NEWS

14 Mar 2022 - Inflation, interest rates and equities: the big question
Inflation, interest rates and equities: the big question Montgomery Investment Management February 2022 Roger Montgomery (00:07): It is February 2022. And over the next few minutes, I'm going to address the question that is probably on the minds of most investors at the moment, and that is the interaction between inflation, short term interest rates, and equities. And what we'd like to do is present an argument that suggests that consensus may have their expectations with respect to inflation and interest rates wrong. If that's the case, then there is a very good argument for buying some of the beaten up stocks that have seen their PEs contract substantially over the last month or month and a half. With that in mind, it's very important to appreciate that we are going to be mentioning some individual company names. Roger Montgomery (00:56): This isn't a recommendation to buy those companies. In fact, we recommend only that you take personal professional advice. The last seven months or so has seen a substantial step change in interest rate expectations as a consequence of the appearance of inflation in the United States and around the world. You can see on this particular chart going back all the way to July last year 2021, that green dash line is a representation of where interest rates were expected to be back then. And you can see that since then moving to the blue line, not only have our interest rates expected to be higher, but they're expected to move sooner and more steeply.
And that really has been a very dramatic change in expectations in the market. It stems from the very hawkish fed rhetoric that's coming out of both the FOMC, the Federal Open Market Committee meeting and Jerome Powell himself. And the question is, is this troubling and should investors be concerned at the moment? The expectation is that there are probably going to be more than four interest rate hikes this year. Many investors see 2022 as a transition year. I want you to remember that expectation of four rate hikes, or even five rate hikes this year, which is currently appears to be priced in to markets, because we're going to assess the legitimacy of that or the opportunity that it presents in just a moment. Roger Montgomery (02:36): Now, it's really important to understand that since the late 1970s, there's been a huge number of studies that have shown that in periods of inflation and also during periods of rising interest rates, PEs contract or the multiple of earnings that investors are willing to pay for a company contracts. And that is the case without exception as you can see in the lower chart here, those gray shaded areas represent periods since 1980, where the 2-year yield in the United States or 2-year US Treasury yields have increased. And that coincides with periods in the top chart where PEs have contracted, and that happens without exception. So, rising interest rates means PEs contract and inflation also results in PEs contracting.
In fact, the greater the inflation, the greater the contraction in PEs. You can see on this particular chart also since 1982 to the present, not only is there a negative correlation between interest rates and PEs or equity multiples, but that correlation is somewhat exponential. Now, this is really important to understand, because what it means is that the lower interest rates are the greater the move on in PE, or the greater the contraction in PE for a given increase in interest rates. And that's why investors need to be particularly careful about what we've dubbed the profitless prosperity stocks. They're the stocks with profits pushed way out onto the horizon with no clear line of sight becoming profitable. They're the ones that tend to be most sensitive to interest rate increases or prospective interest rate increases. But of course, because they've contracted so much in terms of their PE, that could also be an opportunity which we'll address in just a moment. In Australia, we've seen that PE contraction occur substantially. Just in the month of January, in fact, from January the fourth, you can see there are companies like Pro Medicus and Transurban and Reese, ARB, IDP Education, Corporate Travel, REA Group, for example, all very high quality companies. And they've seen their PEs contract from between 14 per cent and by almost a third 33 per cent, in fact, contraction in price to earnings multiples. Roger Montgomery (05:09): So, people are willing to pay substantially less for these businesses, in many cases, very high quality businesses than they were just a month or month and a half ago, but the outlook for companies is very different to what their share prices have been doing. We know that share prices are far more volatile than business operations and the changes in business prospects. And you can see this survey from GLG conducted in early 2022, survey of 471 global CEOs, and 68 per cent of those CEOs believe and are very confident or confident that their revenues will grow over the next 12 months. So, what we've seen is this potential setup for great opportunity for investing, because we've seen PEs contract amid short term fees about interest rates and inflation. Roger Montgomery (06:03): But meanwhile, the underlying companies are reporting that they're confident or very confident in a large case of those surveyed, confident or very confident that their revenue are going to grow. So, businesses are continuing to grow. They're continuing to profit, they're continuing to demonstrate bright prospects, and yet their share prices have contracted substantially. So the question remains is, is this an opportunity? Well, before we answer that question, just have a look at the contraction, or think about the contraction that we've seen in the Fed's assets or in their balance sheet. We know that we've seen quantitative easing and that's tipping over to quantitative tapering now. Roger Montgomery (06:54): So in other words, the US Federal Reserve is buying fewer government bonds each month than what they were buying previously. And what you can see in this chart is that not only as we mentioned earlier, is there a relationship between rising interest rates and contracting PEs, but there is also a relationship between equity market returns and a contracting US Federal Reserve balance sheet. That relationship demonstrates that as the Fed contracts its balance sheet, as it goes from quantitative easing buying bonds in substantial amounts, to reducing the number of bonds that it buys, or the amount of bonds that it buys, and then to contracting its balance sheet, where it actually shrinks the balance sheet, rather than grows it at a slower rate.
You can see that corresponds to returns on the stock market. The greater the balance sheet expansion, the greater the returns in the stock market. The greater the contraction of the balance sheet, the greater the negative return in the stock market. And that corresponds with a very simple idea that the higher the price you pay, the lower your return if you're paying very high prices for stocks. Then in the future at some point, you're going to end up with a lower return, particularly if you bought or paid high prices for stocks, when the US Federal Reserve's balance sheet was expanding. Now all of this, the prospect of rising interest rates in 2022, as well as a balance sheet contraction looks very similar to 2018. Roger Montgomery (08:26): In 2018, the US Federal Reserve hiked rates four times, and they contracted the balance sheet by about 10 per cent. So, Jerome Powell's hawkish statements recently offers a very similar prospect for 2022. Now, what we have to remember is back in 2015, we had an oil meltdown and a nominal recession in the United States. In 2016 and 2017, the economy then began recovering. The US was growing at about 3.8 per cent. We had Trump's tax cuts, and the economy was thought strong enough to support four rate hikes. For 2018, the conditions however weren't strong enough to support the Fed's four interest rate increases. The Fed arguably went too hard and that produced a stock market correction late in 2018 and importantly, that saw the fed stop raising interest rates. Roger Montgomery (09:24): Now for 2018, the US S&P 500 returned minus 7 per cent, after that stock market correction. And the Fed backed off. What's interesting is though that action of backing off raising interest rates actually saw the S&P 500 generate a 30 per cent return the following year in 2019. So, what is the possibility that the really hawkish statements we're seeing out of the US Federal Reserve now actually coincides with peak inflation fear, or even peak inflation? Is it possible that inflation has already turned the corner, and that we see lower rates of inflation in the future, which then sees the Fed pivot its current policy or current rhetoric to a more dovish and less hawkish rhetoric? Well, here's what the bond market thinks. Roger Montgomery (10:18): If you look at the difference between treasury constant maturity, securities, and treasury inflation index securities, which gives you an inflation break even curve, you can see that yes, expectations for inflation have risen slightly over the next 10 years, but it still remains steeply negative. That curve is steeply negative. Meaning, that inflation is seen by the bond market, at least as not persisting and in fact, temporary. I think about that in the context of what the bond market has actually had to absorb. They've seen 7 per cent inflation, which is massive in the United States. They've digested the possibility of four or five rate hikes from the US Federal Reserve. Roger Montgomery (11:00): They've heard tougher talk from the Fed, and there's also political pressure to deal with inflation. And despite all of that, the bond market remains firmly convinced based on this curve that inflation is a temporary phenomena. And in fact, it's not going to persist at all. In the US of course, inflation is on the front page and inflation has been very high there. And the reason why inflation is fastest in the US is because of course, the US offered the most stimulus. US employment cost index at the moment is rising to 4 per cent. Owner's equivalent rent has jumped to 4 per cent. Oil's just broken above $90 a barrel. So, there are real fears of a wage inflation spiral. Roger Montgomery (11:46): Look, there's no question that inflation in fact is running high at the moment. You can see it on this chart for the US, and it's running high in the US and Europe, but I wonder whether or not it could actually flame out. And in fact, there are some signs at the moment that the supply disruptions that have been partly responsible, or largely responsible for the jumping inflation are starting to ease.
And that coincides with this chart of the ISM manufacturing prices paid index, which is already tipping over. We know that prices for container freight, dynamic random access memory, German natural gas, Chinese thermal coal prices, for all of those things are already starting to decline. So, if inflation is primarily a supply side disruption and government stimulated consumer demand, or the result of those things, then it's quite possible these things aren't going to continue. And of course, if we open international borders, we'll see spending diverted to services again or travel, and that means lower demand for goods. And that we'll see some of the price pressure on those goods start to ease.
So, it's possible that inflation has actually peaked at the same time that the US Federal Reserve rhetoric is ramping up and causing all those fears in the stock market. And why is this an opportunity? This is an opportunity, simply because if you look at what the indices have done the S&P 500, our small caps index, if you look at the NASDAQ 100 in the United States or the NASDAQ Composite, you can see they've all fallen, but underneath those falls are much more substantial falls for individual issues. You can see on this table that something like 42 per cent of S&P 500 companies have fallen by more than 10 per cent, even though the S&P 500 has only fallen 3 per cent. You can see in the NASDAQ, for example, 79 per cent of companies have fallen by more than 10 per cent, even though the index has only fallen 7 per cent. The same story is true here in Australia, and that presents a host of opportunities. If you can find businesses that are still increasing their net worth, or increasing their value by generating high rates of return on equity, growing their equity by retaining profits, that process takes years to build value, yet the stock market abandons its long term plans, investors abandon their long term assumptions for companies and worry about the short term when interest rates are expected to go up, and inflation has been running in a million miles an hour, but there is an argument as I've just demonstrated that inflation is already peaking, that we'll see consecutive lower rates of inflation in the future. Roger Montgomery (14:39): And the Fed will ease its rhetoric around inflation and interest rate rises. If that happens, then the stock market could very well bounce quite violently. In fact, as violently as it's recently fallen, and that sets up investors for a terrific opportunity for 2022. Thanks for your time, look forward to talking to you again soon. Funds operated by this manager: Montgomery (Private) Fund, Montgomery Small Companies Fund, The Montgomery Fund |

11 Mar 2022 - Markets Volatile; Ukraine Invaded
Markets Volatile; Ukraine Invaded Laureola Advisors February 2022 THE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT - Markets Volatile; Ukraine Invaded The S&P 500 declined 5.3% in January. Gold and oil were up; crypto and bond prices down. The Russians invaded the Ukraine on 24th of February but markets already had a full slate of concerns prior to the invasion. Inflation refuses to go away: consumer prices were up 7.5% and housing prices up 18.8% in the USA with even smaller markets showing this level of increase. The Bloomberg Commodity Index is up over 12% ytd, led by crude and gasoline. Fertilizer is double the price from a year ago and the world's largest supplier of weedkiller - an important input in food production - declared a force majeure due to shortages of the key ingredient glyphosate. Many key commodities futures have slipped into backwardation indicating low stockpiles of the world's most important commodities (food, energy, metals) without the usual supply response. The Goldman Commodity analyst described the situation as "unprecedented". Our hearts go out to the brave Ukrainians in their struggle and of course their problems dwarf any investment issues. But the Russian invasion makes the global investment landscape even more uncertain: Russia is the 5th biggest trading partner with the EU, the #1 supplier of energy to the EU, and, with the Ukraine, an important exporter of corn and wheat. Uncertainties have increased; the value of a non-correlated investment strategy like Life Settlements is greater than ever. THE LIFE SETTLEMENT MARKETS - Markets Stable; Tertiary Markets Active LS Markets were stable with average gross, projected IRR's in the 12% to 14% range on completed transactions. There were interesting developments in the tertiary market where several larger portfolios were offered including one with over 100 policies. There was some indication that the sellers were motivated and that at least some of the portfolios were of good quality, which is a marked difference from most of the past two years where tertiary trades were mostly the undesired policies to be avoided at all costs. The Life Settlement news magazine "The Deal" reported encouraging developments in the fight to prevent insurance companies from competing with Life Settlements by offering special "enhanced cash surrender offers" which may violate insurance laws in at least some States, in part because the offers may favour some policy holders over others. The issue was raised and discussed at a recent meeting of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners with several States having already fined some carriers for such offers and other States starting to review their own legal and regulatory framework and how it applies to this relatively recent development. It appears to be another example of insurance companies trying to make life difficult for the Life Settlement industry with limited success, probably due to quality legal representation and lobbying of the LS industry and the fact that each policy holder has a vote. Written By Tony Bremness Funds operated by this manager: |

10 Mar 2022 - How to Handle the Current Falling Market
How to Handle the Current Falling Market Wealthlander Active Investment Specialist February 2022 Some investors have asked us how to handle a falling market as many of their investments are losing a lot of money. Here is a summary list of our suggestions about what can be done to stop the unnecessary pain, and adapt portfolios to the new environment. 1. Recognise the Game has Changed Inflation hurts the poor and the middle class who make up the majority of US voters. A significant majority of US voters don't own much in the way of anything that benefits from price increases and haven't benefitted meaningfully from historic asset price inflation. Hence a heavily politicised FED may be forced politically to prioritise fighting inflation ahead of boosting investment markets. They do this by reducing stimulus and raising interest rates. Unfortunately for investors, fighting inflation through reducing balance sheet expansion and raising interest rates only works by crushing demand first. This means economic demand and demand for equities need to get crushed as a necessary precondition to central banks effectively fighting inflation, if they attempt to do so. We might think of this as a policy mistake or a central bank choice, as other measures of fighting inflation (such as addressing supply and labour force issues) are better than anything central banks can do - but it is what it is and comes attendant potentially dramatic effects on mainstream markets. Effectively, one needs to acknowledge the investment cycle, as we highlighted in our article in early January "Four Ways to Massively Improve Performance in 2022: https://www.livewiremarkets.com/wires/four-ways-to-massively-improve-performance-in-2022 By recognising that the game has changed, investors can pivot their portfolio approach from what has worked in a bull market driven by disinflation and interest rates moving to 0, to what works better in a bear market caused by inflation, higher interest rates and reduced stimulus and demand (as massive stimulus packages are withdrawn and inflation bites into real wages growth). The first thing that astute investors can and are doing is reduce the risk of losing money by selling or reducing assets that don't work outside a bull market, and which are at risk of building larger losses. Importantly, it is not losing small amounts but losing large losses in bear markets that destroy investors' long term geometric returns. By way of illustration of this, if you lose 33% you need a massive 50% gain to get back to even; lose 50% and you need 100% gain just to stay still. Furthermore, the journey of the investor is far from pleasant when you are in large losing territory much of the time. Far better not to lose the 33% or 50% in the first place as there is no good cure, but only prevention. 2. Take Advantage of Volatility The assets which are better suited to rising inflation and interest rates include numerous alternatives. These alternatives include skill dependent rather than market dependent managers, market neutral and long short funds, volatility funds, insurance strategies, some CTAs, commodities such as oil and gold, and small subsets of the equity and property market such as shorter duration equities including resources, farmland and water. You probably don't own much of these currently and hence aren't protecting capital from losses as well as you could be in early 2022. The asset classes don't have the marketing and media budgets of the mainstream approaches so you probably don't know as much about them. Importantly, these assets are less likely to lose large amounts over an inflationary period compared with the financial assets mentioned previously. Not losing much in tough periods is the name of the game for long term returns and compounding, as well as the more risk averse. By potentially making money or not losing as much, the assets and strategies mentioned are far better suited to protecting capital and enabling long term compounding of your wealth, and particularly so compared with financial assets which are being meaningfully devalued. Furthermore, they offer a way of crystallising and cashing in strong equity and property gains of the last few years permanently, while still offering growth potential in the future. 3. Take Advantage of Volatility 4. Emphasize Better Value Niche Assets In summaryThere is much you can do not to be a deer in the headlights. Inflationary periods haven't been seen for a long time and most investors need to learn how to adapt to this different environment while it lasts. The ostrich approach with a portfolio suited to an entirely different economic regime doesn't work well when inflation is here. If you're losing large money, it's probably because your portfolio is poorly diversified and extrapolating history that is no longer with us, rather than being adapted to the times. It is far more prudent in current circumstances to adapt to the new investment environment, and buy a broader mix of assets that provide diversification and resilience. This includes a wide range of alternatives, managers that can take advantage of volatility, and better value niche assets. True diversification is the only free lunch in town right now and there is a delicious smorgasbord on offer to choose from. Venison and ostrich is missing from the menu. Funds operated by this manager: WealthLander Diversified Alternative Fund DISCLAIMER: This Article is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment or financial advice nor an offer to acquire a financial product. Before acting on any information contained in this Article, each person should obtain independent taxation, financial and legal advice relating to this information and consider it carefully before making any decision or recommendation. To the extent this Article does contain advice, in preparing any such advice in this Article, we have not taken into account any particular person's objectives, financial situation or needs. Furthermore, you may not rely on this message as advice unless subsequently confirmed by letter signed by an authorised representative of WealthLander Pty Ltd (WealthLander). You should, before acting on this information, consider the appropriateness of this information having regard to your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. We recommend you obtain financial advice specific to your situation before making any financial investment or insurance decision. WealthLander makes no representation or warranty as to whether the information is accurate, complete or up-to-date. To the extent permitted by law, we accept no responsibility for any misstatements or omissions, negligent or otherwise, and do not guarantee the integrity of the Article (or any attachments). All opinions and views expressed constitute judgment as of the date of writing and may change at any time without notice and without obligation. WealthLander Pty Ltd is a Corporate Authorised Representative (CAR Number 001285158) of Boutique Capital Pty Ltd ACN 621 697 621 AFSL No.508011. |

9 Mar 2022 - The question is, when should you invest?
The question is, when should you invest? Insync Fund Managers February 2022 Why we don't try to predict macro-market changes. We don't need to, no investor does. It is well established that the total returns of a stock follow the earnings growth of a business in the long term. Companies that can sustainably grow their earnings at a high rate over the long term are called compounders. Investing in a portfolio of compounders is one of the best ways to generate wealth for longer-term oriented investors that beat market averages. A major benefit of compounders is that market timing is rarely an issue, hence risk is also reduced. Our industry spends an inordinate amount of time trying to predict or forecast the future of markets. Sophisticated soothsaying by in-large. The probability of getting this right on a consistent basis is very low. Many espouse otherwise but a check of their historical records on predictions are quite revealing. Consider this:
What about the worst 20? It is also valid that avoiding the worst 20 days would have boosted your return beyond the fully invested 7.5% annualised return. The best and worst return periods show that extreme events have a large bearing on investor returns. Based on volatility around extreme events (and their mostly unpredictable appearances), it is impossible to predict the worst and best days. Indexing cannot filter in/out the extremes. If only those sophisticated 'crystal balls' in the hands of commentators and fund managers actually worked! Insync's "active" basket of 28 compounder stocks, carefully constructed to control the risk, delivers outperformance over passive benchmarks, over both full and multiple investment cycles, and does so without having to predict extreme events. Fastest decline in history. The Covid-19 pandemic clearly demonstrates the folly of an approach based on prediction. It created the fastest stock market decline in history catching out investors who believed prediction works. Let's say however, you were right and got out in time. Next and without warning, the fastest recovery in history then occurred. Unless you were in the market you missed out in a big way. Predictions require constant and correct timing decisions. Stay in or out? If out, when? Then to where? And for how long? Thus, multiple questions need to be answered just for each event. Now, repeat over the life of your investment hundreds of times. No person or organisation has successfully got these answers sustainably right to produce great enduring outcomes. Market timing strategies also cannot benefit from the compounders. This is because timing tends to interrupt the powerful process of the conversion of earnings into price appreciation. Insync's focus on investing in compounders means we don't need to concern ourselves with the low hit-rate strategy of market timing stocks we hold. This is just one way we lower risk to our investors yet retain above average returns over time that endure. Examples of compounders Funds operated by this manager: Insync Global Capital Aware Fund, Insync Global Quality Equity Fund |

8 Mar 2022 - Manager Insights | Cyan Investment Management
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Chris Gosselin, CEO of FundMonitors.com, speaks with Dean Fergie, Director & Portfolio Manager at Cyan Investment Management. The Cyan C3G Fund has a track record of 7 years and 6 months and has outperformed the ASX Small Ordinaries Total Return Index since inception in August 2014, providing investors with an annualised return of 13.69% compared with the index's return of 8.08% over the same period. The fund has achieved a down-capture ratio since inception of 57.19%, indicating that, on average, the fund has outperformed in the market's negative months.
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8 Mar 2022 - Aligning Interests: (no freeloading on my tab!)
Aligning Interests: (no freeloading on my tab!) Colins St Asset Management February 2022 |
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Fat salaries. Big bonuses. Plummeting share price. Sound familiar?That an article discussing the benefits of aligned interests should even need to be written deeply concerns and somewhat surprises me. Nevertheless, it's clear from our experiences that there are plenty of companies where the interests of the executives and the interests of the shareholders are in direct and lopsided conflict. It boggles my mind that investors would put up with such situations, but it seems that many people out there are either unconcerned that the managers and directors looking after their money don't care about their goals or are simply too busy speculating to notice. So, though it pains me to my value investing roots to prepare this article, here are our thoughts on where investor interests and attention should be (in our humble opinion). "Show me the incentive, and I will show you the outcome." - Charlie Munger, Berkshire Hathaway There are many factors we consider when looking to invest in a company. No doubt, the basic matters such as balance sheet strength, return on equity, and competent management rank highly, but even when all of those factors are in place, a conflict of interest between the incentives for the management team and the interests of shareholders can see an otherwise attractive investment opportunity devolve into an expensive 'learning experience'. It should go without saying that a management team and investors should make all possible effort to ensure that their interests are aligned, but shockingly it is far less common than one would expect. Where investors are concerned with positive long-term outcomes, strong balance sheets, return on assets, return on invested capital, and primarily an increasing share price, many managements incentive schemes (both short term and long term) stunningly disregard some (or all of those factors) in lieu of more 'inventive' measures of success. We've seen management teams align their incentive schemes to revenue, or market cap growth, we've even seen some propose that the management team be rewarded for product growth. In each of those circumstances, we've seen time and again, management teams sacrifice balance sheet strength (via leverage), long term share prices (with dilutionary capital raisings), and margins (in search of wider and less profitable products). None of that behaviour suits shareholders, but all too often, the powers that be, who create long and short-term incentives get lost in the excitement of a good story or an exciting 'opportunity' and forget that the only role a management team should be playing is that of enriching the company's shareholders. Now it's important to note that even a perfect alignment of interests is not a guarantee of success. There have been plenty of companies with the best of intentions that have failed. However, we would suggest that over the long term, misaligned interests are a guarantee of failure. HOW TO ALIGN INTERESTS:There is no one-size-fits-all approach, but broadly speaking there are a few basic things a board should look to do.
2. An improvement on our first point is to align management interests with shareholders by insisting that they become shareholders.
3. Once we've seen management align their interests to both the upside and the downside of the company, we also like to see the directors consistently increase their stake in the business.
If we can find a competent team that is prepared to support the company and align their interests with shareholders, it is one of the best indicators we can find for positive outcomes. A great example of this in practice is National Tyre and Wheel (NTD.ASX). National Tyre and Wheel is a Queensland based business that, through its 28 different distribution centres spread over 3 countries, distributes tyres across a range of industries and sectors as diverse as emergency services, agriculture, off-road adventure driving and industrial vehicles (such as forklifts). The Board and Senior Management have been working together for over 30 years, well before the company was listed on the ASX. Key things that I like about the structure and alignment of interests within National Tyre and Wheel include:
Some other questions investors should be asking: There are no perfect solutions, but there are some simple steps we can take, and some indications we can look out for.
If the company is consolidating, incentives should reflect that. If the company is growing, then the incentives would be reflective of that.
It's worth offering highly attractive incentives to entice and retain quality staff. At the same time, it's important that those benefits are earned.
If the company's employees and Board are confident in the outlook of the business, receiving part of their salary in equity is enticing.
A toxic culture may achieve seemingly good outcomes in the short term but could have catastrophic consequences in the long term. Again, there is no guaranteed method for ensuring success, but knowing that the management team are working towards the same goals that we investors seek, and that a loss to investors will be equally felt by the management team is as good an indicator of the quality and prospects of a business as any we've been able to identify. How we align our interests. At Collins St Value Fund we take these lessons to heart. We expect the directors of the companies we invest in to align their interests with ours, and we expect nothing less from the investors who have entrusted us to look after their capital. As such the team have meaningfully invested in the fund and have done so on the same terms as all our investors. Additionally, the fund only receives a fee when our investors profit (focussing our attention on both genuinely protecting the downside and maximising the upside) - there are no fixed management fees skimmed off the top of investors capital as we believe, that in the Australian equities context, they incentivise little more than asset gathering, rent-seeking, index hugging and, ultimately, mediocrity. Author: Michael Goldberg, Managing Director and Portfolio Manager
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8 Mar 2022 - Webinar | Premium China Funds Management - Asian Fixed Income Webinar
Webinar | Premium China Funds Management - Asian Fixed Income The travails of certain Chinese property developers continue to impact Asian corporate bonds. Jonathan Wu has an update on how we are traversing this landscape. Speaker: Jonathan Wu, Premium's Head of Distribution and Operations & Chief Investment Specialist
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7 Mar 2022 - Manager Insights | Laureola Advisors
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Damen Purcell, COO of Australian Fund Monitors, speaks with John Swallow, Director at Laureola Advisors. The Laureola Australian Feeder Fund has a track record of 8 years and 10 months and has consistently outperformed the Bloomberg AusBond Composite 0+ Yr Index since inception in May 2013, providing investors with a return of 14.96%, compared with the index's return of 3.55% over the same time period.The fund has provided positive monthly returns 97% of the time in rising markets, and 97% of the time when the market was negative, contributing to an up capture ratio since inception of 160% and a down capture ratio of -249%.
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7 Mar 2022 - Norsk Hydro: In discussion with Pål Kildemo
Norsk Hydro: In discussion with Pål Kildemo Antipodes Partners Limited February 2022 In this episode on the Good Value podcast (recorded Monday 21 February 2022), Alison Savas is joined by the Executive Vice President and CFO of Norsk Hydro, Pål Kildemo. Norsk Hydro is a long-term holding in Antipodes' global portfolios, including the ASX-listed Antipodes Global Shares (Quoted Managed Fund) active-ETF (ASX: AGX1). Not only is the Oslo-listed company one of the largest aluminium producers in the world, it also has one of the lowest carbon footprints. Alison and Pål discuss Norsk's low-carbon, low-cost production, the opportunity for a green aluminium premium, and the structural trends impacting the aluminium market. |
Funds operated by this manager: Antipodes Asia Fund, Antipodes Global Fund, Antipodes Global Fund - Long Only (Class I) |

7 Mar 2022 - Is the (Liquidity) Party Over?
Is the (Liquidity) Party Over? Longwave Capital Partners February 2022 Inflation, interest rates and liquidity. The equity market is finally taking notice that all three of these issues are very real. The most speculative stocks were the biggest beneficiaries of recent liquidity abundance and are now most at risk should liquidity retreat - which is exactly what bond markets and most central banks are confirming. In short, the Fed has signaled the liquidity party in SPACs, tech, crypto, concept stocks and promotions is now over. Please go home. Investment results are best considered over a full cycle, and in the case of monetary policy and liquidity we are now seeing what the other half of that looks like. In the past two years we have often been asked if our definition of quality costs us the ability to participate in innovation. Putting aside how early you need to be in the innovation cycle to capture outstanding returns we question whether much of what passed as innovation by companies and alpha by investors was anything more than just a liquidity bubble. I guess we will only know for sure once this cycle completes, but it does make a mockery of the popular growth stock returns narrative, which may be explained almost completely by sentiment and not at all by superior business performance. Generating Positive Returns in a Deflating BubbleMany investors draw parallels between this market to the tech bubble and aftermath in the early 2000s. We think this a very instructive analogy, but a more recent period may also hold lessons for small cap investors navigating the next few years. For six long years, from December 2010 to December 2016, the S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries index delivered investors zero total return as the resources and mining services bubble - which had grown to a huge weight in the index - crested and painfully deflated. Because there was such high divergence in returns before and then during this deflation period, many active small cap managers were still able to generate reasonable absolute returns (5-10% or more per annum) from 2010 to 2016. The trick of course was to avoid getting caught up in the deflation of market values for those stocks that had run up hard in the commodity super cycle (after the peak the small resources index declined by 17.5% per annum from Dec 2010 to Dec 2016) and invest in previously unpopular, overlooked and under-valued companies (the small industrials index increased by 8% per annum over the same period). Today, dispersion in the small cap market is similarly extreme. This means active managers have many compelling investment opportunities away from stocks exposed to liquidity withdrawal and excessive valuation. Microcap stocks are probably the most at risk given their high prices, lack of profitability and sensitivity to liquidity conditions. Microcaps in January 2022 remind us of small resources in December 2010. For many months we have discussed what these opportunities look like - and for a sample of names readers can always refer to the top 10 fund holdings - but to reiterate what we believe will allow investors continuing to generate returns worthy of staying invested in equities, below is a list of attributes to consider:
At the end of January, our portfolio is composed of companies that have in aggregate grown EPS at 15% per annum for the past three years but have been de-rated (PE multiples have declined) as the market was more interested in paying up for "liquidity party" stocks. Our current portfolio look-through return on equity is almost 20% and after price declines in January the P/E multiple is now around 13x. Expressed as a pre-tax earnings yield, our portfolio is offering almost 9% more than the Australian 10yr government bond - a metric worth watching as bond yields rise. Innovation is not over. We will always be on the lookout for genuinely innovative companies that solve customer problems in novel ways and have an economic competitive advantage that captures this value for shareholders. Hopefully the current turmoil and the upcoming reporting season provides more of these opportunities for the fund. February 1st, 2022 marks the first three years of the Longwave Australian Small Companies fund performance. Few strategies can outperform in every short-term market environment. Even fewer can do so applying a long term, low turnover investment strategy where the goal is not to keep churning the portfolio into the stocks du jour. We are often asked "in what market environment would your investment approach struggle?". Before COVID, we had said a period like the dot-com bubble in the late 1990s was one in which we would likely struggle to outperform, as fundamentals and valuation took a back seat to sentiment and liquidity. Given the lessons of this period were recent and accessible to investors we thought it unlikely to recur anytime soon. We were wrong. The period from April 2020 to November 2021 ended up being exactly that type of market. So more than 50% of the first three years of our fund performance has been in a period quite hostile to our investment approach. We managed to tread water rather than sink in relative performance terms, holding the portfolio in good stead as we likely move into a market better suited to our fundamental quality and valuation based approach. Written By David Wanis, Founding Partner & CIO and Portfolio Manager |
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