Research notes

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Research Notes

Purse strings still pulled tight

Nanosonics
3:27pm
February 26, 2024
There were no major surprises in NAN’s 1H24 result, but it’s clear the hospital budgetary strain are unlikely to subside for at least another half. Nevertheless, NAN have some levers to pull on the cost base side to soften the delayed capital sales impact to profitability. Results and commentary fail to entice a stampede back into the stock, but we continue to see this as a solid underlying business with a dominant market position, high margin recurring revenue base, and ample opportunity to deepen the market penetration over time into smaller practices and other jurisdictions. Changes to our model sees our target price reduce to A$3.50 (from A$3.88) although we retain an Add recommendation. While long term value remains for patient holders, we don’t see any immediate need to rush back in just yet.

Resilient core, with some ‘reset risk’ evident

Bapcor
3:27pm
February 25, 2024
BAP reported 1H24 EBITDA -2% and NPAT -13% (pre-released). At the divisional level, Retail dragged (-12%) with the Trade divisions showing resilience (+4.5%). Short-term transformation benefit targets were maintained (A$7-10m incremental NPAT in 2H24). The wider BTB program to be re-assessed under the new CEO. There is clearly some ‘reset risk’ with a new incoming CEO/CFO. Part of our case for the recent recommendation upgrade was the improved prospect for earnings improvement into FY25. Despite the uncertainty tied to an inevitable strategy review, we continue to see higher earnings in FY25 as realistic. We acknowledge the BAP investment case is tricky until the new CEO provides some strategy clarity. However, despite incurring mgmt and strategy change and a difficult cost environment, the business has been resilient. We think the valuation point continues to provide value on a medium-term view.

Trading at a slight scarcity premium

Sandfire Resources
3:27pm
February 25, 2024
There were no surprises in SFR’s 1H24 financials and unchanged FY24 guidance offers comfort. The Motheo ramp-up has been a stand-out success to date, countering underwhelming cash returns from MATSA. SFR has re-shaped into a resilient global business providing a strong option over metals price upside and a longer-dated option over mine life extension/expansion. However we maintain our Hold with SFR traded at a slight premium to NPV.

Price up, volume up, earnings to follow

Cedar Woods Properties
3:27pm
February 24, 2024
This reporting season has seen improved commentary around the residential housing sector and a nascent housing recovery. CWP report the highest enquiry and sales levels in two years for 2Q24, with price increases across its key markets, most notably WA where prices were up 5% to 13% in 1H24. CWP is a volume business and the demand for lots looks to be improving, with margins to invariably follow. CWP’s exposure to lower priced stock in higher growth markets sees further potential to drive earnings. On this basis, we see every reason for CWP to trade at NTA and potentially at a premium, were the housing cycle to gain steam through FY25/26. On this basis, we upgrade CWP to an ADD, with a price target of $5.60/sh.

Still a long way to go

Experience Co
3:27pm
February 24, 2024
EXP’s 1H24 result was in line with our forecasts. The 2H24 looks to have had a decent start with January trading in line with the pcp despite all the wet weather and EXP has also seen positive trading into February. EXP will likely be the last of our travel companies under coverage to fully recover from COVID given its leverage to inbound international tourists to Australia (in particular the Chinese) which continues to lag the wider travel recovery. However, material upside remains on offer for the patient investor. ADD maintained.

Tailwinds still roaring

Fortescue
3:27pm
February 23, 2024
A bumper 1H24 earnings and dividend result from FMG. 5% EBITDA beat and in-line underlying NPAT vs consensus. Interim dividend of AUD 108 cents, also above expectations. FY24 production and cost guidance maintained. FMG now trading at a premium to BHP/RIO is indicative of a solid share price performance, but not a good endorsement of value. We maintain a Hold rating.

Strong pricing but underlying conditions remain soft

Brambles
3:27pm
February 23, 2024
BXB’s 1H24 result was above expectations. Key positives: Group EBIT margin rose 160bp to 20.3% driven by growth in CHEP Americas and CHEP EMEA; ROIC increased 200bp to 21.8%; FY24 guidance for earnings and free cash flow was upgraded. Key negatives: CHEP Asia-Pacific EBIT margin fell 240bp to 34.4%; Group like-for-like (LFL) volumes fell 1%, impacted by customer destocking; Management said the contract environment has become more competitive. We increase FY24-26F underlying EBIT by 2%. Our target price rises to $15.65 (from $14.95) and we maintain our Hold rating.

Mid-year could potentially provide the key catalyst

PEXA Group
3:27pm
February 23, 2024
PXA’s 1H24 Group NPATA (A$15m) was down -36% on the pcp, and slightly below consensus (A$17m). This result had been heavily pre-announced and headline figures were largely as expected with FY24 guidance re-affirmed (albeit PXA Exchange margins are tracking slightly above the top end of the range). The key stock catalyst here remains the launch of the 24- hour UK refinance product in the middle of 2024, which management says remains on track. We make nominal changes to our PXA FY24F/FY25F EBITDA forecasts (+1%-2%) but our NPATA forecasts fall by -22%/-4% on higher non-operating items, e.g. specified items and D&A, etc. Our valuation rises to A$12.19 on higher future operating earnings and a valuation roll-forward. HOLD maintained.

1H24 earnings: Lace up

Accent Group
3:27pm
February 23, 2024
EBIT was 4% lower than forecast and down 11% on a pro forma basis. AX1 said it does not believe consumer demand has changed “fundamentally”, but there is a “little bit of softness” at present. AX1 has performed best where its brands are “hot” (such as HOKA). Against elevated comps, LFLs were resilient at (0.6)% in the first half and have started 2H24 at a similar pace. The comps get less demanding as the half goes on and we expect positive LFLs in 2H24 as a whole. This resilience is a function of the portfolio effect and strong market position. We have lowered our EBIT estimates by 2% in FY24 and FY25 due to higher D&A and retain an Add rating and $2.30 target price.

1H mixed- the end of “market dislocation”?

Ansell
3:27pm
February 23, 2024
1H was mixed, with an inline double-digit earnings decline, but on softer revenue and underlying profit. OPM expanded in Industrial on manufacturing efficiencies and carryover pricing, but was more than offset by contracting margins in Healthcare on continued inventory destocking and slowing of production to address inflated inventories. While a 2H recovery appears reasonable, as a proportion of earnings is driven by cost-outs/efficiencies, we remain cautious on the end of this multi-year “market dislocation” especially as gains are reliant on exogenous factors (eg supportive macros and limited customer destocking), while APIP unfolds over time. While FY24-26 estimates move lower, we roll forward valuation multiples with our DCF/SOTP PT increasing to A$22.53. Hold.

News & insights

A detailed comparison of US productivity and global growth forecasts, highlighting key differences with Australia.

Why The US Has Higher Productivity

Good morning. Today I want to talk about the U.S. economy in comparison, to other economies and, why it's performing, the way it is. The documents I will refer to are first the IMF, outlook, which is,  come out in the last two weeks.  That gives us some international comparisons.

For the US economy I use, the monthly outlook from Standard and Poor's, which is, the number one rated by the Congressional Budget Office, well ahead of other economic forecasters. For the US economy, both the IMF and, Standard Poor's agree that growth this year should be 2%. Our own model of the US economy, based on the Chicago Fed National Activity Indicator, is also forcasting US growth of 2%.

Still, that's 2% is less whatever the negative effect is from, from the US shutdown. When the shutdown continues for a month, that growth rate falls from 2% down to about 1.8 % 1.7%. So it's a moderate slowdown. Still growth in the U.S. economy accelerates next year to about 2.2%. I'll talk later on where that growth is coming from.

When we look at growth in other areas we see that: Euro area is miserable. Great Britain is growing faster than the Euro area now. This year the UK should grow by 1.3% but, the Euro area should grow by about 1.2% this year. Euro area growth drifts off to an even more miserable 1.1% next year. But fortunately, that generates a lot of savings to invest in other countries like us. Those savings then go in to the US equities and bond markets and, the Australian stock market and places like that.

China is slowing down to 4.8% this year and 4.2% next year according to the, IMF. Still, heroically India, marches on to 6.6% growth this year and 6.2% next year. For emerging markets, which include the Indo Pacific generally ,Growth is proceeding  at about 5.2% this year and 4.7%, next year.

The U.S is still, pretty good in comparison. This year, it's, growing at 2% or, depending on  the results of the shutdown. Next US Growth accelerates, to 2.2%, and growth is then about the same the year after.

There's been a lot of debate this year about the effect of tariffs on the US inflation.  In spite of higher tariffs , US inflation is stubbornly , stubbornly low. Headline inflation, which includes food and energy this year should be only 2.8%. Hardly something to scare markets. And that continues a 2.9% next year and 2.5% the year after. Amazingly,US  core inflation is a bit higher than that 3% this year and 3.3% next year. It's just that food and energy prices are falling in the US. Why can't that happen here?

Lets look at one of the reasons that you get really quite steady growth and relatively low inflation in the US The comparison I want to make here is between US output per hour and Australian output per hour. In the beginning of this year, we had a shocking slowdown in productivity growth because our government decided that was better to hire more, people from the public service than generate employment in the private sector. It is well known that, productivity in the market economy grows much faster than in the, than in the public sector. So,  for the first quarter, productivity in Australia grew, or  output per hour worked per annum ,grew by 0.3%  . The RBA has told us that, they expect output per hour that will rise to about 0.7%per annum , the same as the UK. And we'll be able to maintain productivity growth rate of 0.7%, going forward.

Let's compare that to what's happening in the US economy. This year It looks like the US will be producing labour productivity much higher than the Australia.  US Output per hour should grow by 1.6% this year . Next year US Output per hour may grow  even more by, 2.1%. Following that US labour productivity the year should grow between 1.6 and 1.7%,. This is  full 1% faster than, the Australian economy is expected to grow in terms of productivity. Remember, it's growth and productivity which generates increase in living standards.

There's two reasons, that we can provide for why the U.S., productivity is growing so much faster than ours. One is a flexible labour market. It's an extremely flexible labour market in the US. The current Australian government has made our labour market less flexible, less than it previously was. A second reason is deregulation . The program of deregulation by the US administration is making it easier for business , to do business.

That, of course, in turn generates higher levels of business investment. That higher level of business investments creates more growth. So, it's a series of policies which are different in each country . The result will be that, living standards in, in the U.S are going to start going to be growing significantly faster than they are in Australia.

And that's the end of the good news for the day.

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Australia's trimmed mean inflation hit 3%, driven by surging electricity prices and the end of federal subsidies, signalling the end of the rate-cut cycle.

Last time I spoke to you about Australian inflation and its effect on what the RBA might do in its November meeting, I said that expectations for inflation for the year to September, which would be published in October, were between 2.5% and 2.7%. I also said that if inflation came in at the lower estimate of 2.5%, then we could see a rate cut in November.

Well, the numbers are out, and unfortunately, not only are we not getting a rate cut in November, it’s unlikely we’ll see another rate cut any time soon. In fact, it’s fair to say we may be at the very end of the rate-cutting cycle in Australia. The reason is that the core measure, the trimmed mean, which is the RBA’s preferred measure of underlying inflation, came in not at 2.5%, not at 2.6%, and not even at 2.7%, but at a shockingly high 3%.

This result was driven by a 1.3% increase in prices in the previous quarter, which annualises to about 5%, a surprise that wasn’t anticipated. Looking deeper into the quarterly CPI, we saw housing prices rising at 4.7%, health costs up 4.2%, and education costs increasing by 5.3%.

The ABS has indicated that the major source of inflation was a jump in goods inflation, which rose 3%, up 1.1% from the previous quarter, or 4.4% annualised. The standout contributor was electricity, which saw a massive year-on-year increase of 23.6%. Other household fuels actually fell by 1.6%, and annual services inflation was 3.5%.

The ABS attributed this unexpected rise in inflation primarily to electricity prices. But it’s not just electricity prices themselves, it’s the end of Federal Government funding to the states that had been keeping those prices low.

The ABS reported that electricity prices rose 23.6% over the past 12 months, largely because State Government rebates, funded by the Commonwealth under the Energy Bill Relief Fund, have now been used up. These rebates included Queensland’s $1,000 rebate, Western Australia’s $400 rebate, and Tasmania’s $250 rebate. With these rebates exhausted, electricity prices have surged.

The A

BS data shows electricity prices excluding government rebates, and highlights the impact of the federal funding. Electricity prices really took off in 2023, rising by almost 20%, which posed a political risk for the Federal Government. In response, the Government provided funding to State Governments to suppress those prices. There were schemes in both 2023 and 2024, and ahead of the last election, the subsidised price paid by consumers dropped to around 80% of the original cost, well below the actual cost of generation.

However, since December 2024, those subsidies have been reduced. Over the past year, prices have climbed again, though they remain below the unsubsidised cost, which is now around 122% of the original price, or about a quarter higher than where things stood in 2023.

The result of all this is 3% core inflation. If inflation had come in at 2.5%, rates could have fallen from 3.6% to 3.35%. But with 3% core inflation, rates should need to rise by 25 basis points. That said, we’re likely at the end of the rate-cut cycle.

Is the RBA likely to raise rates? They might consider it, but this is cost-push inflation, not demand-driven inflation, so increasing rates wouldn’t help. It would only worsen the situation. This very high inflation figure, driven by the end of federal electricity subsidies, signals the end of the current series of Australian rate cuts.

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Receiving a large inheritance can be life-changing, but it also comes with important financial decisions.

Key Takeaways

  • Press pause. Park funds safely while you confirm what you received, obligations, and any tax implications.
  • Build a plan that fits your goals and timeframes. Prioritise cash buffers, debt decisions, investing, super, and estate wishes.
  • Get advice early. A financial adviser and tax accountant can help you avoid costly mistakes and set up a long-term strategy.
  • Use professional inheritance financial advice to align tax, super, investing, and estate planning decisions.

Receiving a large inheritance can be life-changing. It can also feel overwhelming. The right first steps help you protect capital, make clear decisions, and turn a windfall into lasting financial security. This guide walks you through a practical process Morgans advisers use with clients every day, with a focus on inheritance financial advice tailored to Australian rules.

Step 1: Pause and assess your situation

Before making big choices, slow down.

  • List the assets you have inherited: cash, property, superannuation, shares, term deposits, insurance proceeds, or a business interest.
  • Confirm control and timing. Has probate been granted? Are there executor timelines or sale constraints?
  • Check any liabilities. Some assets may come with debts, fees, rates, or ongoing costs.
  • Gather documents. Will, probate, estate distribution statement, title records, super death-benefit statements, cost-base records for property and shares.

Short term, consider holding funds in high-interest savings or term deposits while you complete the groundwork. ASIC’s Moneysmart has clear tips on handling large amounts of money.

Step 2: Understand the emotional impact

An inheritance often follows the loss of a loved one. It is normal to feel pressure to act quickly. Give yourself time.

  • Avoid large purchases until you have a plan.
  • Set simple rules. For example, no irreversible decisions for 30 to 90 days.
  • Write down your goals and values. What will this money do for you, your family, or future generations?
  • If you feel rushed by offers or schemes, step back and check for red flags. Scamwatch has practical guidance.

Step 3: Map your goals and timeframes

Your strategy should mirror when you will need the money.

  • 0 to 2 years (short term): capital protection and liquidity. Cash, term deposits, or an offset account.
  • 3 to 7 years (medium term): a diversified mix of income and growth.
  • 7 years plus (long term): growth-focused assets with disciplined risk management.

Align each dollar with a job: emergency fund, debt choices, home or investment property plans, children’s education, retirement savings, or charitable giving.

Step 4: Tax and rules to consider

Australia has no inheritance or estate tax. You can still face tax on income or gains from inherited assets. Seek written advice before selling or restructuring. 

  • Property. Capital Gains Tax (CGT) can apply when you sell. A main-residence exemption may be available in some cases and there is a two-year timing rule, with possible extensions in limited circumstances. The ATO has more information on extensions to the 2-year ownership period.
  • Shares and managed funds. You usually inherit the deceased’s cost base. Future gains or income may be taxable in your hands.
  • Superannuation death benefits. Tax depends on your relationship to the deceased and the components of the benefit. ATO guidance explains who counts as a dependant and how tax is applied.
  • Pension and benefits. A large inheritance can affect Centrelink assessments under the income and assets tests. Check how your position may change.

Step 5: Build a financial strategy

This is where professional inheritance financial advice makes a clear difference. A tailored strategy can help you:

  • Preserve capital while generating reliable income.
  • Create an optimised tax position.
  • Invest based on your risk profile and timeframes.
  • Plan for retirement or intergenerational goals.

Common strategies include:

  • Diversified portfolios. Combine cash, fixed income, Australian and global shares, property, and alternatives.
  • Superannuation contributions. Use concessional and non-concessional contributions where appropriate, subject to caps and personal circumstances.
  • Debt reduction or offset use. Compare the after-tax, after-fee return from investing with the guaranteed saving from reducing non-deductible debt.
  • Property investment. Weigh cash flow, rates, maintenance, tenancy risk, and diversification.
  • Philanthropy. Structured giving can align with your values and tax planning.

Step 6: Make considered debt decisions

A lump sum tempts quick mortgage paydowns or new borrowing. Test options with advice.

  • Offset first. Parking cash in an offset account can cut interest while keeping flexibility.
  • Compare outcomes. Paying down non-deductible debt is often strong, but do not drain all liquidity.
  • Avoid new lifestyle debt. Large purchases can wait until your plan is set.

Step 7: Invest with discipline

Good portfolios are simple, diversified, and low friction.

  • Use broad market building blocks supported by high-quality research.
  • Keep fees and taxes in focus.
  • Rebalance periodically to maintain your risk level.
  • Document an investment policy statement you can stick to when markets move.

Step 8: Update your own estate plan

An inheritance is a prompt to review your legal documents.

  • Update your will and enduring powers if your situation has changed.
  • Review super nominations and life insurance beneficiaries.
  • Consider a testamentary trust if suitable for family protection or flexibility.

Learn more about Estate Planning with a Morgans adviser.

Step 9: Avoid common mistakes

Many Australians make avoidable errors with inherited wealth, such as:

  • Making large purchases without a plan
  • Ignoring tax consequences when selling assets
  • Failing to diversify or taking concentrated bets
  • Chasing high returns promised by unlicensed operators
  • Not seeking professional advice early enough

Use checklists, document your decisions, and keep a record of key statements and dates.

Step 10: Work with a Morgans financial adviser

Every inheritance is unique, and so is your financial journey. A Morgans adviser can help you:

  • Clarify goals, timelines, and trade-offs
  • Model debt vs invest decisions
  • Design a diversified portfolio to suit your risk profile
  • Coordinate with your accountant and solicitor on tax and estate matters
  • Set up a review rhythm so your plan stays on track

Contact us today for a free consultation with a Morgans adviser. Let us help you turn your inheritance into long-term financial security.

Learn more with our superannuation advice, financial planning, retirement and estate planning

      
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Frequently asked questions

1) Do I pay tax on inherited money in Australia?
There is no inheritance or estate tax. You may still pay tax on income or gains from inherited assets. CGT can apply if you sell property or shares you inherited. Tax may apply to some superannuation death-benefit payments depending on your relationship to the deceased and the components of the benefit.

2) Should I pay off my home loan or invest the inheritance?
It depends on interest rates, risk tolerance, cash flow, and timeframes. Many clients park funds in an offset account first, then decide with advice. Compare the saving from reducing non-deductible debt with the expected after-tax return from investing. A written plan helps you commit to the path you choose.

3) What if I inherit a house?
Decide whether to live in it, rent it, or sell. Each option has different tax, cost, and lifestyle impacts. Keep records of valuations, costs, and dates. Speak to your adviser and tax specialist before you sign a contract. ATO guidance covers CGT rules and timing, including the two-year rule and limited extension grounds.

4) Who should I talk to first?
Start with a licensed financial adviser and a tax accountant. If property or complex structures are involved, engage a solicitor. Your financial adviser can coordinate the team and build a step-by-step plan. 

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