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How the Montgomery Small Companies Fund is positioned throughout this pandemic

How the Montgomery Small Companies Fund is positioned throughout this pandemic

Against a rapidly evolving macro backdrop, we thought it would be prudent to provide investors with a brief update on how the Montgomery Small Companies Fund (MSCF) has positioned itself and to share our thoughts on the risks and opportunities that we see ahead of us.

Our view on COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced many countries to take unprecedented measures designed to flatten the outbreak curve and relieve pressure on their healthcare systems, such as closing borders and shutting down many non-essential activities. This shutdown could last for a protracted period, perhaps 6 months or even more, and will most likely tip the global economy into recession and result in widespread job losses. The key questions from here will be how deep and for how long? A V-shaped rebound looks off the table with a U-shaped recovery increasingly more plausible. Credit markets will be closely watched for signs of freezing over.

In response, Central Banks are slashing rates and providing liquidity to cushion the blow while Governments’ near-term efforts remain focused on fiscal stimulus packages aimed to support those industries most impacted and maintain employment. This way, economies will be shielded to some extent and hopefully best placed to participate in the upturn when it comes, as it will.

The situation is fast moving, with a rapidly escalating case detection rate in large Western economies. As governments increase COVID-19 testing cadence in response to the growing case burden, we expect the scale of the infection cases to grow. At this early stage what has become clear to us is that the more you look, the more you find.

The burden of health systems consequently becomes more apparent, lifting angst and fear levels within populations. Recent Government announcements appear to be preparing their citizens for this. Governments are, however, mobilising now, some faster than others, and are marshalling impressive resources to mitigate the virus impact on populations and its economic impact.

Montgomery Small Companies Fund Positioning

As small cap investors, our job is to identify the best investment opportunities we see in front of us and to manage risk appropriately, which includes preserving capital. Although we expect the recent sharp sell-off to present some outstanding money-making opportunities over the medium-term, for now we have positioned the portfolio relatively defensively.

In late February, we became alarmed that the US was downplaying the risks of a COVID-19 pandemic, despite what was happening in Europe. Consequently, we began to prepare our portfolio defences, first by lifting cash levels, exiting February at 16.9 per cent. We sold out of stocks in sectors we considered to have primary or first order exposure to virus impacts, like travel and international education. By early last week, we had moved up to 30 per cent cash. We got there by removing or reducing stocks we regarded as the next level of direct exposures, such as retail, media, businesses requiring financial market funding or those with weaker balance sheet positions. We also cut our exposure to smaller, less liquid companies to improve the overall liquidity of the portfolio.

Today we hold roughly 35 per cent cash and we believe the portfolio is relatively well positioned to manage the downturn as we see it today. More than 30 per cent of the portfolio is invested in companies with market caps in excess of $1 billion and another 20 per cent above $500 million (only 2 per cent in sub $250 million market cap bracket).

We will continue to make changes on a dynamic basis as you would expect us to. We will undoubtedly have investments that will have problems that we haven’t foreseen, but overall, we feel the portfolio is now positioned to take advantage of the many opportunities that are now presenting themselves. We have the cash firepower and flexibility to make those decisions when the time comes on terms which we ultimately expect to be beneficial for the fund.

Some of the significant investment exposures include:

  • Cash near 35 per cent;
  • Telecoms & Datacentres c. 17 per cent. Companies like Spark (ASX:SPK), NextDC (ASX:NXT) and Macquarie Telecom (ASX:MAQ) have long life assets, excellent competitive positions and annuity revenue streams that we expect to continue, largely un-interrupted through a tougher economic period;
  • Utilities c. 7 per cent. These assets literally keep the lights on, and whilst we expect there will likely be lower demand for power, and weaker power prices, these businesses have significant long-term asset backing, strong cashflows, resilient capital structures and competitive positions that will not be degraded during a downturn;
  • Growth Technology c. 7 per cent. Appen (ASX:APX) is our largest exposure here, we think its business model is particularly well placed considering its crowd workforce is set up remotely, and demand from the big global tech players should hold up relatively well;
  • Cyclicals c. 10 per cent. We have reduced our cyclical exposure, retaining small positions in a number of higher quality retailers and mining services companies with strong competitive positions and robust balance sheets. These businesses will no doubt face challenging conditions but are well positioned in their sectors to take share and emerge in stronger competitive positions when conditions change;
  • Resources c. 9 per cent, including 5 per cent Gold. Our resource investments have very strong balance sheet positions (net cash) and portfolios of competitive cash generating assets. Our gold miners are generating strong margins and are all Australian based, positioned to generate strong cashflows from the combination of high gold price and weak Australian dollar.

Conclusion

Although we are defensively positioned today, we are constantly monitoring the news flow so we can best take advantage of the stock opportunities when they present themselves. We acknowledge that timing markets perfectly is very difficult. We don’t expect to get this exactly right.

Much internal research and deliberation is focussed on what signposts will ultimately guide our decision to redeploy capital, into the best risk-reward opportunities . Some of these signposts include COVID-19 case, fatality and recovery rates and evidence that the shutdown measures have managed to effectively slowdown the virus, as well as the success of fiscal and monetary policies in stabilising economies.

We are also working on a shopping list of stocks we want to own when the outlook improves. There will be some great opportunities to buy high quality growth companies at really attractive valuations. Select global growers will likely maintain a strong earnings growth trajectory and will also benefit from a weaker Aussie dollar. The next level of opportunity will be the beaten-up cyclicals with strong competitive positions and improving outlooks as the cycle recovers – mining services and retail comes to mind, and eventually the surviving travel and tourism stocks will recover. Then there will potentially be opportunities to participate in deeply discounted recapitalisations of good businesses which were caught out with over levered balance sheets. Finally, as risk sentiment improves, some of the earlier stage companies will present really attractive investment prospects.

The portfolio is structured for capital preservation today and to provide flexibility to take advantage of opportunities to come.  We don’t know what will happen tomorrow but expect every one of our portfolio companies to be able to operate under the conditions ahead.

We will continue to keep you updated over the days and weeks ahead in what have been very challenging times for all investors. Wishing you good health.

Dominic Rose & Gary Rollo.

INVEST WITH MONTGOMERY

Dominic Rose is the Portfolio Manager of the Montgomery Small Companies Fund. Dominic joined Montgomery in August 2019 after spending thirteen years specialising in smaller companies in portfolio management and equities research. Most recently, Dominic was a Portfolio Manager and Senior Research Analyst at MHOR Asset Management in Sydney for three years. Prior to this, he ran Deutsche Bank’s Small Caps Equity Research Team in Sydney for six years. He was also previously Head of Research at Foster Stockbroking.  

This post was contributed by a representative of Montgomery Investment Management Pty Limited (AFSL No. 354564). The principal purpose of this post is to provide factual information and not provide financial product advice. Additionally, the information provided is not intended to provide any recommendation or opinion about any financial product. Any commentary and statements of opinion however may contain general advice only that is prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial circumstances or needs. Because of this, before acting on any of the information provided, you should always consider its appropriateness in light of your personal objectives, financial circumstances and needs and should consider seeking independent advice from a financial advisor if necessary before making any decisions. This post specifically excludes personal advice.

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4 Comments

  1. So this came out on the 19th. Do you think the recent rally is the other side of the V or do you think we are yet to see the bottom? Perhaps when the s**t hits the fan in the US when they hit peak Italy?

    • Hi Julian, thanks for your question. Calling the exact bottom is always difficult – what we do know is the market has moved from being largely unaware of the impending COVID-19 problem to now, highly aware. You are right, I think the market will be closely following the case volumes in the US, looking for the peak, and then stabilization – that will confirm the shutdown strategy is working and we may then have a clearer picture about when the economy will reopen for business. Good to see the governments and central banks throw everything they have at cushioning the blow. Keeping credit markets liquid is crucial. In the meantime, the news flow will be terrible (deaths, unemployment etc). Thankfully, the market does tend to look forward.

  2. “good businesses which were caught out with over levered balance sheets”…

    Isn’t that an oxymoron?

    • Good businesses can exist within badly-structured companies Luke. Being the only supplier of fire starters to eskimos might be a good business. But load the company up with debt and you have a good business in an unstable structure. Hope that makes sense.

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