Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int (MAQ0180AU) Report & Performance

What is the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int fund?

Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Interest aims to outperform the UBS Composite Bond Index (Index) over the medium term (before fees) by using a low risk enhancement strategy. The Fund invests solely in the Macquarie Enhanced Australian Fixed Interest Fund, which in turn invests in a diversified portfolio of predominantly Australian fixed interest securities including securities issued by Government or corporate entities, as well as Asset Backed Securities.

Growth of $1000 Investment Over Time

Performance Report

Peer Comparison Report

Peer Comparison Report

Latest News & Updates For Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int

Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int Fund Commentary June 30, 2023

The Portfolio outperformed the benchmark in Q2, driven by security selection and sector rotation.

Sector rotation

The Portfolio increased its long semi-government exposure over the quarter, however this was largely a function of rebalancing after large cash inflows in the prior quarter. The exposure remains hedged with swap given the risk to spread products that emerged post the US regional banking crisis. Semi-governments broadly narrowed versus bonds over the quarter, however they widened versus swap, unable to keep pace with the relentless tightening in swap spreads over the quarter. Despite the tailwind to the sector from Bank high quality liquid assets demand being well past its peak as the Term Funding Facility maturities ramp up, the continued reduction in AOFM issuance should see the semi-government sector retain some high quality liquid assets bid.

The Portfolio’s neutral credit positioning performed broadly in line with the benchmark over the quarter.

Security selection

The Portfolio remains overweight futures vs physical securities, held in both the short and intermediate sector. The physical Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds (ACGBs) remain ‘rich’ to the overnight index swap curve, particularly in the front end and belly of the curve. Within ACGBs, we continue to hold our exposure in the back end of the curve where bonds offer more value vs overnight index swap and futures. Within semi-government, exposure is concentrated in the 7-10-year part of the curve. We remain underweight Treasury Corporation of Victoria and overweight Queensland Treasury Corporation and New South Wales Treasury Corporation, for relative value considerations.

The Portfolio’s credit security selection outperformed over the quarter. Most credit sectors moved tighter, with stable to tighter spreads for major bank senior bonds allowing higher beta Tier 2 and corporates to outperform. The Portfolio added exposures in the long-end of the curve, with a range of utility issuers coming to the market in Q2. Structured securities continue to provide excess returns, finishing with an especially strong month in June as AAA spreads moved 10bps tighter across the board. Higher than benchmark carry also assisted Portfolio performance.

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Product Snapshot

  • Product Overview
  • Performance Review
  • Peer Comparison
  • Product Details

Product Overview

Fund Name APIR Code
? A Product Code is unique a identifier code issued by a group or governing body, to reference products in a large group. For an example, APIR codes are commonly used for Funds and Ticker codes are commonly used for Securities such as ETFs and Stocks.
Structure
?
Asset Class
? An Asset Class breakdown provides the percentages of core asset classes found within a mutual fund, exchange-traded fund, or another portfolio. Asset classes (in microeconomics and beyond) generally refer to broad categories such as equities, fixed income, and commodities.
Asset Category
? An Asset Category is a grouping of investments that exhibit similar characteristics and are subject to the same laws and regulations. Asset categories (or a sub-asset class) are made up of instruments which often behave similarly to one another in the marketplace, looking down to the Asset Category level is important if looking to build a diversified portfolio.
Peer Benchmark Name
? A Peer Index (benchmark) refers to a peer group of investment managers who have the same investment style or category. It is used to compare the performance of one manager to their peer group, which makes it simpler for investors to choose between the vast number of investment managers.
Broad Market Index
? A Market Index (benchmark) refers to a hypothetical portfolio of investments that represents a segment, asset or category of an investable market. Market Indices are used to benchmark managers performance, to assist their style reliability and ability to provide excess returns.
FUM
? Funds/Assets under management (AUM) is the total market value of the investments that a person or entity manages on behalf of clients. Assets under management definitions and formulas vary by company.
Management Fee
? A management fee is a charge levied by an investment manager for managing an investment fund. The management fee is intended to compensate the managers for their time and expertise for selecting finanical products and managing the portfolio.
Performance Fee
? A performance fee is a payment made to an investment manager for generating positive returns. This is as opposed to a management fee, which is charged without regard to returns. A performance fee can be calculated many ways. Most common is as a percentage of investment profits, often both realized and unrealized. It is largely a feature of the hedge fund industry, where performance fees have made many hedge fund managers among the wealthiest people in the world.
Spread
? A spread can have several meanings in finance. Basically, however, they all refer to the difference between two prices, rates or yields. In one of the most common definitions, the spread is the gap between the bid and the ask prices of a security or asset, like a stock, bond or commodity. This is known as a bid-ask spread.
Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed IntMAQ0180AUManaged FundsFixed IncomeBonds - AustraliaFixed Income - Bonds - Australia IndexAustralian Bond Composite 0-10Y Index19.15 M0.29%0.00%0.11%

Performance Review

Fund Name Last Month
? Returns after fees in the most recent (last) month).
3 Months Return
? Returns after fees in the most recent 3 months.
1 Year Return
? Trailing 12 month returns.
3 Years Average Return
? Average Annual returns from the last 3 years.
Since Inc. Average Return
? Average (annualised) returns since inception
1 Year Std. Dev. (Annual)
? The standard deviation (or annual volatility) of the last 12 months.
3 Years Std. Dev. (Annual)
? The average standard deviation (or annual volatility) from the last 3 years.
Since Inc. Std. Dev. (Annual)
? The average standard deviation (or annual volatility) since the fund inception.
1 Year Max Drawdown
? The maximum drawdown in the last 12 months - a drawdown is a peak-to-trough decline during a specific period for an investment, trading account, or fund.
3 Year Max Drawdown
? The maximum drawdown in the last 36 months - a drawdown is a peak-to-trough decline during a specific period for an investment, trading account, or fund.
Since Inc. Max Drawdown
? The maximum drawdown since inception - a drawdown is a peak-to-trough decline during a specific period for an investment, trading account, or fund.
Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int2.63%3.79%5.24%-2.68%4.8%6.71%6.65%3.64%-5.13%-12.82%-13.16%

Peer Comparison

Fund Name Peer Index Name
? A group of individuals who share similar characteristics and interests are called peer groups. Peer group analysis is an essential part of assessing a price for a particular stock in investment research. The emphasis here is on making a comparison, meaning that the peer group constituents should be more or less identical to the company being examined, especially in terms of their main business and market capitalization areas.
12 Months Excess Return
? Excess returns are an important metric that helps an investor to gauge performance in comparison to other investment alternatives. In general, all investors hope for positive excess return because it provides an investor with more money than they could have achieved by investing elsewhere.
Excess Return Annualised Since Inception
? Excess returns are an important metric that helps an investor to gauge performance in comparison to other investment alternatives. In general, all investors hope for positive excess return because it provides an investor with more money than they could have achieved by investing elsewhere.
12 Months Alpha
? Alpha is used in finance as a measure of performance, indicating when a strategy, trader, or portfolio manager has managed to beat the market return over 12 months. Alpha, often considered the active return on an investment, gauges the performance of an investment against a market index or benchmark that is considered to represent the market’s movement as a whole.
Alpha Annualised Since Inception
? Alpha is used in finance as a measure of performance, indicating when a strategy, trader, or portfolio manager has managed to beat the market annualized since inception. Alpha, often considered the active return on an investment, gauges the performance of an investment against a market index or benchmark that is considered to represent the market’s movement as a whole.
12 Months Beta
? Rolling 12Month Beta is a measure of the volatility—or systematic risk—of a security or portfolio compared to the market as a whole. Beta is used in the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), which describes the relationship between systematic risk and expected return for assets (usually stocks).
Beta Annualised Since Inception
? Beta is a measure of the volatility—or systematic risk—of a security or portfolio compared to the market as a whole. Beta is used in the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), which describes the relationship between systematic risk and expected return for assets (usually stocks).
12 Months Tracking Error
? 12Month Tracking error is the difference in actual performance between a position (usually an entire portfolio) and its corresponding benchmark over the last 12 months. The tracking error can be viewed as an indicator of how actively a fund is managed and its corresponding risk level. Evaluating a past tracking error of a portfolio manager may provide insight into the level of benchmark risk control the manager may demonstrate in the future.
Tracking Error Since Inception
? Since Inception tracking error is the difference in actual performance between a position (usually an entire portfolio) and its corresponding benchmark since inception. The tracking error can be viewed as an indicator of how actively a fund is managed and its corresponding risk level. Evaluating a past tracking error of a portfolio manager may provide insight into the level of benchmark risk control the manager may demonstrate in the future.
12 Months Correlation
? Correlation, in the finance and investment industries, is a statistic that measures the degree to which two securities move in relation to each other. Correlations are used in advanced portfolio management, computed as the correlation coefficient, which has a value that must fall between -1.0 and +1.0.
Correlation Since Inception
? Correlation, in the finance and investment industries, is a statistic that measures the degree to which two securities move in relation to each other. Correlations are used in advanced portfolio management, computed as the correlation coefficient, which has a value that must fall between -1.0 and +1.0.
Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed IntFixed Income - Bonds - Australia Index-0.22%0.07%-0.04%-0.01%-0.01%1.181.15%0.63%10.99

Product Details

Fund Name Verifed by SMSF Mates Manager Address Phone Website Email
Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed IntYes-https://www.macquarie.com/id/en.html-

Product Due Diligence

What is Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int

Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int is an Managed Funds investment product that is benchmarked against Australian Bond Composite 0-10Y Index and sits inside the Fixed Income - Bonds - Australia Index. Think of a benchmark as a standard where investment performance can be measured. Typically, market indices like the ASX200 and market-segment stock indexes are used for this purpose. The Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int has Assets Under Management of 19.15 M with a management fee of 0.29%, a performance fee of 0.00% and a buy/sell spread fee of 0.11%.

How has the investment product performed recently?

The recent investment performance of the investment product shows that the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int has returned 2.63% in the last month. The previous three years have returned -2.68% annualised and 3.64% each year since inception, which is when the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int first started.

How is risk measured in this investment product?

There are many ways that the risk of an investment product can be measured, and each measurement provides a different insight into the risk present. They can be used on their own or together to perform a risk assessment before investing, but when comparing investments, it is common to compare like for like risk measurements to determine which investment holds the most risk. Since Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int first started, the Sharpe ratio is 0.35 with an annualised volatility of 3.64%. The maximum drawdown of the investment product in the last 12 months is -5.13% and -13.16% since inception. The maximum drawdown is defined as the high-to-low decline of an investment during a particular time period.

What is the relative performance of the investment product?

Relative performance is what an asset achieves over a period of time compared to similar investments or its peers. Relative return is a measure of the asset's performance compared to the return to the other investment. The Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int has a 12-month excess return when compared to the Fixed Income - Bonds - Australia Index of -0.22% and 0.07% since inception.

Does the investment product produce Alpha over its Peers?

Alpha is an investing term used to measure an investment's outperformance relative to a market benchmark or peer investment. Alpha describes the excess return generated when compared to peer investment. Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int has produced Alpha over the Fixed Income - Bonds - Australia Index of -0.04% in the last 12 months and -0.01% since inception.

What are similar investment products?

For a full list of investment products in the Fixed Income - Bonds - Australia Index category, you can click here for the Peer Investment Report.

What level of diversification will Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int provide?

Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int has a correlation coefficient of 0.99 and a beta of 1.18 when compared to the Fixed Income - Bonds - Australia Index. Correlation measures how similarly two investments move in relation to one another. This establishes a 'correlation coefficient', which has a value between -1.0 and +1.0. A 100% correlation between two investments means that the correlation coefficient is +1. Beta in investments measures how much the price moves relative to the broader market over a period of time. If the investment moves more than the broader market, it has a beta above 1.0. If it moves less than the broader market, then the beta is less than 1.0. Investments with a high beta tend to carry more risk but have the potential to deliver higher returns.

How do I compare the investment product with its peers?

For a full quantitative report on Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int and its peer investments, you can click here for the Peer Investment Report.

How do I compare the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int with the Australian Bond Composite 0-10Y Index?

For a full quantitative report on Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int compared to the Australian Bond Composite 0-10Y Index, you can click here.

Can I sort and compare the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int to do my own analysis?

To sort and compare the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int financial metrics, please refer to the table above.

Has the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int been independently verified by SMSF Mate?

This investment product is in the process of being independently verified by SMSF Mate. Once we have verified the investment product, you will be able to find more information here.

How can I invest in Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int?

If you or your self managed super fund would like to invest in the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int please contact via phone or via email .

How do I get in contact with the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int?

If you would like to get in contact with the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int manager, please call .

Comments from SMSF Mates

SMSF Mate does not receive commissions or kickbacks from the Macquarie Master Enhanced Fixed Int. All data and commentary for this fund is provided free of charge for our readers general information.

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Historical Performance Commentary

Performance Commentary - December 31, 2022

The Portfolio outperformed the benchmark this quarter, driven by sector rotation.

Sector rotation
The Fund’s exposure to semi-government finished unchanged for the December quarter, sitting modestly long. The exposure was actively traded throughout the quarter, initially moving closer to neutral as semi-governments outperformed swap as swap spreads widened. We increased exposure in November as swap spreads peaked and began retracing whilst semi-government lagged this move. Whilst the state governments have large issuance tasks, we continue to believe the semi-government sector offers value given this is largely reflected in the price. They are well progressed through the issuance and bank balance sheets should have high-quality liquid assets requirements in 2023 given the expiry of Term Funding Facility and Committed Liquidity Facility.

The Portfolio’s neutral credit positioning performed broadly in line with the benchmark over the quarter.

Security selection
The Portfolio is overweight derivatives versus physical securities both in swap and futures, held in the 10-year part of the curve. Physical Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds (ACGB) remain ‘rich’ to the overnight index swap (OIS) curve, particularly in the front end and belly of the curve. Within ACGBs, we continue to hold our exposure in the back end of the curve where bonds offer more value versus OIS and futures. Within semi-government, we closed our underweight to Treasury Corporation of Victoria given considerable progression in their funding task, and spreads have widened to accommodate their irregular issuance pattern. We prefer to be overweight Queensland Treasury Corporation given conservative coal price assumptions provide a tailwind to revenues, with a lower AUD also working in their favour. We are also overweight New South Wales Treasury Corporation given funding task is largely priced into spreads. We moved to underweight Western Australia Treasury Corporation given a deteriorating outlook for iron ore, with conservative price forecasts for the commodity already reflected in spreads. In addition, we deployed some excess cash backing derivatives into Japanese treasury bills over the quarter, fully hedged back to AUD for a favourable yield pick up to the Bank Bill Swap Rate.

Performance Commentary - September 30, 2022

The Portfolio outperformed the benchmark this quarter, driven by sector rotation and security selection.

Sector rotation The Portfolio increased its overweight to the semi-government sector over the quarter given the attractive excess yield on offer versus Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds. Our exposure is concentrated in the 10 year part of the yield curve given the steepness of curve spreads, and recent swap spread widening allowed an attractive entry point. The State Governments have had significant funding tasks, with significant supply still to come and the FY23 funding programs totalling $A75 bn, with New South Wales Treasury Corporation and Treasury Corporation of Victoria making up the lion’s share of supply. The outlook is more balanced going forward however and we are cognisant that balance sheets have large high quality liquid assets requirements and will take down a significant proportion of this.

The Portfolio’s credit positioning performed broadly in line with the benchmark as credit spreads retraced their June wides.

Security selection The Portfolio is overweight derivatives versus physical securities both in swap and futures, held in the 10 year part of the yield curve. The physical Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds (ACGBs) remain ‘rich’ to the overnight index swap curve, though this spread improved somewhat toward the end of the quarter. The market has increasingly become concerned about recessionary fears as leading indicators, particularly in North America and Europe continue to indicate a slowdown in economic growth, and started to price cuts starting early next year with US 2 year/10 year inverting early in July. We undertook micro extensions from the belly out to the 10 year part of the curve.

Within ACGBs we reduced our underweight to the ultra-long maturities, given there continues to be demand in the back end of the curve. Within semi-government we have further reduced our allocation to Treasury Corporation of Victoria, shifting into New South Wales Treasury Corporation and Queensland Treasury Corporation, as Treasury Corporation of Victoria no longer trades at an excess yield over other States and they continue to issue regularly via reverse inquiry which may limit price tension going forward.

In addition, we have deployed some excess cash backing futures into JPY bills fully hedged back to AUD for a favourable yield pickup as opportunities in the cross currency basis start to return post-pandemic.

The Portfolio’s credit security selection outperformed over the quarter. While financial subordinated debt initially moved wider in July, issuance in early August was the catalyst for a significant spread rally. Senior financial paper also contributed to returns, in particular new issuance that came to market with generous concessions. Residential mortgage-backed security (RMBS) spreads stabilised over the quarter, and provided attractive carry for the Portfolio. Higher than benchmark carry was also a contributor to the outperformance.

Performance Commentary - June 30, 2022

The Portfolio began the quarter with an underweight position to the semi sector. However, as the quarter progressed spreads widened materially given the sharp move in swap spreads, which has left semi-governments at multi-year wides to Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds. The Portfolio has gradually increased its exposure to semi-government bonds as levels became more attractive over the quarter. The outlook is more balanced going forward; while supply is expected to remain elevated, the balance sheets have large high quality liquid asset requirements and are expected to continue taking down a significant proportion of issuance. Moves in semi-government bonds going forward will likely continue to be dictated by swap, with asset swap spread levels needing to remain sufficiently attractive for the balance sheets to buy.

The Portfolio’s credit positioning performed broadly in line with the benchmark despite the widening in investment grade credit spreads over the quarter.

The Portfolio is overweight derivatives versus physical securities both in swap and futures. We expected physical security valuations to revert back to trading ‘cheap’ to futures as net supply increases following the end of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s quantitative easing, but collateral shortages remain in the front-end and physical securities have continued to trade ‘rich’ to futures for longer than we expected. We have sold expensive 3 year basket bonds back into the equivalent futures maturity and taken micro relative value opportunities in semigovernment securities as volatility in markets increased the incidence of mispricings on the curve.

Within Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds, we went underweight to the ultra-long end following the persistent flattening in the curve, with the 10s30s curve virtually flat and the 20s30s curve inverted. The Australian ultra-long maturity bonds no longer look attractive relative to offshore, and the Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM) has issued regularly into any demand in the 30 year bond and extend out the maturity curve which we think limits scope for further performance. At their recent update, the AOFM ditched plans to issue a new 20 year bond due to lack of demand, but flagged the possibility of a new 30 year to extend out the curve, demand permitting.

Performance Commentary - March 31, 2022

The Portfolio outperformed the benchmark this quarter, driven by security selection.

Security selection
The Portfolio’s security selection was actively managed as the overweight to ultra-long Australian Commonwealth Government Bonds was unwound following the flattening, with the tapering of quantitative easing (QE), together with the lack of 20 year syndication from the Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM), contributing to the outperformance in recent months.

Within semi-government securities, we have trimmed some of the short-maturity exposures where semi-government spreads are particularly rich, and added in the 10 year maturity segment where yield curves are already steep as markets anticipate in more issuance supply. The Portfolio has also taken micro relative value opportunities in semi-government securities during the quarter given the flattening of the basket. The Portfolio has been positioned overweight derivatives versus physical securities both in swap and futures. We expect derivatives should also outperform physical securities now that the RBA has finished their asset purchasing program, with supply from the AOFM also likely to increase next financial year.

The Portfolio’s credit security selection performed broadly in line with the benchmark. Higher-beta corporate bonds and subordinated financial paper have widened more aggressively in the selloff, as continued rate volatility and the Ukrainian invasion sparked a global risk-off move. Residential mortgage-backed security (RMBS) spreads also moved wider in Q1 as new deals in the primary market continued to print wider than secondary levels, while short-dated credit was impacted by new issuance. The Portfolio continued to benefit from the higher-thanbenchmark carry over the quarter.

Performance Commentary - March 31, 2021

The first quarter of 2021 was dominated by two evolving themes: the rollout of vaccinations and the delivery of further US fiscal stimulus. The two themes combined to provoke an upward revision to global growth expectations for 2021, even though the details reveal a very divergent path to recovery across regions and sectors. Asset markets embraced these themes, with equities pushing to new highs while credit spreads tightened. Bond yields surged higher, led by the US and Australia but with some marked divergence where the macro news was less positive, such as Europe, which had a more muted rise in yields through the quarter.

The rollout of vaccinations is highly dependent on supply. The UK and the US have led the way amongst developed countries, whereas supply problems have significantly hindered the rollout across Europe and, across emerging countries, the picture is even more divergent. For the US, early in the quarter the Democratic party secured both the Georgia Senate seats and this gave them control of Congress, albeit on the slenderest of margins in the Senate – relying on the casting vote of the Vice President. However, this was enough for the Democrats to successfully pass another large fiscal stimulus package in March, including a substantial cash payment to qualifying households. With vaccination progress enabling a gradual re-opening and fiscal stimulus taking place, financial markets quickly embraced this positive news even though the economic fundamentals only began to improve through March.

Central banks have maintained a cautious stance despite the emergence of positive news on vaccines and fiscal stimulus, with the US Federal Reserve stating that that the activity gap created by the pandemic is large and will take some time to close when many of the inflationary pressures are most likely temporary. This consistent theme around developed countries has caused yield curves to steepen, as short-end rates remain strongly supported by the prospect of steady policy for some time to come. The Fund outperformed the benchmark this quarter, driven by security selection.

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