Significant Features: The Pendal Smaller Companies Fund is an actively managed portfolio of Australian smaller companies shares.
Fund Objective: The Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries (TR) Index over the medium to long term.

 

Notice of Termination: Pendal Total Return Fund (APIR: RFA0108AU, ARSN: 092 178 704)

 

The Pendal Total Return Fund (Fund) will terminate effective Thursday, 16 September 2021.

As an existing investor in the Fund, you are affected by this decision. 

Why is the Fund being terminated?

We consider that it is in the best interest of investors to terminate the Fund as we are no longer able to efficiently manage the Fund in accordance with its investment objective and investment strategy. We also consider that the Fund has little prospect of significant growth in funds under management in the foreseeable future.

How this affects you?

We will terminate the Fund on Thursday, 16 September 2021 and as soon as practicable, we will begin winding up the Fund. The assets remaining in the Fund will be realised and the proceeds distributed to all investors in proportion to their unit holding.

Applications, transfers or withdrawal requests received after 2:00pm (Sydney time) on Wednesday, 15 September 2021 will not be accepted.

What does this mean for you?

The cash proceeds from the termination of the Fund will be paid directly to your nominated bank account on or around Friday, 1 October 2021.

If there is a final distribution for the Fund, this will be paid directly to your nominated bank account prior to the cash proceeds from the termination. The details of the final distribution will be included in your December quarterly statement. 

You will also receive an annual tax statement following the end of the financial year during July/August 2022.

Questions?  

If you have any questions, please contact our Investor Relations Team during business hours on 1300 346 821.

 

Significant Features: The Pendal Dynamic Income Fund is an actively managed diversified portfolio of Australian and international fixed income securities.

 

Fund Objective: The Fund aims to provide a return (before fees, costs and taxes) that exceeds the RBA Cash Rate by 2-3% p.a. over the medium term.

 

A new Trump Administration, mass restructuring of Japanese corporates, artificial intelligence and weight loss drugs are just some of the trends that will drive global equities in 2025, says Pendal’s CHRIS LEES

AS THE biggest global election year in history comes to a close, a range of new opportunities – and risks – are emerging for global equities investors in 2025.

Just after the US election, Pendal Global Select fund manager Chris Lees joined a live webinar with Pendal Global Emerging Markets Opportunities fund manager Ada Chan to discuss the major trends affecting investors.

You can watch the full webinar here

Below are Chris Lees’s key points. Click here for Ada Chan’s insights.

The Trump effect

“Our assumption is that Trump 2.0 will be slightly different from Trump 1.0 and will probably be quicker to make some deals,” says Lees.

Mid-cap stocks are already beneficiaries.

“There are a lot of really exciting mid-cap stocks around the world, in many geographies, in many sectors, where earnings have come through the last few years but share prices haven’t done much because global markets have been obsessed with the Magnificent Seven [technology stocks],” Lees explains.

“Partly the better performance from mid-caps is a result of the Trump election, because the new Administration will be very business friendly.

“We are also seeing a better performance from the financials and cyclicals. I think that is sustainable.”

Japanese restructuring

Opportunities in Japan involve corporate restructuring, Lees says.

“Japanese corporates are embarking on western style restructuring and seeing huge earnings growth and huge revenue growth. That’s the excitement in Japan – politics is much less the driver.

He calls it a regime change, and it was triggered by the Japanese stock exchange writing to companies telling them to restructure to get their price-to-book values above one.

“The threat is they will be de-listed [by the exchange] and no CEO wants to be delisted. It’s a powerful stick,” Lees says.

“There’s a whole generation of really, really exciting new Japanese restructuring opportunities for global investors.”

Second generation GLP-1 drugs

Lees calls the development of GLP-1 drugs, better known as weight loss drugs, a “genuine regime shift”.

“Humankind has never had these before … and when you get a regime shift you tend to overshoot.”

He says investors in Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, the manufacturers of first generation obesity drugs, have done well. But the side-effects of the drugs, including gastro issues, vomiting and diarrhea, are negatives. There is also too much weight loss from muscle, and not enough from fat.

“The next generation of weight loss drugs is what we are most excited about. The are 20 plus next generation anti-obesity drugs in phase one, two or three trials. Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk have about half of them, but the others are owned by some really exciting mid-cap companies,” Lees explains.

 “They have less side effects and more of the weight loss is from fat. So that whole market will evolve.”

Artificial intelligence

On artificial intelligence, Lees says the big question is who is going to make money, apart from chip maker Nvidia?

“At the moment, the majority of profits have gone to one stock. Can we find other stocks that can use AI to become inherently more profitable for shareholders?” he asks.

“The bear case for AI is that in the history of technology, successful tech is better, faster, cheaper. But AI isn’t better, faster cheaper because …. Its three to five time more expensive to do an AI driven search than it is a regular Google search.”

“Don’t be wholeheartedly positive, because this technology currently is slower and more expensive. It’s fascinating.”

Find out more about Pendal Global Select Fund

About Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal

Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal are senior fund managers of Pendal Global Select Fund. The pair have been working together as investment managers for more than 20 years.

Chris has more than 32 years of investment industry experience. He joined Pendal Group’s UK-based asset manager J O Hambro Capital Management (JOHCM) in 2008 after spending 19 years at Baring Asset Management, ultimately as head of its global sector team.

Nudgem has 22 years of industry experience, joining JOHCM with Chris in 2008. He was previously an investment director with the Global Equity Group of Baring Asset Management, where he worked closely with Chris since 2001.


About Pendal Global Select Fund

Pendal Global Select Fund is a global equities portfolio with a distinctive, yet proven approach. It is a ‘quantamental’ fund combining quantitative and fundamental investing with decades of experience.

Instead of following the crowd, portfolio managers Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal focus on “fat tail” winners in the distribution of stock returns.

These are the long-term compounders, stocks in early-stage growth or those undergoing transformation or recovery.


About Pendal

Pendal is an Australian investment manager focused on delivering superior investment returns for clients through active management.

Our experienced, long-tenured fund managers have the autonomy to offer a broad range of investment strategies with high conviction based on an investment philosophy that fosters success from a diversity of insights and investment approaches.

In 2023, Pendal became part of Perpetual Limited (ASX:PPT), bringing together two of Australia’s most respected active asset management brands to create a global leader in multi-boutique asset management.

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

In a new short video, Pendal Global Select portfolio manager CHRIS LEES outlines the themes driving his team’s investment decisions in 2024

THERE are ten major themes driving global equities investing right now, according to Pendal portfolio manager Chris Lees.

In his latest quarterly video (watch below), Chris briefly outlines each theme and how he and Pendal Global Select Fund co-manager Nudgem Richyal aim to take advantage.

Chris and Nudgem remain enthusiastic about the biotech theme, buying a mid-cap stock with positive new drug results in the anti-obesity space.

But he also warns investors to be aware of anti-obesity losers among snacking stocks and consumer staples.

“It’s also becoming bad news for the healthcare sector. So we would expect the healthcare sector to deteriorate to red lights as well.”

Chris sees a tech-driven bull market continuing to broaden away from mega caps into midcaps — a trend he predicted he spoke about in February.

“The technology sector’s got positive fundamentals and positive trend, but it’s now expensive and we would expect other cyclical sectors above it to start improving.”

Chris says he and Nudgem are now “80 per cent bullish and 20 per cent bearish”.

In this video, Chris also outlines three possible scenarios — and their likelihood — going forward.

Watch the video above.

Find out more about Pendal Global Select Fund

About Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal

Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal are senior fund managers of Pendal Global Select Fund. The pair have been working together as investment managers for more than 20 years.

Chris has more than 32 years of investment industry experience. He joined Pendal Group’s UK-based asset manager J O Hambro Capital Management (JOHCM) in 2008 after spending 19 years at Baring Asset Management, ultimately as head of its global sector team.

Nudgem has 22 years of industry experience, joining JOHCM with Chris in 2008. He was previously an investment director with the Global Equity Group of Baring Asset Management, where he worked closely with Chris since 2001.


About Pendal Global Select Fund

Pendal Global Select Fund is a global equities portfolio with a distinctive, yet proven approach. It is a ‘quantamental’ fund combining quantitative and fundamental investing with decades of experience.

Instead of following the crowd, portfolio managers Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal focus on “fat tail” winners in the distribution of stock returns.

These are the long-term compounders, stocks in early-stage growth or those undergoing transformation or recovery.


About Pendal

Pendal is an Australian investment manager focused on delivering superior investment returns for clients through active management.

Our experienced, long-tenured fund managers have the autonomy to offer a broad range of investment strategies with high conviction based on an investment philosophy that fosters success from a diversity of insights and investment approaches.

In 2023, Pendal became part of Perpetual Limited (ASX:PPT), bringing together two of Australia’s most respected active asset management brands to create a global leader in multi-boutique asset management.

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

Get set for a 2024 that flips the script on the story of 2023, with the end of big tech outperformance and a resurgent Japanese yen. CHRISTOPHER LEES explains

The outperformance of America’s Magnificent Seven tech megacaps will come to a halt in 2024, paving the way for a return to market leadership for small and midcaps stocks, says Pendal’s Christopher Lees.

Big tech dominated markets in 2023, with the so-called Magnificent Seven – Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla – collectively outperforming global equities by 73 per cent.

But as the earnings and price performance of the tech stocks begins to peak, the market baton is set to be passed back to a fast-recovering small and mid-caps sector, says Lees, who manages Pendal’s Global Select fund. “2023 was an extraordinary year.

But we expect the Magnificent Seven to start underperforming the overall index in 2024. This really could be the beginning of a new trend change – a ‘vice versa’ where small and mid-cap stocks outperform mega caps,” says Lees.

Video: Fund manager Chris Lees offers an overview of Pendal Global Select Fund

Lees – speaking above via video update to holders of the Pendal Global Select fund – says 2024 is shaping to provide a number of ‘vice versa’ performances when compared to 2023.

Apart from the end big tech’s outperformance, the year is also likely to be characterised by a peak in US market outperformance as emerging markets take the lead, and renewed strength from the historically weak Japanese yen.

These changes have profound implications across equities, fixed income and currency markets, says Lees.

“In 2023, the US improved and emerging markets deteriorated. That’s one of the first things we think might be a vice versa in 2024 with the US economy slowing and emerging market earnings recovering.”

Lees says emerging markets inflation rates are falling and emerging market interest rates still have quite a way to come down. Meanwhile, cyclical indicators in emerging markets are recovering very strongly.

“We expect emerging market earnings to recover very strongly as well,” he says.

“So you put those two things together, the prospect of falling interest rates and accelerating earnings growth in emerging markets and that’s why we think emerging markets will perform much better in 2024 than they did in 2023.”

Video: Fund manager Chris Lees offers an overview of Pendal Global Select Fund

Lees says another change could come from the end of historical weakness in the Japanese yen, which is trading at a 50-year low relative to other major currencies.

“The Bank of Japan was the last central bank with negative interest rates. Many people think that will change in 2024.

“Recently we’ve seen the Fed do a dovish pivot on interest rates and we’ve seen the Bank of Japan loosening yield curve control.

“Both of those we think are early warning signs and very, very bullish for the Japanese yen in 2024.”

Find out more about Pendal Global Select Fund

About Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal

Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal are senior fund managers of Pendal Global Select Fund. The pair have been working together as investment managers for more than 20 years.

Chris has more than 32 years of investment industry experience. He joined Pendal Group’s UK-based asset manager J O Hambro Capital Management (JOHCM) in 2008 after spending 19 years at Baring Asset Management, ultimately as head of its global sector team.

Nudgem has 22 years of industry experience, joining JOHCM with Chris in 2008. He was previously an investment director with the Global Equity Group of Baring Asset Management, where he worked closely with Chris since 2001.

* Source: JO Hambro, Morningstar universe – Global Large-Cap Growth Equity funds, Lipper survey – Sector quartile ranking: IA Global, and Lipper Global Equity Global domiciled in the UK, offshore Ireland, or offshore Luxembourg. Lipper ranking is from A GBP Class. Please note that these performance figures have not been calculated in accordance with the Financial Services Council (FSC) standards. 


About Pendal Global Select Fund

Pendal Global Select Fund is a global equities portfolio with a distinctive, yet proven approach and a 17-year track record of outperformance. Since its inception, the underlying strategy (JOHCM Global Select Fund) has delivered top-decile performance in Lipper and 2nd decile in Morningstar.*


This presentation has been prepared by Pendal Fund Services Limited (PFSL) ABN 13 161 249 332, AFSL No 431426. It is not to be published, or otherwise made available to any person other than the party to whom it is provided. PFSL has appointed J O Hambro Capital Management Limited (JOHCML) as the investment manager of the Fund. JOHCML is a wholly owned subsidiary of Perpetual Limited and a related party of Pendal Institutional Limited. Pendal Institutional Limited has appointed JOHCML as its authorised representative (Representative number 001280039) under its Australian Financial Services Licence.
PFSL is the responsible entity and issuer of units in the Pendal Global Select Fund (Fund) ARSN: 651 789 678. PFSL has appointed J O Hambro Capital Management Limited (JOHCML) as the investment manager of the Fund. JOHCML is a wholly owned subsidiary of Perpetual Limited and a related party of Pendal Institutional Limited. Pendal Institutional Limited has appointed JOHCML as its authorised representative (Representative number 001280039) under its Australian Financial Services Licence.
A product disclosure statement (PDS) is available for the Fund and can be obtained by calling 1300 346 821 or visiting www.pendalgroup.com. The Target Market Determination (TMD) for the Fund is available at www.pendalgroup.com/ddo. You should obtain and consider the PDS and the TMD before deciding whether to acquire, continue to hold or dispose of units in the Fund.
An investment in the Fund is subject to investment risk, including possible delays in repayment of withdrawal proceeds and loss of income and principal invested.
This presentation is for general information purposes only, should not be considered as a comprehensive statement on any matter and should not be relied upon as such. It has been prepared without taking into account any recipient’s personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Because of this, recipients should, before acting on this information, consider its appropriateness having regard to their individual objectives, financial situation and needs. This information is not to be regarded as a securities recommendation.
The information in this presentation may contain material provided by third parties, is given in good faith and has been derived from sources believed to be accurate as at its issue date. While such material is published with necessary permission, and while all reasonable care has been taken to ensure that the information in this presentation is complete and correct, to the maximum extent permitted by law neither PFSL nor any company in the Pendal group accepts any responsibility or liability for the accuracy or completeness of this information.

About Pendal

Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management. Pendal Group includes Pendal Australia, J O Hambro Capital Management, Regnan and Thompson, Siegel and Walmsley (TSW).

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

Deglobalisation, digitisation and decarbonisation are the three global megatrends that will dictate portfolio returns post-Covid, says Pendal portfolio manager Chris Lees

THREE global megatrends will drive stock markets returns in coming years: deglobalisation, digitisation and decarbonisation, says portfolio manager Chris Lees, who oversees Pendal Global Select Fund with Nudgem Richyal.

The concept of megatrends driving returns forms part of Lees’ and Richyal’s highly differentiated, high-conviction global equities strategy.

“Global megatrends transcend sector, they transcend geography,” says Lees, speaking at a Pendal webinar introducing the Global Select fund. The fund was awarded a Zenith “Highly Recommended” rating on September 27, 2021.**

“Deglobalisation, digitisation and decarbonisation are three of the biggest megatrends that we see — and they are all accelerated by Covid.

“These mega, long-term themes are beginning to reassert themselves as the market moves on from Covid bounce recovery plays. It’s now mid-cycle and the market is now really beginning to be driven by these trends.”

Lees says the three themes play off each other to cause a “triplification” effect on markets: “There’s a huge capex boom ahead,” he says.

The megatrends view of investing forms part of Lees’ and Richyal’s longstanding investment process which takes broader themes into account rather than simply stock-specific factors.

“What we try to do is very similar to real estate investing,” says Lees.

“If you buy a good house in a rapidly deteriorating neighbourhood, you’re not going to make much money.

“The way make really good money over the long term in real estate investing is look for the improving neighbourhoods.

“The stock market is exactly the same… We go looking for good stocks and fixer-upper, improving stocks in rapidly improving neighbourhoods.”

Lees says the history of global investing shows big themes drive markets.

In the 70s, successful investing was about tilting portfolios to gold. The 80s were about Japan. The 90s were about the NASDAQ. The early 2000s were about iron ore and the 2010s about the US tech stocks.

“Bubbles are fun early on. That’s where you make money. The concept is tilting into the new neighbourhood — the new bubble,” says Lees.

“People who view the stock market as mean reversion are mathematically correct, but they’re implementing wrong,” he says.

Video: Fund manager Chris Lees gives an overview of Pendal Global Select Fund

“A much better way to look at markets is extreme reversion — markets go from one extreme to the other, from fear to greed, from fear to greed.”

Richyal says the trick to successful portfolio management is taking an equal weight approach in a portfolio and weeding out the losers ruthlessly.

“What we can do is mitigate our own foibles by doing it this way.

“We are trying to mitigate the endowment effect — the concept that we as human beings assign more value to something we possess than what somebody else would pay for it.”

Find out more about Pendal Global Select Fund

** The Zenith Investment Partners (ABN 27 103 132 672, AFS Licence 226872) (“Zenith”) rating (assigned ) referred to in this document is limited to “General Advice” (s766B Corporations Act 2001) for Wholesale clients only. This advice has been prepared without taking into account the objectives, financial situation or needs of any individual and is subject to change at any time without prior notice. It is not a specific recommendation to purchase, sell or hold the relevant product(s). Investors should seek independent financial advice before making an investment decision and should consider the appropriateness of this advice in light of their own objectives, financial situation and needs. Investors should obtain a copy of and consider the PDS or offer document before making any decision and refer to the full Zenith Product Assessment available on the Zenith website. Past performance is not an indication of future performance. Zenith usually charges the product issuer, fund manager or related party to conduct Product Assessments. Full details regarding Zenith’s methodology, ratings definitions and regulatory compliance are available on our Product Assessments and at http://www.zenithpartners. com.au/RegulatoryGuidelines


About Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal

Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal are senior fund managers of Pendal Global Select Fund. The pair have been working together as investment managers for more than 20 years.

Chris has more than 32 years of investment industry experience. He joined Pendal Group’s UK-based asset manager J O Hambro Capital Management (JOHCM) in 2008 after spending 19 years at Baring Asset Management, ultimately as head of its global sector team.

Nudgem has 22 years of industry experience, joining JOHCM with Chris in 2008. He was previously an investment director with the Global Equity Group of Baring Asset Management, where he worked closely with Chris since 2001.


About Pendal Global Select Fund

Pendal Global Select Fund is a global equities portfolio with a distinctive, yet proven approach and a 17-year track record of outperformance. Since its inception, the underlying strategy (JOHCM Global Select Fund) has delivered top-decile performance in Lipper and 2nd decile in Morningstar.*

* Source: JO Hambro, Morningstar universe – Global Large-Cap Growth Equity funds, Lipper survey – Sector quartile ranking: IA Global, and Lipper Global Equity Global domiciled in the UK, offshore Ireland, or offshore Luxembourg. Lipper ranking is from A GBP Class. Please note that these performance figures have not been calculated in accordance with the Financial Services Council (FSC) standards. 


About Pendal

Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management. Pendal Group includes Pendal Australia, J O Hambro Capital Management, Regnan and Thompson, Siegel and Walmsley (TSW).

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

Pendal has brought a very different global equities strategy to Australia. Here fund managers Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal explain the Pendal Global Select Fund process

CHRIS LEES and Nudgem Richyal have spent almost 20 years building a highly differentiated global equities investment strategy — and now it’s finally available in Australia.

Originally created in 2004 at Barings Asset Management, the global equities strategy features very different names to those that frequently dominate such funds.

The pair brought their strategy to Pendal’s UK-based asset manager JOHCM in 2008, where they built it into a US$5.3 billion fund. 

After recently launching in Australia as Pendal Global Select Fund, Zenith awarded the fund its highest rating of “Highly recommended” (Sep 27, 2021).**

Yin and Yang

“If you asked clients about us, they would say ‘Chris and Nudgem are Yin and Yang’,” says Lees, a Londoner who now lives in a small village called Andermatt in the Swiss Alps.

“We both bring very different things to the process.”

Singapore-based Richyal says: “We feel unique because we are trying to combine this high-conviction, bottom-up stock picking within the context of top-down factors — particularly sectors and countries.

“It sounds glib, but it’s the Warren Buffet bottom-up stuff with the George Soros top-down stuff.”

A four-dimensional, ‘quantamental’ process

Lees uses the word “quantamental” — a merger of quanatitative and fundamental — to describe the the process.

The first dimension is old-fashioned stock-picking via fundamentals. We are looking for good or improving companies.

The second dimension is valuation. We want those companies in the right sectors at attractive valuations.”

Analysis of sector, country and other factors is important in this part of the process. “Think of it like real estate. Even the best home in a deteriorating neighbourhood can lose you money,” Lees says.

Third, we buy shares when they’re going up, not down, because that’s the only way you can make money for your clients.”

A critical part of the third dimension is understanding key drivers of not only different sectors, but different geographies.

“Just look at China right now. It doesn’t really matter what stock you hold, it hasn’t worked out well,” Lees says.

And the fourth dimension is about tomorrow. The world is always evolving. Nobody could have seen the exact impact of COVID, for example. The fourth dimension is where we are really good,” Lees says.

“We can map out very quickly the good houses in the good neighbourhoods and map out what’s changing over time,” says Lees.

“We quant-screen and that tells us what the best stocks are, what the best sectors are and what the best geographies are. We do that Monday morning — we call that three-two-one.

“Then we spend the rest of the week thinking about the fourth dimension — what’s changing, what’s evolving, which good areas are getting slightly worse. Which bad areas are getting slightly better?”

‘Open-source’ approach to investing

Lees and Richyal adopt what they call an “open-source” attitude to finding opportunities — a reference to the software development paradigm that draws on expertise form many sources.

The pair draws on the expertise of 50-plus investment professionals at Pendal’s UK-based asset manager JOHCM.

“Open source always wins in technology because it’s about taking ideas wherever you find them,” Lees explains.

“All the teams in JO Hambro are coming up with great ideas for us to take a look at.

Richyal says this philosophy is critical to their ability to outperform the benchmark.

“We don’t care about the provenance of the idea. If it’s interesting we will go and do our checks on it,” Richyal says. “That open-mindedness to ideas really helps.”

Rule of thumb

Often, they don’t agree about stocks.

“That’s part of our strength. We come at opportunities from slightly different ways,” Richyal explains.

“We have this rule of thumb about stocks. If it’s one minus one — one of us likes it, and the other doesn’t — it doesn’t get in,” he says.

“If it’s one plus zero, that gets in if one of us can convince the other. Over time that’s where we’ve gotten the best results.

Video: Fund manager Chris Lees gives an overview of Pendal Global Select Fund

“But if it’s one plus one, those are the stocks that are usually at the end of their life,” Richyal says. “If it’s so obvious that we both really like it, it usually means there’s not much juice left.”

“And then there’s the minus one, minus one. They tend to keep underperforming.”

Lees agrees.

“If we’re both very bullish on something, we make good money on it but not really good money. Historically we’ve made most money where one of us is pounding the table bullish, whether it’s a stock or sector or geography or currency.

“In that case it’s good to have the other person’s scepticism in the room,” he says.

Ability to move fast

Agility is important, Lees says.

“By the time a large investment committee agrees on something, often the opportunity has gone. The real money is made where someone has spotted something early, and the rest of the room waits to gather more evidence.”

And given the breadth of the fund — global equities — there are relatively few stocks.

“If you want to outperform the global index, you’ve had to own a narrow set of companies,” Lees says. “It’s always been that way.”

Over the past decade holding the big technology companies has meant outperformance, he says. The decade prior to that was about holding emerging markets and commodities, and then in the 1990s it was about holding technology, media and telecommunications companies.

Digitisation, decarbonisation and deglobalisation are the new themes.

Not wrong for long

Lees says critical to the fund is knowing when to sell stocks.

“It goes right back to what Einstein said when he was asked what the greatest discovery humankind had ever made. He said the power of compound interest,” Lees says.

“Most people still don’t understand that. If you are holding losers in your portfolio, you’re holding back the compounding effect.

Lees adds that it’s been proven that losing stocks carry on losing with greater persistency, and winning stocks carry on winning.

“Weed out the losers and let the winners run.”

Equal weighting

Just as critical is equal weighting of the portfolio’s 30-to-60 stocks.

“It tilts you away from large-cap growth over time and towards mid-cap value. And it’s systematic rebalancing. It forces you to trim you winners back to equal weight. And review your losers.”

Richyal says its about mitigating the endowment effect on the way down.

“That’s when you ascribe more value to something in your possession than its actually worth in the outside world. And on the upside, we’re trying to mitigate overconfidence bias.”

“We really believe that performance follows flows. And our process has been built to say where is the money going to go to? We aren’t trying to pre-empt that move. We are just fast followers and lock on to the trend.”

Find out more about Pendal Global Select Fund

*Source: JO Hambro, Morningstar universe – Global Large-Cap Growth Equity funds, Lipper survey – Sector quartile ranking: IA Global, and Lipper Global Equity Global domiciled in the UK, offshore Ireland, or offshore Luxembourg. Lipper ranking is from A GBP Class. Please note that these performance figures have not been calculated in accordance with the Financial Services Council (FSC) standards

** The Zenith Investment Partners (ABN 27 103 132 672, AFS Licence 226872) (“Zenith”) rating (assigned ) referred to in this document is limited to “General Advice” (s766B Corporations Act 2001) for Wholesale clients only. This advice has been prepared without taking into account the objectives, financial situation or needs of any individual and is subject to change at any time without prior notice. It is not a specific recommendation to purchase, sell or hold the relevant product(s). Investors should seek independent financial advice before making an investment decision and should consider the appropriateness of this advice in light of their own objectives, financial situation and needs. Investors should obtain a copy of and consider the PDS or offer document before making any decision and refer to the full Zenith Product Assessment available on the Zenith website. Past performance is not an indication of future performance. Zenith usually charges the product issuer, fund manager or related party to conduct Product Assessments. Full details regarding Zenith’s methodology, ratings definitions and regulatory compliance are available on our Product Assessments and at http://www.zenithpartners. com.au/RegulatoryGuidelines


About Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal

Chris Lees and Nudgem Richyal are senior fund managers of Pendal Global Select Fund. The pair have been working together as investment managers for more than 20 years.

Chris has more than 32 years of investment industry experience. He joined Pendal Group’s UK-based asset manager J O Hambro Capital Management (JOHCM) in 2008 after spending 19 years at Baring Asset Management, ultimately as head of its global sector team.

Nudgem has 22 years of industry experience, joining JOHCM with Chris in 2008. He was previously an investment director with the Global Equity Group of Baring Asset Management, where he worked closely with Chris since 2001.

* Source: JO Hambro, Morningstar universe – Global Large-Cap Growth Equity funds, Lipper survey – Sector quartile ranking: IA Global, and Lipper Global Equity Global domiciled in the UK, offshore Ireland, or offshore Luxembourg. Lipper ranking is from A GBP Class. Please note that these performance figures have not been calculated in accordance with the Financial Services Council (FSC) standards. 


About Pendal Global Select Fund

Pendal Global Select Fund is a global equities portfolio with a distinctive, yet proven approach and a 17-year track record of outperformance. Since its inception, the underlying strategy (JOHCM Global Select Fund) has delivered top-decile performance in Lipper and 2nd decile in Morningstar.*


About Pendal

Pendal is an independent, global investment management business focused on delivering superior investment returns for our clients through active management. Pendal Group includes Pendal Australia, J O Hambro Capital Management, Regnan and Thompson, Siegel and Walmsley (TSW).

Contact a Pendal key account manager here

Chris joined Pendal as an equity investment specialist in 2014, with industry experience going back to 2000 across Sydney, London and Hong Kong. He works closely with Pendal’s Australian Equities team and provides the link to their views and insights on the outlook for Australian equity markets and portfolio positions. He also works with emerging market, Asian and global equity teams, drawing on thirteen years in working in offshore markets. Prior to joining Pendal he spent eight years as an equity portfolio specialist with BlackRock and then HSBC Global Asset Management. He is a CFA Charterholder.