April 2025
Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Strategy: Global Active Credit
Return (since Sep. 2024): -0.28% gross (-0.61% net)
Net return volatility (since Sep. 2024): 4.63% pa

Objective: The Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund (CAGBF) targets returns in excess of the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporate Bond Index (hedged to AUD), after management costs, by 1.0% to 2.0% per annum over rolling 3 year periods.

Strategy: The Fund offers an active fixed-income strategy focused on mispricing in global government and corporate bonds with the aim of delivering superior risk-adjusted returns over the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporate Index (hedged to AUD). The Fund seeks to have broadly similar interest rate duration risk to the Index subject to any active decisions implemented by the Portfolio Manager to generate excess returns.
The Fund is permitted to invest in Australian and global bonds, such as government and semi-government bonds, bank and corporate bonds, hybrid and asset-backed securities, including residential-mortgage-backed securities, issued in G10 currencies hedged to Australian Dollars, as well as cash, cash equivalents and related derivatives. It can borrow, use derivatives and short-sell, meaning it may be geared (or leveraged). Leverage can amplify gains and also amplify losses.

Period Ending 2025-04-30Gross ReturnNet ReturnBloomberg Global Agg Corp Index (AUD Hedged)Gross Excess Return†Net Excess Return†
1 month-0.22%-0.27%0.34%-0.56%-0.61%
3 months0.63%0.49%1.46%-0.84%-0.97%
6 months1.48%1.19%2.01%-0.53%-0.82%
Inception  Sep. 2024-0.28%-0.61%0.12%-0.39%-0.73%

† The Excess Return column represents the gross and net return above the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporate Index (AUD hedged)

Disclaimer: Past performance does not assure future returns. Returns are shown net of management fees and costs unless otherwise stated. All investments carry risks, including that the value of investments may vary, future returns may differ from past returns, and that your capital is not guaranteed. To understand Fund’s risks better, please refer to the Product Disclosure Statement available at Coolabah Capital Investments' website.
Note: all portfolio statistics other than yields and duration are reported on gross asset value
Av. Portfolio Credit Rating A Modified Interest Rate Duration 6.09 years
Portfolio MSCI ESG Rating AA Gearing Permitted? Yes
No. Cash Accounts 12 Net Annual Volatility (since incep.) 4.63%
No. Notes and Bonds 132
Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Disclaimer: Past performance does not assure future returns. Returns are shown net of management fees and costs unless otherwise stated. All investments carry risks, including that the value of investments may vary, future returns may differ from past returns, and that your capital is not guaranteed. To understand Fund’s risks better, please refer to the Product Disclosure Statement available at Coolabah Capital Investments' website.
The since inception gross (net) return of -0.28% gross (-0.61% net) is the total annual return earned by the fund since Sep. 2024, including interest income and movements in the price of the bond portfolio after all fund fees (assuming net returns are calculated from the historic gross returns using the current fee structure as displayed in the Product Disclosure Statement). The net return quoted applies to the Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class, with quarterly distributions reinvested. Investment return will vary depending upon investment date and any additional investments and withdrawals made. The annualised volatility estimate of 4.63% pa is based on the standard deviation of net daily returns since inception, which are then annualised, attributable to the Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class.
Portfolio Managers Christopher Joye, Ashley Kabel, Roger Douglas, Fionn O'Leary (Coolabah Capital Investments)
APIR Code ETL1382AU Fund Inception 23-Sep-24
ISIN AU60ETL13827 Distributions Quarterly
Benchmark Bloomberg Global Agg Corp Index (AUD hedged) Unit Pricing Daily (earnings accrue daily)
Asset-Class Global Credit Mgt. & Admin Fee 0.55% pa
Target Return 1-2% pa above Benchmark after fees Perf. Fee 20.5% of outperformance of Benchmark after fees
Investment Manager Coolabah Capital Investments (Retail) Custodian Citigroup
Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Portfolio commentary: In April, the long duration daily liquidity Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund (CAGBF) returned -0.22% gross (-0.27% net), compared to the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporate Index Hedged AUD (0.34%). Over the previous 6 months, CAGBF returned 1.48% gross (1.19% net), compared to the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporate Index Hedged AUD (2.01%). CAGBF ended April with a running yield of 5.81% pa, a weighted-average credit rating of A, and a portfolio weighted average MSCI ESG rating of AA.

Since the inception of CAGBF in September 2024, it has returned -0.28% gross (-0.61% net), compared to the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporate Index Hedged AUD (0.12%). While CAGBF's return volatility since inception has been low at around 4.63% pa (measured using daily returns), as a daily liquidity product with assets that are marked-to-market using executable prices, volatility does exist. This contrasts with illiquid credit (eg, loans and high yield bonds) wherein assets that have very high risk can appear to have remarkably low volatility, which is, in fact, just a mirage explained by the inability to properly value these assets using executable prices.

Strategy commentary: April subjected investors to some of the most extreme volatility we have seen since the 2008 crisis. The good news is that this presented Coolabah with tremendous buying opportunities, which we ruthlessly capitalised on. At the worst point during the month, the S&P500 and Nasdaq indices had declined by 22 per cent and 27 per cent, respectively, from their 2025 peaks.

This was accompanied by violent moves in all liquid, or tradeable, asset classes. Bitcoin plunged 28% from its US$107,000 peak in January to US$77,000 in early April. Credit spreads on US bank bonds spiked to levels that were close to the wides observed during 2022 when markets were capitulating as a function of the worst relative interest rate shock on record (in 2022, the S&P500 and Nasdaq slumped by 26% and 36%, respectively, from their prior peaks).

More specifically, the credit spread above the cash rate paid by US financial senior-ranking (or subordinated) bonds jumped by 65bps (80bps) from 90bps to 155bps (130bps to 210bps) in April at the wides. Over the somewhat circular price action during the month, global credit spreads still moved sharply higher in Australia (+10bps), the US (+13bps), UK (+12bps) and Europe (+15bps).

While Australia remained the lowest beta (or volatile) debt market, as we had anticipated, its elasticity to global spread moves was nonetheless somewhat higher than it has been in the past, which liberated interesting trading opportunities.

As an example, the credit spread on Aussie 5-year major bank senior (subordinated) bonds leapt from circa 75bps (145bps) to 105bps (205bps) at the wides. These were historically enticing levels.

Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

5-year Constant Maturity Major Bank Senior Bond Spreads

5-year Constant Maturity Major Bank Subordinated Bond Spreads

In the ASX hybrid market, prices declined materially, although performance was more resilient relative to what we saw accompany similarly sized 20-30% equity moves in, for instance, the pandemic shock of March 2020.

Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

5-year Constant Maturity Major Bank Hybrid Spreads

On a peak-to-trough basis, the Solactive ASX Hybrids Index lost 2.3% in April, which was slightly more than the decline in global investment-grade credit (where the Bloomberg Global Aggregate IG Credit Index (zero duration) had a peak-to-trough loss of 1.5%). The ASX hybrid market outperformed the draw-down in high yield, or sub-investment grade, bonds as proxied by the Bloomberg Global High Yield Index, which fell by 3.0% at its worst. At their wides, 5-year major bank hybrid spreads on the ASX climbed from about 190bps to 265bps, although they have since settled at 215bps.

Solactive ASX Hybrids Index

Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

Bloomberg Global High Yield Index

Coolabah had a highly contrarian approach to portfolio construction and positioning throughout. Heading into April, we had undertaken a range of aggressively defensive measures, including:

Prior 2 April, we had hedged 15% of all our long-only credit risk and 25% of our long-short credit risk in addition to generally derisking over the preceding year. This meant we had tremendous dry powder to use when the volatility erupted.

We had argued for months that Trump was dead serious on his new tariff regime and desire to fully decouple from China. And we asserted that markets were very poorly positioned to deal with this contingency.

We had also warned investors to expect much higher volatility and wider credit spreads, which would nonetheless present buying opportunities. It was important for us to underscore the likelihood of heightened volatility due to the artificially smooth nature of asset prices in recent times, which could lull investors into a false sense of security. It is pretty clear that many were indeed complacent.

On 9-10 April, Coolabah cut all its hedges/shorts and started aggressively buying again. In particular, we bought $1.4 billion of credit on 9-10 April, which we extended to $4 billion of gross buying by the end of the month. We also engaged in $1.4 billion of selling (or $2.6 billion of net buying).

This activity meant that portfolio performance was much more resilient than it has been in prior periods when equities have declined 20-30%. It also meant that portfolios rebounded firmly in the second half of the month, which has continued in May.

Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd: Why did we pivot 180 degrees on 9-10 April after having been so bearish about the outlook? As noted above, we argued prior to April that markets were very poorly positioned for Trump’s new tariff regime. He did not disappoint on 2 April and again on (initially) 9 April with his uber-aggressive tariff framework, which was effectively tantamount to declaring a forever-trade-war on every country in the world. We asserted that Trump’s goals were straightforward:

The savage bond and equity market reaction to Trump’s tariff regime in April evidently convinced him that a more nuanced approach was required. There was also geo-political concern that he would drive key allies and trading partners into the arms of China.

During 9 April Trump engaged in a very sophisticated recalibration after imposing the proposed 2 April package at 12am on that day. Specifically, he offered every country in the world the opportunity to do a trade deal with the US via a three month deferral of their tariffs in lieu of a flat 10% rate that would apply during the negotiating period. At the same time, he boosted his Chinese tariffs to a shocking 145%. What most investors missed is that this actually had the effect of increasing the overall or effective tariff rate that the US was applying across all countries from 32% to 35%, albeit by shifting the incidence or burden of these taxes largely on to China’s shoulders.

It was exactly what financial markets wanted to see—the deal-making Trump in action. And so, the S&P500 embarked on an extraordinary rally and has since recovered a lot of its 22 per cent peak-to-trough draw-down. These were the most volatile market conditions observed since the global financial crisis.

It was, in fact, both Trumps at play: the compromising, mercenary Trump that investors like who is always eager to assuage their apprehensions; combined with a very hard-hitting geo-political and trade hawk who is singularly focussed on decoupling from China and restoring US military and economic hegemony.

For Coolabah, 9 April was a key inflexion point. Trump was demonstrating that he could listen to market signals and thread a much more nuanced needle. We saw this reflexivity in action days later when Trump initially declared that he wanted to sack the Fed chair Jay Powell, which promptly precipitated steep asset price declines, only to quickly walk his rhetoric back within 24 hours when he confirmed that there were, in fact, no plans to dispose of the embattled Fed chair.

Given the moves in credit spreads, a lot of the bad news was now in the price. A reasonable probability of a US recession was being handicapped. Investors expected poor data flowing from both the inflation shock and the disruption to economic activity. While the Fed is nervous about consumer inflation expectations, any recession would quickly compel it to furnish interest rate relief. And Trump was showing that he could be a more nimble actor than the worst of the April price action implied. It was, therefore, time to buy.

We bought in the eye of the storm on 9-10 April when many investors were rushing for the exits. When there was peak fear. Sadly, those fleeing crystallised losses at the worst possible point, highlighting the well-known adage that investors tend to time markets very poorly indeed.

Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd: Looking ahead, portfolio yields have improved despite market expectations for four more RBA rate cuts this year. Credit spreads in many of Coolabah’s key sectors are now trading on historically appealing levels (see the two charts below for US financial senior-ranking and subordinated spreads). Senior-ranking bonds issued in USD are especially interesting at present. And there has been a font of new primary market issuance in USD, EUR, and AUD that is coming with much more credible new issue concessions, which Coolabah has been keen to support. Combined, these variables should power future performance.

Bloomberg US Financial Senior Spreads

Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)

Strategy commentary cont'd:

Bloomberg US Financial Subordinated Spreads

Fund: Coolabah Active Global Bond Fund - Institutional Class
Return/Risk: -0.28% gross/-0.61% net (4.63% pa volatility)
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Performance Disclaimer:
Past performance does not assure future returns. All investments carry risks, including that the value of investments may vary, future returns may differ from past returns, and that your capital is not guaranteed. This information has been prepared by Coolabah Capital Investments (Retail) Pty Limited ACN 153 555 867. It is general information only and is not intended to provide you with financial advice. You should not rely on any information herein in making any investment decisions. To the extent permitted by law, no liability is accepted for any loss or damage as a result of any reliance on this information. The Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) and Target Market Determination (TMD) for the funds should be considered before deciding whether to acquire or hold units in it. A PDS and TMD for these products can be obtained by visiting www.coolabahcapital.com. Neither Coolabah Capital Investments (Retail) Pty Limited, Equity Trustees Limited nor their respective shareholders, directors and associated businesses assume any liability to investors in connection with any investment in the funds, or guarantees the performance of any obligations to investors, the performance of the funds or any particular rate of return. The repayment of capital is not guaranteed. Investments in the funds are not deposits or liabilities of any of the above-mentioned parties, nor of any Authorised Deposit-taking Institution. The funds are subject to investment risks, which could include delays in repayment and/or loss of income and capital invested. Past performance is not an indicator of nor assures any future returns or risks. Coolabah Capital Investments (Retail) Pty Limited (ACN 153 555 867) is an authorised representative (#000414337) of Coolabah Capital Institutional Investments Pty Ltd (AFSL 482238). Equity Trustees Ltd (AFSL 240975) is the Responsible Entity for these funds. Equity Trustees Ltd is a subsidiary of EQT Holdings Limited (ACN 607 797 615), a publicly listed company on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX: EQT). A Target Market Determination (TMD) is a document which is required to be made available from 5 October 2021. It describes who this financial product is likely to be appropriate for (i.e. the target market), and any conditions around how the product can be distributed to investors. It also describes the events or circumstances where the Target Market Determination for this financial product may need to be reviewed. The Fund’s Target Market Determination is available here' website.
Ratings Disclaimer:
MSCI Disclaimer: Neither MSCI nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the MSCI data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any of such data. Without limiting any of the foregoing, in no event shall MSCI, any of its affiliates or any third party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data have any liability for any direct, indirect, special, punitive, consequential or any other damages (including lost profits) even if notified of the possibility of such damages. No further distribution or dissemination of the MSCI data is permitted without MSCI’s express written consent.