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#Court Win against Keybridge
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Last edited one year ago

Wednesday 01-Nov-2023: Court-orders-Meeting-Request-is-invalid-and-ineffective.PDF

https://www.afr.com/street-talk/back-to-the-drawing-board-for-bolton-as-magellan-wins-vote-reprieve-20231101-p5egt3 [Wednesday 1st October]

870e8641c6033ae42c09b6d706d144924ee434.png

Back to the drawing board for Bolton as Magellan wins vote reprieve

Supreme Court ruling is a blow to the activist investor’s efforts to wind up the Global Fund.

Source: www.afr.com

Previously:  https://www.afr.com/street-talk/magellan-plays-its-hand-but-bolton-isn-t-done-20231016-p5eck5 [16th-October]

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Magellan plays its hand, but Bolton isn’t done

Street Talk understands the activist investor won’t be stepping back from his campaign despite Magellan’s announcement

Source: www.afr.com


Market Reaction: [MGF = The Fund; MFG = the Manager of The Fund, i.e. MFG is the manager of MGF.]

Wednesday (1st Nov): MGF +2.5 cps (+1.44%) to close at $1.76. MFG +10 cps (+1.54%) to close at $6.59.

Thursday (2nd Nov): MGF +1 cent (+0.57%) to close at $1.77. MFG +12 cps (+1.82%) to close at $6.71.

MGF's NAV (Net Aset Value) as at Tuesday, 31 October 2023 was $1.9068.


Boys and girls, one of these things is not like the other:

710099785c9ea96e3fd48c12f58d5c3f0678ff.png9be95e664de0fc5ffb8651f4d918a862c864d9.png


And now, some perspective (their 5 year share price charts):

c297b56a59d67962423749b5ba09acece3c709.png243f8011972c1c426e2f56fa5b9252d8d49b90.png


Disclosure: I do not hold any MFG (any more, sold the last of mine on 18th August @ $10.89/share, on the day they released their FY23 results and announced the special dividend and popped up as high as $11.04 during the day before closing at $10.42; they closed at $9.12 one week later, and they're now below $7) but I do hold some MGF (the global fund, closed class) in a small 2-stock portfolio I manage for our two children. There is also a small amount of MGFO (options) in there that are not worth selling - they were trading at 2.4 cps on Monday, but they're down to 2.1 cps today.

Unless Keybridge Capital's Nick Bolton (pictured above) can come up with a viable plan B those (MFGO) options will expire worthless on March 1st 2024 (in 4 months). Nick's Keybridge Capital is the largest holder of MFGO which he accumulated mostly at around 1 cent each or less. He's had success with his activism previously, with other companies, but he may have bitten off more than he can chew with Magellan on this occasion. Time will tell, and there's only 4 months of it left in this particular case, so not long to wait to see how this one plays out.

#Full Portfolio Breakdown
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Last edited one year ago

21-July-2022: Full Portfolio Disclosure: Two days ago, on July 19th, MGF disclosed the entire portfolio including weightings as at June 30th, 2022:

Quarterly-Portfolio-Disclosure---30-June-2022.PDF

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If that's too small, either click on the link above it to view the file, or click on the image to make it larger.

21-July-2022: Today they also released this Investor-Letter.PDF to shareholders from their new MD/CEO, David George. Worth a read!

19-July-2023: Update: I'm expecting their disclosure for 30-June-2023 during the next week, but in the meantime, here's how their portfolio looked at the end of March 2023:

ce7925061060488f76e7430eb7a25dd6b042bb.png

Source: Quarterly-Portfolio-Disclosure---31-March-2023.PDF

I note Meta Platforms (formerly known as Facebook) is NOT held by MGF now; Meta were not in the portfolio at the end of March anyway.


Disclosure: I hold MGF in a very small 2-stock portfolio I manage for our son and daughter. I also do currently hold shares in MGF's manager, MFG. Neither are held here on SM, only IRL.

#9 month uptrend!
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Last edited one year ago

19-July-2023: Just looking at MGF because I've been waiting for their FY23 tax statement (for their two distributions in FY23) and was wondering if I could download it from their share registry or website (no, it ain't ready yet), and noticed that they've actually been in a fairly steady uptrend for the better part of nine months now...

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I had a feeling they'd stopped falling, but I didn't know they'd recovered that much. I only hold MGF in a small two-stock portfolio that I "manage" on behalf of our son and daughter. Unfortunately, the other company in that portfolio is FGX, the Future Generation Fund (the Australian Shares fund, not the Global Fund - FGG), and FGX has been in a steady downtrend for about the same period.

I do hold a larger position in MGF's (the fund's) manager, MFG (Magellan Financial Group) and I follow MFG a lot more closely than I follow their flagship global shares fund, MGF.

On Monday (17th), MGF (the fund) announced that their NAV per unit (of Closed Class Units in the Magellan Global Fund) as at Friday, 14 July 2023 was $1.9096. MGF closed on Friday at $1.64, and at $1.66 on Monday, so they're still trading at around a 14% discount to their NAV, so the gap has narrowed a little from what it got out to last year, but there's still value there, or reason for the traded price to keep rising towards their NAV. Their NAV has also been rising, which helps.

There wasn't much to be happy about last year. They started 2022 with a NAV of $2.07/unit, then reported a NAV of just under $1.70/unit for both June 30th and December 31st 2022. That NAV (net asset value) is now back up to $1.91/unit (last Friday). So not as good as 2021, but better than 2022.

That one year MGF unit price graph looks OK. It looks a lot better than their 3 and 5 year graphs do anyway. Onwards and upwards, I sincerely hope!

#GVF holds MGF
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Last edited 2 years ago

15-July-2022: I currently hold MGF (Magellan Global Fund) [closed class] units, as well as shares in the fund's manager, MFG (Magellan Financial Group). I also hold shares in GVF, the ASX-listed Global Value Fund LIC (listed investment company) run by Miles Staude out of London. GVF have a highly credentialed Board that includes Geoff Wilson of WAM Funds and Chris Cuffe, both legends of the Australian investment management industry. You can read more about Chris here: https://www.australianphilanthropicservices.com.au/board/chris-cuffe/

After building up Colonial First State and then Challenger Financial Services, Chris is now focused on philanthropy and education, having started the free e-newsletter, CuffeLinks, now called FirstLinks, and being on either the board or investment committee of a number of listed companies (GVF, ARG, HM1) and other organisations (UniSuper, Paul Ramsay Foundation, Third Link Growth Fund). Miles Staude himself is also on the GVF Board; Miles is effectively the MD (managing director) of GVF although for some reason he's listed as a non-executive director (NED).

Here's the GVF report for June 2022: GVF-Investment-Update-and-NTA-Value-as-at-30-June-2022.PDF

And here's a screenshot of page 3 and the top of page 4 from that report, which shows that MGF (the Magellan Global Fund) are now one of the top 10 positions in the GVF portfolio.

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[click on the images above to make them larger. Source: GVF-Investment-Update-and-NTA-Value-as-at-30-June-2022.PDF]

Note 8, highlighted above, explains that not ALL of GVF's positions will necessarily be listed in these newsletters, so while listed 4th and being a 4.9% position in the GVF portfolio, MGF is not necessarily GVF's 4th largest position, but it's certainly safe to assume that MGF are a significant position for GVF, i.e. a top 10 position (and likely a top 5 position).

Because GVF are a $200 million fund, and MGF are a $2 billion fund (i.e. 10 x larger than GVF), GVF do not show up as being a sub (substantial shareholder) for MGF. A sub owns 5% or more, which in MGF's case is a minimum of $100 million worth of MGF shares. That would be half of GVF's entire market capitalisation, so clearly their exposure to MGF is more modest than that. It's actually around $10m (4.9% of $200m is $9.8m and GVF is currently trading a little below their actual NTA so you can add a little more onto that $9.8m).

Why is this significant in any way? I don't hear you ask. Well, I'm glad that thought didn't cross your mind. I'll attempt to answer it regardless...

For those unfamiliar with the Global Value Fund (GVF), it is similar to WAM Strategic Value (WAR) which is Geoff Wilson's latest LIC. Only GVF has a better share price graph than WAR does, and a better track record of shareholder returns as well; In WAR's defence, they've only been listed for 1 year (since late June last year) while GVF have been going since mid-2014, so for 8 years. Also WAR's hunting ground is Australia (and mostly ASX-listed funds and companies) while GVF has the whole world to choose from, so they have far more options from which to pick and choose.

Interestingly, WAR also count MGF as one of their top 10 positions.

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Geoff lists those top 10 positions (bottom right corner of the image above) in alphabetical order, not portfolio weighting order, so we don't know how big that MGF position is within the WAR portfolio. WAR is currently a $180m fund trading at an 8% to 13% discount to their before-tax NTA (their before-tax NTA at June 30 was $1.11 per share as shown above and they closed today at $1.015 and at $0.97 on June 30), so reasonably similar in size to GVF, just a tad smaller at this point. I don't think that WAR holding MGF is nearly so significant as GVF holding MGF is, because pretty much all of WAR's holdings are ASX-listed LICs, whereas GVF often don't have much or any major ASX exposure.

WAR also hold Chris Mackay's MFF (as well as running MFF, Chris is also now back helping to run MFG, the manager of MGF, having started MFG alongside Hamish Douglass back in 2006 [16 years ago] and then transitioning to just running MFG's former flagship fund MFF [which originally stood for the Magellan Flagship Fund] before returning to help run MFG in February this year after Hamish took a Medical leave of absence).

WAR even hold WGB, the WAM Global Fund, one of Geoff Wilson's other LICs, also managed by his management company, WAM Funds. Originally it was envisioned that WAR would be an activist fund, similar to GVF, that would be actively executing on strategies to unlock value and close the gaps between the share prices and the NTAs of the LICs that they took positions in. In fact, that was one of the selling points during the lead up to the WAR IPO, with Geoff and his marketing team pointing to a raft of examples of where Geoff had either taken over the management of underperforming LICs or else had a significant positive impact on the share price performance of those non-WAM-Funds LICs that he chose to become in involved in - in prior years.

To an extent, that has and will continue to play out, with SOME of those positions that WAR hold, but clearly not all of them. For example, he's very unlikely to agitate for change with the management of WGB, which WAR holds a position in, because WGB (WAM Global) is already a fund managed by Geoff Wilson's WAM Funds, and he's the Chairman of the WGB Board. Geoff Wilson is the Chairman of the Boards of 7 out of the 8 LICs that WAM Funds manage. The only one of his LIC Boards that has a different Chairman is WMA - WAM Alternative Assets, where Michael Cottier is still the Chairman, as he was back when it was managed by Blue Sky Alternative Investments and was called the Blue Sky Alternatives Access Fund (BAF).

Anyway, back to MGF. And GVF. GVF has a serious track record of activism to unlock value in their underlying portfolio holdings, with an obvious example being the Blue Sky Alternatives Access Fund (BAF) where GVF did become substantial shareholders and Miles got himself onto the BAF board and was instrumental in making sure that shareholders' rights were protected as the manager (Blue Sky) imploded after a sustained short-seller attack and a severe loss of market confidence in the manager and their internal valuations of their assets, lack of external oversight (including sufficient external third-party valuations of Blue Sky's assets), and their (Blue Sky's) rights to management fees that seemed excessive compared to their returns generated from AUM (assets under management). One of Miles' and the rest of the BAF Board's biggest challenges was fighting off Howard Marks' Vulture Fund, Oaktree Capital, which took control of the Blue Sky Alternative Investments (BLA; the management company) and begun carving up and selling off its assets, with the intention of doing the same to the assets managed by BAF - see here: https://www.businessnewsaustralia.com/articles/oaktree-takes-hold-of-blue-sky-s-water-assets.html Further Viewing (video): The Vulture of Wall Street: Billionaire Investor Howard Marks

Miles and the rest of the BAF Board (along with other outspoken BAF shareholders) were ultimately successful in having the management contract with BLA (the former manager of BAF) terminated on mutually acceptable grounds and with agreed conditions, and having Wilson Asset Management (WAM Funds) appointed as the new managers of the fund.

Once WAM Funds took over the management of BAF - and the fund's name was changed to WAM Alternative Assets (WMA), Miles Staude resigned from the BAF/WMA Board and GVF sold their position in WMA (formerly BAF) at a good profit. The discount to NTA with BAF's SP (share price) had blown out to over 40% at one point before the manager change (which is likely when GVF was buying most of their BAF shares) and once WAM Funds took over the management that discount reduced to single figures for a time. I don't think the WMA SP ever moved to a premium-to-NTA because of the alternative nature of the assets - which always seem to trade at various discounts to NTA. It's now blown back out to 17.2% discount (as at June 30 when the WMA SP was $1.035 and their NTA was $1.25), however I daresay most current shareholders who have been in there since the BAF days are happy enough with the new management compared to what it looked like was going to happen in a wind-up scenario under Oaktree Capital control of the former manager (BLA).

Further Reading: https://www.globalvaluefund.com.au/press-research/private-wealth-network-pwn-speaks-with-miles-staude-regarding-blue-sky-alternatives-access-fund-ltd-baf/

Source: https://www.globalvaluefund.com.au/press-research/

In that link above, Miles talks to the Private Wealth Network here in Australia about himself, GVF, and BAF as a case study of his value capture strategy, a type of value investing where he scours the world for underpriced assets that meet his investment criteria and then invests in many of those opportunities once they (GVF) have identified a credible pathway to achieving a positive market re-rating of that asset that will allow them to exit the investment at a suitable profit. GVF MOSTLY invests in CEFs or Closed End Funds, with the most obvious Australian examples being LICs (listed investment companies). However, most of the CEFs that GVF invests in are based out of the UK, Europe or the USA and they are not called LICs over there.

The important distinction between a closed end fund and an open ended fund is that open ended funds will simply issue more units on demand or redeem and cancel units when people want to sell out so their total units on issue usually changes on a daily basis. Most Managed Investment Funds that are NOT ASX-listed are open-ended, and so are ETFs.

From https://www.vanguard.com.au/adviser/en/etf-knowledge-basics/what-are-etfs-tab -

"Although they trade like individual securities, ETFs – like managed funds – are open-ended investments. That means new units can be created and existing units redeemed daily, based on investor demand. Closed-end funds and individual securities, on the other hand, generally issue a fixed number of units."

This is an important distinction. Open ended funds tend to trade at levels that are very close to their NAV (net asset value). ETFs are a good example of this. ETFs use "market makers" who provide liquidity for buyers and sellers and ensure that the unit price (market price) does not stray too far from the actual net asset value (NAV) or net tangible assets (NTA) of the fund. LICs and other closed-end funds, who generally have a set number of shares or units on issue, are subject to far more supply and demand imbalances. While a LIC can issue more shares due to a placement, an SPP (shareholder purchase plan), a Rights Issue (RI), a DRP (dividend/distribution reinvestment plan) or a bonus issue to existing shareholders/unitholders, or can reduce the number of shares/units on issue by means of a share/unit buyback (where shares or units are bought back by the fund and then cancelled, usually done when the market price is significantly below the NAV/NTA of the fund), the number of units or shares on issue otherwise generally stay the same on a day-to-day basis. This means that with a CEF such as a LIC, when people want to buy shares or units, they need to buy those off people who already hold them, and similarly when they want to sell, they need to sell to people who wish to buy them at prices that they are prepared to pay.

This often results in a supply/demand imbalance that may result in those units or shares (in closed-end funds such as LICs) trading at significant discounts or premiums to their respective NTAs/NAVs. We have often seen this with some of the more popular Wilson (WAM Funds) LICs, such as WAM and WAX, which often traded at 20% to 40% premiums when they were in demand, and Karl Siegling's Cadence Capital LIC (CDM) which a few years ago regularly traded at circa 30% premiums to their NTA when they were flying and consistently paying an above-market dividend yield. A recent period of underperformance changed all that for them.

The terms NTA and NAV are usually interchangeable and LICs usually refer to their own NTA, but their NTA is also their NAV. Other funds usually just use the term NAV (net asset value) rather than NTA (net tangible assets) but they mean the same thing, being their underlying asset value in terms of real tangible assets that can be readily sold or redeemed for cash. Another way of thinking about it is that it is the break-up value of the company or fund in terms of what you could sell it off for if you owned all of it (in $/share terms). For that reason LICs will often provide three different NTAs, (1) their before-tax NTA, (2) their NTA after tax but before tax on unrealised gains (which is usually the most applicable with funds that generally hold their investments for multi-year periods), and (3) their after-tax NTA including tax on unrealised gains (which is their break-up or wind-up value).

Some of the main reasons for LICs and other CEFs trading at big premiums to their NTA or NAV are:

  1. The hunt for yield, and the fact that not only do LICs often provide above-average fully franked dividend yields, LICs usually also use Profit Reserves or Dividend Reserves to enable them to smooth their dividends, which means that as long as they have occasional periods of strong outperformance, they can hold back some (or most) of the profits from those bumper years to enable them to continue to maintain or increase their stream of dividends year after year even when their performance is poor or even negative. As a quick example, one of WAM Funds longest running and most successful LICs, WAM Research (WAX) had, at June 30th, a Profits Reserve of 38.7 cps (cents per share), and they paid out 9.95 cps in dividends during the past 12 months, so allowing for the fact that they have increased their annual dividends every single year for the past 10 years, they still have enough in their Profit Reserve for another 3+ years of dividends, even if they make 0% (i.e. no) profit for the next 3 years. However they would be unlikely to have such dismal returns considering their per annum average investment portfolio performance since July 2010 (past 12 years) has been +13.5%, outperforming the All Ords Accumulation Index (+8.1% p.a.) by +5.4% p.a. Understandably, their shares remain in high demand with more people on the buyers side (prepared to pay more) and less on the sellers side (not prepared to sell cheap) most of the time. At June 30, 2022, WAX closed at $1.295/share and their before-tax NTA was $0.9292 (or 92.92 cps), meaning they were trading at a +39% premium to their before-tax NTA, or a +31.8% premium to their NTA after tax (but before tax on unrealised gains) of 98.26 cps, or a +29.2% premium to their NTA after all tax (including tax on unrealised gains) of $1.0025/share.
  2. A recent period of consistent outperformance, such as WAX has demonstrated in the example above (+13.5% p.a. average investment portfolio performance, before fees, for the past 12 years), with the share price tending to follow that same north east NTA trajectory over time, despite periods of share price volatility. Although we are constantly warned that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance, most investors will extrapolate past performance into the future as a likely outcome, so they assume that a fund that has outperformed their benchmark for the past decade or more will more likely than not continue to outperform their benchmark, which is a reasonable enough assumption even if it is not always correct. When you combine consistent outperformance with a growing above-market dividend yield, and a decent amount of positive marketing by the manager of the fund, you will sometimes end up with a double digit premium to NTA in the share price.
  3. The underlying assets of the fund are in a sector that is popular / in demand. Such as a microcap fund when microcaps are seriously outperforming large caps, or a technology fund when tech stocks are flying.


Some reasons for LICs and other CEFs to trade at significant discounts to their NTA/NAV are:

  1. They have recently underperformed, so the market is expecting them to continue to underperform, so there is little demand to own them.
  2. They pay a low dividend or their dividends have been decreasing recently. This is often a factor when combined with recent portfolio underperformance. In the case of LICs, a very low Profit Reserve (or Dividend Reserve) combined with recent underperformance is also often a reason for investors to worry that recent dividends may not be sustainable going forwards and to want to move on to something else with brighter prospects.
  3. They are in a sector that is underperforming (such as tech) or they are unloved for another reason connected to the types of assets that they hold (i.e. a microcap fund when microcaps are seriously underperforming).
  4. They are in a sector where price discovery is more difficult, so there is generally less comfort around their valuations. An example of this is alternative asset funds such as WMA which may hold water rights or shares in unlisted private equity funds, or a myriad of other unlisted assets that are much harder to get accurate current valuations for at any given time compared to listed companies with live trading prices that are readily available to anyone with internet access.
  5. They are simply invested in companies or assets that are not ASX-listed and they usually trade at a discount just because of that, and because of the history of fund managers struggling to outperform their respective benchmarks in that asset class. The best example of this is ASX-listed funds that specialise in overseas listed assets. Even though these overseas companies (that these LICs, LITs or managed funds invest in) trade on the open market and we can check their current market value any time we want to, these funds USUALLY trade at discounts to their NTA or NAV even when other funds managed by the same fund manager that are invested in ASX-listed companies may be trading at a significant premium to NTA. If you look across ASX-listed LICs, LITs (listed investment trusts, such as MGF) and other CEFs that invest in companies listed on exchanges outside the ASX, pretty much all of them are currently and are usually trading at discounts to their respective NTA or NAV. For example, WAM Global (WGB) is a well managed LIC that has performed reasonably well (positive p.a. returns and an increasing stream of dividends) and they finished June at $1.69, an -18.4% discount to their pre-tax NTA of $2.07, and a -20.1% discount to their after-tax (but before tax on unrealised gains) NTA of $2.115 and a -22.4% discount to their after all tax (including tax on unrealised gains) NTA of $2.177/share. Meanwhile, their sister fund, WAM Research (WAX) (which is invested only in ASX-listed companies, but uses similar or identical research-driven investment strategies) finished June at $1.295/share, being a +39% premium to their before-tax NTA of 92.92 cps, a +31.8% premium to their NTA after tax (but before tax on unrealised gains) of 98.26 cps, and a +29.2% premium to their NTA after all tax (including tax on unrealised gains) of $1.0025/share. In summary, it appears that there is far less demand from Australian investors for managed funds that invest in overseas listed companies, and where there is some demand it would seem that most investors are preferring to get their exposure via ETFs who generally charge lower fees, so those investors are happy to gain exposure via passive investment rather than through actively managed funds. Based on recent performance, and current NTA/NAV-discounts indicating lack of demand, it looks like there is far less value placed on active management of investments in overseas listed companies, compared to active management of investments in ASX-listed companies. This is likely because most of these global-companies-focused LICs/LITs/funds (including WGB and MGF) have struggled in recent years to outperform the MSCI World index (the most common global shares index) or the MSCI ex-Australia World index (the same index excluding all ASX-listed companies) which most of these funds use as their own benchmark index. They usually use the accumulation version that includes reinvested dividends and distributions, known as the MSCI World [ex-Australia] NTR (net total return) index. So based on the recent performance of most of these globally-focused funds, even when their actual returns after fees have remained positive, investors would still have been better off in a global-index-tracking ETF where the fees would have been lower and the returns would have been higher. If the active funds manager isn't adding value above and beyond returns available from ETFs, then the demand for their services is much lower, and the Globally-focused closed-end funds that they manage will tend to trade at a discount due to that lack of demand.


This is ONE reason why MGF trades at a significant discount to NTA: Underperformance in recent years. Another is the various issues that their manager (MFG) has had, mostly around their co-founder, superstar portfolio manager and chief investment officer (CIO), Hamish Douglass, stepping back from the business for a time, after a number of internal and personal issues that included his marriage breakdown, his CEO quitting without a good publicly-disclosed reason, and MFG lost their largest institutional mandate (SJP: St James Place in the UK) which alone was a $23 billion hit to their FUM and started a run on their FUM (funds under management). See here: MFG-SJP-mandate-loss-plus-Funds-Under-Management---December-2021.PDF

So those issues are related to the manager, MFG, not to MGF (the fund), but when the manager is on the nose, so too are their funds in many cases (including this one). Obviously too, that FUM outflow is money coming out of the various funds managed by MFG, so that makes MFG forced sellers at times when they have to free up cash to cover those fund redemptions - with their open ended funds. Oftentimes that means selling at times when the prices they are going to get for those assets are far from ideal, so it feeds into further underperformance (realised losses) which feeds into further FUM outflows. It sort of feeds on itself or is a self-fulfilling prophesy, at least for a time. However, this too shall pass.

So MGF is a closed-end fund (CEF) of the type I have been discussing, although they are a LIT (listed investment Trust) not a LIC (listed investment Company). The main difference is that LITs have units and LICs have shares. Also trusts usually have to distribute ALL of their profits to their unitholders every year, however Magellan have come up with novel ways to get around this and make their LITs work in a similar way to LICs where they have managed to smooth their dividends to a degree, which is partly because much of what they do is often subsidised by the management company (MFG),so they have a target distribution yield and if they don't make enough profit to fund that distribution they either sell assets to cover it and/or it is partly paid for by the management company. That's another negative for MFG holders, but a positive for MGF holders. [I am both, so swings and roundabouts, or snakes and ladders, whatever floats your boat.]

MGF units closed June 30 at $1.34 per unit, and their NAV was $1.6954 (see here: MGF-Monthly-NAV---June-2022.PDF)

That $1.6954 NAV was "cum distribution" so included a distribution of 3.66 cents per unit payable on 21 July 2022 (next Thursday).

MGF therefore closed June at a 21% discount (or 20.96% discount to be more precise) to their NAV. Yesterday, Thursday 14th July 2022, MGF closed at $1.395 and according to their website their estimated NAV at close of trade yesterday was $1.70. So their $1.395/unit closing price yesterday was a 17.9% discount to their NAV on the day. That's ex-distribution now of course because the record date for the distribution was 1st July.

My thoughts are that MGF (being a $2 billion fund) is just too big for $200m GVF and $180m WAR to be prodding with a stick. Well, they could try, but I doubt that MGF's management (MFG) would take much notice of them, and they wouldn't need to.

However, I believe that these discount-capture specialist funds (GVF, WAR) are there to make a profit out of (a) the gap between the SP and the NAV closing, which we are already starting to see (21% gap on June 30th, 17.9% gap 2 weeks later on July 14th, and they are now trading ex-distribution as well when the share price often falls but it has actually gone up instead since June 30), as well as (2) a rebound in performance from the underlying portfolio of global companies held by the fund, which should also drag the SP higher if and when it happens.

Because I consider that MFG (the manager of MGF) are already making all the right moves to turn this underperformance and negative sentiment around, I do NOT believe that they (GVF, WAR), or we, need to do anything for that to occur, except to wait. I.e. no activism required, in this case.

MGF released their June report today - MGF-Fund-Update---June-2022.PDF


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They are due for some outperformance in my opinion, based on that performance chart, their low base that they are working from, and the moves that Chris Mackay, Nikki Thomas and Arvid Streimann have made, and their portfolio holdings. Have a look at the companies they hold, Microsoft, Visa, Alphabet (Google), Mastercard, McDonald's, Yum! Brands (includes KFC), Novartis, Reckitt Benckiser, Intercontinental Exchange and Nestle are their top 10 positions and represented 49.1% of their portfolio at June 30.

I'm happy to see that Netflix is not there any more. Nor is Ten Cent or Alibaba. There is no longer a Chinese or Hong Kong-based company in their top 10. China has not been a happy hunting ground for Magellan in the last 18 months to 2 years, and I note they don't break out China exposure separately on their "Geographical Exposure by Source of Revenue" wagon wheel chart now; China is now simply included in "Emerging Markets". That change was one of a few changes that were made back in February when Chris Mackay was brought back into the fold as the effective CIO (chief investment officer) of MFG and Nikki Thomas was brought back in as one of the lead portfolio managers for MGF and many of their other funds as well. Along with selling out of some losing positions. They have also exited Guzman y Gomez, their share in the Australian roll out of the Mexican-style fast food store chain, at a good profit too, and are clearly concentrating their efforts more on where they had their greatest success in prior years, being large (mostly USA-HQ'd) global market-leading companies with huge and growing moats (competitive advantages) and strong tailwinds.

I think people are better off chasing Australian exposure to Chinese companies (if they want it) via Platinum Asset Management who have a specialist Asian fund, PAI (Platinum Asia Investments) or other specialist ASX-listed Asian funds like EAI (Ellerston Asian Investments). The very reasons that Hamish Douglass gave around 8 or 9 years ago for why they were NOT invested in Asia (at that time), which included the unpredictable operating environment there due to strong government control and government policies that could change without notice, plus a lack of transparency regarding the accounts and business dealings/practices of listed companies (and their true ownership structures at times), turned out to be quite prophetic in that those were some of the very things that tripped him up after he later changed his mind and invested heavily in Alibaba and Ten Cent before the Chinese Central Government stopped the Ant Financial Group IPO (Ant was to be spun out of Alibaba) and clamped down on a number of their tech billionaires like Alibaba founder and largest shareholder, Jack Ma, and the companies that those Chinese tech billionaires controlled, sending the share prices of those companies into strong downtrends. This was all sparked by a speech that Ma gave in which he appeared to criticise one or two of the government's policies. And to channel Julia Roberts in "Pretty Woman", that was clearly a BIG mistake. Huge!!

Yet it was not something that was easy to see coming - from over here, and certainly not something that would have had the same effect if it was BHP's Mike Henry criticising an Australian mining tax, or CBA's Matt Comyn saying he thought the RBA was going a bit too hard with interest rate rises, or Meta's Mark Zuckerberg complaining that US laws around anti-competitive company behaviour was having a detrimental effect on consolidation efforts (M&A) within the US tech sector. Freedom of speech, vs no freedom of speech. BIG difference. Huge!!

The Chinese Central Government may face far fewer headwinds when implementing their own policies compared to the US or Australian governments, and so are able to regularly set targets (such as growth targets) and then achieve them, one way or the other, but China still remains a high-risk country to invest in, particularly for outsiders, and that's something that I believe Chris Mackay has always understood, and Nikki Thomas agrees with also. For now, and hopefully for some time to come, they're out of China, or at least they have no major exposure to China within the MGF portfolio, except via expansion into or within China by US or European companies such as Yum! Brands, McDonalds, Microsoft, Alphabet (Google), Nestle, etc.

So, I think there's value there in MGF. They're down now below where they were back at the end of November, 2020, as shown on that graph above, and they've underperformed their main benchmark index, the MSCI World NTR (Net Total Return) Index, over that period, and they're trading at a significant discount to their NAV, however I think there's plenty of opportunity for that underperformance to reverse from here. Remember that while profits generated by the management company (MFG) do hinge a fair bit on FUM either increasing or being stable (not further FUM outflows), that ONLY relates to the manager and their ability to earn base management fees plus performance fees from that FUM. FUM flows have very little affect on the individual funds, such as MGF, unless there's a major outflow that results in forced selling at low prices, and even then, that mostly affects their open-ended funds, not their closed-end funds like MGF.

It would appear that GVF (and WAR) also see similar value here.


Disclosure: I hold MGF units in a small portfolio I manage on behalf of our two children, alongside FGX shares for ASX exposure. I also hold MFG shares (in the manager of MGF) here and in two of my larger real life portfolios. I also hold GVF shares here and in an income portfolio. Because of the nature of their assets and their discount capture strategy, GVF's investment returns are often not very correlated with the wider share market indices, so they often have positive returns or less of a drawdown in negative months for the ASX. They tend to underperform in a galloping bull market, but they can be good value to hold when things turn a bit pear-shaped as they have done recently. I do not hold WAR shares.

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Magellan Global Fund Closed Class (ASX: MGF) - Magellan Financial Group (magellangroup.com.au)

#Portfolio 31-Dec-2021
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Last edited 3 years ago

From the MGF interim report (for the 6 month period ending 31-Dec-2021) released to the market on 28-Feb-2022:

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MAM = Magellan Asset Management.

And here is a full list of the positions held by MGF as at 31-Dec-2021:

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And the following is the list of holdings in MFG's (Magellan Financial Group's) MGE (Magellan Global Equities Fund) and MGG (Magellan Global Trust) funds (which are both funds held by MGF, see above - 2nd top row (after Microsoft) and 4th last row (between Safran and Alphabet Class A):

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When you put that all together, you'll see that there is a fair exposure there to Microsoft (8.7% of MGF), Alphabet (Google, 6.3% via both class A and class C shares) and Netflix (5.3% of MGF). I note that they now own more Alibaba than they did at 30-June-2021 but that the entire Alibaba position is still worth less than it was then, and that they have sold all of their Tencent Holdings shares, which was a reasonably large position (a top 10 position) at 30-June-2021.

In terms of NEW positions (since June 30, 2021), MGF now hold Amazon, Amadeus IT Group and Safran shares. Amadeus is a travel technology company, so similar to (but a lot bigger than) ASX-listed Serko (SKO). Safran is an aircraft, aerospace and defense engineering company that is quite innovative and is focused on environmentally friendly solutions that will contribute to an industry goal of carbon-neutral aviation by 2050 - see here: Areas of innovation | Safran (safran-group.com)

I assume we all know what Amazon does, but it should be noted that while Amazon is dominant in global online retail, it is their AWS (Amazon Web Services) business that is their most valuable strength and their main revenue generator - and AWS is still growing at a faster rate than their other divisions - AWS represented 74.5% of Amazon's total operating income in 2021, compared to 59.1% during the same period in 2020.

See here: Amazon sales, Amazon revenue and Amazon annual profits (digitalcommerce360.com)

Disclosure: I hold MGF shares in a small portfolio I manage for our son and daughter, and I recently bought back into MFG (the management company) with a smaller starting tranche (to be added to later) after watching their Global Equity Strategy Update presentation on 11-Feb-2022:

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#Performance
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Added 3 years ago

06-Mar-2022: Read this today: Magellan Global Fund – A peer and benchmark relative analysis - Rodney Lay | Livewire (livewiremarkets.com)

You can also download a .pdf version of that report here: MGF Peer Analysis FINAL.pdf (livewiremarkets.com)

The article/report highlights some of the main reasons for Hamish's underperformance relative to peers and the MSCI index over the past couple of years, and discusses whether changes are needed to the investment strategy for MGF (the Magellan Global Fund) to return to the sort of outperformance they enjoyed in prior years.

Of course Hamish is now on medical leave and the CIO (Chief Investment Officer) role at MFG (Magellan Financial Group, who manage MGF and the other Magellan funds) has been taken on by Chris Mackay who of course was the co-founder of MFG with Hamish back in 2006. While they have always worked in the same building and shares many resources, Mackay had distanced himself from MFG (the management company) since resigning as its Executive Chairman in 2013 to concentrate on running the fund that became MFF, originally called the Magellan Flagship Fund, but now known as "MFF Capital Investments" - a $1.5 billion dollar fund which Chris owns 16.3% of.

It should be noted however, that Hamish and Chris remained friends and Chris still owns 9.55% of MFG with that stake currently being worth around $275 million (based on MFG's current $2.875 billion m/cap).

Further Reading: Global Strategy Update - February 2022 - Magellan Financial Group (magellangroup.com.au)

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11-Feb-2022: Magellan’s Chris Mackay seeks to steady ship after $5.5b in outflows (smh.com.au)

Some History:

04-Dec-2021: Magellan’s Hamish Douglass on the fight of his career as markets turn against him (smh.com.au)

29-Aug-2017: Magellan duo move a little further apart (afr.com)

11-Feb-2022: Magellan co-founder Chris Mackay’s defiant rallying cry leaves key questions (afr.com)

Magellan Financial Group (magellangroup.com.au)

Magellan Global Fund - Magellan Financial Group (magellangroup.com.au)

I'll post another straw here in a minute with details of what MGF (the Magellan Global Fund) held in their portfolio as at 31-Dec-2021.

Disclosure: I hold MGF shares IRL (in a small portfolio I manage for our two children) and I recently bought back into MFG IRL, starting with an initial tranche after watching the Global Equities Strategy Update presentation by MGF portfolio managers (PMs) Chris Mackay, Nikki Thomas and Arvid Streimann on 11-Feb-2022. It is less than half of the MFG shares I held previously, because I intend to buy back in via tranches (smaller bites) this time.

#Portfolio 31-Dec-2020
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Added 4 years ago

MGF's portfolio (formerly MGG) looked like this on 31-Dec-2020:

#Partnership Offer
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Added 4 years ago

06-Feb-2021:  Just to clarify, the Partnership Offer that MGF is currently extending to their unitholders is a 1:4 offer ($1 for every $4 already held) and is priced at an issue price that is equal to the NAV (net asset value, per Closed Class Unit) of MGF on Friday, February 26th, being three days after the offer closes, and being one business day before the allotment of the new units (on Monday 01-Mar-2021).

While there is no discount to NAV in the offer price, additional Closed Class Units worth 7.5% of what you subscribe for will also be allocated to you, as well as one MGF Option for each Closed Class Unit allocated under the offer.  Each of those MGF Options will be excercisable into one Closed Class Unit with the exercise price set at a 7.5% discount to the estimated NAV per Closed Class Unit at the time of the exercise.  The bonus units and the option discount will be funded by Magellan Group (MFG, i.e. the manager, not MGF - the fund).

I hold MGF units and have subscribed for my full allocation under the partnership offer.  MFG are setting the bar high by funding these discounts and additional units themselves, which means their is no NAV-dilution to MGF (the fund).  The continuing generosity of MFG (the manager) to the unitholders in their various funds is a great thing in my opinion, although it isn't necessarily immediately earnings-accretive for shareholders in MFG (the manager).  Great for the funds they manage.  Probably not as great for shareholders of the management company unless those shareholders take a longer term view, as Hamish Douglass (the driving force behind MFG) clearly is.

I hold MGF and MHH, in a portfolio I manage for my two kids, but I do not hold MFG at this point.