“We continue to recommend investors hold a core defensive portfolio of higher quality companies or REITs that offer secular earnings growth and/or defensive dividends, with selective exposure to topical names and small-mid cap stocks that have strong earnings tailwinds,” says the analyst.
Jaiswal is overweight on the consumer, healthcare, industrials and transport sectors, as well as office, overseas and industrial Singapore REITs (S-REITs). He is keeping neutral on financials, food products, manufacturing and technology, real estate and telecommunication, as well as hospitality and retail S-REITs.
His top picks include DFI Retail Group, Food Empire Holdings, Sheng Siongand Thai Beveragein the consumer sector, Raffles Medicalin healthcare, Singapore Technologies Engineering (ST Engineering)and Marco Polo Marinein industrials and ComfortDelGroin transport.
Jaiswal also prefers UOBfor stocks within the financial sector, Golden Agri-Resourcesand Wilmar Internationalin food products, Centurion Corporationin real estate and Singapore Telecommunications (Singtel)in telecom and media.
See also: SAC Capital initiates ‘buy’ on Sanli Environmental after $105.3 mil contract win from PUB
His favoured REITs are CapitaLand Ascendas REIT, ESR-LOGOS REIT, Keppel REITand CDL Hospitality Trusts.
Following a recent ratings upgrade, RHB has added DFI Retail and CDL Hospitality Trusts to its list of top picks, with the decline in share price bringing the respective stocks’ valuations to more attractive levels. “This, along with our expectation of a recovery in FY2024 support our positive outlook for the share price of both stocks,” says Jaiswal.
However, the analyst adds that the Singapore market will be looking for direction as concerns over the global macroeconomic outlook remain. “We expect the Straits Times Index’s (STI) movement to remain volatile given the uncertainties around China’s economic slowdown and the US interest rate outlook,” he explains.
See also: CGSI downgrades Grab to ‘hold’ ahead of 2QFY2025 results, expects consumer spend to slow in 2H2025
Nevertheless, Jaiswal notes that the STI’s forward price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) remains cheap when compared to its historical valuation, with the STI trading close to 2 standard deviations (s.d.) below its historical average since January 2008. Using a top down approach and a target P/E multiple of 11.5x applied to the STI’s 2024 earnings per share (EPS), he predicts the STI will hit 3,340 points by the end of this year.
Meanwhile, the RHB economics and market strategy team expects that the US Federal Reserve’s (US Fed) Federal Funds Rate (FFR) will rise to 5.50% to 5.75% with the balance of risks skewed towards a print of 5.75% to 6.00% in 2023. The team expects no FFR cuts well into 1H2024.
Retail sales momentum in Singapore is still expected to improve in 2H2023, supported by seasonal factors such as the upcoming Formula 1 Grand Prix, Black Friday sales, Single’s Day sales and Christmas shopping, coupled with front-loading of consumer demand in response to higher GST rates in 2024. Jaiswal maintains his view that discretionary demand should outperform essential spending.
As such, the analyst is maintaining his investment themes. Jaiswal recommends sticking with industrial REITs as rotations into the sector will be time sensitive given the dependency on the interest rate outlook, buying into companies that will benefit from the return of Chinese tourists to the Asean and Hong Kong regions, retaining exposure to quality companies offering defensive earnings or dividends and buying into small and mid-cap companies with a strong growth outlook.