Prince Harry, Meghan, a baby and new ETFs.... it all going on in Australia
Australia
Vanguard Australia rolls out infrastructure and global small cap ETFs
Vanguard’s Australian arm is listing two new ETFs that add to its swelling fleet of products.
VBLD will track the FTSE Developed Core Infrastructure Index, which is made of 146 infrastructure companies across a range of industries, including transportation, energy and communications. It charges 0.47%, making it the cheapest of Australia’s three infrastructure ETFs.
VISM will invest in international small caps in rich countries. Tracking the MSCI World ex-Australia Small Cap Index, it is the first ETF in Australia to offer international small cap exposure. VISM will charge 0.32%.
Both offer ETF share classes of pre-existing Vanguard wholesale funds.
Product review: VISM adds clear value; VBLD seems like a utilities fund
VISM is an overdue addition to the Australian ETF market. Up until now, there has been no international small cap ETF available in Australia. There have been US and Australia small cap ETFs – but nothing else.
Not only does VISM open a frontier, it’s also a great fund. VISM has been available as a wholesale fund for 11 years. During this time it has delivered an annual return of 10% - compared with the 8% delivered on average in this asset class. With an annual fee of 0.32%, VISM also the cheapest international small company fund available in Australia by far.
VBLD we’re a bit less sure of. Investing in infrastructure is popular with pension funds, which like how its reliable cash flows can be used to match their pension liabilities. But the infrastructure investing that makes the big bucks is done privately or as public-private partnerships.
A good example of how private infrastructure investing can make a lot of money is the “vampire kangaroo” Macquarie Bank. From 2006 – 2017, Macquarie managed Britain’s water infrastructure (Thames Water) and sucked it dry for an annual return of 19%. (When it was done, Macquarie left £2bn debt behind, bursting water pipes, untreated sewage all to a fuming British media. Hence the amusing nickname).
But infrastructure ETFs are not playing this game. They simply invest in publicly listed companies that are characterised by some index provider as infrastructure related (there's no agreed definition). In practice, this means they look a lot like utilities sector ETFs, which a few other bits bolted on. As Noel Amenc, professor of finance as the Edhec Business School put things:
“Listed infrastructure indices being tracked by ETFs are often built to include active views or using ad hoc weighting schemes, such as those that avoid over-concentration in a few very large utilities. It is not necessarily clear what systematic risk exposures are being tracked.”
VBLD isn’t a bad fund at all. (Vanguard doesn’t really have any bad funds). But Aussie investors interested in defensive income solutions might be better off in REITs.