NEWS
18 Aug 2017 - Collins St Value Fund
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Fund Overview | The managers of the fund intend to maintain a concentrated portfolio of investments in ASX listed companies that they have investigated and consider to be undervalued. They will assess the attractiveness of potential investments using a number of common industry based measured, a proprietary in-house model and by speaking with management, industry experts and competitors. Once the managers form a view that an investment offers sufficient upside potential relative to the downside risk, the fund will seek to make an investment. If no appropriate investment can be identified the managers are prepared to hold cash and wait for the right opportunities to present themselves. |
Manager Comments | At the end of July, stocks in the Fund's portfolio had an average PE ratio of 8.88x versus that of the ASX200 which was 16.88x, indicating the Fund is continuing to trade in line with its objective. The portfolio's cash holdings decreased to 18% from 22% at the end of June. The Manager notes that they continue to be aware of market risks, with particular focus on tax changes on property for foreign investors and the effect of the removal of stamp duty concessions on the construction industry and property prices. |
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15 Aug 2017 - Optimal Australia Absolute Trust
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Fund Overview | The Fund's bias is likely to be net long under normal market conditions, with the core strategy being to construct a portfolio of listed equity securities priced at levels that do not adequately reflect their underlying value. The Fund will seek to boost returns and limit potential market downside by selective short selling of individual stocks which are priced at levels that are viewed as materially above their underlying value. The Fund will also use certain trading strategies both within its core portfolio (through rebalancing stock weights and overall market exposure in response to price movements) and in certain other situations (typically of a shorter-duration and/or opportunistic nature) with the objective of further increasing returns. |
Manager Comments | Meanwhile the manager's thinking has not changed much from recent months, citing a 'bubble of complacency' along with evidence of consumer mortgage stress (albeit only in certain demographic pockets) despite interest rates at generational lows, with the general consumer slow-down in the June quarter highlighting the broader sensitivity to interest rates. While generally not fans of the Australian consumer economy, the manager benefited from investments in several retail stocks where the discount to their fair value assessment seemed excessive, and where stock prices in the sector had been heavily influenced by short selling, and a deep fear that no local retail business model will survive Amazon's imminent arrival. The Fund's commodity and energy exposure, while small, also generated positive returns, particularly in the emerging lithium sector, while short positions (barring financials) also made a small positive net contribution to performance in July. |
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14 Aug 2017 - Hedge Clippings
A glance in the rear view mirror...
Every so often Hedge Clippings likes to track through our prior meanderings. There are a number of reasons for this - not wanting to repeat oneself too often and thus become tedious is one, or regurgitate last week's views and be considered forgetful, or worse, being another. However now and again we like to check that our weekly gibber is not overly gibberish, and that what we might have written in the past remains relevant.
Of course, if one of our past editions was shown to be completely incorrect we might not highlight the fact. However, in this case we looked at a "Hedge Clippings" from early June when we mentioned, amongst other things, the possibility that North Korea might overstep the mark.
Far be it from us to try to predict who will win the chest beating exercise between North Korea's presidential nutter, Kim Jong-un and his US counterpart, Donald Trump, but it would seem that neither is renowned for stepping back from a fight, even if in Kim's case it is one that numerically only one side can win, while everyone else also loses. However it has finally jolted markets and the VIX out of their low interest rate stupor. Kim cares not a jot for world opinion, and based on his previous rhetoric, Trump not a lot more. However, we would agree with Trump that a line has to be drawn in the sand somewhere, and as previous US administrations have failed to do so, we are reminded of the old saying that "people behave the way they're allowed to".
In the same edition we also commented on the seeming malaise in Australian politics, and this week's decision (or abdication of one) to resolve the same sex marriage question by holding a non binding, non-compulsory, postal opinion poll seems to personify the issue. Without wanting to enter the debate on either side, the process seems to be symptomatic of the current disconnect between business confidence and household sentiment.
Business confidence is high as a result of low interest rates, low inflation, low wages growth,little in the way of labour shortages, and the use of technology to reduce costs. The other side of the coin is that consumer sentiment is low due to high housing costs, low wages growth, uncertain employment prospects, and looming high utility bills. However we suspect that's not all that is troubling the average household. There would seem to be a lack of clear national direction, which is also affecting the widespread optimism that was apparent when Tony Abbott was removed as PM, and could it be a reflection of the fact - or perception - that in reality he's still there pulling strings?
Finally, while on the subject of malaise, a word on corporate governance at the big end of town in a week where it was announced that in the US since the start of the GFC 10 years ago, financial institutions have paid fines totaling US$150 billion for the various misdeeds of management. More correctly the shareholders of those financial institutions have presumably paid the $150 billion in fines. Full marks therefore to the board of the CBA for at least slapping the wrist of a few senior executives. However, in reality, and as one who has spent some considerable time and effort to keep up to date with the AUSTRAC Anti Money Laundering (AML) provisions, those responsible at CBA must have either been asleep on the job, or incompetent, (or both) to have permitted such extensive and long running cash deposits to have occurred right under their noses.
14 Aug 2017 - MHOR Australian Small Cap Fund
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Fund Overview | MHOR looks for investment that exhibit the following set of characteristics: -Opportunity - to take advantage of growth and positive alignment with industry themes and trends. -Quality business - competitively advantaged product or service offering. -Financial flexibility - appropriately resourced to capture its opportunity. -Management - with the vision and capability to bring it all together. -Fundamentally undervalued. MHOR also considers labour standards, environmental, social and ethical considerations when making investment decisions but only to the extent that these factors impact the assessment of risk or return. The minimum suggested investment timeframe is 3-5 years. |
Manager Comments | The Fund's stock holdings remained constant over the month at 31, and by month's end cash holdings were marginally higher at 9.2% of NAV. The portfolio continued to exhibit a growth bias and has considerable exposure to smaller undiscovered stocks, which the manager believes are the future growth stories. At the same time they continue to search and find interesting new and emerging small cap equity opportunities. |
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8 Aug 2017 - Fund Review: Optimal Australia Absolute Trust July 2017
OPTIMAL AUSTRALIA ABSOLUTE TRUST
AFM have released the most recently updated Fund Review on the Optimal Australia Absolute Trust.
We would like to highlight the following aspects of the Fund;
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ARCO Investment Management is a specialist Australian equity investment manager and the Fund has a long/short equity strategy typically with a low but variable net market exposure comprising 40 to 65 stocks broadly selected from within the ASX200.
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The investment team comprising George Colman, Peter Whiting, and Stephen Nicholls bring 100 years combined experience in equity markets.
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In July, the Fund returned +0.24%, taking annualised return since inception to 8.12% p.a. The Fund's approach to risk is shown by the Sharpe ratio of 1.32 (Index 0.26), Sortino ratio of 2.71 (Index 0.26), both of which are well above the ASX 200 Accumulation Index and has recorded over 79% positive months.
For further details on the Fund, please do not hesitate to contact us.

8 Aug 2017 - Bennelong Twenty20 Australian Equities Fund July 2017
BENNELONG TWENTY20 AUSTRALIAN EQUITIES FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review on the Bennelong Twenty20 Australian Equities Fund.
- The Bennelong Twenty20 Australian Equities Fund invests in ASX listed stocks, combining an indexed position in the Top 20 stocks with an actively managed portfolio of stocks outside the Top 20. Construction of the ex-top 20 portfolio is fundamental, bottom-up, core investment style, biased to quality stocks, with a structured risk management approach.
- Mark East, the Fund's Chief Investment Officer, and Keith Kwang, Director of Quantitative Research have over 50 years combined market experience. Bennelong Funds Management (BFM) provides the investment manager, Bennelong Australian Equity Partners (BAEP) with infrastructure, operational, compliance and distribution services.
For further details on the Fund, please do not hesitate to contact us.

8 Aug 2017 - Paragon Australian Long Short Fund
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Fund Overview | Paragon believes that markets are not always efficient, exhibiting a common tendency to price securities well outside of their intrinsic value over the medium term. This market characteristic provides the opportunity for Paragon, an active manager with a flexible mandate, to generate superior investment returns over the longer term. Paragon believes that it is critical to understand both the companies and the industries in which they operate, in order to fully comprehend each investment opportunity. Accordingly, a fundamental approach to company research is taken. Assessing the potential downside is also paramount in framing the risk/reward trade-off for potential investments. |
Manager Comments | Main contributors for July were gains in Agrimin, Global GeoScience, FastBrick Robotics and Lynas and shorts in Coca Cola and Westgold. These were offset by falls in offshore earners on the back of the rallying AUD. At the end of the month the Fund had 38 long positions and 19 short positions. Paragon continue to invest in key themes which typically make up 80% of the Fund's exposure, currently being Offshore Growth, Ageing Population, Electric Vehicles and Mobile Internet. |
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8 Aug 2017 - Fund Review: Insync Global Titans Fund July 2017
INSYNC GLOBAL TITANS FUND
Attached is our most recently updated Fund Review on the Insync Global Titans Fund.
We would like to highlight the following:
- The Global Titans Fund invests in a concentrated portfolio of 15-30 stocks, targeting exceptional, large cap global companies with a strong focus on dividend growth and downside protection.
- Portfolio selection is driven by a core strategy of investing in companies with sustainable growth in dividends, high returns on capital, positive free cash flows and strong balance sheets.
- Emphasis on limiting downside risk is through extensive company research, the ability to hold cash and long protective index put options.
For further details on the Fund, please do not hesitate to contact us.

4 Aug 2017 - Bennelong Long Short Equity Fund
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Fund Overview | In a typical environment the Fund will hold around 70 stocks comprising 35 pairs. Each pair contains one long and one short position each of which will have been thoroughly researched and are selected from the same market sector. Whilst in an ideal environment each stock's position will make a positive return, it is the relative performance of the pair that is important. As a result the Fund can make positive returns when each stock moves in the same direction provided the long position outperforms the short one in relative terms. However, if neither side of the trade is profitable, strict controls are required to ensure losses are limited. The Fund uses no derivatives and has no currency exposure. The Fund has no hard stop loss limits, instead relying on the small average position size per stock (1.5%) and per pair (3%) to limit exposure. Where practical pairs are always held within the same sector to limit cross sector risk, and positions can be held for months or years. The Bennelong Market Neutral Fund, with same strategy and liquidity is available for retail investors as a Listed Investment Company (LIC) on the ASX. |
Manager Comments | The manager's outlook for markets remains cautious. A statistic that caught their eye during the month was the news that the infamous VIX Index or 'fear index' (formerly, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index) reached its lowest ever level in its 27 year history causing them to wonder if such complacency justified? Their response: Not according to Howard Marks at Oaktree Capital, who in his latest memo noted: 'The uncertainties are unusual in terms of number, scale and insolubility in areas including secular economic growth; the impact of central banks; interest rates and inflation; political dysfunction; geopolitical trouble spots; and the long-term impact of technology.' |
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1 Aug 2017 - Touchstone Index Unaware Fund
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Fund Overview | The portfolio is constructed using Touchstone's Quality-At-a-Reasonable-Price ('QARP') investment process. QARP is a fundamental bottom-up process, however, it also incorporates a top-down risk management framework designed to successfully manage the portfolio during varying market conditions and economic cycles. The Touchstone Fund is concentrated, typically holding between 15-20 stocks. No individual stock will ever make up more than 10% of the portfolio at any one time. The Investment Manager may temporarily exceed the exposure limits of the Fund occasionally, particularly during periods of market volatility, to allow for holdings in excess of this 10% limit where the increase in value of the underlying security is due to market movement. The Fund may also hold between 0-50% of the portfolio in cash. The Fund has a high level of associated risk, therefore, the minimum suggested investment time-frame is 5 years. |
Manager Comments | In June, positive performers included IAG (+6.6%), Resmed (+6.7%) and James Hardie (+6.7%). IAG's performance was principally driven by an upgrade to its FY17 earnings and increased confidence in earnings growth. Resmed rallied with positive momentum reported on its new product launches and rectification of recent product issues. James Hardie performed positively as the market gained confidence that the factors impacting margins for their US Fibre-Cement division should improve going forward. Negative contributors for the month included QBE (-8.5%), Wesfarmers (-6.0%) and Goodman Group (-5.9%). Touchstone maintains a positive outlook for Wesfarmers and Goodman Group, and expects that QBE will benefit from a recovery in the global insurance market and higher interest rates. Touchstone noted that volatility has edged back into markets as fears over tighter monetary policy and high valuations have clouded the outlook for the year ahead. The Manager believes that given the heightened uncertainty, the market remains very vulnerable to external shocks. As such, they remain cautious and have reflected this in their portfolio positioning. |
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