NEWS
28 Apr 2021 - Performance Report: Glenmore Australian Equities Fund
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Fund Overview | The main driver of identifying potential investments will be bottom up company analysis, however macro-economic conditions will be considered as part of the investment thesis for each stock. |
Manager Comments | The Fund's Sharpe and Sortino ratios (since inception), 0.92 and 1.09 respectively, by contrast with the Index's Sharpe of 0.55 and Sortino of 0.60, highlight its capacity to produce superior risk-adjusted returns while avoiding the market's downside volatility. The Fund has achieved and up-capture ratio (since inception) of 197%, indicating that, on average, it has risen almost twice as much as the market during the market's positive months. Top contributors in March included People Infrastructure, Whitehaven Coal, Moelis Australia, Fiducian Group, Collins Foods and Eagers Automotive. Key detractors included Coronado Global Resources and Alliance Aviation Services. Glenmore noted that, overall, they are very positive on the prospects for equities generally and the portfolio's holdings more specifically. They added that the recent reporting season highlighted a number of interesting stocks across a range of sectors and with a positive backdrop (recovering global growth, low interest rates, increased rollout of the vaccine). Their outlook on the next 12-18 months remains positive. |
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28 Apr 2021 - Performance Report: Delft Partners Global High Conviction Strategy
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Fund Overview | The quantitative model is proprietary and designed in-house. The critical elements are Valuation, Momentum, and Quality (VMQ) and every stock in the global universe is scored and ranked. Verification of the quant model scores is then cross checked by fundamental analysis in which a company's Accounting policies, Governance, and Strategic positioning is evaluated. The manager believes strategy is suited to investors seeking returns from investing in global companies, diversification away from Australia and a risk aware approach to global investing. It should be noted that this is a strategy in an IMA format and is not offered as a fund. An IMA solution can be a more cost and tax effective solution, for clients who wish to own fewer stocks in a long only strategy. |
Manager Comments | Over the quarter, the Strategy rose +17.71% against the Index's +5.90%. Notable performers included KLA, a US metrology equipment manufacturer, Valero, the USA based oil refining company, and Intel. Most Japanese companies in the portfolio marched higher. They took profits from Discovery A, Hong Kong Exchanges, Orix Holdings and Nomura Holdings. Delft noted that while world markets rose over that period, there has been a significant shift in the shape of the US yield curve which has driven significant sectoral rotation globally. Delft anticipated this and remain focussed on companies exposed to industrial activity, productivity enhancing investment and the switch to fiscal policy. Delft added that National Industrial Policy is returning and expect companies and investors will have to adapt to the new supply chains, different regulations and taxation. Delft remain very diversified with underweight positions in European banks and oils generally. They have overweight positions in 'true technology' companies, Industrials and Healthcare. They like Japan and Asia on valuation, fiscal resilience and improving governance. Their view is that the outlook remains poor for European profits notwithstanding the 'cheap' market. |
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28 Apr 2021 - Performance Report: Bennelong Concentrated Australian Equities Fund
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Fund Overview | The overriding objective of the Concentrated Australian Equities Fund is to seek investment opportunities which are under-appreciated and have the potential to deliver positive earnings, while satisfying our stringent quality criteria. Bennelong's investment process combines bottom-up fundamental analysis together with proprietary investment tools which are used to build and maintain high quality portfolios that are risk aware. The portfolio typically consists of 20-35 high-conviction stocks from the S&P/ASX 300 Index. The Fund may invest in securities listed on other exchanges where such securities relate to ASX-listed securities. Derivative instruments are mainly used to replicate underlying positions and hedge market and company specific risks. |
Manager Comments | The Fund's up-capture and down-capture ratios (since inception), 149% and 92% respectively, indicate that, on average, the Fund has outperformed significantly during the market's positive months while not falling further than the market during the market's negative months. As at the end of March, the portfolio's weightings had been increased in the Health Care, Communication, Materials section, and decreased in the Discretionary, IT, Industrials and Financials sectors. Relative to the ASX300, the Fund was significantly overweight the Discretionary sector (Fund weight: 43.7%, benchmark weight: 8.0%) and underweight the Financials sector (Fund weight: 6.6%, benchmark weight: 29.3%). |
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28 Apr 2021 - Banking Sector - Less bad can be good
27 Apr 2021 - Performance Report: Premium Asia Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund is managed by Value Partners using a disciplined value-oriented approach supported by intensive, on-the-ground bottom-up fundamental research resulting in a portfolio of individual holdings, which are, in the view of Value Partners, undervalued and of high quality, on either an absolute or relative basis, and which have the potential for capital appreciation. The Fund will primarily have exposure to the equity securities of entities listed on securities exchanges across the Asia (ex-Japan) region, however, the Fund may also gain exposure to entities listed on securities outside the Asia (ex-Japan) region which have significant assets, investments, production activities, trading or other business interests in the Asia (ex-Japan) region as well as unlisted instruments with equity-like characteristics, such as participatory notes and convertible bonds. The Fund may also invest in cash and money market instruments, depositary receipts, listed unit trusts, shares in mutual fund corporations and other collective investment schemes (including real estate investment trusts), derivatives including both exchange-traded and OTC, convertible securities, participatory notes, bonds, and foreign exchange contracts. |
Manager Comments | Under high demand for electronic components, the Fund's South Korean and Taiwanese hardware manufacturers holdings continued to rally. Premium China noted the global recovery lends upside to demand, benefitting the materials sector. This includes the Fund's chemical manufacturer holding in South Korea. As the pandemic impacts lessened and recovery kicked in, they have been building more positions in Korean equities since the beginning of the year. They remain constructive on the global recovery outlook and continue to favour the market as the earnings upcycle continues. Overall growth in North Asia has higher visibility underpinned by the resilient macro backdrop. Thus, they maintain their overweight in the sub-region over ASEAN. Looking forward, their conviction on Asian equities remains unchanged. They expect fundamentals to stay robust amid the on-going recovery in the region. The change in the inflation environment is being assessed in their bottom-up stock picking process. They remain focused on quality companies that showcase high visibility and sustained earnings growth. |
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27 Apr 2021 - Performance Report: Atlantic Pacific Australian Equity Fund
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Fund Overview | The primary objective of the Atlantic Pacific Australian Equity Fund is to generate a mixture of capital and income returns for investors with a high risk profile, over a 5 to 7 year investment period. The Investment Manager believes that markets are fundamentally inefficient and that active investment management will result in higher than 'benchmark' returns. The Fund has adopted the S&P/ASX200 Accumulation Index as the benchmark for its performance. The Investment Manager also believes that, on review of many markets globally, no individual style or method of investing will always ensure outperformance in terms of return on investment. In light of this, the Investment Manager may adopt a 'value', 'growth' or 'momentum' style bias, for example, depending on where the market is in its investment cycle. Further, the Investment Manager believes that actual and forecasted events underpin absolute and relative price movements of securities. The Investment Manager will utilise a number of frameworks to assist in positioning the Fund's portfolio of investments. These include fundamental research, quantitative analysis, and macro and catalyst research. |
Manager Comments | The Fund returned -3.78% in March. Top contributors included Computershare (long), Sonic Healthcare (long), Telstra (long), and Whitehaven Coal (long). Key detractors included Mesoblast (long), Norwood Systems (long), SPI Futures (long), and Terracom (long). APSEC noted valuation remain elevated and believe this should be considered in light of the rising bond environment. They emphasise that they don't see the Fund's strategy as a 'market mirror' as was witnessed last year, instead they see it as a satellite portfolio to smooth out returns over the long-run. They have seen drawdowns like this in the past and expect to iron them out over the coming year. |
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27 Apr 2021 - Performance Report: The Airlie Australian Share Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund is long-only with a bottom-up focus. It has a concentrated portfolio of 15-35 stocks (target 25). Maximum cash holding of 10% with an aim to be fully invested. Airlie employs a prudent investment approach that identifies companies based on their financial strength, attractive durable business characteristics and the quality of their management teams. Airlie invests in these companies when their view of their fair value exceeds the prevailing market price. It is jointly managed by Matt Williams and Emma Fisher. Matt has over 25 years' investment experience and formerly held the role of Head of Equities and Portfolio Manager at Perpetual Investments. Emma has over 8 years' investment experience and has previously worked as an investment analyst within the Australian equities team at Fidelity International and, prior to that, at Nomura Securities. |
Manager Comments | The Fund's 12-month up-capture and down-capture ratios, 114% and 93% respectively, indicate that, on average, it has outperformed during the market's positive and negative months. The Fund has maintained an up-capture ratio of above 100% over all time periods, highlighting its capacity to outperform in positive markets. At month-end, the portfolio's top positions included Commonwealth Bank of Australia, BHP Group, CSL, National Australia Bank and Wesfarmers. By sector, the portfolio was most heavily weighted towards the Financials, Consumer Discretionary and Materials sectors. |
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27 Apr 2021 - Boom time for stock markets as bonds left in the doldrums
Boom time for stock markets as bonds left in the doldrums Tom Stevenson, Investment Director, Fidelity 6th AprilĀ 2021 Most of the time, financial markets ebb and flow like the tide. All boats are lifted or fall together. On occasions, however, different assets part company, responding to the same influences in divergent ways. The first three months of 2021 has been such a period. Last week, the S&P 500 rose above 4,000 for the first time as investors decided that a rapid roll-out of vaccinations, the consequent re-opening of the economy and unprecedented fiscal and monetary stimulus will deliver strong growth and rising profits. The US economy is forecast to be 8% bigger in the last three months of this year than it was in the final quarter of 2020. Companies most exposed to a strong cyclical upturn have fared best of all. Commodities, too, have built on last year's strong gains, with copper costing almost twice as much as it did last April. Over the past three months, however, the bond market has moved in the opposite direction. Long-term government bonds have just delivered their worst quarterly fall since 1980. Fixed income investors are worried about precisely the same things that are pushing the stock and commodity markets to new heights - recovery, growth and inflation, leading in due course to higher interest rates. In anticipation of tighter monetary policy, bond investors have pushed yields higher. Thanks to the arithmetic of the bond market, that means lower bond prices - 13.5% lower in three months, a huge move by the usually placid standards of fixed income investing. Inflation is the key to the diverging fortunes of equities, commodities and bonds. But partly because it's been so long since we had to really think about spiralling prices there are a lot of myths to bust. It's time to dust off our understanding of inflation's causes and what it means for our investments. Because if, as seems likely, the first three months of the year are an indicator of what's to come, then many portfolios may need a rethink. The past 12 years has seen some spectacular financial asset price inflation but very little in the real world. That's because physical inflation is a consequence of demand exceeding supply, which you do not create by making wealthy people wealthier. You create inflation by increasing the incomes of people who are most likely to spend their new-found wealth - lower-income households. It is no coincidence that income equality and inflation both peaked in the 1970s. Rising prices follow when you increase the incomes of as many people as possible. We are about to rediscover the link between populist, redistributive policies and rising prices. First, let's dispel some misconceptions. The first is that inflation is caused by supply shocks and cost-push pressures. The opposite may actually be the case if shock leads to recession and so lower demand. As Jeff Currie, Goldman Sachs's commodities guru, has pointed out, OPEC's first attempt at an oil embargo in 1967 failed because of a lack of demand for energy at the time. Six years later when Lyndon Johnson's 'war on poverty' had increased annual oil demand growth from 4% to 8% the Sheikhs were pushing on an open door. A second misconception is that inflation is a consequence of excessive money creation. Here too the evidence points the other way. High debt levels in Japan after years of money printing have failed to generate any inflation because the money never made it to the people who might actually have spent it. Instead, it gathered dust on corporate balance sheets as excess cash. Greater equality in Japan meant there was never any need for inflationary, populist policies and an ageing population kept demand stagnant and prices subdued. If you want to understand the key driver of general price inflation in the 1970s and of commodities in the early 2000s you need look no further than what was happening in the labour markets in America and Europe in the first period and in China thirty years later. The US participation rate rose from 58% to 68% between the 1960s and 1980s, massively reducing the poverty rate, increasing household formation and driving up demand for commodity-intensive goods. In China, joining the World Trade Organisation created the outsourcing boom that delivered a massive redistribution of wealth to millions of low-income Chinese labourers. Like their low-income predecessors in the West in the 1960s and 1970s the first things they looked to buy were metals-intensive physical goods. So, the key driver of inflation in the months ahead will not be excessive money printing or a shortage of supply after years of underinvestment, or higher wages. Rather it will be, in the short run, post-pandemic populism, targeting $1,400 cheques more precisely at the people with a greater propensity to buy food, fuel and capital goods than the higher-income households who benefited from the post-financial crisis spending 12 years ago. That helicopter money won't last for ever, but new ways will be found to keep the populist spending flowing - most likely the new 'New Deal' of green infrastructure, the politically acceptable promotion of income redistribution under the guise of addressing the climate challenge. What do these trends mean for our investments? Almost certainly that the divergence hinted at in the first three months of 2021 is just getting started. Shares and commodities will continue to outperform. Bonds will remain under pressure. As Currie notes, the last time the Democrats kept hold of a clean sweep through mid-term elections was during that war on poverty under Lyndon Johnson. People like populist policies. Highly indebted governments like inflation. Once you set off down this path, it's hard to turn back.. Funds operated by this manager: Fidelity Australian Equities Fund, Fidelity Future Leaders Fund, Fidelity India Fund, Fidelity Global Emerging Markets Fund, Fidelity China Fund, Fidelity Asia Fund |
26 Apr 2021 - Webinar| Laureola Review: Q1 2021
Wed, Apr 28, 2021 5:00 PM - 6:00 PM AEST Please join us for our quarterly webinar where we will discuss the following: 1. Introduction: Laureola Advisors 2. Q1 2021 performance review 3. Analysis of current portfolio and where we are now 4. Upcoming developments 5. Q&A
ABOUT LAUREOLA ADVISORS Laureola Advisors was founded with the belief that investors deserve access to the unique benefits of Life Settlements, with the advantages of a specialist and focused asset manager. The best feature of the asset class is the genuine non-correlation with stocks, bonds, real estate, or hedge funds. Life Settlement investors will make money when others can't. Like many asset classes, Life Settlements provides experienced and competent boutique managers like Laureola with significant advantages over larger institutional players. In Life Settlements, the boutique manager can identify and close more opportunities in a cost effective manner, can move quickly when necessary, and can instantly adapt when opportunities dry up in one segment but appear in another. Larger investors are restricted not only by their size and natural inertia, but by self-imposed rules and criteria, which are typically designed by committees. The Laureola Advisors team has transacted over $1 billion (US dollars) in face value of life insurance policies. |
26 Apr 2021 - Performance Report: Collins St Value Fund
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Fund Overview | The managers of the fund intend to maintain a concentrated portfolio of investments in ASX listed companies that they have investigated and consider to be undervalued. They will assess the attractiveness of potential investments using a number of common industry based measures, a proprietary in-house model and by speaking with management, industry experts and competitors. Once the managers form a view that an investment offers sufficient upside potential relative to the downside risk, the fund will seek to make an investment. If no appropriate investment can be identified the managers are prepared to hold cash and wait for the right opportunities to present themselves. |
Manager Comments | The Fund has achieved up-capture and down-capture ratios over the past 36 months of 126.86% and -71.73%. This indicates that, on average, the Fund has risen more than the index during the market's positive months while falling approximately 70% as much as the market during the market's negative months. In the past 3 months the fund has made a number of major changes to the portfolio. These include increasing their position in National Tyre & Wheel, becoming a substantial shareholder in Retail Food Group, taking a substantial position in Redflex Holdings and reducing their exposure to Uranium. |
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