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KiwiWealth Investing Strategies
Kiwiwealth don't seem to do a regular Q&A member session like Fishers and Milford. Nevertheless I have tried to glean some of their investment tactics from their reports. The official statement on policies and investments is below:
https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...928a58c0541d95
The following report below was posted on 21st November 2021.
https://www.kiwiinvest.co.nz/investm...ective-on-2021
1/ Look for liquidity and quality, and use diversification.
2/ Go for ESG companies that face lower regulatory risks and have a stronger social license to operate.
3/ Have removed carbon intensive companies from portfolios.
4/ Particular standout sectors for investment: Discount retail (Costco, Target and Walmart), Semiconductor value chain (companies behind the computer chips that go into phones, cars and smart refrigerators) and US banks (JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America)
5/ Have been taking profits on some of the themes that have done well during the pandemic (in particular snack foods and discount retailers).
6/ Investing towards next stage as economies recover (railroads, construction material companies and banks).
The latest update from February 2022 (not a video) is here:
https://www.kiwiinvest.co.nz/investm...year-in-review
7/ Rapid increases in interest rates, threatens the frothy valuations we see in certain Growth stocks. On the other hand, the combination of higher rates and more persistent inflation could spell good news for Value investors, those who favour stocks trading at lower multiples.
8/ Looking closely at trends in energy efficiency, efforts to electrify the global car fleet, and natural resource shortages.
9/ The withdrawal of government financial stimulus will present a challenge for some assets.
SNOOPY
Last edited by Snoopy; 30-04-2022 at 06:29 PM.
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KiwiWealth Fund basis for bonus - Nope!
https://www.kiwiwealth.co.nz/product...ed-funds/fees/
"There is one annual fee that applies for each of our Managed Funds. There are also some ‘Other costs’ that flow through to our funds which we’ve estimated in the table below (don’t worry – we don’t expect they’ll vary too much from the estimate)."
"Unlike some other providers, we don’t charge performance fees on top of the return your investment makes, so you get to keep more of your returns."
SNOOPY
Last edited by Snoopy; 30-04-2022 at 06:34 PM.
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Originally Posted by Snoopy
The Fisher Funds fee hurdle rate triggering bonus payments for managing growth assets is:
"The official cash rate" (OCR) + 5%.
On 13th April 2022 the OCR was increased to 1.5%. This means a Fisher Growth fund must earn over 1.5%+5%=6.5% per annum before a bonus payment becomes due to fund management.
https://fisherfunds.co.nz/investment...fees-expenses/
As you can see from the link above, the following fee information specifically links to the kiwisaver funds. There is no separate fee information that I can find disclosed for non kiwisaver Fisher funds. So I assume the fee structure is the same for both kiwisaver and non-kiwisaver managed funds.
Fisher pockets 10% of the returns above the 'performance hurdle' of the investment (leaving the investors with 90%). However the absolute value of this bonus is also capped to be no more than 2% of the total asset value of the fund. Furthermore, there is a clause in the bonus payment rules that says the trigger level for hurdles being set at a new high must be 'grandfathered'. That means if:
1/ a share fund does well and a bonus is paid out, AND
2/ then it falls back,
THEN the 'grandfathered' clause means that if it rises again to its previous high level, the fund managers do not get an 'extra bonus payment' for making up the same ground twice in a later time period.
SNOOPY
$23.3m & $16.6m in performance fees paid across FY21 and FY20, respectively. Big sums. Note 1 page 28.
https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...9381175A8E7B22
might have to go for a few years without any performance fees thanks to their high watermark. poor fellas and gals.
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Fisher Fund Fees: Sample calculation
Originally Posted by Fiordland Moose
$23.3m & $16.6m in performance fees paid across FY21 and FY20, respectively. Big sums. Note 1 page 28.
https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...9381175A8E7B22
might have to go for a few years without any performance fees thanks to their high watermark. poor fellas and gals.
I take note of the way Fishers disclose their 'comparative information'.
As an example I look at their international growth fund
https://fisherfunds.co.nz/unit-price...onalGrowthFund
The above 'linked to' comparative graph shows the actual performance of their 'International Growth Fund' to the comparative 'International Equity Composite Index'. As it happens, their international growth fund shows a nice premium to their comparative reference index over time. However, my reading of the investor documentation is that 'bonus' payments to Fishers are not related to this difference. Instead the 'performance hurdle' for all Fisher funds is 'OCR + 5%'. (NZ weighted OCR over comparative period: = 0.25% => OCR + 5% = 5.25%)
The Fishers benchmark policy for international shares is to hedge 50% to the NZD (Refer Paragraph 3.3.6, Fisher Funds Investment Series, Statement of Investment Policy and Objectives, 25th March 2022).
Let's take the example of the year 1st April 2020 (NZD1 = USD0.6054) to 31st March 2021 (NZD1=USD0.7133) to see how the numbers work out.
If the 'International Equity Composite Index' is actually the MCSI world index
https://www.msci.com/our-solutions/indexes/acwi
then that index rose from 442.35 to 680.47 in USD terms over the year ending 31st March 2021.
The base annual fund fee is 1.42% of the asset value (refer https://fisherfunds.co.nz/assets/fac...Fact-Sheet.pdf)
Putting all this information together:
Year 01-04-2020 to 31-03-2021 |
Starting Position |
Ending Position |
Gain |
Unhedged Gain 'MSCI World Index' |
442.35/0.6054 |
680.47/0.7133 |
+30.6% |
Hedged Gain 'MSCI World Index' |
442.35 |
680.47 |
+53.8% |
Composite Reference Gain 'MSCI World Index' (50% Hedged, 50% Unhedged) |
|
|
+42.2% |
Comparative OCR Fisher Fund Reference Mark |
|
|
+5.25% |
Fisher Growth Fund after fees (Cumulative value $10k invested from 3 year chart) |
$10,165 |
$15,417 |
+51.7% |
Table Notes
1/ Fund performance figures are after deductions for charges but before tax.
2/ Average value of funds under management over period = ($10,165m+$15,417m)/2= $12,791
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The above performance table is all very well. But what we want to know is the growth in the 'International Growth Fund' before fees, so we can get a real handle on what the fees are. This figure is not given. However, if we declare 'F' as the unknown base fee and 'B' as the unknown bonus fee (both measured in the same 'dollar units' as displayed on the fund performance chart), then there is enough information given to allow us to solve this problem. It becomes an exercise in algebra and solving two simultaneous equations.
Base Fee = F = 0.0142x(15,417+F+B) <=> 70.4F=15,417+F+B <=> 69.4F = 15,417 + B <=> B=69.4F-15,417 (i)
Bonus Fee = B = 0.1x( (15,417+F+B)-(1.0525x10,165) ) <=> 10B = 15,417+F+B - 10,699 <=> 9B = 4,718 +F (ii)
Substituting the expression for B from equation (i) into equation (ii) we get:
9x(69.4F-15,417) = 4,718 +F => (625-1)F = (138,753+4,718) => F=230
Putting this value for F back into equation (i) we can now calculate B
B=69.4x(230) - 15,417 = 545
Double Check
Base Fee = 230 / (15,417+230+545) = 1.42% (Check as correct)
Bonus Fee = 545 / (15,417+230+545) = 3.37% (Ouch! No wonder Fisher Funds did not want to disclose this!)
I do note though, that in recent years, Fishers have revised their bonus policy, so that the bonus fee never comes out as more than 2% of the gross value of the fund. That means the total fund fee for the period under consideration was 'only' 1.42%+2%=3.42%. That does sound high, even though we were dealing with an unusual period which started from the 'near the post Covid-19 shock low' and ended with a substantial market recovery.
The total value of the 'International Growth Fund' stood at $98.8m as at 31-03-2021. So this implies 'management' plus 'bonus' fees of
($98.8m x 0.0142=) $1.4m and ($98.8m x 0.02=) $2.0m respectively.
The performance fee figure quoted by FM of $23.3m was across all funds managed by Fisher Funds. The particular fund example that I have looked at is likely one of the worst affected by performance fees. Was that excessive over such an exceptional year? Fisher Funds have not been reappointed as a default provider for Kiwisaver funds at the latest reset which took effect from December 1st 2021. Perhaps therein lies the answer?
SNOOPY
Last edited by Snoopy; 03-05-2022 at 08:08 PM.
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Originally Posted by Snoopy
The performance fee figure quoted by FM of $23.3m was across all funds managed by Fisher Funds. The particular fund example that I have looked at is likely one of the worst affected by performance fees. Was that excessive over such an exceptional year? Fisher Funds have not been reappointed as a default provider for Kiwisaver funds at the latest reset which took effect from December 1st 2021. Perhaps therein lies the answer?
SNOOPY
nice work.
as an aside - check out those margins...npat as a % of revenue - 40% across both years (more or less). Not gross profit margin, EBITDA, not EBIT, not PBT margin....but good old fashioned statutory npat as a % of revenue.
don't think i've ever seen a business with such high margins.
bugger all capex, bugger all working capital....the perfect cashflow business. all npat paid out as dividends.
losing kiwisaver default will hurt - will be interesting to see how much default FUM transfers out
Last edited by Muse; 04-05-2022 at 10:24 AM.
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Net Profit Margin of Fund Managers
Originally Posted by Fiordland Moose
Check out those margins...npat as a % of revenue - 40% across both years (more or less). Not gross profit margin, EBITDA, not EBIT, not PBT margin....but good old fashioned statutory npat as a % of revenue.
don't think i've ever seen a business with such high margins.
bugger all capex, bugger all working capital....the perfect cashflow business. all npat paid out as dividends.
losing kiwisaver default will hurt - will be interesting to see how much default FUM transfers out.
Yes the 'Net Profit Margin' at Fisher Funds is certainly eye-watering. But in any industry where you use other peoples money 'off the books' to generate your income, your 'net profit margin' is going to look impressive. Whether it is out of line with other market players is something I am trying to determine.
Kiwi Wealth is publicly owned, for now. I have found the annual report from the point of view of the individual funds, but not from the point of view parent management company. If anyone can find where that 'public' management firm information might be, I would love to fill in the gaps in the table below. (Edit: Thanks to Haumi, post 17, who tracked down the missing information!)
FY2021 Comparison |
Fisher Funds |
Kiwi Wealth |
Milford Funds Limited |
NPAT {A} |
$49.778m |
$11.961m |
$11.726m |
Fee Income (B} |
$125.906m |
$51.908m |
$162.710m |
Net Profit Margin {A}/{B} |
39.5% |
23.0% |
7.21% |
References
1/ Kiwi Wealth https://www.kiwiwealth.co.nz/assets/...ments-2021.pdf, https://www.fma.govt.nz/assets/Repor...er-AR-2021.pdf, https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...4E226E1FFDC7AA
2/ Fisher Funds https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...9381175A8E7B22
3/ Milford Funds Limited https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...49ACF3BF8AD107
SNOOPY
Last edited by Snoopy; 09-05-2022 at 04:55 PM.
Reason: NPAT: 40.778 -> 49.778
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Junior Member
Snoopy,
is this KIWI WEALTH LIMITED (1738361) ?
NPAT $11.916m (page 9) / Fees $51.908m (page 15) = 23%
https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...4E226E1FFDC7AA
(Perhaps I'm confused about this; parent is NEW ZEALAND POST LIMITED (315766) financial statements p13: Kiwi Group Holdings intermediary, but KIWI WEALTH LIMITED (1738361) was previously
GARETH MORGAN KIWISAVER LIMITED (from 28 Mar 2006 to 01 Apr 2014)
GARETH MORGAN INVESTMENTS KIWISAVER LIMITED (from 17 Mar 2006 to 28 Mar 2006)
INFOMETRICS KIWISAVER LIMITED (from 24 Jan 2006 to 17 Mar 2006)
Last updated on 27 Oct 2021)
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Originally Posted by Snoopy
Yes the 'Net Profit Margin' at Fisher Funds is certainly eye-watering. But in any industry where you use other peoples money 'off the books' to generate your income, your 'net profit margin' is going to look impressive. Whether it is out of line with other market players is something I am trying to determine.
Kiwi Wealth is publicly owned, for now. I have found the annual report from the point of view of the individual funds, but not from the point of view parent management company. If anyone can find where that 'public' management firm information might be, I would love to fill in the gaps in the table below.
FY2021 Comparison |
Fisher Funds |
Kiwi Wealth |
NPAT {A} |
$40.778m |
? |
Fee Income (B} |
$125.906m |
$659.227m |
Net Profit Margin {A}/{B} |
32.4% |
? |
References
1/ Kiwi Wealth https://www.kiwiwealth.co.nz/assets/...ments-2021.pdf
2/ Fisher Funds https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...9381175A8E7B22
SNOOPY
Isn't fishers' NPAT 49.9778? and margin ~39.7% - page 23?
Milford Funds Limited financial accounts are below, but with a big caveat
https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...49ACF3BF8AD107
Milford Funds pays a substantial management fee to its parent company Milford Asset Management. The later does not have to disclose its financials. So you can't work out what the true underlying profitability is without taking a pretty meaty guess. I'm also not au fait with if MFL is the management company for all funds (it appears to do most according to the notes) or if its parent company also undertakes some services and receives income and has its own expenses - hard to know what what group consolidated revenues and earnings are.
You could just assume those costs are pure intercompany and ignore them - gives you probably a decent picture of the true underlying revenue of milford.
Those are the only two i've ever bothered to 'snoop' on in NZ. Possible others disclose.
But Fishers is off the charts more profitable compared to its aussie peers. You can segment those into retail focued and wholesale focued. Retail are valued much more highly as margins are higher and FUM is more sticky, and have less shocks of sudden contract terminations. Some retailers are platinum, perpetual, magellan. Wholesale IOOF, BT, etc. Whole industry is in a state of flux after the hayne royal commission.
industry structure there is much different with self managed super schemes quite large. and post hayne there is been a shift in FUM from traditional asset managers to SMSF and indepedent advisors.
I've had happy hunting capitalising on that shift. Invested into Hub24 which is one of the leading independent platform providers over there. Hasn't been a pleasant 6 months but I'm still up 4.5x
Back to the point. Kiwisaver fees should be much cheaper because of the the magnitude of compounding forces driving up revenue off a scalable fixed cost base.
Members contribute regularly from their paycheck. Their pay tends to go up over the long term with inflation. Employers contribute on similar basis. Markets over the long term tend to go up. and you also get the occasional new member to kiwisaver, though the majority of that is done. Those things compound and compound and compound over the long term into huge increases in FUM from which revenue is ultimately derived. You don't need proportionately more staff to service growth in fum when that is coming from monthly contributions and market returns.
Of course you always get the corrections, like we are in now, or worse. And if you are don't play ball on fees when it comes for default scheme reappointments, you can get your mandate pulled.
but over the long term - its huge. there are graphs of the growth of kiwisaver under management you could easily find somewhere
Last edited by Muse; 04-05-2022 at 09:04 PM.
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anyway thats all i got. hope useful - look forward to seeing what you come up with if you manage to benchmark any others
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Originally Posted by Fiordland Moose
Isn't fishers' NPAT 49.778? and margin ~39.7% - page 23?
Yes I made a typo on the net profit figure. Now corrected.
Originally Posted by Fiordland Moose
Milford Funds Limited financial accounts are below, but with a big caveat
https://app.companiesoffice.govt.nz/...49ACF3BF8AD107
Milford Funds pays a substantial management fee to its parent company Milford Asset Management. The later does not have to disclose its financials. So you can't work out what the true underlying profitability is without taking a pretty meaty guess. I'm also not au fait with if MFL is the management company for all funds or if its parent company also undertakes some services
Those are the only two I've ever bothered to 'snoop' on in NZ. Possible others disclose.
I have added Milford to my comparison table as well. I see in the 'Milford Limited' accounts, in the income statement, that there was a fee of $136.594m paid to the parent Milford Asset Management company (the fee you pointed out FM). You would have to assume that all the cost allocations are done in accord with the parent company's wishes. So if the parent were to decrease the fee required to be paid (and I do note this management services fee jumped an astonishing by $59.010m from FY2020 to FY2021), then the declared profit of 'Milford Limited' can be whatever Milford management want it be (within reason). I guess a net profit margin of 7.21% is there to appease the kiwisaver scheme overseers, so Milford don't look too greedy?
Note 8 in the Milford Limited accounts lists all the Milford funds that Milford Limited manages. This covers all the funds listed in the current Milford fund prospectus,
https://milfordasset.com/if-pds
less the AON branded fund, the kiwisaver fund and the wholesale funds. So it looks to me as though the company 'Milford Limited' does indeed manage all of the Milford funds (listed and unlisted).
SNOOPY
Last edited by Snoopy; 05-05-2022 at 07:11 AM.
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