Invesco has expanded its Australian funds range with the launch of a systematic global equities strategy targeting modest outperformance with tightly controlled risk.
Invesco has launched a global equities fund for Australian investors, offering access to a systematic multi-factor strategy with a more than 20-year track record and over $16 billion in assets under management (AUM) globally.
The Invesco Global Enhanced Equity Fund is managed by Invesco Quantitative Strategies (IQS) and aims to generate returns of 1 per cent per annum above the MSCI World ex-Australia Index before fees while maintaining a targeted tracking error of between 1.5 per cent and 2 per cent per annum.
The strategy invests in a portfolio of 400-550 global companies and uses a systematic approach designed to capture value, momentum and quality factors while operating within a constrained risk framework.
According to Invesco, the strategy has delivered annualised outperformance of 1.3 per cent above the MSCI World ex-Australia Index since its inception in July 2005 and generated 5.3 per cent alpha in the 12 months to 31 March 2026, before fees and in Australian dollar terms.
The launch comes as fund managers continue to seek ways to differentiate active equity offerings amid growing concentration in global share markets and the increasing dominance of a small group of large-cap technology stocks.
Market concentration has become a recurring theme across the funds management sector, with Money Management recently reporting on concerns that narrow market leadership is creating difficult trade-offs for active managers seeking to balance benchmark risk against opportunities to generate excess returns.
Invesco said the new fund is intended to provide investors with a systematic alternative that combines active return objectives with tighter risk controls than traditional active global equity strategies.
Jonathon Crook, managing director and head of Australia and New Zealand at Invesco, said investors were increasingly looking for solutions that combined active return generation with a disciplined risk-management framework.
“In a market environment where returns have been increasingly concentrated in a narrow group of stocks, finding alpha through a diversified and disciplined process becomes even more important,” Crook said.
Scott Bennett, director of Invesco Solutions, said the strategy sought to generate excess returns without taking on unnecessary risk and aimed to reduce the potential for crowding that can emerge in quantitative portfolios.
“Having managed this strategy for over two decades, IQS has a proven track record of delivering attractive risk-adjusted returns while maintaining tracking error within the targeted range,” Bennett said.
Globally, Invesco manages US$2.2 trillion ($3.4 trillion) in assets across public and private markets as at 31 March 2026.
