Will AI generate long-term equity performance?

Analysis
Insights

Enthusiasm for generative artificial intelligence (AI) has helped drive 2023’s stock market gains. We look at the implications for investors.

Share

November 3, 2023

By Joseph Wu, CFA

Key points:

  • The transformative potential of artificial intelligence technology extends across virtually all industries, but identifying long-term winners is challenging.
  • The emergence of the personal computer and the internet provide lessons on how AI adoption could filter through the economy and markets.
  • As markets respond to the AI rollout, disciplined diversification can help investors guard against unintended risks.

A year of solidly uneven performance

Viewed from a high level, 2023 has been a rewarding year for the stock market. Year to date, the MSCI All-Country World Index (ACWI) and the S&P 500 Index have advanced roughly nine percent and 13 percent on a total return basis, outpacing their respective average annual gains of 8.4 percent and 9.3 percent over the past 25 years. Trends beneath the surface, however, reveal that most of those above-average gains have been fueled by only three sectors.

AI-linked sectors set the pace

Year-to-date total returns by equity sector

Year-to-date total returns by equity sector

Bar chart showing year-to-date performance through October 19, 2023 for the MSCI All-Country World Index, MSCI All-Country World Equal-Weight Index, and eleven major equity sectors. Information Technology, 30.2%; Communication Services, 28.4%; Consumer Discretionary, 13.5%; Energy, 10.4%; MSCI ACWI, 9.3%; Industrials, 4.8%; Financials, 1.5%; Materials, -1.9%; MSCI ACWI (Equal Weighted), -2.3%; Health Care, -3%; Consumer Staples, -4.3%; Real Estate, -9.3%; Utilities, -9.7%.

Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg; data through 10/19/23; return calculations based on MSCI ACWI sector index series.

A common factor propelling those three sectors has been burgeoning interest in artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, as recent significant breakthroughs kicked off a wave of optimism around the prospect of a new and durable growth pathway for a number of companies in the Information Technology, Communication Services, and Consumer Discretionary sectors.

Weights matter

2023’s leading sectors as proportions of global equity indexes

2023’s leading sectors as proportions of global equity indexes

Column chart showing the weights of the Information Technology, Communication Services, and Consumer Discretionary sectors, and the combined weight of the three sectors, as percentages of the total indexes as of September 30, 2023, for the S&P 500, MSCI EAFE Index, S&P/TSX Composite and MSCI EM Index. S&P 500 (U.S.): 27.5%, 8.9%, 10.7%, 47.1%. MSCI EAFE: 7.73%, 4.14%, 12.04%, 23.9%. S&P/TSX Composite (Canada): 7.5%, 3.7%, 3.7%, 14.9%. MSCI Emerging Markets: 20.22%, 9.56%, 13.7%, 43.5%.

  • Consumer Discretionary
  • Communication Services
  • Information Technology

Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg, MSCI, S&P Dow Jones; data through 9/30/23

The U.S. stock market has been the performance leader for most of the year, as it offers considerably more exposure to companies perceived to be major beneficiaries of the accelerating AI buildout. These range from firms that supply foundational hardware and infrastructure (such as semiconductor chips and data centres) to those that design software and provide related services (including end-user applications and cloud computing), amongst others.

Regional performance is also uneven

Year-to-date total returns

Year-to-date total returns by region

Column chart showing the year-to-date performance through October 19, 2023 for the S&P 500, MSCI EAFE Index, S&P/TSX Composite and MSCI EM indexes. S&P 500 (U.S.), 12.9%; MSCI EAFE, 4.9%; S&P/TSX Composite (Canada), 2.5%; MSCI Emerging Markets, -0.2%.

Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg; data through 10/19/23

The promise of generative AI

Artificial intelligence technologies are thought to hold immense promise because they are seen as possessing the capacity to impact virtually every industry. A defining attribute of a general-purpose technology lies in its capacity for wide application across all sectors of the economy.

For instance, consider ChatGPT, an acronym for “Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer,” a generative AI application that can produce startlingly humanlike conversational dialogue. Trained using vast amounts of textual data from the internet, ChatGPT’s AI employs natural language processing algorithms that enable it to analyse, manipulate, and generate text in response to input from human users.

The potential for ChatGPT and other generative AI chatbots to turbocharge productivity has motivated companies across many industries to explore different ways of deploying and integrating these technologies in their businesses.

Yet text is merely one branch of the generative AI story. Rapid progress in similar “deep-learning models” stretches into the realms of images, audio, video, and software coding, to highlight just a few modes. These advances could eventually pave the way for so-called “multimodal” generative AI, enabling more powerful functions with wider-ranging applications than current models that are restricted to a single data mode.

Lessons from the emergence of other recent general-purpose technologies – such as the personal computer (PC) and the internet – offer three potential insights on how AI adoption could filter through the economy and markets: (1) it takes time for these technologies to achieve widespread acceptance; (2) the adoption will likely involve several waves of innovation; and (3) assessing the long-term winners and losers is difficult.

The personal computer and the internet were introduced in the late 1970s and early 1980s. But because it took several decades to build a critical mass of users, the U.S. economy did not see productivity improvements driven by these innovations until the latter half of the 1990s, in a trend that lasted through the mid-2000s.

U.S. productivity growth has come in waves

Five-year rolling average, y/y

Rolling five-year average U.S. productivity growth

Line chart showing the rolling five-year average U.S. productivity growth from 1970 through June 2023. The line shows a series of increases and decreases.

  • U.S. productivity growth

Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg, U.S. Census Bureau, World Bank; data through 6/30/23

During this period, there was a pronounced boom-bust sequence in equity markets as investors first embraced an increasingly buoyant view on productivity gains and their presumed positive implications for profits, then tempered their expectations as the anticipated benefits took longer to materialise than initially expected. Despite a notable and durable improvement in productivity from 1997 to 2005, initial optimistic projections of profitability ultimately proved to be unrealistically high and premature. This can be partly attributed to the fact that so-called “killer apps” – products innovative enough to influence business and consumer trends, laying the foundations for durable business models – often take time to develop from an emerging technology.

During the PC/internet era, the search engine emerged as a pivotal killer app, but Google did not really hit its stride until the early 2000s, about five to 10 years into the rapid-adoption phase for the PC and internet. Similarly in the mobile device era, social networks and instant messaging platforms, two of the leading applications (amongst many) created to monetise mobile device use, took more than five years to gain traction following the launch of the first iPhone in 2007.

In the initial AI adoption phase, immediate beneficiaries include the semiconductor industry and incumbent large-cap tech companies, which are already highly profitable and generate abundant cash flows that enable them to invest heavily in the AI space. Far more challenging to identify are the opportunities that will emerge from subsequent waves of innovation to spawn new businesses and disrupt existing operators across various industries.

It seems likely to us that these ambitious expectations will reinforce the recent trend of businesses reorienting their capital spending towards “soft investments” as the global economy continues to digitalise and become more efficient by reducing its reliance on physical structures and equipment. In Q2 2023, U.S. business investment in intellectual property reached nearly $1.5 trillion on an annualised basis, more than doubling over the past decade. Since 2010, investment in intellectual property has grown at an annualised rate of 7.5 percent, handily outpacing the 5.7 percent growth rate for overall business investment.

A structural shift towards “soft capex”

Annual U.S. corporate investment spending since 1995 (indexed to 1/1/95 = 100)

Annual U.S. corporate investment spending since 1995

Line chart showing the trend in overall U.S. nonresidential investment and U.S. nonresidential investment on intellectual property products since 1995. The two data series are indexed to 100 on January 1, 1995. Intellectual property investment has increased faster than total investment since then, reaching an indexed value of roughly 700 compared to roughly 400 for total investment.

  • U.S. nonresidential investment: Intellectual property products
  • Total U.S. nonresidential investment

Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg; data through 6/30/23

Disruptive technologies in an investment context

This year’s equity market advance has been driven predominantly by a few stocks on the back of mounting excitement related to the AI theme. Some of this enthusiasm toward tech-oriented companies appears well founded; we see many large-cap firms in this space as well resourced and fundamentally sound, a view underscored by their strong balance sheets, consistent growth, and robust profitability. In our view, reliably strong cash flow generation afforded by sustainable competitive advantages has positioned such firms to reap more benefits from the evolution of AI than their peers, at least in the early stages.

All the same, the top-heavy nature of this year’s equity market gains means many investors holding diversified portfolios are sitting on returns that aren’t keeping pace with broad market-cap-weighted indexes, whose values are greatly influenced by the performance of their largest constituents.

In times when the stock market is infused with captivating narratives, there is a tendency for investor expectations to overshoot, and upward momentum in the share prices of perceived beneficiaries can be more powerful and enduring than some investors may consider rational. Historical market cycles show the feedback loop that drives an influx of capital towards certain stocks as they ascend to ever-greater heights can also work in the opposite direction.

While we recognise the transformative potential of widespread AI adoption to enhance the long-term growth trajectory for the economy and corporate earnings, the magnitude and timing of these developments are inherently unpredictable and uncertain. Laying the foundations for novel technologies, upon which new applications, products, and services can be built and monetised sustainably, often requires more time than initially anticipated by investors.

The potential concentration of control over AI platforms could also provoke regulatory scrutiny. Furthermore, AI is surrounded by a plethora of thorny issues including data privacy, copyright, amplification of social biases, and the phenomenon of “hallucinations” – when an AI model generates content that appears highly plausible and persuasive despite having no basis in reality.

It is also worth bearing in mind that even the largest companies can see their once-dominant index shares fade over time, as new frontrunners emerge across subsequent economic cycles. Ascending to the top echelon in any decade does not ensure continued success in the next.

Leaders from every era tend to feel the pull of gravity

S&P 500 Index

Combined weight of the top 50 companies in the
        S&P 500

Column chart showing the combined weight of the top 50 companies in the S&P 500 at the start of each decade, and the combined weight of the same 50 companies at the end of the decade, for the 1990s, 2000s, 2010s, and 2020s (through September 30, 2023). The end-of-decade totals are smaller for the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s; the decade-to-date total is slightly higher for the 2020s. 1990s, 47.4% vs. 39.6%; 2000s, 59.6% vs. 33.2%; 2010s, 51.2% vs. 40.1%; 2020s, 51.0% vs. 52.4%.

  • Total market cap weight of top 50 index members at start of decade
  • Total market cap weight of same index members at end of decade

Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg; data for the 2020s through 9/30/23

We firmly believe that AI is an important investment theme with a multiyear runway. But, as has been the case with previous innovations, we also think it is likely that some excesses tied to AI themes will manifest in equity markets along the multi-decade path of adoption and monetisation. With the U.S. and global Information Technology sector now trading at a 30 to 50 percent premium valuation to the broader market, the market seems to have factored in the prospect of amplified profit growth. While it is not unreasonable, in our view, for disruptive technologies to garner premium valuations, we would point out that highly valued companies must constantly demonstrate and defend their competitive edge to retain these valuations. The AI arms race appears to have set off a capital spending boom, though which companies will see their capital allocations pay off in profits – and when – remains an open question.

A recent rally vaulted Tech valuations to significant premiums

Relative forward price-to-earnings ratios of the Information Technology sector vs. the broad market

Tech valuations

Line chart showing the relative forward price-to-earnings ratio of the global and U.S. Information Technology sectors vs. the MSCI All-Country World Index and S&P 500 Index, respectively, since 2006. Current valuation multiples are approximately 1.5x (global) and 1.36x (U.S.).

  • Global
  • U.S.

Note: Based on the S&P 500 Information Technology Index relative to the S&P 500 Index (U.S.) and the MSCI ACWI Information Technology Index relative to the MSCI ACWI (global).

Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg; data through 10/19/23

We note that consensus forward-12-month earnings forecasts for global equity markets are not much higher today than they were at the start of the year. This implies that most of the stock market gains in 2023 have been powered by an expansion in valuation multiples. The same holds true for the global Information Technology sector, which now trades at roughly 25x forward-12-month earnings estimates, up from just under 20x coming into the year.

Corporate earnings growth may have a more difficult time living up to the heavier dose of optimism now embedded in stock prices. For this valuation expansion to be validated, generative AI must not only revolutionise businesses but also translate positive investment sentiment into sustainable earnings streams.

Keep a broader perspective

Against this year’s backdrop of narrow leadership, we would emphasise the importance of a disciplined approach to diversification within equity portfolios. Admittedly, diversification can prove frustrating at times because it entails a tradeoff between risk and return. Maintaining a properly diversified portfolio essentially means always owning some assets that are underperforming, but this exposure to less-popular market segments can bolster portfolio performance when market leadership eventually rotates – as it often does.

This approach can help investors guard against potential unintended risks (and unpleasant surprises) stemming from an undue concentration in a single stock or a cluster of similar holdings, while positioning portfolios to navigate a broader spectrum of possible outcomes over the long term.


This publication has been issued by Royal Bank of Canada on behalf of certain RBC ® companies that form part of the international network of RBC Wealth Management. You should carefully read any risk warnings or regulatory disclosures in this publication or in any other literature accompanying this publication or transmitted to you by Royal Bank of Canada, its affiliates or subsidiaries.

The information contained in this report has been compiled by Royal Bank of Canada and/or its affiliates from sources believed to be reliable, but no representation or warranty, express or implied is made to its accuracy, completeness or correctness. All opinions and estimates contained in this report are judgments as of the date of this report, are subject to change without notice and are provided in good faith but without legal responsibility. This report is not an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. Past performance is not a guide to future performance, future returns are not guaranteed, and a loss of original capital may occur. Every province in Canada, state in the U.S. and most countries throughout the world have their own laws regulating the types of securities and other investment products which may be offered to their residents, as well as the process for doing so. As a result, any securities discussed in this report may not be eligible for sale in some jurisdictions. This report is not, and under no circumstances should be construed as, a solicitation to act as a securities broker or dealer in any jurisdiction by any person or company that is not legally permitted to carry on the business of a securities broker or dealer in that jurisdiction. Nothing in this report constitutes legal, accounting or tax advice or individually tailored investment advice.

This material is prepared for general circulation to clients, including clients who are affiliates of Royal Bank of Canada, and does not have regard to the particular circumstances or needs of any specific person who may read it. The investments or services contained in this report may not be suitable for you and it is recommended that you consult an independent investment advisor if you are in doubt about the suitability of such investments or services. To the full extent permitted by law neither Royal Bank of Canada nor any of its affiliates, nor any other person, accepts any liability whatsoever for any direct or consequential loss arising from any use of this report or the information contained herein. No matter contained in this document may be reproduced or copied by any means without the prior consent of Royal Bank of Canada.

Clients of United Kingdom companies may be entitled to compensation from the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme if any of these entities cannot meet its obligations. This depends on the type of business and the circumstances of the claim. Most types of investment business are covered for up to a total of £85,000. The Channel Island subsidiary is not covered by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme; the office of Royal Bank of Canada (Channel Islands) Limited is a participant in the Jersey Bank Depositors Compensation Scheme. The Scheme offers protection for ‘eligible deposits’ up to £50,000 per individual claimant, subject to certain limitations. The maximum total amount of compensation is capped at £100,000,000 in any 5 year period. Full details of the Scheme and banking groups covered are available on the Government of Jersey’s website www.gov.je/dcs or on request.


Related articles

Life after sports requires a new game plan

Analysis 5 minute read
- Life after sports requires a new game plan

Can the Fed solve global inflation?

Analysis 8 minute read
- Can the Fed solve global inflation?

The U.S. fiscal stimulus uncertainty and the outlook for economic growth

Analysis 6 minute read
- The U.S. fiscal stimulus uncertainty and the outlook for economic growth