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    • Silvercrest - Swiss Equity, (CHF) N D

    Silvercrest
    Swiss Equity

    ISINLU1079727571

    Silvercrest - Swiss Equity, (CHF) N D

    ISINLU1079727571
    funds listsustainability report

    General information

    Asset ClassEquities
    CategorySwitzerland
    StrategyRegional Equities
    Fund base currencyCHF
    Share Class reference currencyCHF
    BenchmarkSPI TR®
    Dividend Policydistribution
    Total Assets (all classes) in mnCHF 232.0831.03.2025
    Assets (share class) in mnCHF 8.4631.03.2025
    Number of positions3731.03.2025
    TER1.00%30.09.2024

    Documents

    Key Information Document
    Prospectus
    Fact Sheet (marketing document)
    Newsletter IM - Professional
    Sustainability-related disclosures

    Risk rating

    Lower riskHigher risk
    1
    1
    2
    2
    3
    3
    4
    4
    5
    5
    6
    6
    7
    7
    Typically lower rewardTypically higher reward
    Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. If the funds are denominated in a currency other than that in which the majority of the investor's assets are held, the investor should be aware that changes in rates of exchange may affect the value of the funds' underlying assets. The portfolio risk management process includes an effort to monitor and manage risk, but does not imply low risk.
    • Performance & Statistics
    • Highlights
    • Breakdowns
    • Managers
    • Legal information
    • Dealing
    • Security Numbers
    • Prices
    • Documents
    • Newsletter

    Performance & Statistics

    Rolling 12 months Performance (%)Cumulative performance (%)Annualised performance (%)
    Loading...
    As of 
    Share Class (Net)
    Benchmark
    Sorry, we could not retrieve the data for this share class.
    Any benchmarks/indices cited herein are provided for information purposes only. No benchmark/index is directly comparable to the investment objectives, strategy or universe of a fund.
    Loading...
    As of 
    Share Class (Net)
    Benchmark
    Sorry, we could not retrieve the data for this share class.
    Any benchmarks/indices cited herein are provided for information purposes only. No benchmark/index is directly comparable to the investment objectives, strategy or universe of a fund.
    Loading...
    As of 
    Share Class (Net)
    Benchmark
    Sorry, we could not retrieve the data for this share class.
    Any benchmarks/indices cited herein are provided for information purposes only. No benchmark/index is directly comparable to the investment objectives, strategy or universe of a fund.
    Export
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    csvxls
    FundBenchmark
    Total Return91.91%88.62%
    Annualized Return6.29%6.11%
    Annualized Volatility12.67%12.21%
    Sharpe Ratio0.520.52
    Downside Deviation8.25%7.86%
    Positive Months63.28%59.38%
    Maximum Drawdown-25.22%-19.93%
    *  Risk-Free Rate -0.28%Target Rate -0.28%
    Calculations based on monthly time series
    Earliest Date: 29.08.2014, Latest date: 24.04.2025
    Fund vs Benchmark
    Correlation0.977
    R20.955
    Alpha0.01%
    Beta1.014
    Tracking Error2.70%
    Information Ratio0.068

    Key risks

    The following risks may be materially relevant

    but may not always be adequately captured by the synthetic risk indicator and may cause additional loss:


     
    Liquidity risk: Where a significant level of investment is made in financial instruments that may under certain circumstances have a relatively low level of liquidity, there is a material risk that the fund will not be able to transact at advantageous times or prices. This could reduce the fund's returns.
     
    Operational risk and risks related to asset safekeeping: In specific circumstances, there may be a material risk of loss resulting from human error, inadequate or failed internal systems, processes or controls, or from external events.
     
    Concentration risk: To the extent that the fund's investments are concentrated in a particular country, market, industry, sector or asset class, the fund may be susceptible to loss due to adverse occurrences affecting that country, market, industry, sector or asset class.
     

     

    Highlights

    Silvercrest - Swiss Equity is a long-only Swiss equity strategy launched in August 2014. It invests in small, mid and large cap Swiss equity securities, and seeks to outperform the SPI TR® index (registered trademark of SIX Swiss Exchange AG) over the long-term. The investment approach is bottom-up and based on rigorous fundamental research seeking to identify leading firms with clear competitive advantages, proven management, core competencies and above average growth perspectives. The portfolio is composed of around 35 positions, well balanced between cyclical, growth and value stocks. It will be biased towards large caps in stagnant economic environments and towards small and mid-caps during economically prosperous periods.

    Breakdowns

    Top 10 (in %)

    Novartis0.00% 9.67%
    Nestlé0.00% 9.62%
    Roche0.00% 9.18%
    Zurich Insurance0.00% 5.63%
    Cie Fin. Richemont0.00% 4.39%
    ABB0.00% 4.29%
    UBS0.00% 4.17%
    Holcim0.00% 3.95%
    Alcon0.00% 3.78%
    Lonza Group0.00% 3.75%

    Sectors (in %)

    Health care0.00% 28.44%
    Financials0.00% 18.90%
    Industrials0.00% 12.97%
    Consumer staples0.00% 12.64%
    Materials0.00% 9.11%
    Others0.00% 4.75%
    Consumer discretionary0.00% 4.39%
    Information technology0.00% 2.95%
    Communications & Services0.00% 2.28%
    Real Estate0.00% 1.89%
    Utilities0.00% 1.68%

    Countries (in %)

    Switzerland0.00% 95.25%
    Cash0.00% 4.75%

    Currencies (in %)

    CHF0.00% 100.00%

    Managers

    Johan UttermanInvestment Management (Global Equities)
    Read more
    Johan Utterman: Senior Portfolio Manager for Silvercrest-Golden Age and Head of Swiss Equities Johan Utterman is a co-portfolio manager for the Silvercrest–Golden Age fund and head of Swiss Equities at Silvercrest Investment Managers (LOIM). He joined in July 2008 as a senior healthcare analyst for the 1798 Fundamental Strategies fund. Prior to joining, Johan was a senior medical technology & device analyst at HBK Investments in New York. Previously, he was a healthcare analyst at Hunter Global Investors in New York from 2005 to 2007 and a European diversified financial analyst at Fidelity Investments in London from 2002 to 2005. Before moving to the buy-side, he worked in investment banking, at Salomon Brothers from 1995 to 1998 and at Morgan Stanley from 1998 to 2002. He began his career as a generalist in mergers and acquisitions at Salomon Brothers and Morgan Stanley before becoming a vice president of the healthcare investment banking team at Morgan Stanley. Johan earned a bachelor of science degree in economics with a finance concentration from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in 1995.
    Fabian WiederinInvestment Management (Swiss Equities)

    Legal information

    General information

    DomicileLuxembourg
    Legal FormSICAV
    Regulatory StatusUCITS
    Registered inAT, CH, DE, FI, FR, GB, IT, LI, LU, NL, NO, SE
    Class launch date20.04.2017
    Close of financial year30 September
    Dividend Policydistribution
    - Distribution dateNovember
    - Last dividend paid  (27.11.2024) CHF 0.11

    Fiscal Information

    DE Investmentsteuergesetz (InvStG)Equity Fund
    AT Investmentfondsgesetz (InvFG)Declared Fund
    UK Reporting StatusYes

    Management Company & Agents

    Management CompanySilvercrest Funds (Europe) S.A.
    CustodianCACEIS Bank, Luxembourg Branch
    AuditorPricewaterhouseCoopers
    Portfolio valuationCACEIS Bank, Luxembourg Branch

    Dealing

    Dealing

    Subscriptions and redemptions frequency daily
    Subscriptions and redemptions cut-off dayT
    Subscriptions and redemptions cut-off time12:00 CET
    Subscriptions and redemptions settlement dateT+2
    NAV valuation pointT
    NAV calculation dayT+1
    NAV calculation frequencydaily
    Minimum InvestmentCHF 1 million
    Management Fee0.75%
    Distribution Fee0%

    Security Numbers

    BLOOMBERGLOSECND LX
    ISINLU1079727571
    SEDOLBNG7YH0
    TELEKURS24685246

    Prices

    Export

    Prices over selected period

    LastCHF0.0018.0524.04.2025
    FirstCHF0.009.4129.08.2014
    HighestCHF0.0019.9628.12.2021
    LowestCHF0.008.6116.01.2015
    * Earliest Date: 29.08.2014, Latest date: 24.04.2025

    Documents

    Professional investors only

    Newsletter IM - Professional
    31.03.2025

    Annexe

    UK Reporting Status - Reportable Income
    31.03.2025

    Reporting

    Fact Sheet (marketing document)
    31.03.2025
    Performance Review
    31.03.2025

    Legal Documents

    Notice to Shareholders
    17.04.2025
    19.07.2024
    17.05.2024
    24.01.2024
    Key Information Document
    28.01.2025
    Annual Report
    30.09.2024
    Prospectus
    19.08.2024
    Semi-Annual Report
    31.03.2024
    Articles of incorporation
    21.03.2019

    Sustainability-related disclosures

    Sustainability-related disclosures
    05.08.2024

    Newsletter

    PERFORMANCE COMMENT

    Silvercrest–Swiss Equity’s institutional share class finished March with a return of -2.77%, which represents an underperformance of 73 bps compared to its benchmark, the Swiss Performance Index (SPI TR).

    As a reminder, the Fund reports performance net of withholding tax on dividends vs gross of withholding tax for the benchmark (35% withholding tax). The headwind equals to some 85-105 bps annually (assuming a dividend yield of 2.5-3.0%), most of which comes in March-May.

    Not owning Logitech or Sonova, alongside the overweight in Sunrise Communications, contributed most to relative performance in the month. The UCITS-imposed underweights in Nestlé and Novartis had the biggest negative impact on relative performance, followed by the overweight in Comet. In the SPI, defensive sectors Real Estate and Consumer Staples led the index higher, while IT and Consumer Discretionary underperformed.

     

    MARKET REVIEW

    The Swiss market, as measured by the Swiss Performance Index (SPI), lost 2.04% in March. The Swiss small & mid cap index (SPIEX) lost 2.63%. This compares with a 4.45% loss for the MSCI World Index (NDDUWI), driven by MSCI USA (NDDUUS), which lost 5.89% vs MSCI Europe’s (MXEU) 4.36% loss. In the first quarter of 2025, the SPI gained 8.58%, ahead of MSCI Europe’s 5.32% gain and losses for MSCI USA and MSCI World.

    Concerns about tariffs, geopolitical uncertainty and technology valuations weighed on equity markets in March. The US Conference Board consumer confidence index fell sharply to 92.9 in March from 100.1 in February, which marked the lowest level since February 2021. In the US, both the S&P global manufacturing PMI and the ISM manufacturing PMI fell. The former fell from 52.7 to 49.8 and the latter from 50.3 to 49.0. These are considered leading economic indicators. Core personal consumption expenditure (PCE) inflation for February, reported in March, rose 0.4% m-o-m, pushing the annual rate to 2.8%, above expectations. This increased worries about stagflation. The VIX index, which measures volatility, increased from 19.6% to 22.3% during the month.

    Meanwhile, Europe took a turn for the better in March. Germany approved a EUR 500 bn infrastructure fund and increased defence spending through a historic vote in the Bundestag. The measure involved amending the constitution to relax debt rules, which many market participants considered a game-changer. At the same time, the European Union approved a “ReArm Europe” plan, with investment of up to EUR 800 bn. The eurozone manufacturing PMI rose to 48.6 in March, up from 47.6 in February, marking its highest level in 26 months.

    In terms of style factors, defensives outperformed cyclicals in March globally and in the US, Europe and Switzerland. Value outperformed growth in all regions. High-dividend and low-volatility strategies also fared well. In the first quarter of 2025, defensives beat cyclicals in all regions except for Europe, and value outperformed growth universally.

     

    PORTFOLIO ACTIVITY

    In March, we sold our holdings in Julius Baer, Swissquote and Schindler, while adding dormakaba to the portfolio.

     

    STOCK OF THE MONTH

    dormakaba’s shares finished March slightly up in a weaker market overall as it is seen as one of the beneficiaries of Germany’s infrastructure fund. After attending the CMD last fall, we met the CEO at a conference in early January and again during the roadshow in Zurich in March. We left the meetings with increased confidence in the execution of mid-single-digit sales growth plus EBIT margin expansion from 15.2% in H1 FY25 to 16-18% in FY26, having walked through a tangible roadmap on how to get there. dormakaba finished Q1 trading on 18.7x NTM P/E compared to the 10-yr average of 19.4x, i.e. a slight discount.

     

    QUARTERLY OUTLOOK

    Uncertainty increased throughout the first quarter of 2025. At the end of last year, investors’ animal spirits rose on hopes of pro-business policies under the new Trump administration, including deregulation and an extension of tax cuts. Instead, President Trump chose to initially focus on tariffs when he took office. Investors grew concerned about heightened inflation and weakening growth. This coincided with a challenge to the US technology sector’s leadership from Chinese artificial intelligence players like Alibaba and DeepSeek, among others, while BYD overtook Tesla to become the world’s best-selling electric car.

    Meanwhile, Europe’s prospects began looking up thanks to Germany’s approval of infrastructure spending, the release of the debt brake, and the EU’s rearmament plan. This has driven a reversal of fund flows, with Europe enjoying inflows after many years of outflows. Europe is, of course, not immune to trade tariffs and the US administration has promised to announce additional ones in early April. Another factor of importance for equity markets is the outlook for Ukraine, where investors are hoping for a ceasefire leading to reconstruction.

     

    Sincerely

    Silvercrest–Swiss Equity investment team

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