Among their top bets: life science companies like Biogen Inc, laboratory supply company Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc, and Canadian cannabis company Tilray Inc.

The bullishness comes at a time when U.S. stock investors must weigh a strong domestic economy against the threats to growth posed by rising interest rates and a global economic slowdown exacerbated by higher trade tariffs between the United States and China, the world's largest economies.

The S&P 500 tumbled in the fourth quarter, edging close to the 20 percent decline from its high that would signify a bear market. Since hitting a low on Christmas Eve, the broad market is up nearly 11 percent.

"In a nutshell, we think very little has changed," said Tom Slater, a portfolio manager of the $11.2 million Baillie Gifford U.S. Equity Growth fund, which has beaten the benchmark S&P 500 by 13.3 percentage points over the last 12 months. "There's a lot of doom and gloom in financial markets but we see fairly little evidence that doom and gloom is merited."

As a result, Slater is sticking with companies like food delivery service GrubHub Inc and e-commerce platform company Shopify Inc that are innovating new business models or opening up old industries through innovation.

"We're not massively interested in investing in technology but in new business models," Slater said.

Anthony Zackery, a portfolio manager of the $127.6 million Virtus Zevenbergen Innovative Growth fund, said that his fund is eschewing some of the larger tech giants like Apple Inc that have led the broad market higher over the last few years and instead has been adding to its stake in tech companies such as identity management software company Okta Inc. Shares of the company are already up 12.7 percent since the start of January, adding to an approximately 160 percent rally over the last 12 months.

"We believe that the stock could double over the next three to four years if they continue executing," Zackery said.

Along with Okta, Zackery is also bullish on Canadian cannabis company Tilray Inc, whose shares he bought during its initial public offering, because of its business lines focused on both the recreational and medical marijuana market.

"We believe that we are in the early innings of the end of global prohibition (of marijuana)," he said.

Christopher Smith, portfolio manager of the $249 million Artisan Thematic Investor fund, said that he is focusing on life science companies because their products are not subject to tariffs at a time of increasing spending on healthcare in emerging markets like China.

"It's somewhat immune to the uncertainty," he said.

He has been adding to his position in companies such as Thermo Fisher, Danaher Corp, and PerkinElmer Inc because they operate in segments with high barriers to entry and have the ability to raise prices. At the same time, he is avoiding all of the so-called FANG stocks - a moniker given to the group of Facebook, Amazon.com, Netflix, and Google-parent Alphabet - that led the market early last year.

"They just became over-owned and they're resetting now," he said. Instead, he is focusing on companies that "have the ability to monetize data" such as IHS Markit Ltd, Fidelity National Information Services Inc, and Intercontinental Exchange Inc, he said.

Michael Lippert, portfolio manager of the $372.3 million Baron Opportunity fund, said that the recent rally in the S&P 500 can be pinned on the fact that "the market got the call wrong on the Fed," and recalibrated after Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's comments that the central bank could be "patient" dialed back market expectations for rate hikes this year.

The deep declines in December allowed him to add companies to his portfolio such as life sciences software company Veeva Systems Inc that had long been on his watch list, he said. He began buying shares in the company when it traded around $84 a share in late December. It now trades at slightly over $100 a share, giving him a 19 percent gain in slightly more than two weeks.

"I wish I hadn't been cute and bought more," he said.

(Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Andrea Ricci)

By David Randall