NEWS
3 Apr 2018 - Performance Report: Pengana PanAgora Absolute Return Global Equities Fund
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Fund Overview | PanAgora believes the best way to find opportunities in the global markets is to combine fundamental analysis with robust quantitative techniques in order to filter the investment universe and select the investments. The Fund invests primarily in listed equity securities from a global universe of developed markets and a select group of emerging market countries. The Fund's objective is to seek absolute returns by identifying and exploiting multiple inefficiencies that may exist in global equity markets. These inefficiencies are primarily exploited through the use of a long/short equity strategy which aims to construct a portfolio that is generally neutral to market movements. As such the performance of the investment strategy is largely independent of the market's performance. The Fund seeks to achieve its objective by using a diversified set of strategies that have low correlation to one another. In addition, because many of these strategies are designed to generate profit under different market conditions, their combination is expected to result in more stable returns over time than any individual strategy in and of itself. |
Manager Comments | The long-term portfolio detracted -0.87% with most of the underperformance coming from the U.S. large capitalisation stocks. Intermediate-terms strategies detracted -0.45%, while short-term strategies contributed +0.11%. In the long-term portfolio, detractors included Spirit AeroSystems and Edgewell Personal Care, both of which remain long positions in the portfolio due to their good alpha scores. International positions in developed markets contributed +0.47% with good performance coming from Europe, in particular the UK and Sweden. Emerging Markets positions contributed +0.14%, with South Africa and Turkey contributing the most. The intermediate strategies detracted -0.36% due to U.S. merger arbitrage related trades where spreads widened in a volatile market. Pengana noted that this presents an opportunity to enter in to new trades at attractive levels. The short-term strategies contributed +0.09%, primarily due to good performance coming from Pengana's Analyst Day strategy. |
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2 Apr 2018 - Performance Report: Touchstone Index Unaware Fund
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Fund Overview | The portfolio is constructed using Touchstone's Quality-At-a-Reasonable-Price ('QARP') investment process. QARP is a fundamental bottom-up process, however, it also incorporates a top-down risk management framework designed to successfully manage the portfolio during varying market conditions and economic cycles. The Touchstone Fund is concentrated, typically holding between 15-20 stocks. No individual stock will ever make up more than 10% of the portfolio at any one time. The Investment Manager may temporarily exceed the exposure limits of the Fund occasionally, particularly during periods of market volatility, to allow for holdings in excess of this 10% limit where the increase in value of the underlying security is due to market movement. The Fund may also hold between 0-50% of the portfolio in cash. The Fund has a high level of associated risk, therefore, the minimum suggested investment time-frame is 5 years. |
Manager Comments | The Touchstone Index Unaware Fund primarily selects stocks from the S&P/ASX 300 Index and typically holds 10-30 stocks. It seeks to invest in reasonably priced, good quality companies with a significant share of expected returns coming from sustainable dividends. |
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30 Mar 2018 - Performance Report: Qato Capital Market Neutral Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund seeks to preserve capital and maximise absolute returns through active and constant risk management, targeting monthly a net market exposure of 0% to hedge broader market risks by generally holding up to 50 S&P/ASX-100 positions (up to 25 long positions & 25 short positions). Historically, the strategy has been uncorrelated to traditional asset classes with a negative beta to equity markets. Qato Capital's process is entirely systematic - stock selection and risk management are all employed in a rules based approach. Positions in Qato's long-portfolio and short-portfolio are rotated monthly dependent upon their Q-Score ranking. The strategy employs no financial leverage/gearing to purchase securities, no derivatives and no financial products to imitate leverage. |
Manager Comments | Reporting companies that impacted the Fund's performance included Bluescope Steel (long, +12.62% for February), Fairfax (long, +7.90% for February), Northern Star (long, +8.64% for February), Newcrest (long, -6.26% for February), South32 (long, -13.09% for February), Vocus (short, -18.06% for February) and Harvey Norman (short, -11.28% for February). |
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29 Mar 2018 - 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 | The largest detractors during the month were Ventas (US, Healthcare) and Scentre (Australia, Retail). Top contributors at the stock level were Hysan (HK Diversified) and Sun Communities (US, Manufactured Housing). The Manager noted the ongoing headwind created by rising long-dated treasury yields and a lack of interest in defensive and so-called 'interest rate sensitive' sectors, has been impacting returns. In their latest report, the Manager briefly discusses a recently published Economic Letter from the Federal Reserve of San Francisco titled 'Economic Forecasts with the Yield Curve', with specific reference to a chart the Manager says provides perspective on where in the cycle the US economy may be. The chart shows the term spread (the difference between long-term and short-term interest rates) and recessions, and highlights how the term spread is a strikingly accurate predictor of economic activity. In fact, the Manager notes, every recession in the past 60 years was preceded by a negative term spread of inverted yield curve. |
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28 Mar 2018 - 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 | Glenmore noted companies invested in by the Fund had a strong reporting season, with a number of companies delivering very positive results and outlooks and no major negative surprises. Top contributors included Appen (+18.4%), NRW Holdings (+14.2%) and Pioneer Credit (+10.9%). Negative contributors included Pacific Current (-8.9%) and Hotel Property Investments (-6.0%). The Fund exited HUB24 and Praemium early in the month due to their share prices reaching Glenmore's valuations. Glenmore noted that, while the earnings outlook remains positive for both, PE multiple expansion has been very aggressive for the last 6 months. |
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27 Mar 2018 - Performance Report: Bennelong Australian Equities Fund
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Fund Overview | The Bennelong Australian Equities Fund seeks quality investment opportunities which are under-appreciated and have the potential to deliver positive earnings. The investment process combines bottom-up fundamental analysis with proprietary investment tools that are used to build and maintain high quality portfolios that are risk aware. The investment team manages an extensive company/industry contact program which helps identify and verify various investment opportunities. The companies within the portfolio are primarily selected from, but not limited to, the S&P/ASX 300 Index. The Fund may invest in securities listed on other exchanges where such securities relate to the ASX-listed securities. The Fund typically holds between 25-60 stocks with a maximum net targeted position of an individual stock of 6%. |
Manager Comments | By the end of the month, the Fund's weightings had been increased in the Discretionary, Health Care, Consumer Staples, IT and Materials sectors and decreased in the Industrials and Financials sectors. |
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26 Mar 2018 - Performance Report: Pengana Absolute Return Asia Pacific Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund will usually hold 40 to 80 positions and will be well diversified across the various event strategies. In keeping with the absolute return focus the Manager will eliminate market risk where appropriate by hedging market and foreign currency risks. Since inception the Fund has averaged a net equity market exposure of ~10%. Sizing of an investment position will depend on the expected risk adjusted returns while taking account the liquidity and volatility of the stock. In addition, the maximum potential loss on any one position should be greater than 0.5% of the NAV and the position should not exceed 30% participation of stressed volume assuming a $200m NAV. Other criteria considered are ability to hedge and the availability of pair candidates as well as the average bid-ask size. For M&A strategies average long position is 3 to 5.5% and average short position 2 to 5%. |
Manager Comments | Pengana noted the return of volatility to equity markets is creating opportunities to capture pricing inefficiencies in the Fund's Relative Value and M&A sub-strategies. Pengana have therefore increased the Fund's Relative Value gross exposure to 112% and M&A exposure to 101%, whilst reducing the Directional Alpha book net exposure to 13.3%. The Manager has also partially hedged the Alpha exposure with puts and put-spread strategies to hedge out potential tail risk. The Fund's net and gross exposures were 13.3% and 242.3% respectively at the end of the month. |
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23 Mar 2018 - Hedge Clippings
Naughty bankers, Trump's trade tirade, Company tax, and Shorten's retiree tax grab.
The banking industry was in the headlines again this week for all the wrong reasons as the Banking Royal Commission continued to unearth totally unacceptable, and we would imagine, criminal lending behaviour. A report quoting UBS analyst Jonathan Mott estimated that one third of all mortgages ("Liar Loans") written in the past year were based to some degree on borrowers' false or misleading income or expenditure data. There's an eerie sense of déjà vu of pre GFC US housing lending here. If anyone's looking for a catalyst for a property crunch, imagine if those loan applications were re-submitted based on the real numbers?
Over in the US the Federal Reserve increased interest rates by 25 bps to 1.75%, taking rates above the RBA cash rate in the process. As pointed out by Jamieson Coote's Charlie Jamieson, the last time this occurred the A$ was at US$.50 cents! As this was possibly the most widely anticipated move we can remember, the market didn't seem to miss a beat, but that didn't last as Trump's latest tariff salvo against the Chinese took its toll overnight.
At the beginning of the year we warned that there were likely to be two big risks to markets this year - rising interest rates, and political "left of field" events.
Both seem to be playing out, although the interest rate theme has been well flagged and therefore there's no surprise in that - although there will come the time when the "Tipping Point" arrives - i.e. when the risk/return balance moves investors out of equities to other less volatile asset classes.
Politics is of course very left field in the Donald Trump/Vladimir Putin era, although it's fair to say that as both are becoming predictable, it's a case of expect the unexpected - or just more of the same. In both cases there's an old rule we recall from physics classes - "for every action there's an equal and opposite reaction". However in the political environment the reaction is not always rational, equal, or predicable. There's no way the Chinese are going to let Trump's tariff announcement simply slide by un-noticed, but what they'll do is yet to be seen.
From investors' perspective therefore volatility and risk come to the fore. Hedge and Absolute Return funds - depending on their strategy, style and the manager's skill - will help protect the downside to varying degrees, for instance those funds with high cash parameters, or the ability to protect against overall market risk using short index futures, or long put options.
Tax - one way or another - was also front and centre in the news this week. In the US The Donald is cutting company tax, while in Australia Malcolm Turnbull is hoping to. Overall, Hedge Clipping's view has always been that the Australian Taxation System - if not broken - is seriously in danger of breaking under the weight of complexity and legislation. As this link shows, Australia's tax act has increased over the past 100 years from just 22 pages to over 5,000 and rising, but that, as they say, is history.
Politicians of all persuasions like to have their say, but none have made any real effort to act to simplify the system. The Henry Tax Review, released in 2010, made 138 specific recommendations, almost none of which were adopted by the government of the day, or since - except the failed Resources Super Profit Tax. Henry's review was also hamstrung as that great political elephant in the room, the GST, was explicitly excluded from the terms of reference. As a result the great taxation debacle, and all its complexity, continues seemingly ad infinitum.
Memo to politicians of all persuasions: An increasing number of the electorate are desperate for a simplification and overhaul of the taxation system (including superannuation). The Country and the economy need it. Leadership is required!
Combining the topics of political leadership and taxation is never easy. However, last week, the opposition leader Bill Shorten got into a fiddling tax act mess, announcing a planned change to the treatment of franking credits - or more specifically a plan to ditch franking credit cash rebates for tax payers with low taxable incomes. He certainly hit a raw nerve on all sides of the electoral spectrum. In last week-end's Financial Review his proposal received no less than 8 full pages of comment or editorial, and in the days since it seems everyone has jumped on the bandwagon, with most of them jumping on Bill.
As such it would be remiss of Hedge Clippings not to join the throng, but we had difficulty in coming up with a new angle. As a result, and being a Friday, here's a different view (with hyperlinks for those of our overseas readers unfamiliar with the local vernacular):
Wee Willie Short-One was looking for a plan,
to soak the rich and famous and so help the common man;
With an election 'round the corner, it's a chance he couldn't miss,
He tried it with his Mediscare, it might just work with this:
"I know!" he says to Albo, (who's breathing down his neck),
"What about the pensioners, they're fair game - what the heck!
Best of all I'm sure they're Libs, so wouldn't vote for us,
We'll call it taxing millionaires, that'll not cause so much fuss."
No matter that they worked for years to put some funds away,
or started up a super fund just for that rainy day.
"Look at all the franking credits they're getting back in cash -
They'll whinge a bit, poor old folk, but few teeth left to gnash."
"But best of all OUR super's safe, indexed and inflation free,
Fifteen percent and guaranteed, it won't hurt you and me.
If it works I'll get a pension, gold pass, driver and a car,
But only if I make PM - if I can only get that far..."
But Willie's got his facts wrong, as pollies often do,
Didn't understand the people his franking tax will screw,
There's lots of labour voters who he forgot to note,
Have also put some shares away - and bloody hell! they'll vote!
For those amongst you who might not recognise the rhythm or the rhyme, check out (and apologies to) William Miller's Wee Willie Winkie. Or for a less politically correct musical connection, Benny Hill's all time number one classic from 1971, Ernie - the fastest milkman in the West.
23 Mar 2018 - Performance Report: KIS Asia Long Short Fund
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Fund Overview | Whilst the Fund's primary strategy is focused on long/short equities, the ability to retain discretionary powers to allocate across a number of other investment strategies is reserved. These strategies may include, but not be limited to: convertible bond investments, portfolio hedging, equity related arbitrage, special situations (e.g. merger arbitrage, rights offerings, participation in international public offerings and placements, etc.). The Fund's geographic focus is Asia excluding Japan, but including Australia). The Fund may invest outside of this region to the extent that: 1. The investment decision is driven from the Asian region or; 2. The exposure is intended to mitigate risk or enhance return from factors external to the Asian region. |
Manager Comments | KIS noted that in January the Fund suffered 106bp of losses due to usage of index futures and options to hedge the portfolio of stock positions which had a long bias. They contrast this with a gain of 160bp in February, noting that over the two months 1/3 of the Fund's gains came from long positions and 2/3 from shorts. In February, the Fund suffered on long stock positions with China Life Insurance Company Ltd H Share contributing a loss of 30bp and Flamingo AI contributing a loss of 28bp. On the short side, in addition to the gains from index hedges of 160bp, the Fund also made 42bp on the decline in share price of Vocus Group, a position KIS have now closed. In KIS Capital's latest commentary they give their view on the market decline in February. They noted that the decline was attributed by many to a positive feedback loop between increasing volatility, declining prices and shifts in correlation in bonds and equities with risk parity/targeted volatility strategies being blamed, and that the rally later in the month seemed to be supported by US corporate buyback programs. |
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22 Mar 2018 - Bennelong Twenty20 Australian Equities Fund February 2018
BENNELONG TWENTY20 AUSTRALIAN EQUITIES FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review on the Bennelong Twenty20 Australian Equities Fund.
- The Bennelong Twenty20 Australian Equities Fund invests in ASX listed stocks, combining an indexed position in the Top 20 stocks with an actively managed portfolio of stocks outside the Top 20. Construction of the ex-top 20 portfolio is fundamental, bottom-up, core investment style, biased to quality stocks, with a structured risk management approach.
- Mark East, the Fund's Chief Investment Officer, and Keith Kwang, Director of Quantitative Research have over 50 years combined market experience. Bennelong Funds Management (BFM) provides the investment manager, Bennelong Australian Equity Partners (BAEP) with infrastructure, operational, compliance and distribution services.
For further details on the Fund, please do not hesitate to contact us.