
News
16 Sep 2013 - Fund Review: Bennelong Kardinia Absolute Return Fund
BENNELONG KARDINIA ABSOLUTE RETURN FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review. You are also able to view the Fund's Profile.
The Fund is long biased, research driven, active equity long/short strategy investing in listed ASX companies with a seven year track record. Consistent top decile long short equity sector performance with a since inception (May 2006) return of 14.11% pa (ASX Accumulation Index 4.18% pa) and a standard deviation of 7.89% pa (Index 14.86%) indicate the Fund's ability to generate strong risk-adjusted returns. The Fund also has a strong focus on capital protection in negative markets. Portfolio Managers Mark Burgess and Kristiaan Rehder have significant market experience, while the Bennelong Group provide infrastructure, operational, compliance and distribution capabilities.
Research and Database Manager
Australian Fund Monitors

16 Sep 2013 - Insync Global Titans Fund
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Manager Comments | The Fund's low risk is further indicated by it's downside deviation of 3.16% (Index 5.93%) and a down capture ratio of -0.80, also over the last 12 months. The Fund's unit price decreased by 1.9% in August. Positive contributions coming notably from our holdings in British Sky Broadcasting, Hugo Boss and GlaxoSmithKline were more than offset by declines in Sanofi, Philip Morris and Walt Disney. Currency movements had less impact on the portfolio in August than they did in the previous three months. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
13 Sep 2013 - Hedge Clippings
Last week's hope for a clear mandate for the new government in both houses has not come to pass, but it's still too early to tell if incoming PM Tony Abbott will be able to cobble together a working relationship with the rag tag group of independents in the Senate. Anyway, enough of politics. I'm just thankful the electioneering is over for the moment.
This was Hedge Fund Week in Australia, with a range of events and the inevitable post event socialising testing my stamina. AIMA Australia put on an excellent and well attended "by the industry, for the industry" one day seminar in Sydney on Tuesday, which had it not clashed with a commercially sponsored event in Melbourne targeting the same audience would have made it standing room only.
One senior AIMA committee member admitted that they even surprised themselves with the professionalism of the day's proceedings. Certainly the quality of the speakers and panelists, with AIMA Australia's Chairman Paul Chadwick's armchair chat with Sir Michael Hintze from CQS a standout, kept the audience's attention through to the end of the day.
Also on stage was ASIC's deputy commissioner Greg Tanzer who delivered the outcome of ASIC's review of the potential systemic risk of the largest local hedge funds to Australia's financial markets. In what would have been a disappointment to some of the gloom merchants in the media who love to love hating hedge funds, ASIC's findings were that they posed no or little risk. Amongst ASIC's findings were that out of the total funds surveyed, the largest 12, each with greater than $500 million in FUM and representing 42% of the total, held just 0.4% of the ASX All Ords' market capitalisation.
However that's not to suggest that there's no risk, just that they pose no systemic risk to the system in the way that LTCM or Amaranth did in the past.
Last night saw the annual Australian Hedge Fund Awards supporting the Cure Our Kids Foundation. Congratulations to all the finalists, to the evenual winner Chris Black from the Laminar Credit Opportunities Fund, and to John Corr who took out the well deserved "Contribution to the Industry" Award.
EVENTS
An upcoming event that may be of interest for Superannuation member administration and investment operation service providers is the Superannuation Fund Back Office conference coming up on 21-22 October. Visit the International Business Review Conferences website for more details.
The Asset Allocation Conference is also coming up from 30th October to 1 November 2013 at the Grace hotel in Sydney. Details are here.
Specific results received this week include the following PERFORMANCE and NEWS UPDATES:
Bennelong Kardinia Absolute Return Fund returned 0.96% over August with a net equity market exposure of 24.7% (49.2% long and 24.4% short). The Fund's since inception (May 2006) return is 14.11% pa (ASX Accumulation Index 4.18% pa) with a standard deviation of 7.89% pa (Index 14.86%).
The Optimal Australia Absolute Trust returned 0.14% for August with a net risk exposure of 9.2% and gross risk exposure of 61.2%. The Fund is characterised by low risk with a Sortino Ratio of 5.39 (ASX Accumulation Index 0.06) and high reward-to-risk with a Sharpe Ratio of 1.81 (Index 0.12). All data is since the Fund inception in September 2008.
Morphic Global Opportunities Fund returned -1.57% over August with net leverage of 88%. The Fund's lower risk is evidenced by a downside deviation of 1.87% (ASX 200 Accum 5.70%). The Sortino ratio of 14.88% as compared to 3.37% (Index) and the Sharpe ratio of 3.10 compared to 1.87 (Index) demonstrate the Fund's strong risk-adjusted returns.
The Aurora Fortitude Absolute Return Fund returned 0.18% for August bringing the Fund's percentage of positive months to 87% since March 2005. Sentiment towards China appears to have turned with the materials index posting a solid 3.7% gain for the month. US Macro data continued to impress, however September does bring a large number of Macro risks to the table including the Tapering debate; Fed Chairman continuity; US Debt Ceiling; German Elections and ongoing tensions in Syria.
Pengana Australian Equities Fund returned 2.27% for August with a cash holding of 26% at month-end. The largest positive contributors to the month's performance were McMillan Shakespeare (validating the Fund's decision to acquire additional shares during the strong reaction to the proposed regulatory change), Seven West Media, Resmed, Woolworths and Ainsworth Gaming.
Updated AFM Fund Reviews were also completed on the following funds this week:
The Bennelong Long Short Equity Fund is a research driven, market and sector neutral, "pairs" trading strategy investing primarily in large cap stocks from the ASX/S&P100 Index, with a ten year track record and annualised net returns of over 20%. Since inception in January 2002 the Fund has had positive annual returns each year, including an 11.95% return in 2008 and 20.6% in 2011, both of which were negative years for the ASX200. The consistent returns across the investment history indicates the Fund's ability to provide positive returns in volatile and negative markets and significantly outperform the broader market.
For something completely different - things you need to know when you are in leadership.
On that note, enjoy the week-end!
Regards,
Chris
CEO, AUSTRALIAN FUND MONITORS
13 Sep 2013 - Fund Review: Bennelong Long Short Equity Fund
BENNELONG LONG SHORT EQUITY FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review on the Bennelong Long Short Equity Fund.
The Fund is a research driven, market and sector neutral, "pairs" trading strategy investing primarily in large cap stocks from the ASX/S&P100 Index, with a ten year track record and annualised net returns of over 20%. Since inception in January 2002 the Fund has had positive annual returns each year, including an 11.95% return in 2008 and 20.6% in 2011, both of which were negative years for the ASX200. The consistent returns across the investment history indicates the Fund's ability to provide positive returns in volatile and negative markets and significantly outperform the broader market.
Research and Database Manager
Australian Fund Monitors

13 Sep 2013 - Pengana Australian Equities Fund
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Manager Comments | The Fund's exposure to non-Australian dollar earnings streams (inclusive of companies with global earnings profiles such as Resmed and Fox Group, NZ based companies and US dollar exposure) stood at 21%. Although the Manager has been biased towards a weakening A$ for some time, they note that the speed of its decline has been surprising. On the one hand, a lower Australian Dollar represents lower global purchasing power for us as consumers. However, the Manager expects several important domestic industries to benefit materially from the currency shift. These include the tourism, education, agricultural and even, dare we say it, the mining industry. Many companies have been forced to streamline their operations to cope with the high A$. The recent falls could translate into a period of very high levels of profitability for some. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
12 Sep 2013 - Aurora Fortitude Absolute Return Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund aims to produce positive returns irrespective of the direction of the share market. For each investment the manager considers the risk, the timeline of that risk occurring and then the potential return. Low transaction costs and liquidity are other important factors in the success and implementation of the strategies. |
Manager Comments | Sentiment towards China appears to have turned with the materials index posting a solid 3.7% gain for the month. US Macro data continued to impress, however September does bring a large number of Macro risks to the table including the Tapering debate; Fed Chairman continuity; US Debt Ceiling; German Elections and ongoing tensions in Syria. The Convergence book (+0.16%) posted the strongest returns of the strategies for the month. The News Corporation demerger continues to present attractive trading opportunities. The Yield portfolio continues to deliver consistent returns (+0.12%) in high quality short-dated names. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
11 Sep 2013 - ASIC Reports hedge funds pose no systemic risk
ASIC has released the finding of its 2012 survey of the potential for hedge funds in Australia to pose a systemic risk to financial markets, with the conclusion that there appears to be no such risk at the present time.
The survey also found that the largest funds (those with over $500 million in assets) had relatively low levels of borrowing and leverage.
However it should be noted that the survey only covered a small number of funds based on the $500m cutoff in assets, and that these represented just 42% of the total assets in the sector as at September 2012.
ASIC's survey estimated that over half of Australia's hedge funds manage less than $50 million, and only 8% manage more than the $500 million cutoff. Furthermore the sector as a whole represented just 3% of the total $2.13 trillion managed by the Australian funds management industry.
ASIC's full report is available here.

11 Sep 2013 - Morphic Global Opportunities Fund
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Manager Comments | The Fund's lower risk is evidenced by a downside deviation of 1.87% (ASX 200 Accum 5.70%). The Sortino ratio of 14.88% as compared to 3.37% (Index) and the Sharpe ratio of 3.10 compared to 1.87 (Index) demonstrate the Fund's strong risk-adjusted returns. In a weak month, the Fund's top contributors were a few individual stocks in a variety of countries along with some hedges. Offsetting this were givebacks on two of July's main alpha sources: currency and interest rate hedges and the Fund overweight to the US bank sector. The Fund ended the month underweight the US market, and to a lesser degree also underweight Europe and Emerging Markets. It remained overweight Japan, but overall a little less than fully invested. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
10 Sep 2013 - Optimal Australia Absolute Trust
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Fund Overview | The Fund's bias is likely to be net long under normal market conditions, with the core strategy being to construct a portfolio of listed equity securities priced at levels that do not adequately reflect their underlying value. The Fund will seek to boost returns and limit potential market downside by selective short selling of individual stocks which are priced at levels that are viewed as materially above their underlying value. The Fund will also use certain trading strategies both within its core portfolio (through rebalancing stock weights and overall market exposure in response to price movements) and in certain other situations (typically of a shorter-duration and/or opportunistic nature) with the objective of further increasing returns. |
Manager Comments | The Fund is characterised by low risk with a Sortino Ratio of 5.39 (ASX Accumulation Index 0.06) and high reward-to-risk with a Sharpe Ratio of 1.81 (Index 0.12). All data is since the Fund inception in September 2008. Major contributors to the Fund's return in August were on the Long side (+1.04% attribution) industrials, media, resources, energy and property and on the negative side, food and transport. On the short side (-0.75%) positives were healthcare and on the negative side, energy, healthcare, staples and index futures. In Australia, that second derivative issue has been very relevant, with significant pro-cyclical portfolio positioning through the recent earnings season. The Manager notes that they have a lot of sympathy with a beta tilt, so ridiculous have many defensive yield valuations become. They are still surprised by the extent to which investors have been prepared to 'look across the valley', such that many earnings reports that were very weak in absolute terms, with cautious or no guidance prompting earnings downgrades, have only resulted in stock price strength. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
9 Sep 2013 - Bennelong Kardinia Absolute Return Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund consists of a concentrated long/short portfolio typically comprising 30 to 40 ASX300 listed stocks, generally with a long bias aligned to the overall market direction. There is a slight bias to large cap stocks in the long side of the portfolio, although in a rising market the portfolio will tend to hold smaller caps, including resource stocks, more frequently. On the short side, the portfolio is particularly concentrated, with stock selection limited by both liquidity and the difficulty of borrowing stock in smaller cap companies. Short positions are only taken when there is a high conviction view on the specific stock. The Fund uses derivatives in a limited way, mainly selling short dated covered call options to generate additional income. These typically have less than 30 days to expiry, and are usually 10 to 15% out of the money. ASX SPI futures and index put options can be used to hedge the portfolio's overall net position. |
Manager Comments | The Fund's since inception (May 2006) return is 14.11% pa (ASX Accumulation Index 4.18% pa) with a standard deviation of 7.89% pa (Index 14.86%). The Australian equity market maintained its upward momentum in August with the ASX 300 Accumulation Index closing 2.51% higher. The domestic reporting season was mixed with results broadly meeting expectations. Whilst revenue growth remained subdued, ongoing cost cutting and efficiency improvements remained a consistent theme. Long positions in Fox, Seek, Crown, and Mineral Resources were all meaningful positive contributors. The largest detractors from performance were Share Price Index Futures contracts (hedging long positions), QBE and EBOS (New Zealand listed). |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |