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INVESTMENTS  |  FUND COMMENTARY 

Australian Shares Fund

The Australian Shares Fund (Wholesale) (the ‘Fund’) fell 18.0% in the quarter ended 30 June 2022, underperforming its benchmark which fell 12.2%. The Fund fell 17.3% in the 2022 financial year, underperforming its benchmark which fell 6.8%.


25 July 2022



Fund commentary

  • The primary reason for the underperformance is the divergence in performance between the S&P/ASX Small Industrials Index (which fell 18.4% during the quarter and 24% for the year) and the S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index (which fell 12.2% during the quarter and 6.8% for the year); noting the Fund has more than 50% invested in small companies.

  • This underperformance is specifically attributed to the Fund’s significant overweight allocation in the information technology sector, the weakest performing sector in the ASX300 over the period, with healthcare also a laggard. The technology sell-off has been led out of the US, with Australian microcap and small-cap companies in their earlier stages of commercial development hit particularly hard. The Fund’s significant underweighting in materials and energy, compared with the index, were also detractors.


Outlook for the Fund

The Fund has an all-cap strategy with investments spread across small, mid and large-cap names.

Small and microcap companies typically in an earlier stage of commercialisation and investing into growth initiatives have been disproportionately affected by rising global interest rates. The combination of an increased discount rate used to value company earnings and the fact small company earnings are typically expected further out results in their share prices being hit harder in a rising interest rate environment. 


We continue to believe superior growth attributes are the primary reason for investing into small and microcap companies. We like to align our small-cap investment with intellectual property and global sales aspirations, a potentially powerful combination.



Australian Shares (Wholesale) Fund Performance

As at 30 June 2022*

fund benchmark
3 months -18.0% -12.2%
1 year p.a. -17.3% -6.8%
3 years p.a. 6.8% 3.4%
5 years p.a. 7.9% 6.8%
10 years p.a. 12.7% 9.1%
since inception p.a. 12.4% 9.1%


*Benchmark is composite S&P/ASX Small Industrials Accumulations Index till 12 August 2019 and S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index thereafter. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

Inception date: 23/01/2012.



Australian Shares (Retail) Fund Performance

As at 30 June 2022*

fund benchmark
3 months -18.2% -12.2%
1 year p.a. -17.8% -6.8%
3 years p.a. 6.0% 3.4%
5 years p.a. 6.9% 6.8%
10 years p.a. 11.3% 9.1%
since inception p.a. 9.5% 6.9%


*Benchmark is composite S&P/ASX Small Industrials Accumulations Index till 12 August 2019 and S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index thereafter. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

Inception date: 19/09/1994.



FundUpdate-ASF_Contributors-1642499905622.jpg

The number one detractor over the quarter ending 30 June 2022 was consumer finance company Pepper Money (PPM) which fell 42%.


Contributors

  • Health insurer NIB Holdings (NHF) was extremely resilient over the quarter, returning +16% and indeed for much of the Covid period as elective surgeries and health insurance claims were dampened, while the number of Australian consumers with health insurance has been growing after years of modest declines.

  • Similarly, our investment in Medibank Private (MPL) was resilient, returning +5.5% over the quarter, having benefitted from reduced health insurance claims, while growing its policy holder base.

  • Our investment in Graincorp (GNC) was a strong relative performer appreciating 12% with strong Australian wheat harvests, good levels of soil moisture and the war in Ukraine exacerbating global grain shortages. Graincorp can make high profits from selling into the global export market during these times.

  • Our investment in Graincorp (GNC) was the strongest relative performer over the 2022 financial year, delivering a total return of 90% (including dividends).

  • The second strongest performer over 12 months was online foreign exchange service provider OFX Group (OFX) which appreciated 72%. The company has been successful diversifying its business into corporates, online sellers, and enterprises, while currency volatility has assisted its consumer business segment. Additionally, the company completed an earnings accretive Canadian FX business acquisition in 2022.

  • Our long-held investment in Macquarie Telecom (MAQ) appreciated 14% over the 2022 financial year. The company has been significantly expanding its Sydney data centre capacity over recent periods, which the market is appreciating.


Detractors

  • The number one detractor was Pepper Money (PPM) which fell 42% over the quarter. Pepper sells residential mortgages and asset finance loans financed through the big four banks and the global securitisation market.

  • Our investment in mortgage insurer Genworth Australia (GMA) fell 20% on concerns its insurance cover for residential mortgages typically greater than 80% LVR’s will be called upon in a declining housing market.

  • The third largest detractor was Bank of Queensland (BOQ) which fell 23% over the quarter on fears of bank margin pressure and potential loan losses on the back of declining residential house prices.

  • Our investment in content management software-as-a-service company Bigtincan (BTH) fell 55% over the 2022 financial year, which has been led by the sell-off in US technology companies. We take encouragement that the company is now guiding the market to a more sustainable free cashflow generation position within 18 months.

  • The second largest detractor was Pepper Money (PPM) which fell 55% over the 2022 financial year. Pepper sells residential mortgages and asset finance loans financed through the big 4 banks and the securitisation market. The market has derated the banking sector while punished participants in the securitisation market. We continue to see the residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) market functioning properly.

  • Technology names under pressure included telematics company Eroad (ERD), which fell 78% over the 2022 financial year. The company disappointed, with its March 2022 year result raising concerns around the need for additional equity capital. We have also been disappointed with management turnover.


Portfolio changes

  • We have been adding to our underperformers which include EML Payments (EML), Domain Group (DHG) and software name Nuix (NXL).

  • We have been adding to DHG because we believe the long-term earnings fundamentals remain attractive for DHG as one of the leading Australian property marketplaces. The recent sell-off in equity markets has provided an opportunity to increase our holding based on fundamental valuation upside.

  • We have added technology names EML Payments (EML), Nuix (NXL), McPhersons (MCP), Rubicon Water (RWL) to the portfolio over the year.

  • The Fund benefited from takeovers of systems integrator Empired (EPD), cloud software distributor Rhipe (RHP), Spark Infrastructure (SKI), Australian Pharmaceutical Industries (API) over the year.



Fund strategy

Australian Ethical offers investors the opportunity to invest in a diversified share portfolio of companies predominately listed on the ASX and selected on the basis of their social, environmental and financial credentials. The Australian Shares Fund utilises an active stock-picking management style with stocks selected for growth rather than income, with a bias towards smaller capitalisation stocks listed on the ASX. All stocks are chosen on the basis of relative value where we deem the risks are being adequately priced.



*Total returns are calculated using the sell (exit) price, net of management fees and gross of tax as if distributions of income have been reinvested at the actual distribution reinvestment price. The actual returns received by an investor will depend on the timing, buy and exit prices of individual transactions. Return of capital and the performance of your investment in the fund are not guaranteed. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Figures showing a period of less than one year have not been adjusted to show an annual total return. Figures for periods of greater than one year are on a per annum compound basis. The current benchmark may not have been the benchmark over all periods shown in the above chart and tables. The calculation of the benchmark performance links the performance of previous benchmarks and the current benchmark over the relevant time periods.

This commentary may contain material provided by third parties derived from sources believed to be accurate at its issue date. While such material is published with necessary permission, Australian Ethical accepts no responsibility for the accuracy or completeness of, nor does it endorse any such third party material. To the maximum extent permitted by law, we intend by this notice to exclude liability for this third party material.

Australian Ethical acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the country on which we work, the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, and recognise and celebrate their continuing connection to land, waters and culture. We pay our respects to Elders past and present and thank them for protecting Country since time immemorial.

See our Reconciliation Action Plan