Seeking value primarily in the non-US developed markets

The international value portfolio is constructed from an equity universe composed of companies with market capitalizations typically greater than $1 billion located throughout the non-US developed and emerging market countries. Through rigorous, bottom-up company analysis, we seek to identify undervalued stocks with upside potential. The investment process comprises three stages: quantitative screening and initial analysis, fundamental research and portfolio construction.

Benchmark
MSCI EAFE
Inception
June 11, 2001
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Strategy overview

The portfolio managers discuss our International Value strategy.

Portfolio managers

Fundamental Portfolio Manager
Fundamental Portfolio Manager
President
Head of Fundamental Research
Fundamental Portfolio Manager
Chief Executive Officer
Fundamental Portfolio Manager
Fundamental Portfolio Manager
Fundamental Portfolio Manager
Fundamental Portfolio Manager
Fundamental Portfolio Manager

Performance

QTD YTD 1 year3 years5 years10 years Since inception
Strategy (gross) 3.0%24.8%31.5%18.0%7.0%6.5%7.9%
Strategy (net) 3.0%24.5%31.0%17.6%6.6%6.1%7.4%
MSCI EAFE 3.2%15.8%17.4%9.8%5.1%5.7%5.6%
QTD YTD 1 year3 years5 years10 years Since inception
Strategy (gross) 3.0%24.8%31.5%18.0%7.0%6.5%7.9%
Strategy (net) 3.0%24.5%31.0%17.6%6.6%6.1%7.4%
MSCI EAFE 3.2%15.8%17.4%9.8%5.1%5.7%5.6%
QTD YTD 1 year3 years5 years10 years Since inception
Strategy (gross) 5.4%21.1%31.6%17.1%6.9%6.9%7.8%
Strategy (net) 5.3%20.9%31.1%16.6%6.5%6.4%7.3%
MSCI EAFE 3.2%12.1%19.4%9.5%4.9%5.9%5.5%
QTD YTD 1 year3 years5 years10 years Since inception
Strategy (gross) 5.4%21.1%31.6%17.1%6.9%6.9%7.8%
Strategy (net) 5.3%20.9%31.1%16.6%6.5%6.4%7.3%
MSCI EAFE 3.2%12.1%19.4%9.5%4.9%5.9%5.5%
Fund 20242023202220212020201920182017201620152014201320122011201020092008200720062005200420032002
Strategy (gross) N/AN/A-7.2%10.5%6.1%22.5%-18.0%28.6%1.1%-1.9%-4.6%27.6%24.6%-10.2%13.9%37.7%-43.0%9.8%27.5%9.0%29.5%48.4%-8.9%
Strategy (net) N/AN/A-7.6%10.1%5.6%22.0%-18.4%28.0%0.7%-2.3%-5.0%27.1%24.1%-10.5%13.4%37.1%-43.2%9.4%27.0%8.5%29.0%47.8%-9.2%
MSCI EAFE N/AN/A-14.0%11.8%8.3%22.7%-13.4%25.6%1.5%-0.4%-4.5%23.3%17.9%-11.7%8.2%32.5%-43.1%11.6%26.9%14.0%20.7%39.2%-15.7%
Strategy (gross)
Strategy (net)
MSCI EAFE
20242023202220212020201920182017201620152014201320122011201020092008200720062005200420032002
N/AN/A-7.2%10.5%6.1%22.5%-18.0%28.6%1.1%-1.9%-4.6%27.6%24.6%-10.2%13.9%37.7%-43.0%9.8%27.5%9.0%29.5%48.4%-8.9%
N/AN/A-7.6%10.1%5.6%22.0%-18.4%28.0%0.7%-2.3%-5.0%27.1%24.1%-10.5%13.4%37.1%-43.2%9.4%27.0%8.5%29.0%47.8%-9.2%
N/AN/A-14.0%11.8%8.3%22.7%-13.4%25.6%1.5%-0.4%-4.5%23.3%17.9%-11.7%8.2%32.5%-43.1%11.6%26.9%14.0%20.7%39.2%-15.7%

Portfolio (as of July 31, 2023)

Benchmark: MSCI EAFE
Asset Allocation
Strategy
Stocks 98.1%
Cash 1.9%
Strategy Characteristics
Strategy Benchmark
No. of holdings 65 798
Weighted avg. market cap (US $MM) $75,770 $74,380
FY2 price/earnings 11.7 12.9
Price/book value 1.9 1.8
Dividend yield (%) 3.1 3.1
TOP 10 HOLDINGS
Security Country Percent
Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc United Kingdom 5.8%
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. South Korea 3.9%
UniCredit S.p.A. Italy 3.4%
Enel SpA Italy 3.0%
BP Plc United Kingdom 2.8%
SAP SE Germany 2.8%
Roche Holding AG Switzerland 2.7%
Reckitt Benckiser Group United Kingdom 2.6%
Danone France 2.4%
Prudential Plc United Kingdom 2.3%

A “weighted average” measures a characteristic by the market capitalization of each stock. Price/book ratio is the weighted average of the price/book ratios of all the stocks in a portfolio. The P/B ratio of a company is calculated by dividing the market price of its stock by the company’s per-share book value. The price/earnings ratio is the weighted average of the price/earnings ratios of the stocks in a portfolio. The FY2 P/E ratio is a forward P/E ratio using a next-twenty-four months EPS estimate in the denominator.

Holdings are subject to change.

SECTOR WEIGHTS
Sector Strategy Benchmark
Financials 18.4% 18.7%
Industrials 17.2% 16.2%
Health Care 14.5% 13.0%
Consumer Staples 13.2% 9.9%
Information Technology 12.1% 8.0%
Consumer Discretionary 5.5% 12.5%
Utilities 5.4% 3.4%
Materials 5.3% 7.6%
Energy 3.8% 4.3%
Communication Services 2.8% 4.1%
Real Estate 0.0% 2.3%
TOP 10 COUNTRIES
Country Strategy Benchmark
United Kingdom 32.0% 14.8%
France 14.1% 12.3%
Germany 9.2% 8.6%
Japan 6.4% 22.4%
Italy 6.4% 2.6%
Switzerland 6.2% 10.1%
South Korea 5.7% 0.0%
Netherlands 5.7% 4.6%
Spain 4.5% 2.6%
Canada 2.3% 0.0%
Regional Allocation
  • Europe – other 81.2%
  • Pacific 13.0%
  • North America 2.3%
  • Emerging Asia 1.1%
  • Emerging Latin America 0.5%

Commentary (As of July 31, 2023)

Highlights

  • Global equity markets marched higher in July, fueled by waning excesses of liquidity in the global financial system.
  • The Federal Reserve’s rate-hiking cycle may be ending, but the lagged effect of sharp rate rises, an inverted yield curve, and negative money supply growth should weigh on the US economy in 2024. Higher borrowing costs for governments and corporations create spending headwinds for economic objectives.
  • After one of the longest cycles on record of US stock market outperformance versus developed non-US, the US valuation premium (measured by relative price-to-earnings ratios) is unusually high, over two standard deviations above the long-term average. We believe this stretched US premium—and greater emphasis on valuation—makes a reversion to the norm and relative outperformance of undervalued international equities increasingly likely.

Portfolio attribution

The Portfolio underperformed the Index during the month, due primarily to country allocation (a byproduct of our bottom-up stock selection process). Portfolio holdings in the transportation, software & services, and health care equipment & services industry groups detracted from relative performance. Holdings in the capital goods, semiconductors & semi equipment, and consumer durables & apparel industry groups offset some of the underperformance compared to the Index. The largest detractor was robotics manufacturer, FANUC Corp. (Japan). Additional notable detractors included low-budget airline, Ryanair Holdings Plc - ADR (Ireland), and contract food service company, Compass Group Plc (United Kingdom). The top contributor to return was jet engine manufacturer, Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc (United Kingdom). Other notable contributors included banking & financial services company, UniCredit S.p.A. (Italy), and semiconductor company, SK hynix, Inc. (South Korea).

Economic outlook

The Federal Reserve’s rate-hiking cycle may be ending, but the lagged effect of sharp rate rises, an inverted yield curve, and negative money supply growth should weigh on the US economy in 2024. Higher borrowing costs for governments and corporations create spending headwinds for economic objectives. Monetary tightening may be felt more deeply in Europe, given its greater credit demand sensitivity to variable interest rates (including through mortgages). Recession looms in the UK, where stubborn inflation has prompted unrelenting rate hikes. The Bank of Japan modestly relaxed its yield curve control, allowing yields to rise to 1% (from a prior ceiling of 0.5%), but appears committed to ultra-loose monetary policy for the near term. In China, policy makers announced measures to boost production of consumer goods and showed support for the nation’s ailing property market.

Investment outlook

After one of the longest cycles on record of US stock market outperformance versus developed non-US, the US valuation premium (measured by relative price-to-earnings ratios) is unusually high, over two standard deviations above the long-term average. We believe this stretched US premium—and greater emphasis on valuation—makes a reversion to the norm and relative outperformance of undervalued international equities increasingly likely.

With interest rates remaining higher for longer, valuation has become relevant again, an investing environment we believe is conducive to Causeway’s fundamental stock selection process. Passive indices emphasize past performers and may be especially vulnerable to compression of inflated valuation multiples. We focus instead on stocks that have underperformed peers, exhibiting valuations we believe are undemanding. Corporate earnings, in aggregate, should decline as economies slow. We seek companies engaged in operational restructuring that can improve earnings and cash flow through cost cutting and efficiency measures. We are especially interested in identifying companies we believe are capable of returning increasing quantities of capital to shareholders (via dividends and share buybacks), to maximize performance.

The market commentary expresses the portfolio managers’ views as of the date of this report and should not be relied on as research or investment advice regarding any stock. These views and the portfolio holdings and characteristics are subject to change. There is no guarantee that any forecasts made will come to pass. The securities identified and described above do not represent all of the securities purchased, sold or recommended for client accounts. The reader should not assume that an investment in the securities identified was or will be profitable. Past performance does not guarantee future results. For a description of our performance attribution methodology, or to obtain a list showing every holding's contribution to the overall account's performance during the quarter, please contact our product manager, Kevin Moutes, at 310-231-6116 or moutes@causewaycap.com.