Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income is an Managed Funds investment product that is benchmarked against ASX Index 200 Index and sits inside the Domestic Equity - Other Index. Think of a benchmark as a standard where investment performance can be measured. Typically, market indices like the ASX200 and market-segment stock indexes are used for this purpose. The Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income has Assets Under Management of 394.76 M with a management fee of 0.95%, a performance fee of 0.00% and a buy/sell spread fee of 0.7%.
The recent investment performance of the investment product shows that the Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income has returned -0.71% in the last month. The previous three years have returned -0.36% annualised and 12.27% each year since inception, which is when the Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income first started.
There are many ways that the risk of an investment product can be measured, and each measurement provides a different insight into the risk present. They can be used on their own or together to perform a risk assessment before investing, but when comparing investments, it is common to compare like for like risk measurements to determine which investment holds the most risk. Since Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income first started, the Sharpe ratio is NA with an annualised volatility of 12.27%. The maximum drawdown of the investment product in the last 12 months is -3.65% and -22.71% since inception. The maximum drawdown is defined as the high-to-low decline of an investment during a particular time period.
Relative performance is what an asset achieves over a period of time compared to similar investments or its peers. Relative return is a measure of the asset's performance compared to the return to the other investment. The Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income has a 12-month excess return when compared to the Domestic Equity - Other Index of -10.66% and -1.51% since inception.
Alpha is an investing term used to measure an investment's outperformance relative to a market benchmark or peer investment. Alpha describes the excess return generated when compared to peer investment. Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income has produced Alpha over the Domestic Equity - Other Index of NA% in the last 12 months and NA% since inception.
For a full list of investment products in the Domestic Equity - Other Index category, you can click here for the Peer Investment Report.
Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income has a correlation coefficient of 0.94 and a beta of 0.29 when compared to the Domestic Equity - Other Index. Correlation measures how similarly two investments move in relation to one another. This establishes a 'correlation coefficient', which has a value between -1.0 and +1.0. A 100% correlation between two investments means that the correlation coefficient is +1. Beta in investments measures how much the price moves relative to the broader market over a period of time. If the investment moves more than the broader market, it has a beta above 1.0. If it moves less than the broader market, then the beta is less than 1.0. Investments with a high beta tend to carry more risk but have the potential to deliver higher returns.
For a full quantitative report on Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income and its peer investments, you can click here for the Peer Investment Report.
For a full quantitative report on Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income compared to the ASX Index 200 Index, you can click here.
To sort and compare the Lincoln Wholesale Australian Income financial metrics, please refer to the table above.
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Performance contributors this month included:
AusNet Services Ltd (AST) – During September, AST received two acquisition bids and finished the period up 44%. Global asset manager Brookfield bid $2.50 (cash) per share, and APA Group (APA) followed shortly afterwards with a bid for $2.60 (cash and script). With the AST Board granting Brookfield exclusive 7 week access for due diligence, APA has to wait for the end of this period, or a favourable ruling from the Takeovers Panel, before undertaking its own due diligence.
Pinnacle Investment Management (PNI) – The company reported well and was strong throughout the period finishing up 32.6%. Net profit margins surged to 68% from 55%, which drove EPS growth of 103% and bolstered ROE to 31% from 18%. From an income perspective, dividends grew by 86% to 28.7cps on a 79% payout ratio.
Carsales.com Ltd (CAR) – The stock rallied 29.35% over the quarter and is currently trading close to all-time highs. On September 1, int announced the completion of its 49% stake in Interactive Brokers (announced back in May), funded by a $600m capital raise. It had a dilutionary impact on the most recent result, with ROE falling from 34% to 24%.
Accent Group (AX1) – Was the best performing stock in the portfolio, closing the month +30.67% higher. The strength in price was partly due to another solid month for Australian retail sales, but predominately related to the company’s announcement that it had agreed to acquire youth apparel retailer Glue Store for $13m. The consideration would be funded out of existing cash facilities and, in time, will be an accretive investment. Monadelphous (MND) – Following a few months of underperformance, Monadelphous (MND) experienced a shift in investor confidence, rallying +22.6% for the month. The Fund Team believes the strong month was a related to growing confidence that the capex cycle for metals mining/ oil gas will continue in the face of soaring commodity prices and analyst upgrades. On top of this, the company announced that it had settled a lawsuit filed by Rio Tinto relating to a fire incident at their iron ore facility in 2019. The lawsuit was in part acting as somewhat of a headwind for investor sentiment.
Adairs Limited (ADH) – Was another retailer buoyed by the continued strong consumer spending environment. Retailers such as Adairs, who invested in a strong omni-channel strategy have benefited enormously from the growth in online spending. On top of that Adairs are well placed to benefit from the housing market recovery
Performance contributors this month included:
RIO Ltd (RIO) – A beneficiary of the cyclical rotation driven by a global economy recovering from COVID and elevated iron ore prices, reported a strong result in February. A US$3.09 per share ordinary dividend and US$0.93 special dividend were declared for the second half, for a full year payout of US$5.57. This represented a solid 72% payout ratio, higher than the 40–60% policy. BHP Ltd – The company reported well on 17 February and closed the month +12.8%. 1H21 profitability was ahead on 1H20 due to record iron ore prices and a strong recovery in copper. The company’s willingness to pay out all the free cash flow in a fully franked US$1.01 dividend was important because, with of Net Debt marginally below their target range, management is taking the view that the global economy is on the mend and iron ore prices will support strong cashflows through the current half.
Service Stream Ltd (SSM) – (-39.6%) reported late in the month and management indicated 2H21 earnings to be in-line with its already lowered expectation due to ongoing COVID disruptions. From an income perspective, a 1H21 dividend of 2.5cps was announced (vs 4.0cps in 1H20 and below expectations). This means that forward dividend estimates are likely to decrease in-line with lower earnings expectations (from ~8.8cps to ~5cps). Although a disappointing outcome, the Fund Team sees little near term risk for further downside and as such has decided to retain the position in the portfolio until the dividend in March.
The Lincoln Australian Income Fund closed the year 5.42% higher, outperforming its benchmark index by 3.1%. Over the month, the Fund rose 0.78% which represented a small underperformance of its benchmark by 0.5%. The materials sector played an important role in the market over the month and did a lot of the heavy lifting.
Performance contributors this month: Accent Group Ltd (AX1) – (+30.7%) Was the strongest performing stock in the Fund for the month after a trading update reported a continuation of strong sales in the first 20 weeks of FY21. Digital sales were strong as were like for like sales despite the impact of lockdowns on the Victorian stores.
Nanosonics Ltd (NAN) – (+29.3) Continued October’s strength retracing roughly five months of losses. Positives come from a recent 1Q21 trading update reporting the company’s sale of Trophon units, Consumables revenues, and an improvement in hospital access underscoring an operational recovery.
Growth to Value Rotation – Adairs Ltd (ADH), Rhipe Ltd (RHP) and Dominos Pizza (DMP) fell -16%, -12.6% and -11.2% respectably getting caught in the movement away from pandemic beneficiaries into cyclical stocks and previous underperformers. Gold (XAUAUD) – Gold was down 9.35% in AUD terms as money shifted from risk off assets to risk on asse
The Lincoln Australian Income Fund (Fund) rose by 0.81% during October, underperforming its benchmark by 1.13%. ResMed Inc produced a quarterly result that was well ahead of analyst expectations as the company benefitted from surging ventilator sales and solid cost controls. Adairs Ltd was also up strongly, providing the market with another robust trading update with total sales up 22%. The lift in revenues was driven by online sales which skyrocketed 134%. The Fund continues to outperform its index over 1 year, 3 years and since inception and is amongst the best performing funds in its category according to Money Management’s^^ list of high yield Australian equity funds.
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