March 2024
Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Strategy: Composite Bond
Return (since Dec. 2023): 4.11% net
Net return volatility (since Dec. 2023): 4.17% pa

Objective: The Fund targets returns in excess of the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index (hedged to NZD) by 1.0% to 2.0% per annum over rolling 12 month periods.

Strategy: The Fund offers exposure to an actively managed fixed-income strategy focused on mispricings in Australian and global government and corporate bond markets with an interest rate duration risk broadly similar to that of the Index. The Fund currently invests in the Coolabah Active Composite Bond Fund (Underlying Fund), an Australian unit trust managed by Coolabah. The Fund targets a position of being fully hedged back to New Zealand dollars.
The Underlying Fund is permitted to invest in bonds, such as government and semi-government bonds, bank and corporate bonds, and asset-backed securities, including residential-mortgage-backed securities, issued in Australian Dollars or in G10 currencies hedged to Australian Dollars, as well as cash, cash equivalents and related derivatives. It can borrow, use derivatives and short-sell, meaning it may be geared (or leveraged). Leverage can amplify gains and also amplify losses.

Period Ending 2024-03-31Net ReturnAusBond Comp Bond Index*Net Excess Return
1 month1.31%1.24%0.08%
3 months1.95%1.33%0.62%
Inception  Dec. 20234.11%3.28%0.83%
Underlying FIXD Strategy*
6 months7.46% 5.42%2.04%
1 year7.68% 2.74%4.93%
3 years pa0.66%-0.50%1.16%
5 years pa2.42% 0.76%1.66%
Inception pa Mar. 20173.47% 2.15%1.31%

* The underlying strategy is an Australian unit trust. The returns displayed are estimated in NZD based on the actual AUD returns with 1 month forward contracts. Net returns are calculated from the historic gross returns using the current fee structure as displayed in the PDS. The Excess Return columns represent the gross and net return above the AusBond Composite Bond Index hedged to NZD. # The yields shown are estimates based on the yield of the underlying strategy hedged to New Zealand Dollar (NZD) using the NZD Bank Bill 3 Month Index (NDBB3M) and the AUD Bank Bill 3 Month Index (BBSW3M).

Disclaimer: Past performance does not assure future returns. Returns are shown net of management fees and costs unless otherwise stated. All investments carry risks, including that the value of investments may vary, future returns may differ from past returns, and that your capital is not guaranteed. To understand Fund’s risks better, please refer to the Product Disclosure Statement available at Coolabah Capital Investments' website.
Note: all portfolio statistics other than yields and duration are reported on gross levered value of the underlying fund hedged to NZD
Gross Portfolio Weight to Cash Securities 1.1% Modified Interest Rate Duration 5.26 years
Gross Portfolio Weight to Bonds 98.8% Gearing Permitted? Yes
Av. Portfolio Credit Rating A Av. Gross Portfolio Weight to Cash 0.4%
Portfolio MSCI ESG Rating AA Gross Portfolio Weight to AT1 Hybrids 0.0%
No. Cash Securities 16 Gross Cash Securities + RBA Repo-Eligible Debt 63.4%
No. Notes and Bonds 144 Net Annual Volatility (since incep.) 4.17%
Av. Interest Rate (Gross Running Yield) 7.78% Underlying Strategy Ratings: Recommended (Lonsec); Zenith available to clients
Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)
Disclaimer: Past performance does not assure future returns. Returns are shown net of management fees and costs unless otherwise stated. All investments carry risks, including that the value of investments may vary, future returns may differ from past returns, and that your capital is not guaranteed. To understand Fund’s risks better, please refer to the Product Disclosure Statement available at Coolabah Capital Investments' website.
The since inception net return of 4.11% net is the total annual return earned by the fund since Dec. 2023, including interest income and movements in the price of the bond portfolio after all fund fees (assuming net returns are calculated from the historic gross returns using the current fee structure as displayed in the Product Disclosure Statement). The net return quoted applies to the Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund, with quarterly distributions reinvested. Each investor's return will vary depending upon their own investment date and any additional investments and withdrawals they make. The annualised volatility estimate of 4.17% pa is based on the standard deviation of net daily returns since inception, which are then annualised, attributable to the Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund.
Portfolio Managers Christopher Joye, Ashley Kabel, Roger Douglas, Fionn O'Leary (Coolabah Capital Investments)
Fund Inception 6-Dec-2023 Distributions Quarterly
Asset-Class Composite Bond Target Return Net 1.0%-2.0% pa over AusBond Composite Bond Index
Min. Investment NZD$1,000 Withdrawals Daily Requests (funds normally in 4 days)
Buy/Sell Spread 0.00%/0.025% Investment Manager Coolabah Capital Investments (Retail)
Supervisor Public Trust Manager FundRock NZ
Mgt. & Admin Fee 0.40% pa Perf. Fee 20.5% of returns over AusBond Composite Bond Index hedged to NZD
Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

In the commentary below, returns indicated with * are estimated returns in NZD based on AUD returns hedged to NZD with 1m forward contracts. All other returns are NZD Denominated where unit classes in NZD exist, and estimated from AUD returns hedged to NZD using 1m forward contracts before the inception of the NZD unit class. Strategy commentary is for the AUD Market.

Portfolio commentary: In March, the zero-duration daily liquidity Active Composite Bond PIE Fund (NZFIXDP) returned 1.31% net, outperforming the RBNZ Overnight Cash Rate (0.41%), the AusBond Bank Bill Index* (0.47%), and the AusBond Composite Bond Index* (1.24%). NZFIXDP ended March with a running yield of 7.78% pa, a weighted-average credit rating of A, and a portfolio weighted average MSCI ESG rating of AA. Since the recent Standard & Poor’s improvement of Australia’s Banking Industry Country Risk Assessment (BICRA) score from 3 to 2, which we forecasted in November, the fund's credit rating has now been upgraded to A+.

Since the inception of NZFIXDP in December 2023, it has returned 4.11% net, outperforming the RBNZ Overnight Cash Rate (1.67%), the AusBond Bank Bill Index* (1.72%), and the AusBond Composite Bond Index* (3.28%). Since inception, NZFIXDP's Sharpe Ratio, which measures risk-adjusted returns, has been 2.01x net. While NZFIXDP's return volatility since inception has been low at around 4.17% pa (measured using daily returns), as a daily liquidity product with assets that are marked-to-market using executable prices, volatility does exist. This contrasts with illiquid credit (eg, loans and high yield bonds) wherein assets that have very high risk can appear to have remarkably low volatility, which is, in fact, just a mirage explained by the inability to properly value these assets using executable prices.

Strategy commentary: In the face of Coolabah’s research indicating that there is a nascent reacceleration in US inflation pressures driven by demand-side services costs, which are in turn underpinned by excessively tight labour markets and unsustainable wage growth, there was an unseemly, twilight-zone like rally in both bonds and equities in the month of March. After the end of the month, one of Coolabah’s most unique late 2023 forecasts, calling for an upgrade to the credit ratings of the major Australian banks’ Tier 2 bonds from BBB+ to A-, was sensationally delivered by Standard & Poor’s (see more later). We had also predicted upgrades to regional banks’ senior bonds and all bank hybrids, which were validated.

Coolabah’s portfolios continued to deliver healthy returns in March, perhaps most strikingly accented by the recently established long duration unit class in our Active Sovereign Bond Fund, which returned 1.42% net of fees in the month, our long duration Global Active Credit Fund, which delivered 1.24% net, and our long duration local strategy, called the Coolabah Active Composite Bond Fund (ETF: FIXD), which returned 1.24% net compared to the benchmark Composite Bond Index’s 1.12%. The charts below highlight our strategy returns (black bars over the last 12 months to 31 March across a range of different solutions – the red bars are different benchmarks).

It's noteworthy that over the past year, some of our best performing strategies have included:

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

The coincident risk and bond rally was driven by a surprising retracement of long-term bond yields (since reversed out in April to date) despite a spate of worrying inflation data (see more later) with 10-year government bond yields contracting in the US (-5bps), Germany (-11bps), New Zealand (-16bps), Italy (-17bps), Australia (-18bps), and the UK (-19bps). This helped to push equities higher in Australia (ASX200 up 2.57%), the US (S&P500 Index up 3.10% and Nasdaq up 1.17%), New Zealand (NZX50 up 3.10%), Europe (Eurostoxx 50 (sx5e) up 4.22%), and the UK (FTSE 100 up 4.23%).

Lower bond yields powered the performance of long duration fixed-rate bond benchmarks, with the Global Aggregate Corporate Index up 1.26% in USD. Tighter credit spreads helped its zero duration counterpart return a still very attractive 0.86% with corporate bond spreads compressing in USD (down 6bps), GBP (down 6bps), and EUR (down 8bps). Down under, cash credit spread performance was much more mixed. Corporate bond spreads only fell by 1bps while 5-year major bank senior bond spreads were unchanged and 5-year major bank Tier 2 spreads actually widened 4bps care of ongoing issuance. One standout was the ASX hybrid market where 5-year major bank spreads dropped by a striking 23bps.

In synthetic CDS index markets, spread moves were generally much more contained with US CDX Index spreads only declining by 1bps, which was matched by a 1bps contraction in European Main Index spreads.

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd: There were, however, notable moves in the price of both oil, with WTI Crude up 6.27%, and gold, which appreciated 9.08%, that could influence and/or correlate with intensifying inflation pressures.

S&P upgrades Aussie major bank Tier 2 bond ratings from BBB+ to A-

Aussie major bank Tier 2 bonds were upgraded on April 4 2024 from a BBB+ credit rating to A-, and Bendigo & Adelaide Bank and Bank of Queensland senior bonds upgraded from BBB+ to A-, which will massively expand the pool of global capital available to be allocated to these assets.

This is a result of Coolabah's unique late 2023 forecast regarding Standard & Poor's lifting Australia's Banking Industry Country Risk Assessment (BICRA) score from 3 to 2 coming to fruition (lower is better), with the market-leading credit agency today declaring:

Coolabah published this forecast on 23 November 2023 at Livewire, predicting that S&P was likely to move around the first quarter of 2024. No other analysts globally shared the same view on this rating change at the time, although many did subsequently come to slowly embrace the idea.

Other interesting consequences that we forecast were an upgrade to the major bank's AT1 hybrid ratings from BBB- to BBB, which has also materialised.

Aussie major bank Tier 2 is now in the "A" band for the first time with all three key global credit rating agencies (CBA will shortly be confirmed for an upgrade with Moody's, based on our research).

Australia's banking system also has the lowest BICRA score globally alongside Canada, Singapore and Hong Kong, which is an entirely prudent determination.

US core inflation picks up in early 2024

The Fed’s preferred measure of underlying inflation – the core PCE deflator – increased by 0.3% in February, rounding up to be in line with market expectations, following a 0.5% rise in January (rounding up from an initial estimate of 0.4%).

The estimated trend shows annualised monthly inflation picking up from around 2% late last year to about 3.5%, echoing the recent re-acceleration in the more timely core CPI (note that the trend estimates can be revised as more data become available).

The pick-up in inflation has been broadly based, in that the estimated trend of the trimmed mean PCE deflator shows annualised monthly growth picking up from 2.50% last year to 3.75%.

Fed Chair Powell said that the February data were in line with expectations, repeating that the Fed needed more confidence before it reduced interest rates, where the return of inflation to the 2% target could be “bumpy” and the strength in activity meant that the Fed “[did not] need to be in a hurry to cut”.

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd: Powell emphasised that the Fed had a “steady hand”, repeating how the FOMC did not overreact to the progress made on inflation late last year.

The next FOMC meeting is on 30 Apr/1 May, but the more likely window for the first cut is still the 11-12 June meeting, which is when the FOMC also updates its economic and financial outlook.

The FOMC then meets twice more before the 5 November presidential election, once immediately afterwards, and then again in December.

The Fed always stresses its political independence, but the election should see it act more cautiously than usual given Trump’s hostility towards the central bank, refraining from offering anything more than tepid guidance and emphasising that decisions will be data dependent.

As for consumer spending, real expenditure rebounded in February, up 0.4% after a 0.2% decline in January. The estimated trend in spending shows steady annualised monthly growth of about 3%.

US core PCE inflation picked up in early 2024

The trimmed mean PCE deflator indicates the pick-up in inflation has been broadly based

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

The core PCE is echoing the higher and more timely core CPI

Trend growth in US real consumer spending remains strong

Persistent services inflation contrasts with falling goods prices

The monthly CPI for February showed underlying inflation tracking in line with the RBA's forecast profile, with persistent services inflation contrasting with falling goods prices in trend terms.

The ex-volatile items/holiday travel CPI rose by 0.5% in February after increasing by only 0.2% for four months in a row, where the increase in February was the largest rise since August.

This suggests that the RBA's preferred measure of inflation - the quarterly trimmed mean CPI, which is due on 24 April, ahead of the 6-7 May board meeting - is on track to post another increase of 0.8% in Q1, in line with the RBA's interpolated forecast.

There is still a margin of error in mapping from this monthly measure of underlying inflation to the quarterly trimmed mean CPI, although both rose by 0.8% in Q4.

Importantly, the monthly CPI echoed the trend shown in other advanced economies, where ongoing strength in services inflation contrasts with goods disinflation.

Goods and services prices have been seasonally adjusted and are broader in scope than the ex-volatile items/holiday travel CPI that proxies the trimmed mean CPI. But that is still useful in demonstrating how the RBA will need a material slowdown in services inflation to be confident that overall inflation will sustainably return to the 2.5% midpoint of its target.

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

Market forecasts versus outcome for the monthly CPI

Underlying inflation is tracking in line with the RBA’s forecast profile

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

Goods prices are falling, while services inflation remains strong

A snapshot of Australian bank/super fund exposure to commercial real estate

Commercial property prices have fallen sharply in most advanced economies over the past year or two, with Green Street Advisors calculating 20%-plus declines in the US and euro area and the RBA estimating a roughly 10% decline in Australia as at late 2023.

Against this backdrop, CCI has taken a snapshot of the exposure of Australian banks and super funds to commercial property and infrastructure.

In aggregate, bank loans to commercial real estate have reached about $0.4 trillion, edging up to 13% of total bank loans over the past couple of years.

This is a little above the 12% average of the past two decades, but well below the 17% peak reached during the global financial crisis.

However, there is a marked divergence in the exposure of different banks.

The exposure of foreign banks continues to trend higher and has reached a series-high 21% of their local loan book.

The exposure of the major domestic banks has edged up to 10% of their loans, while commercial real estate loans written by small domestic banks make up only 4% of their loans.

In comparison, superannuation fund holdings of commercial real estate and infrastructure currently total over $0.35 trillion.

While super fund holdings are a little smaller in dollar terms, the exposure of pension funds is greater than banks when expressed as a share of assets.

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd: Across the pension system, commercial property and infrastructure – where most of it is unlisted – currently accounts for 16% of total super fund assets, which is at the high end of the range of a relatively short history.

Commercial property and infrastructure accounts for 19% of industry fund assets, 16% of public sector fund assets and 10% of retail sector assets.

Bank exposure to commercial real estate has picked up a little as a share of loans over recent years, with foreign banks most exposed relative to their loan book

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

Super funds have increased their exposure to commercial real estate and infrastructure more than banks as a share of assets

Fund: Coolabah Active Composite Bond PIE Fund
Return/Risk: 4.11% net (4.17% pa volatility)
Performance Disclaimer:
This Publication is provided by Coolabah Capital Investments (Retail) Pty Limited (Coolabah) in good faith and is designed as a summary to accompany the Product Disclosure Statement for the Coolabah Investment Funds (Scheme) and the Coolabah Short Term Income PIE Fund and Coolabah Long-Short Credit PIE Fund (Funds). The Product Disclosure Statement is available from Coolabah, or the issuer Implemented Investment Solutions Limited (IIS), and on https://disclose-register.companiesoffice.govt.nz/. The information contained in this Publication is not an offer of units in the Funds or a proposal or an invitation to make an offer to sell, or a recommendation to subscribe for or purchase, any units in the Fund. Any person wishing to apply for units in the Funds must complete the application form which is available from Coolabah or IIS. The information and any opinions in this Publication are based on sources that Coolabah believes are reliable and accurate. Coolabah, its directors, officers and employees make no representations or warranties of any kind as to the accuracy or completeness of the information contained in this Publication and disclaim liability for any loss, damage, cost or expense that may arise from any reliance on the information or any opinions, conclusions or recommendations contained in it, whether that loss or damage is caused by any fault or negligence on the part of Coolabah, or otherwise, except for any statutory liability which cannot be excluded. All opinions reflect Coolabah’s judgment on the date of this Publication and are subject to change without notice. This disclaimer extends to IIS, and any entity that may distribute this Publication. The information in this Publication is not intended to be financial advice for the purposes of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 (FMC Act), as amended by the Financial Services Legislation Amendment Act 2019 (FSLAA). In particular, in preparing this document, Coolabah did not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation and particular needs of any particular person. Professional investment advice from an appropriately qualified adviser should be taken before making any investment. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future performance, unit prices may go down as well as up and an investor in the fund may not recover the full amount the capital that they invest. Returns are shown after fees, but before taxes, and are in New Zealand Dollars unless otherwise stated. The Funds aim to meet their respective objectives by holding units in Australian registered managed investment schemes or unit trusts (Underlying Funds). Equity Trustees Ltd (AFSL 240975) is the Responsible Entity for the Underlying Funds and Coolabah is the investment manager. Equity Trustees Ltd is a subsidiary of EQT Holdings Limited (ACN 607 797 615), a publicly listed company on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX: EQT). No part of this document may be reproduced without the permission of Coolabah or IIS. IIS is the issuer and manager of the Scheme. Coolabah is the investment manager of the Scheme.
Ratings Disclaimer:
MSCI Disclaimer: Neither MSCI nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the MSCI data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any of such data. Without limiting any of the foregoing, in no event shall MSCI, any of its affiliates or any third party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data have any liability for any direct, indirect, special, punitive, consequential or any other damages (including lost profits) even if notified of the possibility of such damages. No further distribution or dissemination of the MSCI data is permitted without MSCI’s express written consent.