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Bigger Is Better for Europe Stocks, Says SocGen

Bigger Is Better for Europe Stocks as SocGen Sees Liquidity Risk

(Bloomberg) -- Small is decidedly not beautiful for European equities, according to Societe Generale SA.

Investors should short the Euro Stoxx Small Index while going long on the blue-chip Euro Stoxx 50 Index, given the prospect of greater “liquidity-driven shocks” ahead for markets, SocGen strategists said. European equity funds have registered almost nonstop outflows this year, a trend that isn’t likely to change soon, they said.

Bigger Is Better for Europe Stocks, Says SocGen

Despite strong balance-sheet fundamentals, profitability and valuations, strategists led by Roland Kaloyan expressed concern about liquidity as the economy slows. “The fact that small caps failed to outperform large caps at the beginning of the year, in a bullish market driven by central bank easing, sends a clear signal that the market is now favoring liquid investments,” they wrote in a note on Sept. 9.

The Euro Stoxx 50 is trading at its highest level relative to the small-cap gauge in almost a year, widening the gap in recent weeks. Shares of smaller companies, which rallied thrice as much as their blue-chip peers in 2017, have struggled to keep up since. SocGen is underweight on these relative to large caps, both in the euro area and the U.K.

Adding to liquidity issues, small caps are beginning to face lower margins, and profitability isn’t likely to improve at this point in the cycle amid Europe’s economic slowdown, the strategists said. Instead, investors are likely to focus on companies linked to “higher-end” global consumers, ones that are less constrained by the weight of Europe’s economic headaches.

To contact the reporter on this story: Namitha Jagadeesh in London at njagadeesh@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Blaise Robinson at brobinson58@bloomberg.net, Monica Houston-Waesch, Jon Menon

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