The macro backdrop has not changed much for investors over the past quarter. Heightened volatility continued to rule the day across all asset classes as inflationary pressures, supply chain challenges, consumer sentiment, and geopolitical events combined (and continue) to increase the uncertainty in the direction of company earnings. Most prominent of concern, domestically and internationally, is when signs of lower inflation will begin to show enough moderation, which would allow the Federal Reserve to pause its dramatic rise in the Fed Funds Rate. Though there has been some moderation, as of now, economic and price data continue to support the Fed’s determination towards higher rates.
We commented in our last letter about the existing debate, which continues, on whether the Fed can navigate the U.S. economy to a soft landing or if a more challenging recession is likely. The jury remains out, but the trend is certainly lower as consensus estimates for this year have declined to real GDP growth of 1.6%. More importantly, as equity markets are forward looking, estimates for 2023 have been lowered to 0.7%. This is because moderating economic growth, cost pressures and higher interest rates have combined to pressure company earnings estimates and the multiples which investors are willing to pay for those earnings.
In an ironic, though not unusual, twist, negative economic data is welcomed with positive market moves. With the heightened concerns over inflation and interest rates, bad news is good news such that lower economic growth would allow the Fed to pause and possibly lower rates. In the short term, such evidence provides some relief. But, conversely the direction of company earnings must be considered in a lower or even negative growth environment and what valuation should be placed on those estimates. The result is heightened volatility as the numerous economic cross-currents and geopolitical risks present a challenging investment landscape.
Reflecting this uncertainty, the Russell 2000® experienced a schizophrenic quarter by rising over 18% into the middle of August, only to move dramatically lower into the end of the quarter, finishing with an official third-quarter return of -2.19%. Our Small Companies portfolio underperformed this benchmark. While not a return that we were positioning for, it is the type which has historically presented an opportunistic buying environment.
Despite the negative returns, our leaders that were positive during the fourth quarter were as follows:
Ameresco (AMRC), an integrated electric energy company focused on energy efficiency and resiliency, led performance for the third quarter. AMRC has been a positive long-term performer for the portfolio though it can prove volatile as large projects can move the forward-looking outlook both up and down. Management has historically executed well, which we feel should continue as they win increasingly larger, more complex projects and expand internationally driving continued growth.
iRobot (IRBT), the leader in robotic vacuuming, was moving positively in the early part of the quarter and then further benefited from a $61 a share acquisition offer from Amazon (AMZN) that was a 22% premium at the time of announcement.
Cambium Networks (CMBM), a wireless infrastructure provider that offers fixed wireless and Wi-Fi to broadband service providers and enterprises, performed well in a tough environment for the technology sector. In our outlook, CMBM offers solutions and services that should drive growth from a global investment cycle by both enterprises and service companies to provide better, faster and expanded WiFi access.
Cyberark Software (CYBR), a provider of cyber security software solutions and services, also defied the recent sector performance challenges. In addition to providing market-leading solutions in Priveleged Access Management, as reflected by Gartner’s placement of CYBR in its “Leaders” category, management has executed well on the company’s transition from licensing to a SaaS revenue model. Increasing security threats and regulatory backdrop should also provide a solid backdrop for continued growth.
Clean Energy Fuels (CLNE), a provider of natural gas fueling stations, rounded out our top performers. Since inclusion in the portfolio, CLNE has delivered strong up-and-down performance as it moves with the volatile energy sector. We have confidence that their sizable supply agreements with Amazon, UPS, Fed Ex and others support continued volume growth in natural gas fueling. Additionally, the company is also building upstream supply opportunities in renewable CNG as they partner with BP and Total. Growing fuel delivery and production should drive improving fundamentals.
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