Australian investors can be forgiven for wondering - with some
trepidation - what the sharemarket is going to get up to next.
While the market has recovered some ground after falling almost 25
per cent in March from its October highs, it is still significantly
down.
It may seem cold comfort to remind those living off their
retirement savings that they have enjoyed five years of
double-digit returns.
Australia's leading fund managers and market economists say
investors should be prepared for at least another six months of
volatility and perhaps longer.
"The worst is probably behind us but it is going to remain a
fairly difficult environment for investors, unfortunately," says
AMP Capital Investors' chief economist, Shane Oliver.
Many fund managers say the level of volatility in the Australian
sharemarket is the highest they have experienced.
"The market is almost schizophrenic," says Stephen Croft, a
senior investment manager with Portfolio Partners and leader of the
fund manager's small companies team.
"It is going from periods of belated optimism to the depths of
bearishness within months and then back again."
Lee Mickelburough, a Perennial Growth Management partner, says:
"It has been the most volatile market I have seen in 20 years in
the market."
And there are economic headwinds building that could well delay
any recovery. Australia's economy is slowing and companies will be
unable to grow their earnings at the same rate. Already some have
begun to issue profit warnings and it is likely there are many more
to come.
Then there are rising food and energy prices, which are helping
to fuel inflation. Higher inflation is a drag on economic growth,
corporate profits and the performance of equities. Inflation is at
4 per cent, above the Reserve Bank of Australia's target range of 2
to 3 per cent a year. The Reserve has already raised interest rates
12 times this cycle, to 7.25 per cent. The central bank will be
hoping that inflation has peaked because it will not want to raise
rates and dampen domestic demand any further.
Meanwhile, the resources sector is powering ahead as demand for
commodities from China and other industrialising nations continues
undiminished.
"What we have is a bear market in industrial stocks and a bull
market in resource stocks," says Brian Eley, the co-founder of
small companies manager Eley Griffiths Group. He says the
difference between the two is enormous.
Most top-performing managers of Australian share funds have
produced losses over the past year but have cushioned them by
riding the resources boom.
BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto have been the mainstays for many of
the top-performing funds. Both companies continue to benefit from
the record prices being paid for most base metals, iron ore and
coal.
Aquarius Platinum and oil and gas producer Australian Worldwide
Exploration have performed well for Eley Griffiths. However, as
with all mining booms, this one is attracting its fair share of
speculative plays.
Eley says there are some very good projects and management teams
but "unfortunately, there is also a lot of the other sort. So we do
our best to step around them."
Han Lee, the founder of Prime Value Asset Management, has also
done well for investors, with holdings in BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto
and explosives and chemical maker Orica.
Fund managers have also seen good results from companies
providing services to the mining sector. One of the best long-term
performers for the Prime Value Growth Fund is Monadelphous, which
provides engineering construction, maintenance and industrial
services to the resources, energy and infrastructure sectors.
A $1000 shareholding in Monadelphous bought five years ago is
now worth about $21,000. Lee bought shares in the company when it
was relatively unknown.
Lee has a knack of identifying investment trends early. He has
capitalised on higher food prices with investments in the
Australian Wheat Board, ABB Grain and crop protection company
Nufarm.
The Prime Value Growth Fund is one of the best-performing funds
over the long term, with an average annual return of 22 per cent
over the seven years to April 30 (see table).
"Like politics, investment is the art of the possible," Lee
says. "You do as well as it is possible to do. Of course, everyone
wants to maximise return for minimum risk. I try to get a
satisfactory degree of return with an acceptable degree of
risk."
But his good performance is due to more than just picking
winners; it is also about avoiding losers.
"Avoiding them is just as important or sometimes more important
than picking winners," Lee says. He avoided investing in stocks
whose problems were triggered by the credit crunch, such as
child-care services provider ABC Learning, property developer and
financier MFS and Centro Properties Group.
Other sectors struggle
Apart from resources and agriculture, most other sectors of the
market are struggling. Lee is underweight in the banks and in the
financial services sector generally.
"The banks in Australia are in the business of selling credit to
a country which has already borrowed so much that I do not know
where the growth is going to come from," Lee says.
James Falkiner, the founder of Falkiner Global Investors (see
box), has followed the Australian banking sector since 1986. He
says the financial performance of the banks probably peaked three
or four years ago, even though their share prices kept rising until
late last year. The banks have struggled to get costs down.
As with Lee, Falkiner wonders where the growth is going to come
from. "We have a heavily leveraged household sector," he says.
Fund managers also expect consumer discretionary stocks, which
are down 35 per cent over the past year, to continue to suffer.
"Highly geared stocks with exposure to discretionary spending
are to be avoided," Lee says.
"The wealth effect of the property boom made people feel like
they could spend more."
Now that property prices are on the way down and food and fuel
are up, he thinks consumers will spend less on things they can do
without.
"We are trying to stay away from those areas," he says.
The share prices of some key consumer discretionary stocks such
as Harvey Norman and JB Hi-Fi have almost halved during the past
six months.
"The question is, are those stocks cheap enough to buy for the
long term?" asks Bob van Munster, the head of equities at Tyndall
Investment Management. "That is occupying at the moment."
Van Munster remains cautious on the sector, saying that the
Australian consumer will continue to be hit.
"What we are finding is pockets of value in an eclectic bunch of
stocks that has been bashed around for stock-specific reasons," van
Munster says.
There is likely to be long-term value in building materials
supplier James Hardie and gaming industry supplier Aristocrat
Leisure, he says.
But James Hardie is exposed to the weak US housing market and,
even though Tyndall already holds shares in the company, Van
Munster says he will probably not pick up more until the problems
in the US housing sector have bottomed.
Aristocrat Leisure's profit growth has been affected by
regulatory problems in the US, its main market, and by the rising
Australian dollar.
Defensive no more
Normally, when markets turn bearish certain sectors can be
relied upon to give some shelter from the storm. But a feature of
this market is that the sectors usually regarded as defensive have
been having a rough time too.
Listed property trusts used to provide shelter from stormy
markets but have taken on a lot of gearing and have moved into
funds management. Some have overpaid for properties at the top of
the market.
Infrastructure stocks are usually another good bet in tough
times but they have been leveraging up on cheap credit. This makes
them volatile investment vehicles, even if the underlying assets
are still defensive, says a BlackRock senior portfolio manager,
Amos Hill.
US-listed BlackRock merged with Merrill Lynch Investment
Managers in 2006. BlackRock is one of the world's largest
investment managers.
BlackRock is finding growth and defensive characteristics in
companies servicing the resources sector. Companies such as project
development and contracting group Leighton Holdings have been huge
beneficiaries of the resources boom.
They have been able to deliver earnings growth with a high
degree of earnings certainty, says Mark Himpoo, BlackRock's head of
Australian Equities.
BlackRock's Australian share funds feature strongly at the top
of the performance league tables (see below). Himpoo says the key
to outperformance over the long term is "to find business
franchises with earnings certainty, strong management teams and
clear strategies".
What is next?
AMP's Oliver says the Australian sharemarket will probably
remain weak because of the problems in the US but that the market
could rally later in the year. The US economy is probably already
in recession.
American banks and, to a lesser extent, European banks have had
to declare losses totalling hundreds of billions of dollars because
of the subprime lending crunch.
The other key factors for the Australian sharemarket are the
Chinese economy and the extent to which Australian consumers will
keep spending if the economy continues to slow.
However, the outlook for China remains strong, as does the
earnings growth of Australian-listed resources companies, although
earnings expectations for Australian industrial companies could
still be too optimistic. "The market could be disappointed," Oliver
says.
Some resource stocks are having a bit of pause at the moment,
says Portfolio Partners' Croft. "But I cannot see that part of the
market failing to outperform for long."
Short cuts
For the year to April 30, the Falkiner Australian Absolute
Returns Fund returned more than 13 per cent.
Over the same period, most other funds lost money, some more
than 20 per cent. The fund is also one of the best performers over
the long term, with an average annualised return of 26 per cent
over the three years to April 30.
Falkiner Global Investors takes short positions in stocks, a way
of making money when a stock price falls. But most of its returns
come from the usual method of investing: buying stocks in the hope
that their share prices will rise. By being able to invest short
and by not seeking to mirror sharemarket indices, its funds can
produce returns that are very different to the market.
The company was founded by James Falkiner in 2004. Falkiner,
above, invests in the larger capitalised companies that have
businesses he understands.
The best-performing stock held by the fund is Fortescue Metals
Group. The share price of the Pilbara iron ore producer has more
than doubled over the past six months. Fortescue was founded in
2003 by Andrew Forrest, who recently surpassed James Packer as
Australia's richest man.
TOP FUNDS LARGE COMPANIES RETURN
Fund name 1yr % 3yr % 5yr % 7yr %
ING OneAnswer IP ING Select Leaders 2.48 22.37 - -
BlackRock Growth 0.18 20.73 22.23 12.7
Prime Value Growth 4.6 20.35 26.06 22.17
ING OneAnswer IP ING Sustain Inv Aust Share 5.94 20.15 - -
BT PPSI - Merrill Lynch Wholesale Aust Share -0.7 19.34 19.62 11.4
Col First State FirstChoice - CFS Aust Share - Core 0.07 19.14 19.02 -
BT Investment - BT Imputation -3.57 19.07 21.59 14.78
BlackRock P Inv Australian Share -1.1 18.83 19.1 10.83
BT Classic Investment - Ethical Share* -4.08 18.65 21.18 -
Commonwealth - Share Income* -0.27 18.47 18.34 11.75
EQT Flagship Fund -0.31 18.28 - -
EQT Core Australian Equity Fund 4.54 18.21 18.34 12.03
BT PPSI - BT Wholesale Core Aust Share -2.67 18.17 20.08 11.88
Macquarie Master - Alpha Plus -3.8 18.15 18.63 -
BlakRock Australian Share -1.81 18.11 18.38 10.23
IOOF/Perennial Flexi Trust - Growth Shares -6.03 18.01 19.38 10.92
Austock Australian Equities -4.57 18 - -
AXA - Wholesale Australian Equity-Growth -4.62 17.91 18,83 11.04
Portfolio Partners Prof Elite Opportunities -0.57 17.87 20.5 -
Portfolio Partners Prof High Growth Shares 5.12 17.86 19.82 14.67
*CLOSED TO NEW INVESTMENT
SOURCE: MORNINGSTAR TO 30/4/08
TOP FUNDS SMALL COMPANIES RETURN
Fund name 1yr % 3yr % 5yr % 7yr %
ING OneAnswer IP ING Small Companies Growth* -4.13 30.75 39.52 18.18
Macquarie Master - Small Companies* -20.23 25.96 30.08 17.9
AMP FLI - AMP Small Comapnies -6.66 24.41 27.66 18.22
Pengana Emerging Companies -15.35 24.36 - -
Portfolio Partners Prof Emerging Shares 3.94 24.25 26.28 16.1
Macquarie - Small Companies Growth -21.6 23.31 27.28 15.82
UBS Emerging Companies 2.82 21.64 - -
Eley Griffiths Group Small Companies -5.74 21.4 - -
BT PPSI - BT Wholesale Smaller Companies -6.7 20.97 28.44 20.29
ING OA IP ING Emerging Companies -5.87 20.78 27.28 13.55
Invesco - Australian Smaller Companies -2.87 19.06 22.01 15.7
Advance Wholesale Aust Smaller Companies -9.27 18.18 - -
Col First State MIF - Future Leaders* -8.64 17.66 20.27 10.41
Col First State FirstChoice - CFS Develop Comp* -15.37 17.47 - -
EQT MIR Aust Emerging Opportunities Share -14.07 17.47 - -
Ganes Focused Value -16.04 17.38 20.47 -
Aberdeen Australian Small Companies -7.99 17.03 25.6 -
Advance Aust Smaller Companies Multi-Blend -10.75 17.02 - -
Challenger Smaller Companies -4.33 16.58 22.36 -
Perpetual WFI Perpertual?s Smaller Companies -10.9 16.13 18.75 -
*CLOSED TO NEW INVESTMENT
SOURCE: MORNINGSTAR TO 30/4/08