Shareholder-initiated resolutions will be a standout feature of this year’s AGMs as investors step up activism on ESG issues such as climate change and executive pay, says Regnan’s Susheela Peres da Costa
- Shareholder-initiated resolutions again a feature of AGMs
- Boards more willing to lend support
- Find out about Regnan’s impact investing solutions
ACTIVISM has long been a feature of annual general meetings held by ASX-listed companies
But an increasing sophistication in the way resolutions are prepared and drafted is leading to more engagement from shareholders and boards.
There are even recommendations from some companies that shareholders vote in favour of activist proposals, says Susheela Peres da Costa, head of advisory at Regnan, a leader in impact investing and ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance).
It’s a major development — and it highlights how portfolios can deliver real results on climate change and other ESG issues when holding companies in portfolios instead of divesting, says Peres da Costa.
“There’s a few reasons for this seismic shift,” she says.
“One is that the advocacy groups have become more sophisticated in understanding the language of shareholders and have a greater appreciation for what is actually within companies’ powers to do.

“But also, investors have become more comfortable about casting their votes based on the substance of the resolution before them — rather than fearing it will be seen as a protest.
“Having a company like BHP recommend that shareholders support a resolution brought by an advocacy group turns that kind of thinking on its head.”
At BHP’s upcoming annual meeting, activists have proposed the mining giant rethink its membership of industry associations that do not support the Paris Agreement’s climate goals. The BHP board agrees and has recommended shareholders pass the resolution.
“That was unthinkable just a few years ago,” says Peres da Costa
A similar resolution has been put to miner South32 which has also recommended shareholders vote in favour.
In the past, activist resolutions were often dismissed by companies and institutional shareholders declined to take proposals from activists seriously.
“Investors have also changed their approach,” says Peres da Costa.
“Big institutions are increasingly recognising that using their votes in a principled way can communicate their position more clearly and transparently than relying only on private meetings behind closed doors.”

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In Australia, successful shareholder resolutions are often drafted by non-government organisations with roots in the not-for-profit sector.
Campaigner Market Forces grew out of the Friends of the Earth climate group. Researcher and shareholder advocate Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility is partly funded by industry super funds.
Resolutions may have started as way for activists to make a protest, but increasingly institutional shareholders are co-sponsoring shareholder resolutions being put to boards.
The lesson for investors?
“Stewardship does drive change. It is working, and success breeds further success,” says Peres da Costa.
“It may not get the cut-through that divestment does, but shareholder engagement and voting can really change things in the world. Changes that companies make after a successful shareholder resolution are proof.”
About Susheela Peres da Costa
Susheela is Regnan’s head of advisory. She has more than 15 years of domestic and international experience advising institutional investors on responsible investment.
As Head of Advisory, she has assisted small foundations through to the world’s largest institutions, including a successful 18-month project in Switzerland responsible investment leadership for a global full-service bank and strategic advice to the UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment on upgrading stewardship.
Susheela chairs the Responsible Investment Association of Australasia and is special adviser to the co-chair of the Australian Sustainable Finance Initiative.
About Regnan
Regnan is a responsible investment leader with a long and proud history of providing insight and advice to investors with an interest in long-term, broad-based or values-aligned performance.
Building on that expertise, in 2019 Regnan expanded into responsible investment funds management, backed by the considerable resources of Pendal Group.
Regnan Global Equity Impact Solutions Fund invests in mission-driven companies we believe are well placed to solve the world’s biggest problems, while the Regnan Credit Impact Trust (available in Australia only) invests in cash, fixed and floating rate securities where the proceeds create positive environmental and social change.
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Find out about Regnan Credit Impact Trust
For more information on these and other responsible investing strategies, contact Head of Regnan and Responsible Investment Distribution Jeremy Dean at jeremy.dean@regnan.com.
It looks like we’re approaching peak pessimism on China — which could mean it’s time to lift portfolio exposure to Asian shares, argues Pendal’s SAMIR MEHTA
- China’s economy drives Asia’s markets
- Maximum pessimism reached
- Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
SIGNS that investors are approaching maximum pessimism on the Chinese economy could indicate it’s time to lift portfolio exposure to Asian shares, argues Pendal’s Samir Mehta.
Most of Asia’s sharemarkets have fallen heavily over the past 12 months on a combination of rising interest rates, higher inflation and escalating geopolitical concerns.
China’s economic outlook has also been a key cause of the declines across the region, as Beijing takes steps to strengthen regulations governing the property sector and lift oversight of the operations of its big technology companies, says Mehta, who manages Pendal’s Asian Shares Fund.
“Pessimism is now embedded in stock prices, and that’s why I’m turning a little bit more positive on Asia, because if China does well, you could start to see things turn up for the region,”
Mehta says this kind of contrarian view on Asia has the potential to deliver gains even if global markets fall, echoing this year’s sudden reversal of fortunes for coal and gas companies as the rest of markets struggled.
“The simple tagline is that China is like another ‘anti-ESG’ portfolio. Back in 2021, ESG was so entrenched that ‘anti-ESG’ stocks like fossil fuels became very cheap and investors were bidding up anything ESG compliant no matter the valuation and no matter the future risks.
“Those risks became manifest in 2022 — everything that was ‘anti ESG’ had a really big bounce, energy and commodities in particular.
“My sense is that China is at a similar stage with negativity now manifest.”
Three positive signs for China
Mehta says three signs indicate China’s economic prospects may be on the mend.
First, the recent profit season saw improving fortunes for bellwether companies. Food delivery giant Meituan posted better than expected earnings while results at gaming giant Netease were good.
On the other hand, poor results are not being treated with big sell-offs — restaurant chain Haidilao has suffered from COVID lockdowns, but its stock rose after weak results on a plan to reorganise the business and reduce restaurants and staffing.
“So, we have results that are not meeting expectations, yet the stocks are higher. And we have some results that are better than expected. These are the initial stages of what looks like sellers’ fatigue.”

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Mehta says there are also hints that President Xi Jinping might loosen up on COVID restrictions once he is confirmed for another term in October, using Hong Kong as a test case.
“I don’t have a crystal ball but there are rumblings around Hong Kong where leaders are talking to the neighbouring provinces as to how do they work with opening up a little bit more.”
Mehta says a signal for investors will be if Xi personally attends November’s G20 meeting in Indonesia.
“Xi leaving the country would be a big statement,” he says.
Mehta says a third positive for investors could be a shift in government policy to stimulate the economy.
“There’s a big rise in youth unemployment in China and social stability for the Chinese is going to be a very important point for Xi after he becomes president for a third term.

“There are real issues that the economy is facing, and therefore his motivation will turn away from cementing power to trying to make sure that they don’t have to deal with social problems.”
And finally, investors’ concerns about tension in Taiwan might be overstated, at least in the short term, says Mehta.
“The experts think that the Chinese navy is just not ready for an invasion by sea that would be multiples of the complexity of the Normandy landing — the Taiwan strait is significantly larger than the English channel.”
Instead, Mehta says investors should consider the prospect of Xi biding his time for a decade or more.
So, what are the risks?
Mehta says the US dollar will remain strong as the US Federal Reserve battles inflation, creating capital outflows that put pressure on Asia’s economies. High commodity and oil prices are also a structural headwind for Asia.
“But barring a real accident, which is possible, the negativity is now manifest in China and the rest of Asia. That means it makes strategic sense to start to allocate capital to Asia.”
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.
Want to understand the outlook for China? Look to Japan’s 1990s stagnation experience, says Pendal Asian equities manager SAMIR MEHTA
- Even in low-growth periods, some companies stand out
- Cashflow, pricing power and market structure the key
- Find out about Samir Mehta’s Pendal Asian Share fund
INVESTORS looking for clues as to how China’s economic future will pan out should examine Japan’s performance after the 1980s boom, says Pendal’s Samir Mehta.
China faces enormous uncertainty about its economic outlook after decades of faster-than-normal growth culminated in a slowdown on the back of Covid-lockdowns, a real estate crunch and regulatory tightening in tech and education.
As the rest of the world wrestles with supply constraints, runaway inflation and rising interest rates in 2022, China instead faces lacklustre growth, rising unemployment and the real prospect of deflation.
“It’s almost diametrically opposite to what the rest of the world is facing,” says Mehta, who manages Pendal’s Asian Share Fund.
“What we are seeing at the moment in China is reminiscent of what happened in the Japanese economy when their bubble burst in the 1990s — for the next three decades Japan’s economy was mostly hobbled.”
Samir Mehta on the China-Taiwan stand-off
“All of us are spell-bound watching a potential Thucydides Trap play out in action between China and the US,” says Pendal’s Samir Mehta on the recent geopolitical developments in the Taiwan Straits.
“Speaker Pelosi’s visit further heightened the risks as rising power China threatens the hegemony of the US.
“My opinion on whether events escalate or not does not matter. But we should not lose sight of what the underlying problems are in China.
“Even without geopolitics, investors looking for clues as to how China’s economic future will pan out should examine Japan’s performance after the 1980s boom,” says Mehta.
Mehta says the key to Japan’s long-term troubles lay in the fact that its banks refused to recognise non-performing loans (NPLs), take write-offs, recapitalise and move on to lubricate economic growth via taking on risks on new projects.
“There are parallels with what we are seeing in Chinese banks. They are unlikely to recognise or write off their NPLs and they are not changing old business models.

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“If you do not recognise the problem, then you risk a massive balance sheet recession and deflation.”
Another parallel to Japan is policy mistakes prolonging the downturn.
In the 1990s the Bank of Japan went too far with interest rate rises while increases in indirect taxes were poorly executed.
Similarly, Beijing seems to be making policy mistakes such as its strict zero COVID policy. Just last month authorities locked down a million people in Wuhan.
Mehta says an extended period of low growth should change the way investors approach China.
“Remember that in Japan’s case there were always some very good companies that were globally competitive — Toyota, Sony, Nintendo, some of their speciality chemical and semi-conductor companies.
“It’s not as if there weren’t good businesses but those businesses typically relied on export orientation because the domestic economy was going through a very challenging period of disinflation and deflation.

“I want to keep that precedent in mind for China and look for similar opportunities.”
Mehta cautions that the geopolitical environment is different. While Japan did cause resentment in the US in the 1980s because of its economic power, it was never a military threat.
“So be careful – the same export markets that were open to the Japanese might not be open to the Chinese.”
But the broad characteristics of companies that will thrive in a slow growth, deflationary domestic environment should be similar.
“The companies that stood out had shared characteristics.
“They were companies with high pricing power, they had an industry structure with few irrational competitors, and they were able to generate very strong cash flows.
“When you have a disinflationary or deflationary environment, cash is a fantastic asset to own.
“Inflation is the enemy of holding cash as value, whereas in a deflationary environment, cash is king.
“In my portfolio in China, I am gravitating towards these kinds of businesses – export-oriented champions or domestic champions with pricing power and cash flow.”
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.
The investment metrics that worked in a low interest rate world are no longer the right markers for profitable investing. Pendal’s SAMIR MEHTA explains
- Some investing metrics will stop working as rates rise
- Margins, asset turns and net profits are key
- Find out more about Samir Mehta’s Pendal Asian Share fund
HOW do you pick your way through tricky global markets?
As markets adapt to higher interest rates, companies with good margins, a high ratio of sales to assets and strong net profits are best placed to survive and thrive, says Pendal portfolio manager Samir Mehta.
The types of metrics that worked in low interest rate world — measuring total addressable market size; valuing stocks as a multiple of sales; and earnings measures that hide stock-based compensation expenses — are no longer the right markers for profitable investing, he says.
“This is a market with nowhere to hide — bonds, equities, private equity, crypto, whether growth or value,” says Mehta, who manages Pendal’s Asian Share Fund.
“The reasons are evident — the Fed is raising rates and they are going to start the process of quantitative tightening.”
Mehta says the effects of this will play out over the coming years. As interest rates rise, the US dollar strengthens, vulnerabilities in the financial system are exposed.
“The first fatalities are on display — cryptocurrencies, bonds of Chinese property companies and the Sri Lankan economy — but there will be more.
“If you look back in history — the savings and loan crisis, the tech bubble, the housing bubble — as we go through a tightening cycle something big could break.”
Opportunity for investors
The crisis will be challenging but he says the opportunity for investors is to look through the valley and identify the factors that will help companies survive the downturn and then grow as stability returns.

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“In the last decade or more of this loose monetary policy environment, every entrepreneur, venture capitalist and most fund managers became focused on the concept of total addressable market.
“How big can this business become? How scalable can it be? Can you become the next Facebook or Google?
“Now, in trying to address a very large market, what became secondary, almost inconsequential, was the question of whether it was a profitable venture.”
Mehta says this explains the rapid growth of a whole raft of popular but unprofitable global tech companies.
“These companies were selling a $1 for 50c.
“If I was to stand on a street corner and hand out a $1 in exchange for 50c my turnover will go through the roof.
“But now, in the current environment, several of these companies could go bankrupt. Which will inflict pain on consumers accustomed to subsidies.

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The reason is twofold.
“Not only is there little capital available for companies to give you those subsidies, but there are massive shortages in everything around us. Problems due to supply chain disruptions; even finding qualified labour has become very difficult.”
The job now for investors is to find those companies, which will survive the shake out and take advantage of the dislocation.
Mehta says investors should turn to time-honoured measures like margins (the ratio of earnings to sales), asset turn (sales to assets) and net profits (after all expenses).
“Let me put in an Australian context: it’s no longer ‘Tim TAM’ for Total Addressable Market.
“Now it’s ‘Tim MAN’ for Margins, Asset turn and Net profit.”
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.
‘If you don’t own China today, you’re going to miss out,’ says Samir Mehta, manager of Pendal Asian Share Fund. Here’s why
- Stimulus could turn around faltering Chinese economy
- Policymakers have track record of rapid action
- Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
INVESTORS nervous about the outlook for China are not accounting for the fact that Beijing has a track record of rapid policy change — and could move quickly to bolster the faltering economy, says Pendal’s Samir Mehta.
A policy-led resurgence in Chinese growth could spark a rally in Chinese stocks battered by regulatory crackdowns, a slumping property market and the fight to suppress COVID outbreaks.
(Listen to this fast podcast from Pendal’s head of income strategies Amy Xie Patrick for a fixed interest perspective on China).
“When Xi Jinping came to power in 2013, he quickly changed the incentives in the system away from pure GDP growth to what he ultimately termed ‘common prosperity’ — reducing inequality, balancing growth and promoting fairness,” says Mehta, who manages Pendal Asian Share Fund.
“If that meant you had to take down the education sector, the internet sector and the property market, you do it. The incentives changed and society began to re-orient itself.
“Policies can change on a dime in China — and my sense is we are on the cusp of them doing something to ramp up economic growth.”
Under pressure
China’s gross domestic product rose by an annual 4.8% in the first quarter. The economy is under pressure from regulatory constraints on the real estate industry and lock downs as authorities struggle to contain Covid.
A quarter of China’s population lives in cities that are now under some form of pandemic lockdown.

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The first clues that Beijing wants to re-start growth have come in reports that Xi is calling for a boost in infrastructure construction and a statement from last week’s Politburo meeting promising stimulus.
“We should waste no time in planning more policy tools and enhance the strength of adjustment in due course,” the Communist Party’s Politburo said Friday, according to a readout of a meeting of the leadership on state broadcaster China Central Television.
There have also been reports that Xi is meeting tech giants this month in a sign of easing regulatory pressures.
And newspapers last week reported Xi had told officials to ensure the country’s economic growth outpaced the US this year.
Expect stimulus
Mehta expects further policy effort to stimulate the economy is on the way.
“During lockdowns in the US, among many other schemes, the government handed out $600 additional monthly payments to households.
“What’s to stop the Chinese from doing something similar?”
Mehta expects fiscal action to dominate because monetary policy is more constrained by the global environment.
“In face of the rapid depreciation of the Japanese Yen, the Chinese renminbi has depreciated by almost 2.5% in the past week.
“The People’s Bank of China needs to be very careful about the externalities. The worst thing that could happen is if they loosen monetary policy in a big bang and are faced with capital outflows, which could result in a further weakening of the currency and have ramifications and unintended consequences.
“Monetary policy cannot be done in isolation, whereas fiscal policy can.”
Risk for investors
The risk for investors is that Chinese policy changes can come “at the drop of a hat”, says Mehta.
He points to the rapid reversal of Beijing’s climate commitments after last year’s UN climate conference.
“Chinese authorities said they were focused on not using fossil fuels and reducing coal consumption — and then the war in Ukraine exacerbated an energy crisis. Restrictions on fossil fuels have been shelved as a result.
“China’s coal consumption is back approaching all-time highs.”
Mehta says a change in policy on economic growth or zero-COVID will have profound impacts for investors.
“Charlie Munger said ‘show me the incentive and I’ll show you the outcome’ and China is all about incentives.
“For 30-plus years, there was just one incentive for everyone in government — GDP growth. What was surprising is that China achieved that GDP growth year-in, year-out.
“But incentives can change on a dime: one thing we know about the Chinese authorities is that when they want to do something, no one can stand in the way because it’s an authoritarian Leninist society, where there is no democratic process. It is rule by law (as defined by President Xi or the CCP), not rule of law.
“When they confront reality, they will have to look it in the eye.
“There seems to be almost universal revulsion at owning stocks in China for good reasons. Yet Chinese stocks today are the equivalent of the “anti-ESG portfolio” of 2021 and 2022.
“Every sector ignored by the market due to ESG compulsions roared back to life — and was in hindsight the only portfolio to own in 2021 and 2022.
“If you don’t own China today, you are going to miss out.”
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.
Warren Buffett’s “economic moat” isn’t what it used to be. Investors need to ask new questions about competitive advantage, says Pendal Asian Share Fund manager SAMIR MEHTA
- Old competitive advantages may no longer apply
- Outsourcing, globalisation now a weakness
- Find out about Samir’s Pendal Asian Share Fund
WARREN Buffet popularised the idea of the “economic moat” to describe a company’s competitive advantages.
But with geopolitical conflict, government sanctions, supply chain disruptions and a new sweeping deglobalisation, companies’ economic moats are not what they once were, says Samir Mehta, who manages Pendal Asian Share Fund.
“The years of seamless globalisation are behind us,” says Mehta.
“Disparate systems with built-in redundancies mean higher costs of doing business going forward.
“It is prudent is to assume lower profit margins and much lower returns on capital for most businesses.
“We might need to reassess what we pay for businesses once thought secure due to their moats.”
Rethink competitive advantage
Sustainable competitive advantage has taken many forms — it could be the ability to produce goods cheaper due to sophisticated outsourcing arrangements, the ability to source low-cost raw materials, or access to less-expensive labour.
“But in a deglobalised world where supply chains are disrupted and sanction risk is real, new questions need to be asked,” says Mehta.
“Where are your email servers based? Which cloud computing software do you use?
“Are you dependent on Visa, MasterCard or Amex for your corporate credit cards?”
Some of the fundamental technologies that investors take for granted have geopolitical connections that can make companies that rely on them vulnerable, says Mehta.
The US government owns the GPS (global positioning system) which powers location-based services like maps on smart phones. American and European banks control the SWIFT international payments system.

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“These are all things which we just take for granted,” he says.
Mehta says the end of the era of just traditional economic moats is another example of change in some of the core factors that investors have taken for granted for decades.
“These are cyclical changes in a long business cycle,” he says. “From the 1980s, we witnessed falling interest rates and lower inflation – but at some point in time, we know that this economic cycle will likely turn.”
Mehta says investors should look to the past to gain insights into what the new world might look like.
“Cycles last decades; we’ve had many instances in the past where we’ve lived in inflationary environments or seen changes in the way economies are managed.”
He recalls the changes Asian economies went through after the crisis of 1997/98 as the International Monetary Fund and western governments imposed sweeping change across the way economies were managed in return for bailouts.
Look for new clues
With some of the basics of investing under threat, Mehta says investors need to look for new clues to find success over the next decades.
One particularly important change is to watch for the effects of the re-engagement of government in economies.
This is typified by Beijing’s deep intervention into Chinese business to reduce inequalities and help contain cost of living pressures, but it is also noticeable in the west as governments deepen their involvement post-pandemic.
Mehta says this re-engagement of government is something of a return to the past for some Asian economies, where the state has a history of “managed capitalism” and favouritism in service of advancing national goals.
“In the past we looked for markers such as higher returns on capital from competitive advantages, but now I have to reorient myself – are there companies that derive their moats from protectionism?
“Where are the companies that will benefit because a government wants them to benefit? “You have to think hard and reassess the level of vulnerability for companies. In that sense, we are heading back to the future.”
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.
Coping with volatility is normal for investors. Here are a few timeworn tips from Pendal’s Asian Equities Fund manager SAMIR MEHTA
- Diversification key to coping with volatility
- Sell-offs can bring opportunities
- Find out about Samir Mehta’s Pendal Asian Share Fund
INFLATION energy prices, interest rates, and now war in Europe: at times it feels like there is nowhere for investors to hide.
Yet coping with volatility and uncertainty is situation normal for experienced investors, who can turn to a few tried and trusted tips to get them through the downturn, says Pendal’s Samir Mehta.
“There are periods of time a portfolio will struggle,” says Mehta, who manages Pendal Asian Shares Fund.
“The cause of volatility and sell-off is global in nature — no geography and very few sectors have been spared.”
Investors can turn to three timeworn strategies when seeking to cope with market uncertainty, Mehta says.
Diversify
First, he says check that your portfolio is appropriately diversified. Even in times of market dislocation, different assets perform differently.
Past few months, the best performers were in the energy sector (oil, gas and coal producers) and miners. A properly diversified portfolio has exposure to these sectors.
This will test ideological convictions, says Mehta.
“But the goal is to identify a few of these areas of strength and have a bit of exposure — even if they are areas where normally you don’t want to participate.”

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Diversification includes holding an allocation to cash through the turmoil.
“You need to try to preserve as much capital as possible,” he says.
Bunker down
Second, Mehta says investors should bunker down and wait out the volatility.
“Sometimes you have to just live through these painful periods of underperformance,” he says.
Look for opportunity
And finally, he says it is a good time to look for opportunities to change the portfolio as the price of companies becomes divorced from their fundamentals.
“Sometimes, the selling is indiscriminate,” says Mehta.
Mehta says broad-based market sell offs often throw up opportunities to buy companies at attractive prices.
“To navigate through this, I try to identify companies that will come through this in a much better state than they are today.”
Case study: Meituan
He uses the example of a company in his portfolio, China’s food delivery giant Meituan.
Meituan has been sold off amid concern it could suffer from Beijing’s regulatory actions aimed at improving equality and alleviating cost of living pressures for Chinese families.
“But they are a business that in my view benefits the community – they provide a lot of employment. Their fees for restaurants are among the lowest in the world. And they are very profitable,” he says.
Mehta’s advice: “Be careful not to the use the price of a company to judge its value.”
“These are the decisions that investors have to make with the kind of confluence of events that are taking place.
“Whether it’s geopolitics, Federal Reserve action, Chinese regulatory issues or inflationary pressures — we have to look through this fog and try to understand which are the businesses that genuinely will come through these problems.”
“The unintended consequences of actions in this war will play out over a long while to come. War teaches us why geography matters and why history can’t be ignored.
“No one felt the weight of his actions than the so-called father of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer (as you can see in this video below).
It’s a sober realism worth listening to.
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.
As a sharp downturn in world markets shakes confidence, investors should look to the past to identify a path through volatility, says Pendal Group’s Asian Share Fund manager SAMIR MEHTA
- Volatility in 2022 is following a familiar pattern
- Think ‘VEPL’: Valuations, Earnings Progression and Liquidity
- Find out about Samir Mehta’s Pendal Asian Share Fund
“HODL!” has been the call to arms for a new generation of investors in recent years — an accidental misspelling of “hold” that became a meme and a rallying cry for how crypto investors should behave when faced with market turbulence.
But as a sharp downturn in world markets so far in 2022 shakes confidence, perhaps investors need to adopt a different meme, says Samir Mehta, who manages Pendal’s Asian Share Fund.
“The meme we should be guided by is VEPL! — Valuations, Earnings Progression and Liquidity,” he says.
Market volatility so far in 2022 is showing a familiar pattern to previous downturns and investors can look to the past for a path through, says Mehta.
He recalls a market aphorism that as the tide turns on easy monetary policy. It’s the small fish that die first as those asset prices underpinned by excess liquidity and leverage start to unwind — but ultimately at some point “a whale gets beached”.
This time around, examples of the ‘small fish’ are the collapse in the Turkish lira amid runaway inflation and the rapid retreat of cryptocurrencies.
“We now have to figure out — where is the whale?” says Mehta.
Past ‘whales’ have been the collapse of the US housing market in the GFC, the tech wreck of 2000 and the Asian financial crisis of 1997.

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‘Every generation thinks they invented sex’
Mehta recalls a decade ago launching the Asian Share Fund with a presentation titled ‘Every generation thinks they invented sex’.
Little has changed with the latest generation of investors, he says.
“This ‘everything rally’ in 2020 and 2021 was premised on shiny new memes and radical technological blockchain breakthroughs. A new paradigm. Yet what has not changed is human greed and fear.
“Excesses, once created, usually deflate over time.”
Mehta says that, as a result, the key skill for investors in 2022 is going to be patience.
“As of now, it would be foolhardy on my part to opine with confidence that this sell off in January in the US is start of a prolonged bear market.
“[But] the confidence that I do have is to suggest that prudence dictates diversification away from momentum-oriented assets.”
So where should investors turn in 2022?
Mehta says he is becoming more optimistic on the outlook for China and intends to increase portfolio weighting over the course of the year.
While market sentiment towards China is negative, it will be one of the few countries loosening monetary policy in 2022.
“In my view, monetary policy will loosen faster than most expect in China,” he says.
Shares in southeast Asia also remain cheap and out of favour, says Mehta.
“That is why I kept adding to our holdings in that region. I still remain convinced that patience in those names will help us in 2022.”
Mehta says the southeast Asian region — with significant stock markets in Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia — has historically been vulnerable to external shocks, “but today that is all relative”.
Elsewhere, valuations for Indian stocks in 2022 will likely face the headwind of higher oil prices but strong competitive dynamics in many industries by dominant firms is an attraction.
“Ultimately, the test as always is whether the stock I own manages to deliver on earnings.”
And how about that whale?
Mehta suggests investors watch three asset classes for signs of trouble: the Chinese property market, the euro, and the private equity and venture capital sector.
“I am not a macro-economist and I have been wrong before, but I’m trying to look back through history and identify where today’s biggest vulnerabilities may lie,” he says.
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.
Omicron is adding uncertainty to investing at the moment. Here Pendal portfolio manager Samir Mehta discusses how to approach investing in periods of doubt
- Investors face weeks of uncertainty with Omicron
- Barbell strategy a way of approaching investment uncertainty
- Find out about Samir Mehta’s Pendal Asian Share Fund
INVESTORS expect weeks of uncertainty as lab technicians probe the Omicron variant.
How to tailor portfolio construction in such times?
It is an apt question in a week where unexpected Covid variants have roiled markets. But the important thing to remember is that uncertainty has always been a feature of investing, says Samir Mehta, who manages Pendal Asian Share Fund.
It’s not just the big unforeseen events that are difficult to predict, he says.
Mehta points to records of Treasury bond yield forecasts from the Society of Professional Forecasters — the oldest quarterly survey of macroeconomic forecasts in the United States conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
Year in, year out for the past two decades, America’s top economists have predicted that bond yields will rise.
As you can see below from this analysis by Bianco Research, year in, year out they have been by-and-large wrong.
Bond bearishness has been a constant for decades, and horribly wrong for decades. pic.twitter.com/noSV4aN23r
— Jim Bianco biancoresearch.eth (@biancoresearch) November 19, 2021
“Humans by nature — especially in our industry — need to appear knowledgeable. And to appear knowledgeable you have to come across as if you know a few things,” says Mehta.
“At the moment, it seems like the rational thing to do is to consider the possibility of interest rates going up because that’s what everyone is saying.
“But there have been so many instances where we’ve been in similar positions like this, and the forecasts have been consistent for rising rates, and they just have not panned out as expected.
“There’s this big tug of war and I have no clue as to which way it will go.”
How to manage uncertainty
So, what do you do when you don’t know what will happen next?
“The question is how do you make decisions in an uncertain environment,” says Mehta.
“And that’s the job. Not just for people like myself, but so many professions involve decision making under uncertainty.”
Mehta says a simple way to construct a portfolio in uncertain times is to use a “barbell strategy” where a portfolio is weighted to opposing outcomes.
“If you do not have conviction on outcomes, you want to hedge your bets. That’s what a barbell is,” he says.

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Pendal Asian Share Fund
“You have enough on both sides so that you don’t get caught on the wrong end of either of them and as evidence start to accumulate, and you get more conviction, you move towards where the evidence is taking you.”
Mehta says the biggest unknown in markets remains whether inflationary pressures are transitory or here to stay.
“Let’s say the forecasters are right, that inflation is likely to be trenchant and not transient.
“That means 10-year bond yields and interest rates around the world have to rise.
“The question becomes which countries, sectors and companies are likely to be uncorrelated to the effects of rising inflation and rising interest rates?
Investing in Asia
Mehta says investors could look to Southeast Asia for this exposure.
“Southeast Asia is neglected, completely out of favour and cheap. But countries like Indonesia and even the Philippines are benefiting from the reflation due to commodities.”
And China should also be back on the list in a barbell approach.
“China is completely out of favour — but it is the one country that has acted diametrically opposite from all others from a central bank action perspective.
“The People’s Bank of China has tightened monetary policy, not allowed lending to get out of hand, the property bubble is coming under strain, GDP growth is affected.
“If the Western world goes into a rising interest rate, rising inflation environment, could we anticipate China doing the opposite? Should we be alive to the fact that liquidity conditions in China could start to become benign at a time when the rest of the world is quite negative on China?”
And what’s on the other side of the barbell?
Here, Mehta says a well-structured portfolio should own the companies that will continue to thrive should inflation prove transitory.
“I want to have some part of my portfolio in structural winners and growth in case forecasts of rising interest rates based on rising inflation turns out to be wrong.”
About Samir Mehta and Pendal Asian Share Fund
Samir manages Penda’s Asian Share Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Asian shares excluding Japan and Australia. Samir is a senior fund manager at UK-based J O Hambro, which is part of Pendal Group.
Pendal Asian Share Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan (Standard) Index (Net Dividends) in AUD over the medium-to-long term.
Find out about Pendal Asian Share Fund
About Pendal Group
Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management.