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Specialist in Asia Pacific, Japan, China, India and South East Asia and Global Emerging Market equities.

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formerly Realindex Investments

Leader in active quantitative equities across Australian equities, global equities, emerging markets and global small companies.

Backed by a unique blend of research, portfolio construction and risk management, focused on uncovering original insights and translating them into investment strategies that are active and systematic, aiming to generate alpha.

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At Stewart Investors, we believe in putting people first. Our investment world-view is of a series of partnerships – with each other, with our clients, with the companies we invest in, the people who buy their goods and services, and with the wider society in which we all live and work.

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Should your clients quit sugar?

By April, 31 countries will have imposed a tax on sugar to tackle the worldwide epidemic of obesity.

Australia has the third highest obesity growth rate, just behind the United States and Mexico (see chart 1). With 63% of Australian adults overweight or obese1, and related health costs coming to $14.6 billion per year to treat diabetes alone2, there are renewed calls from medical professionals and health lobby groups for the Federal Government to follow the lead of countries like Mexico, where a new sugar tax has seen the consumption of sugar-laden drinks such as Coke fall.

Australians are becoming increasingly aware about making investment choices that align with their beliefs about sustainability. For clients who have seen similar regulatory changes affect other industries (such as energy and tobacco), a question they might be asking advisers is whether companies with products that are high in sugar are sustainable investments.

Whether it is the introduction of a sugar tax or changing patterns of consumption, these changes pose serious sustainability headwinds for those companies over a long time horizon. On the other hand, companies that are contributing to and benefiting from sustainable development stand to make positive gains.

Lessons from Mexico

Mexico is a useful case study for the case against sugar. In January 2014,  the Mexican government implemented a roughly 10% nationwide tax on sugar-sweetened beverages. Since then, the sales of sugary drinks have fallen by 5.5% in 2014 and by 9.75% in 2015.3

As allocators of clients' capital around the world, we regularly sit down with the management and investor relations teams of companies. During a recent trip to Mexico, a meeting with the Mexican division of Walmart brought to the forefront the question of where the companies in our investible universe fit in the shifting nutritional landscape of Mexico - a question we came back to throughout the trip.

"80% of Mexico's population in the top cities is wihin three kilometres or ten minutes of a Walmex store," the Investor Relations representative of Walmex told us. It was a stunning statistic, and summed up the sheer scale of Walmart de Mexico's dispersion across the country.

Mexico's journey along the development trajectory has resulted in a radical change in patterns of food consumption, giving rise to the coexistence of hunger and obesity as two sides of the same coin. This 'double burden of malnutrition' is prevalent in middle income countries across the globe, influenced by income growth coupled with rapid urbanisation. In Mexico in particular, the ramifications have been immense. Roughly a third of the country's population is now obese, with childhood obesity in particular tripling in a decade. The proportion of obese children in the country is now the highest in the world.4

The scale of the challenge in Mexico is that of a public health crisis. Obesity, and connected diabetes, take on a severe toll on those living with the condition and pose an increasing burden on the healthcare system. According to the World Health Organisation, diabetes is the leading cause of deaths in Mexico.5 This is particularly staggering in light of the ubiquitous consumption of carbonated beverages in the country. In 2012, Coca-Cola reported sales of more than two units of Coke products to every man, woman and child in Mexico, every single day.6 Further, obesity and related Type 2 diabetes treatments cost the public health system in the country between $4.3 billion and $5.4 billion a year.7

obesity

(Chart 1: Rate of obesity, source: OEDC Obesity update, June 2014.)

These figures, astonishing as they may seem, closely resemble the growing epidemic of obesity and diabetes in Australia. And while the consumption of Coke hasn't been rising at the rate of Mexico's, it's still high, at one unit every day for every single individual in the country.8

Part of the solution

An encouraging factor that was evident in our meetings with management on this trip was the unquestionable acknowledgment of the problem at hand, and a clear desire to be a part of the ultimate answer. To explicitly admit the extent to which malnutrition is pervasive across society is one of the first steps to addressing the sustainability headwinds that it poses. This was particularly evident in our discussions with FEMSA, which owns the OXXO convenience stores and 48% of Coca-Cola FEMSA. The Investor Relations Manager commented: "We know we are part of the problem, but we also want to be part of the solution."

Grupo Herdez, our longest held position in Mexico, is another such example. Their core portfolio has long included healthy staple foods such as canned vegetables and tinned tuna, but they have also recently begun to experiment with new ideas such as frozen yoghurt products that are healthy but also fit local tastes, thereby trying to imagine themselves as more holistic wellness brands.

An almost 10% reduction in sugary beverages could potentially mean tens of thousands of fewer cases of diabetes, strokes, heart attacks and deaths in ten years, altering diets especially perhaps of the younger generations, in turn is saving in health care expenditure as well.9

No single arm of society or organisation can solve a challenge of this scale alone. The private sector, by virtue of its scope and pervasiveness, has a vital role to play in developing a sustainable solution to the problem of malnutrition. As such, we continue to aim to allocate clients' capital to companies that we feel are beginning to realise the necessity improvin access to nutritious products, and believe that this is beneficial both for society and long-term investment returns.

 

Important Information

This material has been prepared and issued by First Sentier Investors (Australia) IM Ltd (ABN 89 114 194 311, AFSL 289017) (Author). The Author forms part of First Sentier Investors, a global asset management business. First Sentier Investors is ultimately owned by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc (MUFG), a global financial group. A copy of the Financial Services Guide for the Author is available from First Sentier Investors on its website.

This material contains general information only. It is not intended to provide you with financial product advice and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Before making an investment decision you should consider, with a financial advisor, whether this information is appropriate in light of your investment needs, objectives and financial situation. Any opinions expressed in this material are the opinions of the Author only and are subject to change without notice. Such opinions are not a recommendation to hold, purchase or sell a particular financial product and may not include all of the information needed to make an investment decision in relation to such a financial product.

To the extent permitted by law, no liability is accepted by MUFG, the Author nor their affiliates for any loss or damage as a result of any reliance on this material. This material contains, or is based upon, information that the Author believes to be accurate and reliable, however neither the Author, MUFG, nor their respective affiliates offer any warranty that it contains no factual errors. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Author.