InvestNow News – 17th July – Salt Funds Management – Performance update for the Salt NZ Dividend & Property Funds – June 2020
Article written by Roger Clayton, Salt Funds Management – 10th July
NZ’s S&P/NZX50 Gross Index posted a +16.9% return over the quarter to bring the year-to-date performance to nearly flat (-0.5%). The key performers were Pushpay (PPH +159%) due to two small guidance upgrades, Tourism Holdings (THL +82%) on cost-out and avoiding a capital raise thus far, and Air New Zealand (AIR +55%) as it recovered from depressed levels and amid a torrent of retail buying. The Fund lagged the benchmark in the extremely strong June quarter, rising by +15.69%. The largest positive by some distance was the Fund’s overweight in the high-yielding Turners (TRA, +52.9%) which recovered from a good deal of the punishment meted out to it in the March quarter. The largest headwind was having no holding in Pushpay Holdings (PPH, +159.3%). This soared as it delivered a result at the bottom-end of expectations but this came with better than expected guidance as the Covid crisis has accelerated the channel shift from physical to digital church donations that their app powers.
InvestNow News – 17th July – Salt Funds Management – Performance update for the Salt NZ Dividend & Property Funds – June 2020
Article written by Roger Clayton, Salt Funds Management – 10th July
NZ’s S&P/NZX50 Gross Index posted a +16.9% return over the quarter to bring the year-to-date performance to nearly flat (-0.5%). The key performers were Pushpay (PPH +159%) due to two small guidance upgrades, Tourism Holdings (THL +82%) on cost-out and avoiding a capital raise thus far, and Air New Zealand (AIR +55%) as it recovered from depressed levels and amid a torrent of retail buying. The Fund lagged the benchmark in the extremely strong June quarter, rising by +15.69%. The largest positive by some distance was the Fund’s overweight in the high-yielding Turners (TRA, +52.9%) which recovered from a good deal of the punishment meted out to it in the March quarter. The largest headwind was having no holding in Pushpay Holdings (PPH, +159.3%). This soared as it delivered a result at the bottom-end of expectations but this came with better than expected guidance as the Covid crisis has accelerated the channel shift from physical to digital church donations that their app powers.