OnePath Wholesale Managed Growth Trust is an Managed Funds investment product that is benchmarked against Multi-Asset Growth Investor Index and sits inside the Multi-Asset - 61-80% Diversified 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 OnePath Wholesale Managed Growth Trust has Assets Under Management of 25.11 M with a management fee of 0.9%, a performance fee of 0.00% and a buy/sell spread fee of 0.06%.
Equity markets rose in June, continuing to defy expectations throughout 2023 as expectations of a paradigm shift in AI drove tech stocks even higher and bond yields stabilised as inflation fell from peak levels. Australia’s S&P/ASX 300 Index delivered a 1% return over the June quarter including dividends, underperforming both the MSCI World (+6.8%) and the US S&P 500 (+8.8%).
Australia’s lower exposure to tech stocks and greater reliance on China for its exports led to relative underperformance, and was further exacerbated by huge outperformance within the US megacaps tech stocks.
The slowing Chinese economy weighed on its sharemarket, with the Shanghai Composite falling 6.9% in AUD terms, contributing to weaker performance in Emerging Markets. Sector performance in Australia was led by Tech (+18%), Utilities (+4%) and Energy (+3.8%) while Healthcare (-3.1%), Materials (-2.7%) and Consumer Discretionary (-1.9%) were the laggards. Despite a rebound in the miners and in some commodity prices in June, this wasn’t enough to make up for sharper falls earlier in the quarter. Iron ore fell 11% to USD108 over the quarter, yet rebounded 10% last month on hopes China stimulus will ignite growth, although measures such a 10bp rate cut and EV subsidies have thus far been insufficient.
Oil prices fell 6% over the quarter to USD71/bbl. Bond yields have traded in a narrow 50bps range this year, with US bond yields at 3.83%, only 4bps lower than where they started the year at 3.87%.
Consumer confidence in the US rebounded sharply, helped by signs that inflation is cooling and a willingness for people to continue spending if still employed. The spending shift from goods to services there continued with the travel industry still reaping the benefits of pent-up demand for holidays post Covid, although here the Australian consumer outlook painted a less rosy picture, with cost of living pressures and higher mortgage rates hurting the domestic retail sector. After lifting rates in May and June, the RBA kept rates on hold at 4.1% at the start of July, the second pause since this rate cycle started and possibly an acknowledgment that 13 months of hikes is helping to reign in spending and cool inflation.
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