BTA0222AU BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund


January, 2023

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of January. Risk sentiment improved over the month as the market saw US headline CPI continue to trend down to 6.5% YoY in December. Core US CPI came in line with expectation at 0.3% MoM and 5.7% YoY. Investors speculated that the Fed would decelerate the pace of rate hikes and lift the target cash rate by 25bps in the February 1 FOMC meeting.

Domestically, headline inflation in December increased to 7.8% YoY, above consensus of 7.6%. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned 6.3% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 6.2%. Unhedged International Equities returned 3.0%, underperforming their hedged equivalent, as the AUD strengthened against its major global peers.

Unhedged Emerging Market Equities returned 3.8% over the month, Chinese equities continued to rally, the offshore stocks outperformed as China’s reopening boosted up investors’ sentiment. Domestic listed property as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index returned 8.1% and global listed property as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned 8.0% over the month.

Government bond yields shifted lower across most of the curve. The Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 50bps lower to 3.55% and the US 10-year Treasury yield moved 37bps lower to 3.51% over the month. The domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned 2.8% and the International Fixed Interest as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 2.1%. Funds allocated to growth assets outperformed those with a higher allocation to defensive assets over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-17.pdf

December, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a negative return over the month of December. Following four consecutive hikes of 75bps this year, the US Federal Reserve decelerated the rate hike in December and lifted Federal Funds Target Rate by 50 basis points to a range between 4.25% and 4.50%. Despite another downside surprise on US November CPI, Fed officials reiterated the hawkish stance and indicated a higher terminal rate of above 5.00% over the next year.

The European Central Bank delivered a 50 basis points hike and increased its deposit rate to 2.00% in line with market expectations. The Reserve Bank of Australia raised the cash rate target by 25 basis points to 3.10%. Risk sentiment was weak heading into the year end, with market concerns around recession risk heightened, signalled by contractionary Service PMI readings in the US. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned -3.3% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -5.2%. Unhedged international equities slightly underperformed hedged exposure due to a weaker USD, returning -5.5%. Emerging Market Equities, as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets EM AUD Net Total Return Index, returned -2.6%. Chinese offshore equities outperformed as the Chinese government shifts its focus away from Covid containment back towards economic growth. Domestic listed property as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index returned -4.0% and global listed property as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned -3.8% over the month.

Global yield curves shifted higher. The US 10-year treasury yield moved 27bps higher to 3.88%, and the Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 52bps higher to 4.05% over the month. Domestic fixed interest, as measured by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned -2.1%. International fixed interest markets, as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged index, returned -1.3%. Over the month both growth and defensive oriented portfolios had negative results.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-16.pdf

November, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of November. A lower-than-expected October US inflation print triggered a rally in stock markets as interest rate expectations shifted lower. This was despite the US Federal Reserve hiking its cash rate target by another 75bps to 3.75-4.00% and its hawkish messaging suggesting a higher terminal rate of above 5%. The US mid-term election concluded with Republicans taking control of the House of Representatives and the Democrats retaining control of the Senate.

Domestically, the Reserve Bank of Australia delivered another 25bps rate hike, the first November rate rise since 2010. The Australian Bureau of Statistics released a new monthly CPI indicator, showing a headline inflation of 6.9% year-on-year to October, below market expectations. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned 6.5% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 5.4%. Unhedged international equities returned 2.0%, underperforming hedged exposure as the AUD appreciated against its major global peers. Chinese offshore equities had a sharp rebound with the Hang Seng index rallying 26.6% over the month.

Market sentiment improved with Chinese authorities recalibrating covid restriction rules and laying out measures to address the liquidity crunch in the property sector. As a result, emerging market equities outperformed, returning 9.6% in AUD terms. Domestic listed property as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index returned 5.8% and global listed property as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned 5.0% over the month. The Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 23bps lower to 3.53% and the US 10-year Treasury yield moved 44bps lower to 3.61% over the month. Both Investment Grade and High Yield credit spreads narrowed.

The domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned 1.5% and the International Fixed Interest as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 2.4%. Funds allocated to growth assets outperformed those with a higher allocation to defensive assets over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-15.pdf

October, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of October. Risk sentiment improved over the month despite another higher-than-expected increase in US Core CPI of 6.6% YoY, and a Headline CPI increase of 8.2% YoY in September. Investors speculated a dovish pivot from the Fed post the November and December FOMC, where rate increases are expected to be kept at the current pace. Domestically, the Reserve Bank of Australia has slowed the pace of rate hikes and raised the cash rate target by 25 basis points, meanwhile headline inflation was reported at 7.3% YoY in the September quarter, expecting to peak in the December quarter of 2022. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned 6.0% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 7.2%. Unhedged International Equities returned 7.8%, outperforming hedged exposure as the AUD slightly weakened against its major global peers. Emerging Market Equities returned -2.6% over the month, China has significantly underperformed, with investors disappointed by its unwavering insistence on COVID-zero measures post its 20th National Congress. Listed properties partially recovered from the previous drawdown.

Domestic listed property as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index returned 9.9% and global listed property as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned 3.1% over the month. Bond market volatility elevated to historical level over the month as the global bond market saw liquidity pressures, followed by immediate government interventions. The Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 13bps lower to 3.76% while the US 10-year Treasury yield moved 22bps higher to 4.05% over the month. The domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned 0.9% and the International Fixed Interest as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -0.4%. Funds allocated to growth assets outperformed those with a higher allocation to defensive assets over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-14.pdf

September, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a negative return over the month of September.

Higher-than-expected US inflation has spurred a risk asset sell-off as the market recalibrated to higher interest rate expectations of 4% and above in the US by the end of this year with less likelihood of rate cuts in 2023. The Federal Reserve delivered its third consecutive 75 basis points rate hike and moved its target rate to a range of 3.00%-3.25%, the highest level since 2008. Energy concerns continued to plague Europe, German CPI was reported at 10.9% year on year and pressures remained for European central banks to turn more hawkish. Financial markets turmoil was further fuelled by the UK government’s fiscal plan and its ramification on UK gilts market.

The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned -6.3% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -8.9%. Unhedged international equities returned -3.2%, outperforming hedged exposure as a result of a stronger USD. Emerging Market Equities, as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets EM AUD Net Total Return Index, returned -5.9%.

Listed properties sold off as higher interest rates weighed on valuations. Domestic listed property as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index returned -13.6% and global listed property as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned -11.8% over the month.

Fear of contagion elevated bond market volatility. UK 10yr gilt yields moved 129bps up to 4.09%, joined by a 57bps increase in German 10yr yield and 62bps increase in Italian 10yr bond yield. The US 10-year Treasury yield also moved 64bps higher to 3.83% over the month and the Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 29bps higher to 3.89%. Credit spreads also widened. As a result, the international fixed interest market, as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -3.5%; and the domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned -1.4%.

Over the month both growth and defensive oriented portfolios had negative results

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-13.pdf

August, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a negative return over the month of August.

Both the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank (ECB) continued their hawkish rhetoric and remained committed to aggressive interest rate hikes. Europe continued to suffer from high energy prices due to the suspension of Russian crude oil and gas supply. The German Producer Prices (PPI) reported its highest-onrecord increase in August and the energy supply problem was further exacerbated by the record-breaking droughts from prolonged heatwaves across Europe. Geopolitical risk in the Asia-Pacific region elevated as China carried out military exercises surrounding Taiwan following the US House of Representative Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan.

Led by the strong Energy and Materials sector returns, the domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned 1.2% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -3.6%. The USD further strengthened as the safe haven currency, unhedged international equities outperformed hedged exposures, returning -2.5%. Unhedged Emerging Market equities, as represented by the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return AUD Index, returned 2.2% over the month. Listed property valuations continued to face a headwind from rising interest rates.

Domestic listed property, as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index, returned -3.6% and global listed property as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned -5.7% over the month. Global yield curves shifted higher because of higher cash rates. The Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 54bps higher to 3.60%, the domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned -2.5%. The US 10-year Treasury yield moved 54bps higher to 3.20% over the month, International Fixed Interest as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -2.7%. Funds with allocations to both growth and defensive assets had negative results over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-12.pdf

July, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of July. Risk sentiment improved despite another uptick in the US headline CPI to 9.1% YoY in July, and a second consecutive 75bps interest rate hike from the US Federal Reserve. Investors speculated a peak in headline inflation and a less hawkish policy setting going forward, following a period of mixed economic signals and the US entering a technical recession over the first half of 2022. Domestically, the Reserve Bank of Australia continued to raise interest rates by 50bps to help contain higher inflation, currently reported as 6.1% YoY in the second quarter of 2022.

The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned 6.0% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 8.0%. Unhedged international equities returned 6.4%, underperforming a hedged exposure as the AUD appreciated against its major global peers. Emerging Market Equities underperformed, returning -1.7%. Listed property rallied after a large drawdown over the previous quarter. Domestic listed property, as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index, returned 11.8% and global listed property, as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned 7.7% over the month.

The growing concerns of a looming recession pushed longer-term bond yields lower. The Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 38bps lower to 3.06%, while the US 10-year Treasury yield moved 10bps higher to 2.65% over the month. The domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned 3.4% and the International Fixed Interest, as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 2.5%. Funds allocated to growth assets outperformed those with a higher allocation to defensive assets over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-10.pdf

June, 2022

BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a negative return over the month of June.

In response to the higher-than-expected increase in the Consumer Price Index for June, the US Federal Reserve delivered a 75 basis-point rate hike, the biggest increase since 1994, lifting the target range for the federal funds rate to between 1.5% and 1.75%. The Reserve Bank of Australia has also lifted the cash rate by 50 basis points to 0.85% in June. Risk sentiment remained negative because of monetary tightening and a weaker growth outlook. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned -9.0% over the month.

International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -8.1%. Unhedged international equities returned -4.6%, as the Australian Dollar depreciated against the stronger US Dollar. Unhedged Emerging Market equities, as represented by the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return AUD Index, returned -2.6% over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-9.pdf

April, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a negative return over the month of April. Risk-off sentiment dominated as investment markets focused on the implications of upcoming rate hikes and quantitative tightening led by the US Federal Reserve. This sentiment was against a backdrop of consistent inflationary pressures, weaker economic growth expectations, as well as rising uncertainties around both geopolitical events and supply chain disruptions. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -7.4%. US equities saw surging volatility, especially for the tech-heavy NASDAQ index.

The US Dollar strengthened as risk assets were broadly sold-off. Unhedged international equities returned -3.2%, outperforming hedged exposure as the Australian Dollar depreciated against the US Dollar. Unhedged Emerging Market equities, as represented by the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return AUD Index, returned -0.2% over the month. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned -0.8% over the month. Domestic listed property, as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index, returned 0.7% over the month. Global listed property, as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned -4.0% over the month.

Yield curves shifted higher as a result of higher cash rate targets. The Australian 10-year government bond yield moved 29bps higher to 3.13% and the US 10-year Treasury yield moved 60bps higher to 2.94% over the month. As a result, the domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned -1.5% and the International Fixed Interest market, as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -2.9%. Funds with allocations to both growth and defensive assets had negative results over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-8.pdf

March, 2022

The Russell Investments Conservative Fund underperformed the benchmark in February. The Fund’s 70% allocation to income assets such as Australian and global bonds and cash tends to drive returns.

Contributing to the Fund’s underperformance was our traditional fixed income portfolio, with both the Russell Investments International Bond Fund – $A Hedged and the Russell Investments Australian Bond Fund recording negative absolute and benchmark-relative returns for the month. The Fund’s exposure to global high-yield debt also weighed on returns in February; the sector underperforming amid global rate hike expectations and heightened geopolitical risks following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Within our global equity portfolio, the Russell Investments Tax Effective Global Shares Fund, the Russell Investments Multi-Asset Factor Exposure Fund and the Russell Investments Global Opportunities Fund all recorded negative absolute and excess returns for the month. Partly offsetting this were good gains across our Australian equity portfolio, with the Russell Investments Australian Shares Core Fund and the Russell Investments Australian Opportunities Fund posting positive absolute and benchmark-relative returns in February. Both funds benefited from underweight exposures to expensive quality growth names such as Sonic Healthcare and Domino’s Pizza. Elsewhere, our exposure to listed property was mixed, with the Vanguard Australian Property Securities Index Fund posting positive returns and the Vanguard International Property Securities Index Fund (Hedged) underperforming. Meanwhile, a stronger Australian dollar impacted the returns from our unhedged global exposures over the period.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-7.pdf

January, 2022

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a negative return over the month of January. Developed Equity markets slid as persistent inflation continued to drive a hawkish rhetoric from the US federal reserve and tensions over a potential Russian invasion of Ukraine escalated.

The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned -6.5% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -5.1%. Unhedged international equities returned -2.2%, outperforming hedged exposure as the AUD depreciated against its major global peers in the risk sell off. Emerging market equities outperformed returning 1.2%.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-6.pdf

December, 2021

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of December. Developed Equity markets rallied into calendar year end despite the hawkish pivot from the US Federal Reserve to combat inflation and a surge in Omicron cases. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned 2.7% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 4.0%. Unhedged international equities returned 1.7%, underperforming hedged exposure as the AUD appreciated against its major global peers. Emerging market equities underperformed returning -0.7%. Emerging Market equities continued to struggle due to the headwinds from Covid restrictions, a stronger USD, surging energy prices and the continuing poor sentiment towards China following concerns regarding anti-trust regulations, property deleveraging and geopolitical issues.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-5.pdf

November, 2021

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of November. Equity market volatility escalated towards the end of the month due to the discovery of the Omicron COVID-19 variant and increasing concern that ‘transitory’ inflation may in fact prove to be persistent causing hawkish rhetoric from Federal Reserve officials. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, returned -0.5% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned -1.6%. The Australian Dollar, being a commodity and risk-sensitive currency, materially depreciated against major global peers, as a result, unhedged international equity exposure returned 3.7%. Unhedged emerging market equities returned 1.6%, as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return AUD Index.

Domestic listed property, measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index, delivered a strong return of 4.0% over the month. Global listed property, the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, returned -1.5%.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Russell_Investments_Portfolio_Series_-_Conservative_-_Class_A_AUD-3-3.pdf

October, 2021

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a negative return over the month of October. Risk sentiment remained positive over the month, supported by strong corporate earnings announcements. High energy prices continued to be the near-term inflationary driver with supply chain issues persisting, exacerbated by extreme weather. The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, gained 0.1% over the month. International equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, gained 5.4%. The AUD appreciated against major global peers, as a result, Unhedged international equity exposure underperformed hedged exposure, returning 1.7%. Unhedged emerging market equities returned -2.9%, as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return AUD Index.

Domestic listed property, the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index, returned 0.6%, adding to the strong performance in September. Global listed property as measured by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index, delivered a strong return of 5.6% over the month

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-4.pdf

August, 2021

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of August. Risk assets had positive gains over the month, as investment markets anticipated continuing accommodative policies from central banks and a slower pace of QE tapering. This was despite volatility associated with Delta variant outbreaks, supply chain issues, Afghanistan, and the slowing of growth in China.

The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, gained 2.6% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, gained 2.7%. Unhedged international equity exposure outperformed hedged exposure as the USD strengthened, returning 3.1%. Emerging market equities returned 3.2%, as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return Index. Chinese stock performance remained weak due to ongoing domestic regulatory issues and US-China tension. The Indian equity market, on the other hand, has been the top performer among major equity markets over the month.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-3.pdf

July, 2021

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the month of July. Equities market traded more cautiously during the month with concern around enduring inflation, slowing global recovery due to the Delta variant and earlier than expected monetary policy tightening. Most developed market equity indices ended the turbulent month in positive territory, supported by central banks’ dovish stance on monetary policy and data from the UK showing the effectiveness of vaccination against hospitalisation.

The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, gained 1.1% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, gained 1.8%. The Australian Dollar depreciated against most major currency peers affected by a retreat in commodity prices, extended COVID lockdowns across Australia and risk sentiment. Unhedged international equity exposure outperformed hedged exposure and returned 4.0%. Emerging market equities returned -4.7%, as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return Index, the cause: a contagious sell-off in Hong Kong and US-listed Chinese stocks triggered by China’s new regulatory crackdown on education companies, in addition to its ongoing scrutiny on IT companies

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-2.pdf

May, 2021

The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, gained 2.3% over the month. International Equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, gained 1.0%. Unhedged international equity exposure returned 1.2%, outperforming hedged exposure due to a slight depreciation in the Australian Dollar against the basket of developed market peers, despite minor appreciation versus the US Dollar. Emerging market equities outperformed developed markets in AUD terms, with the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return Index returning 2.1%.

Listed property also performed strongly with the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index returning 1.8% and the FTSE EPRA/ NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index returning 1.4% over the month. Bond yields have plateaued since the beginning of the March quarter. The Australian 10-year government bond yield drifted 4bps lower to 1.71% over the month and the US 10- year Treasury yield also moved 4bps lower to 1.59%. Credit spreads slightly narrowed over the month. As a result, the domestic fixed interest market, as represented by the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index, returned 0.3% and the International Fixed Interest as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 0.2%

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet-1.pdf

December, 2020

The BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund produced a positive return over the December quarter, resulting in a positive 12 month performance. The December quarter started with investor optimism as markets climbed higher during early October. However, investor sentiment soured mid-month as uncertainty over the US election and climbing COVID-19 cases reversed much of the gains. The Nov 3 US election coupled with approvals for a series of vaccinations resulted in strong equity returns during November that persisted into December, despite being softened by further lockdowns and increasing case rates into the western holiday period.

The domestic equity market, as represented by the S&P/ ASX 300 Accumulation Index, was the stand out performer over the quarter, returning 13.8%, thanks in part to the Australian response to the pandemic and the additional monetary stimulus the RBA has been able to deliver through rate cuts. Global developed equities, as measured by the MSCI World ex Australia Net Return AUD Hedged Index, returned 11.7% over the quarter vs. a 5.7% increase in the unhedged index. The Australian Dollar appreciated against its developed market peers due to continuing global risk-on sentiment, ending the quarter buying 76.9c USD, up from 71.6c at the start of the quarter.

Emerging markets measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets AUD Index returned 11.2%. The domestic and international listed property sectors returned strongly over the quarter. The domestic listed property sector returned 13.2% but global listed property lagged, returning 10.6%, as measured by the S&P/ASX 300 A-REIT Index and the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed AUD Hedged Net Total Return Index respectively. Global bond yields reached record lows during the COVID-19 pandemic but increased during the December 2020 quarter. Domestic yields, as measured by the Australian 10 year government bond yield rose 18bps, leaving yields at 97bps, compared to 137bps 12 months prior. International yields followed a similar path, with US 10 year yields rising 23bps.

A further tightening in credit spreads helped to offset some of the rise in yields, resulting in a -0.1% return for the Bloomberg Ausbond Composite 0+ Yr Index. International fixed interest markets, as measured by the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Total Return AUD Hedged index returned 0.8%. Over the quarter funds with higher allocations to growth assets outperformed those with a higher allocation to defensive assets, due to equity markets outperforming fixed interest assets.

File: https://commentary.quantreports.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet.pdf
asset_class: Multi-Asset
asset_category: 21-40% Growth Assets - Multi-Manager
peer_benchmark: Multi-Asset - 21-40% Multi-Manager Index
broad_market_index: Multi-Asset Moderate Investor Index
manager_contact_details: Array
ticker: BTA0222AU
release_schedule: Monthly
commentary_block: Array
factsheet_url:

https://www.bt.com.au/content/dam/public/btfg-bt/documents/legacy/downloads/factsheets/wholesale/BT-Wholesale-Funds-BT-Wholesale-Multi-manager-Conservative-Fund-BTA0222AU-factsheet.pdf


fund_features:

BT Wholesale Multi-manager Conservative Fund is an actively managed fund that invests mostly in the defensive assets of cash and fixed interest, with a modest investment in growth assets such as shares and property. These funds are actively managed to four different risk profiles with a minimum investment of $500,000.

  • Aims to provide income with a low risk of capital loss over the short to medium term, with some capital growth over the long term.
  • The Multi-manager funds allow you to select a single investment option that diversifies across asset classes, investment managers and investment management styles.
  • This diversification helps reduce overall risk and aims to improve consistency of returns by minimising the impact on overall performance resulting from any one style, asset class or manager.

structure: Managed Fund