

Ask a Fund Manager
The Motley Fool chats with fund managers so that you can get an insight into how the professionals think. In part one of this edition, weâre joined by Andrew Martin, principal of Alphinity Investment Management. The Alphinity Concentrated Australian Share Fund has delivered an annual return of 7.6% after fees over the past five years.
The Motley Fool: The macroeconomic situation has changed dramatically since we last spoke with you in October 2021. Has the higher inflation and interest rate environment changed your investment approach with Alphinityâs Australian share funds?
Andrew Martin: Not at all. If anything, this has reinforced that focusing on earnings and focusing on the companies is the right thing to do.
Macro has been so volatile over the last year. But thatâs incredibly difficult to pick. So, ultimately, earnings are going to drive the market over time. Whether it becomes a growth market or a value market because of the change in macro, ultimately, growth stocks and value stocks are still driven by their earnings. They still have to come through.
Sticking to this process is even more important when you get all this volatility.
MF: Whatâs been your best call over the past year?
AM: When you get this much volatility, avoiding stuff is as important as what you buy.
On that, we avoided getting sucked into those high-valuation, low-profitability type growth stocks. Itâs been very positive for us this year, not being in those stocks.
As for what weâve owned, in this environment, our large caps have done particularly well, in a relative sense. Companies like BHP Group Ltd (ASX: BHP), like National Australia Bank Ltd (ASX: NAB), like Woodside Energy Group Ltd (ASX: WDS).
These large caps have benefited from the environment theyâve been in.
MF: Whatâs your outlook on these three ASX 200 shares heading into 2023?
AM: We are still holding them.
BHP is obviously exposed to the global economy, and China in particular. On that front, things are a bit more questionable going forward than they were six months ago, particularly around China. They are taking longer to come out of their COVID-zero slump. That may take a bit of time to play through.
Woodside has had a very good run and itâs a little bit more stretched now from a valuation perspective. But the outlook for gas remains strong.
And then National Australia Bank; the banks are one of the few sectors that are getting upgrades. Banks are beneficiaries of higher rates. Thatâs still playing through.
MF: Why NAB shares rather than some of the other ASX 200 bank stocks?
AM: I think NAB is executing better. They have really reinvented themselves over the last five years.
Theyâve reclaimed their title as the best business bank in the country. Business is actually going really well, despite everything else thatâs going on. Theyâve managed to have a better margin outcome than their peers. And theyâve managed their costs better. So their growth trajectory looks better than some of the others.
**
Tune in tomorrow for part two of our interview with Andrew Martin.
(You can find out more about Alphinityâs Australian, Global, and Sustainable funds here.)
The post Why these 3 ASX 200 shares have done âparticularly wellâ and remain top holdings into 2023: fund manager appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
- 5 things to watch on the ASX 200 on Monday
- Time to buy? Which ASX 200 shares are trading on single-digit P/E ratios?
- Why did the Woodside share price lag the ASX 200 today?
- Are BHP shares in the buy zone following the latest OZ Minerals news?
- Why Arafura, Nanosonics, NextDC, and OZ Minerals shares are rising today
Motley Fool contributor Bernd Struben has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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