NEWS

24 Sep 2018 - Preparing for the Demise of Franking Refunds

24 Sep 2018 - Performance Report: 4D Global Infrastructure Fund
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Fund Overview | The fund will be managed as a single portfolio of listed global infrastructure securities including regulated utilities in gas, electricity and water, transport infrastructure such as airports, ports, road and rail as well as communication assets such as the towers and satellite sectors. The portfolio is intended to have exposure to both developed and emerging market opportunities, with country risk assessed internally before any investment is considered. The maximum absolute position of an individual stock is 7% of the fund. |
Manager Comments | The Fund returned -0.73% in August. The strongest portfolio performer during the month was Mexican airport operator GAP, up +10.5%. The stock was up post the Mexican elections and also received a boost from the US/Mexico Agreement on trade late in the month. The weakest performer in August was Italian toll road operator Atlantia, down -27.9% after the tragic collapse of the Atlantia operated bridge in Genoa. 4D Infrastructure noted that, despite Atlantia's continued assertions that it had been maintaining the structure in line with the concession's technical standards, increasing noise from political factions around the termination of the Italian road concession framework significantly pressured the stock. 4D believe Atlantia has been oversold on the noise, however, they believe the stock will remain under pressure for some time. As such, 4D will continue to hold a position without increasing it at the present time. Given the generally positive macro environment, 4D Infrastructure remain overweight user pay assets which have a direct correlation to macro strength. However, ongoing geo-political concerns, plus near-term elections, sees them maintain core exposure to quality defensive utility assets. |
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21 Sep 2018 - Hedge Clippings - 21 September, 2018
The HRC has produced (amongst other things) some memorable moments over the past 6 months, ranging from the destruction of the AMP's reputation, and that of its chairperson, the collapse of a witness in the midst of his testimony (which might have saved him from further immediate embarrassment), and overall the understanding that the consumer invariably comes second in dealings with the banking system.
The past two weeks have shone a similar light on the insurance sector, with equally horrific tales of appalling, and in some cases allegedly criminal behaviour, generally inflicted on those most vulnerable. Maybe, as one who has had to deal with an insurance company over a claim, or been on the end of a sales call, there weren't expected to be too many surprises, but surprises there were.
Charging deceased people premiums? Tick. Denying claims without just cause? Tick. What was of concern was the size of the organisations, and the seniority of those in the know, with the ability, but not the inclination, to prevent such practices.
If one had to have sympathy for a witness appearing before the HRC however, it was today's victim, Sally Loane, CEO of the Financial Services Council, the peak industry body with the unenviable task of representing, amongst others, the insurance sector. Without being the perpetrator of the actions of her members, she was made to look responsible for endorsing their collective misdeeds.
It made for uncomfortable TV, and will no doubt be replayed again and again on tonight's news and current affairs channels. With nowhere to go without condemning or damning her members, Loane resembled someone crossing a river full of crocodiles on a tightrope, whilst dodging well-aimed spears from the other side, all the while with no protection other than "I'm the CEO, and have an expert better able to answer that technicality".
Of course in her position, one question was unanswerable: Why is the insurance industry not subject to the same law that requires directors (and others) to "deal honestly, efficiently and fairly" as required by the Corporations Act?
The problem, however, is that even when applied to the rest of the banking and financial services sector, the issue seems to have been well and truly swept under the (boardroom) carpet.
Moving away for the HRC (which by the way is due to produce its interim report in time for next week's "Hedge Clippings") this week saw the US 10 year bond rate poke its head above the 3% mark again. With multiple opinions on the downward direction of Australia's housing market, one thing remains clear: The rising housing tide we've seen was caused significantly, if not totally, by 10 years of unrealistically low interest rates, and easy credit.
As those rates rise, and easy credit becomes a distant memory, so that tide will recede, most likely very quickly. Add to that the threat of Bill Shorten and a potential limit on negative gearing, and the outgoing tide may become a flood, with resultant effects on the economy as a whole.

21 Sep 2018 - Orpea is riding a growth trend forecast to continue for decades

20 Sep 2018 - Fund Review: Bennelong Kardinia Absolute Return Fund August 2018
BENNELONG KARDINIA ABSOLUTE RETURN FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review. You are also able to view the Fund's Profile.
- The Fund is long biased, research driven, active equity long/short strategy investing in listed ASX companies with over ten-year track record.
- The Fund has significantly outperformed the ASX200 Accumulation Index since its inception in May 2006 and also has significantly lower risk KPIs. The Fund has an annualised return of 10.40% p.a. with a volatility of 6.87%, compared to the ASX200 Accumulation's return of 6.08% p.a. with a volatility of 13.33%.
- The Fund also has a strong focus on capital protection in negative markets. Portfolio Managers Mark Burgess and Kristiaan Rehder have significant market experience, while Bennelong Funds Management provide infrastructure, operational, compliance and distribution capabilities.
For further details on the Fund, please do not hesitate to contact us.


19 Sep 2018 - Performance Report: Bennelong Concentrated Australian Equities Fund
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Fund Overview | The overriding objective of the Concentrated Australian Equities Fund is to seek investment opportunities which are under-appreciated and have the potential to deliver positive earnings, while satisfying our stringent quality criteria. Bennelong's investment process combines bottom-up fundamental analysis together with proprietary investment tools which are used to build and maintain high quality portfolios that are risk aware. The portfolio typically consists of 20-35 high-conviction stocks from the S&P/ASX 300 Index. The Fund may invest in securities listed on other exchanges where such securities relate to ASX-listed securities. Derivative instruments are mainly used to replicate underlying positions and hedge market and company specific risks. |
Manager Comments | At the end of the month the Fund's weightings had been increased in the Discretionary, Health Care, IT and Financials sectors, and decreased in the Consumer Staples, Industrials and Materials sectors. The Fund aims to invest in a concentrated portfolio of high quality companies with strong growth outlooks and underestimated earnings momentum and prospects. By comparison with the Fund's benchmark (ASX300 Accumulation Index), the portfolio's holdings, on average, have a higher return on equity and lower debt/equity (Premium Quality), higher sales growth and higher EPS growth (Superior Growth), as well as higher price/earnings and lower dividend yield (Reasonable Valuation). |
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18 Sep 2018 - Performance Report: NWQ Fiduciary Fund
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Fund Overview | The Fund aims to produce returns, after management fees and expenses of between 8% to 11% p.a. over rolling five-year periods. Furthermore, the Fund aims to achieve these returns with volatility that is a fraction of the Australian equity market, in order to smooth returns for investors. |
Manager Comments | NWQ noted there was a high degree of dispersion in the returns of the underlying managers in August. This illustrates the diversified nature of the Fund with the constituent managers employing a broad array of hedged equity strategies. This dispersion is also reflective of the heightened level of stock market volatility that is typical of reporting season. NWQ mentioned the earnings announcements were particularly favourable for the Fund's Alpha allocation, which made a strong contribution to overall performance (+1.17%). |
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17 Sep 2018 - Do Falling House Prices Affect AREIT Investors?

14 Sep 2018 - Happy 10th Birthday, GFC!

14 Sep 2018 - Performance Report: Glenmore Australian Equities Fund
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Fund Overview | The main driver of identifying potential investments will be bottom up company analysis, however macro-economic conditions will be considered as part of the investment thesis for each stock. |
Manager Comments | The Glenmore Australian Equities Fund rose +5.94% in August, outperforming the ASX200 Accumulation Index by +4.52%. Since inception in June 2017, the Fund has returned +38.85% p.a. versus the Index's +12.93%. Adjusting for risk, the Fund's Sharpe ratio for performance since inception is 3.67 versus the Index's 1.69, highlighting the Fund's capacity to achieve significantly superior risk-adjusted returns than the market. Looking at the downside, the Fund's Sortino ratio of 12.02 versus the Index's 1.34, along with the Fund's down-capture ratio since inception of -123.45%, emphasise the Fund's focus on avoiding downside losses (a negative down-capture ratio indicates that the Fund, on average, has achieved positive performance in the market's negative months). |
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