Poles Apart – The Property Imperative Weekly 01 Sept 2018

Welcome to the Property Imperative Weekly to 1st September 2018, our digest of the latest finance and property news with a distinctively Australian flavour.    Locally the bad news keeps coming, while US markets remain on the boil.

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Listen to the podcast, read the transcript, or watch the video show.

NineNews published an article this week, claiming that Sydney and Melbourne dwelling values “may soon rise again” because of a decline in dwelling construction, citing a report saying that the rate of construction is expected to slow down, with the number of new homes built set to fall by up to 50,000 each year.  So they said, that would mean 20,000 fewer homes built across the country each year than the 195,000 needed to meet future demand.

Indeed, the ABS reported this week that building approvals in July were 5.6 per cent lower than in the same month last year.  Total seasonally adjusted dwelling approvals in July fell in New South Wales (-5.2 per cent), Victoria (-4.6 per cent), Queensland (-6.0 per cent), South Australia (-26.5 per cent) and Western Australia (-14.7 per cent). Seasonally adjusted approvals increased in Tasmania by 13.6 per cent. In trend terms, total dwelling approvals in July increased by 4.5 per cent in the Northern Territory and in the Australian Capital Territory (12.2 per cent).

The data shows its high rise apartments which are slowing the fastest (in response to slowing demand from investors) but it is worth noting that the volume of approvals for new detached houses have been tracking around their strongest levels in 15 years. The HIA said that weaker conditions in a number of states have typically been overshadowed by strong activity in Victoria. With Victorian home approvals now showing signs of weakness they expect the national trend – of declining building approvals – will continue throughout 2018.

The HIA also reported on new home sales for July, saying that consistent with the trend for much of 2018, July saw sales fall by 3.1 per cent compared to the previous month. Sales in 2018 thus far are 6.1 per cent lower than in the corresponding time in 2017. The noticeable new trend is that new home sales in Victoria are weakening. Victoria has experienced exceptionally strong conditions, which have been sustained over a number of years, obscuring weaker conditions in a number of other states. With Victorian new home sales now showing signs of weakness we expect the national trend – of declining sales – will continue throughout 2018.

The Sydney market has also been cooling throughout the year particularly in the new growth areas. The high volume of new apartments in metropolitan cities are competing for first home buyers and resulting in a slowdown in new detached home sales. Other regions in New South Wales, such as the Hunter, around the ACT and South and North Coasts, are continuing to see strong growth. They say the market for new home sales across the country is cooling for a number of reasons including a slowdown in inward migration since July 2017, constraints on investor finance imposed by state and federal governments and falling house prices. They expect that it will continue to slow over the next two years due to the adverse factors now starting to take effect the market.

Specifically, they say that finance has become increasingly difficult to access for home purchasers. Restrictions on lending to investors and rising borrowing costs have seen credit growth squeezed. Falling house prices in metropolitan areas have also contributed to banks tightening their lending conditions which have further constrained the availability of finance. An increase in interest rates charged by banks, which had been anticipated, will accelerate the slowdown in sales and ultimately new home building activity.

The latest data from the RBA and APRA confirm the fall in credit, with the monthly RBA credit aggregates for July showing total credit for housing up 0.2% in the month, to $1.77 trillion, with owner occupied credit up 0.5% to $1.18 trillion and investment lending down 0.1% to $593 billion. Investment housing credit fell to 33.4% of the portfolio, and business credit was 32.5%. APRA’s data showed that investor loan balances at Westpac, CBA and ANZ all falling, while NAB grew just a tad. Macquarie, HSBC. Bendigo Bank and Bank of Queensland grew their books, highlighting a shift towards some of the smaller lenders. Suncorp balances fell a little too. You can watch our separate video “Rates Up, Lending Down”, for more on this.

And of course we saw more out of cycle rates hikes from Westpac, who lifted variable rates for owner occupies and investors holding loans with them by 14 basis points – see out video “Westpac Blinks” for more on this – where we discuss the margin compression the experienced, thanks to rising international funding rates (see the BBSW) and the switch from interest only to principal and interest loans.  Then on Friday, Suncorp and Adelaide Bank, both of whom had already lifted a couple of months back, lifted again.  As I said yesterday, what is happening here is that funding costs are indeed rising. But the real story is that they are also running deep discounted rates to attract new borrowers, (especially low risk, low LVR loans) and are funding these by repricing the back book. This is partly a story of mortgage prisoners, and partly a desperate quest for any mortgage book growth they are capture. Without it, bank profits are cactus.  Once again customer loyalty is being penalised, not rewarded.  Those who can shop around may save, but those who cannot (thanks to tighter lending standards, or time, or both) will be forced to pay more

Damien Boey at Credit Suisse, writing before Suncorp And Adelaide Bank moved again said Westpac was the latest of the banks to hike variable rates across new and existing customers, following similar moves from BOQ, BEN, MQG and SUN over the past few months. Not only are out of cycle rate hikes broadening out across the system – we think that they will continue to broaden out across the majors, and become a recurring theme. This is because:

  1. Money market rates are a significant driver of the marginal cost of funds. Arguably, the banks that have hiked out of cycle to date have been more exposed to money markets than the banks that have not. Therefore, money market stress has had a bigger impact of their profitability, putting more pressure on them to hike rates. However, if there are question marks about why certain systemically important banks are facing liquidity or credit problems, then funding costs must inevitably rise for everyone, even if we are only talking about small, but fat tail risks. Also, RBA research suggests that as rates approach the zero bound, the relative cost of no/low fixed rate deposits increases to the point that perversely, margin pressures can emerge.
  2. Interbank spreads should be negligible unless … If a central bank targets a cash rate like the RBA does, it must be willing to provide any and all reserves that the banking system needs. In other words, it must be the lender of last resort. And if it is possible to obtain reserves from the RBA in almost any situation, there should be no need to borrow them from other banks. In turn, the spread of bank bill swap rates (BBSW) to overnight indexed swap rates (OIS, the risk free rate), should be negligible. Unless of course, there is counterparty credit risk over and above liquidity risk. Interestingly, the RBA has gone out of its way recently to remind the market that it is indeed the lender of last resort. But the BBSW-OIS spread remains elevated at European crisis highs, around 45bps.
  3. Wide interbank spreads are hard to explain using conventional factors. For as long as there is a pricing premium mystery, there is no visible end to the cycle of out of cycle rate hikes. Interestingly, in its August Statement on Monetary Policy the RBA provided some alternative explanations for wide interbank spreads, after witnessing the USD liquidity narrative break down in recent months. But even Bank officials do not find these explanations convincing. Therefore, the mystery remains unresolved.
  4. The marginal funding cost drives the change in the average funding cost. Therefore, we do not need to forecast further increases in the BBSW-OIS spread to have conviction that banks will continue hiking rates out of cycle. We only need to know that the BBSW-OIS spread will persist at wide levels. Again, for as long as there is uncertainty about why the spread is so wide to begin with, it is hard to argue with conviction that spreads ought to narrow and normalize.

Even after some banks have hiked rates out of cycle, we still think that in aggregate there are more than 50bps of variable rate mortgage hikes in the pipeline based on already known developments in the money market. But the RBA only has 1.5% worth of rate cut ammunition left in its bag of tricks.

This means that the RBA has lost some autonomy over the monetary transmission mechanism, because effective borrowing rates can rise independently of the cash rate. In particular, Australian-US yield differentials are likely to further invert, undermining the carry trade appeal of the AUD/USD. The Fed still seems quite determined to hike rates. But the RBA is unlikely to be matching the Fed’s hawkishness given the slowdown in train, and given what the banks are doing to rates and credit supply.

So we are in for a period of more out of cycle rate rises, as well as tighter lending standards. No surprise, then that refinance rejections are rocketing, as we reported this week, and mortgage prisoners are getting locked in.  The ABC story even got picked up by ZeroHedge in the US.

So back to that NineNews report, they missed completely the real reason why home prices are falling, it’s all about credit availability.  Lending standards are tighter now – borrowing power is reduced, and so new loans are only available on tighter terms. If you want to understand the link between credit and home prices, which is still not widely understood, I recommend you watch my recent conversation with Steve Keen, who explains the mechanisms involved, and the policy failures behind them. See “Are Icebergs Fluffy? … A Conversation with Steve Keen”. This show has already become one of the most popular in the site, and it is really worth a watch.

The upshot though is home prices are likely to continue to fall. CoreLogic’s dwelling price index showed another fall in August, recording a 0.38% decrease in values at the 5-city level. This is the 11th consecutive monthly decline in home values, down a cumulative 3.4% over that period at the 5-city level: Quarterly values also fell another 1.3% In the year to August, with home values down by 3.09% at the 5-city level, driven by Sydney (-5.64%). Significantly, Perth’s housing bust continues to roll on, with dwelling values now down 13% since peaking in June 2014 after falling another 0.6% in August: the cumulative loss in values at 13% is greater than the 11.5% peak-to-trough falls experienced between 2009-09, and the duration of the downturn has hit 50 months – more than twice as long as prior downturns. Plus, rents there have similarly fallen, with median asking rents down 29% for both houses and units since June 2013.

My theory is, where Perth has gone, other centres are likely to follow as the great property reset rolls on. Melbourne and Victoria is deteriorating significantly, and remember there net rental yields are some of the lowest across the country. No, prices are not likely to recover anytime soon.

And if you want further evidence, auction clearance rates remain in the doldrums.  It is interesting to see now the main stream media is beginning to talk about this, and I have been busy this week with interviews on Radio Melbourne, 2GB and elsewhere. Remember this is only the end of the beginning. I continue to believe 2019 will be a really bad year, what with more rate hikes, interest only loan switches, and decaying sentiment. As one industry insider told me this week, “some of my property investor clients have decided to try and sell before the falls bite”. It may be too late.

And to add to the mix, ABC’s Michael Janda wrote an excellent piece this week on the advantage some large banks have with regard to how APRA assesses their capital base.  The big four banks between them hold around 80 per cent of all Australian home loans. There are many factors that have led to this extreme market dominance: economies of scale, better credit ratings and an implicit Federal Government guarantee — all of which are linked. But the major banks — plus Macquarie and, recently, ING — also enjoy a regulatory benefit that is little known outside the financial sector, but provides a substantial competitive advantage. “The average capital risk weights of the standard banks is around 39 per cent, the major banks average around 25 per cent, and the actual cost [difference] of that equates to around 15 basis points in margins, so it’s not insignificant at all,” the chief executive of second-tier lender ME Bank, Jamie McPhee, told The Business. Those 15 basis points, or 0.15 percentage points, either have to be added onto the interest rate of mortgages that ME Bank and other smaller lenders offer or they take a hit to their profit margins.

For regional banks on the “standardised” system, the safest high-deposit, fully documented housing loans are considered just 35 per cent at risk, meaning they only have to hold $35,000 in capital on $1 million home loan. However, the major banks, plus Macquarie and ING, are allowed to set their own risk weights, using internal financial modelling under the internal ratings-based (IRB) approach. Until the Financial System Inquiry (FSI) there was no floor on how low these could be — a couple of the major banks were averaging less than 15 per cent on mortgages, meaning they held less than $15,000 in capital to protect against losses on $1 million home loan. Smaller banks have ‘disadvantage baked in’. However, on recommendations from that inquiry, the bank regulator APRA introduced a floor of 25 per cent on the average mortgage risk weight for these banks. That still leaves a significant difference between the amount of capital the big banks hold and what the smaller banks have to put aside.

APRA continues to argue that these more sophisticated banks deserve benefit from their investment in more advanced management systems, and yet APRAs recent reviews suggest significant issues. Here is a recent discussion between Senator Whish-Wilson and APRA Chair Wayne Byers discussing in a Senate committee hearing in May the outcomes from their targeted reviews of major bank lending practices in 2017, but only released publicly through the royal commission process earlier this year.

This casts doubt on whether the big four actually live up to the theory of having better risk assessment and management than the smaller banks. Is APRA still captured we ask, and should the playing field be levelled. We continue to think so.

So now to the markets. Locally, Bendigo and Adelaide Bank fell 0.26% on Friday to 11.59, Suncorp rose 0.06% to 15.49, Westpac fell 0.38% to 28.54, well down from a year ago, despite the mortgage rate hike, and CBA fell 1.26% to 71.24. More are getting negative on the banks, given recent events.  The ASX 200 fell 0.51% to 6,319, just off its highs, as the financial sector fell away.  The Aussie continues to fall against the US dollar, down a significant 0.96% to 71.93, and we continue to expect more weakness ahead.

Sentiment is rather different in the US markets, with the 10-year rate still elevated, and the gap to the 3 month Libor very narrow, as we discussed before a potential harbinger of a recession later. But the US stock markets remain in positive territory.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.09% to 25,964, still below its peak in February. The S&P 500 passed a new record in the week, and ended on Friday at 2,901.  The VIX was down again, falling 4.95% to 12.87, indicating the market is risk off at the moment.  The US Dollar Index Futures was up 0.43% to 95.05.

That said, the burst of optimism about trade in the market during the week, didn’t last until the closing bell on Friday. The U.S. announced a bilateral deal with Mexico on Monday. But tension built throughout the week as the U.S. announced there was a Friday deadline to bring Canada into a newly-revamped NAFTA. The U.S. and Canada missed that deadline, but announced that talks would resume next Wednesday, leaving the market facing more wait-and-see trading days. There was also drama during Friday’s discussions after the Toronto Star reported that Trump told Bloomberg off the record he had no plans to give any concessions at all to Canada. The president appeared to later confirm that stance in a tweet, saying Canada now knows where he stands.

Trade worries spread beyond North America, though. Trump told Bloomberg he was prepared to withdraw from the WTO if necessary. And he plans to move ahead with tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese imports as soon as a public-comment period concludes next week. China’s foreign ministry said Friday that the U.S. putting pressure on Beijing would not work.

The Yuan rose a little against the US Dollar, but remains way down on a year ago.

Meantime retail earnings dominated the calendar this week, leading to strong stock movements in the low-volume environment. The S&P Retail index ended up slightly for the week.

Among big movers, Abercrombie & Fitch stock plummeted on second-quarter revenue and same-store sales missed estimates. Best Buy stock tumbled despite better-than-expected second quarter revenue and earnings as online sales slowed and the company warned that it is “expecting a non-GAAP operating income rate decline in the third quarter.” And Tiffany & Co spiked on second-quarter results and strong outlook, but then tumbled in later sessions.

In tech, Tesla shares started the week with a quick drop and finished it lower as it scrapped plans to go private. CEO Elon Musk wrote in a blog late last week that he would not move forward with a plan to take the company private, noting that after speaking with retail and institutional shareholders that “the sentiment, in a nutshell, was ‘please don’t do this.’”

Musk had surprised the market out of the blue, tweeting he was thinking of taking the company private at $420 per share and had funding secured. The SEC was interested in whether the tweet was designed in a way to punish short sellers, according to reports.

The NASDAQ rose 0.26% to 8,109.5 in record territory driven by the booming sector.

Data out this week illustrated two contrasting segments of the U.S. economy, one stronger and one weaker. Economic indicators on the consumer side remained very strong. The Conference Board’s index of consumer confidence increased to 133.4 this month, compared to a reading of 126.7 forecast by economists. That was its highest level since October 2000. The University of Michigan’s August consumer confidence index was revised up to 96.2 from its preliminary measure of 95.3. And consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, rose 0.4% last month, matching June’s reading and analyst forecasts.

But the National Association of Realtors said its pending home sales index, which measures signed contracts for homes where transactions have not yet closed, fell 0.7% to a reading of 106.2 after rising by a revised 1.0% in the previous month. Economists had forecast pending home sales rising 0.3% last month. So more questions on the housing sector ahead.

Oil closed out the month higher as traders balanced expectations of crude supply losses with the potential of trade wars denting global demand. China, the world’s largest commodity importer, has seen economic growth dwindle since the trade war with the U.S. kicked off, and a further escalation could dent growth, forcing Beijing to rein in crude imports. Oil prices ended the month nearly 2% higher on bets on renewed global supply shortage as U.S. sanctions on Iran’s crude exports are expected to reduce crude from market, underpinning higher crude prices. Both WTI and Brent crude are expected gain on a potential slump in Iranian exports, although gains in WTI prices will be limited as the refinery maintenance season is set to get underway. Oil prices were helped earlier in the week by an EIA report showing crude oil stockpiles fell much more than expected.

Gold moved a little higher this week, ending up 0.16% on Friday to 1,206, Bitcoin lifted 1.23% to 7,029

So, we can see a significant divergence between the local market here, dragged down by negative sentiment on banks and housing (and the increasing realisation of more issues ahead) and the US where stocks are at the highs despite the building risks from higher corporate debt and the yield curve inversion.

The two markets are poles apart.

Global economy ‘tinder dry’, warns JCB

Investors are not being compensated for the risks they are taking in the current late-cycle global economy, warns Jamieson Coote Bonds via InvestorDaily.

Record levels of corporate and household debt, combined with the prospect of rising interest rates, are putting the Australian and world economies on a knife’s edge.

That’s the view of Jamieson Coote Bonds director of investment, research and strategy Paul Chin, who is also concerned about the prospect of ‘contagion’ from the collapse of the Turkish lira last week.

“Our concern with markets right now is that investors are not compensated well enough for the risks that they’re taking. That’s evident in so many different ways,” Mr Chin said.

While he is not predicting the current crisis in Turkey will create a broader financial crisis along the lines of the 1998 Asian meltdown, Mr Chin said it is a sign of the dangers of autocratic leadership.

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who effectively controls monetary policy in the country, refuses to raise interest rates because he believes doing so would lead to inflation (an opinion that is at odds with almost every economist in the world).

The consensus among economists is that Turkey needs to raise official interest rates by about 1,000 basis points (10 per cent) in order to arrest the decline of the lira, which fell 40 per cent against the US dollar last week following the imposition of US trade sanctions.

Mr Chin said he had similar concerns about the autocratic manner in which US president Donald Trump has ignited a trade war with China.

“It’s a major risk and it really does derail world growth. It could precipitate the next crisis inadvertently as well,” Mr Chin said.

Trade wars, by definition, can only be win/lose or lose/lose, he said. In the latter scenario, he said, “everyone goes protectionist and isolationist”.

“It’s just tinder dry in terms of how late cycle we are. We have high debt levels and one little thing can push everything over the edge,” he said.

Jamieson Coote Bonds (JCB) is a ‘pure-play’ defensive fixed income manager that invests in high-grade Australian bonds as well as the sovereign debt of G7 countries.

Mr Chin says many of the financial advisers he talks to are “pulling their hair out” looking for growth options in their portfolio.

But if JCB is right, they might be looking for the wrong thing at the wrong time.

“Advisers are thinking to themselves: ‘Things are pretty richly valued right now. I’m concerned about the trade war, I’ve read stuff about Turkey. I’d better start reading about defensives,’” Mr Chin said

Updated Finance And Property Scenarios (Summary Findings)

Yesterday we ran a live discussion on our revised property and finance scenarios. For those who need to “answers” this is a brief overview.  We explain more about our thoughts in the full show (below).

  • Scenarios are a way of exploring different futures, and to consider the consequences, not as a forecast, but to facilitate understanding and debate.
  • None of these scenarios may turn out to be right…. Things change.
  • We use a framework driven from our core market model and we are going to look at the four potential outcomes, updated with the latest data and outcomes.

Business As Usual

  • Credit growth eases
  • Fall in prices continues, employment around current level
  • RBA still banking on household consumption to support growth.

Things Can Only Get Better

  • International rates rise out of cycle
  • Exchange rate down
  • RBA lifts rates – pressure on rates 50 basis points.
  • Credit growth slides.
  • Loss rates rise.
  • Home prices slide further.

Not Yet Doomsday

  • US rate rises trigger pressure in the USA
  • Flight to quality, to US$ or gold.
  • Capital exits Australia, need rates higher to retain investment, yet needs to cut to help the economy.
  • One bank in Australia would have issues, due to investor loans.

Armageddon

  • International crisis, pressure on economies.
  • Caught in the tide.
  • Unemployment lifts
  • Defaults rise.
  • Unusual measures.
  • Australia parallels Ireland (or worst)

For each scenario we look at a range of outcomes, and also apply a probability rating. The results are shown here:

You can watch the full show here:

Updated Finance And Property Scenarios (Recorded Live Stream)

Yesterday we ran a live YouTube event where we discussed the latest revisions to our financial and property scenarios.

We looked at four:

1. Business As Usual

2. Things Can Only Get Better

3. Not Yet Doomsday

4. Armageddon

You can watch a replay of the event along with the live chat here:

You can listen to the podcast version here:

Note there were a couple of audio gremlins in the live stream version, and we will be posting a higher quality edited version here:

 

The Million Dollar Man Who Is Waiting For The Bubble To Burst

In the latest edition of my discussions with economist John Adams, we look at recent RBA monetary policy, and conclude is not fit for purpose.

Despite all the hype, the next cash rate move could well be down, as the bursting debt bubble approaches.

John’s original article is here.

 

End of ECB QE Could Push Up Global Bond Yields

Global bond yields could see upward pressure if net capital outflows from the eurozone start to subside when the ECB ends its quantitative easing (QE) in December 2018, according to Fitch Ratings.

The latest chart of the month from Fitch’s economics team shows net outflows of capital from the eurozone in the form of long-term portfolio debt instruments. This is calculated as purchases of foreign bonds by eurozone residents minus foreigners’ purchases of eurozone bonds. Net portfolio debt outflows rose sharply after the ECB commenced government bond purchases in early 2015. ECB purchases were substantially greater than the net issuance of new debt to fund eurozone government deficits, implying reduced exposures by existing holders of eurozone government debt. In an environment of increasing scarcity, existing bondholders moved capital to other geographies.

This large net capital outflow has likely helped cap benchmark long-term bond yields in the US (and elsewhere) and a reversal of these flows could drive yields upwards. Since the start of the ECB’s sovereign QE programme, it has bought over EUR2 trillion of bonds while net bond outflows from the eurozone have amounted to EUR1.5 trillion. Eurozone investors now own as many US bonds as Japan and China combined. However, with net QE purchases set to end this year net outflows have already recently started to lose some momentum with foreign selling of eurozone bonds moderating since the start of this year. The risk is that eurozone net bond outflows could drop away sharply when the ECB QE ends in December 2018, reducing demand for US Treasuries and pushing up US (and global) yields.

One factor that could temper such a shock is the ongoing yield advantage of owning US bonds. This is likely to remain a strong pull factor for eurozone investors, as the chart shows. The spread between two-year US Treasuries and German Bunds is at the widest in three decades. The large stock of ECB QE holdings is expected to continue to contain Bund yields, which will remain further anchored by ECB’s negative deposit rate. We believe the ECB deposit rate will be on hold until late next year while the central bank awaits confirmation of firmer underlying inflation trends. Meanwhile the Fed will continue to raise rates.

While the ECB’s dampening influence on global bond yields is likely to weaken significantly from next year, it is unlikely to go away completely.

Turkish Lira Under the Bus

More evidence of the global fragility of the financial markets on Friday.

Turkey’s finance minister, Berat Albayrak, unveiled a new plan for their economy on August 10th.

The new economic stance will be one with “determination” — that’s a key part of it, Albayrak says. It will “transform” Turkey’s economy. It will also have a “strategic” and “powerful infrastructure.”

But Donald Trump, tweeted that he would double tariffs on Turkish steel and aluminium products.

As a result, the lira plummeted further. In the course of an hour, it reached a new low of 6.80 to the dollar, marking its worst daily performance in over a decade. It recovered a little afterwards, but has lost about 40% of its value against the dollar since the start of the year.

Many fear the fallout could spread beyond Turkey’s border, prompting traders to abandon riskier assets like stocks in search of safe-havens like gold, yen and Treasuries.

Volatility, as measured by the “fear index”, rose nearly 17%, underlying investor concerns about the broader impact of a possible crash in Turkey’s economy.

The exposure to a slump in Turkey’s economy is “pretty international,” though limited to the banking sector, said Tim Ash, a senior EM strategist at Bluebay Asset Management.

Data from the Bank for International Settlements showed that Japanese banks are owed $14 billion, U.K. lenders $19.2 billion and the United States about $18 billion.

The Turkish Lira also moved the same way against the Euro.

“We’re not going to lose the economic warfare” being waged against Turkey said President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Erdogan is boasting of Turkey’s 7.4 percent growth rate in the first quarter. Forget about the exchange rate, he says. “It’s going to be better.”

Responsible Investments hit Major Milestone

Responsible investment in Australia has hit a major milestone, with a new report finding over half of all professionally managed investments in Australia are now invested as responsible investments. Environmental, social, corporate governance and ethics considerations now sit alongside financial as critical components informing the investment decisions of the majority of Australia’s professional investors.

The 17th annual Australian Responsible Investment Benchmark Report 2018 (KPMG), the most comprehensive review of the responsible investment sector in Australia, reveals the industry hitting new heights with $866 billion now managed as responsible investments, representing 55 per cent of all professionally managed assets in Australia, up from $622 billion in 2016 (growth of 39% year on year).

“This is a major milestone to reach with a majority of funds invested in Australia now being invested under commitments to responsible investment,” said Simon O’Connor, CEO of RIAA. “We are now at a stage whereby issues such as climate change, human rights, corporate culture, diversity and a whole range of other important sustainability issues are right at the forefront of consideration by Australia’s finance community.”

O’Connor explained the uplift in assets was largely due to mainstream investment funds making a switch to incorporate responsible investment, such as incorporating negative screening, systematically assessing environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors as well as engaging directly on these issues to influence corporate Australia.

“Nearly two decades of progress in responsible investment has this year reached an important tipping point, which we believe will only gain further momentum in light of growing calls for transparency and accountability across finance along with a growing consumer demand for investments that align with their values,” said O’Connor.

Broad Responsible Investment

RIAA and KPMG research reviewed Broad Responsible Investment strategies of 112 asset managers in Australia, finding 24 managers could demonstrate a leading approach to ESG integration, constituting $679.3 billion AUM, up by 22% year on year

Asset managers cited ESG factors positively impacting portfolio performance as now the greatest driver of growth in responsible investment (up by 20 per cent year on year)

Core Responsible Investment

Core Responsible Investments using negative or positive screening, sustainability themed investments, impact investing and community finance have also reached a record level of $186.7 billion representing 12% of all professionally managed assets, more than tripling between 2015 and 2017.

This growth in absolute and relative terms reflects both a surging demand for ethical, sustainable and impact investments as well as a further embedding of negative screens across mainstream financial products and mandates – particularly across tobacco and controversial weapons
Core responsible investment Australian share funds outperformed their benchmark over three, five and ten years

Responsibly invested international share funds outperformed the benchmark in the one and three-year time horizons, with comparable performance over ten years; and responsibly invested balanced portfolios outperformed their benchmark over the three, five and ten year periods
“Our research continues to show us Australians don’t want to build their retirement savings and other investments off the back of harmful activities without compromise to financial performance. The investment industry is responding, by providing more investment opportunities that align with these values, but also building these considerations into the bulk of the market.

“While it’s hugely positive to see responsible investment now with the lion’s share, our aspiration is to see this number grow as the understanding of ESG factors on positive portfolio performance increases,” said O’Connor.

ASIC’s review of exchange traded products identifies areas for improvement

ASIC has completed a review of the exchange traded products (ETP) market in Australia, including exchange traded funds, aimed at ensuring the market is delivering on promises to investors.

Exchange traded products (ETPs) are open-ended investment products that are traded on a securities exchange market. ETPs trade and settle like shares and give investors exposure to underlying assets without owning those assets directly.

ETPs differ from listed funds because they are open-ended. Tthis means that the number of units on issue may increase or decrease daily depending on investor demand. ETPs, especially exchange traded funds (ETFs), are increasingly popular with retail investors and self-managed  superannuation funds (SMSFs).This is because of their accessibility, perceived low cost, transparency, intraday liquidity, diversification benefits and ability to provide exposure to new asset classes. There has been steady growth in both funds under management and the number of ETP products available on the market in Australia

ACIS’s review focused on two types of ETPs:  a) passively managed ETFs with an investment objective to track an index or benchmark; and b) funds that are actively managed to outperform a benchmark or to achieve an absolute return objective (referred to as ‘active ETFs’ and ‘managed funds’).

The review found that the market is generally performing well, and ETPs are meeting the relatively low cost and liquidity expectations of investors. However, the review identified a range of risks that require monitoring by issuers and oversight by market operators.

The large and growing investment in ETPs in Australia by retail and SMSF investors prompted ASIC to look at a number of the key premises and functions of the ETP market. The key concern identified was the potential for the bid/offer spread to temporarily widen, leading to investors paying a spread that would be considered too high, and undermining the relatively low cost proposition of some ETPs.

Further, ASIC considers that market operators and issuers should play a more proactive role in monitoring the performance of ETPs, including liquidity in the market, and where they observe spreads widening unreasonably, they should take appropriate action.

ASIC is also recommending that ETP issuers publish the indicative net asset value (iNAV) with a frequency that enables investors and financial advisers to make more informed decisions.

ASIC Commissioner John Price said, ‘We encourage issuers to continue to educate investors and their advisers about how the ETP market operates and to provide them the tools, like an iNAV, to help them make informed investment decisions’.

Another area of concern identified in the report was market maker concentration, as although there are an increasing number of new entrants in Australia that serve a growing market, most liquidity is still provided by only two entities. ASIC expects issuers and market operators to be aware of this risk and incorporate a means of managing it into their risk management framework.

While not many ETPs have closed in Australia to date, ASIC encourages issuers and market operators to develop policies for reviewing, and where necessary remove from quotation with an orderly wind down, ETPs that may not meet ongoing suitability for quotation, such as very small ETPs that may be uneconomical to operate.

SEC’s New Dark Pools Rule Is Credit Positive – Moody’s

Moody’s says that last Wednesday, the US Securities and Exchange Commission adopted amendments to the rules governing alternative trading systems (dark pools) that will increase transparency around trading data and execution.

The new rule is credit positive because it will require dark pools to provide standardized and detailed public disclosures, enhancing their oversight. The new disclosures take effect January 2019.

The increased disclosure requirements will improve reporting and oversight by dark-pool operators, which are typically large banks and independent and specialized trading firms such as Liquidnet Holdings, Inc.  We expect these improvements to increase customer confidence in dark-trading venues, allowing customers to assess potential conflicts of interest or the potential for leakage of subscriber information from the dark pools to its broker-dealer operator or affiliates. The tougher reporting requirement standards will also strengthen dark pools’ internal oversight and compliance framework, which should limit future regulatory penalties, a credit positive.

Dark pools are a type of off-exchange trading venue that institutional investors actively use because they provide anonymous execution and minimize market effects. Dark-pool trades remain subject to national market system regulatory requirements, chief among them that trades must be executed at or better than the national best bid-offer price – the price that corresponds to the most competitive, publicly visible resting order on so-called bright venues such as exchanges. As of first quarter 2018, dark pools processed around 12% of all US equity trading volume

In recent years, the SEC and the New York Attorney General have scrutinized dark pools. Securities regulators investigated whether banks misled institutional investors participating in their dark pool trading venues and favored high frequency traders. A number of dark-pool operators agreed to settle charges relating to disclosure failures or other securities law violations. Most prominently in 2016, subsidiaries of Barclays Bank PLC (A2/A2 stable, baa31) and Credit Suisse AG (A1/A1 stable, baa2) agreed to settle separate cases. Barclays paid $70 million and Credit Suisse paid $84.3 million to resolve claims that their dark pools failed to continuously monitor the trading venues against predatory trading, to treat subscriber information confidentially and other disclosure shortfalls.

The new reporting requirements include the disclosure of information regarding ownership of a dark pool and its broker-dealer and arrangement between the dark pool and affiliate broker-dealers. A dark pool will also be required to disclose the type of subscribers it caters to, order types, fees and other operational information.