Home / News / Small funds defy the odds in the world of bigger is better

Small funds defy the odds in the world of bigger is better

Some of super's best performers this year are also its smallest, and new research from Frontier finds that asset allocation is more influential than size and scale when it comes to generating alpha.
News

Using SuperRatings’ SR50 Balanced universe to determine the ‘top ten’ funds, Frontier found that seven of the last year’s top performers had less than $30 billion in assets, with five less than $15 billion. Other smaller funds not in the SuperRatings’ survey, including First Super and MIESF, were among a small handful of funds to post positive returns in a tough year.

“Funds with a larger allocation to unlisted assets typically performed best,” Frontier wrote in the note. “The impact of periodic valuations of unlisted assets has helped portfolios hold up during the ‘risk-off’ sentiment of the last twelve months. This was a much stronger determinant of outcomes than fund size.”

However, the correlation between size and performance does hold up “to an extent” at the bottom end, with the poorest performers all having less than $5 billion FUM. And over a ten-year horizon, Frontier found a stronger correlation between size and performance, though the research questions whether “larger funds have better performance because they are large, or whether they are large because they have better performance”. Not all large funds are at the top of the performance charts.

“Consistent performance leads to optimal long-term performance,” said Frontier senior consultant Daniel Leslie. “Of course, there will be individual below-par years along the way but of the ‘top ten over ten’, only AustralianSuper and HESTA have outperformed the median fund in every financial year. Most of the top ten funds have had periods of underperformance in the last decade, and Hostplus as the best performer over ten years, has even had periods of bottom quartile returns.”

Frontier senior consultant David Carruthers (photo at top) also noted that some of last year’s failing funds – which included the likes of Australian Catholic Super – were at the top of the league tables this year, and Frontier suggests that the performance test needs to be updated to include measures of investment performance across multiple time periods, level of fees and costs, and size of assets and cashflow position, in order to be satisfied that funds are of appropriate quality for members.

“A number of last year’s ‘failing funds’ produced some of the best returns this year,” Carruthers said. “It’s a reflection that some of those funds may not have been bad funds after all. The members that stayed with those funds have done very well this last year.”

Lachlan Maddock

  • Lachlan is editor of Investor Strategy News and has extensive experience covering institutional investment.




    Print Article

    Related
    ‘A force to be reckoned with’: Funds heading for retirement tipping point

    Some members are excited for retirement, while others approach it with a “real sense of shame and fear”. Funds are going to have to figure out how to cater to both groups or risk failing them all.

    Lachlan Maddock | 20th Nov 2024 | More
    Super early access for housing would hurt every member’s balance: Aware

    Opening up early access to super for housing would have a negative effect on the balances of even those members that don’t dig into their savings, with funds forced to adopt more conservative investment strategies and hold more liquid assets.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th Nov 2024 | More
    HESTA brings total portfolio thinking to ‘nuanced’ housing crisis

    The circa $88 billion industry fund for workers in health and community services reckons that alleviating the affordable housing crisis will boost its other investments by easing the cost of living and inflation.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th Nov 2024 | More
    Popular