Commodities and emerging markets funds will run the gauntlet

There are eight “gauntlets” that any managed fund will have to run over the medium term,  according to Investec Asset Management investment strategist Michael Power, and while a Japanese equity fund might be lucky to meet one of them, funds investing in commodities or the emerging markets would satisfy almost all eight.

One key “gauntlet” was a fund’s ability to “surf the carry trade out of the West and into the rest”, Power said.

The fund should also “avoid dollar blindness”, Power said, by not achieving a majority of its returns in the form of US dollars, which the strategist said was declining and fading as the world’s reserve currency.

On a similar tack, Power said investors should choose funds which “achieved a real rate of risk-adjusted return”, and thanks to quantitative easing, this no longer meant a comparison with US 10-year Treasury bonds.

“By printing money, Ben Bernanke has eroded the price of risk. The real risk-free rate is higher than the 2.5 per cent you are getting on 10-year Treasuries,” Power said, citing something like the 6 per cent cost of 10-year capital in Australia as a more appropriate hurdle for investors to consider.

Another “gauntlet” the fund should be able to run was the rise of the supranationals, Power said, pointing out the return of companies like Google, Vodafone or McDonald’s had mostly been superior to their home equity markets.

Sponsored Content

He said the new supranationals were coming from the emerging markets, pointing to the rise of Indian pharmaceutical giants-in-waiting, and the imminent initial public offering of Brazilian energy company Petrobras, which at $76 billion will be the world’s largest ever float (eclipsing another emerging markets float, Agricultural Bank of China, which added $21 billion to the capitalisation of the Shanghai bourse earlier this year).

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

OMERS a step closer to bringing it all in-house

OMERS continues its drive to bring more of its investment management in-house, recently announcing a major expansion of its investment operations with the launch of a New York investment office.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS undertakes large-scale board reforms

CalPERS is undertaking sweeping changes to the way its board operates as part of a package of governance reforms to be rolled out in the coming year.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Investors need to know source of hedge fund returns advises AQR

Institutional investors need to be able to clearly define where returns are coming from in their hedge fund portfolios, whether it be alpha, hedge fund beta or market beta, and be conscious of the fees for each return source, principal and co-founder of AQR Capital Management, Cliff Asness, told delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium

Investors voice disapproval of Murdoch’s sons

Investors in News Corp have clearly signalled that they oppose Rupert Murdoch’s plans to pass control of the media giant to his children, voicing strong opposition to the re-election of sons Lachlan and James Murdoch to the board at the company’s annual general meeting last week.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Russia central bank diversifies into Australian cash

Russia’s central bank, which has $558.4 billion in foreign exchange reserves, has appointed National Australia Bank to manage up to 1 per cent, or $5.58 billion, of its assets in Australian cash instruments.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous