The 12 months ending 30 September were volatile. But, after all was said and done, our international fund finished up 25%, our Australian fund finished up over 10%. Our tactical growth finished up over 14%. All of our funds look attractive relative to their benchmarks, especially as they were all significantly less volatile than the market.
But the outlook is as uncertain now as it has been any time in the last few years. Putting together an investment strategy in this environment is difficult to say the least.
As is the usual state of affairs under Trump 2.0, there are plenty of contradictions that investors need to grapple with:
Net effect: position for an earnings boom, keeping a close eye on economic landmines.
The two most topical contradictions are the first and the last:
The central message is counterintuitive: stock markets and the real economy often travel on different tracks. GDP growth is a poor guide to equity returns across both developed and emerging markets. Index structure, firm concentration, foreign revenue exposure, policy regimes, and sectoral balances do more to shape equity outcomes than headline GDP.
In the United States, these forces are powerful and as diverse as they have been in a long time:
The result is a market that can rise—even when parts of the real economy feel flat. Or vice versa.
INSERT CHART
Headline market valuations, particularly when measured by forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios, suggest that stocks are expensive. However, when we separate companies into groups based on their size, it becomes clear that only the biggest stocks — typically high-growth, mega-cap technology and consumer firms—are pulling overall averages higher.
The sustainability of today’s tech-driven expansion is the key variable. Two broad scenarios are possible:
A whimper: Growth slows as orders for early-stage companies in data center infrastructure taper off, leading to a gradual deceleration.
A bang: Excessive valuations and funding shortages eventually hit unprofitable tech firms, triggering a sharp unwind reminiscent of past cycles.
Valuations today are a study in contrasts. The giants look stretched, but much of the market sits at fair or even attractive levels. That means investors aren’t forced into an all-or-nothing stance—they can lean into areas where multiples remain reasonable while avoiding the extremes.
Cycles never end on schedule, and expensive doesn’t always mean imminent collapse. Tech strength may keep pulling indices higher for longer, especially with falling rates and subdued growth elsewhere. But earnings revisions, not headline valuations, will decide which companies deserve their price tags.
Right now, the opportunity lies in the middle ground: quality businesses outside the most crowded names, trading at fair prices with sustainable growth. Staying invested, but selective, is the strategy that best matches today’s uneven market landscape.
We are underweight shares overall, significantly underweight Australian shares. We are overweight bonds, and with lots of foreign cash:
September saw the bull-run restart with semiconductors once again at the fore. Our new portfolio addition at the beginning of the month, the European semiconductor maker ASML, proved timely with a nice contribution in its first month. Currency proved a drag as the AUD strengthened across the board.
Australian equities languished this month, with growth stocks and healthcare out of favour, offset to some degree by strength in the Gold sector.