Monthly Newsletter Coeli Absolute European Equity – November 2022

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Monthly Newsletter Coeli Absolute European Equity – November2022

NOVEMBER PERFORMANCE

The fund’s value increased by 2.9% in November (share class I SEK). The Stoxx600 (broad European index) increased during the same period by 6.8% and HedgeNordic’s NHX Equities increased provisionally by 1.2%. The corresponding figures for 2022 are a decrease of 28.9% for the fund, -6.3% for the Stoxx600 and -6.0% for NHX Equities.

 
EQUITY MARKETS / MACRO ENVIRONMENT
The positive trend that began in mid-October continued in November. The Fed raised the key interest rate at the beginning of the month by 75 basis points, fully in line with expectations. At the press conference afterwards, central banker Powell had an unexpectedly hawkish tone, which caused the risk appetite, once again, to collapse. The sentence from Powell that lowered the stock market was "incoming data since our last meeting suggests that the ultimate level of interest rates will be higher than previously expected". In the week after November 10th, all the world's financial eyes were on the US inflation data and for the first time in a long time the deviation was in the positive direction. Inflation on an annual basis came in at 6.3% against the expected 6.5%. This triggered huge relief among investors and the world's stock markets rose sharply while interest rates fell significantly. The Nasdaq stock exchange was the biggest winner, climbing by a whopping 7.5% that day! Below is Nasdaq's development during November. Note the movements on November 2nd, November 10th and November 30th when inflation decreased and the economy in terms of GDP numbers was stronger than expected. Source: Bloomberg The above events have increased the likelihood that the US economy will escape a recession. Expectations for the Fed's next rate hike in December also fell from another 75 basis point increase to 50 basis points. The US dollar weakened sharply, completely according to the textbook and that drove the risk appetite even further. Below is a year's development for the US ten-year interest rate. Source: Bloomberg Around November 10th, there was also news from China that more lenient quarantine rules would be implemented which further contributed to increased risk appetite. For several years China's economy has had a weak development, much due to its extreme covid policy. Companies with exposure to China rose sharply. A new investment for the fund, the Finnish elevator manufacturer, Kone, with significant operations in China, was one of those companies that strongly performed those days. At the end of November, unusual footage of citizens' wild protests against the country's harsh lockdowns was released. After almost three years in extreme hard lock-down, the line has been crossed for many and to us outsiders it seems undoubtedly insane. China's self-produced vaccine works poorly compared to that of the Western world. At the same time, the country refuses to buy foreign vaccines as it would have been a political defeat. Now it is speculated that a victorious exit from covid will soon be declared, where they will emphasize how harmless the infection has become. Below Chinese infection numbers. The third major event this month was President Joe Biden meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G20 meeting in Bali on November 15-16. It was the first meeting between them and even if the relations are not significantly better after the meeting than before, it can still be considered positive that they meet given the elevated tones that have been heard recently. All in all, Thursday, November 10th provided large amounts of fuel to the world's stock markets, while the share of cash held by the investor collective remained very high and investors were generally very depressed. There was also a strong sector rotation where previous winning stocks were sold, and losers were bought (simplified). The following two weeks saw massive buying actions covering short positions and driving share prices. Rarely have so many short positions been closed (bought) in a two-week period (according to Goldman Sachs). That says a lot about how cautiously positioned the market was. The image below shows the share of cash some way into November. The image below is from November 24th and shows that investors continued to buy significantly more puts than calls. The positioning has been easy with a negative market view which in the short term was completely wrong as the stock market stubbornly continued to rise, volatility fell, and the option value quickly eroded. Undoubtedly, the pain trade is still on the rise. Many managers have thrown in the towel for 2022 and there is some stress in the system regarding index levels creeping upwards. Source: Goldman Sachs Economic activity is now slowing as interest rate increases from the world's central banks take hold. The slowdown has different effects, but simply put, the consumer is at the forefront of increased interest and energy costs, as well as general cost inflation. The reverse applied almost three years ago when Covid struck. Then the crisis hit some companies hard, while the consumer experienced unusually good conditions with subsidies and savings that soared. Below is one of many examples that show a sharp slowdown in activity. Container traffic in Los Angeles port falling steeply. Turbulent! A few months ago, the German producer price index showed the largest monthly increase on record, which was followed by the largest monthly decrease on record. Source: Bloomberg, Societe Generale Clear signs of declining inflation have led the world's central banks to indicate in recent weeks that they are now likely to enter a softer phase with interest rate increases. It is completely in line with our expectations. The risk that central banks around the world will break the economy has decreased in recent weeks, which has contributed to the rise in the world's stock markets. It is not unlikely that the Fed's last rate hike will be the one that comes on December 14th (not consensus). Significant improvements in world bottlenecks also reduce cost pressures. If only China opens up too, it will be even better. When China picks up the pace, the price of oil will likely rise, which in turn will drive inflation. Oil prices are now around annual lows and lower than they were before Russia attacked Ukraine. Despite all the challenges, the supply of various groceries has been surprisingly good, which has contributed to falling prices in recent months. What continues to plague Europe are energy prices and that is on our naive politicians. It doesn't feel right when ECB chief Christine Lagarde is hoping for a warm and windy winter so that energy prices don't rise too much and key interest rates must be increased further. It feels somewhat blunt, very diplomatically put. The anger of the population is palpable and in order to remain in their well-paid positions, the politicians are now busy paying out various subsidies so that people can afford to pay their electricity bills. That in itself drives the inflation that central banks are fighting against. Professor John Hassler at Stockholm University makes the assessment that the various proposals for electricity price subsidies that have been discussed in Sweden have led to an extra 25 basis points increase in the policy rate. It's like a vicious circle reference in an excel model. In the past few days, a report from the European system operators' cooperation organization was released which stated that Southern Sweden, electricity area 4, has the least installed electricity production capacity in relation to expected maximum use among all 50 European electricity areas! The impressive own goal is entirely self-inflicted, and the achievement has been in the making for a few years. One wonders what evil the population has done to deserve such mediocre political decisions that led to such extremely serious consequences? The new government does not impress either and has had a shaky start with diffuse deliveries of clear election promises. The difference between the American 10-year-old and 2-year-old is now down to negative levels (below zero, far right), which has not happened at any time during the 2000s. It clearly signals a serious slowdown in the economy, and the relationship is usually an accurate indicator. Source: Bloomberg The Bank of England stated that Brexit is complicit in the high levels of inflation in the country, which in turn created a deficit in the labor supply and weakened the economy. Britain's growth potential has lagged all major economies except Mexico due to a collapse in productivity and major problems with a limited labor supply. The absence of the lost empire contributed to probably the worst political decision in Europe in the last 50 years. In an attempt to lighten the mood, we recommend watching the following clip. A rebuttal from Nigel Farage, a fanatical Brexit supporter and instrumental in the entire political process. Watch video on Twitter  Another strong indicator of Britain's gradually reduced importance in the world is the image below. In just a few years, it has lost a superior lead in total market capitalization compared to other European countries. After all, the pound is (together with another currency) the worst currency in the Western world this year. The other currency is of course the Swedish krona. That has greatly contributed to the fact that the traffic over the Öresund Bridge (connecting Sweden and Denmark) is now back at levels from autumn 2019, which is very gratifying. However, it is mostly traffic from Denmark, as the Malmö/Lund region has turned into one big one-pound-land for Danes. Source: Bloomberg If you have the slightest interest in politics the below interview with the loyal former Vice President, Mike Pence, interviewed by ABC News is recommended. The interview was released in mid-November, the day before Donald Trump announced that he will run for president in 2024 (no coincidence). It is the first interview Pence has given since the storming of the Capitol on January 6th, 2021. According to Pence, the president acted ruthlessly towards him, his family and everyone else who was there that day because he was completely passive. It is a shocking interview and completely unimaginable that it could happen in the world's most powerful democracy. Donald Trump himself had the worst imaginable start to his announcement that he will aim for the presidency. Never count him out though. Watch video on YouTubeLong positionsAccelleron During October and November, we bought shares in the Swiss company Accelleron. The company was spun off from ABB as recently as October and sells turbochargers for large engines in the marine and energy segments. Every year, Accelleron delivers around 10,000 new turbochargers. Product revenue (which comes from the actual turbochargers) makes up about 25% of sales, while more stable aftermarket revenue (maintenance/service and spare parts sales) accounts for the remainder. Because the revenue mix is so heavily weighted toward the aftermarket, Accelleron should have relatively stable revenue even in a recession scenario. Despite spending around seven percent of revenue on research and development, the company should be able to manage with an operating margin of around 25%. Combined with good capital efficiency, the return on capital employed is around 35%. The weak point in the investment case is the growth, which is not expected to be much higher than 2–4% per year (at profit level). However, it is more than compensated by the low valuation of around 9x operating profit, which can be considered very attractive. In connection with the company being spun off, we saw an opportunistic opportunity to buy the shares at a discount. Since Accelleron is Swiss with a small market capitalization in relation to ABB's, there were probably many ABB owners (such as Sweden funds) who, due to fund restrictions and other reasons, did not want and/or were able to own Accelleron shares. This created initial selling pressure which we used to purchase our first shares. Since then, the stock has recovered. In November, the share rose by 13%. 4imprint The best stock of the month is called 4imprint, which rose 22%. In our August letter we wrote about the company, which in many ways has an American operation even though the stock is listed in London. In short, the business is about distributing giveaways, i.e., items that are often given away as gifts for marketing purposes. Since we last wrote about the company, management has once again upgraded its outlook for the full year. Despite the share rising by roughly 50% this year, the company is still valued at 13-14x operating profit, which we think is attractive. LVMH Since the start of the fund almost five years ago, we have owned the luxury conglomerate LVMH on and off. This month was especially prosperous after there were increasing indications that China may be softening its hard-line post-pandemic stance. However, the news flow on this has been extremely ambiguous, with luminaries speaking in favour of an easing one day, followed by the opposite the next. Regardless, LVMH benefits if the Chinese consumer can come back to a greater extent. The stock rose 15%in November and is now trading around its highest level. With a market capitalization of 360 billion euros (roughly half of Sweden's GDP), it is undoubtedly one of the world's most successful companies. When Bernard Arnault started the business in 1987, the market capitalization was 500 million euros. Below is a picture of the course development over the past five years. Source: BloombergWincanton In November, our British logistics company Wincanton reiterated that it believes it will meet analysts' expectations for the full year. We think that is very good, given that expectations have been at the same high level all year despite the gradual worsening of the macroeconomic climate. Next year, there is a possible trigger in that the company's large pension debt will be reassessed. This will probably mean that Wincanton can reduce its provisions for the pension liability drastically (possibly completely), which will give the company a completely different cash flow profile. ISS One of our top stocks for 2022 is ISS. As of the end of November, the stock had risen 23% during the year and 12% for the month in isolation. In November, ISS held a capital market day where it announced its goal of growing by 4-6% annually, to an operating margin of five percent. As we mentioned briefly in the previous monthly letter the company also came out with a nice trading update at the beginning of the month which, in combination with a positive stock, caused the share to rise. Throughout the year, ISS has been one of the fund's largest positions and for long periods of time the largest. Below is a picture of this year's price development. Source: BloombergPets at Home One of our weaker stocks in November is Pets at Home, which fell 9%. Although the company's half-year report, released during the month (for the financial year ending in March), reiterated the forecast for the full year we guess that the result as such caused the market to question whether management can achieve what it has communicated. After several days of analysis, we feel confident that the company will do exactly this, and for that reason we have also taken advantage of the situation and increased our position by almost 50%. Rugvista Rugvista released their report during November. The stock has had a tough journey on the stock market this year, like many other consumer companies. Sales were in line with Carnegie's expectations, while operating profit came in just over 130% better, largely thanks to more effective marketing. The conversion rate (the number of website visitors who place an order) also improved significantly in the quarter. We continue to like Rugvista and increased our position following the report. The stock rose 22% during November, and as of today has risen roughly 60% in five weeks. Teleperformance Biggest disappointment for the month was Teleperformance, our (former) French holding that is in the business of outsourcing customer support and a range of related services. We had reduced our position ahead of the company's Q3 update, which was positive and in line with market expectations. Shortly afterwards, information was published by a newspaper which stated that the company did not treat its staff in Colombia well. We judged the company's response to the accusations to be inadequate. Since we could no longer form a good idea of risk versus return, we chose to sell the holding at a loss. The stock fell 21% in November. Short positions The short portfolio contributed with a negative result during the month. The largest negative contribution come from our short positions in a Swedish small company index and in the larger Swedish OMXS30 index. Exposure The net exposure, adjusted for our unlisted holdings, at the beginning and end of the month was 76% and 79% respectively. Summary As expected, performance for November was positive and the fourth quarter is so far the third strongest quarter for the European stock markets in 30 years! The Nasdaq, which developed weaker than several benchmark indices, closed at +5.5%. The entire rise basically came on the last day of November as the big technology companies like Amazon, Google and Meta have been under pressure for a long time. The market value of these three companies now corresponds to the total value of Apple. That development is also reflected in the fact that Goldman Sachs' hedge fund clients are now underweight the major technology companies by roughly 5% in relation to the S&P500. The biggest underweight since tracking began of the positioning in 2016. Source: Goldman Sachs It is also clearly visible in the image below which shows the market breadth measuring the proportion of stocks that trade above the 200-day rolling average. Nasdaq lags Europe and the S&P500. The higher the number, market breadth, the more balanced/credible the rise in the market. The rise now therefore looks considerably more credible than in August. We also note that November offered by far the highest activity of the year in ABOs (Accelerated Bookbuilding Offerings) with a total of USD 25 billion from companies such as Pernod, Air France and Swedish Catena. The reporting season is over, and the year is coming to an end. The general impression is that the companies have so far withstood the situation well, often maintaining profitability despite all the problems. Geopolitically the world is still in a dangerous situation, but at least it hasn't gotten worse. Europe has been a positive surprise in terms of unity towards Russia, which is gratifying. Bottleneck problems are gradually decreasing, the food supply is working better than feared six months ago and we now have, at least in the US, falling inflation. That pushes interest rates down and the USD has also lost value, which is positive. The picture below shows that the euro has strengthened by 7-8% against the dollar in the past month. Source: Bloomberg The price of copper, a strong indicator of the global economy at large, indicates that US interest rates are now set to consolidate (which they already appear to be doing). At the end of November, the Financial Times had a large article in which leaders of the leading European companies stated that they had been too pessimistic in the last six months. The outcome so far has been better than feared. All of this together has of course contributed to the strong development during October and November. The recent rally has created some pain for investors who had too much cash, too defensive portfolio and short positions that developed very strongly in a short period of time. The US companies have massive buyback programs underway that are roughly double historical levels, and $10 billion worth of shares a day are being bought back. Systematic funds, non-fundamental and trend-following, have also picked up and bought a lot of stocks in recent weeks. The inflow into equity funds has been a positive surprise. The image below shows inflows to various ETFs. Admittedly lower than the record year 2021, but about double compared to 2020. Pain trade is still on the rise. There is more liquidity to draw from. Continued record levels in US money market funds. But in the real economy, it will get worse before it gets better. Below is the US household savings ratio since 1959. An unprecedented total crash and after paying $23 for an espresso in New York last week, it's understandable. Source: Goldman Sachs The inverted US two-year interest rate signals a continued sharp decline in economic activity. Source: UBS We assess that the recent rise is still considered a bear market rally by consensus, and we will go down to old (or new) lows again. This is because the downward adjustments of the profits must go down further and that the central banks will continue to raise interest rates. Rarely has a downturn in the economy been as expected as now. As everyone knows, the stock market is not in the real economy here and now, but rather 6-9 months into the future. The image below shows that it is entirely possible for the stock market to give a positive return despite falling earnings. Those of you who were there in 2009 will remember that, for example, cyclical shares gave a very strong return. It was really shaky in March 2009 when the stock market started its recovery. bild 26 Source: Societe Generale The image below shows that, based on historical data, the stock market begins to accelerate six months before the economy turns around, that is, at the same time that profit estimates are still being dialled down. It is clear that the declining phase in the economy has begun, and the debate is now when it can turn up again. Source: Goldman Sachs Below is a picture illustrating the historical returns after the market bottomed out in various economic recoveries. We guess that we will be in a lower economic growth phase when the economy recovers. Source: UBS The market is surprisingly often right and in recent months banks, trading companies, construction companies, cars and small companies have had a stronger performance than the large broad indexes. It signals that the market's concern about a recession has diminished. Below is the valuation level for the major stock markets. Denmark is at the highest level driven by Novo Nordisk, which weighs heavily in the index, and which has had a strong year behind it. Sweden is around the median value and Great Britain far below. Italy has its constant political problems. The US, which is not visible in the picture, is traded at around 18x earnings against the median value around 15x, clearly above and a factor that makes us significantly more positive about Europe's stock markets ahead of 2023 than the US's. The average for Europe at the time of writing is around 12x earnings. Below clearly shows the valuation difference between the US and Europe and the strong multiple contraction that took place during the year. TINA (There Is No Alternative) has been in effect for several years. But not anymore. The image below shows the difference between the US one-year yield and the earnings yield for the S&P500. In Europe, the picture is totally different as the corresponding figure is just under 6%and one of the reasons why we favour Europe over the US now. Source: Bloomberg, Goldman Sachs Smaller and medium-sized companies are Europe's equivalent of growth stocks. After a miserable 2022 with a very weak price development for many smaller companies, that asset class has now started to perform better than the broad indices. For us, Lindab is a perfect example where the share has had a strong development in recent weeks. This year's decline is still a whopping 60%. There is a lot that suggests that smaller companies will have a more favourable development in the coming year:
  • In many cases, a very weak price trend in 2022. Lack of liquidity has punished many shares severely. It should be reversable in the next year
  • Small companies have stronger growth over time
  • They are more often the subject of takeovers and there is plenty of mispricing
  • In the US, small companies are now traded at a record discount compared to larger companies.
  • Smaller companies' excess returns have historically started in a recession
In addition to the above points, it can be stated that small companies in relation to large companies have had a strong period in recent weeks. Cyclical companies have also had this compared to more defensive ones. This coincides with a falling USD and strengthening euro. Inflation in the US, which is likely to have peaked, will also result in further falling interest rates. This in turn weakens the USD further and, all else being equal, is positive for risk appetite where smaller companies typically benefit more than larger companies. Our thought from last month's letter that the market may be about to break out of a long period of range bound trading looks to be correct so far. Compared to previous bear market rallies during the year which were based on optimism which then failed, the latest rise is driven by an extreme pessimism where the development then surprised positively. The central banks have started to soften and just the fact that we are moving forward in time is positive as we approach a move towards a softer central bank policy. A decline in the market usually bottoms out when the previous winners, the generals, capitulate in the market and consolidate. This is quite true for the large FAANG companies in the US. All this is a very different compared to how it looked in August. The total capitulation of Britain's political leaders regarding their budget clearly shows that it is the financial market that is largely dictating the conditions, especially for indebted countries. It is not unreasonable since it is the market participants who lend the capital. It was also very clear when Italy's new Prime Minister presented the budget that they do not want to repeat Britain's mistakes. The same also applies to the highest degree in Sweden, where the new government gave an unusually Lutheran and frugal message. The political risk has decreased. Russia's vile attacks against Ukraine are still ongoing and the outcome of this is difficult to predict, but it seems less likely that Russia would win the war. China recently made a clear mark against Russia that the use of nuclear weapons is absolutely prohibited, which is of course positive (but this is a very difficult matter to understand). The frequency of comments that China is beginning to ease its Covid restrictions is increasing all the time. Soon they may also become reality, which would be very positive for the world economy. In the very short term, until the turn of the year, we will likely experience further positive returns. This despite the disappointment over the labour force figures that came on Friday, December 2nd. After the turn of the year, we roll into a new reporting season where the difference between the companies' conditions will become even clearer and which will likely lead to some turbulence but also new opportunities. The positive Covid effects in society and economies are ebbing away, but at the same time the Goldman Sachs Financial Conditions (weekly compilation of stock and bond markets as well as the banking systems) have now improved so much that they are on par with what it looked like when the US the central bank began its record interest rate hikes before the summer. This is clearly positive, see below. bild 34 Source: Goldman Sachs Finally, after 10 years of growth for passive capital that buys and sells blindly and with a 2022 where macro has controlled most of the development for the stock market, we believe that the conditions for a significantly better working climate for stock pickers in 2023 will be good. We thank you for all your support and communication during the year and wish you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!! Mikael & Team Malmö on 6th of December2022 [/et_pb_text][et_pb_post_title _builder_version="3.0.89" title="on" meta="off" author="off" date="off" categories="off" comments="off" featured_image="off" featured_placement="below" text_color="dark" text_background="off" border_style="solid" module_class="gen-single-news-heading-module gen-trustee-single-headline" date_format="d M, Y" border_style_all="solid" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on" /][et_pb_text admin_label="Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund R-SEK" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" module_class="gen-table-module" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"]

Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund

Performance in Share Class Currency1 MthYTD3 yrsSince incep
Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund - R SEK1.30%-0.93%3.38%14.52%
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Gustav Fransson

Portfolio Manager of Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund [/et_pb_text][et_pb_image _builder_version="3.0.89" src="https://coeli.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Alexander-Larsson-Vahlman.jpg" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="off" use_overlay="off" always_center_on_mobile="on" force_fullwidth="off" show_bottom_space="on" custom_margin="||21px|" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on" /][et_pb_text admin_label="Namn och title" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" module_class="gen-single-ingress-module" custom_margin="||40px|" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"]

Alexander Wahlman

Senior Analyst [/et_pb_text][et_pb_text admin_label="Top Holdings (%)" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" custom_margin="||20px|" module_class="gen-trustee-single-table" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"]
Top Holdings (%)
LANSBK 1.25% 18-17.09.254.1%
NORDEA HYP 1.0% 19-17.09.25 4.1%
SWEDBK 1.0% 19-18.06.254.1%
WHITE MOUNT FRN 17-22.09.473.9%
B2 HOLDING FRN 19-28.05.242.9%
  [/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][et_pb_row _builder_version="3.0.89" background_position="top_left" background_repeat="repeat" background_size="initial" module_class="gen-single-news-content-row gen-trustee-single-content-row" custom_padding="0px|||" custom_padding_phone="23px|||" custom_padding_last_edited="on|tablet" module_class_2="gen-trustee-single-sidebar" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"][et_pb_column type="2_3"][et_pb_text admin_label="Tillbaka-knapp" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" border_style="solid" custom_margin_tablet="||17px|" custom_margin_last_edited="on|desktop" module_class="gen-back-button hide-in-print" border_style_all="solid"] Note that the information below describes the share class (I SEK), which is a share class reserved for institutional investors. Investments in other share classes generally have other conditions regarding, among other things, fees, which affects the share class' return. The information below regarding returns therefore differs from the returns in other share classes. Return to Fund page [/et_pb_text][et_pb_text admin_label="Datum / Skriv ut" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" border_style="solid" custom_margin_tablet="||17px|" custom_margin_last_edited="on|desktop" module_class="gen-single-news-date-module gen-trustee-print-module hide-in-print" locked="on" border_style_all="solid"] [blog_post_date]
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Utveckling september
Fondens värde sjönk -5,1 procent i september (andelsklass I SEK). Stoxx600 (brett Europaindex) sjönk under samma period med -3,4 procent och HedgeNordics NHX Equities var preliminärt oförändrat. Motsvarande siffror för 2021 är en ökning om +21,6 procent för fonden, +14,0 procent för Stoxx600 och +6,4 procent för NHX Equities.  
Equity markets / Macro environment
After seven consecutive months of positive performance the world’s stock markets were poised for some degree of turbulence. Volatility was especially high in some equities and on Monday, September 20, the highest nominal volume ever traded was reached in options on the S&P500 (!) The broad European index fell by 3.4 percent in September compared to the S&P500 which fell by 4.8 percent. The fund also had its first negative performance since October last year with a decline of 5,1 percent. More about that later. Despite high levels for many stock indices, sentiment among investors has been relatively gloomy. Bank of America's monthly survey recently showed that only 13 percent of managers expect a positive market in the future, which is the lowest figure since April 2020 (and that was clearly wrong). The reasons cited are China's growth problems, the crisis-stricken Chinese real estate giant Evergrande, the development of the delta variant, declining profit growth and, of course, rising inflation. However, they are still overweight equities which is perhaps not so strange when you have to pay to lend your capital to countries. As interest rates rose at the end of the month, the German 10-year interest rate followed with a giant step from - 0.25 percent to - 0.17 percent… The picture below is an overall risk indicator, and we are around zero (neutral). The news flow in September began with record high inflation figures in Europe at +3.0 which exceeded market expectations. The corresponding figure in July was + 2.2 percent. It was the fastest growth rate since November 2011 and several countries recorded up to five percent in inflation rate. The pressure on the ECB to reduce its support measures is increasing. On Friday, October 1, new inflation figures came in for September, which showed a further acceleration in the inflation rate by +3.4 per cent. The rate of change can be mostly attributed to rising energy prices that are starting to create real problems in the world's economies as well as agricultural shifts. The picture below shows that food prices are at record high levels over the past 60 years. The biggest losers are the poorest part of the population. In the slightly longer term it is forecasted that it is not excessive demand that will drive inflation, but rather a limited supply, and then both in terms of products and labour. At the end of September, long queues were reported at petrol stations across the UK when fuel ran out and there were not enough truck drivers to refuel. Prime Minister Boris Johnson urges his citizens to refuel sensibly and at a normal rate. You wanted Brexit, so there you go. In sheer desperation, Johnson has now issued 5,000 temporary short-term visas for temporary drivers. Good luck. M25 spring 2022? Below are European gas prices which have risen in a seemingly uncontrolled fashion and recorded the highest September prices ever. A silent prayer for the mild winter. We guess that this development will soon be a major topic in the media, and it will undoubtedly create various problems and somewhat reduce next year's expected growth. It feels reassuring that Per Bolund (Swedish Green Party MP) claims that there is no electricity shortage in Sweden because then the costs for ordinary people would be unbearably high during the winter (which of course they will be). Rising gas and electricity prices have led European politicians to start discussing billion-dollar subsidies (in euros) to households and manufacturers who will experience sharply rising electricity bills over the winter. Source: Bloomberg Henrik Svensson, site manager at the oil-fired power plant in Karlshamn (south Sweden), does not agree with Per Bolund that we have a surplus of electricity in the country. For large parts of September, the power plant ran at full capacity and burned 240k liters of oil per hour. Henrik Svensson believes that it is electricity shortages and high electricity prices that are behind the high production. He also says that there is a lack of planned power production in southern Sweden and that it will take many years before the electricity grid is strengthened and new electricity production is in place. Sweden today burns more oil than we have done in 10 years. A gigantic energy policy and climate policy failure signed by the Green Party. Source: Steget efter Winning candidate for this year's Christmas presents below. The change in the US 10-year interest rate created considerable pressure on, primarily, growth stocks at the end of the month. The performance dispersion for different sectors was very large in September with oil shares as a clear winner. This was also felt in the last days of September. Source: Bloomberg Below is the development for the US 10-year interest rate. The turbulence in the stock market was caused by the change in interest rate level breaking through on the upside, as can be seen in the chart. There have been countless attempts to explain the turbulence in recent weeks. The recent and significant amount of options being exercised, Evergrande, interventions by the Chinese government, Fed tapering, Bank of England expected to raise interest rates, delta variant, inflation, bottlenecks in production, difficulties in finding staff, rising energy prices and declining growth rates. We think it is enough to look at the picture below. Rising interest rates hit hard at growth companies' valuations. Goodbye Mutti and thank you for an extraordinary effort for Europe! Source: Nyhetsbyrån TT She was politically in a class of her own during the euro crisis ten years ago and Sweden also has her to thank for a lot. Despite a somewhat weaker performance in recent years, German citizens have experienced significantly better economic development than many others. On September 29, the covid-19 restrictions in Sweden were finally removed and we can now, in principle, start living a normal life again. The number of bookings for winter holidays skyrocketed to the great joy of the tourist and transport industry. In recent months, tourism activity in the Mediterranean has been "extraordinary" and much better than forecasted before the summer. Luxury travel is also reaching new heights. Private jet passengers to Mallorca increased by +70 percent in July compared to July 2019 with an average of 83 private jets per day landing in Palma. If you want to rent a yacht, you are being referred to next year as basically everything has already been fully booked. We now belong to a minority group. Passively managed capital exceeds actively managed capital for the first time ever. This will give us more opportunities as mispricing increases. In addition to being one of the world's best stock markets this year, Sweden also has the most listed companies in the entire EU. Bloomberg drew attention to the fact that there are now around 1,000 listed companies on the various trading platforms in Stockholm. More than 80 percent are smaller companies, and the list is filled with new listings every day until Christmas! For us, it is interesting as we are constantly looking for new potential core holdings. In recent weeks, we have identified one which we write about under Long Positions. We end this section with a picture that well reflects today's political level. Source: Kluddniklas
Long positions
Truecaller During September, we did a lot of work on the Swedish company Truecaller which will go public on October 8th. Truecaller is one of the most interesting companies we’ve seen in recent years. Truecaller has developed a phone application that can, among other things, identify unwanted calls from, for example, telemarketers. The app is one of the top ten most downloaded applications globally, and in some of the main markets such as India, Nigeria and Indonesia, it is one of the three most downloaded apps. As a Swedish company with headquarters in Stockholm, the firm has chosen to list on the Swedish stock exchange, which we are very happy about. Truecaller was founded in 2009 by Alan Mamedi and Nami Zarringhalam. They met at the Royal Technical University in Stockholm, and they continue to be active in the company as the CEO and Chief Strategic Officer (CSO), respectively. When they released the first version of the app, they received 10,000 downloads within one week. By 2013 they had reached over 10 million users globally and in Q2 2021 they had reached 278 million monthly users. Throughout their journey, Truecaller has attracted several well-known investors such as Sequoia Capital (early investors in Apple, Whatsapp, and Zoom among others), Atomica (Skype-founder Niklas Zennström’s investment company), and Kleiner Perkins (early investors in Google, Amazon, and Spotify among others). Until recently, revenue streams have mainly consisted of income from in-app advertising. In addition to this, there is a premium version where paying users can get additional functionalities. That business accounted for around 20 percent of revenues in 2020. During the fall of 2020, Truecaller launched a corresponding offering that targets corporates.  This part of the business allows B2B customers to be listed as verified callers when they call private people. It can for example be a security company that calls about an alarm or a courier company that needs to get in contact with a receiving customer. It is a common problem that these types of companies get rejected when the call-receiver doesn’t recognize the number. Truecaller declares that their product benefits from network effects. i.e., the product gets better the more people who use it (think Facebook). This can be relatively easy to appreciate since phone number identification inherently evolves from reporting of unwanted calls by the users, i.e., when enough people have reported an unwanted call Truecaller flags for this in the app). Over time, Truecaller has built a database containing 5.7 billion unique phone-identities. Network effects doesn’t just build a better product over time, they also increase the entry-barriers for potential competition. The majority of Truecaller’s income comes from developing countries. The company explains that the problems related to spam emails, harassment, unwanted calls, and messages are more common there than in the western world. India is Truecaller’s largest market where these types of problems are significant. One positive aspect of the geographical exposure is that it allows for a nice structural tailwind: the population growth in developed markets is much higher than in the west (driven by an increasing average age) and the smartphone penetration is growing fast. Historically, 97 percent of all app downloads have been organic. However, management has begun to experiment with user acquisitions by the way of advertisements through, for example, Facebook. The returns on user acquisition looks extremely attractive. In some markets, such as India, Truecaller could achieve a return on investment of up to 20x on every spent dollar. In more mature markets, such as the USA, the same multiple amounts to 4x, still very attractive. Indonesia, which is a relatively new market to the company, has a multiple of 0.8x. This means any user acquisition spend in Indonesia is unprofitable at this point. However, management is confident that the return profile will wander above the 1x as more users join and the network effects take place. In summary, the investment opportunities are plentiful and attractive – and unique. In summary, several things speak for significant growth in the future. The investment in paid user acquisition, a sharpened premium-offer, the newly launched B2B product and continued growth of the advertising business. In addition to this, acquisitions may likely follow. Growth has been prioritized over profitability and it is only recently that the company began to report profits. In 2019 sales grew by 57 percent. In 2020 the corresponding figure was 64 percent, and during the first half of 2021 the company’s sales grew with as much as 151 percent in comparison to the same period last year (which was partly affected by the pandemic). During the first half of this year, the company’s operating margin was 32 percent. As you can imagine, Truecaller is very capital-efficient. Working capital is very low which gives a nice cash conversion and a very high return on capital employed – all attributes that are required to create a very successful and valuable company over time. Truecaller targets a revenue growth of at least 45 percent between 2021-2024e. After 2024 the EBITDA-margin should be at least 35 percent. The sum of the year-on-year growth and the EBITDA-margin should amount to at least 70 percent (a variant of the rule of 40 that tries to balance growth and profitability). We don’t think it will be difficult to reach these targets and the analyst estimates we have looked at are cautious, especially regarding profitability. In our preliminary prognosis for 2023, our EBITDA-estimate is around 16 percent ahead of the analyst estimates that we’ve studied. This is based on that Truecaller can continue to grow sales much faster than hiring new people while the gross margin improves slightly in coming years. The gross margin is an interesting aspect of the equity story. Truecaller’s gross margin amounts to approximately 70 percent. Most of the cost of sales consists of platform fees to Apple and Google. Since Apple and Google practically control the distribution channels for apps together, a duopoly has occurred and prices for app-developers such as Truecaller have remained high around 25-30 percent of sales. This situation is now heavily criticized from all parts of the world since the situation is not considered competitive, for example look at this analysis about an American court ruling concerning a twist between Epic Games and Apple. We believe Google and Apple’s fees will decrease over time – which would be a positive event for Truecaller. Furthermore, Truecaller’s new business deal bypasses Goggle and Apple, which gives a gross margin of close to 100 percent. This will strengthen the profitability even more. There are of course risks associated with the dependence on Google/Apple (which is the case for every company in the application business); the geographical exposure and one should never write off the threat of competition even if it seems far away at this stage. However, we do believe the benefits outweighs the negatives. Truecaller has excellent financial characteristics, operational founders with large shareholdings who will remain active in the business and some of the world’s most well-known investors behind it. We therefore look forward to being included as an anchor investor ahead of the stock exchange listing on October 8th. We are even more excited to follow the company’s successes in current and new markets in the coming years. CVS Group One of the happiest days of the month was when our veterinarian company CVS Group released their interim numbers. Once again, the company beat analysts’ expectations which have been raised several times over the course of the year. In the first two months of the new financial year (which begins in July), the company has grown by 17 percent. This can be compared with the growth expectations for the full year which, before the report release, were 7 percent. Once again, analysts have thus far been “forced” to upgrade their assumptions. In a sour September stock market, the share fell 3 percent. It becomes clear that the positive effect of the pandemic on pet ownership is more tenacious than ever. Pets live for many years, and we believe many underestimated the importance of the large number of new customers during the pandemic. Below is a graph of Google searches for veterinarians in the UK as well as data from the Swedish Board of Agriculture regarding the number of newly registered dogs. We speculate that the UK has similar trends as Sweden. The data points are also positive for our other pet company Swedencare. Pet companies are obviously still hot; right now there’s a bidding war going on over the German pet company Zooplus, where EQT is currently in the lead with the highest bid. We also note that there have been several venture capital-led acquisitions of veterinary companies at higher multiples than CVS is valued at. Source: Jordbruksverket, Coeli Source: Google Trends, Coeli Lindab Since our first investments in Lindab in the autumn of 2019, the thesis has always been that the building systems business segment did not fit into the business and in September, management finally found a buyer for the company. The transaction entails a write-down of goodwill corresponding to SEK 430 million, but it is cash flow neutral. Lindab took the opportunity to update its financial targets; the company now wants to grow by 10 percent per year (of which approximately two thirds are through acquisitions) and reach an operating margin of at least 10 percent (previously 10 percent over a business cycle). The share responded positively to the message. We noted broad insider purchases in Lindab during the month, also from CEO Ola Ringdahl himself, which we think bodes well for the report in October. Despite this the share price decreased 8 percent in September. Victoria We have written several times about the British flooring company Victoria, which in September had a weak share price development of 17 percent. By all accounts, the company is doing well – during the month it was reported that sales rose 70 percent compared to 2020, and 50 percent compared to 2019. If you only partially extrapolate these figures for the rest of the year, it is obvious that analysts’ expectations are too low. We believe that this month’s decline is related to flows: growth companies and small and mid-cap companies were some of the most affected sectors in September – Victoria was hit from both sides. We have increased our position in recent days. The Pebble Group One of the month’s (few) joys was Pebble Group. As we previously wrote, the company is active in the market for gift advertising, i.e. gifts that companies give to customers, employees, and other stakeholders for marketing purposes. In September the company came out with its half-year figures that were better than expected. Pebble’s software division, Facilisgroup, is growing better than our expectations. This is also the part we believe the market is valuing too low. The stock rose 10 percent in September. Knaus Tabbert During the last trading day in September, our German motorhome manufacturer Knaus Tabbert announced that the forecasts for 2021 must be lowered due to component shortages. We are not particularly surprised that this has happened given what we have seen from other vehicle manufacturers. If the company can remedy these supplier problems, management believes that 2022 will be unaffected at best, as Knaus still has a bursting order book, increased production capacity and more suppliers from January next year. The share fell 7 percent in September.
Short positions
The short portfolio contributed with a negative result during the month. Our short-term negative positions in the German DAX had the largest negative contribution. Some stock specific short positions that contributed positively to the result were Swedish Dometic, German Henkel and Norwegian NEL.
Exposure
The net exposure, adjusted for our unlisted holdings, at the beginning and end of the month was 76 and 74 percent, respectively.
Summary
September's negative return of x percent also meant the end of the fund's, so far, longest period of positive return (10 months). We are obviously disappointed with that, but we have been in the game long enough to understand that equities sometimes must fall to be able to refuel and continue their upward trajectory. In general, September was the weakest month for many equities since the crisis started 1.5 years ago. September, otherwise, started strong for us and was a continuation of an unusually good performance at the end of August. Our companies presented many good news (except for Knaus Tabbert on the last day of the month) but small-caps and especially those categorized as growth shares, had a very weak performance during September. The main reason for this was, as previously mentioned, the change in the US long-term interest rate and general "risk off". The picture below shows the development since March last year compared with the corresponding time intervals in the financial crisis in 2009 and onwards. Both periods have shown an unusually strong recovery and the current trend is even stronger than when the financial crisis raged 12 years ago. Source: Goldman Sachs Since the crisis started 1.5 years ago, we have had three different phases. The first and shortest, "despair", showed a decline in prices of 33 percent. The second phase, "hope", ended at the beginning of this year and showed a very strong return of 79 percent despite declining earnings. The last, “growth”, where we are now, has shown +11 percent in share prices with sharply rising growth for companies' earnings, but at lower valuations. Source: Goldman Sachs The recovery for American companies (below) has been extremely strong and compared to 2019, the 2021 profits will be approximately 36 percent higher. Very impressive. Source: Goldman Sachs It is very gratifying that Europe, for once, is keeping up with the United States and showing strong profit growth. Compare this with the non-existent profit growth between 2007–2019 (!) Despite rising equity prices, valuations have fallen and Europe is now trading around 16x the profit 12 months ahead. It's not very strenuous (we think). For an average commercial property, you can get a return of maybe 3 percent before net financial costs. After financing, this corresponds to at least P/E 50x. And paying to lend to different countries does not feel like an exciting alternative either. Source: Goldman Sachs The valuation of global shares in relation to global GDP looks more strained. A major reason for this is the central banks' aggressive policy. The valuation of the major leading technology companies is at an average level seen from the last five years. Source: Goldman Sachs The image below is striking. It shows that Swedish property prices, which have risen by almost 200 percent over the past 15 years, have had the same development as the money supply. In theory, price per m2 and krona is unchanged for the past 15 years. Is there anyone who still doubts that the world's central banks are responsible for the largest wealth creation in human history? It is important to be on the wagon because when it is gone you’ve missed it. And what central banks cannot push, the price of bitcoin for example, rises even more as central banks cannot make more of it. The opportunities for central banks to reverse the band are few. In the long run, this means that the next 10 years will, overall, be a good period for, for example, stock picking. All forms of uniqueness (growth) will be highly valued to compensate for the fact that the value of money decreases at a rapid pace. If there is anyone who is still not convinced, take a look at the picture below. The market capitalization of the S&P500 divided by the Fed's balance sheet…. Source: Bloomberg Onwards and upwards. The wealth of American households is accelerating away from the change in GDP. Thank you Fed and all the world central banks! Citigroup's surprise index has weighed down and analysts' profit estimates are also starting to soften. Not a good combination and it has undoubtedly contributed to the weak development in the stock markets recently. It took a full 219 days for the S&P500 to have a decline of 5 percent. We will see how high the next bar will be.
Timing is everything. A fascinating graph that shows the importance of having reasonable timing in decisions.
Source: Goldman Sachs Despite a difficult month behind us, it feels reasonable to expect a stronger market during the last quarter of the year. Our view is that we are still in a rising market, although we are likely to experience some turbulence for a few more weeks. "Bear markets" are constantly declining with sharp rallies while "bull markets" continue to rise with some strong drawdowns. We therefore believe that we are still in a rising market. Some statistics to cheer you up. The S&P500 managed to rise by 0.2 percent in the third quarter (Europe -1.9 percent) which means six consecutive positive quarters. This has only happened eight times before and only on one of the (eight) occasions has the following quarter yielded a negative return. Two quarters later, it has in all cases yielded a positive return. In addition, for the past 20 years, October has been the fourth best month, thus much better than its reputation. Having pointed that out, October takes first place in terms of most frequent daily movements that exceed one percent. The Stockholm Stock Exchange, which is an excellent reference point, had risen by 30 percent at its highest about a month ago, but is currently at 20 percent. Even more important is that measured in USD, OMX has "only" risen by 13 percent, which is in line with the US stock markets. This is hardly excessive given the profit growth among the companies. The risk premium in the market is high. Investors are reasonably careless, and we are approaching the turn of the year. Global growth is well above average and interest rates are extremely low. Given how cruel the market has been to many investors this year, with sector rotations and a high concentration of companies driving performance, it almost feels obvious that the broad mass of investors will continue to reduce risk in their portfolios and then be short equities at year-end when the market rises. We'll see, but that's our main scenario right now.
We are now closing the books for the third quarter, and we look forward to the end of the year and above all the entrance for Truecaller on the Stockholm Stock Exchange on October 8! Thank you for this month and we'll hear from you later.   Mikael & Team Malmö on 5 October [/et_pb_text][et_pb_text admin_label="Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund R-SEK" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" module_class="gen-table-module" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"]

Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund

Performance in Share Class Currency1 MthYTD3 yrsSince incep
Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund - R SEK1.30%-0.93%3.38%14.52%
[/et_pb_text][et_pb_text admin_label="Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund R-SEK" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" module_class="gen-table-module" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"] [cg_linear_graph id="31122"] [/et_pb_text][et_pb_image _builder_version="3.0.89" src="https://coeli.com/wp-content/uploads//2020/10/ncbr.png" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="off" use_overlay="off" always_center_on_mobile="on" force_fullwidth="off" show_bottom_space="on" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on" /][/et_pb_column][et_pb_column type="1_3"][et_pb_image _builder_version="3.0.89" src="https://coeli.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Gustav-Fransson6.jpg" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="off" use_overlay="off" always_center_on_mobile="on" force_fullwidth="off" show_bottom_space="on" custom_margin="||21px|" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on" /][et_pb_text admin_label="Namn och title" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" module_class="gen-single-ingress-module" custom_margin="||40px|" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"]

Gustav Fransson

Portfolio Manager of Coeli Nordic Corporate Bond Fund [/et_pb_text][et_pb_image _builder_version="3.0.89" src="https://coeli.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Alexander-Larsson-Vahlman.jpg" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="off" use_overlay="off" always_center_on_mobile="on" force_fullwidth="off" show_bottom_space="on" custom_margin="||21px|" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on" /][et_pb_text admin_label="Namn och title" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" module_class="gen-single-ingress-module" custom_margin="||40px|" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"]

Alexander Wahlman

Senior Analyst [/et_pb_text][et_pb_text admin_label="Fund Overview" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" custom_margin="||20px|" module_class="gen-trustee-single-table"]
Fund Overview
Inception Date2017-12-20
Investment management fee (share class I SEK)1.00% p.a + 20% Performance fee (OMRX T-Bill Index)
Performance Fee. Yes20%
Risk category5 of 7
[/et_pb_text][et_pb_text admin_label="Top Holdings (%)" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" custom_margin="||20px|" module_class="gen-trustee-single-table" disabled_on="on|on|on" disabled="on"]
Top Holdings (%)
LANSBK 1.25% 18-17.09.254.1%
NORDEA HYP 1.0% 19-17.09.25 4.1%
SWEDBK 1.0% 19-18.06.254.1%
WHITE MOUNT FRN 17-22.09.473.9%
B2 HOLDING FRN 19-28.05.242.9%
  [/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section][et_pb_section bb_built="1" fullwidth="off" specialty="off" _builder_version="3.0.89" module_class="gen-trustee-single-yield-section gen-pattern-section" custom_padding="0px|||"][et_pb_row _builder_version="3.0.89" custom_padding="||53px|"][et_pb_column type="4_4"][et_pb_text admin_label="VIKTIG INFORMATION" _builder_version="3.0.89" background_layout="light" module_class="gen-trustee-single-warning-blurb"] IMPORTANT INFORMATION. This is a marketing communication. Before making any final investment decisions, please refer to the prospectus of Coeli SICAV II, its Annual Report, and the KIID of the relevant Sub-Fund. Relevant information documents are available in English at coeli.com. A summary of investor rights will be available at https://coeli.com/regulatory-information-coeli-asset-management-ab/. Past performance is not a guarantee of future returns. The price of the investment may go up or down and an investor may not get back the amount originally invested. [/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section]

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Den sammanfattande riskindikatorn ger en vägledning om risknivån för denna produkt jämfört med andra produkter. Den visar hur troligt det är att produkten kommer att sjunka i värde på grund av marknadsutvecklingen. Indikatorn speglar framför allt upp- och nedgångar i de aktier fonden placerat i. Denna produkt innehåller inte något skydd mot framtida marknadsresultat. Du kan därför förlora hela eller delar av din investering. Förutom de risker som ingår i riskindikatorn kan andra risker påverka fondens resultat. Se fondens fondbestämmelse för mer information.

Morningstars fondbetyg (rating) är ett mått som går att använda för att se hur fonderna har presterat historiskt. Fonden får ett högre betyg om den har haft en bra avkastning i förhållande till fondens risknivå. En fond måste ha funnits i minst 3 år för att få ett totalt betyg. Har fonden funnits längre än 5 och 10 år får dessutom betyg för dessa tidsperioder. Morningstars hållbarhetsbetyg är ett mått på de ekonomiskt väsentliga riskerna inom miljö, socialt och ägarfrågor (ESG) i en portfölj relativt till liknande konkurrerande portföljer. Hållbarhetsbetyget beräknas för fonder, förvaltningsuppdrag och index globalt, med hjälp av Morningstars databas med portföljinnehav.