Investing in Nasdaq without Big Tech

The Nasdaq now trades more than 20 percent below last November’s high. With Big Tech remaining under downward pressure, other parts of the Nasdaq look promising. 

There has actually been a correction phase since February last year. First in the more speculative parts of the market, such as technology companies that are not making profits, SPACs or software companies with extremely high valuations.

Fear of underperforming still dominates in Europe

The fact that most active investors do not succeed in beating the market does not mean that the market cannot be beaten. “It is not that complicated at all,” said alpha investor Jens Peers, CEO and CIO at Mirova Asset Management, part of the Natixis group. 

Of all actively managed investment funds, some 85%, after expenses, perform worse than the market. It’s a statistic that fuels the eternal debate between active and passive investors.

Macro, multi-strategy hedge funds best performers in Q1

Hedge funds with a macro or multi-strategy focus were among the best performing funds in the first quarter, shielding investors from geopolitical turmoil, high inflation numbers and shifting monetary policies, according to Preqin, a privately-held London-based investment data company that provides financial data and information on the alternative assets market.

The firm said that, in a historical context, first quarter performance was “certainly disappointing but hedge funds managed to guard investors against major pullbacks.” 

High-yield corporates at a virtual standstill

Rising interest rates and continuing tension surrounding the Ukraine conflict have brought the issuance of high-yield corporate bonds in Europe to a virtual standstill. “The size and speed of the current interest rate increase is causing companies to stop going public and the market to virtually dry up,” said one specialist.

Top 5 emerging markets shares: Nordea 1 in the lead

For emerging countries, the first quarter of 2022 was dominated by the war in Ukraine unleashed by Russia. Equities from Russia itself suffered particularly badly. Various index compilers, including MSCI, have removed Russian shares from all their regional indices. At a price of 0, the MSCI Russia index has suffered a loss of 100 percent this year.

The next waypoint for investors: corporate earnings 

When it comes to the prospect of a recession, and a possible prolonged period of stagflation, the jury is still out, even in Europe. Although in agreement on a deteriorating economic outlook, major asset managers such as BLI, Pictet and JP Morgan hold diverging views on what’s next. For investors, corporate earnings are now seen as the next waypoint.