Increase to the Fund’s management fees and costs

The Fund’s financial year 2022 (FY22) estimated management fees and costs are 1.41% p.a. of the assets of the Fund. The estimated management fees and costs have increased from 1.28% p.a. of the assets of the Fund in financial year 2021.

The increase is due to the fund experiencing higher estimated transaction costs. The Fund’s FY22 estimated transaction costs net of any amount recovered by the Fund’s buy-sell spread increased by 0.13% p.a. to 0.17% p.a.

Transaction costs are incurred when buying and selling the Fund’s underlying securities and are paid out of the Fund’s assets. These costs are reflected in the daily unit price and are not charged to you as an additional fee. Transaction costs and buy-sell spread may vary from year to year depending upon market conditions, the market impact of transacting and volumes traded.

There has been no change to the Fund’s management fee of 1.22% p.a. or estimated expense recoveries of 0.02% p.a..

Key points

  • Paul Hannan and Noel Webster will step down as Senior Portfolio Managers of Pendal’s Smaller Companies team from today.
  • Over 17 years Paul and Noel have together built a well-respected and highly successful franchise. The Smaller Companies Fund has delivered 11.55% pa after fees since they took over management on April 1, 2004. The Microcap Opportunities Fund has returned 23.87% pa since its launch in March 2006. Both have significantly outperformed their benchmark, the S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries index (source: Pendal at Apr 30, 2021).
  • Pendal’s emphasis on team development and a disciplined process has laid a strong foundation for the next stage in the franchise’s evolution.
  • After more than three years as Portfolio Managers, Lewis Edgley and Patrick Teodorowski take over full management of the Pendal Smaller Companies and Pendal Microcap Opportunities portfolios from today.
  • Paul Hannan will continue as an analyst until the stock coverage transition is completed. This is expected in 2022.
  • Noel Webster will step down from the team as soon as the handover of his stock coverage is completed within the next two months.
  • Edgley and Teodorowski also become Co-Heads of Smaller Companies in Pendal’s Australian equities boutique, reporting to Head of Australian Equities, Crispin Murray.

TODAY Pendal announces the next stage in a Smaller Companies portfolio management transition which began in 2017.

From June 21, Lewis Edgley and Patrick Teodorowski take over full management of Pendal’s Smaller Companies team.

Edgley and Teodorowski have been Portfolio Managers for the fund since early 2018. Over the past three years they have taken increasingly greater responsibility for the portfolio’s trading, position weightings and construction. They now take full responsibility of the team and portfolios.

Pendal’s Australian equities team has a culture of accountability, granting team members the opportunity to prove themselves.

Paul Hannan and Noel Webster successfully executed this approach, focusing on development within the Small Cap strategy. Edgley and Teodorowski have been with Pendal for eight and 11 years respectively. Their progression reflects our focus on development.

This transition is the next stage of the smaller companies evolution and demonstrates Hannan and Webster’s focus on succession planning and their confidence in leaving management of the funds in the hands of Edgley and Teodorowski.

The Smaller Companies team is a vital part of Pendal’s broader Australian equity boutique – in terms of the portfolios they run and the company research that feeds directly into the midcap and broadcap funds.

Edgley and Teodorowski will work closely with Crispin Murray and other portfolio managers in the boutique, building on a long track record of success and excellence in our small cap capability.

The team will continue to be assisted by analysts Rachel Cole and Damien Diamant. Another analyst is expected to be appointed shortly.

A monthly insight from James Syme and Paul Wimborne (pictured), managers of Pendal’s Global Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund 

  • There are three broad drivers of the recent commodity boom: a natural demand bounce-back after 2020, US economic stimulus, and Chinese economic stimulus.
  • Here we review the prospects for each and discuss our portfolio positioning around the commodity rally.

COMMODITY price moves have been one of the most significant parts of markets pricing in a post-Covid global economic recovery.

As we’ve mentioned before, commodities are a major driver of returns for emerging market (EM) equities as a whole. They’re also a major differentiator of returns among different parts of the asset class.

We feel there are three broad drivers of the recent commodity boom: a natural demand bounce-back after 2020, US economic stimulus and Chinese economic stimulus.

Here we review the prospects for each and discuss our positioning around the commodity rally.
 
Download this article as a PDF
 
Demand bounce-back

Pent-up demand during lockdowns created a huge demand shock as restrictions and trade interruptions began to ease.

This was particularly noticeable in the housing and construction industries with long lead-times and big price increases on products such as construction lumber, windows and bricks.

One trackable index for this is the US CME lumber future, which rose from US$400/lot at the start of 2020 to more than US$1600/lot in May.

There’s also been a surge in demand for smart, programmable or connected devices, leading to real pressure on the availability of some semiconductor components.

One benchmark, DRAM memory chip, climbed to US$4.60 from US$2.60 in August 2020.

US and Chinese economic stimulus

US and Chinese economic stimulus is the other driver of the commodity boom.

Investors face a complicated world. The biggest economy has broken with 40 years of generally deflationary fiscal and monetary restraint, just as the second-biggest economy has significantly tightened policy.

The Biden administration moved quickly to pass a US$1.9 trillion stimulus package, and is now preparing a US$6 trillion budget that will very substantially increase the rate of investment by the government sector in the US economy.

Meanwhile, as we noted in December, China has moved to end an acceleration in money supply growth and credit growth that began in mid-2020.

Fiscal policy was tightened, which naturally reduces credit growth. We also saw a disappointing Q1 GDP growth rate of 0.6% quarter-on-quarter and a decline in shorter-term bond yields as markets priced in the slowdown.

In this environment it is hard to see where commodity prices might go from their current elevated levels.

Historically a slower China is bad for commodity prices. But this has always been in an environment of tight US fiscal policy.

In terms of where commodities might go — and how to manage exposure in emerging markets — we make the following observations:

1. China’s dominant role in commodity demand

The dominant role of China in terms of global commodity demand and its historical importance to commodity prices should not be dismissed.

When taken alongside the ability of market systems to increase supply in the face of high prices, we would not be surprised to see a meaningful pull-back in commodity prices at some point this year.

2. Not all commodities are the same

It’s important to note that not all commodities are the same. Agricultural products in particular can display a very strong supply response to high prices as farmers’ planting decisions are affected.

In addition some commodities are more exposed to Chinese end demand (steel, coal) and some more to US end demand (particularly oil).

The oil price has risen strongly in the past year. As oil companies struggle to add production capacity — in light of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) restraints — we feel there is probably more upside to the oil price than to industrial metals from this point.
 
Pendal named 2020 Fund Manager of the Year in Zenith Awards.
 
3. Correlation between equity and commodity prices

Although the share prices of most commodity-producing companies in emerging markets have risen strongly, there remains a high correlation between those share price moves and moves in the prices of the respective underlying commodity products.

These shares offer exposure to commodity prices, but nothing more.

We have exposure to commodity-producing companies in sectors such as oil/gas, wood pulp, cement and gold. But in every case we have a clearly identified additional catalyst that we expect to come through — as well as the supportive environment for commodity prices.

For example, for Brazilian oil and gas producer Petrobras we believe the market has mispriced when (and even if) domestic product prices deviate from import parity prices. Meanwhile in the first quarter of 2021 the company had free cash flow equal to 10% of its market cap.

At Brazilian pulp and paper company Suzano, we feel the company’s substantial progress in ESG has not been recognised by analysts yet. At Mexican cement maker Cemex we feel the rapidly improving European operating environment is not yet in consensus estimates or priced into the share price. And so on.

4. Opportunities in other sectors

Fourthly, the macro-economic impact of commodity prices creates opportunities in other sectors in certain countries.

Followers of our strategy will be aware of our increased allocation to Brazil and South Africa. Recent economic data and corporate results show robust demand growth there — particularly from South African financials and retailers.

We also note that strong economic recoveries are underway in the UAE (where we have maintained our position) and potentially in Russia (where we are currently underweight).

One of the great attractions of emerging market equities is the global macro exposures the asset class offers. One of the great strengths of a top-down approach is an ability to find preferred opportunities within this view.

The overall environment for cyclical assets remains robust, both for commodities and emerging market equities.

But as always we feel it pays to be selective.

Download this article as a PDF.

About Pendal Global Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund

James Syme and Paul Wimborne are senior portfolio managers and co-managers of Pendal’s Global Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund.

The fund aims to add value through a combination of country allocation and individual stock selection.

The country allocation process is based on analysis of a country’s economic growth, monetary policy, market liquidity, currency, governance/politics and equity market valuation.

The stock selection process focuses on buying quality growth stocks at attractive valuations.

Find out more about Pendal Global Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund here.
 
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.

Contact a Pendal key account manager here. 

Here’s our weekly Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies wrap from Pendal portfolio manager Tim Hext (pictured).

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies

 

THIS week we saw strong economic numbers — here and in the US — turbo-charged by fiscal stimulus.

Australia’s May employment update reported 115,000 new jobs created, including 97,000 full-time. Jobs are now 1% higher than before the pandemic.

Unemployment fell from 5.5% to 5.1% despite a rise in participation. Importantly underemployment (part-time workers looking for full time hours) fell to 7.4%. This level was last seen in January 2014.

Underemployment has had a stronger correlation to wages in recent times so it lifts the chances of decent wage gains.

On the topic of wages the Fair Work Commission this week passed down a 2.5% increase to the minimum wage —from $19.84 an hour to $20.33 an hour.

This affects about 2.2 million workers. They must have gotten the decision about right as employer groups and unions seemed as unhappy as each other. There was a tip of the hat to Covid impacts with delays on the increase until November for some industries.

The pace of the recovery continues to catch the RBA by surprise.

In February the Reserve forecast unemployment to reach 5.25% by June 2023. Given an opportunity for revision in May they predicted 5% by December 2021. They effectively reached it in the same month as the re-rating.

While forecasts are playing catch up the RBA seems more than happy to leave the narrative way behind. In a speech this week From Recovery to Expansion, Governor Philip Lowe noted the improvements but held the line that “inflation pressures remain subdued and are likely to remain so”.

Time will tell, but after hearing the central bank tell me consistently for 30 years that inflation has a long lag to activity it’s hard to see how today’s low inflation is a good predictor of inflation a year from now.

Pendal named 2020 Fund Manager of the Year in Zenith Awards.

Strong US inflation numbers

Late last week the US printed another series of strong inflation numbers.

Year on year CPI is now 5% and 3.8% ex food and energy. There are some base effects from this time last year but the moves were broad-based and finally seemed to catch the Feds’ attention.

The previous set of numbers brought out a round of Federal Reserve speakers talking about “transitory” inflation.

This time the Fed seemed to be paying attention.

In a press conference Fed chairman Jerome Powell said: “as the reopening continues, shifts in demand can be large and rapid, and bottlenecks, hiring difficulties and other constraints could continue to limit how quickly supply can adjust, raising the possibility that inflation could turn out to higher and more persistent than we expect”.

To paraphrase, as we said earlier “transitory” will be measured in years, not months.

Markets were quick to price in earlier rate hikes in the US, helped by the Fed dots predicting earlier hikes.

Terminal rates were less affected as the yield curve flattened. It seems the Fed narrative has changed from being way behind the curve to maybe keeping up with it — limiting the chance of a major policy mistake unleashing longer-term inflation.

For now the US dollar is rallying because it seems the Fed may be well ahead of the rest of the world in tightening. Only New Zealand might beat them to it in the developed world.

The RBA has a chance for a reset in early July, although the capping of Yield Curve Control at April 2024 now seems a foregone conclusion.

Overall it is negative for bonds, but February saw the major re-rating and the surprise factor is diminishing.

We expect rates to gradually climb while not moving higher than what we saw in late February.

 

 

Tim Hext is a portfolio manager with Pendal’s Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies (BIDS) team.

Led by Vimal Gor, Pendal’s BIDS boutique is one of the most experienced and well-regarded fixed income teams in Australia. In 2020 the team won the Australian Fixed Interest category in the Zenith awards.

The team oversees $22 billion invested across income, composite, pure alpha, global and Australian government strategies with the goal of building Australia’s most defensive line of funds.

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies here

Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

Here’s what’s driving Australian equities this week according to Pendal’s head of equities Crispin Murray (pictured above). Reported by portfolio specialist Chris Adams.


BONDS continue their counter-trend rally despite US inflation data again coming in higher than expected last week.

US 10-year yields fell another 10bps to 1.45% — down 30bps from their highs. The Australian equivalent fell 20 bps to 1.49%.

Falling yields saw growth stocks resume leadership in equities last week. The S&P/ASX 300 gained 0.3% while the S&P 500 was up 0.43%. 

Macro and policy

Many reasons are offered up for the recent bond price rises:

  • Economic growth slowing after the peak of April/May
  • Softer-than-expected employment data
  • The “fiscal cliff” of 2022 as stimulus rolls off, dampening recovery and subduing inflation
  • Potential for the Fed to discuss tapering in its next meeting
  • Belief that supply disruptions will be temporary
  • Covid resurgence holding back Asian and emerging market recoveries
  • Monetary tightening in Beijing
  • Carry trades from other currencies supporting bond demand

All these factors are likely playing a role to some extent. The employment data in the US is particularly important, as an exemplar of a string of economic data that has surprised on the downside.

Though perhaps the most important factor is little-discussed: the demand and supply of Treasury bonds.

In Q1 2020 the US Treasury issued US$342 billion in bonds. Of this the Fed purchased US$254 billion as part of Quantitative Easing (QE). In Q2 Treasury issued only US$70 billion since they had effectively drawn down on the cash balances built in Q1 to fund stimulus.

However the Fed’s QE has continued at the same rate of about US$250 billion for the quarter.

This has effectively engineered a strong bid in the Treasury market, in an environment where many had positioned away from bonds.

The danger could be in reading higher bond prices as a macro signal that inflation concerns have been tamed.

We do not agree.

The technical supply/demand factors may be clouding the signal from bond prices. But the underlying economy remains strong. We see the debate around inflation as still very much alive.

Money Management Fund Manager of the year awards

 
US CPI data

In this vein, US CPI data for May was again stronger than expected. Headline inflation was 5% year-on-year and +0.6% month-on-month. Core inflation was 3.8% and +0.7% respectively.

The market took this in its stride, mainly because price growth was concentrated in transient areas such as air fares, used cars and apparel.

There were less benign components as well.

For example total rent ticked up. This is relevant because it tends to be a longer cycle part of inflation. It had been running at 2%, but is expected to rise to 4% as the surge in house prices feeds into the owner’s equivalent rent part of the equation.

Fast food prices also rose. Although it’s not a big part of the basket, this reflects higher input costs and labour costs passing through to consumers. It’s another thing to keep watching.

Investor and Home Depot co-founder Ken Langone said last week that a number of his businesses were battling the worst labour shortages in 50 years.

The costs of equipment, labour, spare parts and fuel were all rising, he said. His businesses were demonstrating pricing power but it wasn’t having any negative effect on demand. 

Against a backdrop of near-zero rates, there is an argument we may not get a natural petering out of activity and easing on pricing pressure to subdued levels before 2024.

This could particularly be the case when factoring pent–up demand, excess savings and wealth increases.

Capex investment

Meanwhile we need to watch investment in capex, which has the potential to surprise on the upside.

Surveys suggest a surge in capex plans in the US. Part of this is tied to investment in clean energy. But companies will also need to spend on capacity to replace Chinese supply of products such as steel and aluminium as Beijing shifts from its role as the world’s provider of energy-intensive products.

In this environment we continue to see appeal in commodities. The sector can benefit if inflation recedes, allowing policy to stay loose and growth strong. Alternatively, it should be a beneficiary if stronger inflation starts to emerge.

Several commodities have already run hard, so it is important to be selective. We still see opportunity here.

This week the Fed meets amid speculation about its approach to tapering QE bond purchases. We suspect some indication that it will start investigating the possibility of tapering, in keeping with recent signals.

COVID and vaccines

The overall environment continues to improve. New daily cases in India have dropped to about 20% of peak levels. Europe and the US remain low. Numbers in Brazil and Asian nations with recent outbreaks appear to be stabilising. 

The main concern is spread of the Delta variant in the UK which could be a lead for other countries. This more transmissible version has seen a tripling of cases from the lows and will likely delay the final stage of reopening on June 21. It is raising the threshold for vaccinations to reach herd immunity.

Markets

After a strong run equity markets have been broadly consolidating since mid-April. Bond yields have fallen, commodity markets risen, earnings revised higher and liquidity remains abundant.

New Covid variants are causing significant concerns. But vaccines remain very effective and supply is increasing.

We would not be surprised to see markets move higher through the northern summer.

The Australian bourse saw a rotation to growth names last week as bond yields fell.

Information Technology rose 6.9%. Bond-sensitive sectors such as REITs (+2.2%) and Utilities (+2.9%) outperformed to show some signs of life.

This rotation came at the expense of Financials (-1.9%), which led the market in the last six months.

Last week’s move closed the gap in performance between Financials and Technology. But the former is still about 27% ahead in 2021 and there is potential for more.

AUSTRAC announced investigations into Star Entertainment (SGR, -4.5%) and Crown Resorts (CWN, -3.7%) for alleged breach of anti-money laundering regulations. The Victorian Royal Commission inquiry into Crown was also extended.

The potential for more onerous regulation is rising. But a push for cashless casinos, which can help combat money laundering, is complicated by the presence of slot machines in pubs and clubs.

AUSTRAC also launched a formal enforcement investigation into National Australia Bank (NAB, -3.8%).

This appears to be a case of the regulator losing patience after long negotiations. The issues do not look as serious as those at Westpac (WBC, -2.2%) and there are currently no civil penalty proceedings. Nevertheless this could lead to a significant step-up in compliance costs.

The rotation to tech saw the rest of the banking sector fall. Bendigo and Adelaide Bank (BEN) was down 4.1%, ANZ (ANZ) lost 3.3%, Bank of Queensland (BOQ) fell 2.6% and Commonwealth Bank (CBA) dropped 1.1%.

Altium (ALU, +28.6%) was the best in the ASX 100 last week. The rotation to tech was augmented by a takeover bid from US company Autodesk. This highlights a strong environment for mergers and acquisitions (M&A) amid cheap funding, a strong economic outlook and a market rewarding earnings growth. The bid was rejected.

M&A activity in the US data centre sector prompted local play NextDC (NXT) to rise 7.7%.

Afterpay (APT, +9.6%) and other buy-now-pay-later stocks benefited from the latest fund raising by Swedish competitor Klarna. It raised US$639 million from Softbank at a valuation of US$45.6 billion. This is roughly 40x its 2020 revenue.

When Klarna raised capital in March it was valued at US$31 billion. In September 2020 it was $10.3 billion. This highlights heady valuations in the sector and the amount of capital being deployed in a land grab.

Ultimately we think this will impact on margins.

About Crispin Murray and Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund

Crispin Murray is Pendal’s Head of Equities. He has more than 27 years of investment experience and leads one of the largest equities teams in Australia. Crispin’s Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund has beaten the benchmark in 12 years of its 16-year history (after fees), across a range of market conditions , as this graph shows:

Source: Pendal. Performance is after fees and before taxes. *From 01 Apr 05; **as at 30 Apr 21. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

 
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management. Find out more about Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund here.  Contact a Pendal key account manager here.

Here’s our weekly Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies wrap from Pendal portfolio manager Tim Hext (pictured).

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies

 
THIS WEEK we saw rallies everywhere.

Massive fiscal and monetary stimulus continues to support “risk-on”. Bonds shared in the rally, breaking through recent ranges and increasing their recent positive correlation with equities.

It is generally difficult to isolate a single reason for market movements. Sometimes we just guess — and this is one of those times for bonds.

The best explanation I can find is the continued massive weight of money. This is creating a positive loop from very strong equities into bonds via pension fund reweighting — especially in the US.

A recent Milliman article shows that the 100 biggest US corporate-defined benefit pension plans overall are nearly fully funded (98.8% in May). This is an incredible result given they were funded near 70% on average a decade ago.

Amazing what a tripling in your equity market can do.

The opportunity to lock in a fully funded plan is not going missing this time. Last time they got there was early 2008 — so lessons have been learnt.

In Australia of course we are largely a defined-contribution retirement market. Unlike defined benefits plans, no one tracks or measures a liability.

We talk in general terms about funding retirement and we publish statistics about what is needed for a basic or comfortable retirement. But the concept of locking in risk market gains is more gut feel than defined levels.
 
Pendal named 2020 Fund Manager of the Year in Zenith Awards.
 
Central banks continue to reward asset owners.

Even though we are now well past the depths of the Covid crisis, stimulus continues to ramp up.

This month banks will draw down around $80 billion of funds under the Term Funding Facility promised by the RBA last year. At 0.1% cost of funds for three years, the gifts keep giving well beyond when they were most needed.

Next month the RBA will likely begin signalling a back-off in stimulus by not extending Yield Curve Control. But importantly it will stay in place until April 2024.

Fortunately fiscal policy this time around has also helped wage owners with few assets. The past decade saw tight fiscal policy and loose monetary policy.

Not surprisingly capital boomed while wages stagnated. To paraphrase Midnight Oil, “the rich got richer, the poor got the picture”.

Finally it seems the message is getting through that fiscal policy is a far more targeted and effective means of stimulus than monetary policy.

The main way monetary policy helps is by boosting asset prices and hoping it somehow filters down. Fiscal policy can target where needed — importantly those with a capacity to spend rather than save.

For now though, central banks are keeping a foot to the floor, hoping they can pull off the Goldilocks trick of boosting asset prices and growth without too much inflation.

A difficult balancing trick — but one for now the market is happy to believe.  

 

Tim Hext is a portfolio manager with Pendal’s Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies (BIDS) team.

Led by Vimal Gor, Pendal’s BIDS boutique is one of the most experienced and well-regarded fixed income teams in Australia. In 2020 the team won the Australian Fixed Interest category in the Zenith awards.

The team oversees $22 billion invested across income, composite, pure alpha, global and Australian government strategies with the goal of building Australia’s most defensive line of funds.

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies here

 

Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

 

Here’s what’s driving Australian equities this week according to Pendal’s head of equities Crispin Murray (pictured above). Reported by portfolio specialist Chris Adams.

 
MARKETS continued to grind higher on limited news flow last week.

Improved sentiment on global growth pushed the energy sector ahead 8.5%, which led the S&P/ASX 300 to a 1.6% gain for the week.

There were several factors at play, including a sense that the worst overseas Covid outbreaks are coming under control. There are indications Europe will soon follow the US into a broader re-opening.

OPEC’s meeting was very short, signalling that its stance of restricted supply remains firm. Brent Crude rose 2.8%.

Covid and vaccines

Global cases continue to trend in the right direction in the US and EU — as well as some of the worst-hit countries such as India. Continued vaccine exports to under-supplied countries is boosting confidence.

US mobility levels have now passed pre-COVID highs. The EU is trending higher, which is helping improve sentiment on oil.

Economics and policy

US non-farm payroll data showed an additional 559,000 new jobs in May. This was better than April, but was still well below the jobs growth that many expected with the recovery.

There are still 7.6 million fewer jobs than before the pandemic. There is a view that on-going federal unemployment insurance top-up payments are discouraging people from job hunting. These payments are due to roll off in September.

A buffer of excess savings accumulated in the past year is also likely to be playing a role. The result is a falling workforce participation rate at a time of huge jobs supply.

Leisure and hospitality account for about 40% of the gap in jobs compared to pre-Covid. Education and health make up another 15% or so.

Wages are a big focus given latent concerns on inflation and people’s reluctance to return to work. Wages grew faster than expected in the latest data. But the year-on-year rate is still subdued at 2% growth.

 
Money Management Fund Manager of the year awards  

 
The composition of wage growth is distorting headline figures to a degree. We have seen a faster return in lower-paid jobs which is depressing the headline figure.

Interestingly, leisure and hospitality is bucking this trend, with 8.8% wage growth. This highlights labour supply issues in the sector.

The debate is whether labour supply issues will be resolved relatively quickly or whether this will seed wider spread inflation.

Another point to note is that productivity is high.

The US has returned to pre-Covid GDP — with far fewer workers. This clear gain in productivity reduces the importance of unit labour costs.

These issues will play into the Fed’s policy deliberations. At this point most expect the Fed to start talking about tapering in the June meeting, without drawing any firm conclusions. The focus is on clear signalling to avoid a “taper tantrum” in markets.

We won’t return to the trend of long-term job growth until mid-2023 based on the current jobs growth rate. This is consistent with the Fed’s message of no rate tightening for two-to-three years.

This helps explain why bond markets have so far seemed comfortable with the Fed’s stance — and the benign reaction to signals around tapering.

This is supportive for equity markets, as is the ongoing growth pulse.

The US Composite Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) is well above its highest level in over a decade. The Global Composite PMI, while trending upward, is still below its highs.

There is scope for the Global PMI to follow the US, emphasising that there are several legs to the global recovery story. This can prolong it further than many are expecting.

Markets

Bonds remained largely unmoved last week and the broad environment was reasonably benign.

There was some movement in the commodity space. Brent crude rose 2.4%, passing a technical level that suggests it could head towards US$80. If that’s the case, it will be interesting to see what this means for bonds.

Elsewhere iron ore rose 10.8%. Copper and gold consolidated.

Overseas we started seeing gains in the Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) sector, which has long languished. The main explanation is that it is a later cycle play on the re-opening.

In Australia the Energy sector rose 8.5% — though it’s still up only 6.8% for 2021 so far. REITs rose 2.6% domestically, but are also lagging for over the year to date (up just 6.4%).

Financials remain very consistent, up 1.6% for the week. There are some early signs of rotation from the banks (which are up 30.2% for the year to date) to the insurers.

Utilities (+5.8%) gained some respite, reflecting the local issue of higher power prices following a recent explosion at the Queensland coal-fired Callide Power Station.

Six of last week’s eight top performers in the S&P/ASX 100 were energy stocks. Origin (ORG, +15.7%) led the pack, a beneficiary of higher oil and power prices. Santos (STO) was up 12.2% and Oil Search (OSH) gained 11%.

Worley (WOR, +15.6%) had a fortuitously-timed investor day, which played to the theme of a rising oil price driving a recovery in capex in the sector. We are mindful that part of the reason oil is strengthening is a lack of new investment response.

The iron ore miners did not respond to the 10% gain in prices. This reflects some scepticism around the sustainability of price drivers, which is linked to the stimulus and economic recovery.

In contrast, sentiment remains bullish on the copper miners despite a 4.5% drop in the price last week. This is regarded as a longer-term theme related to renewable energy and electric vehicles.

Tech was the week’s loser, for no discernible reason. Appen (APX, -8.7%) was the worst performer. Altium (ALU, -3.5%) was also weak. There are signs of a base building in tech stocks in the US, although we do not expect sustained market leadership given the broader macro backdrop.

Gold stocks reflected the yellow metal’s 1.6% fall. Evolution (EVN) fell 4.9% and Northern Star (NST) was down 4.6%. We see the gold price as well supported.  

 

About Crispin Murray and Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund

Crispin Murray is Pendal’s Head of Equities. He has more than 27 years of investment experience and leads one of the largest equities teams in Australia. Crispin’s Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund has beaten the benchmark in 12 years of its 16-year history (after fees), across a range of market conditions , as this graph shows:

Source: Pendal. Performance is after fees and before taxes. *From 01 Apr 05; **as at 30 Apr 21. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

 
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management. Find out more about Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund here.  Contact a Pendal key account manager here.

What does the latest GDP data mean for investors? Pendal portfolio manager Tim Hext (pictured) explains in our weekly Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies wrap.

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies

 

THE WEEK’s headline act was the Q1 GDP result.

It marked the first full year since Covid-led changes, restrictions and lockdowns altered our economic landscape (and lives).

What a comeback. Most importantly, Australia’s economy has expanded as we emerge from the shadow of 2020.

Australia’s GDP is now 0.8% higher than it was in December 2019. This was driven by the 1.8% GDP growth in 2021 Q1.

It’s a strong result across most sectors and states even though pockets of the economy have not yet recovered.
 

 
Comforting: consumer spending

Sustainable economic growth always stems from a strong and stable consumer spending base. Therefore it was wonderful to see consumer spending as the biggest driver of growth in 2021 Q1.

Even better, this time around in 2021 we are spending on services instead of just goods. This is the opposite of 2020 when we were in the midst of an online spending frenzy.

Goods spending held steady with a decline of only 0.5% — instead of falling off a cliff — despite concerns about post-Covid spending patterns.

This was a case of retail services roaring back to life. Just when we thought the gift would not keep giving.

Not surprisingly, the main retail services sectors benefitting from an uplift in consumer spending were those held back during lockdown. Hotels, cafes, restaurants, recreation, culture, transport have all taken off.

Hello domestic tourism

Elsewhere in the economy the Q1 results showed that building programs already in place worked. Building approvals rose with higher levels of new building, which will feed into inflation.

The biggest upside surprise came in business investment.
 
Pendal named 2020 Fund Manager of the Year in Zenith Awards.
 

After lacklustre business investment over the past decade it became easy to write off this section of the economy. But thanks to new measures allowing unprecedented property, plant, and machinery (PPE) tax write-off, private business investment rose by 4% — with 11.6% in new PPE spend alone.

This is a level of growth not experienced in more than 10 years (since Q4 2009).

Troubling: Victorian lockdown

Even as Victoria extends lockdown by another week there is no need to hit the panic button. The economy will not hit the brakes — as long as this lockdown does not extend to the same length as last year.

Experience has taught us this is not lost spending but delayed spending. Once the economy re-opens it will recover lost ground.

Furthermore, Australians now have the habit of saving for a rainy day. Household income continued to rise in Q1. Though the savings rate has eased from pandemic levels, it is still above 11%.

This is more than double the pre-pandemic, five-year average savings range of 5-6%. These savings will serve Victorians well through this lockdown and support them in the re-opening, as will the new federal support measures.

Strong tax receipts from the increase in nominal GDP driven by commodity prices and economic expansion will fund those measures. This ensures we are seeing a mere storm in a teacup.

 

 
Implications

Given the strength of Australia’s economic growth we expect the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to announce in early July that it will not extend Yield Curve Control (YCC) beyond the April 2024 bond.

This supports our portfolio positioning. Kinks in the yield curve will be ironed out as the three-year futures basket sets to roll off the yield curve-controlled bonds.

Continued economic growth will support the federal budget bottom line through stronger tax receipts.

This will result in favourable demand-supply dynamics of Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds (ACGBs).

Meanwhile the eventual RBA tapering of Quantitative Easing will see Semi-government bonds underperform from current levels.

In the medium term, we favour being overweight ACGBs and underweight Semis.

 

Tim Hext is a portfolio manager with Pendal’s Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies (BIDS) team.

Led by Vimal Gor, Pendal’s BIDS boutique is one of the most experienced and well-regarded fixed income teams in Australia. In 2020 the team won the Australian Fixed Interest category in the Zenith awards.

The team oversees $22 billion invested across income, composite, pure alpha, global and Australian government strategies with the goal of building Australia’s most defensive line of funds.

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies here

 

Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

Here’s what’s driving Australian equities this week according to Pendal’s head of equities Crispin Murray (pictured above). Reported by portfolio specialist Chris Adams.

 

 
IT WAS relatively quiet on the macro front last week.

Signs that the Fed was “thinking about thinking about” tapering were absorbed without any ructions in the bond market.

It seems the local market is also content to look through the Victorian Covid outbreak and lockdown. The S&P/ASX 300 gained 2.17% last week, with good market breadth. The S&P 500 was up 1.2%.

Covid and vaccines

It’s too early to make a call on whether the Victorian shutdown will contain the latest outbreak. At this point the market seems sanguine. Travel and casino stocks have not been punished.

Overseas the biggest outbreaks appear to be improving. New case numbers continue to decline in India, the EU and the US. Brazil may also have turned a corner.

New daily cases have been ticking up in the UK where the Indian (B.1.617.2) variant is becoming the dominant strain.

We are watching new outbreaks in Asian countries such as Taiwan and Vietnam which had previously kept the virus under control.

There is some talk of a new variant emerging there, which has elements of both the Kent and Indian strains. But it is too early to be clear on this.

Macro and policy

There was little news last week. Anecdotal evidence from the US continues to demonstrate the strength of recovery and pent-up demand.

There is a growing focus on recent developments in China and the implications for resource demand. Beijing has made efforts to talk down commodity and crypto prices in recent weeks. It has also sounded warnings against speculation in property.

Data suggests Chinese credit growth is decelerating, which is seen as an important indicator for commodity demand. This issue needs to be watched.
 
Money Management Fund Manager of the year awards
 
While credit growth is slower than this time last year, the base effect of stimulus in 2020 needs to be considered. Credit growth remains ahead of 2019.

Meanwhile 10-year bond rates remain very low and the RMB has been appreciating, which helps purchasing power. The global economic recovery will boost the Chinese manufacturing sector.Despite some restraining measures at the margin, we think Chinese policy remains supportive and is unlikely to be the catalyst of a significant correction in commodities.

There have been notable developments regarding oil — all of which are likely to constrain medium-term supply and support prices.

The International Energy Agency published a roadmap for the industry to achieve net zero emissions by 2050. The projections will be difficult to achieve, but this sends a strong signal that energy companies should not be investing in new green-field projects.

Last week a small US hedge fund successfully gain institutional support to force three new directors onto the board of Exxon.

At this point there is no specific plan for change — the move stems from desire to drive a share price re-rating rather than ideological motivations.

But it relates to a view that Exxon has been dragging the chain when it comes to pivoting its portfolio towards renewable sources.

This highights a shift against new investment in oil and gas.

Elsewhere a Dutch court ruled that Shell’s plans to cut emissions were not stringent enough. The energy and petrochemical giant was told to cut emissions by 45% before the end of 2030. The ruling will be appealed — a process that could take several years. But it places more pressure on the company to act.

All of the above highlights the forces being applied to oil supply growth.

Meanwhile volume decline rates are rising, given the increased share of shale in total supply. Demand is likely to be maintained for much of the decade, leading to a potential future squeeze in oil prices.

Markets

We are seeing some rotation back to growth leaders in the global equity market, following underperformance for much of the past three months. This is broadly supportive of market breadth.

Merger and acquisition (M&A) activity is proving to be supportive in 2021 — driven by low funding costs, improving economic fundamentals and substantial fire power in private equity.

There have been US$1,266 bilion in M&A deals in the US so far this year. The previous record was US$861 billion at the same point in 2019.

Commodities generally bounced back last week. Brent crude rose 4.8% and copper gained 4.1%. Iron ore bucked the trend to end 4.3% lower.

Costa Group (CGC, -23.7%) fell last week as management downgraded EPS guidance by about 30% for the current year and by 10-20% for FY22. Several factors were at play — all in the domestic market — off-setting strength in the international segment. Pricing in avocados wass weaker than expected. A fruit fly issue in South Australia and higher labour costs in a mushroom facility have also dragged. These issues were previously flagged, but the impact was far greater than expected.

Fortescue Metals (FMG, -0.81%) was also among the laggards after confirming a cost uplift for its Ironbridge project. The increase from $2.6 billion to $3.3-3.5 billion is significant, but it’s in line with the market’s current expectation.

There was relief in the market as the potential investment from Domain Group (DHG, +14.8%) in PEXA looks set to be a lot less than many feared. Underlying trends in housing also remain supportive.

Testing company ALS (ALQ, +11.3%) delivered a strong result with margins higher in its commodity and life sciences divisions. Management delivered a positive outlook, helped by strong exploration activity from smaller miners. Earnings expectations were upgraded by 10-15% for out-years.

Carsales.com (CAR, +10.4%) bounced back from last week’s sell-off. Management made an effort to put the acquisition in the US — which has not been well received — into the context of an overall healthy business.

Tabcorp (TAH, +3.6%) received a bid for it wagering business from Betmakers Technology (BET). This is effectively a proposal for TAH to buy BET and the dynamics of the deal do not look particularly appealing. But it adds an extra layer of competitive tension into the battle for control of TAH’s wagering business.
 

About Crispin Murray and Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund

Crispin Murray is Pendal’s Head of Equities. He has more than 27 years of investment experience and leads one of the largest equities teams in Australia.

Crispin’s Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund has beaten the benchmark in 12 years of its 16-year history (after fees), across a range of market conditions , as this graph shows:

Source: Pendal. Performance is after fees and before taxes. *From 01 Apr 05; **as at 30 Apr 21. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

 
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.

Find out more about Pendal Focus Australian Share Fund here. 

Contact a Pendal key account manager here.

We heard a lot of t-words this week — particularly “transitory” and “tapering”. Pendal portfolio manager Tim Hext (pictured) explains what it all means in our weekly Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies wrap.

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies

 
TWO THEMES dominated bond and equity markets this week.

The first was the Fed’s plan to label the latest inflation surge as “transitory”.

Although US Federal reserve speakers are allowed to speak their views, they generally follow the party line. Right now the party line is that the recent surge in inflation “largely reflects transitory forces”.

The implication is: all will soon be fine if the cycle plays out as usual.

Those Fed speakers were out in force this week — Evans, Barkin, Clarida, Quarles, Daly — and we may see similar sentiments from the RBA next week.

There is some truth to this.

Commodity prices always surge coming out of a recession. Firms generally cut back supply in a recession and are slow to react to stronger demand.
 
Pendal named 2020 Fund Manager of the Year in Zenith Awards.
 
This causes shortages that last about two years before supply catches up with demand. Last week we included a graph that shows this.

However another story coming out of recession is that monetary and fiscal policy are tightening in line with stronger demand.

Equilibrium at lower prices is reached by both expanding supply and contracting demand. This time around governments and central banks globally are very happy to be way behind the curve.

Massive stimulus will stay in place and it is therefore likely commodity and goods prices will be higher for longer.

Transitory perhaps. But when measured in years — not quarters — the risk of embedding inflation in the system is much higher.

Tapering

The second theme for markets this week was tapering — in particular signs that the idea is slowly entering the minds of central bankers.

At many central banks tapering initially means reducing the size of Quantitative Easing (QE) programs.

US Fed minutes reveal that while there will be no change for now, they will soon be talking about reducing the size of purchases. It’s a similar story with the ECB.

And the Reserve Bank of New Zealand went a step further on tapering, reinstalling its OCR (cash rate) track. This shows potential for rate hikes beginning late next year and into 2023.

RBNZ governor Adrian Orr did provide some fresh honesty for a central banker by reminding everyone this was an educated guess and who really knew the future.

In Australia the RBA has signalled July as a crunch time for tapering, of sorts. They are unlikely to extend their yield curve control beyond the current April 2024 bond, if that can be called tapering.

They are also likely to announce whether QE will be extended beyond September. Here consensus is they will — but perhaps reduced from the $5 billion per week.

The Australian Office of Financial Management recently announced $130 billion of issuance for 2021-22.

The RBA is now buying $4 billion per week (plus $1 billion of state debt). At the current rate this means the RBA will finance the government in seven months.

Of course the RBA is keen to separate its QE (the purpose of which is driving down term rates) from government financing, but by buying the bonds they are financing the government.

We expect a halving of the QE program to $50 billion, reflecting reduced issuance and likely tapering offshore.

So the message from central bankers is clear: “Trust us. Relax on inflation. If it does get too high we’ve got this.”

The market reaction over the past two weeks indicates this is believed. We can see this in the chart below.
 

 
The market was gradually pricing in the rising inflation in a steady manner from around October last year.

It got a massive spike upwards in February but since then has consolidated and started trending down.

The question now is which direction will this head.

For now though some of the pain experienced in February is starting to be reversed for bond holders.

 

Tim Hext is a portfolio manager with Pendal’s Bond, Income and Defensive Strategies (BIDS) team.

Led by Vimal Gor, Pendal’s BIDS boutique is one of the most experienced and well-regarded fixed income teams in Australia. In 2020 the team won the Australian Fixed Interest category in the Zenith awards.

The team oversees $22 billion invested across income, composite, pure alpha, global and Australian government strategies with the goal of building Australia’s most defensive line of funds.

Find out more about Pendal’s fixed interest strategies here

 

Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.

Contact a Pendal key account manager here