Tag: Australian Market
Clime Capital Limited (ASX: CAM) is a Listed Investment Company (LIC), which listed on the ASX in February 2004. The portfolio is managed by Clime Asset Management Pty Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Clime Investment Management Limited (ASX: CIW), an ASX-listed asset management company with $1.18b funds under management (FUM) and $5.1b funds under management and advice (FUM&A) as at 30 June 2021.
The Company’s primary objective is to provide an above market yield. In addition to this, the Company seeks to provide higher risk-adjusted returns to the benchmark index (ASX All Ordinaries Accumulation Index) in comparison to its peers. It provides exposure to a portfolio that is divided into three classes: (1) Australian equity exposure; (2) Unlisted fixed income; and (3) Cash.
The portfolio will predominantly provide exposure to an all cap Australian equities portfolio.
The Manager has the ability to keep safe the cash in case the attractive investment opportunities cannot be identified. While there are no mandated limitations, the Manager will typically hold no more than 30% cash at any given time. The portfolio will comprise 35-55 securities. The Manager is paid a management fee of 1.0% per annum of the gross assets of the Company and is eligible for a performance fee of 20% of the outperformance of the ASX All Ordinaries Accumulation Index, subject to performance being positive.
An investment in CAM is suitable for those investors seeking an above market yield and regular income with the Company paying quarterly dividends. The Company will seek to generate the above market yield from a portfolio of all cap domestic equities and a portfolio of fixed income securities.
CAM provides a slightly unique exposure to other LICs with the addition of the unlisted fixed income exposure combined with the all cap domestic equities exposure.
About the company:
Clime Capital Limited (ASX: CAM) is a Listed Investment Company (LIC) with a long history, with the Company listing on the ASX in February 2004. The portfolio is managed by Clime Asset Management Pty Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Clime Investment Management Limited (ASX: CIW), an ASX-listed asset management company with $5.1b funds under management and advice (FUM&A) as at 30 June 2021. The Company’s market cap has grown over seven-fold since listing. Upon listing, the Company had a market cap of $17.64m. The Company has a relatively open-ended mandate and the portfolio composition has changed over time. The portfolio can currently broken down into three sleeves: (1) Australian equity exposure; (2) Unlisted fixed income; and (3) Cash. The portfolio will predominantly be exposed to domestic equities with exposure to stocks of all sizes with a small exposure to unlisted fixed income investments, which provides additional income to the portfolio and satisfies the interest payments for the Convertible Notes.
(Source: IIR, FNArena)
General Advice Warning
Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.
Fund Objective
The fund aims to achieve capital growth equal to, or greater than the Benchmark with lower volatility over the long term by investing globally in listed securities of companies having their registered office or exercising a preponderant part of their economic activities in emerging countries through the underlying fund.
Approach
The strategy’s robust foundation and consistent execution remain attractive features. The rules based, quantitative process is built on academic research demonstrating low-risk stocks leads to better risk adjusted returns. After an initial liquidity filter, Robeco’s quant model ranks the 2,000-stock universe on a multidimensional risk factor (volatility, beta, and distress metrics), combined with value, quality, sentiment, and momentum factors. In recent years, enhancements to refine the model have been added, including short-term momentum-driven signals that can adjust a stock’s ranking up or down by a maximum 10 percentage points. This should prioritise buy decisions for stocks that rank high in the model and score well on short term signals, and vice versa. From 2020 the team also allows liquid mega-caps to have more weight in the portfolio. Top-quintile stocks are typically included in an optimisation algorithm that considers liquidity, market cap, and 10-percentage-point country and sector limits relative to the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. A 200- to 300-stock portfolio is constructed with better ESG and carbon footprints than the index; rebalancing takes place monthly, generating annual turnover of about 25%. Stocks are sold when ranking in the bottom 40% of the model.
Portfolio
The defensive nature of the strategy translates into a higher allocation to low-beta and high-yielding stocks in the utilities, consumer staples and communication services sectors, while consumer discretionary stocks are a large underweight. The valuation factors embedded in the model have steered the fund clear from index heavyweight Meituan, while positions in Alibaba and Tencent were sold in August and September 2021, respectively. The quant approach gives management wide latitude to invest across the market-cap spectrum, and the diversified 200- to 300-stock portfolio has long exhibited a small/mid-cap bias compared with the index. However, the team’s decision to increase the maximum absolute weight in mega-caps to 4% from 3% for liquidity purposes has increased top-10 concentration to around 20%, double the level at inception. Still, 29% of assets remain invested outside of large- and mega- caps, about three times the MSCI Emerging Markets index’ allocation.
Performance
This defensive strategy has generally offered good volatility reduction during turbulent markets, capturing 67.77% of the losses of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index since inception, and 76.89% of the upside return. It did not live up to expectations in the coronavirus-dominated markets of 2020, falling more than the index, explained by market dynamics that did not work in its favour. Exposure to dividend stocks and traditional low-risk stocks did poorly compared to high-growth and momentum stocks; the tilt to mid and small caps also detracted. The portfolio lagged during the subsequent recovery that benefited underweight technology and e-commerce stocks. While the value rally in the final quarter did help, cyclical value stocks that are not favoured rallied the most. Consequently, the fund underperformed the Emerging Markets Minimum Volatility Index by 11 percentage points. Things changed in 2021, benefiting from low risk exposure and value tilt during the correction of Chinese e-commerce stocks following a regulatory crackdown. Taiwanese financials and Indian IT stocks aided returns, helping to recoup lost grounds. The fund’s alpha since inception versus the MSCI EM index remains positive, yet slightly behind the minimum volatility index. Although three- and five-year absolute returns have been below index, Sharpe ratios are broadly similar to index with a lower drawdown since inception.
About the fund
The fund aims to achieve capital growth equal to, or greater than the Benchmark with lower volatility over the long term by investing globally in listed securities of companies having their registered office or exercising a preponderant part of their economic activities in emerging countries through the underlying fund.
The investment strategy of the underlying fund seeks to capture the low risk anomaly. Analysis by Robeco has shown that low-risk stocks (in terms of volatility and beta) are able to generate returns equal to, or greater than, the market with lower associated risks. The beta of a stock or portfolio is a number describing the correlated volatility of an asset in relation to the volatility of the benchmark that the asset is being compared to.
(Source: Morningstar)
General Advice Warning
Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.
Approach
FAIR tracks the Nasdaq Future Australian Sustainable Leaders Index, a benchmark Nasdaq co-developed with BetaShares in 2017. As per the guidelines laid out by the Responsible Investment Committee, Sustainability Leaders are defined as companies generating more than 20% revenue from select sustainable business or having a certain grade (B or better) from sanctioned ethical consumer reports or being a certified B corporation. There is a maximum 10 stocks per sector and a limit of 4% exposure at an individual stock level.
Portfolio
As at 30 November 2021, FAIR has a large-cap-dominated portfolio comprising 86 stocks. Stocks must have a market cap of more than USD 100 million and three-month trading volume of over USD 750,000. The index differs largely from the category index S&P/ASX 200, as there is a significant overweight in healthcare, real estate, technology, and communication services. On the other hand, the portfolio is underweight in financial services and materials with nil exposure to energy stocks.
People
The three-person responsible investment committee may remove index inclusions at any time based solely on qualitative considerations of whether a company still meets ESG considerations. The committee comprises Betashares co-founder David Nathanson and Adam Verwey, a managing director of large investor Future Super.
Performance
In early 2020, the fund dropped significantly owing to the frantic sell-off triggered by the global coronavirus pandemic. Despite this, the fund managed to close on a positive return of 2.23% for the year 2020. The uptrend continued into 2021, and it ended the calendar year with 17.99% returns, closely matching the category.
(Source: Morningstar)
General Advice Warning
Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.
Approach
The investment process is based around searching for stocks that have “future quality.” To achieve the investment objective, the analyst’s undertakes bottom-up fundamental research seeking quality of franchise (competitive advantages), quality of balance sheet (low debt), quality of management (strong stewardship), and quality of future valuation (sustainable but growing cash flow). The first step is developing stock ideas; the analyst’s makes use of third-party research, personal insights, company meetings, site visits, conferences, and input from other Nikko AM investment teams. Ultimately, the investment universe is restricted to companies with market caps above USD 1 billion and daily traded liquidity of more than USD 10 million. The next step is thorough fundamental bottom-up research on the firm’s business model, management and balance sheet. Detailed financial models, based on long-term cash flow forecasting, are built to establish a future quality valuation. The individual portfolio managers summarise the company research in a standard template and present stock ideas formally at a weekly meeting, where open critique is undertaken by the analysts. The investment philosophy is high-conviction, with the analysts adopting a largely index-agnostic strategy, which slightly favours growth and results in an active share of 90%-95%. Ultimately, stock selection plays a key role in the process.
Portfolio
The portfolio construction methodology is disciplined and repeatable, using a proprietary ranking tool to grade stocks in terms of expected alpha and risk. The resulting portfolio contains the analyst’s highest conviction 40-50 stock ideas. The investment process typically leads the team to construct a portfolio with a higher weighting in defensive sectors, including healthcare and consumer staples, and typically a lower weighting in cyclicals, namely, consumer discretionary and financials. However, these allocations depend on stock opportunities and economic conditions. At 31 Oct 2021, the portfolio had an active underweighting in defensive sectors, with healthcare heavily favoured and an active overweighting in cyclical sectors, with industrials and consumer discretionary stocks favoured. Regional allocation typically tends to be similar to the index. However, at 31 Oct 2021, the portfolio was only overweight in two regions: the United States and Hong Kong/Singapore. A comprehensive risk-management process is implemented to ensure no unintended sector, geographic, or commodity risk is included in the portfolio. The portfolio is also monitored from an environmental, social, and governance risk perspective. Risk-management guidelines include that no more than 10% of net assets may be invested in any one stock.
People
The investment team includes five highly experienced portfolio managers (William Low, James Kinghorn, Iain Fulton, Greig Bryson, and Johnny Russell) who operate as global generalists but with sector-specific responsibilities. In addition, two portfolio analysts, who mainly undertake thematic or project research joined the team in 2019. Low leads the team; he joined Nikko AM in mid-2014 as a portfolio manager with overall responsibility for the global-equity team (the team moved across from Scottish Widows Investment Partnership where they previous managed global equity strategies together). He has more than 30 years’ experience in the investment/finance industry, previously working for BlackRock and Dunedin Fund Managers as a portfolio manager and investment manager. Kinghorn and the other team members joined Nikko AM in mid-2014; Kinghorn had been at SWIP since 2011. Fulton joined after previously working at SWIP as head of research since 2005. Bryson joined after working at SWIP since 2007. Russell joined Nikko AM after working at SWIP since 2002. The team has access to the extensive global resources of Nikko AM, which boasts more than 100 portfolio managers and 50 analysts.
Performance
In mid-2015, the existing Nikko AM global-equity fund was restructured from a multimanager approach to its current structure of direct investment in stocks in the MSCI ACWI, under the guidance of the incumbent five portfolio managers. This team arrived at Nikko AM in 2014, having previously worked at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership. Since the strategy and personnel changes, this fund has outperformed its Morningstar Category index (MSCI World Ex Australia NR Index) and most peers in the five years to 30 Nov 2021, on a trailing returns basis. Individual calendar-year results have been strong from 2015 through 2020, with standout 2018 and 2020 years, and 2016 the lone blot against the team. In 2017, outperformance was relatively slender,
and positive contributors included Sony and Tencent. The strategy had a stronger 2018 with positive attribution from LivaNova. Returns were again solid against the index and peers during 2019, with Chinese sporting goods company Li Ning Company and US software giant Microsoft among the top contributors. Both the index and peers were thumped in 2020 by the team, which managed a softer drawdown during the first-quarter correction and adding alpha each of the remaining quarters. In the 11 months to 30 Nov 2021, the strategy have struggled, as style headwinds had an impact on performance, despite solid attribution from SVB Financial Group and Bio-Techne Corporation.
About Fund:
Nikko AM Global Share is a strategy with sturdy foundations, thanks to its highly experienced team of portfolio managers and well-structured investment process. The Edinburgh-based investment team functions in a very cooperative, transparent, and mutually respectful manner, adopting a flat operating structure, with individual portfolio managers having specific sector responsibility on a global basis. The resulting portfolio of typically around 40-50 stocks is slightly growth-orientated and high conviction, with around 35% of FUM in the top 10 stocks. The strategy benchmarks to the MSCI All Country World Index, giving it rein to venture into emerging markets, but this allocation is rarely more than 10% of assets.
(Source: Morningstar)
General Advice Warning
Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.
Approach
The investment process is based around searching for stocks that have “future quality.” To achieve the investment objective, the analyst’s undertakes bottom-up fundamental research seeking quality of franchise (competitive advantages), quality of balance sheet (low debt), quality of management (strong stewardship), and quality of future valuation (sustainable but growing cash flow). The first step is developing stock ideas; the analyst’s makes use of third-party research, personal insights, company meetings, site visits, conferences, and input from other Nikko AM investment teams. Ultimately, the investment universe is restricted to companies with market caps above USD 1 billion and daily traded liquidity of more than USD 10 million. The next step is thorough fundamental bottom-up research on the firm’s business model, management and balance sheet. Detailed financial models, based on long-term cash flow forecasting, are built to establish a future quality valuation. The individual portfolio managers summarise the company research in a standard template and present stock ideas formally at a weekly meeting, where open critique is undertaken by the analysts. The investment philosophy is high-conviction, with the analysts adopting a largely index-agnostic strategy, which slightly favours growth and results in an active share of 90%-95%. Ultimately, stock selection plays a key role in the process.
Portfolio
The portfolio construction methodology is disciplined and repeatable, using a proprietary ranking tool to grade stocks in terms of expected alpha and risk. The resulting portfolio contains the analyst’s highest conviction 40-50 stock ideas. The investment process typically leads the team to construct a portfolio with a higher weighting in defensive sectors, including healthcare and consumer staples, and typically a lower weighting in cyclicals, namely, consumer discretionary and financials. However, these allocations depend on stock opportunities and economic conditions. At 31 Oct 2021, the portfolio had an active underweighting in defensive sectors, with healthcare heavily favoured and an active overweighting in cyclical sectors, with industrials and consumer discretionary stocks favoured. Regional allocation typically tends to be similar to the index. However, at 31 Oct 2021, the portfolio was only overweight in two regions: the United States and Hong Kong/Singapore. A comprehensive risk-management process is implemented to ensure no unintended sector, geographic, or commodity risk is included in the portfolio. The portfolio is also monitored from an environmental, social, and governance risk perspective. Risk-management guidelines include that no more than 10% of net assets may be invested in any one stock.
People
The investment team includes five highly experienced portfolio managers (William Low, James Kinghorn, Iain Fulton, Greig Bryson, and Johnny Russell) who operate as global generalists but with sector-specific responsibilities. In addition, two portfolio analysts, who mainly undertake thematic or project research joined the team in 2019. Low leads the team; he joined Nikko AM in mid-2014 as a portfolio manager with overall responsibility for the global-equity team (the team moved across from Scottish Widows Investment Partnership where they previous managed global equity strategies together). He has more than 30 years’ experience in the investment/finance industry, previously working for BlackRock and Dunedin Fund Managers as a portfolio manager and investment manager. Kinghorn and the other team members joined Nikko AM in mid-2014; Kinghorn had been at SWIP since 2011. Fulton joined after previously working at SWIP as head of research since 2005. Bryson joined after working at SWIP since 2007. Russell joined Nikko AM after working at SWIP since 2002. The team has access to the extensive global resources of Nikko AM, which boasts more than 100 portfolio managers and 50 analysts.
Performance
In mid-2015, the existing Nikko AM global-equity fund was restructured from a multimanager approach to its current structure of direct investment in stocks in the MSCI ACWI, under the guidance of the incumbent five portfolio managers. This team arrived at Nikko AM in 2014, having previously worked at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership. Since the strategy and personnel changes, this fund has outperformed its Morningstar Category index (MSCI World Ex Australia NR Index) and most peers in the five years to 30 Nov 2021, on a trailing returns basis. Individual calendar-year results have been strong from 2015 through 2020, with standout 2018 and 2020 years, and 2016 the lone blot against the team. In 2017, outperformance was relatively slender,
and positive contributors included Sony and Tencent. The strategy had a stronger 2018 with positive attribution from LivaNova. Returns were again solid against the index and peers during 2019, with Chinese sporting goods company Li Ning Company and US software giant Microsoft among the top contributors. Both the index and peers were thumped in 2020 by the team, which managed a softer drawdown during the first-quarter correction and adding alpha each of the remaining quarters. In the 11 months to 30 Nov 2021, the strategy have struggled, as style headwinds had an impact on performance, despite solid attribution from SVB Financial Group and Bio-Techne Corporation.
About Fund:
Nikko AM Global Share is a strategy with sturdy foundations, thanks to its highly experienced team of portfolio managers and well-structured investment process. The Edinburgh-based investment team functions in a very cooperative, transparent, and mutually respectful manner, adopting a flat operating structure, with individual portfolio managers having specific sector responsibility on a global basis. The resulting portfolio of typically around 40-50 stocks is slightly growth-orientated and high conviction, with around 35% of FUM in the top 10 stocks. The strategy benchmarks to the MSCI All Country World Index, giving it rein to venture into emerging markets, but this allocation is rarely more than 10% of assets.
(Source: Morningstar)
General Advice Warning
Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.
Process:
AMP Capital Corporate Bond provides exposure to a wide range of credit securities within Australian, global, investment-grade, corporate bond, and high yield. The benchmark changed from the Bloomberg AusBond Credit 0+Yr Index to the Bloomberg AusBond Bank Bill Index in February 2016, reflecting the fund’s capital preservation and income emphasis since 2012. Monthly distributions are announced and reviewed biannually, which helps income-focused investors manage their expectations. Credit analysis is done on two accounts; first, a quantitative and qualitative assessment of the broader industry sector, and second, issuerand security-specific analysis.
The analysis is conducted in line with a “score card” methodology that incorporates fundamentals, technicals, and valuations. The primary weighting is to the valuation and fundamental factors as the team believes this is the primary determinant of a positive outcome for investors over the longer term. The duration view is led by the macro team and is established through a similar score card system, which again considers fundamental, sentiment, and technical factors, with the analyst view of valuation playing a key part. The credit strategy panel, comprising senior investment staff, set the overall credit strategy, risk budget, and sector allocations. However, the ultimate duration and credit exposures are determined by comanagers Sonia Baillie and Nathan Boon.
Portfolio:
The vehicle chiefly comprises Australian credit, though it does hold around 5% each in US and UK names. The strategy can hold up to 10% in high yield and 15% in unrated bonds but is usually well below these limits. The portfolio is largely BBB and A rated corporate bonds, with the BBB names providing a slightly larger proportion of the fund’s asset value at nearly 44% to October 2021. Following the coronavirus-driven dislocation, the team took opportunistic exposures in long duration REITs and industrials, some of which have seen partial profit taking with significant spread tightening throughout 2021. 2019 saw the fund rotate back into corporate bonds following the late-2018 sell-off.
The team believes credit fundamentals are improving and technicals supportive, but valuations indicate little expectation of further spread compression. It wants to maintain income by holding credit, albeit at a reducing amount to late-2021, also using credit derivatives to insulate from wider spreads. The fund’s duration limits were adjusted from plus or minus 1.5 years versus the old credit benchmark, to absolute terms of zero to 4.5 years in October 2014. The fund has been positioned within a duration range of 0.2-0.8 years since the start of 2017 (0.6 years in October 2021), meaning the sensitivity to rising interest rates is low. FUM has steadily declined over the past few years and currently sits at AUD 855 million as of October 2021.
People:
Sonia Baillie (head of credit) has led this portfolio since October 2017, joined by Nathan Boon (head of credit portfolio management) in March 2018. This group, however, is currently transitioning into the Macquarie fixed-income team as part of AMP Capital’s sale to that organisation; completion is expected by mid-2022, creating some uncertainty. The duo gets significant input from head of macro Ilan Dekell, and a team of analysts spread between Sydney and Chicago. Head of credit research Steven Hur was previously a key member until he left the group in December 2021. The fixed-income team is headed by Grant Hassell, who has more than 30 years of experience, though he is the sole member of this quartet not joining the Macquarie investment team in the same capacity.
Hassell contributes to overall discussions through team meetings and investment committees, acting as the sounding board for the various heads to bring ideas together into a portfolio. While there has been staff turnover among the credit analyst and credit portfolio managers–former managers Jeff Brunton and David Carruthers left in 2014 and 2016, respectively–most key staffers have long tenure. For example, while Baillie was appointed portfolio manager only in 2017, she has been with the team since 2010, has held other senior roles, and worked in the firm’s Asian fixed-income business. Furthermore, AMP Capital has taken steps to improve staff incentives and address staff turnover.
Performance:
Over the long run, this fund has outdone the Bloomberg AusBond Bank Bill Index and the average credit fund. That’s not necessarily compelling, given the fund has been running substantially more credit and/or duration risk than those yardsticks. Since AMP Capital slashed the fund’s duration, rival credit funds are a more reasonable benchmark looking ahead; the fund’s historically high duration means we also compare the fund’s history against the Bloomberg AusBond Credit Index, where this strategy has underperformed. The fund’s track record has benefited from higher-than-average credit risk, as well as significant interest-rate risk, that has paid off as rates declined to historically low levels. returns, yet three- and five-year returns fail to beat the average category peer. Given declining global interest rates, the fund reduced its distribution in mid-2017 to 0.275% per month, and then 0.25% per month at the beginning of 2018. This continued through 2021 when distributions dropped to 0.175% by year-end, the shop expects it to remain at these compressed levels, barring unforeseen circumstances. The rate peaked at 0.55% per month in 2012, highlighting that while these distribution indications can be helpful in the short run, they should not be relied on for long-term income expectations.
About Funds:
Though a new home will bring positives to AMP Capital Corporate Bond, it also introduces uncertainties for this diversified credit strategy. AMP Capital’s Global Equities and Fixed Interest business is in the midst of a sale to Macquarie Asset Management, which is expected to complete by mid-2022. Head of global fixed income Grant Hassell is leading the integration. The strategy has benchmarked to the Bloomberg Ausbond Bank Bill Index since early-2016, reflecting the income goals with capital stability. This move followed a history of changes, which under Macquarie’s guidance going forward could see further revisions in approach.
(Source: Morningstar)
General Advice Warning
Any advice/ information provided is general in nature only and does not take into account the personal financial situation, objectives or needs of any particular person.