DMXASF Monthly ReportDecember 2021 – DMX
|
An investment company managed by
DMX Asset Management Limited AFSL 459 120 13/111 Elizabeth Street, Sydney, NSW 2000 Trustee & Administrator Fundhost Limited AFSL 233 045 |
|
|
Dear Investor,
DMXASF’s NAV rose 0.55% (after fees and expenses), lagging the ASX 200 Total Return Index which rose 2.75% for the month. It was another essentially flat month with lots of wiggling around on an individual stock basis, mostly cancelling each other out, with nothing too drastic to drive performance in either direction.
The month was active with plenty of opportunities to assess, both on-market and via capital raisings. A number of our companies are expanding through carefully-considered strategic acquisitions, and are augmenting their balance sheets to support their growth aspirations. With many compelling opportunities to deploy capital into, our cash balance has fallen to nil by month-end (though the Fund has received cash inflows from new and existing investors, processed in early January). Cash is always a by-product of our process, and we’re delighted to have constructed a difficult-to-replicate, thematically diverse, and highly prospective portfolio of 40+ compelling opportunities.
Portfolio Commentary
Modest losses were recorded across a number of names including Aeeris which continued its descent, declining another 9%, Kip McGrath handing back its prior month’s gains, also down 9%, and Laserbond declining 9% following a capital raising in which we participated. Some of our software positions, which generally have long-dated and higher risk expected cashflows declined, including Proptech and Elmo Software, each down 12-14%. On the other side of the ledger, our retail holdings continued to perform well with Dusk up 12% and Michael Hill reaching fresh modern highs, up 15% on the back of strong Christmas trade and margin expansion. Each of Cryosite and Schrole rose/recovered 29-33%, helping bring our monthly performance into the black.
Capital Raisings Augment Balance Sheets & Provide Opportunity
One of the key value-adds from active portfolio management within the smaller company universe is the potential to participate in capital raisings, to acquire stock at attractive prices and in otherwise low-liquidity names, and to time these investments around the opportunity sets of the capital-raising companies. We assessed a number of capital raising opportunities this month. We are pleased to report we participated in a placement conducted by Laserbond, which was raising capital to fund what we consider to be a value-adding strategic acquisition, allowing the company to expand its geographic footprint. We also participated in a placement conducted by Frontier Digital Ventures, as that company moves to increase its ownership in majority-controlled subsidiaries, and further augment its balance sheet to fund growth. Finally of note, we took the opportunity to initiate a position in Credit Clear which raised capital to fund a strategic acquisition that we believe will be highly value-accretive for the company. Credit Clear is discussed below as a digital disruptor. In each of these cases, we are taking advantage of liquidity at attractive pricing, and at points in these companies’ evolution that we believe will lead to positive step-changes.
The portfolio continues to have significant overlapping exposure with DMX Capital Partners (DMXCP), with some 68% of the fund also being owned within DMXCP. This month’s DMXCP report includes a brief outlook profile for each of its Top 10 holdings. Each of these is also owned by DMXASF, though not necessarily all in our Top 10. (DMXASF’s Top 10 includes Michael Hill, FSA Group and Frontier Digital Ventures.) The DMXCP Top 10 outlook profiles are included in an Appendix to this report and investors are encouraged to review these for insights into how we’re thinking about the potential for many of the idiosyncratic and highly prospective holdings across both portfolios. Those Top 10 holdings comprise 40% of the DMXCP portfolio, and the same names represent 30% of the DMXASF portfolio.
Digital Disrupters
We are in the process putting together a new blog-piece that we expect to distribute shortly. The digital disruption theme is one that is prominent across our portfolios. Many industries continue to be slow to adopt technology for stakeholder engagement despite many consumers (B2B and B2C) now prefer digital engagement. This is providing a wonderful opportunity for digital-first companies. The teaser below highlights two portfolio positions that are disrupting industries through digital workflow solutions and improving efficiency and business outcomes. We look forward to expanding on this theme in our upcoming blog. In the meantime, please enjoy these insights.
Credit Clear
The credit collection process has typically been driven by phone calls to overdue debtors. Listed in 2020, Credit Clear has developed a solution that collects receivables using a mix of methods including digital mobile interfaces. The company claims “better customer engagement and insight, faster payment reconciliations, improved cash flows and lower costs to collect when compared to traditional methods”. This is reflected in the 73% uplift in gross profit from their acquired collection company, Credit Solutions, in 2019. Unlike listed peer Credit Corp, Credit Clear doesn’t buy debt but provides collection services to corporates such as Suncorp. This capital-light strategy also lowers investment risk.
We participated in a recent capital raising to fund the acquisition of another traditional collection business, ARMA. The strategic fit is excellent, with Credit Clear’s digital solutions to be applied to ARMA to drive efficiencies and boost profitability.
Xref
Xref provides a reference checking solution to HR departments and talent agencies that have traditionally made phone calls for reference checks. Xref are digitising the reference checking process with cloud-based software and digital messaging replacing traditional phone calls, thus reducing HR costs and producing more reliable outcomes.
Xref previously had to work hard to convince HR departments to convert to digitisation. Now, organisations are primed, and it is just a matter of convincing them that Xref offers the right solution. This is by ensuring they are prominent in software search sites such as Capterra, being integrated into the common HR systems, and having partnerships with key credential checking companies such as their recent deal with First Advantage in the US. Xref is cash flow positive, is growing revenue at 68% (as at HY to 31 Dec) and has an increasingly global customer base.
In Summary
We’re enthused about the positioning of the portfolio as we move into 2022, and look forward to navigating what markets (and COVID) throw at us in the period ahead. We have no special insights or thoughts on market direction, and don’t spend any energy thinking of this. Instead, we’re wholly focused on what’s within our control, which is our diligent process of searching for, researching, and managing a portfolio of high quality, thematically differentiated, and highly prospective smaller companies.
DMXASF’s NAV rose 0.55% (after fees and expenses), lagging the ASX 200 Total Return Index which rose 2.75% for the month. It was another essentially flat month with lots of wiggling around on an individual stock basis, mostly cancelling each other out, with nothing too drastic to drive performance in either direction.
The month was active with plenty of opportunities to assess, both on-market and via capital raisings. A number of our companies are expanding through carefully-considered strategic acquisitions, and are augmenting their balance sheets to support their growth aspirations. With many compelling opportunities to deploy capital into, our cash balance has fallen to nil by month-end (though the Fund has received cash inflows from new and existing investors, processed in early January). Cash is always a by-product of our process, and we’re delighted to have constructed a difficult-to-replicate, thematically diverse, and highly prospective portfolio of 40+ compelling opportunities.
Portfolio Commentary
Modest losses were recorded across a number of names including Aeeris which continued its descent, declining another 9%, Kip McGrath handing back its prior month’s gains, also down 9%, and Laserbond declining 9% following a capital raising in which we participated. Some of our software positions, which generally have long-dated and higher risk expected cashflows declined, including Proptech and Elmo Software, each down 12-14%. On the other side of the ledger, our retail holdings continued to perform well with Dusk up 12% and Michael Hill reaching fresh modern highs, up 15% on the back of strong Christmas trade and margin expansion. Each of Cryosite and Schrole rose/recovered 29-33%, helping bring our monthly performance into the black.
Capital Raisings Augment Balance Sheets & Provide Opportunity
One of the key value-adds from active portfolio management within the smaller company universe is the potential to participate in capital raisings, to acquire stock at attractive prices and in otherwise low-liquidity names, and to time these investments around the opportunity sets of the capital-raising companies. We assessed a number of capital raising opportunities this month. We are pleased to report we participated in a placement conducted by Laserbond, which was raising capital to fund what we consider to be a value-adding strategic acquisition, allowing the company to expand its geographic footprint. We also participated in a placement conducted by Frontier Digital Ventures, as that company moves to increase its ownership in majority-controlled subsidiaries, and further augment its balance sheet to fund growth. Finally of note, we took the opportunity to initiate a position in Credit Clear which raised capital to fund a strategic acquisition that we believe will be highly value-accretive for the company. Credit Clear is discussed below as a digital disruptor. In each of these cases, we are taking advantage of liquidity at attractive pricing, and at points in these companies’ evolution that we believe will lead to positive step-changes.
The portfolio continues to have significant overlapping exposure with DMX Capital Partners (DMXCP), with some 68% of the fund also being owned within DMXCP. This month’s DMXCP report includes a brief outlook profile for each of its Top 10 holdings. Each of these is also owned by DMXASF, though not necessarily all in our Top 10. (DMXASF’s Top 10 includes Michael Hill, FSA Group and Frontier Digital Ventures.) The DMXCP Top 10 outlook profiles are included in an Appendix to this report and investors are encouraged to review these for insights into how we’re thinking about the potential for many of the idiosyncratic and highly prospective holdings across both portfolios. Those Top 10 holdings comprise 40% of the DMXCP portfolio, and the same names represent 30% of the DMXASF portfolio.
Digital Disrupters
We are in the process putting together a new blog-piece that we expect to distribute shortly. The digital disruption theme is one that is prominent across our portfolios. Many industries continue to be slow to adopt technology for stakeholder engagement despite many consumers (B2B and B2C) now prefer digital engagement. This is providing a wonderful opportunity for digital-first companies. The teaser below highlights two portfolio positions that are disrupting industries through digital workflow solutions and improving efficiency and business outcomes. We look forward to expanding on this theme in our upcoming blog. In the meantime, please enjoy these insights.
Credit Clear
The credit collection process has typically been driven by phone calls to overdue debtors. Listed in 2020, Credit Clear has developed a solution that collects receivables using a mix of methods including digital mobile interfaces. The company claims “better customer engagement and insight, faster payment reconciliations, improved cash flows and lower costs to collect when compared to traditional methods”. This is reflected in the 73% uplift in gross profit from their acquired collection company, Credit Solutions, in 2019. Unlike listed peer Credit Corp, Credit Clear doesn’t buy debt but provides collection services to corporates such as Suncorp. This capital-light strategy also lowers investment risk.
We participated in a recent capital raising to fund the acquisition of another traditional collection business, ARMA. The strategic fit is excellent, with Credit Clear’s digital solutions to be applied to ARMA to drive efficiencies and boost profitability.
Xref
Xref provides a reference checking solution to HR departments and talent agencies that have traditionally made phone calls for reference checks. Xref are digitising the reference checking process with cloud-based software and digital messaging replacing traditional phone calls, thus reducing HR costs and producing more reliable outcomes.
Xref previously had to work hard to convince HR departments to convert to digitisation. Now, organisations are primed, and it is just a matter of convincing them that Xref offers the right solution. This is by ensuring they are prominent in software search sites such as Capterra, being integrated into the common HR systems, and having partnerships with key credential checking companies such as their recent deal with First Advantage in the US. Xref is cash flow positive, is growing revenue at 68% (as at HY to 31 Dec) and has an increasingly global customer base.
In Summary
We’re enthused about the positioning of the portfolio as we move into 2022, and look forward to navigating what markets (and COVID) throw at us in the period ahead. We have no special insights or thoughts on market direction, and don’t spend any energy thinking of this. Instead, we’re wholly focused on what’s within our control, which is our diligent process of searching for, researching, and managing a portfolio of high quality, thematically differentiated, and highly prospective smaller companies.