NEWS
18 May 2021 - Green shoots emerge for dividends
18 May 2021 - Unexpected outcomes from COVID-19
17 May 2021 - Manager Spotlight | Vantage Private Equity Growth 4
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Vantage Asset Management's portfolio of Private Equity Growth Funds provide wholesale or sophisticated investors the ability to invest in private equity opportunities that are normally only available to large institutional investors. Vantage design their private equity funds specifically for sophisticated investors, SMSF's and family offices to gain access to these opportunities by investing in selected private equity funds which are only open to institutional investors. Vantage's underlying funds ultimately invest in profitable private companies in the lower to mid-market segment, with an enterprise value between $25m to $250m at the time of investment. Vantage Private Equity Growth 4 (VPEG4) provides investors with access to a diversified portfolio of Australian private equity investments that are ultimately managed by a selection of top tier private equity fund managers in Australia who have historically and consistently delivered superior returns to investors. VPEG4 implements the same investment strategy as Vantage's previous Private Equity Growth funds, VPEG, VPEG2 and VPEG3. Each of these invest in up to 8, closed end, private equity funds which in turn each invest into a portfolio of 6 to 8 profitable private companies. Ultimately Vantage are seeking to build a highly diversified portfolio of up to 50 underlying companies managed by the top tier private equity fund managers in Australia that are normally only accessible to institutional investors. Since establishment in 2006, Vantage has invested across 25 private equity funds, which have in turn invested in 136 companies which have, as at 31 March 2021, completed 60 exits (or sales) from their portfolios. The gross proceeds from these exits have resulted in a 2.7 X return on invested capital, delivering an average Internal Rate of Return of 31.7% p.a. to Vantage's funds. VPEG4's predecessor funds VPEG2 and VPEG3 have delivered net returns to their investors since their inception of 19.95% p.a. and 21.59% p.a. respectively to 31 March 2021. This ranks each fund in the top quartile of private equity fund of funds globally for each of their respective vintage years. VPEG4 has a target return of 20% p.a. and Vantage believe that VPEG4 is particularly suited to investors who are looking for superior returns in an asset class that is difficult to access and has consistently outperformed most other asset classes over the medium and long term with a low correlation to listed equities, bonds and property. SPECIAL OFFER Vantage are providing the ability to invest in VPEG4 with a reduced minimum investment commitment amount of AU$50,000 compared with the standard Institutional Offer requiring a minimum commitment of AU$1,000,000 per investor. This offer also allows investors to pay for their investment via an initial payment of 15%, followed by progressive calls (averaging 25% of the investment commitment) each year, as opposed to paying the entire investment amount on application. VPEG4 will be accepting applications and issuing interests on a monthly basis through to 30 September 2021. To participate in this offer please click the OLIVIA123 link below or for further information please click the link to the VPEG4 Fund Profile which includes a link to contact Vantage directly. |
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Disclaimer: Neither Vantage nor any other person or entity guarantees any income or capital return from the Fund. There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve results that are consistent with the investment performance of previous investments or that the investment objectives for the Fund will be achieved. In considering past performance information, prospective investors should bear in mind that past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results, and there can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve comparable results, that unrealized returns will be met, or that the Fund will be able to make investments similar to the historical investments as described in the Information Memorandum. Investments in Private Equity are generally illiquid. However, the minimum term of an investment in VPEG4 is four (4) after which investors can redeem their investment. Please refer to section 8 of the Information Memorandum for further information. Distributions are made to participating investors on an ongoing basis with distributions (from exits) generally occurring from year two onwards. Australian Fund Monitors Pty Ltd, holds AFS Licence number 324476. The information contained herein is general in its nature only and does not and cannot take into account an investor's financial position or requirements. Investors should therefore seek appropriate advice prior to making any decisions to invest in any product contained herein. Australian Fund Monitors Pty Ltd is not, and will not be held responsible for investment decisions made by investors, and is not responsible for the performance of any investment made by any investor, notwithstanding that it may be providing information and or monitoring services to that investor. This information is collated from a variety of sources and we cannot be held responsible for any errors or omissions. Australian Fund Monitors Pty Ltd, A.C.N. 122 226 724 |
17 May 2021 - Performance Report: 4D Global Infrastructure Fund
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Fund Overview | The fund will be managed as a single portfolio of listed global infrastructure securities including regulated utilities in gas, electricity and water, transport infrastructure such as airports, ports, road and rail as well as communication assets such as the towers and satellite sectors. The portfolio is intended to have exposure to both developed and emerging market opportunities, with country risk assessed internally before any investment is considered. The maximum absolute position of an individual stock is 7% of the fund. |
Manager Comments | The strongest performer for April was US rail company Kansas City South up 10.7% as the two Canadian rail heavy weights (Canadian Pacific and Canadian National) target its assets with competing takeout offers on the table. The weakest performer in April was Brazilian contract generator AES Brasil down 21.1%. This was partly timing, with a recovery on 1 May, and partly ahead of an anticipated weak Q1. 4D continue to position for the prevailing economic outlook and infrastructure as a means of a recovery as they continue to capitalize on the raft of opportunities currently on offer. |
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17 May 2021 - Performance Report: Longlead Pan-Asian Absolute Return Fund
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Manager Comments | Profits were made from the long side in April with Taiwanese positions in particular benefiting from the rally while exposures in China and the US detracted. By sector, Consumer Discretionary, Materials and Information Technology positions contributed to performance, while losses were experienced in Financials and hedging positions. |
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17 May 2021 - Performance Report: Quay Global Real Estate Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund will invest in a number of global listed real estate companies, groups or funds. The investment strategy is to make investments in real estate securities at a price that will deliver a real, after inflation, total return of 5% per annum (before costs and fees), inclusive of distributions over a longer-term period. The Investment Strategy is indifferent to the constraints of any index benchmarks and is relatively concentrated in its number of investments. The Fund is expected to own between 20 and 40 securities, and from time to time up to 20% of the portfolio maybe invested in cash. The Fund is $A un-hedged. |
Manager Comments | Winners from the month in order of contribution to returns were American Homes for Rent (US Single Family), Cubesmart (US Storage) and Life Storage (US Storage). The laggards for the month were Hysan (Diversified, Hong Kong), Scentre Group (Aust, Retail) and Coresite (US, Data Centres). Quay's observations from reporting season in the US are that the reported results and updates have generally been strong and, in many cases, particularly the economically cyclical and Covid-exposed sectors such as office and retail, have exceeded market expectations. There are some exceptions, such as European retail where stimulus spending has been more subdued, and Covid associated lockdowns still linger. The self-storage sector in the US is particularly of note for its strength. Decreasing supply and strong demand created by dislocation is driving net income growth rates in the mid-high single digits. There were no changes in the Fund during the month, Quay maintains a positive outlook and believe it is well positioned to achieve their investment objective of CPI + 5% p.a. |
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17 May 2021 - Why equities are still king
Why equities are still king Ophir Asset Management 12th April 2021 In our Investment Strategy Note we review the mammoth outperformance of stocks over the long run versus bonds and cash, including why we expect this to continue in the future despite calls by some of excess equity market valuations. Even before the onset of the Covid-19 Pandemic, investors faced significant challenges building long-term wealth. With a muted outlook for economic growth and inflation, investors were unlikely to earn the double-digit percentage annual returns that they had become accustomed to. At the time many analysts believed that risk-adjusted returns over the next decade are likely to be half of those achieved in the past 20 years, an outlook that may have forced investors to revise their portfolio strategy. But despite that outlook, and despite concerns that equities are now 'overvalued' after strong post-Covid rallies, investors' asset allocation decision hasn't changed drastically. That's because, compared with other asset classes, equities are still offering investors the most compelling investment case in our opinion, and the most compelling chance to build long-term wealth and maximise their lifestyle in retirement. Clear and unequivocal outperformance Through the decades, equities have by far and away been the top-performing asset class. The charts below show the cumulative total returns in the US market over the last 121 years from stocks, bonds, bills (i.e., cash), and inflation. Equities performed best, returning 9.7% per year versus 5.0% on bonds, 3.7% on cash, and inflation of 2.9% per year. The extent to which equities outperformed the other asset classes is clear and unequivocal. Furthermore, this study captures some notable setbacks: two world wars, the great depression, an OPEC oil shock, the GFC and COVID-19. In each case, equities eventually recovered and reached new highs. Why fixed income and cash now do nothing for wealth creation When thinking about future asset class returns, we must acknowledge how exceptionally low interest rates now are. Short-term interest rates in Australia, the US and most other developed economies are near zero, or in some cases negative! Central banks seem intent on maintaining this support, with interest rate futures factoring low rates to remain for at least the next four years. Although inflation is soft and likely to be contained, it still sits at a level above both short- and long-term interest rates. Because of this, rates in Australia are negative in real terms. This means that investment dollars sitting in these cash and fixed income asset classes are generally losing value after inflation. For investors seeking long-term wealth creation, government bonds offer nothing to an investor, and should only be considered in a portfolio for diversification purposes. Meanwhile, cash holding should be kept to the bare minimum, purely as a means to facilitate liquidity. The shrinking equity risk premium So what does this mean for equities? The answer is: a lot. The return investors seek on equities need to be related to the returns on such supposedly 'safe' assets such as Government bonds. Because they are riskier (more volatile) than Government bonds, investors demand to earn more from equities to justify owning them. This relationship is known as the 'equity risk premium' -- the excess return investors expect from equities over the returns on risk-free government bonds. Although this premium cannot be measured directly, since it only exists in investors' minds, it can be inferred from historical experience. Elroy Dimson of the London Business School estimates the excess return on world stocks over bonds at 3.2 percentage points between 1900 and 2020. The excess is estimated at 4.8 percentage points for Australia; and for the US, at 4.4 percentage points. There are reasons to believe, however, that the risk premium demanded by equity investors may now be lower than the historical average. Corporate governance has improved dramatically over the last 50 years, while policymakers have smoothed the business cycle through shrewd inflation targeting. Still beating bonds But with interest rates cemented close to zero, equity returns need not be outstanding to maintain their relative appeal. The most striking way to illustrate superiority of equities as an investment class is to compare its earnings yield with the yield on government bonds. Even following their 40% rally since late March, the chart below shows this yield premium on offer from equities at still-near-record levels. The same point can be made by flipping this comparison into price-earnings multiples. The Australian equity market's current PE of around 20x is often pointed out as expensive and a sign of poor future returns. But this 20x multiple - which implies a yield of 5% -- looks cheap compared against the 55x multiple investors are effectively paying when buying Australia's government bonds that currently yield just 1.8%. So, although traditional PE measures show equities to be expensive versus their own history, they are still cheap versus bonds. This is what sets our overall asset allocation preference so firmly in favour of equities. At the same time, it is conceivable that equity multiples could expand further. For example, the heavily quoted cyclically adjusted PE, or CAPE, of the ASX top 200 is not expensive on long-run measures. Returns that build real wealth If we accept that equities are one of the few asset class that offers investors scope to grow real wealth going forward, what sort of returns can be expected? In our opinion, when you combine earnings growth, dividends, and the boost from franking credits, a 10% annual return from the Australian share market overall should be achievable over the long term. We acknowledge though that over the next few years it might be lower than this. In terms of raw returns, international equities markets probably will not outpace Australian equities once franking credits are taken into account domestically. Global stocks do, however become competitive on risk-adjusted measures once market diversification and currency impacts are considered. Some investors may be worrying that equities are overpriced given they are hitting fresh highs. But even though many equity markets are at, or near, all-time highs, we do not see this as an obstacle to further share market gains. Even after record highs, subsequent 12-month returns from equities have generally been strong. Furthermore, while buying into the market slowly in dribs and drabs (dollar-cost averaging), can help mitigate investors' fears of bad market timing, history suggests that investing all at once into the sharemarket generates higher returns than dollar-cost averaging on average. Outperforming with stock selection While equities are still promising strong returns, it is important to remember that at Ophir, internally we target 15% per annum total returns over the long term (5+ years) across all our equity strategies. That means our investment team is seeking to outperform the market benchmark for each of our funds through stock selection. This is a hurdle we have more than achieved historically and one we hope that means we can continue to under promise and over deliver. Funds operated by this manager: Ophir Opportunities Fund, Ophir High Conviction Fund (ASX: OPH), Ophir Global Opportunities Fund |
14 May 2021 - Hedge Clippings | 14 May 2021
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14 May 2021 - Performance Report: NWQ Fiduciary Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund aims to produce returns after management fees and expenses of RBA Cash Rate + 4.0-5.0% p.a. over rolling five-year periods. Furthermore, the Fund aims to achieve these returns with volatility that is a fraction of the Australian equity market, in order to smooth returns for investors. |
Manager Comments | The Fund's capacity to protect investors' capital in falling and volatile markets is highlighted by the following statistics (since inception): Sortino ratio of 1.18 vs the Index's 0.63, maximum drawdown of -8.77% vs the Index's -26.75%, and down-capture ratio of 13.25%. NWQ noted the Fund's outperformance in April demonstrated the Fund's underlying managers' skills in stock selection, outperforming a strongly rising stock market (Fund +4.13% vs +3.47% for the market) while maintaining throughout the month a modest 30% net exposure to the market. The Fund continues to maintain a modest net stock market exposure of 30% and no direct exposure to interest rates providing the Fund's investors with diversification in an environment where equity and bond market valuations are elevated. |
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14 May 2021 - Performance Report: Equitable Investors Dragonfly Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund is an open ended, unlisted unit trust investing predominantly in ASX listed companies. Hybrid, debt & unlisted investments are also considered. The Fund is focused on investing in growing or strategic businesses and generating returns that, to the extent possible, are less dependent on the direction of the broader sharemarket. The Fund may at times change its cash weighting or utilise exchange traded products to manage market risk. Investments will primarily be made in micro-to-mid cap companies listed on the ASX. Larger listed businesses will also be considered for investment but are not expected to meet the manager's investment criteria as regularly as smaller peers. |
Manager Comments | Equitable Investors noted there were few catalysts within the portfolio in April, but NAV advanced as gains in one of their larger software positions, field services and trades app developer Geo (NZ:GEO), offset a drift in a couple of others, DIY security tech company Scout Security (SCT) and MedTech software play MedAdvisor (MDR). The Fund participated in several capital raisings during the month that contributed positively. The manager remains focused on the company-specific medium-to-long term prospects for Fund investments and they are very optimistic about those prospects. They emphasised that movements in the Fund's NAV within any monthly period will always be influenced by broader market sentiment. |
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