The term deposit 'wall' starts to buckle

Cracks are appearing in the ‘wall of money’ standing in term deposits, with the beneficiaries being liquid fixed-income funds, but the outlook for traditional mortgage funds looks bleak according to an analysis from wealth management strategists, Tria Investment Partners.

Tria IP partner, Andrew Baker, said the $70 billion flood of post-GFC cash into bank term deposits was now beginning to ease, however it had devastated mortgage funds, cash management funds, and fixed-income funds.

The industry must devise new ways “to capture service”, Baker said in Tria’s report, ‘The wall of money: term deposits and the BDM’s lament’.

Structural demand for yield will continue to increase as the population ages, so there would be a ”good market for high-quality, liquid fixed-income funds which diversify the limited direct lending opportunities in Australia”, he said.

“Their returns should offer enough of a premium to make them compelling again when deposit rates drop. For managers with the right products, it’s a waiting game,” Baker said.

It was possible that a new generation of term-based mortgage funds would emerge, with withdrawal features that better matched the underlying assets, he said.

The evolution of a retail bond market could be spurred, along with the possibility of government bonds being traded on the ASX in retail parcels.

 

 

 

 

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‘Not an ATM’: Sicilia shrugs off private credit liquidity fears

The chief investment officer of the $150 billion industry super fund says that Hostplus’ portfolio will weather the ongoing downturn in software companies and that moves by a number of large private credit managers to gate their funds are a result of the asset class being offered to retail investors who should not have assumed the funds would be liquid enough to get money out when everybody else is trying to do the same.

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