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Commodities Trading Ideas & Charts

Newcrest focus on cost efficiency, capital discipline and optimisation

Business Strategy and Outlook

Newcrest accounts for less than 3% of global mine production and is a price taker. Returns have improved post the expensive acquisition of Lihir, but are likely to remain below the company’s cost of capital for the foreseeable future.

Operations are focused on the Asia-Pacific region, with production split roughly evenly between Australia and Papua New Guinea, or PNG, with a smaller contribution from the Americas. The company is a long-established low-cost producer, save a cost spike in 2013, which subsequently abated.

Current management was installed in 2014 and brought a focus on cost efficiency, capital discipline and optimisation. Under Sandeep Biswas,Newcrest has been a much more reliable producer and has delivered incremental improvements at its operations, boosting throughput and lowering unit costs, particularly at Lihir and Cadia. Newcrest has a solid exploration record. Excluding acquired Lihir ounces, gold equivalent reserves increased from 3.4 million ounces in 1992 to 78 million ounces in December 2017, while resources increased from 8.5 million ounces to 144 million ounces. Gold equivalent resources were added at less than AUD 20 per ounce. Reserves at the end of 2020 were 49 million ounces of gold and 6.8 million metric tons of copper.

Financial Strength 

The company’s balance sheet is sound. The company ended June 2021 with modest net cash of USD 0.2 billion. We expect net debt to grow to end fiscal 2022 to about USD 1.5 billion with the acquisition of Pretium Resources and elevated capital expenditure at Cadia, Lihir and with the development of Havieron and Red Chris. However, despite the increase, we think the balance sheet is still sound. We forecast debt/EBITDA to peak slightly to around 0.7 in fiscal 2022 before declining gradually through the remainder of our forecast period.Newcrest has long-dated corporate bonds totaling USD 1.65 billion. The bonds mature in fiscal 2030, 2042, and 2050 with maturities of USD 650 million, USD 500 million, and USD 500 million, respectively. At the end of fiscal 2021, the company had USD 1.8 billion of cash and USD 1.6 billion of undrawn debt.

Bulls Say 

  • Gold companies can behave countercyclically. They provide a hedge to inflation risk and tend to offer some benefit in times of market uncertainty. Gold can gain from continued money printing and/or if there is a flight to safety. 
  • Newcrest’s reserves are massive and mine life is long, offering leverage to upwards movements in the gold price. 
  • Newcrest owns several world-scale deposits in Cadia, Telfer, Lihir, and Wafi-Golpu. Large deposits typically bring significant exploration upside and expansion options.

Company Profile

Newcrest is an Australia-based gold and, to a lesser extent, copper miner. Operations are predominantly in Australia and Papua New Guinea, with a smaller mine in Canada. Cash costs are below the industry average, underpinned by improvements at Lihir and Cadia. Newcrest is one of the larger global gold producers but accounts for less than 3% of total supply. Gold mining is relatively fragmented.

 (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.

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Dividend Stocks Philosophy Technical Picks

Despite wobbles at the top, Bapcor’s core is expected to be positive

Business Strategy and Outlook:

Bapcor’s narrow economic moat is contingent not on the CEO, but rather its scale. Bapcor’s scale allows not only additional buying power, but also the ability to source an extensive range of inventory (over 500,000 SKUs, many of these slow-moving, for over 20,000 different vehicle types) and the flexibility to efficiently allocate inventory between stores. Smaller players, lacking this scale, will be unable to replicate Bapcor’s low cost position. 

Bapcor’s trade network’s extensive reach also means Bapcor is able to provide parts to more customers in a timelier manner than smaller competitors, often within the hour, even for slow-moving SKUs. Bapcor’s trade customers consist of principally chain and independent mechanic workshops. These businesses are relatively price inelastic, as costs are passed through to the end consumer, and these businesses instead value parts availability and convenience, allowing service bays to turn over quickly. The number of registered vehicles in Australia will grow at low single digits over the next decade, marginally outpacing population growth. There are currently more than 19 million passenger vehicles in Australia, with an average age of over 10 years, and more than 14 million older than five years– squarely in Bapcor’s target market.

Financial Strength:

While it is expected that the near-term earnings momentum may slow down, analysts anchor on the firm’s long-term fundamentals and defensive earnings. The dividend yield generated by the firm is also substantial.

The financial outlook for the firm remains unchanged. Bapcor has benefitted from elevated government stimulus and pent-up demand, boosting fiscal 2021 sales as consumers opt to maintain and improve their existing cars rather than upgrade to newer vehicles. Australian retail sales were the standout in fiscal 2021, with sales from the Autobarn and Autopro network up 26% compared with fiscal 2020. It is expected that much of the growth was discretionary, rather than maintenance expenditure–retail sales outperformed 16% sales growth in Bapcor’s maintenance focussed trade business.

Company Profile:

Bapcor is one of the largest automotive spare parts and accessories businesses in Australia and New Zealand. The firm principally distributes automotive spare parts and accessories to independent and chain mechanic workshops in Australia and New Zealand through Burson-branded stores. Bapcor also operates a retail automotive spare parts and accessories business in Australia, catering to the DIY customer, under the AutoPro and Autobarn brands. The specialist wholesale business is a brand owner and wholesaler of specialised parts.

(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.

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Dividend Stocks Philosophy Technical Picks

AUB Group Ltd. visions to boost EPS growth with acquisition strategies

Business Strategy and Outlook

AUB operates the second-largest general insurance broker network in Australia and New Zealand. AUB brokers derive revenue from commissions paid by insurers, based on gross written premiums. AUB owns or has equity stakes in each broking business within the network. Post the exit of rehabilitation services in 2021, around 85% of group EBITA is delivered by the broker network, while the underwriting agencies generate about 15%.

A key value proposition over smaller brokers is AUB’s ability to negotiate more favourable policy wording and pricing. Scale also provides the capacity to spend more on technology, which helps facilitate greater analytical and processing capabilities, and marketing to help attract and retain customers. Other services such as claims support and premium funding support the value proposition.

AUB’s underwriting agencies distribute insurance products but take no underwriting risk. Underwriting agencies act on behalf of insurers to design, develop, and provide specialised insurance products and services.

The earnings outlook is positive. It is expected further insurance price rises over the medium term as insurers seek to cover claims inflation and weak investment income. This follows a weak pricing environment due to excess global reinsurance capacity, soft economic conditions, and elevated competition.

Financial Strength

AUB is in sound financial health. It has strong cash flow generation with a high conversion of earnings to operating cash flow and a relatively high dividend pay-out ratio. Gearing as reported by the company (corporate, subsidiary and look through share of associate debt/debt plus equity) ratio is reasonable, at 28.5% and below the firm’s maximum 45% ratio. Excluding customer cash for premium held by AUB but payable to insurers, AUB holds AUD 90 million in cash, which when included lowers gearing further. The current debt load looks manageable, with EBITDA interest cover of over 16 times and the nature of its businesses being relatively low risk. It is assumed AUB will use operating cash flows to fund increased positions in existing broker partners, with headroom to fund small acquisitions from cash on hand.

Bulls Say’s

  • AUB’s scale and expertise in insurance products and services leave it well placed to benefit from higher insurance pricing. 
  • BizCover and the Kelly+Partners partnership see AUB placed to take market share in the smaller end of the SME market. 
  • The firm’s acquisition strategy, both new investments and increased equity stakes, likely boosts EPS growth.

Company Profile 

AUB Group is the second-largest general insurance broker network in Australia and New Zealand. It has an ownership in 55 brokerage businesses, which collectively write over AUD 3 billion in premiums. It also owns equity stakes in 27 underwriting agencies. AUB derives revenue from commissions (from insurers, ultimately paid for by AUB’s customers) based on gross written premium, or GWP, from agencies it owns, and a share of profits from associates and joint ventures. GWP is split between personal (6%), small to medium enterprises (68%), and corporates (26%).

(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.

Categories
LICs LICs

Twilio’s Software Building Blocks Are Constructing a Cloud Communications Empire

Business Strategy and Outlook

Twilio is a cloud-based communication-platform-as-a-service, or CPaaS, company offering communication application programming interfaces, or APIs, and prebuilt solution applications aimed at improving customer engagement. Through these APIs, Twilio’s platform allows developers to integrate messaging, voice, and video functionality into business applications. In a go-to-market model that focuses on empowering developers to utilize the APIs to build products in a highly customized fashion, Twilio has been able to expand into use-cases that would be difficult to penetrate otherwise. For widely sought after use-cases, Twilio has developed solution applications, like Flex Contact Center, which combine various channel APIs into a unified interface to create use-case-specific solutions.

The communication channel APIs are deployed through the Programmable Communications Cloud and then are combined and expanded into application platforms in the Engagement Cloud to offer higher level functionality for specific use-cases. In this view full stack as best-in-breed in the CPaaS space, enabling deeply integrated, sticky communication solutions. Twilio has stellar customer metrics, with churn consistently below 5% and net dollar expansion in excess of 130% in recent years.

Financial Strength

Twilio is in a healthy financial position. Revenue is growing rapidly, and the company is beginning to scale, while the balance sheet is in good shape. As of September 2021, the company had cash and short-term investments of $5.4 billion and a debt balance of $985.5 million. In March 2021, Twilio issued $1.0 billion of senior notes, consisting of $500 million of 3.625% notes due 2029, and $500 million of 3.875% notes due 2031. In June 2021, the company redeemed its prior convertible notes, due March 2023, in their entirety. Since raising approximately $150 million in its IPO in 2016, Twilio has completed several secondary offerings, recently announcing a $1.8 billion offering of its Class A common stock in 2021. Twilio has yet to achieve GAAP profitability, as the company remains focused on reinvesting excess returns back into the company, both on an organic and inorganic basis, to build out the platform and enhance future growth prospects.

Our fair value estimate for Twilio is $356 per share, down from $388 as we model slightly more muted long-term growth. It is expected that Twilio to grow at a 38% CAGR through 2025 from the combination of an expanding customer base and increasing usage of the platform by existing customers, evidenced by a stellar 131% net dollar expansion rate in the third quarter. Investors are discouraged by the combination of the third-quarter slowdown in organic growth, which we still view as healthy at a 38% increase year over year, and the widening loss expected for full-year 2021 after management’s fourth-quarter guidance.

Bulls Say’s 

  • The addition of SI partnerships and solution APIs should lead to increasing success in winning enterprise customers, which not only offer a greater lifetime value for a proportionally smaller acquisition cost, but also tend to be stickier customers. 
  • Twilio has stellar user retention metrics, with churn consistently below 5% and net dollar retention north of 130% in recent years. 
  • As Twilio focuses on developing more solution APIs and growth shifts from usage-based messaging to SaaS-like priced solutions, there should be a natural uptick in both gross margins and recurring revenue.

Company Profile 

Twilio is a cloud-based communication platform-as-a-service company offering communication application programming interfaces, or APIs, and prebuilt solution applications aimed at improving customer engagement. Through these APIs, Twilio’s platform allows software developers to integrate messaging, voice, and video functionality into new or existing business applications. The company leverages its Super Network, Twilio’s global network of carrier relationships, to facilitate high speed cost-optimized global messaging and voice-based communications.

(Source: FN Arena)

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.

Categories
Technology Stocks

Accenture Posts Stellar Results as Compressed Transformations Accelerate Demand; Raising FVE to $258

Business Strategy and Outlook

Accenture is one of the largest IT-services companies in the world, providing both consulting and outsourcing capabilities. It is expected that Accenture’s growth will remain at a healthy and gradual pace, rather than a massive uptick. 

As a consultant, Accenture provides solutions for specific enterprise problems as well as broad-scope strategies in addition to integrating software for more than 75% of the global top 500 companies. As an outsourcer, Accenture offers business process outsourcing like procurement services as well as application management. 

As per the opinion of Morningstar analyst, there is always something new in the realm of enterprise technology to keep Accenture relevant and engaged with its most important customers. It’s wide moat stems from intangible assets associated with a stellar reputation for reliability and strategic and technological know-how, especially with large, risk-averse enterprise customers. It is also believed that  Accenture benefits from high customer switching costs as its key customers are loath to switch service providers for large or ongoing contracts. Further, as per Morningstar analyst Accenture generates industry-leading returns on capital because of its scale, given that there are only so many blueprints and software partners that an IT-services company needs to solve enterprise problems. Plus, with Accenture having one of the largest IT workforces (at half a million) and an industry-leading number of diamond accounts (typically $100 million annually or more), smaller IT-services companies may find it hard to keep up with the increasing innovation and know-how required to service enterprise technology.

Accenture Posts Stellar Results as Compressed Transformations Accelerate Demand; Raising FVE to $258

Wide-moat Accenture reported excellent first-quarter results, with the top and bottom line exceeding both management’s and our expectations. Accenture experienced broad-based growth in the quarter, benefiting from accelerating digital transformations throughout all end markets. Outperformance was industry, geography, and deal-size agnostic–reflective of the tremendous demand environment Accenture is experiencing. It is  believed that Accenture is uniquely positioned to address compressed transformation, a demand phenomenon that reflects enterprises requiring all-comprehensive digital and cloud transformations in a faster time span. This broad-market trend toward clients taking on more change at once will accelerate and continue to build an impressive pipeline. On the back of increasing alignment of Accenture’s end markets with its business transformation backed value proposition, Morningstar analysts increased our fair value estimate to $258 per share from $236. 

Financial Strength

Accenture’s financial model requires very little debt and generates significant cash flow. The company has an extremely low debt/capital ratio of 0.3% and produced slightly over $3 billion in free cash flow in fiscal 2021. Morningstar analysts are confident that it will be able to deliver on significant share repurchases, dividend expansion, and acquisitions going forward, as it is expected that free cash flow to the firm will expand to over $8 billion by fiscal 2026. Most important is Accenture’s returns on new invested capital. While Accenture has similar operating margins to peers like Cognizant and Capgemini, it is able to achieve much greater returns on new invested capital than its peers because of its size, as per Morningstar analyst. This is possible in the industry because most major consulting/IT-services companies need the same partnerships with major software companies and all need blueprints to solve common enterprise problems. 

Bull Says

  • Accenture will increase wallet share with its enterprise customers as the technology landscape becomes increasingly complex. 
  • Accenture will rely more on automation to handle some of its business process outsourcing, allowing for margin expansion. 
  • Accenture’s mix shift away from more commoditized offerings should boost profitability.

Company Profile

Accenture is a leading global IT-services firm that provides consulting, strategy, and technology and operational services. These services run the gamut from aiding enterprises with digital transformation to procurement services to software system integration. The company provides its IT offerings to a variety of sectors, including communications, media and technology, financial services, health and public services, consumer products, and resources. Accenture employs just under 500,000 people throughout 200 cities in 51 countries.

(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.

Categories
Funds Funds

JP Morgan Investment Funds: A collection of top picks from diversified industries

He also tends to add and trim positions aggressively as they become more or less attractive according to analyst models, a tendency that benefits when stock prices mean revert. While Davis’ artful approach has some appeal, it doesn’t have a discernible edge relative to its competition.

Portfolio:

This portfolio finds a balance between differentiation and careful risk management. It held 51 stocks at the end of September 2021, significantly less than the 140-180 it used to have when it had three independently managed sleeves. However, manager Scott Davis’ desire to let stock selection drive results leads to only modest sector and industry tilts relative to its S&P 500 benchmark. Davis also considers factor exposure when building the portfolio. For instance, he increased the portfolio’s stake in financials companies toward the end of 2020 to bolster its exposure to cheaper, more cyclical stocks to help offset its lack of exposure to the energy sector.

The portfolio has historically leaned a bit more toward a growth style, and that still rings true. It displayed a slight growth bias relative to the benchmark as of October, sporting higher valuation metrics such as price/ sales and faster trailing revenue- and earnings-growth rates.

People:

This strategy continues to rely heavily on J.P. Morgan’s core research team, but it is now led exclusively by Scott Davis, who oversaw the strongest-performing sleeve of this formerly multi-managed offering. Davis became a named manager in August 2014, inheriting a 10% slice of the strategy, but quickly saw his share grow, most notably after manager Thomas Luddy stepped down at the end of 2017. Davis continues to leverage the ideas of J.P. Morgan’s core research team, which consists of 23 analysts with extensive industry experience.

Performance:

A good portion of the fund’s success came in 2020, which skews the trailing return figures a bit. Its 26.7% gain in 2020 outpaced the benchmark by over 8 percentage points, the best calendar year since Davis debuted. The fund’s case over other time periods is weaker: It outperformed the bogy about 51% of the time on a rolling one-year basis since Davis joined.

(Source: jpmorgan.com)

Price:

Analysts find it difficult to analyse expenses since it comes directly from the returns. Analysts expect that it would be able to generate positive alpha relative to its benchmark index.


(Source: Morningstar)                                                                      (Source: Morningstar)

About Funds:

The investment objective of this fund is to achieve a return in excess of the US equity market by investing primarily in US companies. It uses a research-driven investment process that is based on the fundamental analysis of companies and their future earnings and cash flows by a team of specialist sector analysts.

(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.

Categories
Technology Stocks

Threat-prevention Solution providing robust growth for Palo Alto Network Inc

Business Strategy and Outlook

Palo Alto Networks became a leading cybersecurity provider through its next-generation firewall appliance altering the requirements of an essential piece of networking security. The firm’s portfolio has expanded outside of network security into areas such as cloud protection and automated response. Looking ahead, Palo Alto’s nascent threat-prevention solutions will provide robust growth along with a significantly improved margin profile.

Core to Palo Alto’s technology is its security operating platform, which provides centralized security management. The ability to add technologies via subscriptions in the Palo Alto framework can alleviate complications by providing more holistic security, which can generate sustainable demand. Palo Alto will continue to outpace its security peers by focusing on providing solutions in areas like cloud security and automation. Palo Alto’s concerted efforts into machine learning, analytics, and automated responses could make its products indispensable within customer networks. Although it is expected that Palo Alto will remain acquisitive and dedicated to organic innovation, significant operating leverage will be gained throughout the coming decade as recurring subscription and support revenue streams flow from its expansive customer base.

Financial Strength 

Palo Alto is financially stable and would generate strong cash flow as it expands its operating margin profile. The company has historically operated at a loss (excluding fiscal 2012), and we expect it to turn profitable by fiscal 2023 on a GAAP basis. Palo Alto ended fiscal 2021 with $2.9 billion in cash and cash equivalents and total debt of $3.2 billion in 2023 and 2025 convertible senior notes. The $1.7 billion 2023 notes mature in June 2023 and have a 0.75% fixed interest rate per year paid semiannually, while the $2.0 billion of notes that mature June 2025 have a 0.375% interest rate paid semiannually. Palo Alto issued note hedges for both maturity dates to alleviate potential earnings per share dilution. The company announced a $1.0 billion share-repurchase authorization in February 2019, which was increased to $1.7 billion the following year with an expiration at the end of 2021, and has subsequently extended the program. Palo Alto continues to use share buybacks to return capital to shareholders, and believe that it will not pursue any dividend payouts.

The fair value estimate of $585 per share is consistent with a fiscal 2022 enterprise/sales ratio of 11 times and 4% free cash flow yield and upgraded its moat to wide.

Bulls Says 

  • Adding on modules to Palo Alto’s security platform could win greenfield opportunities and increase spending from existing customers. 
  • Palo Alto could showcase great operating margin leverage as it moves from brand creation into a perennial cybersecurity leader. Winning bids should be less costly as the incumbent, and we think Palo Alto is typically on the short list of potential vendors. 
  • The company is segueing into high-growth areas to supplement its firewall leadership. Analytics and machine learning capabilities could separate Palo Alto’s offerings.

Company Profile

Palo Alto Networks is a pure-play cybersecurity vendor that sells security appliances, subscriptions, and support into enterprises, government entities, and service providers. The company’s product portfolio includes firewall appliances, virtual firewalls, endpoint protection, cloud security, and cybersecurity analytics. The Santa Clara, California, firm was established in 2005 and sells its products worldwide.

(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.

Categories
Funds Funds

Vanguard Mid-Cap Growth Fund Investor Shares: A Solid Mid-Cap Growth offering with rock bottoms fees

Approach

Frontier’s approach is best described as growth-at-a-reasonable-price. The team, like Wellington, also invests with a multi-year time horizon, though the end portfolio is more diversified, owning 70 to 80 stocks, while sector bets have stayed within 10 percentage points of the index over the years. Rounding out the subadvisor group is RS, which employs a sector-neutral approach to build a 60-80-stock portfolio. While risk management efforts–such as a desired 2:1 upside/downside ratio for each stock and the use of technical indicators–have proven efficacious on RS’ small-cap offering, they have consistently failed to have the intended impact in the mid-cap arena.

Portfolio

Portfolio’s sector weightings hover fairly close to the Russell Midcap Growth Index’s. As of June 2021, the biggest overweighting was to consumer discretionary, with 19% of assets, more than the Russell Midcap Growth Index’s 16%. The Wellington team purchased hospitality firm Hilton Worldwide Holdings in 2021’s second quarter, believing its asset light business model, good management team, and strong growth prospects in Asia will serve the stock well going forward. Conversely, the end fund held modest underweights to industrials and information technology.

portfolio vanguard.png

People

This strategy’s three subadvisors are experienced, stable, and capable, driving a People rating upgrade to Above Average from Average. The group has been more successful in the small-cap space over the years, and the standalone RS Mid Cap Growth offering has struggled since its July 2008 inception. In October 2021, Vanguard slashed RS’ stake to 20% from 45%. Frontier also came on board in December 2018 and manages 40% of fund assets (down from 45%). While the January 2020 retirement of Stephen Knightly was a loss, a thoughtful transition to Chris Scarpa–who had been a comanager since 2010–and the grooming of longtime analyst Ravi Dabas as comanager mitigate concerns.

Performance

The current subadvisors have been in place here together since December 2018. Since then, through October 2021, the fund’s 28.5% annualized gain lagged the Russell Midcap Growth Index’s 31.1% return and 60% of its mid-cap growth. Frontier Mid Cap Growth–the strategy behind Frontier’s sleeve–gained 30.6% annualized gross-of-fees between December 2018 and October 2021, slightly lagging the index but placing in line with peers. While stock selection was strong in financials, it was poor in healthcare, and the underweighting to the solidperforming information technology sector also detracted. 

Wellington–via its Focused Mid Cap Growth strategy–has been the strongest-performing subadvisor but long had had the lowest allocation, though Vanguard raised its stake to 40% of fund assets from 10% in October 2021. Between December 2018 and October 2021, its 31.8% annualized gain gross-of-fees bested 57% of peers. The sleeve benefitted from solid picks in I.T., including DocuSign and Square.

performance vanguard.png

(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.

Categories
ETFs ETFs

SPDR® Dow Jones Global Real Estate Fund: Well-diversified exposure to global real estate at a relatively cheap price

SPDR Dow Jones Real Estate ETF DJRE is a sensible option for investors seeking exposure to diversified global real estate. DJRE tracks the Dow Jones Global Select Real Estate Securities Index, a market-cap-weighted index (rebalanced quarterly) via full replication.

Approach

DJRE aims to fully replicate the Dow Jones Global Select Real Estate Securities Index. Stocks included in the index must derive 75% of revenue from owning and operating properties, have a market cap of at least USD 200 million at the time of inclusion, and meet certain liquidity requirements. In simple terms, companies in this index generate most of their revenue from rent.

Portfolio 

Real estate investment trusts make up about 85% of the portfolio while approximately 10% of DJRE’s holdings are property developers and non-REIT property managers. The US continues to dominate the portfolio, forming more than 65% of regional exposure in October 2021. Other sizable weightings include 10.2% in Japan, 4.6% in Australia, 4.5% in the United Kingdom, and 3% in Singapore. The remainder is in Hong Kong and developed European markets such as Germany, France, and Sweden.

People

John Tucker has been appointed as the new chief investment officer, Effectively from September 2021, replacing Lynn Blake, who has taken retirement. Tucker is a State Street veteran who has been in multiple senior leadership roles within GEBS for the past 20 years. Australia-domiciled passive products are managed by a core team of Tucker and four portfolio managers: Alexander King, Lillian Poon, Andrew Howson, and Elda Dong.

Performance

C:\Users\Akhila\Downloads\etf per. 2.png

(Source: Factsheet)

Top holdings of the fund

C:\Users\Akhila\Downloads\top 10 holdings.png

(Source: Factsheet)

About the fund

SPDR Dow Jones Real Estate ETF DJRE is a sensible option for investors seeking exposure to diversified global real estate. DJRE tracks the Dow Jones Global Select Real Estate Securities Index, a market-cap-weighted index (rebalanced quarterly) via full replication. The fund derives strong support from the global reach and execution capabilities of its parent State Street. With around 250 total holdings and less than 30% exposure in the top 10 holdings, the target benchmark is well diversified. The index consists of globally traded real estate investment trusts and real estate operating companies–companies generating most of their revenue from rent

(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.

Categories
LICs Sectors

Qualitas Real Estate Income Fund Raises $171.6m through entitlement offer

The main Business area of Qualitas Real Estate Income Fund are Financial Services, Asset Management & Investment. Their Market Capitalisation is also 601.60 million. 

Net Profit till June 2021 is 22.93 Million while Revenue is 29.81 million. Net Tangible Asset per unit is $1.6054 Till 22 November 2021.

QRI Financial Summary

QRL Financial Summary.png

On 7 October 2021, QRI announced they were seeking to raise up to $214m through a 1-for-2 pro-rata non-renounceable entitlement offer to eligible unitholders and a shortfall offer to new investors at an Offer price of $1.60 per unit.

There was strong demand for the Offer with QRI raising $171.6m. The raise takes the total capital of the Trust to $599.6m.

The capital raised will be invested as per the investment strategy of the Trust, with the raising providing unitholders the benefits of greater liquidity and portfolio diversification.

The Manager will waive its management fee with respect to any uninvested capital raised from the Entitlement Offer, ensuring unitholders are not paying fees on idle capital. We view this as a significant positive for unitholders.

Company Profile 

Qualitas Real Estate Income Fund is a listed investment trust incorporated in Australia. The Fund aims to achieve a Target Return of 8% p.a. and provide monthly cash income, capital preservation, and portfolio diversification. The Fund will invest in a portfolio that has direct or indirect exposure to Australian and New Zealand secured real estate loans.

(Source: FN Arena, Intelligent Investor)

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.