NEWS

9 Jun 2023 - Quay podcast: The surprising trends emerging in real estate
Quay podcast: The surprising trends emerging in real estate Quay Global Investors May 2023 Chris Bedingfield speaks with Bennelong Account Director, Mai Platts, about the latest results from reporting season, Quay's current portfolio positioning, the opportunities in residential and self-storage, and the ongoing impact of inflation and bank failures. "Interestingly, based on the latest set of results, and remember the banking crisis started to occur in March, our companies by and large were still able to access the debt markets, and they've still been able to access credit through their banking relationships. We haven't seen any real major disruption yet in terms of what our companies are able to do."
Funds operated by this manager: Quay Global Real Estate Fund (AUD Hedged), Quay Global Real Estate Fund (Unhedged) For more insights from Quay Global Investors, visit quaygi.com The content contained in this audio represents the opinions of the speakers. The speakers may hold either long or short positions in securities of various companies discussed in the audio. This commentary in no way constitutes a solicitation of business or investment advice. It is intended solely as an avenue for the speakers to express their personal views on investing and for the entertainment of the listener. |

8 Jun 2023 - Don't Worry About Beating the Market
Don't Worry About Beating the Market Marcus Today May 2023 |
Individual investors can march to the beat of their own drum, giving them a significant advantage over professionals.It is a simple question and goes to the heart of any investor's journey. My answer is, do you want to beat the market? The benchmark indices were set up so you can measure your performance against a bunch of stocks and compare your performance with your peers. So who are your peers, and does beating them really matter? Fund managers love benchmarks, as it gives them the best marketing tool: beat the index, and you get to market the heck out of your fund. It is what the benchmarks were designed for. You get your own wiggly line of performance above the market wiggly line, and off to market you go. It is not rocket science. Magellan was brilliant at it. Here's my opinion on beating the market: it's rubbish. What is the point in outperforming the market if the market is going down? Your aim is not to beat the market, but to deliver an absolute performance. Your mission, if you choose to accept it, is not to beat the market but to make money. The idea is to create wealth, not lose less money than the index. The index, after all, does not always go up. When you are retired, try paying your bills and living life with the 'outperformance'. If the index has been going down for the last five years, and your portfolio hasn't gone down as much…well, good luck. Forget beating the benchmark. That may not get you there if the market is rubbish. Of course, the investment boffins will tell you that the index always goes up over time. You just have to pick that time! Instead of trying to beat the benchmark, you would be much better served by setting a target that your investment pie needs to reach over time, to allow you to enjoy the lifestyle (hate that word) that you desire. Absolute returns should be your goal. Benchmark returns are for funds that want to market their genius. Your goal should be that self-imposed target of growing your pie. One thing I know for sure is that investing is tough. There are no easy answers. Professional (?) fund managers find it tough. They have huge resources and a massive advantage over retail investors, and yet, they still fail. I sometimes find it worrying that so much effort has gone into so little improvement over an index ETF - especially if the benchmark is your thing. It will not guarantee that lifestyle you desire though. There are no guarantees with investing. Past performance is not indicative of future results. You only have to look at many fund managers' performance to see that - even Cathie Wood has the odd bad year. For retail investors, what you do have is flexibility and choice. Big funds cannot move that quickly. They think that a 5% cash holding is being defensive, but you could go to 100% cash. You do not move markets when you buy and sell. Stealth. It means that you have that flexibility. Use it. But use it wisely, as with any great power comes great responsibility. Tax is one issue and selling winners rather than losers is another. Want to Gain an Edge?How do you gain an edge to make absolute returns? The simple answer to gaining an edge is to use inside trading. Isn't that illegal? Of course, it is. And we do not want to go to the 'big house'. But when I talk inside trading, my definition is different. Inside trading, in my eyes, is using every piece of available information to try to gain an advantage. We all try to game an advantage after all. But how? Insider Trading means watching what directors are doing in their stocks. It means watching what the funds are doing. It means opening your eyes when you are walking around. Trying to derive clues as to the investment picture from everyday experiences. Read as much stuff as you can. Try to connect the dots. Use every weapon in your investment arsenal. Do not just rely on Technical Analysis alone. Don't rely on Fundamental Analysis completely. Do not swallow broker research whole. Being strapped to one method of investing limits you. Take a holistic approach. Look at what is happening around you. What products do you use and what do others use? The Franking EdgeWhen you look at the Australian market it is dominated by big resources and banks, big opportunities abound every day. We are also blessed with dividend imputation which makes us fairly unique in the world. As we approach the banking sector results and those fat franked dividends, use that to build wealth. Asset allocation and portfolio construction make a huge difference. Timing the market is tough. Sometimes being too cute is sub optimal. If you do not have the time or the inclination, and index performance is good enough for you, an Index ETF is the way to go. A200 or IOZ have the lowest fees. But if you really want to build wealth, then absolute performance should be your goal. Treat it like a job. Get serious about it. Making money requires effort. Making anything requires effort. Buying a charting program and having it spit out stocks to buy or sell is not the best solution. You need to embrace all the tools you can. Here at Marcus Today, we know of one member that has turned $150,000 into $50m in the space of a few years. All his own doing. Try doing that in an Index fund. That beats an ETF. How did he do it? Lots of research and belief in the project. Bit of luck too, no doubt. Always helps. But the more work you put in the luckier you will become. Author: Henry Jennings, Senior Market Analyst |
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7 Jun 2023 - Why I think tech and small caps could rally this year
Why I think tech and small caps could rally this year Montgomery Investment Management May 2023 With inflation finally coming down, it looks like the U.S. Fed Reserve could soon stop lifting interest rates and start cutting, possibly as early as this year. That's great news for equity markets, which tend to rally when rates are lower. And it's particularly good news for technology stocks and small caps. U.S. interest rate markets currently reflect investor expectations for a rate cut by the Federal Reserve before the end of the year, and more than three rate cuts by the end of January 2024. That's just seven months away! Clearly, the market is rather bearish about the prospects for the American economy, but earnings season doesn't appear to lend any credence to predictions of an economic collapse. With earnings season now well underway, only a third of companies have yet to report. Of the two-thirds that have reported, earnings growth has come in at negative three per cent year-on-year, according to JP Morgan. The result, thus far, is significantly better than the negative nine to twelve per cent hitherto anticipated, and suggests some reappraisal of rate expectations might be necessary. Last week we saw the U.S. indices rally after a stronger than expected jobs report. In the not too distant past, news of strong jobs would be met negatively amid expectations of consequent rate hikes. Now, it seems, equity investors are enthused by strong jobs that a recession is less likely. Last Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman, Jerome Powell, reminded those investors expecting early rate cuts that the labour market remains robust if not hot. He also submitted the prediction that there will not be a recession in calendar 2023. Judging from the current reported results from corporate America, it certainly seems the Fed Chair is right. The Bloomberg chart in Figure 1. reveals current consensus rate expectations and confirms the noted expectations of at least three cuts before the end of January next year. The magnitude of the divergence between Powell's comments and the market's expectations is unusual. Figure 1. U.S. Rate cut expectations Source: Bloomberg So, what needs to happen for the market to be right? While anything is possible (another pandemic perhaps?), it seems the requirements will be difficult to achieve before the end of January 2024. For example, inflation would need to fall to the Fed's target of circa two per cent relatively quickly. That's not out of the realms of possibility as the annualised rate of U.S. CPI over the past six months is just 3.6 per cent. Incidentally, we have frequently reminded investors that deflation is very good for innovative growth stocks. The fall to 3.6 per cent annualised consumer price index (CPI) is very positive for equities and explains the 20 per cent jump in the Nasdaq since January 1st, this year. But the path from 3.6 per cent to two per cent is not guaranteed. The strong jobs market and strong earnings from corporate U.S. suggest there will be bumps and delays to the Fed reaching its target. And presumably, even if the Fed's target of two per cent inflation is achieved, it won't immediately start cutting rates unless that CPI print is associated with weakness in the economy, in corporate profits and consequently, the jobs market. So, the next question might be, could the labour market weaken from here? Layoff data has now risen to its highest level in two years. (From 2019 onwards we began warning investors that when the spigot of Private Equity and Venture Capital money dried up, layoffs would be seen in the "profitless prosperity" sub-sector of the tech industry - the sub-sector NYU Professor Scott Galloway referred to in 2019 as suffering from "Consensual Hallucination". See the article How soon till we see the collapse of profitless prosperity¹ and From Private Equity to Zombie - The ABC of Capitalism.² So, can the labour market weaken quickly enough to justify multiple rate-cut expectations by January 2024? While the media is now breathlessly reporting the not-so-widely-anticipated layoffs in profitless technology businesses, there would have to be a much broader and more dramatic increase in unemployment to produce the necessary weakness that would validate significant rate cuts. The final question then, can the U.S. tip into a deep recession this year if the jobless rate doesn't accelerate quickly and inflation doesn't drop to said target of two per cent? First, it is worth keeping in mind that some experts believe that current two per cent real rates are not as "restrictive" as the Fed chairman has asserted. If they are accommodative, then the economy might just side-step a recession altogether. The tumult in the banking sector may be a precursor to some credit tightening, and perhaps that is the source of economic weakness, but there are lags associated with such transmission mechanisms, not least because regulators will do everything in their power to avoid it. And let's not forget that the inverted yield curve means long bond rates are accommodative and therefore supportive of investment. If the market's investors have the rate cut scenario wrong, it could mean their predictions of a recession are also wrong. In the event, investors conclude the economy is growing and disinflation remains in place, equities will continue to rally and potentially strongly. Further gains in the Nasdaq and perhaps even small companies would not surprise remembering, since the 1970s, the combination of disinflation and economic growth has been very good for innovative and growth stocks. Author: Roger Montgomery Funds operated by this manager: Montgomery (Private) Fund, Montgomery Small Companies Fund, The Montgomery Fund ¹ https://rogermontgomery.com/how-soon-till-we-see-the-collapse-of-profitless-prosperity/ ² https://rogermontgomery.com/from-private-equity-to-zombie-the-abc-of-capitalism/ |

6 Jun 2023 - ESG Policy: The real-world impacts
ESG Policy: The real-world impacts Magellan Asset Management May 2023 |
Elisa Di Marco, Portfolio Manager - MFG Core International and Core ESG Fund, discusses ESG-linked government policies, the real-world impacts of these policies and the importance of proxy voting |
Funds operated by this manager: Magellan Global Fund (Hedged), Magellan Global Fund (Open Class Units) ASX:MGOC, Magellan High Conviction Fund, Magellan Infrastructure Fund, Magellan Infrastructure Fund (Unhedged), MFG Core Infrastructure Fund Important Information: This material has been delivered to you by Magellan Asset Management Limited ABN 31 120 593 946 AFS Licence No. 304 301 ('Magellan') and has been prepared for general information purposes only and must not be construed as investment advice or as an investment recommendation. This material does not take into account your investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs. This material does not constitute an offer or inducement to engage in an investment activity nor does it form part of any offer documentation, offer or invitation to purchase, sell or subscribe for interests in any type of investment product or service. You should read and consider any relevant offer documentation applicable to any investment product or service and consider obtaining professional investment advice tailored to your specific circumstances before making any investment decision. A copy of the relevant PDS relating to a Magellan financial product or service may be obtained by calling +61 2 9235 4888 or by visiting www.magellangroup.com.au. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results and no person guarantees the future performance of any strategy, the amount or timing of any return from it, that asset allocations will be met, that it will be able to be implemented and its investment strategy or that its investment objectives will be achieved. This material may contain 'forward-looking statements'. Actual events or results or the actual performance of a Magellan financial product or service may differ materially from those reflected or contemplated in such forward-looking statements. This material may include data, research and other information from third party sources. Magellan makes no guarantee that such information is accurate, complete or timely and does not provide any warranties regarding results obtained from its use. This information is subject to change at any time and no person has any responsibility to update any of the information provided in this material. Statements contained in this material that are not historical facts are based on current expectations, estimates, projections, opinions and beliefs of Magellan. Such statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, and undue reliance should not be placed thereon. Any trademarks, logos, and service marks contained herein may be the registered and unregistered trademarks of their respective owners. This material and the information contained within it may not be reproduced, or disclosed, in whole or in part, without the prior written consent of Magellan. |

5 Jun 2023 - Meta Platforms - AI Winner
Meta Platforms - AI Winner Insync Fund Managers May 2023 Excluding China (where US social media companies are generally excluded) Meta Platforms Family of Apps are used monthly by a staggering 90% of the world's connected population. Meta has a long history of investing into AI. For years, Meta has employed a world-class AI research team that has been publishing industry-changing research. Even though we can't see it, Meta has, for years, used AI to recommend posts in our feeds, moderate content, and target ads behind the scenes in Instagram and Facebook. Source: Netbasesquid.com Meta is currently incorporating AI more visibly into his company's products. They are deploying AI technologies to assist advertisers optimise their spend across different mediums with the company saying it's improved its "monetization efficiency," or how much the company makes off of ads they sell on Reels, by 30-40 percent on Instagram and Facebook. Insync significantly increased the Fund's exposure to Meta when shares were trading below US$100 in November 2022, as investors were fretting over how much the company was spending on the Metaverse. What was not appreciated was that 80% of their investments was spent on their core business including AI. Meta shares are today trading in excess of US$200. Meta Platforms has 80% gross margin, over 19% net margins (which includes an expense/deduction of R&D spend of $35.4bn), and returns on invested capital in excess of 25%. It is an extremely profitable business which is in a strong position to benefit from the exponential deployment of artificial intelligence Funds operated by this manager: Insync Global Capital Aware Fund, Insync Global Quality Equity Fund Disclaimer |

2 Jun 2023 - Hedge Clippings | 02 June 2023
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Hedge Clippings | 02 June 2023 Phillip Lowe had a subtle shot at politicians this week, and Treasurer Jim Chalmers in particular, when fronting a Senate Estimates hearing in Canberra, asking the Senators to consider whether fighting inflation should only be left to the RBA? "In a perfect world, you'd have a different set of arrangements," Lowe proposed. "The other way you could reduce aggregate demand at the moment is to increase taxes or reduce government spending." Of course that might involve some of the senators in question losing their jobs, which they'd rather not do. He could also have added something about the government not supporting wage rises, but sensibly kept away from that, even going so far as saying he didn't think the budget was adding to inflation, but actually reducing it. It's still unknown if Lowe will keep his job when his term (or time) is up in September, and Chalmers has given no hint of support, suggesting that he won't. Whether he does or not is unlikely to change his successor's focus on inflation, and therefore the upward direction of interest rates, even though Lowe's claims that the 11 rate rises over the past year are working. The Fair Work Commission's 5.75% increase in minimum wages awarded to 2.6 million workers, and 8.6% for 180,000 on the lowest rate, won't be helping when the RBA announces the outcome of next Tuesday's board meeting. As a result, a bevy of bank economists are forecasting a further 0.25% rise, with some now suggesting that a peak of 4.6% - or three more increases - is not out of the question. Not only are interest rates a blunt instrument with which to manage inflation, their effect on the economy is a lagging one. As a consequence, when the results show up in the statistics the RBA use in their monthly determinations, the tipping point in the economy has already occurred. Hence rates inevitably rise (and fall) too far. For many people - those under mortgage or rental stress, or minimum wages - that tipping point has already occurred, so if a cash rate of 4.6% is on the cards there'll be some serious pain, and certainly Lowe's increases will have worked. Even if he's not going to be there to take the credit - or the blame - when or if inflation returns to the 2-3% target, and rates gradually follow suit. On Tuesday afternoon next week at 4.15 we are holding the next in our series of Fund Manager Round Table Webinars, this time focusing on the Hybrid Credit sector. Register here to join Ben Harrison from Altor Capital, Nick Thomson from AquAsia Funds Management, and Patrick William from Rixon Capital for their take on the opportunities and risks for the sector. |
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News & Insights Market Update April | Australian Secure Capital Fund The golden opportunities for infrastructure in a challenging environment | 4D Infrastructure April 2023 Performance News Insync Global Capital Aware Fund |
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2 Jun 2023 - Performance Report: Equitable Investors Dragonfly Fund
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2 Jun 2023 - Performance Report: PURE Resources Fund
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2 Jun 2023 - Are we still catching cold when America sneezes?
Are we still catching cold when America sneezes? Pendal May 2023 |
Investors concerned about the banking crisis and recession fears in the US may be missing out on finding investment opportunities in other parts of the world, says Clive Beagles. MARKETS are watching the US closely as its banking system reels from the impact of higher interest rates on regional bank bond portfolios. Three US banks have been shuttered during the rolling crisis and regional bank shares have been volatile as markets weigh up the prospect of further failures. But the crisis has also swept up banks and markets outside the US, which may offer opportunities for investors who can keep calm amid the noise. Last week Pendal's Samir Mehta argued that the US regional bank turmoil shouldn't discourage investors from considering Asian bank stocks. Clive Beagles, a senior fund manager at Pendal's UK-based asset manager affiliate J O Hambro, has similar things to say about British bank stocks. "Many of the UK banks are posting returns on equity of close to 20 per cent in the first quarter," says Beagles. "But they all trade at a discount to book value -- some of them at 0.4 or 0.5. That includes big names like Natwest and Lloyds. "Discounts to book value for that kind of return on equity just look silly." Beagles says the US market is acting like a "rotating firing squad" that seems to be picking a different name every other day to sell off. But he believes the banks that are failing in the US are smaller players which are not globally significant. "The differential between how the US has been regulating their banks and how the UK and Europe are regulating banks is becoming ever clearer -- which is frustrating because they have been dragged down a bit by the noise. Is everyone else still catching cold when America sneezes? Beagles says the underlying concern many investors have is of a global recession triggered by a downturn in the US. "There's an old assumption that when the US sneezes everyone else catches a cold. But I do slightly wonder if it's going be different this time. "If this is a crisis, it's the first one we've had where the US dollar is going down rather than up. "Normally, you head to the dollar for safe haven status." Beagles believes the US dollar weakness indicates something different is going on from the usual global contagion. It could point to a period where the US is one of the slower-growing economies in the developed world rather than its traditional role as one of the fastest. "The banks are just a microcosm of that -- they will need more capital and need to be more tightly regulated in a slower US." Beagles also cautions against comparisons to previous banking crises. "In 2008, UK banks had tier-one capital ratios of 4 per cent. Today they have tier-one ratios of 14 per cent." Tier-one capital refers to bank's most reliable and highest-quality capital. A higher tier-one capital ratio generally suggests a bank is better equipped to absorb losses and maintain its financial stability. "In 2008, there were something like £400 billion more loans than there were deposits -- today it's the other way around. "The UK as an economy is under-geared rather than over-geared." Author: Clive Beagles, Senior Fund Manager |
Funds operated by this manager: Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund, Pendal Global Select Fund - Class R, Pendal Horizon Sustainable Australian Share Fund, Pendal MicroCap Opportunities Fund, Pendal Sustainable Australian Fixed Interest Fund - Class R, Regnan Global Equity Impact Solutions Fund - Class R, Regnan Credit Impact Trust Fund |
This information has been prepared by Pendal Fund Services Limited (PFSL) ABN 13 161 249 332, AFSL No 431426 and is current as at December 8, 2021. PFSL is the responsible entity and issuer of units in the Pendal Multi-Asset Target Return Fund (Fund) ARSN: 623 987 968. A product disclosure statement (PDS) is available for the Fund and can be obtained by calling 1300 346 821 or visiting www.pendalgroup.com. The Target Market Determination (TMD) for the Fund is available at www.pendalgroup.com/ddo. You should obtain and consider the PDS and the TMD before deciding whether to acquire, continue to hold or dispose of units in the Fund. An investment in the Fund or any of the funds referred to in this web page is subject to investment risk, including possible delays in repayment of withdrawal proceeds and loss of income and principal invested. This information is for general purposes only, should not be considered as a comprehensive statement on any matter and should not be relied upon as such. It has been prepared without taking into account any recipient's personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Because of this, recipients should, before acting on this information, consider its appropriateness having regard to their individual objectives, financial situation and needs. This information is not to be regarded as a securities recommendation. The information may contain material provided by third parties, is given in good faith and has been derived from sources believed to be accurate as at its issue date. While such material is published with necessary permission, and while all reasonable care has been taken to ensure that the information is complete and correct, to the maximum extent permitted by law neither PFSL nor any company in the Pendal group accepts any responsibility or liability for the accuracy or completeness of this information. Performance figures are calculated in accordance with the Financial Services Council (FSC) standards. Performance data (post-fee) assumes reinvestment of distributions and is calculated using exit prices, net of management costs. Performance data (pre-fee) is calculated by adding back management costs to the post-fee performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Any projections are predictive only and should not be relied upon when making an investment decision or recommendation. Whilst we have used every effort to ensure that the assumptions on which the projections are based are reasonable, the projections may be based on incorrect assumptions or may not take into account known or unknown risks and uncertainties. The actual results may differ materially from these projections. For more information, please call Customer Relations on 1300 346 821 8am to 6pm (Sydney time) or visit our website www.pendalgroup.com |

1 Jun 2023 - Performance Report: Insync Global Quality Equity Fund
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