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Ms Madeline Nettey, Chief Executive Officer of Republic Investments
Ms Madeline Nettey, Chief Executive Officer of Republic Investments

Republic Investments confident of positive return in 2020

The Chief Executive Officer of Republic Investments, Ms Madeline Nettey, has assured investors of its Unit Trust Fund that it was still confident of making a positive return this year despite the adverse impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

With just four months left for the year to end, she said although the expected return for the fund as planned at the beginning of the year might not be realised, it was still confident of finishing the year with a positive return.

Ms Nettey was speaking in an interview with the Graphic Business on the sidelines of its annual general meeting in Accra.

“The strategy at the beginning of the year has had to be re-calibrated several times based on development emanating from the COVID-19 pandemic. We were all anticipating that the pandemic would have ended earlier than we are currently experiencing, but it has dragged longer and has affected investor confidence, interest, as well as access to available capital to invest,” she explained.

She said that had adversely impacted on the company’s projected growth for its funds.

“If you look at the stock exchange market too, the performance has not been as expected. We were hoping for a bit more correction from the bearish performance it has been recoding over the past two years, but if we look at some reforms that had to come in at the beginning of the year where listed equities were asked to hold on with dividend payment, this was at a time that you will typically see interest in the stock market, but once that announcement was made, investors pulled back a bit and that adversely impacted the stock market.

“The future plan has a balance between equity and fixed income so the expected return for the fund may not realised as planned, but we are confident we will make a positive return. We have balanced the portfolio in such a way that the fixed income component is absorbing the shock from the losses of the equity side, so towards the end of the year we are still confident,” she assured investors.

Unit Trust Fund

The Unit Trust Fund of Republic Investments recorded an impressive performance in 2019, with the value of the fund increasing from GH¢232.93 million in 2018 to GH¢264.21 million, representing a growth of 13.4 per cent.
Read: Half year profit of Republic Bank up by 75%; Assets cross GH¢3b mark ...

 
The fund also recorded a yield of 12.09 per cent at the end of the period under review.

Ms Nettey said the growth of the fund was due to the sustained reliance on it as a safe haven to meet the liquidity needs of clients in the heat of the liquidity squeeze that plagued sections of the financial sector.

“It is worth noting that your fund was well positioned to honour all redemption requests from unit holders, some of whose funds were locked up in other fund managers that got their licences revoked in the year 2019.

“Entrenching the ethos of this fund as the fund of choice for investors, the number of unit holders increased from 39,185 in 2018 to 43,120 in 2019,” she stated.

Future Plan Trust Fund

The value of the company’s Future Plan Trust Fund, however, declined from GH¢18.62 million in 2018 to GH¢17.78 million in 2019, representing a decline of 4.51 per cent.

The return position of the fund also reduced from 11.61 per cent in 2018 to 8.23 per cent in 2019.

Ms Nettey attributed that to the sluggish performance of the Ghana Stock Exchange, which led to both the composite index and financial index recording negative returns at the end of 2019, a situation she said affected investors’ behaviour in the year under review.

REIT Fund

The Republic Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) Fund also ended 2019 with a net fund value of GH¢65.43 million and an annualised yield of 9.02 per cent.

The fund’s value reduced by GH¢5.84 million in 2019 from a position of GH¢71.27 million in 2018.

Ms Nettey said the decline of the fund could be mainly attributed to institutional clients’ redemptions to shore up their liquidity to meet expected tier 3 pensions withdrawals.

Equity Trust Fund

Republic’s Equity Trust’s net asset value stood at GH¢13.02 million as of the end of 2019.

The fund also recorded a positive return of 3.35 per cent compared to its benchmark (GSE composite index) which ended the period on a negative note (-12.25 per cent).

Ms Nettey said a five-year performance assessment of the fund positioned it favourably at 11.35 per cent against the composite index of 2.62 per cent.

However, she said the bearish nature of the equities market, coupled with the redemptions requests from some unit holders led to the value of the fund declining from a position of GH¢14.20 million in 2018 to GH¢13.10 million in 2019.

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