Investor Summary
Fund Strategy
FUND PERFORMANCE AS OF 31st March 2026
| ANNUALIZED SINCE INCEPTION | QUARTERLY | YTD |
|---|---|---|
| - | - | - |
| ANNUALIZED SINCE INCEPTION | QUARTERLY | YTD |
|---|---|---|
| - | - | - |
The ClearBridge Dividend Strategy outperformed in a volatile first quarter, remaining largely flat while the S&P 500 declined 4.3%. The strategy benefited from a significant underweight to information technology during a sharp software selloff and an overweight to energy as geopolitical tensions drove oil prices 38.2% higher. AI has rapidly eroded traditional software moats, prompting a deliberate retreat from most software exposure, while the war in Iran unleashed energy sector volatility. The managers recycled gains from defense and AI-linked stocks into high-quality industrials like Otis and Honeywell, and alternative asset managers including Blackstone and Apollo Global Management. Energy exposure was sharpened around highest-conviction names Williams and ExxonMobil, while exiting EQT and Enbridge. Key risks include persistent inflation from elevated oil prices and potential economic headwinds from higher interest rates. The strategy maintains broad diversification across high-quality companies with strong dividend growth prospects, positioning defensively against AI disruption and geopolitical uncertainty while capitalizing on selective opportunities.
The ClearBridge Dividend Strategy focuses on high-quality dividend-paying companies with strong financial characteristics and reasonable valuations, emphasizing broad diversification to navigate market concentration and disruption while capitalizing on energy sector strength and selective opportunities in industrials and alternative asset managers.
A slowing global economy combined with higher inflation and interest rates could present strong headwinds to markets in 2026. The managers continue to emphasize broad diversification and will exercise caution navigating the twin challenges of AI disruption and the war in Iran. They believe they are well-positioned for the current environment with a diverse portfolio emphasizing high-quality companies.
| Date | Letter | Tickers | Keywords | Pitches | Quick Takes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 8 2026 | 2026 Q1 | ADP, APO, AVGO, BX, ENB, EQT, HON, LHX, MSFT, NOC, ORCL, OTIS, RTX, TSM, WMB, XOM | AI, defense, dividends, energy, Geopolitical, inflation, semiconductors, software | - | ClearBridge Dividend Strategy outperformed during Q1 2026 volatility by avoiding software's AI-driven selloff and overweighting energy amid Iran war tensions. Managers recycled defense and tech gains into quality industrials and alternative asset managers while concentrating energy exposure around Williams and ExxonMobil. Strategy emphasizes diversification and dividend growth to navigate AI disruption and geopolitical risks. |
| Jan 7 2026 | 2025 Q4 | AAPL, ADP, APD, AVGO, GOOGL, ITX.MC, KO, LHX, META, MMC, MSFT, NESN.SW, NVDA, ODFL, ORCL, TEL, TMUS, UL, UNP, XOM | AI, Concentration, diversification, dividends, large cap, semiconductors, technology, value | - | ClearBridge Dividend Strategy maintains disciplined diversification amid historic market concentration, participating selectively in AI while trading at significant discount to S&P 500. Portfolio companies growing dividends 10% annually. Managers reduced Oracle due to risky business model shift, maintained Broadcom for competitive AI positioning, expect opportunities in overlooked areas as AI obsession continues. |
| Oct 9 2025 | 2025 Q3 | AVGO, CMCSA, DEO, GOOGL, KO, LHX, META, MMC, NESN.SW, NOC, NSC, ODFL, ORCL, RTX, SRE, TEL, TMUS, TRV, UNH, UNP | AI, defense, dividends, large cap, Quality, risk management, technology, valuation |
AVGO ORCL TEL LHX MARSH ODFL |
ClearBridge Dividend Strategy profited from AI exposure but lagged S&P 500 due to disciplined risk management and IT underweight. Flexible dividend approach enabled successful additions of Alphabet, Meta, T-Mobile post-dividend initiations. Mixed outlook reflects economic resilience versus concerning market concentration and high valuations. Emphasis on modest valuations for better risk-adjusted returns. |
| Jul 9 2025 | 2025 Q2 | AAPL, AVGO, BDX, DIS, GM, LHX, MSFT, NVDA, ORCL, PPG, TEL, TMUS, UNH, V, XOM | AI, defense, diversification, dividends, energy, Quality, valuation, value |
LHX XOM AVGO LHX XOM AVGO ORCL |
ClearBridge Dividend Strategy managers remain cautious amid record valuations, positioning defensively in energy, defense, and dividend growers. Despite Q2 underperformance versus momentum-driven markets, they maintain discipline around valuation and diversification. Portfolio trades at significant discount to S&P 500 while emphasizing quality companies with sustainable dividend growth as inflation hedge. |
| Apr 5 2025 | 2025 Q1 | AIG, APO, AVGO, CVS, EIX, GILD, GOOGL, ITX.MC, KO, MSFT, NESN.SW, NOC, RTX, SAP, SRE, TEL, TMUS, WMB, XOM | defense, dividends, energy, tariffs, Utilities, value |
CVS ITX.MC TEL |
ClearBridge Dividend Strategy outperformed during Q1 2025 market decline through defensive positioning and valuation discipline. Underweights to tech and consumer discretionary, plus overweights to energy and defense, drove outperformance. Managers grew more cautious on tariff headwinds but remain confident in portfolio companies' ability to navigate turbulence and deliver robust dividend growth. |
| Jan 7 2025 | 2024 Q4 | AAPL, AMZN, APO, AVGO, DEO, EQT, GOOGL, HLN.L, JPM, KVUE, MDLZ, MET, META, MSFT, NESN.SW, NVDA, ORCL, TSLA, UPS, WMB | diversification, dividends, Natural Gas, Quality, technology, value | - | ClearBridge Dividend Strategy maintains disciplined diversification while the S&P 500 becomes dangerously concentrated in mega-cap technology stocks. The fund focuses on high-quality dividend payers offering downside protection, current income and growth. Recent moves include adding European consumer staples and natural gas exposure while exiting underperformers. Restrained 2025 expectations given elevated valuations. |
| Sep 30 2024 | 2024 Q3 | AAPL, AMT, AVB, AVGO, EIX, ENB, GOOGL, INTC, META, MRK, MSFT, ORCL, RTX, TMUS, TRV, WM | AI, dividends, Outperformance, rates, REITs, technology, Utilities, valuation | - | ClearBridge's dividend strategy outperformed in Q3 as AI momentum cooled and rate cuts boosted utilities and REITs. The fund maintains disciplined exposure to AI leaders while overweighting rate-sensitive sectors. With AI valuations stretched and rates declining, high-quality dividend payers trading at discounts to the market are positioned for sustained outperformance. |
| Jun 30 2024 | 2024 Q2 | AAPL, APD, AVB, CMCSA, DEO, GOOGL, HLN.L, INTC, MA, MDLZ, META, MSFT, NESN.SW, NVDA, ORCL, PXD, SRE, TRV, V, VMC, WMB, XOM | Concentration, diversification, dividends, Passive investing, technology, valuation | - | ClearBridge Dividend Strategy maintains disciplined diversification while markets reach dangerous concentration levels, with IT comprising 40% of S&P 500. Managers continue rebalancing from expensive to reasonably valued dividend growers, underperforming concentrated benchmarks but positioning for resilience. Economic outlook remains constructive despite elevated valuations and global risks. |
| Apr 20 2024 | 2024 Q1 | AMT, AMZN, AVGO, CMCSA, DEO, DIS, DTE, GOOGL, HLN.L, KO, KVUE, MA, META, MSFT, NESN.SW, NVDA, ORCL, SAP, TMUS, V | AI, Consumer Staples, diversification, dividends, large cap, technology, Utilities, value | - | ClearBridge Dividend Strategy captured 70% of market gains while actively deploying into out-of-favor sectors at attractive valuations. Added consumer staples, communications services, and utilities positions including Meta after dividend initiation. Portfolio trades at significant discount to market multiples approaching historic highs, maintaining diversification while market concentrates in mega-cap technology. |
| Mar 1 2024 | 2023 Q4 | AAPL, AMT, AVGO, AZN, BDX, CHK, CSCO, ENB, GILD, INTC, JPM, MSFT, PFE, PSA, SRE, WMB, XOM | AI, dividends, healthcare, inflation, Pipelines, rates, technology, Utilities |
AAPL|MSFT|NFLX|NVDA|UNH AAPL GILD AZN |
ClearBridge's dividend strategy captured 85% of Q4 gains while positioning for 2024 with increased exposure to oversold pipelines, utilities, and real estate. The team reduced high-multiple growth stocks and added defensive healthcare names. With robust employment, easing inflation, and potentially peaked rates supporting dividend growth, the strategy is well-positioned despite higher valuations limiting capital appreciation potential. |
| Nov 10 2023 | 2023 Q3 | AAPL, AMT, APO, CMCSA, ENB, GILD, MET, MSFT, PXD, RTX, TMUS, VMC, VZ, WMB | dividends, energy, financials, industrials, interest rates, value |
APO HRTX TMUS GILD |
ClearBridge's Dividend Strategy is reducing exposure to high-multiple names while increasing allocation to quality dividend growers as interest rates normalize. Apollo was a standout performer while RTX detracted due to engine issues. New positions in T-Mobile and Gilead offer compelling dividend growth. Managers remain cautious on markets but bullish on dividend growers' defensive characteristics. |
| Jun 30 2023 | 2023 Q2 | AAPL, APO, AVGO, COF, DEO, DIS, MSFT, ORCL, PFE, PSA, SAP, SRE, UPS, VMC | AI, dividends, energy, financials, inflation, rates, technology, value |
PSA COF |
ClearBridge Dividend Strategy managers are cautious on the narrow AI-driven rally, focusing instead on dividend-paying companies with pricing power to navigate persistent inflation. They favor lower-multiple stocks given rising rate headwinds, recently adding Public Storage and Capital One while trimming Oracle, SAP, and UPS after strong runs. |
| Mar 31 2023 | 2023 Q1 | AAPL, AIG, AMZN, BAC, COF, DEO, GOOGL, JNJ, JPM, LIN, MET, META, MSFT, NVDA, ORCL, PFE, PNC, SAP, TSLA, UNH, USB | Banking, dividends, financials, interest rates, Quality, value | - | ClearBridge Dividend Strategy repositioned bank holdings during Q1 banking crisis, exiting Bank of America for Capital One due to interest rate risk concerns. Strategy emphasizes high-quality dividend compounders as optimal for environment where rates may stay higher longer than expected, providing inflation protection and downside cushion versus vulnerable high-multiple growth stocks. |
| QUARTER | THEMES | TAGS |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 Q1 |
AIAI has rapidly eroded traditional software moats, prompting a deliberate retreat from most software exposure. Software developers have been using AI to accelerate coding for the last two years, yet only recently have investors realized that coders were inadvertently training their replacements. The S&P 500 software sector declined 24% in the quarter as Claude Code usage multiplied. |
Software Disruption Technology Automation Coding |
EnergyThe portfolio benefited from a significant overweight to energy as geopolitical tensions drove oil prices higher. The war with Iran unleashed volatility in the physical world, resulting in a 38.2% surge in energy sector performance. The managers maintain a large overweight to energy while focusing investments on highest-conviction names like Williams and ExxonMobil. |
Oil Geopolitical Iran Natural Gas Pipelines | |
DefenseDefense stocks have soared as the geopolitical temperature has risen over the last 18 months. The Dividend Strategy has benefited strongly from large holdings in defense over the last few years. However, at current prices and given increasingly statist commentary from the federal government, the managers believe better opportunities exist elsewhere and have exited Northrop Grumman while trimming L3Harris and RTX. |
Geopolitical Government Aerospace Contracts Spending | |
SemiconductorsWhile AI has crushed investor sentiment toward software, it has yet to shake conviction in the semiconductor industry outlook. The iShares Semiconductor ETF rose 9% in the first quarter, and the semiconductor industry group is now the largest in the S&P 500 at 15%. Demand for chips is insatiable and the outlook for data center construction is beyond robust. |
Chips Data Centers Manufacturing Technology Hardware | |
Alternative Asset ManagersThe managers significantly increased exposure to Apollo Global Management alongside purchasing Blackstone, as concerns around private-credit markets improved risk-reward profiles for both. While losses in credit will inevitably rise from current low levels, both companies are well-positioned to navigate the cycle with their long-duration capital and copious dry powder positioning them to play offense. |
Private Credit Capital Markets Dry Powder Credit Cycle Asset Management | |
DividendsThe strategy anticipates continued dividend growth, driving increased cash returns and providing a meaningful offset to inflation. The diverse portfolio emphasizes high-quality companies with low risk of disintermediation supported by strong financial characteristics and reasonable valuations. |
Income Cash Returns Inflation Quality Yield | |
| 2025 Q4 |
AIAI will radically change lives and the economy, but current valuations embed trillions in expectations while revenues remain minimal. The managers question whether today's favored players will be ultimate winners and emphasize the need to distinguish between technological impact and financial outcomes. |
Artificial Intelligence Valuations Technology Bubble Revenue |
DividendsThe strategy's average holding has grown its dividend at 10% over the last 12 months with similar growth expected ahead. The managers remain committed to dividend-focused investing as part of their diversification and valuation discipline approach. |
Dividend Growth Income Distribution Yield | |
SemiconductorsThe managers discuss Nvidia's GPU dominance and Broadcom's positioning as an ASICS chip provider competing with Nvidia. They view Broadcom favorably as customers seek supplier diversification, with the company's AI strategy playing to core strengths without requiring substantial capital outlays. |
Chips GPU ASICS Nvidia Broadcom | |
Data CentersOracle's data center contracts require hundreds of billions in spending, representing a risky shift from high-margin software to capital-intensive, lower-margin infrastructure business. The managers reduced their Oracle position due to concerns about this business model evolution and balance sheet strain. |
Infrastructure Cloud Oracle Capital Intensive | |
| 2025 Q3 |
AIAI enthusiasm continued to propel the S&P 500 higher with sizable gains in IT and tech proxy sectors. The Strategy profited from AI exposure through holdings like TE Connectivity, Broadcom, and Oracle, though maintained disciplined risk management approach. |
Artificial Intelligence Technology Semiconductors Cloud Data Centers |
DividendsStrategy maintains flexible approach to dividends, owning stocks with dividend commitment but no minimum yield threshold. Recent additions include Alphabet, Meta, and T-Mobile after dividend initiations. Dividend growth viewed as beneficial in inflationary environments. |
Dividend Growth Income Capital Allocation Yield Payout | |
DefenseDefense holdings Northrop Grumman, RTX, and L3Harris Technologies performed well in environment of heightened geopolitical tensions, benefiting from increased defense spending backdrop. |
Defense Spending Geopolitical Military Aerospace Government | |
| 2025 Q2 |
DividendsThe strategy emphasizes dividend-paying companies with the ability to grow dividends significantly over time. Over the last eight years, the average portfolio company has grown its dividend by 7%, well in excess of inflation. Dividend growth is becoming increasingly critical as inflation expectations become more entrenched and stagflation becomes a concern. |
Dividend Growth Income Inflation Protection Compounding Yield |
AIThe portfolio includes AI exposure through Broadcom and Oracle, which are described as two of the best AI plays around. However, these positions were built when stocks embedded weak outlooks rather than meteoric expectations, with Broadcom purchased at 11x P/E in March 2020 and Oracle at 14x P/E in September 2020. |
Artificial Intelligence Technology Broadcom Oracle Valuation | |
Defense SpendingThe strategy initiated a position in L3Harris, a defense company that had sold off on DOGE-related concerns. With armed conflict breaking out globally, robust defense spending seems like one of today's few safe bets. L3Harris possesses a robust balance sheet and strong outlook at an attractive entry point. |
Defense Geopolitical Risk Military L3Harris Government Spending | |
OilThe strategy significantly increased its position in Exxon Mobil as commodity weakness provided a compelling opportunity. The company is simultaneously lowering its cost per barrel and reducing emissions intensity while growing production. Exxon Mobil is positioned to deliver double-digit returns even without oil price improvement and could provide a portfolio hedge during stagflation. |
Energy Commodities Exxon Mobil Stagflation Hedge Cost Reduction | |
ValueThe managers emphasize purchasing stocks when they embed low expectations and reasonable valuations. They actively position the portfolio in more conservatively valued securities, emphasizing diversification across high-quality companies. The strategy trades at a meaningful discount to the market with a forward P/E of 18.9x versus 23.8x for the S&P 500. |
Valuation Margin of Safety Conservative Discount Quality | |
| 2025 Q1 |
DividendsThe strategy focuses on companies with ability to deliver continued, robust dividend growth. Portfolio emphasizes quality compounders with steady dividend policies like Inditex. |
Dividend Growth Income Yield Payout |
ValueManagers redoubled emphasis on valuation over recent years, reducing exposure to higher-multiple stocks and redeploying into more conservatively priced securities. Portfolio trades at meaningful discount to market. |
Valuation Multiple Compression Discount Price | |
Trade PolicyEscalating tariffs caught markets off guard with speed and magnitude. Will be bumpy multiyear process to re-order global trade system, introducing near-term headwinds through reduced sales and higher costs. |
Tariffs Trade Wars Global Trade Policy | |
DefenseDefense stocks RTX and Northrop Grumman were positive contributors to performance in industrials sector during the quarter. |
Defense Spending Military Aerospace Contractors | |
| 2024 Q4 |
DividendsThe strategy focuses on high-quality dividend payers with three key attributes: downside protection, current income, and growth. Dividend growers help combat inflation and provide 40% of total return over the long term. The fund initiated positions in Alphabet and Meta when they announced regular dividend policies. |
Dividend Growth Income Yield Payout Quality |
AIThe market's meteoric rise has been powered by AI-driven technology juggernauts. Nvidia has been the standout stock with 800% gains over two years. The strategy maintains meaningful AI exposure through Apple, Broadcom, Microsoft and Oracle but avoids going all-in on AI investments. |
Artificial Intelligence Nvidia Technology Compute Growth | |
Natural GasThe fund increased exposure to natural gas through EQT during Q4, anticipating robust demand growth from AI data centers and expected resumption of LNG export permitting under the incoming administration. Energy demand for AI and data centers is driving this outlook. |
LNG Energy Demand Data Centers Export Demand | |
| 2024 Q3 |
AIAI stocks took a breather in Q3 after adding trillions in market cap over 18 months. While the fund holds AI-beneficiaries like Alphabet, Apple, Broadcom, Meta, Microsoft and Oracle, their disciplined valuation approach results in lower exposure than the S&P 500. With significant AI value already embedded in stock prices, potential for material rerating appears reduced. |
Technology Valuation Concentration Growth Semiconductors |
DividendsThe strategy focuses on high-quality dividend payers that have lagged the S&P 500 over the last 18 months due to AI concentration. The significant decline in long-term interest rates increases the relative attractiveness of yields available in their dividend-paying holdings. Investors began gravitating back toward dividend stocks in Q3. |
Income Yield Quality Rates Outperformance | |
RatesThe Federal Reserve's half-point rate cut was major news for the quarter. As it became clear the Fed would cut rates, interest-rate-sensitive sectors like housing, pipelines, real estate and utilities outperformed. Lower rates reduce refinancing headwinds and increase attractiveness of dividend yields relative to fixed income. |
Fed Monetary Policy Utilities REITs Refinancing | |
| 2024 Q2 |
DividendsThe strategy focuses on companies with nicely growing dividends that provide cushion amid volatility and preserve purchasing power. Recent additions of Alphabet and Meta reflect the benefits of their flexible dividend approach, enabling quick moves after dividend announcements. They expect continued robust dividend growth from their companies. |
Dividend Growth Income Yield Payout |
AIAI fervor drove IT and communication services performance, with utilities rising on merchant power companies serving AI data centers. Alphabet sees meaningful revenue opportunities from AI innovations across segments. The managers note AI demand is growing acknowledgment that midstream infrastructure plays a key role to back up renewable power. |
Artificial Intelligence Data Centers Technology Innovation | |
| 2024 Q1 |
DividendsThe fund maintains a dividend-focused strategy, adding positions in companies with attractive upfront yields and solid free cash flow generation. They initiated a position in Meta after the company announced its inaugural dividend and expect steady dividend compounding across their holdings. |
Dividend Yield Free Cash Flow Capital Discipline Income Payout |
AIThe market's rise is dominated by AI-focused mega cap technology names, with Nvidia rising over 80% in the quarter. The fund embraces AI trends through measured investments in select names like Broadcom and Microsoft while maintaining diversification. |
Artificial Intelligence Nvidia Technology Mega Cap Growth | |
Energy TransitionElectric utilities are positioned to benefit from stronger growth due to the energy transition and data centers' phenomenal growth. The fund increased allocation to electric utilities, adding DTE Energy, as these companies trade at their lowest relative valuations in a decade. |
Electric Utilities Data Centers Grid Renewable Infrastructure | |
ValueThe fund took advantage of attractive valuations in out-of-favor sectors, purchasing high-quality consumer staples at discounts to broad market averages. They focus on a disciplined approach to valuations while the portfolio trades at much more modest valuations than the broader market. |
Valuation Discount Margin of Safety Undervalued Premium | |
| 2023 Q4 |
DividendsThe strategy focuses on high-quality dividend growers as a core investment approach. Growing dividends are positioned as one of investors' few tools for combating inflation and rising interest rates, preserving and expanding purchasing power when dividends grow faster than inflation. |
Dividend Growth Income Inflation Protection Quality Yield |
AIAI is acknowledged as very real and will profoundly impact the economy and society, though most current noise is still just that. The managers note investors tend to overestimate technology impacts one year out but underestimate impacts 10 years out, referencing previous technology cycles where early leaders weren't always long-term winners. |
Artificial Intelligence Technology Innovation Disruption Cloud | |
RatesInterest rates are viewed as a key market driver over the last two years. Rising rates present meaningful headwinds to asset values by increasing discount rates for future cash flows. The portfolio is positioned to benefit whether rates decline (making dividend yields more attractive) or rise (dividend growth provides inflation protection). |
Interest Rates Fed Policy Monetary Policy Valuation Discount Rates | |
InflationInflation is identified as a major market driver, with soaring inflation leading the Fed to hike rates sharply in 2022. While inflation eased significantly in 2023, the managers note it's premature to declare victory as history shows inflation can abate only to resume climbing. |
Inflation CPI Purchasing Power Fed Policy Economic Cycles | |
PipelinesThe strategy meaningfully increased exposure to pipelines throughout 2023, taking advantage of oversold conditions. Pipeline investments like Enbridge and Williams are positioned to benefit if rates decline as their yields become more attractive. |
Energy Infrastructure Midstream Cash Flow Yield Infrastructure | |
UtilitiesUtilities exposure was meaningfully increased throughout 2023 by taking advantage of undue declines, with investments in companies like Sempra. Utilities are positioned as higher-yielding investments that should thrive if rates decline as their yields become more attractive. |
Regulated Utilities Defensive Yield Infrastructure Rate Sensitivity | |
| 2023 Q3 |
DividendsThe strategy focuses on high-quality dividend growers with strong balance sheets and pricing power. Portfolio companies have grown dividends at 10% on average over recent years, demonstrating quality and durability. The managers emphasize dividend growth as protection for investors' purchasing power in inflationary environments. |
Dividend Growth Income Quality Pricing Power Inflation Protection |
RatesRising interest rates are viewed as the gravity of the financial system that will ultimately pull all asset prices lower. The 10-year yield moved from 3.8% to 4.6% during the quarter. Managers believe current rates represent more normal levels rather than historical aberrations, expecting rates to remain higher for longer. |
Interest Rates Yield Curve Monetary Policy Valuation Impact Higher For Longer | |
ValueThe strategy has deliberately reduced exposure to higher-multiple names and increased exposure to lower-priced, high-quality dividend growers. Managers emphasize valuation discipline and believe many high-multiple securities embed substantial risk as rates have risen but valuations remained elevated. |
Valuation Discipline Multiple Compression Price-to-Earnings Risk Management Quality | |
| 2023 Q2 |
AIManagers acknowledge AI's transformative potential but express caution about the narrow market rally driven by AI enthusiasm. They note AI could displace workers and create economic disruption, with progress likely to be bumpy despite long-term potential. |
Artificial Intelligence Technology Disruption Automation Innovation |
DividendsThe strategy focuses on dividend-paying companies with pricing power to offset cost pressures. Managers emphasize companies that can protect profitability through pricing power while maintaining dividend distributions. |
Dividend Yield Income Cash Flow Distribution Yield | |
InflationInflation is viewed as the central character in the current market cycle, stemming from 2020 fiscal and monetary stimulus. Managers believe inflation and interest rates may remain higher for longer, impacting investment valuations and economic conditions. |
Price Increases Cost Pressures Monetary Policy Economic Conditions Pricing Power | |
RatesRising interest rates represent a step-function change in financing costs and discount rates used to value investments. The Fed has raised rates 500 basis points over 16 months, creating headwinds for capital appreciation and favoring lower-multiple stocks. |
Interest Rates Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Valuation Cost of Capital | |
| 2023 Q1 |
DividendsThe strategy emphasizes high-quality dividend compounders as particularly well-suited for the current environment of potentially higher interest rates for longer. Healthy dividends provide cushion in volatile markets and can benefit from dividend growth to offset inflation and preserve purchasing power. |
Dividend Growth Income Yield Compounders Quality |
Credit StressThe banking crisis revealed interest rate risk to be more urgent than credit risk. The managers repositioned bank holdings to better reflect the new paradigm, moving away from banks with significant held-to-maturity securities exposure to those with minimal interest rate risk. |
Banking Crisis Interest Rate Risk Deposit Migration Consolidation | |
RatesThe managers believe inflation may be harder to contain than consensus expects and interest rates may be higher for longer. This creates elevated risk for higher-multiple stocks and supports their emphasis on dividend-paying companies over growth stocks. |
Interest Rates Fed Policy Duration Risk Inflation |
| Date | Pitch Type | Author | Ticker | Company | Industry | Sub Industry | Bull / Bear | Exchange | Keywords | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 31, 2025 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | CVS | CVS Health Corporation | Health Care | Health Care Services | Bull | NYSE | contrarian, Health Care Services, health insurance, Medicare Advantage, Pharmacy Services, turnaround, underwriting | Login |
| Oct 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | AVGO | Broadcom Inc. | Information Technology | Semiconductors | Bull | NASDAQ | AI, cash flow, dividends, growth, infrastructure, semiconductors | Login |
| Oct 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | ORCL | Oracle Corp. | Information Technology | Systems Software | Bull | NYSE | AI, cloud, enterprise, growth, Margins, recurring revenue, Software | Login |
| Oct 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | TEL | TE Connectivity Ltd. | Information Technology | Electronic Components | Bull | NYSE | AI, Automation, Connectivity, dividends, growth, Industrials, Sensors | Login |
| Oct 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | LHX | L3Harris Technologies Inc. | Industrials | Aerospace & Defense | Bull | NYSE | Aerospace, backlog, cash flow, Defense, dividends, growth, Security | Login |
| Oct 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | MARSH | Marsh & McLennan Cos. | Financials | Insurance Brokers | Bull | NYSE | Brokerage, cash flow, defensive, dividends, growth, Insurance, Quality | Login |
| Oct 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | ODFL | Old Dominion Freight Line Inc. | Industrials | Trucking | Bull | NASDAQ | dividends, Industrials, Logistics, Margins, recovery, Transportation, Trucking | Login |
| Jul 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | LHX | L3Harris Technologies, Inc. | Industrials | Aerospace & Defense | Bull | NYSE | backlog, cashflow, Defense, Margins, valuation | Login |
| Jul 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | XOM | Exxon Mobil Corporation | Energy | Integrated Oil & Gas | Bull | NYSE | cashflow, energy, Margins, Production, valuation | Login |
| Jul 9, 2025 | Fund Letters | John Baldi | AVGO | Broadcom Inc. | Information Technology | Semiconductors | Bull | NASDAQ | AI, cashflow, semiconductors, Software, valuation | Login |
| Jun 30, 2025 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | LHX | L3Harris Technologies Inc | Industrials | Aerospace & Defense | Bull | NYSE | Aerospace, balance sheet, Defense, Discount Valuation, Free Cash Flow, geopolitical, Government Contractor | Login |
| Jun 30, 2025 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | XOM | Exxon Mobil Corporation | Energy | Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels | Bull | NYSE | Commodity Cyclical, Cost Reduction, Double-digit Returns, Emissions, energy, oil, production growth, Stagflation Hedge | Login |
| Jun 30, 2025 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | AVGO | Broadcom Inc | Information Technology | Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment | Bull | NASDAQ | AI, Artificial Intelligence, entry point, profit-taking, semiconductors, technology, Valuation Discipline | Login |
| Jun 30, 2025 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | ORCL | Oracle Corporation | Information Technology | Software | Bull | NYSE | AI, Artificial Intelligence, Cloud computing, Contrarian Entry, Database, Software, technology | Login |
| Mar 31, 2025 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | ITX.MC | Industria de Diseno Textil SA | Consumer Discretionary | Specialty Retail | Bull | Madrid Stock Exchange | cash position, Consumer Discretionary, dividend policy, Fast-fashion, Global Retail, quality compounder, Specialty retail, Strong Margins | Login |
| Mar 31, 2025 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | TEL | TE Connectivity Ltd | Information Technology | Electronic Components | Bull | NYSE | automotive, Connectors, Cyclical, data centers, Diversified End Markets, Electronic Components, Industrial, Medical devices | Login |
| Sep 30, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | APO | Apollo Global Management | Financials | Asset Management & Custody Banks | Bull | NYSE | alternative investments, asset management, earnings growth, financial services, Fixed Annuities, private equity, Retirement Services, Value | Login |
| Sep 30, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | HRTX | RTX Corporation | Industrials | Aerospace & Defense | Neutral | NYSE | Aerospace, Cyclical, Defense, Industrial, Jet Engines, manufacturing, turnaround, Value | Login |
| Sep 30, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | TMUS | T-Mobile US Inc | Communication Services | Wireless Telecommunication Services | Bull | NASDAQ | 5G, Competitive Advantage, Dividend Growth, Free Cash Flow, growth, Spectrum, telecommunications, Wireless | Login |
| Sep 30, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | GILD | Gilead Sciences Inc | Health Care | Biotechnology | Bull | NASDAQ | biotechnology, defensive, dividend yield, healthcare, HIV treatment, patent protection, pharmaceuticals, Value | Login |
| Jun 30, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | PSA | Public Storage | Real Estate | Specialized REITs | Bull | NYSE | dividend, Free Cash Flow, Pricing power, Real Estate, REITs, Self-storage, Supply-Demand | Login |
| Jun 30, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | COF | Capital One Financial Corporation | Financials | Consumer Finance | Bull | NYSE | banking, consumer finance, credit cards, Credit risk, Cyclical, financial services, interest rate risk | Login |
| Dec 31, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | AAPL|MSFT|NFLX|NVDA|UNH | Microsoft Corporation | Information Technology | Systems Software | Bull | NASDAQ | Artificial Intelligence, Cloud computing, Diversified Technology, Dividend Growth, large-cap, risk management, Software | Login |
| Dec 31, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | AAPL | Apple Inc. | Information Technology | Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals | Bear | NASDAQ | consumer electronics, growth deceleration, high valuation, large-cap, Revenue Growth, technology hardware, Valuation risk | Login |
| Dec 31, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | GILD | Gilead Sciences Inc. | Health Care | Biotechnology | Bull | NASDAQ | biotechnology, dividend yield, healthcare, HIV treatment, patent protection, Pharmaceutical, Value | Login |
| Dec 31, 2023 | Fund Letters | ClearBridge Investments Dividend Strategy | AZN | AstraZeneca PLC | Health Care | Pharmaceuticals | Bull | NASDAQ | Below Market Valuation, Defensive growth, diversified portfolio, double-digit growth, healthcare, patent protection, pharmaceuticals | Login |
| TICKER | COMMENTARY |
|---|---|
| MSFT | We currently own just one software stock — Microsoft — and one stock — ADP — with a small, and we believe well-defended, software exposure. |
| ADP | We currently own just one software stock — Microsoft — and one stock — ADP — with a small, and we believe well-defended, software exposure. |
| BX | We bought four "new" holdings in the quarter. Two of the four — Blackstone and Otis — we have owned before. Blackstone and Otis both sold off in the quarter, and we took advantage of those declines to welcome these old friends back into the portfolio. |
| OTIS | As the leading elevator manufacturer, Otis is a best-in-class industrial company. While new construction activity ebbs and flows, Otis's earnings are predominantly derived from its aftermarket repair and maintenance business, which is not economically sensitive and grows every year. |
| APO | Alongside our purchase of Blackstone, we significantly increased our exposure to Apollo Global Management, as concerns around private-credit markets improved risk-reward profiles for both. While losses in credit will inevitably rise from current low levels, both companies are well-positioned to navigate the cycle. |
| HON | Alongside Otis, we purchased shares of Honeywell during the quarter. Honeywell possesses formidable franchises in controls and aerospace. Its pending reorganization (it is splitting into three companies) should improve focus and execution while highlighting value. |
| NOC | We exited Northrop Grumman and trimmed L3Harris and RTX. |
| LHX | We exited Northrop Grumman and trimmed L3Harris and RTX. |
| RTX | We exited Northrop Grumman and trimmed L3Harris and RTX. |
| ORCL | Our five-year investment in Oracle proved highly profitable as the company transitioned its business model from licensing to software-as-a-service (SAAS). In the last year, Oracle went all-in on building data centers for AI customers, pushing its backlog north of $500 billion. We sold our remaining Oracle shares in the first quarter of 2026. |
| AVGO | On the semiconductor side, we modestly reduced our position in Broadcom to fund our new investment in Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC). While Broadcom remains well positioned, and we remain constructive on the stock, the risk-reward outlook has diminished as the shares have tripled over the last two years. |
| TSM | We modestly reduced our position in Broadcom to fund our new investment in Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC). Whereas TSMC prospers regardless of who wins the semiconductor race (TSMC manufactures chips for all the major semiconductor companies), one can conceive of scenarios where Broadcom could become less relevant in the future. |
| XOM | ExxonMobil, however, as the largest private oil producer in the world, directly benefits from the events in the Persian Gulf. Higher oil prices will drive bumper earnings and cash flows. Exxon's robust production growth from low-cost basins will propel volume increases and margin expansion through the end of the decade. |
| WMB | We have focused our energy investments in our highest-conviction ideas: Williams and ExxonMobil. Our investment in Williams is predicated on growing North American natural gas production and surging power demand from data centers. |
| EQT | EQT always represented more of a tactical investment in an improving U.S. natural gas market, rather than a long-term investment in a franchise energy company. We made substantial profits in EQT over a four-year holding period and have decided to move on. |
| ENB | After a long and profitable investment in Enbridge, we sold the position to concentrate our pipeline investments in Williams, which possesses a superior balance sheet and growth outlook. |
| Ticker | Put/Call | Amount Bought | Shares Bought | % Change | Weight % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Recent Buys Data | |||||
| Ticker | Put/Call | Amount Sold | Shares Sold | % Change | Weight % | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Recent Sells Data | ||||||
| Industry | Prev Quarter % | Current Quarter % | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| No industry data available | |||