Platform Availability
AMP North, BT Asgard, BT Panorama, Centric, CFS Edge, HUB24, IOOF, Macquarie Wrap, Mason Stevens, Netwealth, Praemium
STATISTICAL
DATA
PORTFOLIO SUMMARY
FEATURES
- APIR CODE PCL0022AU
- REDEMPTION
PRICEA$ 1.5001
-
FEES *
Management Fee: 1.1%
Performance Fee:
20.5%
- Minimum initial investment
A$10,000
- FUM AT MONTH END
A$ 125.67m
- STRATEGY INCEPTION DATE
1 April 2015
- BenchmarkMSCI All Country World SMID Cap Index unhedged in AUD
Fund Managers
Jon Moog
CIO and Portfolio Manager
Description
The Fund invests principally in small and midcap listed (or soon to be listed) global equities. Its investment objective is to obtain returns greater than the MSCI All Country World Index SMID Cap unhedged in Australian dollars (‘Index’) over rolling 3 year periods after fees. The Fund’s investment manager, Lizard Investors LLC, uses a value oriented investment approach that seeks to identify and invest in quality businesses that create significant value but are mispriced, overlooked, or out-of-favour. The investment manager believes that unique opportunities exist due to limited available research, corporate actions, or unfavourable investor perception.
COMMENTARY
Market Commentary
Large cap equity markets reached new highs in the US, Europe and Japan during February, following stronger than expected December quarter earnings reports.
However, US inflation remains persistent, with a range of indicators suggesting that the Federal Reserve (Fed) is not quite at the point where it can begin cutting interest rates. The US consumer price index (CPI) edged up from 3.1% to 3.2% in February, despite a survey of economists having indicated no change was expected.
This increase led to investors pushing back the expected timing of the first interest rate cut by the Fed from March to June. However, weaker retail sales and jobs data indicate that US rate cuts can probably be expected later this year.
The European economy is under greater pressure from elevated interest rates and higher energy prices, bringing a faster slowdown. Eurozone CPI headline and core inflation cooled to 2.6% and 3.1%, respectively, while composite purchasing managers’ index data improved slightly but remained consistent with economic contraction. UK CPI inflation was unchanged despite better January retail sales, but a reduction in the regulated energy price should help inflation fall further.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 share market index finally surpassed its December 1989 peak in February. Rising inflation and real wage growth may lead the Bank of Japan to end its long-standing negative interest rate policy in April.
Smaller companies underperformed larger caps in February, this was driven by two factors:
This weakness had a greater impact on smaller stocks within the small cap universe. Companies with a market capitalisation greater than US$10 billion outperformed those with a market cap of less than US$1 billion by 7.5% in February.
The divergence in the valuations of large and small companies has been stretched for some time and now appears unsustainable. The manager expects that small caps will outperform large caps when interest rates begin to fall.
Portfolio Highlights
The Fund is heavily invested in companies with market capitalisation levels at the smaller end of its market index. The underperformance of smaller companies impacted the Fund’s relative returns in February.
Stock performance in industrials and information technology detracted from relative returns. However, the Fund benefitted from its overweight position in information technology and its zero-weighting to the interest rate-sensitive real estate sector.
The strongest contributor to relative returns in February was the holding in Korea’s market-leading gaming and video streaming service AfreecaTV, which the Fund established in December. The stock continued to perform well, as its video streaming service benefits from the exit of Amazon-owned Twitch from the Korean market.
The Fund’s second largest contributor to relative returns in February was the US-listed IT solutions business Sapiens which focusses on the insurance sector. It continued to outperform after announcing stronger than expected revenue and earnings growth during the December quarter.
Stock performance in Japan detracted from relative performance in February as Japanese small caps underperformed larger stocks in line with other major markets. The Fund remains confident that the recent focus on maximising shareholder returns in Japan, which has benefitted larger companies, will extend to small cap outperformance over the medium term.
The Japanese outsourced research and engineering firm Technopro, which provides skilled engineers to many industries across Japan, was the largest underperformer in February. This followed concerns about profitability in its international business, despite strong December quarter earnings.
Japan-based Infocom provides enterprise software and distributes online Manga via subscriptions. It underperformed despite strong earnings results when it delivered disappointing forward earnings guidance and limited distribution of cash to shareholders.