Author Archives: Kathryn Wenborn

Paradice Climate Action Plan Progress Report 2024

 March, 2025

Paradice Climate Action Plan Progress Report 2024

We are pleased to share our latest Progress Report on the delivery of our multi-year Climate Action Plan (CAP). Following the structure of the CAP and its three pillars of Governance, Investments and Stewardship & Advocacy, we provide an update on the status of activities intended for completion or commencement in CY2024. We also share some highlights from our climate-related stewardship efforts.

Read the Report here

Disclaimer:

This material is prepared by Paradice Investment Management Pty Ltd (ABN 64 090 148 619, AFSL No. 224158) (“Paradice”, “we” or “us”) to provide you with general information only.
This material is not intended to constitute advertising (in respect of Paradice pursuant to Australian law) or advice (including investment advice or security, market or sector recommendations) of any kind. It is not intended to take the place of professional advice and you should not take action on specific issues in reliance on this information.
This material is not to be copied, reproduced or published at any time without the prior written consent of Paradice.
The information and opinions contained herein, including information obtained from third party sources which are considered to be reliable, are not necessarily all-inclusive and, as such, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, completeness or reasonableness of any assumption contained herein and no responsibility arising for errors and omissions (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence) is accepted by Paradice, its officers, employees or agents.
It may contain certain forward-looking statements, opinions and projections that are based on the assumptions and judgments of Paradice with respect to, among other things, future economic, competitive and market conditions and future business decisions, all of which are difficult or impossible to predict accurately and many of which are beyond the control of Paradice. Because of the significant uncertainties inherent in these assumptions, opinions and judgments, you should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. For the avoidance of doubt, any such forward looking statements, opinions, assumptions and/or judgments made by Paradice may not prove to be accurate or correct.
Any specific securities identified herein are not representative of all securities purchased, sold, or recommended by Paradice.
In addition, the information, analysis, and opinions expressed herein are for general and educational purposes only. ESG considerations, such as climate change, may vary across investments, and not every ESG factor may be identified or evaluated for every investment. There is no guarantee that the evaluation of ESG characteristics will be additive to a strategy’s performance. ESG is not a uniformly-defined characteristic and information used to evaluate ESG characteristics may not be readily available, complete, or accurate, and may vary across providers and issuers. Because of the subjective nature of ESG assessment, there can be no guarantee that ESG factors considered will reflect the beliefs or values of any particular client/investor.
You should consider your own needs and objectives and consult with a licensed financial adviser before making a decision to invest in any Paradice product. Additional important risk disclosures can be found here https://www.paradice.com/au/terms-conditions/.
The content of this publication is current as at the date of its publication. It does not reflect any events or changes in circumstances occurring after the date of publication.
Copyright © 2025 Paradice.

Further Information

Paradice publishes stewardship summary report for 2024

Paradice publishes stewardship summary report for 2024

Paradice is pleased to share our annual report summarising the stewardship-related activities undertaken by our Australian equities investment teams in 2024. This includes ESG-related engagement with investee companies, how we exercised our voting rights, and highlights from our advocacy and collaborative efforts.

Collectively in 2024, the Australian equities teams held 230 ESG-related engagements with 102 companies. Transition risks relating to climate change dominated engagement during the year, with a total of 116 engagements on this topic. The next most common topic was conduct and stakeholder relations, with 105 engagements. The report not only provides key engagement statistics but offers some insights into how we engage at both a company level and on specific ESG themes through case study examples.

Read the Paradice Annual Stewardship Summary here

Disclaimer:

This material is prepared by Paradice Investment Management Pty Ltd (ABN 64 090 148 619, AFSL No. 224158) (“Paradice”, “we” or “us”).

This material is not intended to constitute advertising or advice (including investment advice or security, market or sector recommendations) of any kind.

This material is not to be copied, reproduced or published at any time without the prior written consent of Paradice.

The information herein is intended to provide an indication of the engagement activity undertaken by the investment teams responsible for managing Australian equities. The material presented contains information derived from the various portfolios managed by Paradice, including, but not limited to, Paradice Australian Equities Fund (ARSN 617 679 071), Paradice Australian Mid Cap Fund (ARSN 620 055 138), Paradice Australian Small Cap Fund (ARSN 620 056 091), Paradice Equity Alpha Plus Fund (ARSN 631 044 678), and Paradice Australian Small Cap Opportunities Fund (ARSN 667 664 137) (together “the Paradice Funds”).  

Equity Trustees Limited (“Equity Trustees”) (ABN 46 004 031 298), AFSL 240975, is the Responsible Entity for the Paradice Funds.  Equity Trustees is a subsidiary of EQT Holdings Limited (ABN 22 607 797 615), a publicly listed company on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX: EQT).

The information and opinions contained herein, including information obtained from third party sources which are considered to be reliable, are not necessarily all-inclusive and, as such, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, completeness or reasonableness of any assumption contained herein and no responsibility arising for errors and omissions (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence) is accepted by Paradice, its officers, employees or agents.

Any specific securities identified herein are not representative of all securities purchased, sold, or recommended by Paradice.

In addition, the information, analysis, and opinions expressed herein are for general and educational purposes only.

In preparing this material we did not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. It is not intended to take the place of professional advice and you should not take action on specific issues in reliance on this information. Neither Paradice, Equity Trustees nor any of its related parties, their employees or directors, provide and warranty of accuracy or reliability in relation to such information or accepts any liability to any person who relies on it. Past performance should not be taken as an indicator of future performance. You should obtain a copy of the Product Disclosure Statement for any relevant Paradice Fund before making a decision about whether to invest in the product.

The Target Market Determinations for the Paradice Funds are available here: https://paradice.com/au/investor-centre/. A Target Market Determination is a document which is required to be made available from 5 October 2021. It describes who this financial product is likely to be appropriate for (i.e. the target market), and any conditions around how the product can be distributed to investors. It also describes the events or circumstances where the Target Market Determination for this financial product may need to be reviewed.

ESG considerations may vary across investments, and not every ESG factor may be identified or evaluated for every investment. There is no guarantee that the evaluation of ESG characteristics will be additive to a strategy’s performance. ESG is not a uniformly-defined characteristic and information used to evaluate ESG characteristics may not be readily available, complete, or accurate, and may vary across providers and issuers. Because of the subjective nature of ESG assessment, there can be no guarantee that ESG factors considered will reflect the beliefs or values of any particular client / investor.

The services described may not be suitable for or offered to all investors and investors should consult with an investment advisor to determine the appropriate investment strategy. All investments carry a certain risk, and there is no assurance that an investment, strategy, or approach will provide positive performance over any period of time. There is no guarantee that an investment in any strategy offered has or will be profitable. Strategies are actively managed and subject to change. Additional important risk disclosures can be found here for Paradice https://www.paradice.com/au/terms-conditions/

Any forecasts or estimates contained in this publication are not guaranteed. It is of a general nature only and was current only at the time of initial publication.

Copyright © 2025 Paradice.

Image credits: Unsplash

Further Information

Report: Observations from Paris Trip

 September, 2024

Report: Observations from Paris Trip

Paradice Global Equities Team

In September, Toby Shute, an analyst on the Global equities team, attended a pan-European equities conference hosted by Kepler Cheuvreux in Paris. He participated in 17 group and one-on-one company meetings over the course of three days. This provided a good opportunity to check in with firms that the Global team either owns or has studied in the past, in addition to meeting several others for the first time. The conference setting also provided an opportunity to compare notes and trade war stories with other Global and European-specialist investors.

Read the report here.

Disclaimer:

Not for onward distribution.
This material is prepared by Paradice Investment Management Pty Ltd (ABN 64 090 148 619 AFSL No 224158) (Paradice, we or us). This material is not intended to constitute advertising or advice (including investment advice or security, market or sector recommendations) of any kind. In addition, this material represents only the views of the Paradice Global Equities team as at the time of release and is not intended, and may not, represent the views of Paradice or any of the other investment teams at Paradice. It does not reflect any events or changes in circumstances occurring after the date of publication.
It may contain certain forward looking statements, opinions and projections that are based on the assumptions and judgments of Paradice with respect to, among other things, future economic, competitive and market conditions and future business decisions, all of which are difficult or impossible to predict accurately and many of which are beyond the control of Paradice. Because of the significant uncertainties inherent in these assumptions, opinions and judgments, you should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements. For the avoidance of doubt, any such forward looking statements, opinions, assumptions and/or judgments made by Paradice may not prove to be accurate or correct. You should perform your own research and due diligence, consult your own financial, legal, and tax advisors before making any investment decision with respect to transacting in any securities covered herein. Following publication of this material, the investment teams at Paradice may transact or continue to transact in any of the securities covered herein, and may be positive, negative or neutral at any time hereafter regardless of our initial conclusions, or opinions.
This material is not to be copied, reproduced or published at any time without the prior written consent of Paradice. Paradice or any of their respective related parties, directors or employees, make any representation or warranty as to the accuracy, completeness, reasonableness or reliability of the information contained in this publication or accept liability or responsibility for any losses, whether direct, indirect or consequential, relating to, or arising from, the use or reliance on any part of this material.
The information and opinions contained herein, including information obtained from third party sources which are considered to be reliable, are not necessarily all inclusive and, as such, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, completeness or reasonableness of any assumption contained herein and no responsibility arising for errors and omissions (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence) is accepted by Paradice, its officers, employees or agents.
Copyright© 2024 Paradice

Contributors:

Toby Shute

Further Information

Report: Observations from China and USA Trip

October, 2024

Report: Observations from China and USA Trip

Paradice Australian Equities Strategy

Recently David Feng, a portfolio manager/analyst from the Australian equities team, undertook a three-week trip to China and the US. Below is an update on the local economy and a view of in-trend topics from those locations. The trip comprised of company visits, interviews with industry contacts and experts, meetings with sector analysts, and conferences with participants from both listed and unlisted companies.

Read the report here.

Disclaimer:

This material is prepared by Paradice Investment Management Pty Ltd (ABN 64 090 148 619 AFSL No 224158) (Paradice, we or us).
This material is not intended to constitute advertising or advice (including investment advice or security, market or sector recommendations) of any kind. In addition, this material represents only the views of the Paradice Australian Equities team as at the time of release and is not intended, and may not, represent the views of Paradice or any of the other investment teams at Paradice. It does not reflect any events or changes in circumstances occurring after the date of publication.
It may contain certain forward looking statements, opinions and projections that are based on the assumptions and judgments of Paradice with respect to, among other things, future economic, competitive and market conditions and future business decisions, all of which are difficult or impossible to predict accurately and many of which are beyond the control of Paradice. Because of the significant uncertainties inherent in these assumptions, opinions and judgments, you should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements. For the avoidance of doubt, any such forward looking statements, opinions, assumptions and/or judgments made by Paradice may not prove to be accurate or correct. You should perform your own research and due diligence, consult your own financial, legal, and tax advisors before making any investment decision with respect to transacting in any securities covered herein. Following publication of this material, the investment teams at Paradice may transact or continue to transact in any of the securities covered herein, and may be positive, negative or neutral at any time hereafter regardless of our initial conclusions, or opinions.
This material is not to be copied, reproduced or published at any time without the prior written consent of Paradice. Paradice or any of their respective related parties, directors or employees, make any representation or warranty as to the accuracy, completeness, reasonableness or reliability of the information contained in this publication or accept liability or responsibility for any losses, whether direct, indirect or consequential, relating to, or arising from, the use or reliance on any part of this material.
The information and opinions contained herein, including information obtained from third party sources which are considered to be reliable, are not necessarily all inclusive and, as such, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, completeness or reasonableness of any assumption contained herein and no responsibility arising for errors and omissions (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence) is accepted by Paradice, its officers, employees or agents.

Contributors:

David Feng

Further Information

Paradice’s Sam Theodore sees riches in these uranium stocks

26th August, 2024

AFR: Paradice’s Sam Theodore sees riches in these uranium stocks

Our super funds made two things clear: rates are likely to be higher for longer and equities are back in fashion. We ask some stock pickers to name their calls.

Published in the Australian Financial Review on 26 August 2024. See the original article here.

Paradice Investment Management’s Sam Theodore is visibly excited when he talks about his first trip to Africa a few months ago.

The crux of his journey was to visit ASX-listed Paladin Energy’s flagship uranium project in Namibia, where the miner flagged its first commercial production of the commodity in early April.

It was here that he got to know the management team over several days, sitting next to them on long bus trips to understand the business better.

“Spending time with Paladin’s management team was crucial,” Theodore says. “It’s a very important part of our investment process to have judgment on the management team and their ability to execute.

“Nothing beats kicking the tyres and seeing the site and meeting the people in person.”

It is this focus on management (and governance) that Theodore credits in part for his strategy’s outperformance. The Australian Small-Cap Opportunities Fund, which launched only in July last year, has returned almost 30 per cent, more than tripling the benchmark S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries Total Return Index’s 9.29 per cent return.

Paladin is not the only uranium developer Theodore is bullish on. He also owns Deep Yellow and NexGen Energy in a portfolio of 50-odd stocks.

He says uranium is the perfect example of a commodity with growing demand and limited supply.

“We’re seeing demand grow despite supply not being able to respond,” he says. “We’ve seen the long-term contracting price continue to increase month on month. I think the fundamentals are showing through, and they will become more acute over the next two years.”

Those supply issues sent the price of uranium to its highest levels in more than a decade last year, as Western governments – including Australia – renewed their push to develop sovereign nuclear energy generation. This also triggered a wave of capital raising from ASX uranium developers.

NexGen, a Canadian uranium hopeful that has a secondary listing on the ASX, is awaiting final environmental approvals and is poised to be a top-quality, low-cost producer, according to Theodore.

Gyms and pokies

The Paradice fund manager is more bearish about the broader economic environment. He is underweight the consumer sectors given disposable income still looks “relatively challenged” despite economic conditions appearing “incrementally better”.

“I’ve got to say the consumers have probably been even more resilient than we expected in reality,” he admits. “But it’s definitely been a quite tough environment for a lot of the consumer names.”

That doesn’t mean Theodore has not been investing in the space. He says some consumer-facing businesses are bucking the trend, such as gym operator Viva Leisure and poker machine maker Light & Wonder.

Regarding the former, Theodore says investors have been concerned about the impact of poor consumer confidence on the business, which has weighed on the share price (it is down 6.4 per cent year to date).

Instead, he says, the low-cost gym operations have increased earnings and revenue “strongly” in the past two years, thanks to consistent member growth.

He says the business is expected to increase earnings at a compound annual growth rate of 30 per cent over the next three years, and is currently trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of less than 10.

Light & Wonder, which boasts Aristocrat Leisure’s former chief executive Jamie Odell and former chief financial officer Toni Korsanos as its executive chairman and vice chairman, respectively, is another company to have bucked the trend.

Products gaining traction

Theodore says the pokies manufacturer’s consistent earnings, dominant market position, and signs that its products are gaining traction in the US mean it is likely to beat its $1.4 billion EBITDA guidance by FY25.

Commenting on its rivalry with Aristocrat Leisure, the fund manager says both are leaders in the industry from a product perspective but Light & Wonder is trading on a much lower multiple.

“Light & Wonder is growing at probably twice the rate that Aristocrat is growing earnings,” Theodore says. “It’s also trading at a 50 per cent discount on a PE basis.”

Year to date, the shares are up 35 per cent.

Before Theodore joined fund management, he spent more than a decade on the sell side working at UBS as an analyst covering gaming, engineering and contractors stocks. He was also head of emerging companies research.

It was there that he met Perpetual’s stockpicker Anthony Aboud, who was his then boss and had a big influence on Theodore as a young analyst when “analysing stocks and assessing risk”.

(Also, working there at the same time was hedge fund Totus Capital founder Ben McGarry.)

‘Tomorrow’s winners are all small caps’

Theodore then switched to the buy side, joining US investment giant BlackRock in 2015 from Sydney where he would become lead portfolio manager of its industrial long-short fund in 2020. However, a restructuring of the Australian equities business early last year led to the high-conviction equities team being wound up.

Eager to venture back into small caps, Theodore was handpicked to launch a second small-cap strategy for Paradice that targeted high-net-worth individuals, retail investors and smaller institutions. The firm’s first fund has been closed to new money for almost two decades.

“Tomorrow’s winners are all small caps, typically,” Theodore says.
“If you look at some of Australia’s biggest and best companies, they’ve started as small caps. Being able to find those that graduate from small caps and ride the wave through is always the most rewarding and interesting.”

Investing in the smaller end of the sharemarket means Theodore is no stranger to grappling with volatility or when company founders sell down their stakes – the “red flags” to look for when investing in the space.

“One of the things we’re looking for is when insiders are selling stock because it’s a reality these businesses have a lot more information than we do,” he says.

“If they are seeing there’s value to be found elsewhere … then that should be a signal for all investors.”

He points to the family-tracking device Life360 as a good example of a founder-led business that has “executed very strongly”.

“When we launched this fund, we looked at the company that had a top 15 app in the US, which is quite amazing,” he says. “It’s an Australian-listed company and the market capitalisation was around $2 billion, whereas every other company around that position were these giants of tech.”

Its shares have rocketed more than 150 per cent so far this year to trade at around $19 apiece, with a market value of $4.4 billion.

“It has all the things we look for in an investment – a good balance sheet, founder-led, a large addressable market, and a product that has a lot of consumer appeal.”

Having now spent more than two decades in the finance industry, Theodore says being passionate and thinking more long-term is critical to being a successful stockpicker.

“This isn’t just a job; it’s all-encompassing – markets are always on and it’s very dynamic,” he says.

“Both the world and the industry, with the amount of brokers and news not to mention social media, has increasingly become shorter and shorter in terms of thinking.

“In all the noise, be careful not to lose the bigger picture.”

Joanne Tran is a markets reporter for The Australian Financial Review in the Sydney newsroom. 

Disclaimer:

This material (or any contribution to it) is not intended to constitute advertising or advice (including legal, tax or investment advice or security recommendation) of any kind.  It is of a general nature only and was current only at the time of initial publication. The information and opinions contained herein are not necessarily all-inclusive and, as such, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, completeness or reasonableness of any assumption contained herein and no responsibility arising for errors and omissions (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence) is accepted by Paradice, its officers, employees or agents.  It may contain certain forward looking statements, opinions and projections that are based on the assumptions and judgments of Paradice with respect to, among other things, future economic, competitive and market conditions and future business decisions, all of which are difficult or impossible to predict accurately and many of which are beyond the control of Paradice. Because of the significant uncertainties inherent in these assumptions, opinions and judgments, you should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements. You should consider your own needs and objectives and consult with a licensed financial adviser. For the avoidance of doubt, any such forward looking statements, opinions, assumptions and/or judgments made by Paradice may not prove to be accurate or correct.  References to securities may or may not represent the holdings of the Paradice Funds. It does not reflect any events or changes in circumstances occurring after the date of publication.

Past performance of the Fund is not a reliable indicator of future performance. The value of an investment in the Fund may rise or fall. Returns are not guaranteed by any person.  In deciding whether to acquire, or to continue to hold, units in the Fund please read the current product disclosure statement and The Target Market Determination (TMD) for the Fund is available here.

The information may contain confidential, proprietary, privileged or copyright material belonging to us, related entities or third parties and may not be copied, reproduced, published, disclosed or redistributed in any format without the prior approval of Paradice.

Contributors:

Sam Theodore

Report: Is there an opportunity to invest in Australian Small Caps now?

August, 2024

Report: Is there an opportunity to invest in Australian Small Caps now?

Paradice Australian Small Cap Opportunities Fund

 
This thought piece discusses what we are seeing in the small cap space in the US and whether this suggests that there are opportunities within the Australian small cap market.

Are US small cap stocks setting the scene?

There has been a lot of commentary and media recently talking about the great rotation currently underway globally out of large caps and into small caps.

Below is a chart of the Russell 2000 (blue line; representing US Small Caps) vs the S&P 500 (white line; US Large Caps) over the last month, which illustrates close to a 10% performance difference between the two indices.

(Source: Internal, Bloomberg, as at 1 August 2024)

Why might this rotation be happening and what does it mean in an Australian context? 

  • In our view, AI is an expense at the moment rather than a revenue generator. This goes to the cost of building out the infrastructure for AI and the lag as capacity fills up before returns come.
  • Concentration risk may be playing out. The 10 largest stocks by market capitalisation in the S&P 500 accounted for 27% of the index at the end of 2023, nearly double the 14% share of a decade earlier (source: Morgan Stanley). This has increased to 37% in 2024 according to FactSet data, with the Magnificent Seven making up 31% of the index. That rate of increase in concentration is the most rapid since 1950, according to Morgan Stanley. In our view the Magnificent Seven will have to keep positively surprising on earnings to maintain that momentum.[1]  
  • The rotation began after the June 2024 CPI. In our view, this will get stronger when interest rate cuts begin to materialise and the move in US small caps over the last month suggests conviction on the rotation growing, a trajectory which could play out similarly in an Australian context as outlined below.

Interestingly, in Australia, we have not yet seen this play out at the index level – with Small Caps (the blue line in the chart below) only slightly ahead vs the ASX100 over the last month. 

 (Source: Internal, as at 1st August 2024)

There are probably a number of reasons why this might be the case, but typically what we are seeing transpire in the US could follow here with a lag, depending somewhat on the local interest rate cycle.

And if we do see a catch up here in Australia, the scale is likely to be quite big – given the level of underperformance we have seen over the past 3 years:

 (Source: Internal to Paradice, as at 31 July 2024)

Paradice Australian Small Cap Opportunities Fund (“SCOF” or “the Fund”) turned one on 20 July 2024

Why consider an investment in SCOF?

  1. Fund Performance: SCOF has performed strongly in its first 12 months; delivering 29.99% total return, 20.70% above benchmark return of 9.29% (being the S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries Total Return Index. Refer also to table below).[2]
  2. Investment Philosophy/Process: SCOF employs a similar process to the original Paradice Small Cap Fund founded in 2000; which has delivered >14% p.a. total return over this time.[3]
  3. Fund Size: SCOF has a relatively small FUM allowing it to be nimble, take advantage of mispricing while focusing on capital preservation and compounding returns.
  4. Boutique Structure: As a Paradice product, SCOF is able to leverage off the wider Paradice network.
  5. The Australian Small Cap Index[4] has materially underperformed Large Caps[5] by c.25% since interest rates started rising in early 2022. With rates close to a peak; and early signs of a small cap re-rate occurring in the US; now is a good time consider investing in Australian Small Caps in our view.     

1) Fund Performance:

SCOF celebrated its one year anniversary on 20 July 2024.

For the year to 31 July 2024 the Fund delivered a c30% total return before tax, after ongoing management costs and accrued performance fees.

Details below:

31 July 2024

Past performance of the Fund is not a reliable indicator of future performance. The value of an investment in the Fund may rise or fall. Returns are not guaranteed by any person. Fund returns are calculated before tax, after ongoing management costs and any accrued performance fees (unless waived). Returns greater than 1 year are annualised.

2) Investment philosophy/process:

As at 30 June 2024, the existing Australian Small Cap Fund has returned 14.9% total gross return and 9.34% alpha per annum over 24 years.[3]

SCOF implements a similar investment philosophy to that implemented successfully by the other Paradice Funds – including the existing Australian Small Cap Fund.

3) Fund size:

SCOF is a capacity constraint product – we will limit FUM to maximise alpha generation.

Further we are at the early stage of SCOF’s life cycle, which has obvious benefits:

– increased nimbleness to trade in and out of stocks; and

– broader investment opportunities.

4) Boutique structure supported by the wider Paradice business:

The investment team behind SCOF are co-investors in the Fund alongside our clients, which creates strong alignment. SCOF can also leverage the wider Paradice funds management network. 

5) Time for Australian small caps? 

With the Australian Small Cap Index near 15-year lows; and the early stages of a potential re-rate underway in US Small Caps; now could be an opportune time to invest in Australian Small Caps. 

[1] Source: How Magnificent 7 affects S&P 500 stock market concentration (cnbc.com))
[2] Past performance of the Fund is not a reliable indicator of future performance. The value of an investment in the Fund may rise or fall. Returns are not guaranteed by any person. Fund returns are calculated before tax, after ongoing management costs and any accrued performance fees (unless waived). Returns greater than 1 year are annualised.
[3]Returns presented on a “gross” basis do not reflect any management fees, and other potential expenses to be borne by the investors. The Australian Small Cap Fund is managed by a separate investment team and is distinct from the Australian Small Cap Opportunities Fund. 
[4] The S&P/ASX Australian Small Industrials Index. 
[5]The S&P/ASX Australian All Ordinaries Index. 

Disclaimer:

This material is prepared by Paradice Investment Management Pty Ltd (ABN 64 090 148 619 AFSL No 224158) (Paradice, we or us).

This material is not intended to constitute advertising or advice (including investment advice or security, market or sector recommendations) of any kind. In addition, this material represents only the views of the Paradice Australian Small Cap Opportunities team as at the time of release and is not intended, and may not, represent the views of Paradice or any of the other investment teams at Paradice.

Equity Trustees Limited (ABN 46 004 031 298, AFSL No. 240975) (Equity Trustees) is the responsible entity of, and issuer of units in, the Paradice Australian Small Cap Opportunities Fund (Fund). Equity Trustees is a subsidiary of EQT Holdings Limited (ABN 22 607 797 615), a publicly listed company on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX:EQT). 

It may contain certain forward looking statements, opinions and projections that are based on the assumptions and judgments of Paradice with respect to, among other things, future economic, competitive and market conditions and future business decisions, all of which are difficult or impossible to predict accurately and many of which are beyond the control of Paradice. Because of the significant uncertainties inherent in these assumptions, opinions and judgments, you should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements. For the avoidance of doubt, any such forward looking statements, opinions, assumptions and/or judgments made by Paradice may not prove to be accurate or correct. You should perform your own research and due diligence, consult your own financial, legal, and tax advisors before making any investment decision with respect to transacting in any securities covered herein. Specific securities identified herein are not representative of all securities purchased, sold, or recommended by the Fund previously or in the future. Following publication of this material, the investment teams at Paradice may transact or continue to transact in any of the securities covered herein, and may be positive, negative or neutral at any time hereafter regardless of our initial conclusions, or opinions.

The content of this publication is current as at the date of its publication and is subject to change at any time. It does not reflect any events or changes in circumstances occurring after the date of publication. 

You should consider your own needs and objectives and consult with a licensed financial adviser when deciding whether a Paradice Fund is suitable for you. You should also read the current Product Disclosure Statement and Target Market Determination available at www.paradice.com. A Target Market Determination is a document which is required to be made available by 5 October 2021. It will describe who this financial product is likely to be appropriate for (i.e. the target market), and any conditions around how the product can be distributed to investors. It will also describe the events or circumstances where the Target Market Determination for this financial product may need to be reviewed. 

This material is not to be copied, reproduced or published at any time without the prior written consent of Paradice. Neither Paradice, Equity Trustees, nor any of their respective related parties, directors or employees, make any representation or warranty as to the accuracy, completeness, reasonableness or reliability of the information contained in this publication or accept liability or responsibility for any losses, whether direct, indirect or consequential, relating to, or arising from, the use or reliance on any part of this material. 

The information and opinions contained herein, including information obtained from third party sources which are considered to be reliable, are not necessarily all inclusive and, as such, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, completeness or reasonableness of any assumption contained herein and no responsibility arising for errors and omissions (including responsibility to any person by reason of negligence) is accepted by Paradice, its officers, employees or agents.

Equity Trustees nor any of its related parties, their employees or directors, provide and warranty of accuracy or reliability in relation to such information or accepts any liability to any person who relies on it

Copyright© 2024 Paradice

Contributors:

Sam Theodore

Head of the Australian Small Cap Opportunities Fund

Michael Peet

Portfolio Manager of the Australian Small Cap Opportunities Fund

How to play higher interest rates for longer in equities

 8th July, 2024

AFR: How to play higher interest rates for longer in equities

Our super funds made two things clear: rates are likely to be higher for longer and equities are back in fashion. We ask some stock pickers to name their calls.

Published in the Australian Financial Review on 8 July 2024. See the original article here.

Having done the rounds with super fund CIOs in the past week, we can confidently say two things: higher interest rates for longer is the consensus call and listed equities are back in fashion.

Our CIOs can all see rates are coming down in some parts of the world – Europe, Canada, for example – but none of them told us to expect any dramatic changes to either Australian or US interest rates this year, pushing the bulk of the rate cuts story into 2025.

They’re also holding firm on equities allocations, having done well in shares in FY24 and wanting to capture what is left in the rally.

While the CIOs shift asset allocation levers, they leave it to internal or external stock pickers to adjust equities portfolios.

So, how will stock pickers try to make money in this environment?

We’ve gone to a few of Australia’s top equities shops to find out, including four investors who manage money for the philanthropic Future Generation Australia or its sister fund Future Generation Global, both listed on the ASX.

Sage Capital’s Sean Fenton, a long/short investor, is avoiding Australian banks and retailers and buying travel stocks.

He thinks the RBA will keep rates on hold for the rest of this year in a bid to topple sticky inflation.

“The RBA may consider a hike or two, but it would be pretty tough to mount a case for cutting rates even though there are signs that the economy is softening,” Fenton says.

Fenton is steering clear of retailers, including blue chips Harvey Norman, JB Hi-Fi and Wesfarmers, and think the banks have run too hard.

“[The banks] rallied strongly last year on hopes of a rate cut and, despite increased competition, profits have been supported as they have released provisions for bad loans,” he says.

“However, rate hikes and only a small tick up in bad debts would leave their elevated valuations looking vulnerable.”

That underweight banks call is popular in institutional equities-land. Macquarie’s banks analysts were reiterating their underweight the sector call on Monday morning, agreeing the banks cannot grow off the low impairment charges forever.

For winners, Fenton is turning to asset-rich Baby Boomers who are fuelling takings at travel companies.

“The demographic that travels and has net assets – the Baby Boomers – benefit from higher rates. So travel, while in the consumer discretionary sector, is more resilient to rate hikes than banks or retailers,” he says.

He likes Flight Centre, Webjet and Qantas, which he says can also benefit from operational improvements.

Gold, Block

Paradice Investment Management’s Tom Richardson, another long/short investor, reckons the market is pricing the likelihood of interest rate cuts appropriately: about a 50 per cent probability of a rate rise in Australia by September, and two cuts in the US this year.

He likes gold for its past performance in rate-cutting cycles, and bigwig Newmont Mining in particular.

“Following their acquisition of Newcrest last year, the world’s largest gold miner has a portfolio of long-life and low-cost mines,” he says.

“They are currently looking to sell some smaller mines which will de-gear the balance sheet and provide capital management options.”

He also nominated Block Inc, the US payments group that hit the ASX-boards when it acquired Australia’s Afterpay two years ago, which he says could win from those eventual rate cuts.

“While the investment is far from predicated on interest rate cuts, we would expect the company to benefit from increased consumer confidence and spending,” he says.

“The business has evolved over the past year instilling financial discipline across all units. We see a long runway for growth at an attractive valuation.”

Global view, careful on cuts

Magellan Financial’s Nikki Thomas has a global portfolio. She thinks the Federal Reserve may cut interest rates just once this year or not at all, allowing the election to play out and recognising that economic growth is “still quite good”.

“Most indicators suggest to us that aside from some slowing among consumers, most of the cyclical parts of economies are bottoming or turning up,” Thomas says.

“This will accelerate if interest rates come down.”

She says her portfolio is invested between high-quality defensives (Colgate, Stryker, UnitedHealth, for example) which have growth prospects and resilience to a deteriorating economy or a black swan event, and structural growth companies like Microsoft, Amazon, ASML and Netflix.

Her stock picks, though? NYSE owner Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) and Amazon.

“ICE should benefit from ongoing good volumes in many of its markets,” she says. “The upside should come from its mortgage originations business where it acquired Black Knight and is building out a technology platform to automate mortgage origination. If rates come down, originations (which are virtually at a standstill as buyers wait for better rates) will return.

“Amazon is a structural winner in both cloud and AI as well as a business with significant margin potential in its US e-commerce operations as it leverages its scaled and now regionalised logistics capability.”

Quality, defensive small caps

In small caps land, perhaps the most interesting and hottest contested part of Australian institutional equities, Eley Griffiths co-founder Ben Griffiths reckons the RBA will be reluctant to lift rates.

He says it is also OK if the RBA does not cut rates in the near term; the market’s happy to sit tight.

“Given the All Ordinaries Index is currently flirting with historic highs, now is not the time to lose resolve towards stocks,” Griffiths says.

“The market is now well conditioned for indefinitely high interest rates. We continue to own quality names with defensive earnings attributes to better withstand a more challenging economic conditions.”

He tips gold miner Capricorn Metals and funds management investor Pinnacle Investment Management Group as key stock picks.

Anthony Macdonald is a Chanticleer columnist. He is a former Street Talk co-editor and has 10 years’ experience as a business journalist and worked at PwC, auditing and advising financial services companies. Connect with Anthony on Twitter. Email Anthony at a.macdonald@afr.com

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