Neil Padoa is Head of Global Developed Markets and has 16 years of investment industry experience.

AFTER A STRONG rebound in the second quarter of the calendar year (Q2-20), equity markets continued their gains, returning 8.1% in the third quarter of 2020 (Q3-30). Returns were broad based, with developed markets as a whole returning just under 8% and emerging markets continuing a recent run of outperformance, returning 9.6%. The US continues to outperform other developed regions, with a return of 9.4%, handily ahead of Europe’s 4.5%. Most other asset classes also delivered a positive result.

The Fund returned 6.5% for Q3-20, approximately 1.6% behind the benchmark return of 8.1%. Over one year, the Fund has outperformed by 174 basis points (bps), and by 124bps over five years.

COVID-19 UNDERSCORES NEED FOR SERVICE EXCELLENCE

Salesforce was a top-three contributor to Fund returns over the final quarter of the financial year, with the share price climbing 26% in one day following the release of better-than-expected results. Organic revenue growth of 19% on a year-over-year basis in a quarter heavily impacted by Covid-19 is an excellent result and highlights the strong positioning of the company and demand for its software solutions. Salesforce is the global leader in customer relationship management software and has moved into adjacent areas, including the broader digitisation of customer-facing activities, such as marketing, e-commerce, data management and business intelligence.

While these trends were strong before Covid-19, the consequences of the virus have reinforced the need for businesses to invest in revenue-generating activities, to know their customers better and to be able to reach them online. Salesforce offers the tools to do this. The company sees a large opportunity ahead and continues to invest aggressively in adding staff at a time when many companies are laying people off. Salesforce is a well-managed, high-quality and fast-growing compounder with strong environmental, social and governance credentials, and we remain bullish on its outlook.

Bayer was a detractor over the final quarter of the financial year. We think the stock is materially undervalued at a seven times price-to-earnings ratio. This is due to continued uncertainty regarding the resolution of the Roundup litigation and regulatory uncertainty around its Xtend platform at a time when end-markets (principally corn, due to lower bioethanol demand) are temporarily depressed. Longer term, Bayer remains the leading crop science franchise, with significant opportunity to improve profitability from merger synergies, new products in the pipeline (e.g. short-stature corn) and scaling its digital agriculture initiative. While recent results have been disappointing, the range of potential outcomes remains tilted to the upside.

FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS REMAINS KEY

Earlier this year, we felt that there were attractive opportunities for those investors with a long time horizon and the ability to filter companies whose prices had been dislocated with little impact to their sustainable earnings power. After a sharp rally, these opportunities are now harder to find. In addition, the need to reassess the prospects of many businesses continues as investors parse fundamental virus-induced behavioural changes from short-term noise. Fundamental changes, however, play to the strengths of fundamental investors, and we continue to find a select number of stocks with solid, long-term prospects that are reasonably priced.

Thank you for your continued support and interest in the Fund.


Disclaimer

Global (ex-US) readers
US readers

Neil Padoa is Head of Global Developed Markets and has 16 years of investment industry experience.


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“Now is no time to think of what you do not have. Think of what you can do with what there is.” ― Ernest Hemingway, The Old Man and the Sea.