QEP International Value
Investment Objective
The QEP International Value strategy seeks long-term capital appreciation.
Description
Schroder QEP International Value is an index-unconstrained, value-based strategy designed to deliver higher long-run returns than the market. Analyzing a universe of over 12,000 stocks, the team constructs a highly diversified portfolio typically containing over 500 stocks.
Stock selection for this strategy is grounded in the analysis of company fundamentals indicating Value (dividends, cashflow, sales, assets and earnings). Portfolios will exhibit a style bias towards these factors. The team believes that Value outperforms over the long term, but to help minimize exposure to ‘value traps’, stocks which are cheap for good reason, investment decisions are also informed by the team’s analysis of business quality. They determine Quality on measures of Profitability, Stability Financial Strength, Sales Growth and Governance.
The team believes that intelligent portfolio construction can greatly enhance the ability to generate repeatable long-run returns. They reduce stock specific risk by building a highly diversified portfolio, but with conviction in every single stock. Recognizing the limitations of market cap-weighted indices, they take an index-unconstrained approach which enables them to invest wherever they find the best Value opportunities and to capitalize upon those which may be missed by other global managers, including those at the lower end of the market cap spectrum and across emerging markets.
Investment Options*
- Subadvised Mutual Fund
- Commingled Vehicle
- Separate Accounts
Learn More
To find out more about this strategy, download the strategy overview or email our team at canada@schroders.com.
Investment Disclosures
*The strategies listed include those which may be subject to the ability to meet investment minimums and other specific criteria, and may not be directly available to U.S. investors.
**Index: The MSCI ACWI ex US Index (the benchmark) is an unmanaged portfolio of equity securities used as a point of comparison for the strategy. No strategy can guarantee that its performance will exceed or match the performance of its benchmark.
Investment risks: All investments, domestic and foreign, involve risks including the risk of possible loss of principal. The market value of the portfolio may decline as a result of a number of factors, including adverse economic and market conditions, prospects of stocks in the portfolio, changing interest rates, and real or perceived adverse competitive industry conditions. Investing overseas involves special risks including among others, risks related to political or economic instability, foreign currency (such as exchange, valuation, and fluctuation) risk, market entry or exit restrictions, illiquidity and taxation. Emerging markets pose greater risks than investments in developed markets.
There can be no guarantee these strategies will be successful or that the investment objective can be achieved.