting from, or related to, the information, data, analyses or opinions or their use. This document contains certain forward-looking statements. We use words such as “expects”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “estimates”, “forecasts”, and similar expressions to identify forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results to differ materially and/or substantially from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by those projected in the forward-looking statements for any reason. Past performance does not guarantee future results. The value of investments can go down as well as up and an investor may not get back the amount invested. Feedback This report is the collective effort of numerous contributors among the Morningstar Investment Management global team. Below are the personnel that are available for comment: Scott Dixon Dan Kemp Investment Communications EMEA Chief Investment Officer EMEA [email protected] [email protected] Page 26 of 26 Global Investment Strategy and Asset Allocation | February 2017 Page 26 of 26 Page 26 of 26 Page 26 of 26 ? 1 Oliver’s Yard 55-71 City Road London EC1Y 1HQ ©2017 Morningstar Inc. All rights reserved. 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