A concentrated portfolio of typically 20-30 stocks across Asia.
Uses a bottom-up stock selection process that favours companies with a compelling business model, above-average earnings rate, increasing returns on equity over time and attractive valuations.
A disciplined portfolio construction process with a focus on diversification and risk management.
A concentrated approach, so that you can access our best ideas in Asia
Informed by 50+ years' experience investing in the region
Access to 60+ on-the-ground research professionals in Asia
Anthony Srom, Portfolio Manager of the Fidelity Asia Fund describes the most important factors of his investment process, how he finds his best ideas from around Asia and the importance of managing risk.
Portfolio Manager, Anthony Srom for the Fidelity Asia Fund explains the key tenants of the Fund's outperformance and why he thinks this makes it a good choice for those wanting exposure to Asia.
EDITED TRANSCRIPT
In the first quarter of 2025, the Asia ex-Japan market was up roughly 1% in Aussie dollar terms but there was a huge divergence in performance across the individual markets. China led the way up around 15%. There was a huge surge in optimism and sentiment towards China following the announcement of DeepSeek which got everyone excited and moving towards the more tech orientated parts of the market.
Also, we have been seeing an improvement in the property market, particularly in tier one and tier two cities in China, and retail sales have been going up as well. We saw around 4% year on year increase in retail sales. So, optimism towards China has improved from a very low base and also from a pretty low valuation relative to the rest of the region.
Elsewhere, India, really struggled in the first part of the quarter, but did bounce back a little bit towards the end. We've started to see some earnings downgrades coming through and earnings expectations, which were pretty lofty last year, have been coming down.
Therefore, we've been seeing some de-rating of the Indian market. At the other end of the spectrum in terms of the most negative, Taiwan and Thailand.
Taiwan, obviously a very tech orientated market. TSMC is the dominant player there.
But, with the emergence of DeepSeek, there were some questions around the future demand in the near term at least, for tech hardware, which weighed down on the overall tech semiconductor area, which Taiwan is a global leader in. And in Thailand, we have been seeing tourism growth, but not at the rates that maybe a lot of investors were expecting.
So, we've seen a bit of a sell off in the Thailand market as well.
In the first quarter the Fund unfortunately underperformed the market, largely because of what we didn't own. Now, we don't own any of the internet companies and those sort of high-tech stocks in China. The market was very excited by them with DeepSeek, and it created a lot of optimism and improved sentiment towards those parts of the market. But we've been staying away, largely because we're still waiting to see how these companies actually truly adopt things like AI to generate new business revenues and improve margins as well.
Also, we own Techtronic. Now Techtronic is the one stock in the portfolio that's really impacted by tariffs or potential tariffs. And of course, we have lots of talk around will the U.S. put tariffs on, won’t they, where those tariffs will be? It’s created a lot of volatility in Techtronic who sells around 75% of their products to U.S., builders and home DIYs.
On the flip side, in terms of positive contribution, we've seen some strong performance from Zijin Mining. Zijin Mining is a gold and copper miner in China and of course we've seen gold hit all-time highs with ongoing uncertainty around global economy from the fallout from potential tariffs as well.
Yum China has been a big contributor to us. We’ve started to see margins improve. The company's really been working on cost controls, working with suppliers to control the cost of food that goes into their meal deals and so on. They are the owner of KFC and Pizza Hut across China and they've been really executing on their plans.
We've also seen some strong numbers from a relatively new position that we opened last year in Sea Ltd. Sea is the number one e-commerce player across the Asean region.
And we've seen a more favourable competitive environment there with a number of players exiting the market. Sea and through that Shopee brand taking market share. That's enabled them to increase take rates and slowly improve margins as well.
Well, the quarter ahead is going to be pretty volatile. There's of course lots of concern around tariffs. The U.S. have been talking about Liberation Day and what that means for the rest of the world, it’s still really to be seen. So, we anticipate a lot of volatility, a lot of uncertainty in the coming quarter across all of the markets.
With that in mind, and if we do see that, you should probably expect more flows going towards, let’s call them called defensive type stocks. For us, actually a safer way to try and mitigate some of those risks is to look at companies that really focus on their domestic markets and not really on export markets. Those companies that focus on their domestic markets, of course, aren't as impacted by tariffs. There will likely be some indirect tariffs, if it has a subsequent slowdown on domestic economies across the region. But overall, those companies should continue to see strong demand driven by structural growth that we do see across the Asia region.
Join Investment Director Gary Monaghan as he provides an update on Asian markets, looks at the main contributors and detractors to performance and how positioning for the portfolio is currently given the outlook.
See for yourself how the fund has performed since inception. The chart below represents the value now of $10,000 invested in the Fidelity Asia Fund in September 2005 compared with $10,000 invested in the MSCI All Country Asia ex-Japan Index NR.
Chart as at: 31 March 2025
Total net returns represent past performance only. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Returns of the Fund can be volatile and in some periods may be negative. The return of capital is not guaranteed. Benchmark: MSCI AC Asia ex-Japan Index NR, effective 1 January 2010. Benchmark data prior to 1 January 2010 is a blend of the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index and the MSCI All Country Asia ex-Japan Index NR: NR at the end of the benchmark name indicates the return is calculated including reinvesting net dividends. The dividend is reinvested after deduction of withholding tax, applying the withholding tax rate to non-resident individuals who do not benefit from double taxation treaties.
Net returns as at 31 March 2025
Timeframe | 1 yr % |
3 yr % pa |
5 yr % pa |
7 yr % pa |
10 yr % pa |
15 yr % pa |
Since inception (29/09/05) % pa |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fund | 8.83 | 6.53 | 7.90 | 7.98 | 9.70 | 10.81 | 9.64 |
Benchmark | 16.57 | 8.32 | 6.82 | 5.25 | 6.38 | 7.64 | 7.43 |
Active return | -7.74 | -1.79 | 1.08 | 2.73 | 3.32 | 3.17 | 2.21 |
Total net returns represent past performance only. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Returns of the Fund can be volatile and in some periods may be negative. The return of capital is not guaranteed. Benchmark: MSCI AC Asia ex-Japan Index NR, effective 1 January 2010. Benchmark data prior to 1 January 2010 is a blend of the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index and the MSCI All Country Asia ex-Japan Index NR: NR at the end of the benchmark name indicates the return is calculated including reinvesting net dividends. The dividend is reinvested after deduction of withholding tax, applying the withholding tax rate to non-resident individuals who do not benefit from double taxation treaties.
Net as at 31 March 2025
1 yr % |
3 yr % pa |
5 yr % pa |
7 yr % pa |
10 yr % pa |
15 yr % pa |
Since inception (29/09/05) % pa |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total return | 8.83 | 6.53 | 7.90 | 7.98 | 9.70 | 10.81 | 9.64 |
Growth | 6.88 | 5.18 | 5.55 | 4.64 | 5.73 | 7.61 | 5.21 |
Income | 1.96 | 1.35 | 2.35 | 3.34 | 3.97 | 3.20 | 4.43 |
Growth return is the unit price movement on exit to exit basis. Income is expressed as Total Return less growth component.
Total net returns represent past performance only. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Returns of the Fund can be volatile and in some periods may be negative. The return of capital is not guaranteed. Benchmark: MSCI AC Asia ex-Japan Index NR, effective 1 January 2010. Benchmark data prior to 1 January 2010 is a blend of the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index and the MSCI All Country Asia ex-Japan Index NR: NR at the end of the benchmark name indicates the return is calculated including reinvesting net dividends. The dividend is reinvested after deduction of withholding tax, applying the withholding tax rate to non-resident individuals who do not benefit from double taxation treaties.
Distribution | Distribution (CPU) | Reinvestment price |
---|---|---|
30-Jun-24 | 43.8863 | $23.9765 |
CPU = cents per unit. The above cash CPU excludes imputation credits and foreign income tax offsets which are non-cash components and are reported in the end of year tax statement. If the Distribution CPU column is 0.0000 it means that nothing was distributed.
As at 31 March 2025
As at 31 March 2025
As at 31 March 2025
% total net assets | |
---|---|
HDFC BANK LTD | 13.3% |
TAIWAN SEMICONDUCTOR MFG CO LTD | 9.6% |
YUM CHINA HOLDINGS INC | 7.0% |
TECHTRONIC INDUSTRIES CO LTD | 6.7% |
AIA GROUP LTD | 5.6% |
FOCUS MEDIA INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CO LTD | 5.3% |
SEA LTD | 5.2% |
NAVER CORP | 4.8% |
ZIJIN MNG GROUP CO LTD | 4.4% |
KWEICHOW MOUTAI CO LTD | 4.4% |
As at 31 March 2025
Fund % | Benchmark % | Relative % | |
---|---|---|---|
HDFC BANK LTD | 13.3 | 1.8 | 11.5 |
YUM CHINA HOLDINGS INC | 7.0 | 0.3 | 6.7 |
TECHTRONIC INDUSTRIES CO LTD | 6.7 | 0.2 | 6.4 |
FOCUS MEDIA INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CO LTD | 5.3 | 0.0 | 5.3 |
NAVER CORP | 4.8 | 0.3 | 4.6 |
As at 31 March 2025
Fund % | Benchmark % | Relative % | |
---|---|---|---|
TENCENT HLDGS LTD | 0.0 | 6.0 | -6.0 |
ALIBABA GROUP HOLDING LTD | 0.0 | 3.9 | -3.9 |
SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO LTD | 0.0 | 3.1 | -3.1 |
XIAOMI CORP | 0.0 | 1.5 | -1.5 |
MEITUAN | 0.0 | 1.4 | -1.4 |
Organisation | Rating |
---|---|
Lonsec | Highly Recommended4 The Lonsec Report is only available to financial advisers, please contact us for a copy. |
Morningstar | Silver5 |
Zenith | Highly Recommended6 |
This Fund is unhedged and is subject to the risk of fluctuations in international stock markets and currencies. Investors accessing the Fund through a master trust or wrap account will also bear any fees charged by the operator of such master trust or wrap account. Any apparent discrepancies in the numbers are due to rounding.
1Management costs and buy/sell spread are current as at the date of publication of this website. These fees may be subject to change in the future.
2Total returns (net) have been calculated using exit prices and take into account the applicable buy/sell spread and are net of Fidelity’s management costs, transactional and operational costs and assumes reinvestment of distributions. No allowance has been made for tax. Returns of more than one year are annualised. The return of capital is not guaranteed.