Jun Bei Liu: Meet the Australian $1bn fund manager

Jun Bei Liu of Tribeca Investment Partners recalls her first encounter with the stock market as a teenager in Shanghai and how it has shaped her to become a lead portfolio manager.

Jun Bei Liu: Meet the Australian $1bn fund manager

July 10, 2022
Jun Bei Liu of Tribeca Investment Partners recalls her first encounter with the stock market as a teenager in Shanghai and how it has shaped her to become a lead portfolio manager.
Read Transcript

Jun Bei Liu remembers her very first encounter with the stock market. As a teenager in Shanghai, she watched in fascination as her father stuck massive papers full of share price charts onto walls of the house built by her grandfather.

“It was like decoration,” Liu says. “We started off in his room, then it expanded to my room, then it expanded to the rest of the rooms upstairs, and eventually made its way down into the living room and kitchen and everywhere.”

Now, Liu’s father defers to her for investment advice. As lead portfolio manager at Tribeca Investment Partners, Liu manages the Alpha Plus Fund, which holds long and short positions on Australian equities. Under her guidance, its value has tripled from just over $300 million to $1.1 billion in three years.

Her current role is one that a 12-year-old Jun Bei, then a student in China, would literally not have been allowed to dream of.

“Our teacher asked us to write: what do we want to be when we grow up? And [back] then, the Chinese system [had] ... no focus on individuality, it’s about what’s better for the collective,” Liu says.

She recalls catching a glimpse of the notebook of her classmate, who had written: ‘I want to be an unknown police woman that helps out society without anyone recognising’.

“My one was: ‘I want to be a world-famous politician’,” Liu says. “My teacher marked it down. Her comment was, ‘please dream of something more realistic’ ... there was a lot of pressure to conform.”

Her teacher’s advice never stuck, and Liu now oversees the allocation of more than $1 billion in the midst of geopolitical uncertainty and a rapidly shifting economic environment. Since taking sole responsibility of the Alpha Plus Fund, a pandemic has slammed the brakes on the global economy; Russia’s war on Ukraine has sent commodity prices skyrocketing, creating food security crises and rampant inflation; central banks are pumping up interest rates as a result; and investors are less willing to take on riskier assets.

Yet the fundamental variables driving sharemarkets don’t change, Liu points out. A listed company’s share price is perennially reflective of two things: the business’ underlying earnings, growth, and management; and then how much people are willing to pay for it, or what we know as investor sentiment.

That’s where things get hairy. “People underestimate the emotional side of sharemarkets. Most of the time, [stock price] movement is due to emotion,” she says, adding that emotional bias has “significantly amplified” since COVID.

“People underestimate the emotional side of sharemarkets. Most of the time, [stock price] movement is due to emotion.”

“What varies a lot of the time is actually not due to company earnings. It’s because of what people want to pay. And that is behavioural.”

Her job is to block out the noise, Liu says. But today’s equity markets are increasingly influenced by the whims of retail investors, many who bought into the COVID crash of February and March 2020, and who Liu says now make up a “dominant force” dictating the sharemarket. The number of retail investors in Australia doubled to 1.43 million between mid-2020 and mid-2021, Investment Trends research shows.

Perhaps the sharpest example of retail investors’ influence is the short squeeze of GameStop, engineered by Reddit users in January 2021. Cryptocurrency, too, started as a niche underground movement that was supposed to be a hedge against inflation, but has become so mainstream it’s now proving to be bound by the same rules governing traditional assets.

“Retail investors are a driving force of a lot of FOMO (fear of missing out), or, you know, ultimate capitulation,” Liu says, adding that they tend to sell when the market’s bad, or push bull markets even higher.

These novice investors have also contributed to a swell of what Liu calls “passive money” in global sharemarkets due to their tendency towards products like ETFs, which can be likened to a bundle of investments that tracks the performance of an underlying index.

For Liu, an ‘active’ fund manager whose job it is to pick stocks with the objective of out-performing indexes, this is good news.

“What [passive money] does is create volatility and inefficiency in the market. And it does, in a way, provide a pretty good market for active investors,” she says.

Active investing paid off earlier this year when Liu caught wind of the relative underperformance in Magellan’s flagship fund. That, combined with rumours of leadership instability, led her to take a short position on the stock, predicting the share price would struggle. She was right, and Tribeca made $15 million by shorting Magellan.

“We’re seeing the market dynamic changing,” Liu says. “It really pays to do your homework.”

For someone whose job is defined by assessing dips and troughs that shift by the minute, is there anything that hasn’t changed?

“I am a curious person. I have a very curious mind, I love to learn about new things.” It’s the same trait she has had as a young girl, she says.

“When I was in China, all I ever wanted to do was be the hostess in a restaurant and open the door. I never thought I would go to high school [or] university because we were so poor. We never thought it was possible.

“I always say: don’t set a goal. The sky is the limit.”

 

Disclaimer: This material has been prepared by The Sydney Morning Herald, published on 10 July 2022. HM1 is not responsible for the content of linked websites or content prepared by third party. The inclusion of these links and third-party content does not in any way imply any form of endorsement by HM1 of the products or services provided by persons or organisations who are responsible for the linked websites and third-party content. This information is for general information only and does not consider the objectives, financial situation or needs of any person. Before making an investment decision, you should read the relevant disclosure document (if appropriate) and seek professional advice to determine whether the investment and information is suitable for you.

Jun Bei Liu remembers her very first encounter with the stock market. As a teenager in Shanghai, she watched in fascination as her father stuck massive papers full of share price charts onto walls of the house built by her grandfather.

“It was like decoration,” Liu says. “We started off in his room, then it expanded to my room, then it expanded to the rest of the rooms upstairs, and eventually made its way down into the living room and kitchen and everywhere.”

Now, Liu’s father defers to her for investment advice. As lead portfolio manager at Tribeca Investment Partners, Liu manages the Alpha Plus Fund, which holds long and short positions on Australian equities. Under her guidance, its value has tripled from just over $300 million to $1.1 billion in three years.

Her current role is one that a 12-year-old Jun Bei, then a student in China, would literally not have been allowed to dream of.

“Our teacher asked us to write: what do we want to be when we grow up? And [back] then, the Chinese system [had] ... no focus on individuality, it’s about what’s better for the collective,” Liu says.

She recalls catching a glimpse of the notebook of her classmate, who had written: ‘I want to be an unknown police woman that helps out society without anyone recognising’.

“My one was: ‘I want to be a world-famous politician’,” Liu says. “My teacher marked it down. Her comment was, ‘please dream of something more realistic’ ... there was a lot of pressure to conform.”

Her teacher’s advice never stuck, and Liu now oversees the allocation of more than $1 billion in the midst of geopolitical uncertainty and a rapidly shifting economic environment. Since taking sole responsibility of the Alpha Plus Fund, a pandemic has slammed the brakes on the global economy; Russia’s war on Ukraine has sent commodity prices skyrocketing, creating food security crises and rampant inflation; central banks are pumping up interest rates as a result; and investors are less willing to take on riskier assets.

Yet the fundamental variables driving sharemarkets don’t change, Liu points out. A listed company’s share price is perennially reflective of two things: the business’ underlying earnings, growth, and management; and then how much people are willing to pay for it, or what we know as investor sentiment.

That’s where things get hairy. “People underestimate the emotional side of sharemarkets. Most of the time, [stock price] movement is due to emotion,” she says, adding that emotional bias has “significantly amplified” since COVID.

“People underestimate the emotional side of sharemarkets. Most of the time, [stock price] movement is due to emotion.”

“What varies a lot of the time is actually not due to company earnings. It’s because of what people want to pay. And that is behavioural.”

Her job is to block out the noise, Liu says. But today’s equity markets are increasingly influenced by the whims of retail investors, many who bought into the COVID crash of February and March 2020, and who Liu says now make up a “dominant force” dictating the sharemarket. The number of retail investors in Australia doubled to 1.43 million between mid-2020 and mid-2021, Investment Trends research shows.

Perhaps the sharpest example of retail investors’ influence is the short squeeze of GameStop, engineered by Reddit users in January 2021. Cryptocurrency, too, started as a niche underground movement that was supposed to be a hedge against inflation, but has become so mainstream it’s now proving to be bound by the same rules governing traditional assets.

“Retail investors are a driving force of a lot of FOMO (fear of missing out), or, you know, ultimate capitulation,” Liu says, adding that they tend to sell when the market’s bad, or push bull markets even higher.

These novice investors have also contributed to a swell of what Liu calls “passive money” in global sharemarkets due to their tendency towards products like ETFs, which can be likened to a bundle of investments that tracks the performance of an underlying index.

For Liu, an ‘active’ fund manager whose job it is to pick stocks with the objective of out-performing indexes, this is good news.

“What [passive money] does is create volatility and inefficiency in the market. And it does, in a way, provide a pretty good market for active investors,” she says.

Active investing paid off earlier this year when Liu caught wind of the relative underperformance in Magellan’s flagship fund. That, combined with rumours of leadership instability, led her to take a short position on the stock, predicting the share price would struggle. She was right, and Tribeca made $15 million by shorting Magellan.

“We’re seeing the market dynamic changing,” Liu says. “It really pays to do your homework.”

For someone whose job is defined by assessing dips and troughs that shift by the minute, is there anything that hasn’t changed?

“I am a curious person. I have a very curious mind, I love to learn about new things.” It’s the same trait she has had as a young girl, she says.

“When I was in China, all I ever wanted to do was be the hostess in a restaurant and open the door. I never thought I would go to high school [or] university because we were so poor. We never thought it was possible.

“I always say: don’t set a goal. The sky is the limit.”

 

Disclaimer: This material has been prepared by The Sydney Morning Herald, published on 10 July 2022. HM1 is not responsible for the content of linked websites or content prepared by third party. The inclusion of these links and third-party content does not in any way imply any form of endorsement by HM1 of the products or services provided by persons or organisations who are responsible for the linked websites and third-party content. This information is for general information only and does not consider the objectives, financial situation or needs of any person. Before making an investment decision, you should read the relevant disclosure document (if appropriate) and seek professional advice to determine whether the investment and information is suitable for you.

Disclaimer: This material has been prepared by Sydney Morning Herald, published on Jul 10, 2022. HM1 is not responsible for the content of linked websites or content prepared by third party. The inclusion of these links and third-party content does not in any way imply any form of endorsement by HM1 of the products or services provided by persons or organisations who are responsible for the linked websites and third-party content. This information is for general information only and does not consider the objectives, financial situation or needs of any person. Before making an investment decision, you should read the relevant disclosure document (if appropriate) and seek professional advice to determine whether the investment and information is suitable for you.

facebook
linkedin
All
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
July 4, 2023

The Artificial Intelligence Era

The semiconductor industry is entering its fourth phase - the Artificial Intelligence  era. Over roughly 50 years, the semiconductor market has gone from a nascent industry to about the size of 500bn USD today.

Read More
Over next six months, the retail sector will present some of the best buying opportunities as earnings are downgraded to more realistic levels. Over next six months, the retail sector will present some of the best buying opportunities as earnings are downgraded to more realistic levels. Over next six months, the retail sector will present some of the best buying opportunities as earnings are downgraded to more realistic levels. Over next six months, the retail sector will present some of the best buying opportunities as earnings are downgraded to more realistic levels.
July 2, 2023

The hidden gems in the Australian sharemarket

Jun Bei Liu of Tribeca Investment Partners shares her insights with The Australian Financial Review on where investors can uncover hidden gems in the Australian market for potential growth and profitability.

Read More
May 29, 2023

GSFM Conversations: Munro Partners discuss growth equities

Damien McIntyre, the CEO of GSFM, chats with Munro Partners' Portfolio Manager Kieran Moore to discuss the current investment environment and several areas of interest that have Munro's team excited.

Read More
May 26, 2023

Top stocks for today's markets (and why Jun Bei Liu believes the ASX will head higher in 2023)

Jun Bei Liu of Tribeca Investment Partners (Core and Conference Fund Manager) doesn't believe the Australian economy will nosedive into a hard landing in the next few months or years.

Read More
May 18, 2023

The key characteristics Zenith looks for when rating funds

David Wright, Co-founder of Zenith Investment Partners and member of HM1 Investment Committee recently spoke with Livewire about key characteristics Zenith looks for when rating funds.

Read More
May 17, 2023

Aggressive climate targets spell opportunity for investors

Partner and Portfolio Manager, James Tsinidis of Munro Partners (Core Fund Manager) discusses the opportunity of investing in net-zero emission companies with Firstlinks.

Read More
April 26, 2023

Stock Story: Mastercard

Read the latest Stock Story from Magellan (Core Fund Manager) about one of one of our Core Holdings, Mastercard. In the article, Magellan tap into the underlying layers that support the consistency and strength of the business.

Read More
March 18, 2023

How worried should Australians be about the US banking crisis?

Tribeca’s Alpha Plus Fund Manager, Jun Bei Liu, spoke with ABC News about the stability of the Australian financial market in the midst of the Silicone Valley Bank crisis.

Read More
March 8, 2023

How Jun Bei Liu became the $1.2 billion portfolio manager she is today

Fearlessness, resilience and plain hard work: How Jun Bei Liu became the $1.2 billion portfolio manager she is today.

Read More
February 28, 2023

Invest in the Journey: Stock Story of Liberty Media

Listen to the latest episode of Invest in the Journey, hosted by our Core Fund Manager, Munro Partners as they take a closer look at the stock story of Liberty Media – the company that owns Formula One today.

Read More
December 9, 2022

2Fold: Investing for Impact - Michael Traill AM

HM1 Director, and Director of For Purpose Investments Michael Traill AM recently joined the 2Fold: Investing for Impact Podcast where he discussed opportunities for businesses and the not-for-profit sector to work together.

Read More
August 5, 2022

Invest in the Journey: Munro's long-only strategy

Jeremy Gibson, Partner and Portfolio Manager at Munro Partners, delves into where the portfolio is currently positioned in addition to his outlook for the months and years ahead.

Read More
July 28, 2022

Munro Partners: Advanced Micro Devices

Munro Partners shares their thoughts on a company they believe has a very sustainable earnings growth trajectory ahead due to the beginning of a new era within the high performance computing sector.

Read More
April 27, 2022

Munro Partners: The Next Big S Curve

Long-time Conference Fund Manager Nick Griffin of Munro Partners with Climate Co-Portfolio Manager James Tsinidis to discuss what they think is the next big S curve.

Read More
March 22, 2022

Invest in the Journey: Munro Partners

Munro Partners have launched their own podcast: Invest in the Journey. For their first episode, the three Founding Partners, Nick Griffin, John Spensley and Ronald Calvert share why they started Munro Partners.

Read More
December 10, 2024

Professor Jane Butler: Sparking Hope for Spinal Cord Injuries

In this episode of the Hearts & Minds Podcast, we sit down with Professor Jane Butler to discuss her groundbreaking research into spinal cord injuries.

Read More
impact-podcasts
September 24, 2024

Asian Market Potential with Tom Naughton of Prusik

CIO Charlie Lanchester sits down with Tom Naughton, CIO of Prusik Investment Mgmt. Tom shares his investment philosophy, the opportunities and challenges in Asian markets, and how his 2023 conference stock pick, Swire Pacific (0019.HK), delivered an impressive 30% return.

Read More
investing
September 4, 2024

Building Hearts and Minds with Co-Founders Matthew Grounds and Guy Fowler

In this episode, co-founders Matthew Grounds AM and Guy Fowler OAM discuss their journey in building Hearts & Minds and its philanthropic model that has donated over $70 million to medical research.

Read More
investing
June 25, 2024

Navigating the Resource Sector with Jeremy Bond of Terra Capital

In this episode, we chat with Jeremy Bond, Founder of Terra Capital and HM1 Conference Fund Manager. Tune in for insights into the world of resource investments and the exciting opportunities that lie ahead.

Read More
investing
June 11, 2024

Prof. Nadia Badawi on Cerebral Palsy Breakthroughs and Neonatal Care

Dive deep into the groundbreaking work of Professor Nadia Badawi, an internationally recognised neonatologist and expert in Cerebral Palsy.

Read More
impact-podcasts
May 28, 2024

Investment Insights: Rikki Bannan on Top Picks and Trends

Join us for an engaging episode featuring Rikki Bannan, Portfolio Manager of IFM Investors and HM1 Conference Fund Manager. This episode explores Rikki's career journey, investment strategies, and her 2023 conference stock pick, Telix Pharmaceuticals (ASX.TLX).

Read More
investing
December 6, 2023

Peter Cooper talks building and instilling a culture of humility and excellence

In this episode, our guest is the renowned investor, Peter Cooper, founder and Chief Investment Officer of Cooper Investors (Core Fund Manager). A founding supporter of Hearts and Minds, Peter is a staunch advocate of our model and its philanthropic purpose, actively engaging in every facet of Hearts and Minds.

Read More
investing
November 28, 2023

Jun Bei Liu on her high conviction investment strategy

In this episode, HM1 Chief Investment Officer Charlie Lanchester is joined by Jun Bei Liu. Jun Bei is the Portfolio Manager of Tribeca’s Alpha Plus Fund and since taking over managing the Fund, she has quadrupled AUM.

Read More
investing
November 21, 2023

The world of rare genetic disease research

In this episode, we speak to Associate Professor Gina Ravenscroft. Gina is an Associate Professor in Neurogenetics at the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research in Perth. Her research interests are in rare genetic diseases, with a particular focus on neurogenetic diseases in babies and children.

Read More
impact-podcasts
November 14, 2023

Learn what makes a high conviction investment and how to avoid short-term noise

In this episode, our Core Fund Manager Magellan shares how they select top stocks for the HM1 portfolio.

Read More
investing
November 7, 2023

Delve into the world of kids critical care and trauma research

In thie episode, we are joined by Dr. Marino Festa, or Rino for short. He is the Medical Director of NSW Kids ECMO Referral Service and a senior specialist in Paediatric Intensive Care at Children’s Hospital at Westmead.

Read More
impact-podcasts
October 31, 2023

Where Regal's Phil King is searching for opportunities

HM1's CIO, Charlie Lanchester, talks to Phil King of Regal Funds about his passion for stocks, his ongoing search for opportunities, and some of the sectors he’s excited by right now. Phil King of Regal Funds, has been a tremendous supporter of Hearts & Minds since the beginning.

Read More
investing
October 24, 2023

Preventing recurrent miscarriages and birth defects

In this episode, CEO Paul Rayson is joined by renowned biomedical researcher Professor Sally Dunwoodie. Prof. Dunwoodie's groundbreaking work has revolutionised clinical practices and enabled genetic diagnostic tests worldwide. In 2017, her team achieved a double breakthrough with the potential to prevent recurrent miscarriages and various birth defects.

Read More
impact-podcasts
October 17, 2023

Nick Griffin on how he finds global winners

In this episode, CIO Charlie Lanchester chats with Nick Griffin, the founding partner and CIO of Munro Partners, one of HM1's Core Fund Managers. They go over his career to date, reflect on the lessons he’s learned, and trace the decisions that led to him starting Munro.

Read More
investing
October 10, 2023

How A/Prof Matt Call is teaching our body to kill cancer

In this episode, CEO Paul Rayson is joined by WEHI’s Associate Professor Matt Call to talk about his incredible research. Matt’s team teaches and trains the body's own immune cells to target and kill cancer cells.

Read More
impact-podcasts

No results found.

Please try a different search keyword or filter.