
News
15 Jun 2013 - Hedge Clippings
Last week's "Hedge Clippings" included some comments defending hedge and absolute return funds against some of the broader criticism they receive, particularly when the market is rising strongly. Our logic was twofold:
Firstly the sector, often included as part of the "alternative" asset bucket, is made up of such a diverse range of strategies that comparison (apart from bottom line performance) is nigh on impossible. It's also worth noting that many equity long short strategies should, in our opinion, not be categorised as alternative at all, but rather should be termed active equities.
Secondly the diversity of performances are equally large, even between funds with similar strategies or geographic mandates. Taking May's single funds' performance numbers to date (based on 45% of those received so far) they range from -12.44% through to +15%, with an average of +0.92%, against the ASX200 Accumulation index which fell -4.50%.
Over 12 months the range becomes even greater: -62% through to +75% with an average of +14.22% against the cumulative return of the ASX200 of +26.41%.
As we've noted many times before, with diversity such as that, it's easy to prove your hedge fund point of view, positive or negative.
Taking a look at May performance numbers also proves the point that while volatility normally leads to negative market returns, it provides the opportunity for hedge funds (or at least the best of them) to show their defensive characteristics in falling markets. While there is a way to go yet, the ASX200 accumulation index is down a further 4.67% in June, taking it almost 10% off the high reached just a month ago. Year to date (January) the Index is up only 2.92% while hedge funds, which had been lagging, are up 6.85%.
Having said that of course, we're falling into our own problem of calculating averages from a significantly diverse set of numbers.
Moving on, we were pleased to be able to host Opalesque's founder and CEO, Matthias Knab, along with a selected group of local fund managers to the 2013 Opalesque Australian Round Table to discuss issues affecting the local industry. The full transcript is available here.
Performance and News Updates on www.fundmonitors.com this week:
Optimal Australia Absolute Trust achieved 1.22% during May with a since inception (September '08) return of 11.48% pa. Major contributors to the Trust's return for the month were driven by a return from both long investments (+0.22% attribution) and shorts (+1.25% attribution).
The Allard Investment Fund returned 6.30% during May with its twelve month return standing at 14.59%. At the end of May the Fund was 67.3% invested and in terms of country exposures the largest was HK/China 31.4%, followed by Singapore at 13.0% and Korea at 10.3%.
Morphic Global Opportunities Fund recorded 6.77% for May bringing its since inception (Aug 2012) return to 28.70%. Taken as a whole, global stocks in local currency terms were volatile, but largely unchanged by month end.
The Insync Global Titans Fund delivered 4.8% during May bringing it's since inception (October 2009) return to 9.5% pa. However, the main driver of the Fund's return in May came from the 7.7% depreciation of the Australian dollar against the US dollar.
And finally, for something completely different, how the power of words can make a significant change.
On that note, I hope you have a happy and healthy weekend!
Regards,
Chris
CEO, AUSTRALIAN FUND MONITORS
14 Jun 2013 - Insync Global Titans Fund
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Manager Comments | Key positive contributions came from our holdings in Sanofi, Oracle, BAT, GlaxoSmithKline and IBM, with BSkyB being the sole detractor. However, the main driver of the Fund's return in May came from the 7.7% depreciation of the Australian dollar against the US dollar. With the Fund's currency exposure 100% unhedged,the Fund benefited from the AUD's fall (and remains currency unhedged). Despite the strong absolute performance in May, the relative performance of the Fund against the equity benchmark was impacted by the rotation from defensive stocks to financial and cyclical stocks. Insync's philosophy is to invest in the more predictable growth companies and to include downside protection strategies. That has delivered positive absolute returns during previous market downturns. The Fund's average investment market cap is A$103.4bn and the weighted avg forecast dividend yield is 2.97%. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
14 Jun 2013 - Fund Review:Morphic Global Opportunities Fund
MORPHIC GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review on the Morphic Global Opportunities Fund.
We would like to highlight the following aspects of the Fund:
- The Morphic Global Opportunities Fund is an early stage, boutique, Sydney-based fund established in 2012 with experienced CIO's, and an investment team of 6 including a risk manager.
- The Board has a majority of independent members with significant risk and investment experience.
- The Fund is a global equity long/short manager with a long bias and a macro-economic overlay. The mandate allows the Fund to short sell, use derivatives and invest in assets such as commodities & currencies.
- Portfolio construction is stock selection agnostic with a bias to valuebased and momentum strategies. Risk management is a primary consideration in portfolio construction.
- Morphic's philosophy is that only funds with flexible hedging strategies will be able to deliver acceptable, steady, real, absolute returns over the investment cycle.
Research and Database Manager
Australian Fund Monitors
13 Jun 2013 - Morphic Global Opportunities Fund
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Manager Comments | Taken as a whole, global stocks in local currency terms were volatile, but largely unchanged by month end. The Australian dollar fell 7.7% against the US dollar. The decision to remain unhedged accounted for all the Fund's gains and a little more. The Fund's top thematic contribution came from a tilt to US financial stocks, led by Wells Fargo and a basket of regional banks. A long-short position in Asian gambling stocks also added performance, as did a basket of stocks expected to benefit from a revival in leverage buyouts. Outside these themes, the largest individual gains came from Irish packaging company Smurfit Kappa; US shoe maker Crocs; Korean cable shopping network GS Home Shopping; US health company Herbalife; Pakistan's Lucky Cement; and US hard disk maker Western Digital. From a macroeconomic perspective, the month saw little improvement in underlying data, but increasing fears about how markets would react to any reduction in the rate of US money printing. The Manager expects nervousness and risk aversion to remain high, and since month end has trimmed net exposure and gone substantially underweight emerging markets. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
12 Jun 2013 - Allard Investment Fund
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Manager Comments | At the end of May the Fund was 67.3% invested and in terms of country exposures the largest was HK/China 31.4%, followed by Singapore at 13.0% and Korea at 10.3%. In terms of industry exposures the largest was financials at 13.7% followed by conglomerates at 12.4% and telco's at 8.2%. The top ten holdings accounted for 51.8% of the total portfolio. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
11 Jun 2013 - Fund Review: Optimal Australia Absolute Trust
OPTIMAL AUSTRALIA ABSOLUTE FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review on the Optimal Australia Absolute Fund.
We would like to highlight the following aspects of the Fund:
- Optimal Australia is a specialist Australian equity investment manager established in 2008.
- The Fund's long/short equity strategy portfolio typically has a low but variable net market exposure comprising 40 to 65 stock broadly selected from within the ASX200.
- The investment team comprising George Colman, Peter Whiting and Stephen Nicholls have close to 90 years combined experience in equity markets.
- Consistent out-performance of the market: Approximately 84 % of monthly performances have been positive with a largest drawdown of -1.38%.
Research and Database Manager
Australian Fund Monitors
11 Jun 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 | Major contributors to the Trust's return for the month was driven by a return from both long investments (+0.22% attribution) and shorts (+1.25% attribution). The Australian equity market was very weak in May, finishing down 5.1%. There was a sharp reversal in the pattern of leadership, with the market led down by high-yield defensive and financials, and with the consumer staples and financial sectors both falling by over 9%. A key influence behind this was the decline in the AUD, which fell almost 7% during the month, to USD 0.966. The manager had the view that the AUD 'carry' trade (offshore yield-seeking investment) has worked its way right across the fixed income spectrum and into higher-yield equities. This 'carry' buying, when added to support from retail investors and (largely passive) institutional money flows, meant that way too much money was on this same trade. The result was a number of stocks in the broad yield category trading at valuations that were bewildering (at least to us) on almost any other metric, and the weaker currency in May was the trigger for a decent very decent correction in this group. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
7 Jun 2013 - K2 Asian Absolute Return Fund
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Manager Comments | The Fund's net exposure band has been maintained at 80% to 100%, ending the month at 96%, marginally lower than April. Increasing volatility in recent weeks together with seasonal weakness justifies a wider trading band with respect to the fund's net exposure.With the AUD's substantial fall against the USD total currency gains for the fund were approximately 288bps. Given forward PE valuations remain well below long term averages, the attractiveness of equities remains in place. The longer term question facing the region is how well China responds to the new leadership's shift of growth drivers away from government led stimulus towards a more private sector led economy. |
More Information | » View detailed profile of this fund |
7 Jun 2013 - Hedge Clippings
Last week we suggested that given the outlook for the local currency, Australian investors would be well served by including some offshore exposure to their portfolios as protection against further falls in the A$. With various economists now calling the Aussie down to US$0.80 this may well be the way to go. Certainly there seems to be an exodus of offshore investors from the equity market (where they constitute 47% total value) after the inflows of the past 12 months, which has further undermined the currency and the market.
In any event, local funds which invest offshore benefitted significantly (provided they weren't hedged) from the A$'s fall of over 7% in May, with strong double digit returns from the likes of PM Capital and Magellan amongst others. On the local front returns have been varied as usual depending on the manager, fund or strategy. Some of this week's reported highlights are featured below.
Last Monday we wrote an article for Alan Kohler's Eureka Report entitled "In defence of Hedge Funds" to counter some negative comments on the sector in Ian Verrender's article "The thin edge of the hedge wedge". Ian suggested that after fees investors might find it simpler and cheaper to merely purchase an index fund - in other words, just buy the market.
The thrust of our response was that given the diverse range of underlying assets and strategies which combine to make up the "hedge fund" sector, averages can be both dangerous and misleading, as can results of average returns.
But it did cause us to delve into the returns (after fees) of all funds in our database with a five year track record, and compare them against the market (using the ASX200 accumulation index as the benchmark). For the record, over the five years to the end of May, the market provided investors with an annualised return of 3.07%. Therefore, in one way Ian was correct: 37% of the 145 funds underperformed the market, and 15% underperformed to the extent they provided negative returns.
On the positive side, 63% of funds outperformed the market, and therefore presumably justified their existence up to a point. However given that the markets return of 3.07% is not what we would call acceptable, particularly given the risk and volatility concerned, that might not be saying much.
But 41% of all funds doubled the market's return, and 27 (or 18%) provided their investors with annualised five year returns ranging between 10 and 19%, which by any standard is impressive. The chart showing the spread of returns is below:
It does however emphasise that analysis and understanding of the strategy, manager and fund is essential when discussing hedge funds - as it is when investing in them.
Performance and News Updates on www.fundmonitors.com this week:
BlackRock Global Allocation Fund returned 2.04% in April, in line with its benchmark, and 14.10% over the preceding 12 months. The team continues to believe that equity valuations remain attractive relative to fixed income valuations, though the Manager has become incrementally more cautious over the short-term given increasing stock prices, weaker revenue expectations and uncertainty in Europe.
The Bennelong Long Short Equity Fund had a remarkable May delivering 9.49%, bringing its twelve month performance to 19.89%. The portfolio benefitted from a pleasing month, with both the long and short portfolios contributing positively.
Bennelong Kardinia Absolute Return Fund delivered 0.4% during May. The twelve month return now stands at 18.46%. The Fund's net equity market exposure, including derivatives was reduced to 31.3% (47.5% long and 16.2% short).
The K2 Asian Absolute Return Fund returned 2.38% during April to bring twelve month performance to 33.82%. The Fund's net exposure band has been maintained at 80-100%, ending the month at 96%, marginally lower than April. Increasing volatility in recent weeks, together with seasonal weakness justified a wider trading band of the Fund's net exposure.
And finally, for something completely different, The Swear Jar, probably something every office needs. Ours certainly does!!
On that note, I hope you have a happy and healthy weekend, or in Australia, a long weekend (all except Western Australia who will be celebrating the Queens birthday in September).
Regards,
Chris
CEO, AUSTRALIAN FUND MONITORS
7 Jun 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.
We would like to highlight the following aspects of the Fund:
- 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% .
- Portfolio Manager Richard Fish has over 25 years market experience, while Bennelong Funds Management, who have over $3 billion in FUM across various funds, provide infrastructure, operational and compliance functions.
- The Fund's Investment history commenced in January 2002 and has 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.
- 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
