Thematic Hub (2024)

Thematic investing is a forward-looking investment approach that seeks to capitalise on megatrends and long-term structural changes.

We believe there are three overarching megatrends that are shaping the future:

  • Demographic change
  • Technological innovation
  • Climate change

These are broad forces that reach into almost every part of our lives, and as they evolve – and interact – they create themes that have a radical, observable impact on the world. Thematic investing aims to identify these thematic opportunities, and make investments that potentially will benefit if they are realised.

As most investors know, generating good share market returns requires identifying companies likely to produce healthy earnings and dividends over time. Thematic investing is primarily about accessing the potential for significant growth. Most thematic investors are looking for opportunities to generate returns higher than those they would get from investing in the broader market.

Thematic investing focuses on structural, not cyclical themes. Where cyclical themes play out over the short and medium-term, structural themes – for example, the move towards clean energy – play out over a much longer term, and tend to be one-off shifts that irreversibly change the world.

Thematic Hub (1)

Cyclical themesStructural themes
  • Occur at somewhat regular short- or medium-term intervals, typically based on changes in the business cycle.
  • Occur as one-off shifts that change an existing paradigm.
  • Can be mean-reverting, so that over a long period of time they tend to converge with some average level.
  • Tend to be longer-term in nature
  • Typically driven by powerful forces such as disruptive technologies or changing demographics and consumer behaviour.

Frequently asked questions

Thematic investing is when an investor tries to identify long-term transformational trends, and the investments that are likely to benefit if those trends play out.

Thematic investing is explicitly forward-looking, often tapping into economic changes investors can see taking place around them, disruptive technologies, changing demographics and consumer behaviours.

The rise of cybersecurity is a good example, driven by rapidly increasing global spend by governments, corporations, and individuals to prevent cyber-attacks, data theft, industrial espionage, and other hacks.

The key benefits of thematic investing are:

Growth potential

Exposure to transformative, long-term themes typically offers the potential for significant growth.

Timing is less important

Because of the long-term nature of these themes, the timing of entry and exit points is less important than it is when investing based on economic cycles. Buying into the theme has the potential to be profitable whether the ‘wave’ is caught right at the start, or picked up a little later on.

Shown below, the rate of adoption of major technology changes over the past century – such as the telephone, electricity, cars and radio – has been measured in decades. The pace of technological innovation is unrelenting, with more recent changes such as the internet, smart phones and social media just as disruptive, and take-up more rapid.

Unconstrained

Thematic investing ignores geographical boundaries, sector classifications and style biases, meaning that investors are unconstrained in looking for investment opportunities, and can take a far more flexible approach in thinking how industries and companies work in a global universe.

Potential for alignment with an investor’s philosophy or values

Thematic investing can cater to an investor’s philosophy or values by tilting their portfolio towards a specific theme that resonates with them, such as environmental, social, or technology-focused themes.

Spreading portfolio risk

Thematic investing can help to spread portfolio risk as returns have tended to have low correlation to swings in major regional or sector investment benchmarks.

Suited to a passive investment approach

ETF thematic investing readily lends itself to a globally diversified passive approach – using rules to identify companies with revenue exposure to a secular trend, and then investing in a broad selection of the leading players from around the world.

Identifying a thematic opportunity you think provides significant long-term growth potential is an important part of thematic investing. The next step is deciding how to position yourself to benefit from it – who will the winners and losers be as the theme plays out?

A high-risk/high-reward strategy is to invest in one or several companies that you think will benefit from the trend. For every Amazon or Netflix, there may be hundreds, even thousands, of companies trying to exploit the same opportunities that fail, making the process of ‘picking winners’ extremely challenging.

An alternative is a thematic ETF, which provides exposure via a basket of securities rather than trying to pick a few ‘winners’.

This approach reflects the idea that in emerging industries undergoing structural growth, we may not know who the winners will be, but if you can hold all the stocks within that industry/thematic, and let the market decide the weighting of your portfolio by having a market capitalisation-weighted exposure, you can ensure you participate in the winners.

In other words, while you may not know who the next Amazon or Netflix will be, by investing in the industry/theme as a whole, you can ensure you have exposure to them.

Most thematic ETFs track indices that have been constructed to measure the performance of companies that participate in the particular trend.

Investing in a theme via an ETF offers a number of benefits, including:

Cost effectiveness– using an index-tracking ETF to invest in a theme, as opposed to an actively-managed fund, typically involves lower costs. In addition, active managers face just as many challenges ‘picking winners’ from secular change as they currently do in picking winners from cyclical change.

Diversified thematic exposure– the security selection part of the process is taken care of as the ETF typically invests in a broad set of companies from around the globe that provide exposure to the theme.

Transparency– the full portfolios of ETFs are made available to investors daily.

We believe that thematic investing typically is suited to a market cap-weighted approach.

One of the benefits of a passive market cap-based indexing approach is that it tends to increase portfolio weightings to emerging ‘winners’ with rising market cap over time, while cutting exposure to ‘losers’ with declining market cap.

We believe there are three broad megatrends that drive thematic investment opportunities, structural changes that are creating permanent shifts to the way the world works:

  • Technological innovation
  • Demographic change
  • Climate change

Each of these megatrends has implications for almost everything we do. We can see and experience their impacts in our lives today, and we also know they will have both predictable and unforeseen consequences for the remainder of the 21st century.

Technological change and the growing dominance of the digital economy is arguably the most significant megatrend in terms of creating thematic investment opportunities.

Demographic change includes trends such as:

  • ageing populations
  • slowing population growth rates
  • the expanding middle class in emerging economies such as China and India.

As a megatrend, climate change encapsulates:

  • the impacts and resource scarcity caused by climate change and environmental degradation
  • policy initiatives designed to support decarbonisation and the climate transition
  • consumer and investor preferences for sustainability.

An investor’s time horizon, tolerance for risk and overall investment goals are important considerations when deciding whether to buy into or sell out of any investment.

The main benefit of thematic ETFs lies in the possibility of gaining investment exposure to a specific theme.

While broader-based indices such as theNasdaq-100 Indexare often the focus of much of the discussion in investing communities, if an investor is seeking a specific type of technology exposure, such asrobotics & A.I.orcybersecurity, a thematic ETF may be worth considering.

As another example, a broader-based index such as the S&P/ASX 200 provides access to the top 200 companies in Australia, but if an investor is seeking exposure to Australian technology companies specifically, they might consider a thematic ETF such asBetashares S&P/ASX Australian Technology ETF (ASX: ATEC).

Like all investment approaches, thematic investing is not without risk. Given the long-term nature of megatrends, there is the risk that the trend will take longer than expected to be established – or even that it does not materialise at all.

In saying that, we believe thematic exposures can provide strong potential for returns as part of a well-diversified portfolio, as well as exposure to markets that may have previously been difficult, or impossible, to access.

Investors typically use thematic investments to complement broad market core exposures, rather than to replace them.

For example, an investor might construct the core of their portfolio using ETFs that provide exposure to the broad Australian sharemarket, international shares, and fixed interest. They could then consider adding thematic investments as a smaller part of the portfolio, with the objective of seeking extra growth from exposure to themes in which they have conviction.

Investors can of course choose individual stocks that they hope will do well if a theme plays out. However, picking winners is notoriously difficult.

Another option is to gain exposure through a managed fund or ETF. Thematic ETFs typically invest in a portfolio of companies meaningfully exposed to a chosen theme, reducing stock-specific risk. They are necessarily exposed totheme-specific risk, so will typically trade with a higher level of volatility than a broad market core exposure. However, when blended with broad-based core holdings, a thematic ETF can add diversification benefits, as well as outperformance potential, to your portfolio.

As is the case with all investments, you should consider your time horizon, tolerance for risk and overall investment goals in deciding whether thematic ETFs are a suitable investment for you.

It’s important to assess the quality of exposure an ETF, and the index it tracks, provides to the chosen theme, which comes down largely to the index methodology.

Ideally, the index should provide a ‘pure-play’ exposure – the basket of securities in the index should represent the particular theme without its focus being diluted by exposure to other themes or sectors.

In analysing how ‘pure-play’ an exposure is, a couple of measures can be helpful.

The correlation with the broader market is one indicator – for example comparing the thematic index with an index like the NASDAQ 100 Index. A low correlation with the broad market can be indicative of a strong pure-play exposure, while a high correlation may suggest a lower pure-play thematic.

Looking at the overlap in holdings between the thematic index and the broad index can also be instructive, with a low overlap being preferable.

While there are no cast-iron rules around these two measures, a combination of low correlation and low overlap can be taken as an indicator that the theme has a reasonable divergence from the broad market.

It’s also important to keep an eye on costs. Index-tracking thematic ETFs tend to be more cost-effective than actively managed thematic funds.

How to invest in thematic funds

It’s never been easier for investors to gain diversified, transparent and cost-effective exposure to these major investment themes shaping our world with ETFs.

These are some of the global thematic investment opportunities we’ve identified and the ETFs we’ve introduced to the market that offer exposure to these trends.

Thematic Hub (2024)

FAQs

How to answer a thematic question? ›

Consider the nature and scope of the question. Should your answer be chronological or topical? Should it be based on social, political, cultural, diplomatic, intellectual, or economic history? Look within the question for an implicit structure for your essay.

What is an example of a thematic question? ›

Some examples of thematic questions from other films: Is the price of obsession worth the potential rewards? (Whiplash) Can men and women be friends? (When Harry Met Sally) Is it right to be forced to do good? (Clockwork Orange)

What is a thematic hub? ›

Thematic Hubs are institutions or networks that are intended to enable theCentre to systematically utilize the experiences, structures and arrangements of existing regional and national institutions or entities in order to accelerate the implementation of its core programme of activities.

How to generate codes in thematic analysis? ›

You draw codes from a review of the data or an initial analysis to produce the codebooks. Reflexive thematic analysis is more flexible and does not use a codebook. Researchers can change, remove, and add codes as they work through the data.

What are the 7 steps in thematic analysis? ›

Step 1: Become familiar with the data, Step 2: Generate initial codes, Step 3: Search for themes, Step 4: Review themes, Step 5: Define themes, Step 6: Write-up. 3.3 Step 1: Become familiar with the data. The first step in any qualitative analysis is reading, and re-reading the transcripts.

What is a thematic example? ›

Examples of Theme Topics: Love, Justice/Injustice, Family, Struggle, the American Dream, Wealth, Inhumanity Examples of Themes: People risk their own identity to find love; Power corrupts humanity; Without empathy, there can be no justice.

What is the meaning of thematic answer? ›

Thematic means concerned with the subject or theme of something, or with themes and topics in general. [formal] ... assembling this material into thematic groups.

What is a good thematic statement? ›

A thematic statement is a simple yet powerful message an author is trying to convey in their work. For example: Love is the glue that binds the Universe together. There is no such thing as true love. Maternal love is the most powerful of all types of love.

What is an example of thematic approach? ›

An example of thematic instruction is identifying and using a theme across the curriculum to teach all subjects. Some general ideas for a theme could be careers, weather, food, or people.

What is an example of a creative hub? ›

An example of a Creative Hub is the CRU cowork in Portugal. It is located at the heart of Porto's art block, the Bombarda Art District.

What is a hub in research? ›

A starting point for the support and resources you'll need for conducting research, scholarly and creative activity at the University.

How many codes is normal in thematic analysis? ›

The general rule of thumb is that each theme should not have more than 4-5 codes. It is also better to have 6-10 broad themes with sub-themes rather than lots of really detailed themes.

What is the difference between coding and thematic analysis? ›

'Themes' are features of participants' accounts characterising particular perceptions and/or experiences that the researcher sees as relevant to the research question. 'Coding' is the process of identifying themes in accounts and attaching labels (codes) to index them.

What is the bias in thematic analysis? ›

Reflexive TA approaches embrace researcher subjectivity as a resource for research (rejecting positivist notions of researcher bias, see Varpio et al., 2021), view the practice of TA as inherently subjective, emphasize researcher reflexivity, and reject the notion that coding can ever be accurate—as it is an inherently ...

How do you write a thematic response? ›

Thematic Essay Checklist
  1. State a focused main argument about the theme.
  2. Hook the reader and introduce the theme.
  3. Begin each with a clear topic sentence related to the theme.
  4. Use specific examples, quotes, or facts.
  5. Explain how the evidence supports the thesis.
  6. Link analysis back to the central theme throughout.
Jun 20, 2024

What is a theme question answer? ›

'Theme' is the main idea around which a particular piece of writing or speech revolves. It is the central idea which is reiterated through the various characters and events in the text. The Oxford Learner's Dictionary defines the term 'theme' as “the subject or main idea in a talk, piece of writing or work of art”.

How do you start a thematic statement? ›

When you write a theme statement, start by listing some of the topics of the text; for example, alienation, prejudice, ambition, freedom, love, loyalty, passion, etc.). The topic can also be a longer phrase, such as the relationship between love and hate. Can the meaning of a work be love?

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