Prashant Khemka, manager of Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets, believes that managers who don’t beat their benchmarks should not charge fees.
Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets was one of just two investment trusts to go public last year amidst a period of drought in new listings for the London Stock Exchange.
This new fund aims to replicate the success of its stablemate Ashoka India Equity by applying the same investment philosophy to the broader emerging markets universe.
The £35m investment trust made the headlines again recently as it is looking to absorb its much larger peer, Asia Dragon Trust, to grow its assets under management and get onto the radar of a wider investor base.
Performance of fund
Source: WhiteOak Capital Management
Below, the founder of WhiteOak Capital Management, Prashant Khemka explains his strategy, how the investment trust structure enables him to generate higher alpha and why managers who don’t outperform their benchmarks should not charge fees.
Could you explain your investment strategy?
A crucial prerequisite to generate sustainable, peer group-leading performance over many years and market cycles is to have a robust investment culture. Everyone in our team is driven by a single-minded objective: to generate the highest return compared to anyone else in the peer group. We don’t have a top-quartile or top-decile mindset, but a sportsman-like mindset: we’re aiming for the gold medal.
We follow a stock selection-based approach, underpinned by the belief that outsized performance is generated by investing in great businesses trading at attractive valuations. We use an analytical framework, which also serves as a valuation framework, called ‘OpcoFinco’.
From a risk management perspective, an end objective is to maximise alpha while also minimising the volatility of that alpha.
What is the OpcoFinco framework?
To generate cash flow sustainably in the future, a company needs returns on incremental capital to be higher than the cost of capital.
When you find businesses that possess these attributes, you must value them logically and invest only if there is a substantial upside to fair value.
The OpcoFinco framework enables you to analyse a company through the prism of return on incremental capital and then to quantify the value of return on incremental capital.
Unlike many people, we don't use the price-to-earnings ratio at all. We think it's very misleading because it is distorted.
Could you explain your fee structure?
We have a 0% fixed management fee structure. We charge a performance fee on a three-year cumulative alpha basis, which means we only get paid if we outperform. The alignment of interest is strong because we can't just sit on our laurels and expect to get paid.
There are too many investment trusts out there that have never generated alpha, but are charging fees on an ongoing basis. There's very little accountability and I'm quite surprised to find that the accountability level is not as high as I would have expected in a developed market like the UK.
The 0% management fee combined with the annual redemption facility and performance of the trust should keep the discount very tight. In the case of Ashoka India Equity, we've generally been trading at a small premium versus a 15% to 20% discount for most of our peers.
Why did you choose the investment trust structure?
Emerging markets are inefficient segments of the global equity market and we have an overweight to small and mid-cap (‘smid’) companies because it’s an even more inefficient part of emerging markets. Being overweight smids doesn’t mean you are going to outperform but a good management team can generate higher alpha in that space.
Because it's closed-ended, the investment trust structure enables us not to worry as much about liquidity. Hence, we can allocate more capital in small-cap companies, which may not be appropriate from a liquidity management perspective in an open-ended vehicle.
It also allows investments in pre-IPO opportunities. It’s not possible to explore those opportunities in open-ended vehicles.
What has been the best-performing stock in the portfolio since launch?
The best performer has been Doms Industries, which is an Indian stationery and art material manufacturer. It produces things such as pencils, erasers and mathematical instruments. Basically, things students would use in school.
When I grew up, Doms wasn't around. We used all kinds of pencils that weren't necessarily branded. But now when I go back to India, I see that all the kids in the family are using Doms products.
Fila Group from Italy is an investor in Doms Industries and owns a good amount of its shares.
What about the worst-performing stock?
It has been Budweiser Brewing Company APAC, which is listed in Hong Kong. The Chinese market has been under tremendous pressure and most of our Chinese names are down 11% to 44%.
Following the reopening of China after Covid, it was expected that the demand for beer consumption would substantially normalise and get back to its earlier growth path, but like many other segments of the Chinese economy, consumption has been fairly tepid.
That is why Budweiser has derated.
The portfolio is underweight China relative to the benchmark. How do you approach this market?
We never form top-down views such as ‘China is in deep trouble, so we will underweight this market.’
However, the portfolio is overweight the most democratic countries and underweight the least democratic countries. We believe authoritarian regimes have lower alpha potential. Similarly, we are underweight state-owned enterprises and overweight private companies.
Now, if you reassign some of the companies in the portfolio that are exposed to China like South Africa’s Naspers (which has a sizeable stake in Tencent) as well as some off-benchmark names, our allocation to China is more or less in line with the benchmark.
How do you select your off-benchmark positions?
Most of them have three attributes: they derive the majority of their value from emerging markets, are high alpha opportunities and mitigate some factor risks in the portfolio.
For example, if you take France’s LVMH, 60% of its growth was driven by China alone in the 10 years prior to the Covid crisis and we estimate that a majority of its profits still come from emerging markets. It mitigates the underweight risk in China.
Similarly, Netherland’s ASML derives the majority of its value from emerging markets, has high alpha potential and mitigates the underweight risk in Taiwan.
What do you do outside of fund management?
I like to spend time with my family. I have three kids and we have a fund management competition going on between them. They have their own portfolios and try to outperform each other. It’s good fun to see the industry within the family as well.
UK equities hit an all-time high this week but there’s plenty of petrol in the tank to continue fuelling this rally.
The UK equity market hit fresh highs this week and, while no-one wants to get in at the top of any market, there are many reasons to believe that this rally might only just be getting started.
With the benefit of hindsight, we would all have boosted our domestic equity holdings months ago, but some investment professionals think now still seems like a relatively opportune moment to get in on the action.
While many catalysts have converged to produce the recent rally (including an improvement in economic data, imminent rate cuts and voracious share buybacks) there are plenty more irons in the fire yet to make an impact.
FTSE 100 and FTSE All Share vs MSCI ACWI, year-to-date
Source: FE Analytics
One factor that could really move the dial would be inflows.
As Artemis Income’s Nick Shenton pointed out, the UK stock market has “been making all-time highs on a total return basis for a while [but] it’s not doing so from an extended position where it’s widely owned or the shares don’t [offer] value. We think it bodes quite well that it’s starting to make all-time highs without the aid of international investors coming back to the UK market, or even domestic investors”.
Meanwhile, private investors continue to pull money out of UK equity funds, channelling it instead into passively-managed global and US equity funds. Asset managers are bullish about the prospects for US large-cap stocks and European equities but not the poor old UK. Even wealth managers such as Coutts are turning their back on the UK – at precisely the wrong time, in my view.
The UK government is doing its best to stem the tide of outflows, launching the British ISA which is not expected to move the needle massively, but is a step in the right direction. It proves there is political will to take action to support the stock market, which is why Man Group’s Henry Dixon called the British ISA announcement in the spring Budget “a faint line in the sand moment”.
Jack Barrat, who co-manages Man GLG Undervalued Assets with Dixon, said the chancellor’s call for UK pension funds to disclose their allocations to domestic equities should give the stock market more “sunlight” and “greater attention”.
If the government were to go one step further and abolish stamp duty, that could encourage investors back into the stock market.
Valuations remain attractive despite this year’s gains, as the chart below shows.
Marcus Weyerer, senior ETF investment strategist, EMEA at Franklin Templeton, said: “With a price-to-book ratio of less than 2.0, UK equities are currently trading at a discount of more than 50% compared to US equities. Additionally, in terms of forward price-to-earnings, they are closely aligned with emerging market levels. Furthermore, the UK has long been considered a haven for income investors, and it currently boasts a dividend yield of 3.8%.”
Cheap valuations in a cheap currency have sparked a “frenzy” of merger and acquisition (M&A) activity, according to James Lowen, manager of JOHCM UK Equity Income. Five of his 60 holdings have been approached by bidders this year alone.
There has been a dearth of initial public offerings (IPOs) but if valuations were to surge, British companies might become more confident about going public here.
And if valuations better reflected what public companies are worth, management teams might be less eager to move their listings to the US.
A pickup in IPOs would create a virtuous circle, according to Graham Ashby, a UK all-cap fund manager at Schroders. “History clearly shows that increased UK IPO activity typically corresponds with a short-term peak in the equity market – witness the high levels of IPO activity in 2008 and 2021, compared with current depressed levels,” he said.
Meanwhile, companies themselves are cognisant of the value in their own cheap shares, so have been buying them back in droves. Buybacks – along with companies being taken out by foreign acquirers or moving their listings abroad – are gradually shrinking the size of the UK equity market.
Ashby observed that “less supply when demand may be set to increase” could eventually drive up prices. Quoting Warren Buffett’s maxim of being greedy when others are fearful, he concluded: “It may be time to get greedy.”
The overall cheapness of the UK market masks the fact that some of the UK’s largest stocks already appear expensive, Lowen warned. The seven “expensive defensives” (AstraZeneca, GSK, Diageo, Unilever, LSEG, British American Tobacco and RELX) look overvalued and comprise a fifth of the FTSE 100, which represents “a big danger lurking under the surface” for passive investors.
Other areas such as banks, insurers, miners and small-caps offer greater opportunities. That is why Lowen believes actively-managed strategies that can deviate away from the FTSE 100 index’s largest names would be a better way to play the UK recovery.
FE fundinfo head of editorial Gary Jackson set out to find the best performing active UK equity managers this week and found 21 funds that beat the mighty MSCI All Country World index over three years.
Five funds even outperformed the MSCI ACWI by more than 5% (Invesco UK Opportunities, BNY Mellon UK Income, UBS UK Equity Income, Invesco FTSE RAFI UK 100 UCITS ETF and Ninety One UK Special Situations).
This is no mean feat, dominated as the global index is by the US, which has outperformed the UK mightily.
If these fund managers can surpass global equities during a period where the UK has been a laggard, what might they be capable of at the helm of a more buoyant opportunity set?
This could be an attractive entry point into the asset class, say experts.
Small-caps have been deeply out of favour in the UK and elsewhere.
Every month over the past year, the size of small-cap equity funds has shrunk by a third, contracting from £14.5bn five year ago to £9.8bn today, according to data from the Investment Association. This shrinkage has been caused by both outflows and disappointing returns, which have averaged at -15% over the past three years.
But with UK economic growth now improving, inflation easing and signals that a rate cut could come as soon as next month, some of this negative sentiment could start to lift, according to Bestinvest managing director Jason Hollands.
He declared: “It could be quite an interesting time to dip the toes back in.”
“Small-cap stocks are inexpensive and another factor to consider is that the whole UK market is basically up for sale to international bidders at the moment, who can see plenty of value opportunities,” he added.
His message was echoed by Sheridan Admans, head of fund selection at TILLIT, who said the expectation that rates have stabilised or will potentially be cut later in the year “has provided a catalyst for rising investor interest”.
FundCalibre managing director Darius McDermott added that today’s cheap valuations, which are unlikely to last over the long term, represent a “good potential entry point”.
For investors who are tempted by these opportunities, below is a selection of domestic and international small-cap funds to consider.
UK small-caps
Hollands went with the River & Mercantile UK Listed Smaller Companies fund and, for investment trust fans, Henderson Smaller Companies.
The former is managed by George Ensor with a focus on the smallest 10% of companies on the UK market.
“The ES River & Mercantile process includes growth, value and recovery buckets, so the fund has performed well in a variety of market environments,” he said.
Henderson Smaller Companies, managed by veteran Neil Hermon, includes exposure to mid-cap stocks in the FTSE 250.
“It has a quality growth approach and will ‘run its winners’, holding on to its winners as [they ascend] into the mid-cap arena. In common with most UK equity investment companies, it is trading at a fairly big discount at the moment, -13%, which should appeal to bargain hunters,” Hollands concluded.
Admans also admires the River and Mercantile fund, but suggested the Aberforth Smaller Companies trust as another option, with its “unique approach” to investing in companies that are out of favour.
“Its focus on turnaround stories or value investing is a refreshing alternative to the more popular growth-focused funds in the market,” he said.
“What sets Aberforth apart is its team-based approach and its emphasis on dividends and a company's ability to pay them.”
Despite its success, the trust is currently trading at an 11.6% discount to its net asset value, presenting “a great opportunity for investors who are looking for exposure to Aberforth’s specific niche of deep value UK small-caps”.
Other picks included Liontrust UK Micro Cap, favoured by Pharon Independent Financial Advisers head of fund solutions Andrew K O’Shea. It has been "successfully managed" on a team approach by Anthony Cross, Julian Fosh, Victoria Stevens and Matt Tonge since its launch in March 2016 and they have more recently been joined by Alex Wedge and Natalie Bell.
The fund is managed using the "Economic Advantage" investment approach that looks to identify companies with a durable competitive advantage by generating – and more importantly, sustaining – a higher-than-average level of profitability.
"Companies that are successful in gaining a place in the portfolio must also have a minimum percentage of the share ownership held by senior management," said O'Shea.
"The fund currently has a bias towards the technology and industrials sectors, which together account for approximately 50% of the portfolio."
McDermott highlighted the IFSL Marlborough UK Micro Cap Growth fund, which has gone through a period of poor performance due to its style being out of favour but “will recover when the wind changes”.
Small-caps overseas
But it’s not just in the UK that smaller companies could come rally from their low valuations. McDermott was also bullish on US and European small-caps, where many world-class, high-quality companies are trading below their intrinsic value.
To tap into a European small-cap recovery, he highlighted Janus Henderson European Smaller Companies.
“Backed by a large and experienced investment team, this is a true stock picker’s fund where the managers are happy to invest across the entire universe to deliver returns,” he said.
For exposure across the board, abrdn Global Smaller Companies is a “textbook global small-cap fund”, said McDermott.
Based around abrdn’s screening tool 'Matrix', which former co-manager Harry Nimmo helped create, it identifies smaller companies from all around the globe, including in emerging markets, that are believed to have the best growth prospects.
Finally, for investors looking for exposure to the largest stock market in the world and one of the most dynamic parts of it, Admans chose the Artemis US Smaller Companies fund.
“The managers take a flexible approach and aren’t wedded to either growth or value but they look for the large companies of tomorrow,” he said.
“As such, there is a slight preference for long-term structural growth sectors like technology and healthcare. The team managing this fund has significant experience and a track record of investing in US small-caps.”
Investment decisions are driven by both macroeconomic views and bottom-up stock picking, he added.
There is more growth in airlines and banks than people think, according to Phoenix Asset Management's Gary Channon.
Airlines and banks aren’t usually thought of as growth areas, but they have the potential to surprise sceptical investors, according to Gary Channon, manager of the £190.7m Aurora Investment Trust.
Although he focuses on valuations, he admitted he has been “obsessing” about the growth potential of these industries.
For banks, the market is assuming a 13-14% return on equity, but the manager predicts they are in a good position to deliver well above consensus expectations.
“What really excites me about banks and airlines is that so many of these companies now have almost-impossible-to-replicate market positions and actually quite good growth prospects,” he said.
Another misconception around these companies is that they are of lower quality, but he disagreed and said their competitive positions are “very strong”.
Performance of fund against sector and index over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
Banks tend to grow in line with deposit growth and to consolidate their market shares over time, he noted.
“In the past 25 years, deposits have grown about 6% per annum in the UK. If banks grow deposits by 5% or 6%, their earnings growth is going to be 10-15%,” said Channon.
As for airlines, he used Delta as an example, whose revenue growth has been twice that of Procter and Gamble and the same as L'Oreal over the past 25 years, and its competitive position has improved.
The market is substantially underestimating the potential of banks and airlines, said the manager, and what’s even better, these stocks are trading at “incredibly” low multiples.
“The earnings progression is what makes me think that the absolute opportunity here is much bigger than people think,” he concluded.
Channon is not the only one bullish on banks. Hargreaves Lansdown equity analyst Matt Britzman cited four reasons why investors should consider buying the UK’s largest banks: defaults remain low; elevated interest rates are a tailwind; capital levels support strong shareholder returns; and the UK’s economic outlook is improving.
With first-quarter results strong across the board and economic data pointing to clement conditions ahead, banks “have a spring in their step”, Britzman said.
In the same vein, J O Hambro Capital Management’s James Lowen said banks have been one of the best performing parts of his JOHCM UK Equity Income fund during the past year, but he thinks they are still cheap and have further upside. He owns Barclays, Natwest and Standard Chartered.
Channon has chosen Lloyds Banking Group as his fourth-largest position, making up 7.9% of the portfolio.
The Aurora trust also holds include Ryanair and easyJet, which respectively account for 6.8% and 4.4% of its assets under management.
Channon follows a value-based approach to investing in high-quality UK-listed businesses and aims to buy stocks at prices that allow for strong returns.
The gold price has soared recently but there could still be upside if history is anything to go by.
Since late February, the gold price has soared to new heights in nominal terms, trading at 2,349 dollars per troy ounce. There are various contributing factors including anticipated delays to rate cuts following stickier-than-expected inflation; rising geopolitical risks in the Middle East; and a weakening US dollar.
The two biggest drivers, however, appear to have been central bank purchases and algorithmic traders pushing the price up.
Gold’s recent performance indicates improved sentiment towards the metal, although in real terms the price still lags 2020 levels reached during the Covid-19 crisis. Also, if we zoom out on the performance of gold equities, the asset class is trading well below its long-term average, indicating there could still be a reasonable amount of upside from here.
Looking across the spectrum of gold investments, bullion outperformed miners. Gold miners are more closely correlated to equities, which have performed strongly, but only a narrow subset of stocks have led this outperformance and gold miners didn’t form part of that cohort.
Throughout history, gold has acted as a good inflation hedge, evident in the 1970-80s, but more recently in 2020-21 gold struggled to keep up with inflation due to headwinds such as rising bond yields.
In a similar vein, the relationship between the performance of gold and Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS) has decoupled over the past few years, with gold significantly outperforming those bonds. Only now, three years on, are we finally starting to see that relationship return.
Over the past few years, gold exchange-traded products have experienced significant outflows, even during the recent rally. However, the metal saw strong demand from central banks during March from countries such as China, Poland and Turkey. Gold as a proportion of foreign reserves remains very low in these countries (just 4% in China) compared with other regions such as the US, which has 70% of its foreign reserves in gold. So we could well see this demand continue.
It’s not new news but it’s worth highlighting that gold is an event risk hedge and a good diversifier in investment portfolios; in times of turmoil investors flock to safe-haven assets, including gold. We’ve observed this time and again in the past: for example, the gold price increased by 17% and 33% during the 9/11 attacks and Paris bombings respectively, whilst equities significantly lagged these figures.
Currently, geopolitical risk remains elevated, with continued conflict in Ukraine and the Middle East and rising tensions between the US and China, and therefore an allocation to gold could make sense.
The quality of gold investments has evolved over time and in 2012 the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) published its Responsible Gold Guidance (RGG) in order to combat human rights abuse, avoid contributing to conflict and to comply with high standards of anti-money laundering and combat terrorist financing.
More recent guidance goes further and requires refiners to provide an assessment of their environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) responsibilities. There are various passive vehicles which track the same index but have varying levels of ESG integration. By selecting products that require adherence to more recent LBMA RGGs, investors can achieve the same performance, at the same fee, whilst reducing exposure to the aforementioned risks.
So could it be gold’s time to shine? Well, despite the recent rally there could still be upside if history is anything to go by, and with central banks increasing reserves and geopolitical risks on the rise, there is a clear investment case for holding gold. And there is also the option to invest in exchange-traded funds with reduced exposure to various ESG risks if the appropriate fund is selected.
Jade Coysh is a senior research analyst at Momentum Global Investment Management. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.
Experts reveal what signals retail investors should monitor to avoid pitfalls with their fund selection.
Researching and monitoring funds is a crucial aspect of investing and is indeed something that research teams at wealth management firms spend a significant amount of time doing.
Retail investors do not have access to the same level of tools and resources as manager research professionals and often have limited time available to do their own due diligence.
As such, they are at a significant disadvantage when it comes to spotting funds that might be going off the boil and identifying red flags before they cause problems.
Simon Evan-Cook, fund manager at Downing, said: “This is really hard for retail investors because the information and tools available to them are blunt at best. I suspect this is a regulatory thing, as there seems to be a view that if you give retail investors more tools and information, that they’ll end up doing themselves more harm than good. I have no idea whether this is true or not, but there you go.”
Trustnet asked experts what key aspects retail investors should keep an eye on to spot warning signals.
Put performance into context
Performance is of course a metric to monitor, but it must be assessed within a broader context.
Evan-Cook explained: “This doesn’t mean managers have to always outperform, far from it – we expect great managers to underperform from time to time.
“But it has to make sense, so if a manager follows a value style, we are fine with that if the wider value style has been having a tough time in the market. But if it’s the opposite, this is a red flag.”
Spot style drift
By the same token, Jason Hollands, managing director of Bestinvest, stressed that investors should understand their fund manager’s style and make sure they are not drifting from it.
He said: “When they appear to be straying from their professed approach, this can provide a red flag that something may be going wrong. That could be a value manager buying stocks on hefty multiples or one with a long-term ‘buy and hold’ approach significantly upping their portfolio turnover.”
Concentration isn’t always a good thing
Hollands has a preference for concentrated portfolios as they show that the managers have higher conviction in their picks.
He said: “When you see a notable change in the number of holdings, it might be indicative of lack of confidence creeping in.”
However, he also cautioned against heavy concentration, such as when three or four stocks have a disproportionate weight in the portfolio. “This does increase the risk of the fund and set the alarm bells running too,” he added.
Be wary of large funds
While performance may be the first port of call for retail investors, size also matters.
Darius McDermott, managing director of FundCalibre and Chelsea Financial Services, warned investors to be particularly careful with big funds as they are harder to manage.
“Be wary of big funds, particularly with small-cap, mid-cap or multi-cap, or bond funds. Being relatively small and nimble is key to alpha generation in these types of funds,” he explained.
Evan-Cook agreed and recommended looking for telltale signs, such as a gradual increase in the number of stocks in the portfolio or a growing exposure to mega-cap stocks instead of small-caps.
However, McDermott also called on investors to be wary of “sub-scale” funds that need to charge high fees to survive.
Keep an eye on flows
If a fund’s assets under management are shrinking rapidly, that might be because other investors may have noticed something concerning under the bonnet, according to McDermott.
Hollands agreed: “It is potentially a signal that large, institutional investors with deeper research resources and access to more portfolio information than private investors have concerns and are deserting the manager.
“Even where this is not the case, when a fund is experiencing major outflows, this can be hugely disruptive, as was the case with the collapse of the Woodford Equity Income fund.”
Yet Hollands also warned that the reverse situation is not ideal either, as rapidly growing assets under management can have an impact on the strategy.
“For example, if past successful performance has partially been driven by investing in smaller companies, rapid growth in assets may impact the ability to take such positions. Likewise, if a fund has historically had a high portfolio turnover approach, actively trading positions, growth in size may make it less nimble,” he explained.
Monitor managers’ behaviour
Investors should also observe the behaviour of their fund managers, said Evan-Cook, although he admitted that this is more of an art than a science.
“Signs of an ego getting out of control are hard to define, but if something arouses your suspicion, you might be better off out than in,” he said.
Evan-Cook also recommended that investors make sure their fund’s manager does not have too much on his or her plate in terms of other responsibilities, for instance if they manage several funds, as it might mean “they’ve taken their eye off the ball”.
Research key personnel changes
For Hollands, a manager departure is always a time for investors to consider whether the new manager has a credible track record or if they are “unknown quantity”.
He said: “Fund groups will often replace an incumbent with a deputy who may be highly familiar with the process or bring in a new team from outside.”
Corporate change could be a red flag
Finally, investors should also pay attention to potential corporate upheavals that may affect a fund group, be it a merger or acquisition and the subsequent integration or a controversy.
He said: “Institutional consultants – who advise large investors such as pension schemes – will typically freeze recommending companies going through such change until the situation stabilises.”
The platform is removing Jupiter’s fund following the departure of its manager, Ben Whitmore.
AJ Bell has chosen Man GLG Income to replace Jupiter UK Special Situations in its model portfolio solutions (MPS).
The decision to remove Jupiter UK Special Situations came when lead manager Ben Whitmore announced his departure to launch Brickwood Asset Management and was replaced by Alex Savvides from J O Hambro Capital Management.
AJ Bell's £2.6bn range of model portfolios are numbered one through six, with one being cautious and six being the highest risk and described as 'global growth'. The platform has added Man GLG Income to portfolios two through six, with an allocation of between 3.5% and 6%, depending on the risk level.
Ryan Hughes, interim managing director of AJ Bell Investments, said: “Ben Whitmore brought a specific value focus that blended well with the rest of the portfolio, helped by his clear investment philosophy and consistent implementation of his process, which led to strong returns. The characteristics are well shared by Henry Dixon and Man Group with a similar value bias.
“There is high correlation between the two funds, making Man GLG Income the natural replacement for Jupiter UK Special Situations, and it is a fund already well known to the investment team as it has been used in the AJ Bell Income MPS for a number of years.”
Performance of funds vs benchmark over 10yrs
Source: FE Analytics
Dixon, an FE fundinfo Alpha Manager whose £1.9bn Man GLG Income fund has achieved top-quartile returns over one, three and five years, invests with a “willingness to look across the market-cap spectrum and comfort in investing away from the index”, Hughes explained.
Square Mile Investment Consulting & Research has awarded the fund an A rating and praised Dixon’s contrarian approach. “The manager and his team are entirely focused on uncovering out of favour opportunities in order to provide both an attractive income and total return for investors. The manager ultimately has to have high conviction in a company's recovery potential, as well as the temperament to invest when others are fleeing,” Square Mile’s analysts said.
“There is definitely an ethos of exploring where others fear to tread and given the contrarian nature of the process and the willingness to invest in medium and smaller sized companies, as well as company debt and overseas stocks, the fund is likely to look and act very differently to its peers and benchmark at times.”
Hargreaves Lansdown highlights low defaults and a recovering economy as two reasons for optimism.
UK banks have outperformed the wider market over the opening months of 2024 and analysts at investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown think there are compelling reasons for further gains.
The FTSE All Share Banks index has made a 23.8% total return over 2024 to date, more than double the gain in the FTSE All Share. This adds to a recent history of strength: while it took banks a long time to recover from the financial crisis, the FTSE All Share Banks index is up 69% over five years versus just 27.3% from the FTSE All Share.
Performance of UK banks vs wider market over 2024
Source: FE Analytics. Total return in sterling between 1 Jan and 14 May 2024.
Matt Britzman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “The UK’s largest banks have a spring in their step with first quarter results strong across the board and economic data points to clement conditions ahead.”
Below, the analyst gives four key takeaways from the recent UK bank reporting season.
Default levels remain low
Loan defaults – or the failure of borrowers to make required repayments on debt – are a key concern for banks and something that investors play close attention to.
However, Britzman pointed out that borrowers have shown “impressive resilience” over the past year despite rising costs and increasing interest rates, which often make it harder for people to pay back loans.
This does not mean that loan defaults are falling. A Bank of England survey of lenders found that default rates on loans to households and small- to medium-sized businesses increased in 2024’s first quarter and are expected to have risen again in the second quarter.
“Banks need to keep track of the money they might not get back from loans, and these expected losses show up as negative entries in their financial reports,” he added. “But first quarter results were strong: fewer people than expected are failing to pay back their loans, and the hit to profits was much smaller than many had feared.”
Higher for longer interest rates could act as a tailwind
Higher interest rates tend to benefit banks – so long as they do not cause a significant uptick in loan defaults. So, with borrowers being more resilient than feared, the prospect of interest rates staying higher for longer could be another positive for many banks.
Several months ago, some of the big banks thought interest rates would be cut several times in 2024, which would reduce the income they derived from loans. However, inflation is being more sticky than central banks had hoped so they are unlikely to cut rates as fast as many first thought they would.
“It’s still too early for banks to revise their income guidance, but if current trends continue, they may have the confidence to raise guidance in the coming quarters,” Britzman said.
The UK economic outlook is improving
Another reason for optimism in UK banks are signs of an improving domestic economy. Britzman said one of the key themes raised by bank management teams in reporting season’s investor calls was an improved outlook for the UK economy, albeit “from a low base”.
Given this, banks expect lending volumes to improve over the course of the year, the housing market to continue to show signs of improvement and wage growth to remain ahead of inflation.
Britzman added that domestic-focused banks like Lloyds and NatWest, which are seen as UK economic bellwethers, look best placed to benefit from this trend.
Capital levels support strong shareholder returns
The final positive sign for UK banks is that many are banks are sitting on strong capital levels, which the Hargreaves Lansdown analyst described as “one of the key strengths of this cycle”.
This is important for investors, as this capital allows banks to absorb shocks, acts as a foundation for growing the loan book and offers scope for shareholder returns.
Britzman concluded: “The potential for shareholder returns should be seen as a key attraction for the banking sector.
“A good run so far in 2024 means yields have come down a touch, but given the strong capital positions, investors can expect some hefty dividends and buybacks over the medium term.”
Trustnet looks at emerging market and Asian equity funds that have been run by the same manager since 2004 and have achieved top-quartile returns over the past three years.
Emerging market equities have been on a rollercoaster ride during the past two decades. While they trounced developed markets in the 2000s, they have lagged behind in the 2010s.
Given this contrasting track record, seasoned managers who have weathered various market conditions may have advantages when it comes to navigating volatile markets.
Below, Trustnet researched funds in the IA Emerging Markets, IA Asia Pacific Excluding Japan, IA Asia Pacific Including Japan, IA Latin America, IA China/Greater China and IA India/Indian Subcontinent sectors that have been managed by the same person since 2004 or earlier and have produced top-quartile returns over the past three years.
Managers who ticked these boxes have been through it all and continue to make top returns.
Performance of indices from 2004 to 2014 and from 2014 to 2024
Source: FE Analytics
In the IA Emerging Markets sector, James Donald and Rohit Chopra are the only ‘veteran’ managers to have fulfilled our criteria.
They have both been in charge of Lazard Emerging Markets since 1999 and were joined by Monika Shrestha in 2006 and Ganesh Ramachandran in 2020.
Together, they look for financially productive and sensibly-priced companies, but may also consider businesses with improving returns.
Analysts at Square Mile said: “The team has followed companies and the evolution of markets for many years, and has learnt to be appreciative of the threats and opportunities that come around over time.
“In essence, the managers look for companies with high or improving financial profitability as long as they are at acceptable and attractive valuation levels. This can mean building exposure to companies, sectors or markets that have been overlooked or ignored.
“Whilst this is a good discipline to have, this relative value approach can add a higher element of volatility, in what is already a volatile asset class.”
Indeed, Lazard Emerging Markets has been relatively more volatile than the average fund in the IA Global Emerging Markets sector over the past decade, although it has done significantly better in that regard over three years, according to FE Analytics.
Performance of fund over 3yrs (to last month end) vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
In the IA Asia Pacific Excluding Japan sector, Richard Sennitt is the only manager who has met our requirements.
He joined Schroders in 1993 and has been managing Schroder Asian Income since 2001 as well as other Asian funds.
Sennitt seeks companies in the Asia Pacific region that can deliver both income and capital growth and has a particular focus on those with earnings growth, sustainable returns and valuation support.
The portfolio typically holds between 60 and 80 stocks with a bias to high-dividend paying companies.
Analysts at FE Investment said: “The Schroder Asian Income fund does not purely buy companies in only the highest-yielding sectors – capital appreciation is equally important. The fund has managed to grow the dividend payment consistently, even through periods like the financial crisis and 2020’s global Covid restrictions, where many companies slashed dividends.
“From a portfolio perspective, this fund offers diversification benefits to income investors as mainstream equity income funds available in the market are typically focused on the UK or on developed markets.”
In terms of geography, the fund has a bias toward the more developed countries in the region, such as Australia, Taiwan and South Korea, at the expense of China and India.
Performance of fund over 3yrs (to last month end) vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
In the IA China/Greater China sector, Martin Lau and Louisa Lo are the only two veteran managers to have made top-quartile performance over the past three years amidst a particularly challenging period for Chinese equities.
Martin Lau has been at the helm of FSSA Greater China Growth since 2003 and was joined by Helen Chen in 2019.
The fund’s mandate allows the managers to look for opportunities in Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
Rayner Spencer Mills Research analysts said: “The benchmark-agnostic approach means that the managers avoid compromise by avoiding large constituents of the index which may not possess the superior levels of stewardship that they are seeking – this also means that the sector allocations are a residual of the stock selection process. The process emphasises absolute rather than relative returns and risk is thought of in an absolute way rather than versus the benchmark.”
Performance of funds over 3yrs (to last month end) vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
Louisa Lo has managed Schroder ISF Greater China since 2002, which also invests in the whole Greater China region and does not specifically focus on mainland China.
Although FSSA Greater China Growth has done better over three years, Schroder ISF Greater China has slightly outperformed over the past decade. However, FSSA Greater China Growth has generally been less volatile.
No veteran managers in the IA Asia Pacific Including Japan, IA Latin America and IA India/Indian Subcontinent sectors have met our criteria.
Nvidias’ valuation is “very reasonable” and Alphabet is cheap, according to J. Stern & Co.’s Chris Rossbach.
Investor demand for tech companies has skyrocketed in recent years and so have the multiples at which they trade, prompting valuation-aware managers to come out with dire warnings of dangerous hype surrounding artificial intelligence (AI).
As prices rose, so did rumours of a tech bubble that is about to burst, and experts started to say that the Magnificent Seven – the best-performing tech companies of the 2020s – could only go sideways from now on.
However, for Chris Rossbach and Katerina Kosmopoulou, managers of the J. Stern & Co. World Stars Global Equity fund, nothing could be more wrong.
In fact, Rossbach declared: “We are not in a tech bubble of any kind”.
“There are always going to be parts of the market and industries that are overvalued, but if you look at markets overall, the valuations don't seem to be excessive. Particularly in tech, they're not excessive at all.”
Semiconductor-darling Nvidia is trading on a 2025 price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio as high as 30x, but to Rossbach, that is actually “very reasonable” due to its size, scale, future prospects and the growth that it delivers.
This is particularly relevant as the managers keep an attentive eye on value and only invest in companies when prices are judged to allow for significant capital growth over five to 10 years or more. Nvidia is the top holding in the portfolio, representing 8.3% of the fund’s assets under management (AUM).
Alphabet, the parent company of Google and a leader not only in internet searches but also cloud computing, is the fifth-largest holding (4.4% of AUM) and is trading on 18x P/E, again a fair price to Rossbach.
“In fact, Alphabet is trading below the S&P 500 average multiple, so it's even below the market for the quality company that it is,” Rossbach continued.
“Big tech companies are reasonably valued compared to their prospects, and rising interest rates haven’t created a bubble but rather left many companies behind, such as many consumer, healthcare and industrial companies. We're very far away from having any kind of valuation issue,” he concluded.
The fact that mega-cap tech stocks have driven the market to its current highs does not worry Rossbach or Kosmopoulou either, because these companies’ growth is sustained. Kosmopoulou, who started her career at the time of the dot-com bubble in the early 2000s, said that is the key difference between now and then.
“Companies now are generating huge amounts of cash flow and are investing in things that effectively generate returns today. Back then, you had investments into the network, but with no visible return in sight. That's a key difference as you look back 20 years on,” she said.
Innovation and growth do not necessarily have to come from large caps either, Rossbach continued.
“One way innovation takes place is through small, innovative companies that get acquired at very high valuations by much larger companies, and these large companies can continue to prosper,” he said.
“But there's always the possibility of a disruption, especially as we get into the use cases for AI and the metaverse. It is entirely possible that some of the smaller companies will get to scale. The trillion dollar level is going to take a little bit of time, but we absolutely see many that could get into the $500bn range.”
Performance of fund against sector and index over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
The J. Stern & Co. World Stars Global Equity fund has recently turned five and since its inception, it has been in the top-decile of the IA Global sector, maintaining its outperformance record over the past five, three and one years.
It follows a benchmark-independent process which favours companies with pricing power and strong competitive positions in growing markets.
The market may vote to send momentum even higher in the short term, but in times like these, fundamental investors must stay the course.
The first calendar quarter was extraordinarily powerful for the price momentum factor – in layman’s terms, stocks which had gone up a lot in the previous three to six months tended to keep going up.
The MSCI World Momentum Index rose more than twice the broader MSCI World Index, increasing 21.2% versus the index up 9.9% in sterling terms. This degree of outperformance was the third-largest since the Momentum Index’s inception in the third quarter of 1973, surpassed only by the fourth quarters of 1984 and 1999, and was to the statistically minded a 2.8 standard deviation event.
We would not make too much of a 1999 comparison, as we are very aware that equity markets are what those statisticians would call a ‘non-stationary’ time series, in which the past doesn’t have the same deterministic effect that it does in stationary series (think coin flips).
The intuition behind this is that markets remember in a way that coins being tossed do not – the history of booms and busts has a ‘scarring’ effect on the collective minds of investors and means we cannot automatically extrapolate from what followed after Q4 1999 or, for that matter, Q4 1984.
Eyes on earnings
Evenlode’s valuation discipline and process mean that we rebalanced all our portfolios through the first quarter of 2024 into positions which were becoming better value as prices fell, in a market where this was an unusually punishing trade for relative returns.
Our focus is on a company’s cash earnings potential, adjusted for risk and capital intensity, over a horizon of five years and beyond, so there will be times when price momentum and long-term earnings potential diverge. When this happens, we will always follow long-term earnings potential.
There will also of course be times when price momentum and long-term earnings align. Our strategies are not necessarily negatively correlated with momentum, particularly when related to the wider index. However, history suggests that when momentum is unusually strong, our style is likely to suffer in relative terms. We think this is particularly the case right now when momentum is being fed by two separate waves, both of which tend to exclude the Evenlode Global Equity fund.
In the first group (as was the case in 1999 with the bull market in technology, media and telecoms) powerful thematic trends around generative artificial intelligence (AI) and drug innovation in GLP-1s for diabetes and obesity are driving some mega-caps to extraordinary new highs.
While we have exposure to the generative AI trend through Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft, we have avoided pure plays on these trends as we are cautious around cyclicality and high thematic concentration.
Secondly, more like the Volcker boom of the 1980s, securities prices are being adjusted upwards after a period of inflation and a widely feared recession, in expectation of continued declines in borrowing costs and a resurgent global economy driven by the US. This has restrained the relative performance of companies which are less sensitive to changes in rates and economic growth.
With that being said, work we have done on fundamental earnings revisions suggests that our portfolio companies’ earnings expectations were little different to those of the index during the quarter.
Emerging opportunities
We prefer not to spend too much time worrying about factors and the macro context. The resilience of our portfolio companies’ earnings, both in the Q4 2023 reporting season and in the incremental revisions to consensus, makes us additionally confident that we have not strayed in our pursuit of compounding ability.
There are many things our companies are up to which excite us. For example, the opportunity for the card networks Mastercard and Visa to expand their sales of value-added services to issuers, acquirers and merchants; the opportunity for traditional data firms such as Verisk, Experian and RELX to improve the productivity of clients by offering more sophisticated analytics packages; and the opportunity for beauty and spirits companies like L’Oréal and Diageo to expand their footprint in emerging markets while further extending their innovation-based pricing pyramids in developed markets.
We expect there will be more ingots of treasure to heap onto the ‘weighing machine’ of cumulative shareholder earnings, described by Benjamin Graham. In the short-term, as Graham also observed, the market may vote to send momentum higher, but it is in these very times when you must stay the course.
James Knoedler is portfolio manager of the Evenlode Global Equity fund. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.
A myriad of catalysts are spurring UK equities to new heights but not all stocks will benefit equally.
Catalysts to reignite the UK equity market are all coming in to land at once, like planes at Heathrow Airport, and the stock market itself is finally taking off.
That’s the view of James Lowen, who has managed JOHCM UK Equity Income with Clive Beagles for 20 years. “It feels like there are lots of planes stacking up, so that each of them is a catalyst. Some have already landed, some are approaching the runway, but we’re surrounded by catalysts: inflation falling, [imminent] interest rate [cuts], GDP being better than expected, companies performing well, mergers and acquisitions, buybacks. Now it really feels like it's happening.”
More distant prospects (planes still in mid-air, circling the runway) include the abolition of stamp duty, a move by politicians to compel pension funds to invest more in the UK, the tide of outflows reversing course, a rebirth of IPOs after valuations return to more normal levels and greater political certainty in the aftermath of the next general election, he said.
Yet the rising tide of the UK equity market recovery will not lift all stocks equally, Lowen warned.
Britain’s stock market is one of two halves. We have our own ‘Magnificent Seven’ this side of the Atlantic, although ‘magnificent’ is a misnomer because Lowen thinks they are overvalued.
He singled out AstraZeneca, GSK, Diageo, Unilever, LSEG, British American Tobacco and RELX as the “expensive defensives”.
“I think this is this is a big danger lurking under the surface,” he cautioned. “They make up a fifth of the FTSE 100 so anyone buying a tracker, this is what they’re getting and those seven stocks are very expensive.”
RELX is trading on a price to 2024 consensus earnings ratio of 28x, while LSEG is trading at 25x.
To put those numbers into context, Lowen said he sells stocks when they reach a price to earnings multiple of 10-12x and most of his holdings are trading at 5-8x.
“Some of the seven haven’t delivered, some of them have got quite high leverage,” he continued. “People have herded to them because they feel safe in them, because you’re not likely to see a profit warning from RELX.”
To participate in the continued upswing in UK equities that Lowen anticipates, he believes investors should avoid the large, expensive defensives and gravitate instead towards banks and insurers, miners, oil, domestic growth stories and small-caps.
Banks have been the most profitable part of the JOHCM UK Equity Income fund’s portfolio over the past year, contributing 150-200 basis points of performance but they are still cheap, he argued. Banks have just had their best results season for 20 years and they have given clear guidance on capital allocation to shareholders, he said.
Barclays’ share price on 1 January 2024 was £1.54. It was trading at less than half its book value of £3.31, which Lowen described as “ludicrous”.
The share price had risen to £2.16 by 14 May 2024 and Barclays has paid a 6p per share dividend, but it is still “ludicrously cheap” compared to its 2026 book value of £4.85, he said.
Unlike banks, insurers have yet to start recovering. “If we’re in a greyhound race, [insurers] haven’t left the trap shed but some of the other things have got to the first corner,” Lowen said.
Performance of Barclays and Galliford Try vs FTSE All Share over 1yr
Source: FE Analytics
JOHCM UK Equity Income’s mining stocks have risen from an incredibly low base. Galliford Try Holdings outperformed the FTSE All Share by 10% during the first three months of this year, but before that it was trading at less than cash, which Lowen described as “absolutely astonishing” given that this is a company that makes £25m a year. It is at the “foothills” of its recovery, he added.
“It’s becoming clear that the UK is lifting off but you’ve got to make sure you’ve got the right UK exposure,” Lowen concluded.
Performance of fund vs sector and benchmark over 20yrs
Source: FE Analytics
Kate Morrissey is leaving for an opportunity elsewhere and will be replaced by her colleague Nicholas McLoughlin.
Kate Morrissey, head of HSBC Asset Management’s $13bn World Selection fund range, is leaving to pursue an opportunity elsewhere. Nicholas McLoughlin, head of managed solutions funds, is replacing her.
Morrissey has spearheaded the World Selection funds – a series of multi-asset portfolios catering to different risk levels and providing diversification across asset classes, currencies and regions – since 2019.
She has spent more than 20 years at HSBC, initially in discretionary wealth management before moving over to the asset management division in 2011 as a senior fund manager in the global bond team.
During her career, she has launched new funds, expanded the client base, improved the funds’ performance and ratings, and enhanced the integration of environmental, social and governance factors into HSBC AM’s multi-asset solutions.
McLoughlin was appointed head of managed solutions funds in December and will now become the lead portfolio manager of HSBC AM’s flagship risk-profiled, multi-asset solutions. He was previously global head of multi-asset research and senior portfolio manager, and he will continue to be responsible for multi-asset research.
McLoughlin initially joined HSBC Asset Management as an asset allocation strategist in 2011 before moving to Norges Bank Investment Management in 2015 and then returning to HSBC two and a half years later.
HSBC AM said its team-based approach and its investment process for the World Selection funds will remain unchanged.
The World Selection range has proved popular with investors and its medium risk iteration, HSBC World Selection Balanced Portfolio, has gathered £4.8bn in assets under management.
The portfolio held 55% in global equities as of 31 March 2024 with the remainder in a variety of bond strategies, as well as small allocations to commodities, listed infrastructure and property. The portfolio uses a range of HSBC AM funds and iShares exchange-traded funds as building blocks.
This medium risk fund is not managed with reference to a sector or benchmark but it has consistently outperformed the IA Mixed Investment 20-60% Shares and 40-85% Shares sectors over one, three, five and 10 years.
Performed of fund vs IA Mixed Investment sectors over 10yrs
Source: FE Analytics
Trustnet looks at the only investment trust that delivered positive returns every calendar year since 2014.
Anyone who has invested in the same fund for a decade has almost inevitably experienced a year or more of negative returns.
However, this is a feeling from which investors in Fidelity Asian Values are immune. Indeed, it is the only investment trust whose share price has not fallen into the red in any calendar year since 2014, according to research by Trustnet.
This ability to sidestep downturns owes much to the investment philosophy of FE fundinfo Alpha Manager Nitin Bajaj, who has been in charge of the Asian small-cap investment trust since 2015.
Catherine Yeung, investment director of Fidelity Asian Values, explained that Bajaj’s method is about understanding and buying good companies that can withstand market downturns and emerge stronger when the cycle shifts.
Another key ingredient has been staying away from momentum growth rallies. For instance, Bajaj avoided Chinese stocks such as Meituan and Alibaba in 2021, as they were trading on sky-high price-to-earnings ratios, even if that meant temporarily underperforming the benchmark.
Source: FE Analytics
Yeung recalled: “Our underlying stocks were actually delivering on earnings, increased market share, etc., but because everyone was in love with those Chinese high growth names, ours were out of favour from a relative perspective.
“To be really frank, Bajaj often gets more stressed when his names are doing well very quickly, because he then takes profit and has to find new opportunities.
“For example, when China came out of lockdown at the beginning of 2023, the portfolio was so exposed to the reopening theme that we had a huge outperformance. So Bajaj trimmed very quickly and rotated into other areas, because he's mindful of not being part of consensus trading and strictly adheres to his target prices.”
Performance of investment trust over 5yrs and 10yrs vs sector and benchmark
Source: FE Analytics
This contrarian approach has enabled Fidelity Asian Values to be the third best performing investment trust across the IT Asia Pacific, IT Asian Pacific Equity Income and IT Asia Pacific Smaller Companies sector over 10 years, behind Baillie Gifford’s Pacific Horizon and Schroder Asian Total Return.
It has also done better than its sector peers abrdn Asia Focus and Scottish Oriental Smaller Companies in that period while being less volatile.
However, the picture is different over five years, as both abrdn Asia Focus and Scottish Oriental Smaller Companies have outperformed Fidelity Asian Values, which has also lagged the MSCI AC Asia Pacific ex Japan Small Cap index.
Yeung explained that this relative underperformance was partly due to the underweight positions in Taiwanese and Korean equities, as the two markets soared on the back of the excitement around artificial intelligence (AI).
Yeung said: “Anything related to AI, whether it's in Korea or Taiwan, has just gone soaring. It's absolute bubble territory.”
Performance of indices over 1yr
Source: FE Analytics
Another factor was the early decision to overweight China. In May 2023, Bajaj raised his overweight position to China and Hong Kong from about 28% to 39% and added gearing. However, Chinese equities continued to dip until turning a corner in February of this year.
The current weighting to China (30%) and Hong Kong (9%) is the highest the investment trust has ever allocated to those markets, although Bajaj has a self-imposed limit of 35% for any single country.
Yeung said: “For a meaningful recovery to happen in China, we need to see earnings stabilise. We're probably at the trough now.
“Apart from earnings, there's a very interesting dynamic taking place in China. Both state-owned enterprises and private companies are rewarding minority shareholders.
“Japan also played an influential role in those changes, as the reforms enacted by the Tokyo Stock Exchange have attracted investors back into that market.”
She also highlighted that the Korean market is trying to emulate the reforms undertaken in Japan as well via its Value-Up programme, with the aim of putting an end to the ‘Korea discount’.
Bajaj also has high conviction in Indonesia, which is the third largest country allocation after China and India.The Southeast Asian archipelago accounts for 15.5% of the portfolio, with most of the names being either banks or consumer companies
“Indonesia offers the best mix of growth, quality and valuation. It has very similar dynamics to India, but it's trading at a lot more attractive valuations,” Yeung explained.
“The policy dynamics in Indonesia has been very effective. The country has been very good at implementing pro-business policies.
“It has commodities, a good demography and it is benefiting from the China plus one strategy like Thailand and Vietnam.”
While the investment team at Fidelity Asian Values has found some attractive stocks elsewhere in Southeast Asia, the breadth of opportunities is not as large as in Indonesia, while liquidity is frequently an issue.
When it comes to Indian equities, Bajaj is cautious due to the high valuations they command and prefers China at the moment.
“What's interesting when it comes to India versus China is that the consumption story in China has been underpinned by a recovery in the low price goods. People want value for money, even though households are well off, so the low-end part of the pricing curve has picked up enormously or had a recovery,” Yeung said.
“In India, it's the other way around. We often look at two-wheeler sales as an indicator for consumption, and it's not doing very well. In other words, the rural consumers in India aren't spending. What's lifting up this consumption theme is, in fact, middle class or higher middle class spending. It's not a broad base consumption recovery.”
Yet over the long term, Yeung expects India to replace China as the “GDP giant” of the region.
Salim Ramji is replacing Tim Buckley, who is retiring in July after 33 years at Vanguard.
Vanguard has named Salim Ramji as its new chief executive officer (CEO), replacing Tim Buckley on 8 July. Ramji was global head of iShares and index investing at BlackRock until he stepped down in January 2024.
Buckley is retiring from his dual roles as CEO and chairman after spending 33 years at Vanguard. Mark Loughridge, Vanguard’s lead independent director, will be appointed non-executive chairman.
Meanwhile, Greg Davis, Vanguard’s president and chief investment officer, is joining the firm’s board of directors and taking on expanded responsibility for regulatory and government affairs. John Murphy, president and chief financial officer of The Coca-Cola Company, will also join Vanguard’s board of directors on 1 June.
Davis said: “I look forward to working together with Salim as we continue innovating and improving our capabilities while remaining focused on lowering the cost and complexity of investing for our tens of millions of investors worldwide.”
Ramji spent the past decade at BlackRock. Before leading iShares, he headed up BlackRock’s US wealth advisory business and earlier served as global head of corporate strategy. Prior to BlackRock, he ran McKinsey’s asset and wealth management practice.
Buckley described Ramji as a strategic thinker with “a strong fiduciary ethos” and said he “cares about advancing the interests of individual investors”.
Ramji said: “I am drawn to Vanguard because of the firm’s clarity and consistency of purpose. The current investor landscape is changing and that presents opportunities for Vanguard to further its mission of giving people the best chance for investment success.
“My focus will be to mobilise Vanguard to meet the moment while staying true to that core purpose – remaining the trusted firm that takes a stand for all investors.”
FE Analytics shows that 21 UK funds have outperformed the MSCI AC World index over three years.
The global equity market has been powered higher by surging US stocks but research by Trustnet shows a handful of UK funds are outperforming them over the past three years.
UK equities have been out of favour among investors for an extended period and, as the chart below shows, the FTSE All Share has underperformed the MSCI AC World index over the past three years (although this has started to narrow more recently).
For active managers, beating global equities – with its high weighting to the efficient US market – is no mean feat. The average fund in the IA Global sector is more than 10 percentage points behind the MSCI AC World (its most common benchmark) while the IA UK Equity Income and IA UK All Companies sectors are also nowhere near the index.
Performance of sectors and indices over 3yrs
Source: FE Analytics
However, there are some funds in the two main UK equity sectors that have made a higher return than the global stock market over this period: FE Analytics shows that 21 out of the 300 funds with a sufficient track record – or 7% – have done this.
Martin Walker and Bethany Shard’s Invesco UK Opportunities fund has made the highest three-year return, posting a gain of 45.3% and beating the MSCI AC World index by 13.6 percentage points in the process.
The £1.3bn fund has a value approach with Walker and Shard looking for companies with attractive earnings potential that isn’t recognised by the rest of the market. This tends to lead them to UK large-caps with strong international businesses; among the fund’s top holdings are the likes of Shell, BP, AstraZeneca, Unilever and Imperial Brands.
In their latest update, the managers said: “Despite the caution engendered by macro views, we remain optimistic at the medium- to long-term outlook for UK equities – particularly on a relative basis – as the value factor increases in importance. We expect an increased focus on cash generation in UK equities and the low starting point for valuation will combine to overcome inertia in relative performance.
“We believe that over the next 10 years, in an environment of higher interest rates and higher inflation than we have experienced since the global financial crisis, value as a factor will be more important. An environment that is different calls for equity exposure that is different. And sector exposures in the UK are very different to other global equity markets. The FTSE All Share index offers low correlation to US markets, but still has scale, breadth and depth of companies.”
Signs of these can be seen in the below table, which shows the 21 IA UK All Companies and IA UK Equity Income funds that have made a higher return than the MSCI AC World over the past three years.
Source: FE Analytics. Total return in sterling between 10 May 2021 and 10 May 2024
Many of the funds in the above table take a value approach to investing with Man GLG Income, BNY Mellon UK Income, Man GLG Undervalued Assets, Schroder Income, JOHCM UK Dynamic, Ninety One UK Special Situations and UBS UK Equity Income being among them.
Although value investing has continued to underperform growth in 2024 – the MSCI AC World Growth index is up 11.8% while MSCI AC World Value gained 8.9% – the UK stock market has been catching up with its international peers.
The FTSE 100 has reached a record high, as investors overcome the aversion that has been in place since 2016 and take another look at UK stocks – and UK value is outperforming UK growth.
The recent outperformance of the UK is apparent when we look at the number of funds outperforming the MSCI AC World index since the start of the year: 69, or 22% of the 311 with a long enough track record.
This compares with just one fund beating global equities on a five-year view (Artemis UK Select).
Matt Britzman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “Investors are finally starting to look at UK businesses and see reasons to be optimistic. The Bank of England held rates steady earlier in the week but hinted at rate cuts to come. Meanwhile, economic growth came in better than expected, but crucially not too much better to drive up fears it could cause inflation to spike. This comes on the cusp of major UK banks reporting over the past couple of weeks and there was a huge array of optimism from management teams around the outlook for the UK.
“Many will look at this run and assume it has no legs, UK investors have been beaten down too many times in the past. UK bulls will argue it’s been long overdue, with the market suffering from a hefty valuation discount to global peers for some time.”
Fidelity’s Talib Sheikh and Legal & General Investment Management’s Sonja Laud both prefer European equities to the US.
European equities are cheap, rate cuts are imminent and Germany’s prospects are improving. For all these reasons, Fidelity Multi Asset Income manager Talib Sheikh and Legal & General Investment Management chief investment officer Sonja Laud both prefer European equities to the more expensive US stock market and are adjusting their portfolios accordingly.
In the past 18 months or so, global equity markets have been driven by multiple expansion with mega-cap technology giants leading the way, Sheikh said. But he added: “Multiple expansion is probably coming to an end and the next leg of the equity market move has to be driven by earnings. I think that will be positive for dividends – so equity-income-orientated blocks in our portfolio are quite high at the moment.”
Sheikh has been increasing exposure to core developed market equities where growth is expanding, with an emphasis on continental Europe and, to a lesser extent, the UK. “We’re trying to buy more value plays where there is a cushion, where we can see the earnings start to increase from here,” he explained.
He is implementing this tilt towards Europe by investing in Dan Roberts’ Fidelity Global Dividend fund, which is overweight Europe and the UK given American companies’ preference for share buybacks over dividends. Sheikh has also used Euro Stoxx equity futures to quickly and efficiently increase his exposure.
Germany has been Europe’s laggard given its exposure to elevated gas prices but they are coming down, he explained. Germany’s business cycle is more tied into China than other countries but both Germany and China are starting to recover.
Spanish and Italian economic data are looking strong, so if Germany can join the pack, then Europe “goes from having six horses driving the European recovery to having them all go in the right direction”, he said.
Europe is the only regional equity market where Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) is currently overweight. Laud agreed with Sheik that European equity valuations are attractive and that it would be a tailwind if the European Central Bank cuts rates in June.
European industrials have suffered from increased energy input costs but any uptick in global manufacturing would be supportive.
Furthermore, if China has hit its nadir and starts to recover, that will help Germany, which is geared into the global economic cycle. “China alone can’t turn Germany around but it will at least give us a slice of hope that we are moving in the right direction,” she said.
Baylee Wakefield, a multi-asset fund manager at Aviva Investors, also has a positive view on European equities. "Europe is at a cyclical low point; earnings revisions are becoming more positive after being a beneficiary of low earnings expectations and valuations are attractive," she said.
"In addition, we're seeing buybacks increase in Europe so now buyback yields are essentially in line with the US. Finally, the ECB has provided a tailwind to the equities story by providing more certainty that it will be cutting in June."
The US equity market, by comparison, has been dominated by the ‘Magnificent Seven’ tech stocks, Laud observed. “As investors do you really want all your eggs in seven stocks?”
The Magnificent Seven are “incredibly high quality companies” with “no equivalents elsewhere in the world”, but expectations are elevated and disappointments – such as a decline in iPhone sales – will not be well received by markets, she argued.
Her views have significant implications for investors in passive funds tracking global equity indices, given that the MSCI World has 71% in the US, the MSCI All Country World index has 63% in the US and the FTSE All World has 62% in the US. “Concentration risk is what clients are worried about”, Laud said, adding “rightly so”.
Sources: LGIM, Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, FTSE
With geopolitical tensions on the rise, LGIM expects volatility to increase and has gone underweight risk assets including global equities.
Sources: LGIM, Macrobond
Passive investors in US and global equities have experienced “powerful” returns over the past decade, she acknowledged, but going forward she expects gains to be more muted, not least because inflation and rates are likely to remain reasonably elevated. “Your expectations might have to be quite a lot lower than they were before,” she warned.
Whether investors should stick with their passive equity allocations depends on their time horizons. With a 10-year view or longer, investors who have made strong gains are probably in a position to ride out short-term volatility in anticipation of future growth, she said. “Long-term, those [Magnificent Seven] companies will do well and you can happily ignore the volatility in between.”
What is a trust, when would you need one and how do you set one up?
Imagine the scenario. You want to leave your estate to your three grandchildren, but they’re all young adults. If you die tomorrow and they inherited it all, would this sudden wealth send them off the rails? Would they spend it, frivolously, without an eye on provision for the future as you intended?
Or do you not really know who you might leave your estate to – you don’t have children so would it be your niece and nephew? You haven’t seen your nephew in three years, but your niece visits regularly – you just might be undecided who you might want to benefit and when you want them to receive the funds.
If one of these scenarios applies to you, setting up a trust may well be the way to deal with it.
Trusts have been in use for hundreds of years and can be used for many reasons – from supporting future generations and paying school fees, to sheltering funds from beneficiaries who aren’t quite able to handle their finances yet.
In some places, tax planning has been an important factor in creating trusts because in some jurisdictions, trusts have different tax treatments.
But trusts can be off putting because they don’t have the best reputation – people often perceive them as overly complicated and tricky.
So what exactly is a trust?
There is no one definition, but basically, a trust is the legal relationship between a person (or the ‘settlor’ in legalese) who puts their assets into a trust, the trustee – the person who manages the trust – and the beneficiary, who benefits from the trust. The trustee will manage the trust and, depending on the type of trust, ensure the beneficiary receives the assets at the most suitable time and for the right purpose.
The role of the trustee is important. They aren’t called a trustee for nothing. Their role is to act in the best interest of the beneficiaries, so choosing the right one is vital. And it’s common to see professional trustees, such as a lawyer or a trust corporation, who can provide an impartial approach and deal with practical aspects.
Why would you consider setting up a trust?
As mentioned in the examples above, gifting money to people isn’t always cut and dried. You might want to continue to exert a level of control or take steps to ensure your wishes are carried out after you effectively hand over the assets. There can be a number of reasons why people consider a trust.
One might be that you want to make a gift, but you don’t want to do that outright – you might want it to be phased over time, for example. Another reason is that your intended beneficiaries are not in a position where it is a good idea for them to receive funds directly – this could be down to a lack of mental capacity, or they might be too young. In this case, you can structure the trust to ensure beneficiaries can receive the assets at a certain time – or they could be released at certain life stages (for example, to pay for a house deposit, or for children’s school fees).
Family circumstances might dictate that a protective arrangement is appropriate. You might be concerned if a family member can be trusted with funds – they might have a drug addiction, a problem with gambling or they might just not be very good at handling finances. They might have a partner who can’t be trusted, so you might want to provide some financial protection against a future relationship breakdown. Obviously, you would need some legal advice, depending on what jurisdiction you are in, but in a case like this, setting up a trust can be an effective way of protecting family wealth.
Charitable trusts are useful if you want charitable causes that are close to your heart to benefit from a financial contribution or gift. It can mean your trust can benefit charities in the long term, rather than maybe just gifting to one or two charities now.
In a nutshell, trusts are a way to think ahead, of how they can benefit others in the future.
The complexity of trusts – is it a misnomer?
Well, it’s not really. Trusts can be very complex to set up and legal and tax advice is essential to ensure they are structured in the right way and managed properly. Depending on where you are, there are various international reporting requirements to be met.
Professional advice could well be worth the investment. Working with professional advisers can make this process much simpler, from deciding whether a trust is appropriate for your needs, to helping you wade through the paperwork and legalities. But even though they do have their complexities, it might well be the answer to how you want to pass on your assets – it’s not always as simple as making a will.
How do you invest them?
This is an area definitely best left to the professionals, as depending on the settlor’s intentions and the objectives of the trust, a bespoke investment strategy needs to be formulated. For example, the trust might need to pay income to defined beneficiaries, or it might be more flexible than that. You’ll need a professional to work with the trustees to ascertain the risk profile and investment profile of the trust.
Trustees might also need to be supported in fulfilling their duties, including any ethical criteria they need to meet and tax considerations. It is also important that trustees are kept aware of the trust’s investment performance and any changes that are made to the trust’s portfolio.
So even if they might be a little complex, if you are facing certain scenarios with your family regarding your assets or want your assets to be used for specific purposes, a trust might well be for you. Just make sure you get the right guidance, support and expertise to help you if you have a question of trust.
Andrew Chastney is a technical specialist at Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management. The views expressed above should not be taken as advice.
Experts explain how the lack of enthusiasm of UK equities is indirectly affecting investment trusts.
UK equities have been notoriously out of favour with both domestic and international investors for several years. Although the FTSE 100 has rallied in recent times, it is difficult to tell whether the tide is finally turning.
All we know for now is that investors have been consistently withdrawing money out of UK equities, with £8bn of outflows in 2023 alone.
Given that investment trusts are listed on the London Stock Exchange, investors might wonder whether – and if so, how – it impacts their holdings.
For Anthony Leatham, investment companies research analyst at Peel Hunt, the lack of popularity for UK equities particularly affects the 92 investment trusts that make up part of the FTSE 250, the UK mid-cap index.
He explained: “They can be affected by flows into passive vehicles such as trackers and ETFs, which are often more pronounced during volatile periods, when the index swings sharply in one direction and can sweep all stocks along with it.”
UK small- and mid-caps have been more affected by the exodus out of UK equities than their large-cap peers, which has caused some to worry that the asset class may be incrementally disappearing.
Leatham believes, nonetheless, that the share price of investment trusts should reflect the performance of their holdings in calmer market conditions, regardless of the underlying asset class.
However, Emma Bird, head of investment trusts research at Winterflood, warned that the decrease in global asset allocation towards UK index tracker funds will continue to act as a headwind for investment trusts, which together account for roughly 8% of the FTSE All Share.
Investment trusts have a different natural investor base compared to ‘normal’ UK equities, predominantly composed of domestic retail investors. This nuance means that they have not been as adversely affected by the shift away from the domestic market by UK pension schemes and the lack of interest in UK equities among foreign investors.
James Carthew, head of investment companies at QuotedData, said: “What we don’t have is a general problem of UK investors wanting to asset allocate away from the UK, because the investment companies market is set up to allow them to do that.
“Neither are we suffering from overseas investors shunning the UK, as they were never buyers of investment companies in the first place. One of the great failures of our EU membership is that there was never a proper single market for investment – so Brexit made no real difference to the investor base for investment companies.”
Yet, Bird stressed that UK-focused investment trusts, which account for nearly 10% of the investment trust sector’s net assets, will be more impacted by the unloved nature of UK equities.
Carthew also pointed to an issue specific to investment trusts and unrelated to their listing location, namely the competition of ETFs, open-ended funds and large partnership structures.
While discounts should, in theory, incentivise investors to favour investment trusts over other pooled investment vehicles, this is not what is happening in practice.
Carthew said: “We can only speculate as to why, but we feel that it is a lack of awareness of the opportunity amongst retail investors, the cost disclosure issue amongst professional investors (which we are hoping that the government/FCA will address) and the consolidation of wealth managers.”
The later factor means that most investment trusts have become too small and not liquid enough for wealth managers.
For instance, investment management firm Quilter Cheviot recently revealed having a preference for investment trusts with at least £250m of assets under management and considering anything below £200m as sub-scale.
According to data from Peel Hunt, it means that 120 out of approximately 300 investment trusts are technically uninvestable for Quilter Cheviot.
Carthew added: “Some investment trusts have tried to address this through mergers but we feel it is likely to be insurmountable, unless the clients of those wealth managers feel that they are missing out on opportunities and take their business elsewhere.”
Bird concluded that it is still unclear what the catalyst for a re-rating will be, but she expects M&A activities, interest from private equity firms and regulatory development incentivising increased investment into the UK stock market to play a positive role.
Managers are overweight equities, technology, US large-cap growth, Europe and commodities, but underweight real estate, the UK and China.
Fund managers are at their most bullish since November 2021 in anticipation of imminent rate cuts. Equity allocations have hit their highest levels since January 2022 while cash allocations at 4% are down to a three-year low, the latest Bank of America Global Fund Manager Survey found.
The most crowded trade by far is going long the Magnificent Seven (cited by 51% of respondents). Fund managers are overweight US large-cap growth stocks and technology in general, with 38% of respondents saying they expect large-cap growth to continue leading the US bull market.
Fund managers’ views of the most crowded trades
Source: BofA Fund Manager Survey
A minority (16%) expect US equity market leadership to rotate towards large-cap value, while 14% are banking on small-cap value and 13% favour small-cap growth stocks.
Fund managers have also gone overweight European equities.
Looking at sectors, fund managers are overweight healthcare as well as technology, while May saw a modest rotation into staples from industrials.
Managers are overweight equities, healthcare and tech
Source: BofA Fund Manager Survey
Net percentage of fund managers who are overweight equities
Source: BofA Fund Manager Survey
On the other side of the table, allocations to real estate are at their lowest since June 2009.
Managers are also underweight utilities, Chinese and UK equities, and bonds. Almost half (47%) of global fund managers expect bond yields to fall due to interest rate cuts.
The vast majority (82%) of fund managers polled expect the US Federal Reserve to cut rates in the second half of this year, while 78% are anticipating two or more cuts during the next 12 months.
Soft landing remains the consensus forecast (56%), while almost a third (31%) predict no landing and just 11% anticipate a hard landing.
The greatest risk that fund managers foresee is higher inflation, which concerns 41% of respondents, followed by geopolitics (18%). Fund managers are at their most overweight commodities since April 2023, reflecting these two tail risks.
Fund managers’ perceptions of the biggest tail risk
Source: BofA Fund Manager Survey
Global growth expectations have fallen for the first time since November 2023 with a net 9% of managers anticipating that the global economy will weaken during the next 12 months. By contrast, just last month, a net 11% of managers said the economy would strengthen.
Nonetheless, fund managers remain bullish overall. BofA measures sentiment by looking at allocations to stocks and cash as well as economic growth expectations and on that basis, confidence is high, as the chart below shows.
Fund manager sentiment most bullish since November 2021
Source: BofA Fund Manager Survey
The last exceptional company in the UK was ARM Holdings, says Aegon’s Douglas Scott.
The UK market is failing to attract new investors because there is a distinct lack of ‘unique’ companies, according to Douglas Scott, manager of the Aegon Global Equity Income fund.
His fund has just 5.7% in UK names, a figure that is closer to 2-3% stripping out international names and focusing purely on domestic stocks.
This has been a good call for the $805m fund over recent years, propelling it to the top quartile of the IA Global Equity Income sector over one, three, five and 10 years.
Performance of fund vs sector and benchmark over 10yrs
Source: FE Analytics
The dire situation for the UK market will not change in the near term, he warned, as there is nothing to excite investors, who have pulled money out of UK funds in 35 consecutive months and last month removed a further £665m.
“The UK stock market is dominated by oil, mining and banks. It has no unique companies. The last one we had that was really unique in my eyes was ARM Holdings. We have nothing,” he said. ARM was taken private in 2016 by SoftBank, then acquired by NVIDIA four years later.
“We have some good companies – Experian, AstraZeneca – which are good growth companies that can do well in their field, but they are not unique,” he concluded.
Abby Glennie, manager of the abrdn UK Smaller Companies fund, agreed with Scott when it comes to larger companies.
“I think the point is probably quite correct in the large-cap space. It’s not that companies are not unique – it’s that they’ve been the same companies for a long time. When you are a large-cap, the changes you make to the business are like turning around an oil tanker. They never really change the business that much,” she said.
However, she argued the picture was different in small-caps, where companies can pivot quickly and tend to have more dynamic business models.
Thomas Moore, manager of the abrdn UK Income Unconstrained Equity and abrdn Equity Income Trust, took a different tack. He does not believe it actually matters whether or not the UK has any unique companies.
“That comment smacks of growth investing. Uniqueness is a nice high level theme but I would say the basics of investing are more important than touchy feely language,” he said.
Instead, investors should focus on a company’s cashflow, which in turn will dictate how much it can reinvest in the business, its share buybacks and its dividend payouts.
“How unique a company is doesn’t pay the dividends, whereas cashflows do. If you’re a growth investor looking for the next ARM or Darktrace, that is what you spend 90% of your time doing,” said Moore.
“As an income investor it’s knowing what will happen from one year to the next in terms of identifying cashflows. If the company surprises on growth, fantastic, that’s positive. That gives me the valuation re-rating. But it is all about the building blocks of generating a return.”
Despite Scott’s criticisms of UK plc, he is positive on certain stocks such as mining giant Rio Tinto, property firm London Metric, housebuilder Taylor Wimpey and asset management group Phoenix, although these are “the smallest holdings in the fund”.
But he warned that one option mooted by politicians to improve the prospects of the UK market – to force pension funds to up their exposure to UK companies – would likely fail.
In the early 2000s pension funds had as much as 40% in domestic stocks, a figure that has plummeted to just 4% today. Scott thinks this shift to global portfolios was “a great idea”.
“What you are buying? Although it might be quite cheap, the UK is not providing you with anything different as such,” he said.
As a result, pension funds have been doing the right thing by diversifying to other countries, Scott argued, adding that even if the government tried to force them to invest domestically, this would be met with serious pushback.
Audrey Ryan, manager of the Aegon Ethical Equity fund, had a different view and argued the government needed to go further. She said it should do more to attract new investors, warning that if it did not, companies would either continue to re-list overseas – a trend that has been ongoing for the past 18 months – or be taken out by private equity and other buyers.
“It would be lovely to see increased focus by leaders to encourage capital to the UK market and certainly encouraging companies not to relist. We have started that journey but I would love to see more impetus,” said Ryan.
Even so, there a number of reasons to be optimistic on the UK, she added. Given UK equities have been so “unfashionable”, Ryan argued that valuations are now “very compelling” both against their own history and relative to overseas markets.
She added that mergers and acquisitions – predominantly in the small- and mid-cap space but also now creeping into larger names – are evidence of this.
“For me that underpins my view that UK equities are mispriced and if we don’t as investors take advantage of that the external market will, whether that be private equity or other trade buyers,” she said.
“A number of companies I invest in are acknowledging the value is not reflective of their businesses and are increasingly doing more share buybacks, which is providing a degree of support for the market. And the UK is delivering one of the highest dividends out there globally, if income is something you are striving for.”
Fund managers believe a Trump victory is more of a concern for European markets than for US equities.
Donald Trump’s return to power would be more problematic for European markets than for US equities, according to a Quilter Investors survey of 21 fund managers.
Indeed, 61% of the fund managers polled believe a Trump victory would be a significant blow for European markets.
Those views echo the sentiments of European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde, who said in January that the Republican candidate is “clearly a threat” to Europe.
Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, said: “A Trump victory in November brings about a lot of uncertainty for Europe. While the US will likely see existing tax cuts extended and further ‘onshoring’ of manufacturing and production, Europe is likely to experience volatility from Trump’s ‘America first’ policy.
“Having already imposed tariffs on EU steel and aluminium in 2018, which have since been paused by the Biden administration, Trump is now promising a universal 10% tariff on all imports into the US, and has spoken about rates of 60% on Chinese goods.
"His uncertain support for NATO at a time of Russian aggression is already prompting European countries to increase defence spending, adding further pressure to government budgets. Trump has boasted in the past about ending the conflict in Ukraine in 24 hours, with the strong suggestion he would end all funding support, raising the risk that Europe would become more involved.”
Fund managers are not as pessimistic when it comes to US equities, with only 15% of them seeing Trump’s return to the White House as a negative for the asset class.
In fact, more than half of respondents believe a Trump presidency would be positive for US equities, including if Republicans also win control of Congress.
Source: Quilter Investors
However, the best US election outcome for markets would be a second term for Joe Biden, but with Republican control of the Senate, according to the surveyed fund managers.
A split in power was generally favoured over one-party dominance. Some managers explained that a unified US government may result in a higher budget deficit through higher spending and/or tax cuts, exacerbating concerns around US government debt levels.
Other respondents predicted that a Republican-controlled Congress would pave the way for deregulation, especially in financial services, energy and corporate mergers.
Nonetheless, many professional investors do not expect the US election to have a significant impact on US stock market prospects.
One manager explained: “History suggests that equity markets tend to see lower average returns and higher volatility in US election years versus non-election years. But these averages are skewed by events that have coincided with elections, notably the bursting of the dot-com bubble, the global financial crisis, and the Covid-19 pandemic.
“What’s happening in the economy tends to be much more important for markets than what’s happening in the White House.”
Fund managers identified geopolitics as a key risk, citing tensions between the US and China as a potential trigger for market instability.
James said: “At a time when global growth is decelerating, we are seeing a number of threats that risk the global order that we have become familiar with.
“However, despite the conflicts that have erupted of late, it remains the relationship between the two economic behemoths, US and China, that concerns investment professionals.”
One respondent also highlighted that markets haven’t priced in any risk premium reflecting this increase in geopolitical risk.
Nearly half of the surveyed fund managers believe a return to a 2% inflation target across developed economies is “unreasonable” or “totally unreasonable” due to the surge in geopolitical tensions.
One respondent concluded: “The world is focused on security over the medium to long term. National security, energy security, supply-chain security, and food and water security.
“All this will require capital and fiscal spend, which means inflation will be higher than we’ve been used to in the post-global financial crisis period.”
The asset manager warns that the average EMEA investor is still underweight Japanese equities.
Japanese equities rose from the ashes last year, with the Nikkei 225 index reaching levels unseen in 34 years and hitting an all-time high in March 2024.
As a result of this return to form, international investors are coming back into Japanese equities while domestic savers now have incentives to invest in their own stock market.
Yet BlackRock found that investors in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) remain significantly underweight Japanese equities.
Performance of indices (in local currency terms)
Source: FE Analytics
According to BlackRock’s research, the average allocation to Japanese equities is 3.6% within the equity sleeve of moderate risk multi-asset funds domiciled in EMEA, or 1.6% of the whole portfolio (based on an average 45% allocation to equities). That compares to Japan’s 5.4% weighting in the MSCI All Country World Index.
However, BlackRock believes that investors should double their allocations to Japanese equities to 7.3% to make the most of their attractive risk/return profile and diversification benefits. Japanese equities have a sub-50% correlation to most other regional stock markets, the manager pointed out.
“Even with the return of foreign investors in 2023, years of persistent selling means that we are only just seeing benchmark allocations returning to neutral in both iShares flow and foreign institutional investor flow," BlackRock stated.
“As Japan’s weighting in indexes rebalances in line with its higher market capitalisation, passive investors will need to continue to buy Japanese equities if they are to maintain their allocations.”
For investors looking to increase their exposure to Japan, BlackRock expects broad passive exposure will be the most popular route and suggested the iShares MSCI Japan UCITS ETF.
For alpha-seeking investors, BlackRock recommended opting for active managers who can exploit the Japanese equity market’s frequent rotations in style leadership: “Funds that combine bottom-up and top-down thematic approaches may be well-positioned to identify the winners from economic shifts. Given that Japan is a highly macro-sensitive market, a balanced and risk-controlled approach is crucial, in the pursuit of stable alpha.”
One reason for BlackRock’s bullish sentiment towards the land of the rising sun is ongoing corporate governance reform.
With the Tokyo Stock Exchange ordering companies with a price-to-book ratio below one to come up with credible plans to improve amidst the threat of a forced delisting, Japanese corporations have been prompted to either return excess capital to shareholders or to invest it.
BlackRock explained: “Returning capital through share buybacks also bolsters the asset side of household balance sheets, producing a wealth effect that supports consumption. The sum of buybacks and dividends for 2023 came in at an all-time high of ¥28trn, with projections for 2024 even higher.”
Despite Japan’s recent outperformance and resulting concerns around valuations, BlackRock believes that Japanese equities are still not expensive relative to their own history and to US equities.
The asset manager is also unconcerned about the $475bn holdings of the Bank of Japan (BoJ) in domestic assets.
“It seems unlikely to us that the BoJ would start unwinding these positions at such a pivotal moment in Japan’s economic turnaround. Our base case is that following the cessation of the BoJ’s ETF purchasing programme, it will look to gradually unwind its positions over the coming years or even decades.”
Another reason for the asset manager’s enthusiasm on Japan is the country’s macro-environment, as the BoJ is the only major central bank to have stuck to its expansionary monetary policy, driving its currency lower and attempting to embed higher inflation after decades of price stagnation.
“Now the question becomes whether the BoJ will be successful in creating a virtuous cycle between wages and prices. Signs of a meaningful structural shift are becoming more apparent as the pass-through between wages and prices strengthens, as evidenced in the most recent annual wage negotiations.
“Given such a meaningful move towards a more inflationary environment, the BoJ has ended the world’s last negative interest rate by hiking for the first time since 2007. In addition to setting the short-term rate between 0-0.1%, it also ended the yield curve control program and ceased purchases of ETFs,” the firm noted.
“BlackRock Investment Institute views this shift as a hard-won return to inflation and thinks the BoJ is unlikely to now sabotage this progress by aggressively tightening policy.”
The BoJ’s exit from the long-running negative interest rate policy may bring about an appreciation in the yen and drive volatility higher.
Yet BlackRock is comfortable with this prospect, explaining that the market has already priced it in, that the BoJ had pledged to keep monetary policy accommodative and that US rates are likely to stay higher for longer anyway.
“Most importantly, the end of negative interest rates isn’t reflective of an inflation fight. Instead, we believe it’s reflective of inflation success. With inflation showing signs of embedding closer to the 2% target, we think nominal interest rates are likely to be higher than they were during the period of deflation. We expect real rates to remain negative in Japan, in contrast to other markets.”
Therefore, the asset manager encouraged investors to look at unhedged exposures to Japanese assets and to search for opportunities away from large-cap exporters.
Finally, domestic investors also have a role to play, as their large savings could provide a structural tailwind for equities.
BlackRock explained that sustained inflation and a steepening yield curve should reduce demand for cash and low-yielding government bonds and nudge savers into the stock market. The Nippon Individual Savings Account, a tax-free investment programme that came into effect in January 2024, is a further incentive.
According to data from the BoJ, private individuals in Japan held nearly $14trn in assets at the end of March 2023. Cash and savings comprised 54%, but equities only 11%.
“Getting to comparable levels seen in the European Union of nearly 33% of individual assets in shares could see more than $1.7trn flowing into equities in coming years,” the manager estimated.
Matthews Asia funds have excelled at beating their benchmarks.
Shrewd investors keep a vigilant eye on their funds’ returns to make sure that their active managers are justifying their fees by delivering solid results above their benchmarks.
A high alpha score (a measure of outperformance) is usually interpreted as a sign that a skilful manager is at the wheel and driving returns, rather than just being along for the ride alongside the rest of the market.
For this research, Trustnet selected funds investing in Asia with a complete five-year track record, measured their alpha scores over 61 year-long periods from January 2018 to December 2023, and averaged them – showing which funds have consistently achieved above-average returns and are therefore delivering more bang for your buck.
In the IA China sector, the fund that was most successful at beating its index was Matthews China Small Companies. With an average alpha of 16.35, this $208m strategy isn’t widely available in the UK, but can be accessed on the 7IM, AJ Bell and Transact platforms.
Co-managed by Andrew Mattock and Winnie Chwang, it returned 24.4% in the past five years, against steep losses of -29.7% for the MSCI China Small Cap index.
Source: FinXL
FSSA All China came in second place, with an average return of 6.63% above its index, the MSCI China All Shares.
The fund has a bias to mid and small-cap companies and is focused on secular growth businesses which trade at attractive valuations.
Rayner Spencer Mills Research (RSMR) analysts consider this fund “one solution to access both onshore and offshore Chinese equity markets”.
“Performance since launch has been strong, driven by stock picking and the fund has delivered outperformance in the majority of down periods in the market,” they said.
“The fund’s record, combined with the overall strength of the China team at FSSA, justify an RSMR rating with the strong research resource on China equities likely to continue to deliver good returns going forward.”
A steep step below, with half the average alpha, was the Allianz All China Equity fund, which is another good option for investors who want access to both mainland and offshore Chinese companies.
RSMR described it as a one-stop-shop fund to gain exposure to China “with a greater emphasis on the domestic economy and consumption story than traditional offshore China mandates”.
Struggling the most at beating their benchmarks were the Invesco PRC Equity and the GAM Star China Equity funds, which were relegated to the bottom of the table.
Another fund from Matthews Asia was the best performer within the IA Asia Pacific Excluding Japan sector. Managed by Vivek Tanneeru, the Matthews Asia Small Companies strategy led the table, albeit with a lower average alpha than its Chinese sibling (9 instead of 16.35). It achieved a FE fundinfo Crown Rating of five.
Source: FinXL
At 7.34, the high-conviction bottom-up mandate Barings ASEAN Frontiers came second best.
“The fund is an interesting satellite choice for investor portfolios, offering exposure to economies in the region with a still undeveloped and fast growing consumption story,” RSMR analysts said.
“The assets managed in the strategy allow scope to exploit opportunities in under researched mid and small-cap names. The experience of the managers, combined with a strong investment process, make the fund a useful addition to investor portfolios.”
Close behind was the popular £3.3bn Baillie Gifford Pacific, which has outperformed the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan index by an average 6.9% since 2018.
This is another “very distinctive” portfolio, according to RMSR researchers. Managers Roderick Snell and Ben Durrant focus on buying companies early and holding them for the long term, so that they can accelerate revenue growth by scale and network effects.
“An approach such as this is always likely to result in lumpy performance and the team is not trying to deliver consistent incremental index outperformance on a year by year basis,” RSMR said.
Comgest Growth Asia Pac Ex Japan, Mirabaud Equities Asia ex Japan and Invesco Asia Consumer Demand were unable to add value on top of their indices and had negative alpha of -3.9, -3.2 and -3.1, respectively.
Moving over to India, active investment decisions only paid off for one-third of Indian equity funds in this study.
Stewart Investors Indian Subcontinent Sustainability, Nomura India Equity and GS India Equity Portfolio were the best performers.
Source: FinXL
FE fundinfo Alpha Manager David Gait helms the Stewart Investors fund, which was highlighted by Square Mile analysts for its absolute return mindset and for the team’s “passionate belief that the monies entrusted to them should be invested in the highest quality companies run by responsible management teams”.
“They pay particular attention to the owners and management teams in charge of such companies as they believe that a firm's ability to deliver longterm sustainable returns is closely correlated with the company's management culture,” the analysts said.
“The impact of business practices on the local community and environment is important, but the team will consider a range of factors such as the quality of a company's financial positioning and sustainability of cash flows.”
The Nomura fund is much larger, with $1.8bn of assets under management. Manager Vipul Mehta has been at the company since 2004 and in the past five years doubled investors’ money, while in the same timeframe, the average peer returned 80%.
Active decisions enabled the fund to exceed its benchmark by 3% on average in each of the rolling 61 year-long periods measured.
For abrdn SICAV I Indian Equity and JPM India, stock picking was detrimental to the funds’ performances, with negative average alphas of -4.45 and -4.08, respectively.
Finally, leading the IA Japan sector with an average alpha of 7.03 was Fidelity Japan, which was also able to maintain a positive alpha in 60 of the 61 periods in consideration.
Source: FinXL
Managed by Min Zeng, the five crown-rated strategy made investors 85% over the past five years, compared to 40.7% for the sector as a whole.
Outperforming the Russell Nomura Mid-Small Cap index by an average of 6.7%, M&G Japan Smaller Companies was the second fund to make the list. Alpha Manager Carl Vine has been in charge since September 2019. During his tenure, the fund has outperformed the average peer by 48 percentage points.
In third position was another fund with a small-cap focus, Janus Henderson Horizon Japanese Smaller Companies, led by Alpha Manager Yunyoung Lee. It had an average alpha of 4.05.
Struggling to keep up with the competition, FTF Martin Currie Japan Equity and Invesco Responsible Japanese Equity Value Discovery remained at the foot of the table.
Sectors previously in this series: UK Equity Income, UK All Companies, Global, Global Equity Income, Sterling bonds, smaller companies, global bonds, cautious funds, balanced and adventurous funds, European funds.
Talib Sheikh, who recently took over Fidelity’s multi-asset income funds, believes the global economy has entered a new regime.
Talib Sheikh has spent 2024 moving Fidelity International’s $7.4bn multi-asset income portfolios out of government bonds, going overweight Europe and enhancing the investment process, after replacing Eugene Philalithis at the start of this year.
One of the first moves Sheikh made was to reduce interest rate risk and duration from three and a half years to one year in the $5.5bn FF Global Multi-Asset Income fund and its stablemates. “All we have left is short-dated plays,” he said.
Government bonds are expensive and risk additive, he explained. As a result, diversification has become harder during the past 18 months because “government bonds and investment grade credit haven’t really been that safe”. Currencies can be a useful diversifier, he added.
In the fixed income portion of his portfolios, Sheikh favours corporate hybrids in Europe. He has invested in contingent convertibles (CoCos), also known as additional tier 1 (AT1s) bonds, which sit at the bottom of the debt stack above equities and pay attractive yields in the region of 7.5% for two years of duration.
He has modest exposure to infrastructure using investment trusts, which have had “a pretty torrid time” in recent years due to rate hikes. They offer high free cash flows and high dividend yields, many of which are inflation-linked, he said.
Equity exposure is at the top end of his funds’ permissible ranges, at 40% for FIF Multi Asset Income, 60% for FIF Multi Asset Balanced Income and 80% for FIF Multi Asset Income & Growth.
Sheikh, who joined Fidelity from Jupiter Asset Management in October, has been increasing his exposure to core developed market equities where growth is expanding, with an emphasis on continental Europe. “We’re trying to buy more value plays where there is a cushion, where we can see the earnings start to increase from here,” he explained.
Performance of fund year-to-date vs sector
Source: FE Analytics
Sheikh has adjusted the investment process to be more responsive to changing economic scenarios so that the fund is always “relevant”, whatever the macroeconomic outlook.
These changes resulted in Square Mile Investment Consulting & Research removing the Multi-Asset Income fund’s A rating as its analysts would “prefer to see how the combination of the changes to the team and approach progresses over time”. Rayner Spencer Mills Research reaffirmed its rating.
Sheikh said he approaches multi-asset investing in a similar way to his predecessor Philalithis. “The way I think about the world is very connected to the way Fidelity thinks about it,” he explained. “They definitely wanted someone who thought in a similar way to how Eugene built portfolios.”
Nonetheless, he also wants to bring his 25 years of experience to bear. “I’m not just going to copy what Eugene did. I want to try and enhance the process and bring my own experience. Most of that is to do with the idea that we’re in a new regime.”
Sheikh believes the global economy has entered a new regime of regional desynchronisation, higher government deficits and stickier inflation. He thinks inflation will move symmetrically around central banks’ targets, so “sometimes we’ll worry about inflation, sometimes we’ll be worrying about deflation”. The macroeconomic backdrop is oscillating between reflation, where commodities do well, and goldilocks, where equities outperform, he observed.
Between the financial crisis and the Covid pandemic, the global economy moved in sync but more recently, regional economic cycles have become desynchronised. Europe and the UK have experienced mild recessions, China has had “a terrible time” and US economic resilience has surprised on the upside.
This has created greater divergence and therefore more opportunities for asset allocators. “If you’ve been ignoring Europe, long the US, long Japan and short China, you’ve had an amazing three years,” he observed.
Sheikh’s approach to asset allocation is to form a structural view – his outlook for the next six to 12 months – then a shorter-term cyclical view covering six to nine months, which guides tactical shifts. He then analyses what his structural and cyclical forecasts mean for asset prices.
“I think of macro forces as being like a wave going across the global economy. It’ll hit one asset class then another asset class, then another asset class,” he explained. “So what we’re trying to do is think forward how those macro forces are going to be priced across various asset classes.”
The multi-asset portfolios are built using Fidelity funds alongside third-party funds, leveraging recommendations from the in-house manager research team. He also uses derivatives to adjust the asset allocation efficiently and cheaply.
Sheikh’s funds have three objectives: income first, as well as downside protection, plus the prospect of capital growth. He is aiming for volatility to be half that of the equity market and described the investment process as “stable, repeatable and sensible.” His multi-asset funds will not beat returns from equities over 10 years, but “we’re a different animal”, he pointed out. “We’re taking half the risk. There is no free lunch. We’re trying to smooth the ride for investors.”
European high yield has outperformed the US this year, which is pretty rare, but the factors driving those returns are even more intriguing.
With an impressive 12.29% return, high-yield bonds were the best-performing sub-sector of the fixed income universe in 2023. To investors’ delight, that relative momentum has been maintained into 2024 despite spreads being tight and there are signals of further good news ahead.
The high-yield market has behaved similarly to global equities (if you strip out the outlier performance of the ‘Magnificent Seven’) benefiting from the shift towards risk-on, fuelled by signs of falling inflation and the prospect of rate cuts – even if they are delayed and fewer in number than originally expected.
But the most fascinating element of high yield as we move into spring is the increase in differentiation between the US and Europe.
US high yield is essentially flat on the year. Within that, B and CCC-rated bonds rallied strongly over the first quarter of 2024 but have since sold off, along with the rest of US high yield as the effects of interest rate uncertainty have impacted US credit generally.
In contrast, dynamics in European high yield have become very interesting. Over 12 months, Europe has outperformed the US by 1.8%, which in itself is a pretty rare occurrence. But what’s even more unusual is that the European market has outperformed despite the fact that it has more BB bonds in its universe.
Indeed, BBs have led the European market year-to-date, up 1.86%. BB-rated bonds have generally outperformed their US counterparts and have not sold off to the same extent in the second quarter of this year.
The driver of this differential comes from the different expectations around interest rate paths for Europe versus the US. A first cut in the summer remains likely for Europe, while later this summer or even further out is looking more plausible for the US.
As an active manager, it’s good to see the return of differentiation between rating categories that are classically more interest-rate sensitive like BBs, and those more influenced by factors like idiosyncratic risk, which is the case for CCCs. This creates potential value-add opportunities across geographic allocations and credit selection.
On a global view, the high-yield market was yielding 8.11% at the end of April. While this is a touch off the 9-10% that we view as an automatic ‘buy’ signal, strong coupon generation is keeping performance motoring and is only likely to increase as rates remain higher for longer.
Despite the market largely pricing out early interest rate cuts, performance has been maintained by a healthy underlying economic environment for credit. Tailwinds include limited supply, thanks to lots of names refinancing early, as well as multiple ‘rising stars’ moving back up to investment grade. Additionally, you’ve got investors looking to deploy cash, both from coupon income and new allocations.
It would be remiss not to mention that we’ve seen a couple of headline-grabbing negative credit events recently, but these have resulted from idiosyncratic stories around very large-cap structures struggling against poor results and refinancing issues.
Overall, the first quarter results season left corporates on firm footing with the asset class supported by healthy tailwinds, which should set it up for continued positive performance. When we see firm signs of rate cuts coming through, that should provide an extra boost to risk appetite.
In our portfolios, we’ve been adding coupon risk as we see that as the best way of generating returns within high yield as we tread water ahead of rate cuts. The US offers greater coupon return potential and has the stronger underlying economy, but that must be weighted up against the return of differentiation in Europe, which we would expect to outperform given the more benign growth and inflation environment.
We think a quality stance in Europe with a little bit more interest rate sensitivity is probably a good thing versus the US, because you've got at least one rate cut coming from the European Central Bank in the next couple of months, as reflected in the outperformance of BBs. Investment flexibility around regional allocations allows us to make top-down decisions based on where we see macro drivers and pressures, while we’re giving significant weight to bottom-up research in the current environment to avoid idiosyncratic risks.
Andrew Lake is head of fixed income at Mirabaud Asset Management. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.
The research company’s Academy of Funds has several new entrants and two departures.
Square Mile Investment Consulting and Research has released its latest Academy of Funds round-up today, announcing the departure of two funds and a number of new entrants.
It has expelled PIMCO GIS Dynamic Multi-Asset and abrdn Europe ex-UK Income Equity from its Academy of Funds due to changes in leadership. Managers Geraldine Sundstrom and Stuart Brown are about to leave PIMCO and abrdn, respectively.
“While Square Mile acknowledges PIMCO’s strong resources and team approach, the fund’s rating was largely predicated on Sundstrom’s experience of managing dynamic multi-asset strategies,” Square Mile’s analysts said.
“As for the abrdn fund, it has lost its two portfolio managers within a relatively short period, with the previous co-manager Tom Dorner departing in September 2023, and Square Mile would like time to monitor the strategy and its investment team after the announced new manager, Charles Luke, will have stepped in.”
These defections were compensated by several additions to the fray.
Premier Miton secured a quartet of new ratings for its Diversified Growth range, with the Diversified Cautious Growth, Diversified Balanced Growth, Diversified Growth and Diversified Dynamic Growth funds all gaining an A rating as they enter the Mile Academy of Funds.
The flagship fund in the range, Diversified Growth, has delivered strong risk-adjusted returns for more than a decade, while the other three funds have achieved this since their launch over five years ago.
Performance of fund against sector and index over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
“Key to the strategies' success are the views of the specialist investment teams at Premier Miton, which are responsible for the underlying sleeves which collectively make up the funds within the range,” the analysts said.
“These funds are a robust option for investors seeking a range of growth-orientated actively managed multi-asset portfolios.”
One of the cheapest active funds in the IA North American sector, the HSBC US Multi Factor Equity fund also received an A rating thanks to the managing team’s ability to “consistently provide alpha across a range of strategies since July 2006”.
The fund offers core exposure to US equities, targeting an ex-ante tracking error of 2.5% per annum from the S&P 500 and focusing on value, quality, momentum, low risk and size factors.
In the closed-ended space, the Mercantile Investment Trust also joined the list with an A rating. The strategy is led by the “experienced” Guy Anderson, who is part of a “well-resourced” team at JPMorgan Asset Management.
The trust predominantly focuses on high-quality and fast-growing UK equities listed outside of the FTSE 100. It convinced Square Mile for its “repeatable, efficacious” investment process, its liquidity as a £1.7bn investment vehicle, and its yield which has grown each year over the past 10 years and is currently at 3%.
Finally, the Vanguard Global Corporate Bond and Global Short Term Corporate Bond index funds were given Recommended ratings, which are awarded to funds that “meet the highest standards in their fields but cannot be readily differentiated from their direct peer group, such as passive vehicles”.
The former tracks the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Float Adjusted Corporate Index Hedged and the latter the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Corporate 1-5 Year Float Adjusted Index Hedged.
“Both funds’ benchmarks are structured in such a way that the largest constituents will be companies with the highest absolute levels of debt. While this could create a concern from a credit risk perspective, it is difficult to avoid given the size of the investment universe,” the analysts concluded.
Strategies admitted to the Academy of Funds
Source: FE Analytics
The investment platform is rolling out a range of passively-managed multi-asset solutions in response to the rising popularity of cheap trackers.
Hargreaves Lansdown is launching four multi-asset model portfolios using passive funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) managed by BlackRock.
The new passive range follows last year’s launch of HL Managed – a suite of model portfolios using active funds as building blocks.
The investment platform is offering a range of cheaper passively-managed solutions in response to the popularity of trackers amongst its clients, said chief investment officer Toby Vaughan. In the past two years alone, the number of Hargreaves Lansdown clients using passive funds as their main investment has increased by 80%.
“Our new ready-made multi-index investment portfolios are an easy cost-efficient solution for those looking to get started with investing,” he added.
The HL Multi-Index portfolios come in four flavours. The adventurous portfolio will have 100% in equities, while the moderately adventurous offering will have an 80/20 split between stocks and bonds, with 70-90% of equity market volatility.
Balanced investors will have 60% in equities and the rest in bonds, with 50-70% of stock market risk. Finally, HL Multi-Index Cautious will have just 30% in equities and 70% in bonds with 30-50% of the volatility of global equity markets.
Within that framework, Hargreaves Lansdown fund managers David White and Ziad Gergi will make country and sector allocation decisions, which they will implement using BlackRock’s passive funds and ETFs.
White is the lead manager for the new multi-index fund range as well as for HL Growth, the platform’s workplace default fund. He joined Hargreaves Lansdown in 2022 from Nationwide and before that ran institutional multi-manager portfolios at BMO Global Asset Management.
Gergi joined Hargreaves Lansdown last year from Barclays Wealth, where he was head of multi-asset portfolio managers. He is a co-manager of HL Multi-Manager Balanced Managed Trust, the HL Multi-Manager Equity & Bond Trust and the HL Multi-Manager Special Situations Trust.
The new multi-index model portfolios will start trading on 6 June 2024 and Hargreaves Lansdown is offering a £1 per unit fixed offer launch price until 11.59pm on 5 June 2024. The minimum investment is a £100 lump sum or £25 monthly commitment. The ongoing charges figure is capped at 0.3% but Hargreaves Lansdown charges its platform fees on top, which go up to 0.45%.
Promotion of Natalie Bell follows the hire of a new manager in the Liontrust Economic Advantage team.
Natalie Bell has been promoted to named manager on the £1.1bn Liontrust UK Smaller Companies and £146m Liontrust UK Micro Cap funds.
Bell has been part of Liontrust’s Economic Advantage team – which runs the funds – since August 2022 and has been supporting on the day-to-day management of the funds, building her knowledge of the holdings and contributing to investment decisions.
She joined Liontrust in 2021 as part of its Responsible Capitalism team, where she led engagement with investee companies across the full suite of the firm’s funds. Prior to joining Liontrust, Bell worked in corporate governance and policy at EY and the Confederation of British Industry (CBI).
Anthony Cross, head of the Liontrust Economic Advantage team, said: “Since moving across into fund management, Natalie has consistently impressed us with her diligence and skill in analysing companies.
“She has quickly become an integral member of the team and her recent tenacity in leading our efforts to lobby for government support for the UK equity market has been especially notable. Natalie’s promotion to become a named manager of the UK Smaller Companies and UK Micro Cap funds is richly deserved and a natural step in her continued career progression.”
Performance of funds vs sector over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
Bell will continue to work on the other Economic Advantage funds with their existing named managers. Her promotion comes after a new fund manager was hired by the team.
Alexander Game joined Liontrust last month from Unicorn Asset Management where he worked for almost a decade and was a named manager on the Unicorn UK Growth fund, Unicorn UK Smaller Companies fund and the Unicorn AIM IHT and ISA portfolio service.
Cross commented: “Alex is a natural fit for our team, bringing with him a strong track record of identifying attractive long-term investment opportunities and an investment ethos that is closely aligned to the Economic Advantage process.”
Liontrust said Bell’s promotion and Game’s appointment are “very positive milestones” in the evolution of the Economic Advantage team.
Quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year fund sales have grown in all major asset classes.
UK fund groups have opened 2024 with elevated inflows compared to 2023, the latest Pridham report released today has shown.
BlackRock, Legal & General Investment Management and HSBC Asset Management were the main beneficiaries thanks to their passive offerings, which accounted for 74% of all new flows.
But active managers also benefitted from recent growth trends, with seven houses moving into positive sales territory – most notably Jupiter Asset Management, Artemis and Rathbones, as the tables below show.
Most popular asset managers in Q1 2024
Source: Pridham report
Compared to 2023, BlackRock’s leadership position was further strengthened this year, with gross retail flows into its UK domiciled open-ended investment funds surpassing £10bn for the first time since the final quarter of 2020.
HSBC also moved up one ranking on the back of its passive funds.
In the active cohort, Artemis entered the top-10 best-selling gross and net sales rankings with strong demand for its equity funds, especially Artemis UK Select, which was its top retail seller.
Jupiter moved up two spots for gross new business and has seen growth in three consecutive quarters. The Jupiter India fund received the most retail attention, placing it within the quarter’s best-selling retail funds.
The popularity of US equities among UK-based investors also gained Natixis Investment Managers and T. Rowe Price a spot in the top 10 best-selling net new business rankings – Natixis Loomis Sayles U.S. Equity Leaders and T. Rowe Price US Smaller Companies Equity were the most bought strategies.
Source: FE Analytics
With equity markets buoyant and fixed income offering investors both yield and capital appreciation potential, the future looks bright for the
“Q1 retail sales showed that demand for high-performing active funds remains there. The active opportunity, however, is diverse, with fund groups often only seeing success in a limited number of investment categories at one time,” he said.
“As retail investors and their advisers adjust their portfolio allocations to reflect the outlook of higher for longer interest rates, opportunities will be created for fund groups to win new business.”
Fund selectors lose confidence in the AllianzGI bond strategy after Mike Riddell’s departure.
Experts are selling the Allianz Strategic Bond fund after its lead manager Mike Riddell jumped ship to Fidelity International.
Allianz Global Investors (AllianzGI) has appointed Julian Le Beron to take over with an “enhanced” team-based, co-led approach, which “will be beneficial in terms of expanding the inputs into strategies,” the firm said.
This development didn’t convince experts, who all agreed the fund is a sell.
Having shot the lights out in 2020, as 8AM Global’s Andy Merricks noted, Allianz Strategic Bond is “at least consistent now, achieving fourth quartile returns regularly”.
Performance of fund against sector and index over 5yrs
Source: FE Analytics
“I would assume that those still holding it are doing so because of Mike Riddell in the hopes that he can recapture the spark of 2020. Now that he’s moved to Fidelity I would imagine Riddell supporters will follow him,” he said.
“For those who remain, it will be interesting to see whether the ‘enhanced’ investment process means that it will find a way of yielding even less than it does now compared to cash and eroding capital or whether they will stem the tide and see better performance in the coming months.”
Ben Yearsley, investment consultant at Fairview Investing, agreed with Merricks that the fund is “quite unique and very specific to Riddell”, making it “difficult to stay put after he's gone”.
Investors won’t be able to follow Riddell to Fidelity directly either, as he won't take over the Fidelity Strategic Bond fund until 2 January 2025 at the latest.
It’s also likely that the new AllianzGI managers will dial down the risk, according to Yearsley. He recommended that investors “sell now and go for a new choice”, possibly splitting the money between AXA Global Strategic Bond and the M&G Global Macro Bond fund.
“They blend well together as the AXA fund has core allocations to the main bond asset classes while the M&G’s product is more specialised, with currency returns being a big part of the decision making process,” he said.
It is managed by Jim Leaviss, who Yearsley considers “one of the premier bond managers”.
Jason Hollands, managing director of Bestinvest, also leaned towards selling, indicating the TwentyFour Dynamic Bond fund and the Janus Henderson Strategic Bond fund as two possible replacement candidates.
The former is a concentrated best-ideas fund with a flexible mandate to roam across the fixed income markets. It has performed “incredibly well” in a variety of very different market conditions.
“It is also able to use interest rate and credit derivatives to optimise exposure, as well as take short positions for hedging purposes,” he said.
On the other hand, the Janus Henderson vehicle invests across global bond markets focusing on total return rather than income.
“Managers John Pattulo and Jenna Barnard take a cautious approach to risk, not for example buy any emerging market bonds, only developed markets. They also have an aggressive selling mindset to protect the fund’s value, with company profit warnings or management change potentially triggering a review,” Hollands added.
Finally, Andy O’Shea, an investment director at Pharon Independent Financial Advisers, said he was never a fan of the AllianzGI fund as it did not provide enough risk diversification from equity exposure.
“There have been a number of funds that aim to provide a catch-all diversifier for clients through access to multiple sources of alpha, but using them all at once just introduces additional volatility with little quantifiable benefit. Therefore whilst Mike Riddell is undoubtably a very intelligent manager, I would not follow him across to Fidelity, nor stick with Allianz Strategic Bond,” he explained.
“I would suggest considering the L&G Strategic Bond fund instead. This fund slips under many radars but has provided IA Sterling Strategic Bond sector-beating performance and comprehensively outperformed the Allianz fund since the arrival of Colin Reedie in January 2019.”
Source: FE Analytics
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