With September and the third quarter of 2024 ending, Wall Street is now focused on two things. These are the economy and the earnings season. The former will guide investors on the impact of the Federal Reserve’s highly welcomed 50 basis point interest rate cut while the latter will let them determine whether the artificial intelligence sector is delivering profits.
The penultimate and the final month of the quarter have been quite eventful. Markets started out in August fearful after a poor showing from the labor market and the manufacturing sector. The labor market has been one of the primary drivers of the Fed’s interest rate policies, as the central bank has been eager to ‘cool’ it down to reduce payroll growth and inflation. However, investors worried at the August start that perhaps the central bank had been too restrictive.
Starting with the manufacturing weakness, the Institute of Supply Management’s (ISM) manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) dropped to 46.8 from the previous month’s 48.5. On its own, this wasn’t particularly worrying as the Fed’s data for Q2 had shown a 3.4% annualized growth in factory production. However, the next data release for the labor market saw nonfarm payrolls jump by just 114,000 for a 101,000 drop for the preceding 12 months’ monthly additions. Additionally, unemployment jumped to 4.3%, for the highest level since September 2021. Investors were already wary of the job market as job openings had dropped by 46,000 in June. Consequently, they sold and led the flagship S&P index to drop by 6% and the broader NASDAQ index to shed 7.9% during the first week of August. These drops led the Magnificent 7 group of stocks to lose a stunning $800 billion in value.
Shifting gears, the volatility in the markets also merits a look at how mutual funds are performing. Like hedge funds, mutual fund managers are financial professionals with often decades of experience in managing money under their belt. Insider Monkey made a list of the 20 Best Mutual Funds in 2023 last year. This list was compiled in April, and naturally, it was dominated by mutual funds with significant investments in the technology sector. In this list, the five best performing mutual funds of 2023 were variants of a fund that invested in the semiconductor industry. The next five all had investments in the big tech sector, and with the two groups, the two top performing mutual funds had made 23% in trailing year to date returns for the technology funds and 28% for the semiconductor funds.
But what about 2024? After all, not only has the global geopolitical climate made gold shinier than usual, but rate cuts are also increasing the investor itch to diversify holdings from large caps to small and medium cap stocks. Well, while semiconductor mutual funds have delivered strong returns so far, others have also joined the list. Taking a closer look reveals that 5 star mutual funds focusing on spinoff companies or those being restructured, those investing in underappreciated businesses with long product cycles, companies investing in capital markets, gold mutual funds, and small cap funds have all surpassed semiconductor funds. In respective order, the top performing mutual funds in these categories have delivered 51%, 49%, 44%, 42%, and 42% in year to date trailing returns while the flagship S&P index has gained 21.4% through price appreciation year to date.
2024 has been a good year for mutual funds overall. Data from BofA shows that in Q1 2024, actively managed mutual funds delivered their best set of performance in 17 years. As per the bank, 64% of these funds had beaten their benchmarks which was a sizeable increase over the 38% that had eked out similar performance in 2023. BofA speculated that a broader equity outperformance might have led to the improved mutual fund performance, with analysts stating that while “healthier market breadth should give managers better odds of selecting stocks that will outperform, a shift in leadership away from mega cap Tech poses a risk to those still betting on last year’s winners.”
The shift in market trends due to the Fed’s interest rate cut has also shaken up investment advisors’ perception of low risk mutual funds called money market funds. Data shows that retail investor assets in these mutual funds sat at a whopping $2.6 trillion as of September 18th, 2024. This marks an equally stunning growth of 80% since 2022’s start as retail investors piled in $951 billion in the funds to benefit from a rate hike cycle that would eventually culminate at 24 year high interest rates in the US. The shifts in mutual fund sentiment coupled with strong fund performance at a time when the SEC has approved new rules, which will go into effect in 2026 if adopted, which will require mutual funds with net assets less than $1 billion to file monthly portfolio holding reports as opposed to quarterly reports.
Before the rate cut, Goldman Sachs took a look at the recession odds in America. A recession will be the key driver of index performance after rate cuts especially when we consider historical data. Mind you, GS was one of the few banks that stood against the broader analyst predictions of a recession in 2022, and as of early September, its analysts had a 12 month ahead US recession probability of 20%. This was still lower than the Bloomberg consensus of 30%, and in its report, the bank added that the US economy should continue to grow at 2%.
Our Methodology
To make our list of Goldman Sachs’ favorite mutual fund manager stocks, we ranked the bank’s recent list of 50 stocks where large cap, growth, and value mutual fund managers had positions overweight with respect to the benchmark index. Out of these, the stocks that were the most overweight were selected. For a list of hedge fund stocks, you can read Goldman Sachs’ Best Hedge Fund Stock Picks: Top 20 Stocks.
For these stocks, we also mentioned the number of hedge fund investors. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points. (see more details here).
Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ:INTU) is a software as a service (SaaS) firm that helps businesses with their daily operations. The firm’s software allows customers to manage payroll, compliance, accounting, and secure access to credit. Its shares have been on quite a roller coaster this year. Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ:INTU)’s stock tumbled by 16% in May as the firm delivered the antithesis of what underlies the narrative of most SaaS stocks. The company’s management warned during the Q1 2024 earnings call that it could lose a stunning 1 million customers using its TurboTax software. This was because the IRS had debuted its software to enable people to self file taxes, and the comments indicated to investors that Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ:INTU) might stop growing with one software product. After the 16% drop, its stock soared by 18% between June and July only to pare them back in early August due to market worries of a recession. Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ:INTU)’s second quarter results sent the stock tumbling 7.5% after its revenue and earnings guidance for the October quarter, which sat at $3.13 billion and $2.36, missed analyst estimates of $3.37 and $2.78. Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ:INTU) also lowered its consumer growth target to 6% to 10% from an earlier 8% to 12%. Since growth and cost control are the keys of SaaS hypothesis, investors weren’t impressed. Looking ahead, cross selling and margins should be pivotal for any tailwinds to Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ:INTU)’s shares.
Baron Funds mentioned Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ:INTU) in its Q2 2024 investor letter. Here is what the fund said:
“Intuit Inc. has been rolling out Intuit Assist, a GenAI powered digital assistant, across its product lines to help Credit Karma users select new credit cards, QuickBooks customers forecast cash flow, Mailchimp customers create targeted email marketing campaigns, and TurboTax customers understand changes in their tax returns from the prior year. Klarna, the privately held consumer lending and payments company, is cutting costs by using GenAI assistants to handle two-thirds of customer service chats and reduce its dependency on external marketing agencies. We consider these GenAI advancements to be evolutionary rather than revolutionary, but we continue to closely monitor the impact of new technologies on the fintech industry.”
Overall INTU ranks 8th on our list of Goldman Sachs' top fund manager stock picks. While we acknowledge the potential of INTU as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter timeframe. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than INTU but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.
Disclosure: None. This article was originally published on Insider Monkey. All investment decisions should be made after consulting a qualified professional.