The SNOWBALL wants to buy back into SUPR, one of the safer yields in the Investment Trust universe, after the cash raise yesterday and ahead of their xd date next week.
The blended yield, if the share is held for just over one year should be around 9%.
I could raise the cash by selling AIRE but currently it’s interesting as their may be a biding war for the share, or the AEW bid my complete.
I’ve decided to book the profit in ORIT £727, with the intention of buying back into ORIT after the dust settles at AIRE.
I’ve bought for the SNOWBALL 11145 shares in SUPR for £9,500.
The Board of Directors of AEWU (the “Board of AEWU“) confirms that it is considering a possible all-share offer to acquire the entire issued share capital of Alternative Income REIT plc (“AIRE“) (the “Possible Offer“).
The Possible Offer could lead to the combination of two REITs with aligned portfolios, offering greater portfolio diversification, the benefits of increased scale, a reduction in operating costs and an attractive ongoing dividend per share, with AEWU currently paying an annual dividend of 8 pence. The Possible Offer would be expected to be earnings accretive for AEWU.
Terms of the Possible Offer
Under the terms of a Possible Offer, AIRE shareholders would receive:
0.725 shares in AEWU for each AIRE share held
This is based on an exchange ratio calculated using the companies’ respective net asset values (“NAVs“) per share, with a discount applied to AIRE’s NAV per share of 6 per cent.
The NAVs per share referred to above have been adjusted for the companies’ respective estimated transaction costs and for the most recently declared (but not accrued) dividend per share (as described in the sources and bases section).
Background to and rationale for the Possible Offer
Achieving an appropriate scale for AEWU’s strategy is a key ongoing priority for the Board, with expected benefits to shareholders from growth including enhanced liquidity in the Company’s shares, a lower operating cost ratio as well as an expanded portfolio of investment opportunities. These factors are considered important to ensure that the Company and its strategy remain relevant at a time of much corporate activity and competition in the UK-listed property sector.
The Board and the Company’s investment manager, AEW UK Investment Management LLP, will seek to take advantage of appropriate growth opportunities for the Company where possible, including the potential issuance of new equity. The protection of existing shareholders’ interests, including in earnings potential, will remain paramount in anything examined or proposed.
With the above principles in mind, the Board and its advisers entered into discussions regarding a possible offer for AIRE earlier this year, having been invited to put forward a proposal by the Board of AIRE. On 24 March 2026, following press speculation, the Company made an announcement to confirm that it was considering a possible offer for AIRE. At the time, an in-principle agreement of terms had been reached with the Board of AIRE for an all-share offer by way of a scheme of arrangement. Unfortunately, certain key information was not available, and agreement on other matters could not be concluded within the required timescales for making an offer. Additionally, access to AIRE’s major shareholder was not granted to obtain their views, which would have been paramount (at the time) to proceeding with the possible offer. As a result, AEWU made a statement that it did not intend to make an offer on 21 April 2026, the deadline by which it was required to confirm a firm intention to make an offer under the City Code.
It was of regret to the Board of AEWU that this opportunity was not able to progress at that time. AIRE’s portfolio is consistent with the assets and management style applied within AEWU. In particular, AIRE’s assets’ inflation-linked income stream was felt to be very complementary to the strong rental growth prospects offered by the portfolio of AEWU and the possible combination of the companies could have served both sets of shareholders’ interests.
Subsequent events
On 12 June 2026 Glenstone REIT plc, which holds 24.78 per cent. of the issued share capital of AIRE, announced a firm intention to make a cash offer for the issued share capital of AIRE that it does not already own. This announcement released AEWU from its restrictions under the City Code to make another approach to AIRE. The offer made by Glenstone, were it to be successful, removes the possibility of AIRE shareholders receiving further dividend income and is being made at a discount to the prevailing net asset value of AIRE of 15.4 per cent., which, in the opinion of the Board of AEWU and its advisers, compares unfavourably with the proposal made by AEWU some months ago.
The Company notes the recent statements by Glenstone of their previous support for the possible all-share offer for AIRE by AEWU and their agreement in principle to provide an irrevocable undertaking to vote in favour or accept AEWU’s proposal, based on the terms agreed at that time. However, this was not communicated directly to AEWU at the time nor any other conditions of provision of their support that might have been requested.
Funds and trusts four pros are buying and selling: Q2 2026
Professional fund buyers reveal their most recent buys and sells, and share their outlook for the months ahead.
15th July 2026
by Lucy Loewenberg from interactive investor
As markets move through the second half of 2026, the FTSE 100 remains firmly above the 10,000 mark. The index has continued to hold its gains, although its momentum has become more uneven in recent weeks.
Equities, particularly in the US, remain near record levels, supported by resilient earnings and continued optimism around artificial intelligence (AI).
However, volatility has resurfaced as a theme shaping UK and European markets, as geopolitcal tensions endure, keeping oil prices and energy stocks in focus.
Against this backdrop, our fund-of-funds investors continue to take a range of approaches to portfolio positioning. They favour global strategies and funds focused on emerging markets.
Each quarter, our multi-manager panel share their current bull and bear perspectives, along with the funds and investment trusts they have recently bought, added to, or sold.
Simon Evan-Cook, manager of the Downing Fox Funds
Reason to be bullish: there’s still a load of money being fired at the economy in the pursuit of building out the AI infrastructure, which is trickling down through the economy. Much of this spending is coming from the big tech monopolies which, prior to this, were producing more cash than they knew what to do with.
Reason to be bearish: there are signs that consumers are becoming overstretched, particularly now that wage growth is cooling down. It wouldn’t take much to flip them into recession-inducing belt-tightening.
Bought: Evan-Cook established a position in Guinness Global Innovators Z GBP ACC to his stable of highly active funds. “Like most people, we are excited about the high level of innovation happening today, but we are equally nervous that there are patches of overexuberance, which we are keen to avoid,” says Evan-Cook. He believes the experienced team is good at identifying genuinely innovative companies, but are also aware of the dangers of their prices rising too high.
Ian Mortimer, co-manager of the Guinness Global Innovators fund, was recently interviewed by interactive investor.
Increased: he topped up his holding in Skerryvore ICAV Global EM Eq S GBP Acc . This fund’s focus on high-quality companies makes it tortoise-like in its approach and returns, and recently it has looked very slow versus the AI-heavy hares. Evan-Cook adds: “It has proved wise in the past to top up the tortoises when the hares are this far ahead.”
Trimmed: he cut back his exposure to IFSL Evenlode Global Equity B GBP Acc . “We still like the fund, but one member of the fund management team has recently left, so we’re holding a lower weight while the changes bed down,” says Evan-Cook.
Vincent Ropers, co-manager of IFSL Wise Multi-Asset Growth & IFSL Wise Multi-Asset Income
Reason to be bearish: inflationary pressures from the war in Iran and supply shortages are building up and starting to impact interest rate decisions and consumers on both sides of the Atlantic. In the US in particular where consumers have been one of the growth engines for the economy, this could put a dent in future growth.
Reason to be bullish: The AI spending engine is still firing on all cylinders, for now, offering support to growth over the next few months.
Increased: despite solid underlying operational performance and a number of exits in recent months in the portfolio, ICG Enterprise Trust Ord ICGT
suffered a sharp de-rating during the quarter. The trust, like other peers in the listed private equity sector, suffered from concerns about the impact of AI on its software exposure (a long-favoured sector for private equity investors), fears about higher interest rates due to inflationary pressures, and uncertainty about a febrile IPO market.
Ropers says: “We note, however, that ICG’s software exposure is limited at about 12%, that the trust is conservatively managed, so less dependent on high levels of debt, and that the bulk of their exits have not historically relied on public markets (preferring exits to trade buyers or to other PE funds).” That’s why he thinks that the discount, currently 31%, presents attractive value.
Trimmed: by contrast to the position in ICG Enterprise, which Ropers increased during the quarter, he trimmed his position in private equity trust Pantheon International Ord PIN
The same sector dynamics and investors’ concerns weighed on this trust, but its aggressive share buyback programme contributed to a tightening of the trust discount. The managers also realised more than 10% of the net asset value at a premium to carrying value, thus boosting investors’ confidence in valuations. “Given the sharp relative outperformance of the trust versus some of its peers in recent months, we took some profit,” he says.
Paul Green, co-portfolio manager, CT Global Managed Portfolio Trust
Reason to be bullish: economic fundamentals are broadly positive, and corporate earnings growth is broadening beyond the Magnificent Seven, supporting equity market strength.
Reason to be bearish: the conflict in the Middle East has pushed up near-term inflation expectations and the risk is that central banks react with rate hikes in order to curb supply-side inflation.
Increased: Green’s team hasn’t added any new positions to their portfolios over the last quarter, but they introduced a position in Fidelity Emerging Markets Ord FEML
to the Growth Portfolio in August last year and have since scaled the position up.
FEML has posted returns of more than 100% over the past 12 months, almost doubling its MSCI Emerging Markets benchmark return. Green says: “When we decompose those returns, we find that more than half its outperformance can be attributed to gearing, investing in smaller but less liquid companies and shorting specific companies or markets – impressive use of the investment company structure.”
after the change of manager to the established Artemis UK Income team, who Green says, “enjoy one of the best and longest open-ended track records in the open-ended Investment Association (IA) UK Equity Income Sector.”
The team will manage the trust in the same way as their open-ended fund, but Green believes that with some modest gearing (and lower ongoing fees) on a portfolio showing attractive fundamental characteristics, it should lead to attractive returns.
Tihana Ibrahimpasic, portfolio manager on the multi-asset team at Janus Henderson Investors
Reason to be bullish: US productivity rose 2.9% year-over-year in the first quarter — the strongest in two years — as AI adoption feeds through the economy, while a palatable interest-rate environment is fuelling record activity (Q1 global M&A hit $861 billion (£643 billion), the strongest in five years). Earnings momentum is broadening beyond the Magnificent Seven and across regions, pointing to a wider, more durable growth base.
Reason to be bearish: inflation could prove a more sizable and persistent risk than consensus expects, with the Federal Reserve and most major central banks on pause or leaning hawkish in response to higher oil prices – leaving rates higher for longer. Combined with ongoing geopolitical conflict, entrenched inflation and rising rates would pressure valuations and long-duration assets.
a rules-based, quality-tilted US large-cap strategy that seeks to outperform the broad S&P 500 over a full cycle.
Rather than relying on a manager’s discretion, it systematically screens the index for companies with a track record of positive free cash flow and then selects the highest-quality names on metrics such as cash generation, low gearing and capital-light business models.
The result is a concentrated 100-stock portfolio at a relatively low cost, with high-conviction weightings in durable US technology and healthcare leaders. Ibrahimpasic says: “The position was introduced to build a little more resilience into the portfolio through its quality tilt, having captured a genuine quality premium over the plain benchmark.”
Increased: she added further to her holding in the emerging market growth manager, FP Carmignac Emerging Markets B GBP Acc (BQXJRP9) fund. This is a high-conviction, growth-oriented global emerging market equity strategy that seeks to outperform over a full cycle by investing in quality, cash-generative, self-financing companies operating in countries with strong macro fundamentals.
“This was partly done to increase exposure to the asset class, as well as build up exposure in a high-conviction manager,” says Ibrahimpasic.
Sold: she closed her position in Regnan Sustainable Water and Waste IGBP , which is run by a well-established team and seeks to invest in generally small and mid-cap businesses, predominantly in the industrials and utilities sectors, that meet certain environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria.
“Our exit was a result of tactical rotation towards large-cap names and raising cash across the book stemming from our risk management process, as well as a period of softer performance of the manager beyond its prevalent style,” she says.
on 1 June 2025. They have both been part of the multi-asset team at Columbia Threadneedle since 2016 and 2007, respectively, and have a combined investment experience of 35 years. The two investment trusts specialise in buying other investment trusts.
Tihana Ibrahimpasic is a portfolio manager on the multi-asset team at Janus Henderson Investors. Prior to taking this role in 2021, she was a research analyst in the team from 2018.
This 89-Year-Old Investor Wants More Growth! My 52% Answer.
Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist Updated: July 15, 2026
I need to ask your honest opinion, my careful contrarian! Should this reader move on from me?
“I’m 89 years young and active,” Peter wrote. “Don’t need income—only growth.”
(I’m the income guy. Do I have a growth arrow in my quiver, or should this young man look elsewhere to get rich?)
First of all Peter, you’re the man. You’re doing many, many things right to eschew current income at the spry age of 89. Good for you for staying active and for being in a position to still pursue portfolio price gains.
Peter went on to explain that he holds six of my official recommendations. He also owns the Vanguard Information Technology ETF (VGT). And then he dropped the hammer on me:
“Should I stop reading your missives? If so, which writer should I follow?”
Which writer—as in which other writer! Peter Pan, I appreciate the candor. Never get old, Peter. And never stop telling people how it is.
My main beat is high yields. Most readers here are retired, or approaching retirement, and looking to lock in that high income today. They are all about turning the pile of cash they’ve saved their entire lives into a sustainable dividend machine to fund their retirements.
Many have $500K to $1 million or $2 million or so. They like the 8% yields because they generate $40,000 per year on a $500K nest egg. Or $160K per year in payouts on $2 million.
But it sounds like you are in an excellent spot. Your pile is quite cushion-y and you just want to keep growing the nest egg. Awesome.
It’s rare to see a growth emphasis at age 89. Usually at 39, 49 or even 59—when we have years to decades to retirement—do we focus on growth. So Peter, don’t grow up! Let’s keep your portfolio rolling with the safest, securest way to more gains—the dividend magnet.
Over the long haul, stock prices follow their payouts higher or lower. Find me a company growing its dividend by double-digits and I’ll show you a long-term 10%+ annual total return machine! Dividend hikes are the most reliable way to invest in growth. We get rich on the dividend schedule.
The current yield of a dividend magnet stock never tips off what’s happening. It looks pedestrian at 1% or 2% or 3%. But what’s really happening is that the Peter Pan portfolio is flying along, humming at double digits per year alongside that dividend growth.
We’re doing a twist, Peter, on what you’re seeing with VGT. It’s a more nuanced, pick-and-shovel approach to the market. Let me give you an example.
EQT Corp (EQT) is the power broker behind many of the stocks you’re buying in your Vanguard fund.
We added it to our Hidden Yields dividend growth portfolio back in January 2024, discussing that there were only three sure things in life: death, taxes and the cyclical nature of natural gas.
At the time, gas fetched a measly $3.25 per million BTUs. Producers were shutting down their wells because they simply weren’t profitable. And of course, investors were fleeing the sector. And that’s why we bought—knowing that the cure for low prices was low prices.
EQT is the premier producer in Appalachia, sitting on nearly 4,000 profitable drilling locations at even rock-bottom gas prices! Yet at the time the stock was impossibly cheap, trading around six times free cash flow. The company was set to generate roughly $14 billion in free cash over the next five years, against a market cap of $15 billion. In other words, we could buy the whole company and get paid back by 2028. And we’re already more than halfway there, with the cash still rolling in…and its pace likely to pick up!
Fast-forward to today, and EQT’s market cap has ballooned to $37 billion. The reason? Natural gas for electricity generation is in high demand, with AI sucking up all the available juice it can find. Every time you ask ChatGPT or Claude what it thinks about something, the machines are spinning, and they demand energy. Skeptics can argue about how much a single query burns, but nobody argues about the gigawatts AI in aggregate requires.
So, how’s EQT doing? The price alone is up 47% since our initial buy, with more room to run!
In total we’re up 52%, including dividends. And this stock has more room to run because EQT’s natural gas is critical to the current AI build out.
Why do I still like EQT after this run? Two words. Two letters, actually: AI.
Let’s consider Homer City (not named after Mr. Simpson, to my knowledge, who lives in Springfield, anyway). This is a dead coal plant in Pennsylvania, once the state’s largest, and it’s experiencing a renaissance as an AI power campus. The Homer City location spans 3,200 acres and will produce 4.4 gigawatts of on-site gas generation. That’s the output of roughly four large nuclear reactors. It flips on next year, and EQT is the exclusive gas supplier in one of the largest single-site gas deals in North American history.
EQT is the power broker behind the bots. AI runs on electricity, which is ultimately EQT’s gas.
And this is the biggest buildout in modern American history. We’re talking about $700 billion of data-center spending from the “hyperscalers” (Google, Microsoft, Amazon and friends) this year alone! And that’s nearly double last year’s investment.
Current grid “wait times” are 5+ years. Want power? Take a number! Or consider “on-site natural gas” which is a VIP power plant right next door to the data center. (No line to wait in!) On-sites can deploy in just two years versus 5+. This is why “the natty” is booming and we’ll see more Homer Cities across the country.
Data centers are projected to boost America’s power-plant gas burn by 20% by 2030. Homer City’s contract alone supplies one-tenth of that increase and EQT is locked in to benefit:
The boom is already showing up in EQT’s top and bottom lines. First-quarter revenue nearly doubled to $3.4 billion, and profits nearly doubled as well.
And get this—gas itself is still cheap! “Henry Hub” standard variety goes for just $3.20 per million BTUs today, which is about the same it was trading at when we bought EQT. The company has nearly doubled its profits with zero help from gas price gains thus far.
As I mentioned (warned!) earlier, these “pick and shovel” payers rarely impress with their current yields. EQT yields just 1.3% today, which is fine for you, Peter. You’ll appreciate that EQT pays just 12% of its profits as dividends today and that management just raised its dividend in October by 5%. More hikes ahead are likely.
So, to answer your question, Peter: please, no—don’t stop reading. Keep on asking the questions that investors half your age forget to ask. Yeah, we can do growth. Here’s how I’d recommend we do it responsibly.
As my kids are fond of pointing out to their friends: I’m 44 and a half (ah, youth). Halfway to you, Peter—and I aspire to be you when I grow up. Bless her heart, my youngest’s friend mentioned last week that there was no way her dad was in his 40s—he looked like he was in his 30s. I know 30 is ancient to an eight-year-old, but hey, I’ll take it. Halfway to you, Peter. Still chasing growth—with a protective stock seatbelt on!
And EQT isn’t the only dividend grower to buy here. Above where EQT operates—up on the land’s surface—we have a company that owns the buildings and cashes the rent checks from these hyperscalers. This company is basically the landlord to everyone participating in the AI boom. The biggest names in tech are paying rent to this firm.
A Stormy Market? We’re Interested. Two 9%+ Dividends to Buy
Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist Updated: July 14, 2026
This market is in a three-way “tug-of-war”—and it’s set up some sweet deals on our favorite 9%+ dividends.
The Fed. The White House. Iran. A peep from any of the above and stocks soar (or tank).
But we contrarians can see through the short-term fog here.
We’re buying this volatility, in part because we’re playing the long game on AI, and the likelihood it’ll cap wage growth and inflation in the long run (more on that below).
But in the here and now, we need to play it smart—and zero in on payers that cushion our downside so we can collect their rich payouts in peace. I’ve got two closed-end funds (CEFs) that do just that—and throw off huge 9%+ yields, too.
Plus, these two funds help us avoid the mistake most investors are making now.
1 Click to 9X the Payouts Your Friends Are Booking
That mistake? When markets come under pressure, many investors look to a “plain vanilla” index fund, like the State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY), to take advantage.
The problem? SPY’s current yield is … 1%. One percent!
Want a $50,000 yearly income stream from SPY? Hope you’re prepared to invest around $5 million.
It’s too bad because SPY holders can easily grab dividends 9X bigger when they go just a bit past ETFs, to CEFs. Our first one holds the stocks in SPY, but instead of a sad 1%, it pays a 9.1% dividend that gets safer when markets turn stormy.
Swap the “Y” in “SPY” for “XX”—and Unlock a 9.1% Payout
That CEF is SPY’s high-yielding “clone,” the Nuveen S&P 500 Dynamic Overwrite Fund (SPXX).
The tickers are similar because like SPY, SPXX holds the stocks in the S&P 500, such as Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT) and Visa (V). But instead of SPY’s 1% dividend, you get SPXX’s sweet 9.1%.
Why the difference? SPXX sells call options. These give the buyer the right to buy SPXX’s stocks at a fixed future date and price. That generates extra income because SPXX keeps the “premiums” these buyers pay, no matter how these trades play out. The value of these options also rises with volatility.
SPXX then uses this cash to fund our payouts.
This strategy can cap upside in a rising market, as some of SPXX’s holdings get sold. But it also gives us most of our return as dividends, which is one way it cushions volatility.
SPXX has lagged SPY this year, with a 7.4% total return based on market price (in purple below), compared to 9.9% for the ETF. You’d expect that, as the bulls ran through the first half of ’26, despite the many whipsaws we’ve seen along the way.
But over that time, something curious happened: The performance of the fund’s portfolio (that is, its net asset value, or NAV), which strips out sentiment, has more or less matched SPY, returning 9.8% year-to-date (in orange below).
NAV Pops, Price Trails … and a Buy Window Opens
That gap has teed up a 9.1% discount to NAV on SPXX (which by coincidence matches the fund’s yield), much wider than the SPXX’s five-year average of 3.9%.
And if you look at the right side of the chart below, you’ll see that SPXX’s discount is starting to narrow again. That’s a sign that investors are placing more value on SPXX’s options strategy and are starting to buy in as volatility picks up:
SPXX’s Cheap (for Now) Valuation
This setup—a below-average discount that’s starting to narrow—is generally a smart time to buy a CEF. And while we wait for SPXX’s markdown to close, this “SPY clone” will pay us 9X what the original does.
Swap Your Bond ETFs for This 10%-Paying CEF
This opportunity isn’t only coming our way in stocks. It’s handing us deals in bonds, too. That’s because the herd is wrong on the direction of interest rates in the long run.
We already touched on AI, which provides a sweeping level of automation to white-collar work that is highly deflationary.
In the 1990s, the Internet acted as a similar “deflator” on prices. The move from snail mail to email and from fax machines to web browsers made businesses wildly more efficient, which kept a lid on consumer prices—and a floor under bond prices. They rallied throughout the entire decade.
Oil? Despite the latest tit-for-tat, prices are still well below their 2026 highs. And this conflict will end. Neither side can afford any other outcome. That’ll lead to a further drop in the price of the goo, and another gut-punch to inflation.
But the crowd doesn’t fully grasp any of this yet, so bonds are hated. That’s our cue.
One thing you do not want to do at a time like this is pick up a corporate-bond ETF like the SPDR Bloomberg High-Yield Bond ETF (JNK), which pays 6.6%. That’s not bad, but it pales in comparison to the payout of a corporate-bond CEF like the 10%-yielding DoubleLine Yield Opportunities Fund (DLY).
Not only is DLY’s yield 50% larger than that of the index fund, but it comes our way monthly, with the odd special dividend thrown in:
When it comes to performance, there’s no comparison. DLY is run by Jeffrey Gundlach, the so-called “Bond God,” who’s as connected as they come. DLY launched in February 2020, as the COVID dumpster fire was starting to rage. That let it buy the dips while the world went into lockdown.
And since bonds started to get up off the mat in late 2022, DLY (in purple below) has routed JNK, as typically happens with CEFs, which are actively managed.
The “Bond God” Grabs an Extra Jump in the Rebound
Even so, we can grab DLY at a 7.3% discount today, wider than its five-year average of 5.1%. That’s also cheaper than JNK, which, as an ETF, never gives us a discount.
NextEnergy Solar Fund Limited (“NESF” or the “Company”)
Commencement of Formal Sale Process
NESF announced on 11 March 2026 the results of a strategic review, on 3 June 2026 the Company’s updated NAV as at 31 March 2026 and on 22 June 2026 the Company’s Full Year Results & Annual Report.
Notwithstanding the performance of its underlying portfolio of assets, NESF continues to have a challenging experience as a listed company, including a share price discount to its reported NAV that has persisted for several years and impacted its ability to raise new equity capital to fund its future growth. The board of NESF (the “Board“) also believes that it is challenged by the increased focus on shorter-term investment horizons by some parts of the public equity markets compared to the longer-term nature of its investments.
Since the announcement of the strategic review the Board has continued to engage with major stakeholders to understand their views on the Company’s future strategic options. Having evaluated this feedback and numerous alternatives to maximise value for shareholders, the Board believes that it would be in shareholders’ interest to investigate the sale of NESF and has therefore decided to commence a “Formal Sale Process” of the Company (as referred to in Note 2 on Rule 2.6 of the Takeover Code (the “Code“)) (the “Formal Sale Process“).
NextEnergy Capital IM Ltd, NESF’s investment manager, fully supports the Board’s decision.
The Board is not in any active discussions with any potential offeror and is not considered to be in receipt of an approach from any potential offeror as at the date of this announcement.
The Takeover Panel has agreed that any discussions with third parties in relation to an offer for the Company may take place within the context of a “Formal Sale Process” (as referred to in Note 2 on Rule 2.6 of the Takeover Code).
Formal Sale Process
As part of the Formal Sale Process, the Board invites expressions of interest from bona fide parties regarding a potential transaction for the entire issued ordinary share capital of the Company. The Formal Sale Process is being managed by the Board, which is being advised by Rothschild & Co. Parties interested in participating in the Formal Sale Process or otherwise engaging with the Company should contact Rothschild & Co, using the contact details below.
The Company intends to conduct a process focused on those parties which understand and value the full potential of the Company.
Parties interested in participating in the Formal Sale Process will be required to enter into a non-disclosure and standstill agreement with the Company on terms satisfactory to the Board and on the same terms, in all material respects, as other interested parties before being permitted to participate in the Formal Sale Process. The Company intends to provide interested parties with certain information on its business, following which interested parties would be invited to submit their proposals to the Board. NESF will update the market in due course regarding timings for the Formal Sale Process.
A real estate investment trust (REIT) is a company (or group of companies) that owns and manages property portfolios, generating income and capital gains for investors.
At least 75% of their global profits must come from property rental income.
REITs can invest in many types of commercial property, such as offices, warehouses, data centres, shopping centres or industrial parks. Residential assets often include student accommodation, apartment blocks or assisted living facilities. They don’t invest in individual houses or flats. They might also hold the underlying land an asset sits on, or a site ready for future development.
What are the risks of investing in a REIT?
While REITs can invest with a broad focus, many take a focused view on one or two sectors, which can introduce concentration risk.
Max King, former fund manager and MoneyWeek columnist says excess supply and limited demand could lead a particular sector into a bear market.
“In that case, not only can net asset values (NAVs) fall but discounts to NAV can open up,” he says.
For this reason, knowing what to buy is the key, which is far from easy.
In King’s view, a specialist investment trust, like TR Property, would be a better option, letting the experts do the asset allocation for you.
You could build your own diversified portfolio of commercial property by selecting REITs from different sectors or countries. Or you may prefer to buy an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks a broad index of property companies.
As with most property-related stocks, the share price of a REIT can be volatile, especially during periods of crisis when they may move more sharply than the wider stock market. But while investing in direct property can come with liquidity concerns (because property can be difficult to buy and sell quickly), as REITs offer investors shares in a stock market-listed company, liquidity is less of a concern.
HMRC estimates around 200 REITs are currently registered. Many large property companies, such as British Land and Landsec, fall into this category
These aren’t just a UK concept; the US, Australia, France and Japan also have similar regimes in place.
How are REITs taxed
REITs differ from standard investment trusts and other property funds through the way they are taxed.
In the UK, companies held inside REITs are exempt from corporation tax on any qualifying property rental profits and capital gains. But the REIT must distribute at least 90% of any rental income (not gains) every year to shareholders, within 12 months of the company’s year-end. These payouts are called property income distributions (PIDs), rather than standard dividends.
PIDs are usually subject to a 20% withholding tax – a tax paid directly to HMRC before you receive payment.
PIDs circumvent the need for corporation tax to be paid on the REIT’s holdings, meaning that shareholders in REITs can receive proportionately more money post-tax than through other property investment vehicles.
Certain types of institutional shareholders can qualify to receive PIDs gross – without the 20% deduction. Some of these include UK public bodies, charities or pension funds, for example.
Not all profits generated are PIDs or capital gains. Properties inside REITs can also generate profits from other activities (sometimes called ‘residual’ or ‘non-core’ activities), which might be interest payments, development or property management. These are usually taxed as ordinary profits, and treated as such. These residual activities must be no more than 25% of the REIT’s total income profits or assets.
When were REITs introduced?
REITs were introduced in the UK in 2007. The idea was to remove the ‘double taxation’ that had previously applied – where the core asset (building or piece of land) – paid tax and then shareholders also paid tax on receipt of any investment returns or income. Now, for most REITs, the tax is only collected when investors receive the payments, at their standard rate of income tax.
So while investors hold shares in the REIT (as it’s a listed company), it means they have a similar tax position to owning the property directly.
They may also be subject to other restrictions, such as caps on leverage, which is the amount they can borrow against their assets.
How to build a successful investment portfolio from scratch, by STEPHEN YIU of Blue Whale
Story by Stephen Yiu
Investing offers the chance of significantly higher returns than saving in cash.
This is at the ‘cost’ of watching your money go up and down in value on paper in the short term, but leaving your investment alone long enough makes short-term volatility irrelevant.
Contrary to what most people fear, it is not hard to do.
Here’s how to get started and then build up and manage a successful investment portfolio.
1. Beginners should buy ETF trackers
If you’re new to investing, Exchange-Traded Funds are a great first move. An ETF is a ready-made basket of shares that make up the index it is tracking, giving you exposure to lots of companies in one trade.
This instantly spreads your risk: if one company has a bad day, others can offset it.
Stephen Yiu: ETFs are low effort, low fuss, and the ideal foundation for new investors
ETFs are low cost, easy to buy and sell and transparent in their holdings.
For example, an ETF tracking the S&P 500 index provides instant access to America’s largest companies across multiple sectors.
ETFs are low effort, low fuss, and the ideal foundation for new investors.
For many people, there is no need to venture beyond investing in ETFs to enjoy a successful portfolio, whether in their Isa or pension or both.
2. What ambitious amateurs should do next
By their very nature, your returns from ETFs are only ever going to track the relevant market, never beat it.
For many people, that is all they are looking for, especially given the low costs and ease of choice ETFs offer.
However, once you have cut your teeth with passive investment and built up a nicely diversified portfolio of tracker ETFs, you might want to be more ambitious and seek market-beating returns as the icing on the cake.
The first alternative for more ambitious investors is to look for consistent long-term success from competent, high-calibre active fund managers.
ETFs track the market, but successful active fund managers aim to beat it by spotting opportunities others miss, sidestepping risks early, and making informed decisions across all conditions.
Over time, this advantage can compound into a significant gap between ‘average’ returns and the kind of performance that builds lasting wealth.
But spotting and investing with a good manager is the trick. Here’s what to look for.
– Proven outperformance across multiple years and market cycles, not just one lucky run.
– Transparency and regular communication – keeping investors updated on positioning and performance.
– A clear, repeatable investment process that you can understand and trust.
Without this calibre of management, active funds risk becoming expensive index-trackers – in fact most active funds typically underperform their relevant index.
But when managed properly, truly active funds can be the powerhouse of your portfolio, delivering returns that passive strategies alone can’t match.
3. Investing for profit and pleasure
Picking individual company shares is the most hands-on approach for the more ambitious investor.
You control every decision and can enjoy substantial rewards if you back a winner early.
However, the risks are higher: company missteps, price volatility and concentration can hurt. Success demands research, discipline and the ability to stay calm during market swings.
At Blue Whale, even our professional investors (who analyse markets full time) typically cover just five companies each.
That’s how much work it takes to truly understand a business and its drivers. For private investors, replicating that depth across even a handful of shares can be prohibitive.
Financial ambition: Investing offers chance of significantly higher returns than saving in cash
The bottom line
A smart progression might look like this: start with broad, low-cost ETFs for a diversified base, then add proven active managers – the serious investor’s engine of outperformance – and finally, if time and interest allow, sprinkle in individual shares for challenge and enjoyment.
The real key is patience. Stay the course, ride out the bumps, and let compounding quietly work in your favour. Start early, stick with it, and you’ll give yourself the best shot at long-term financial success.
Looking at the chart of Blue Whale, you will notice there are long periods when prices go sideways or fall, a good time to own dividend paying shares as you fail by the month and not the year.
If you are investing for capital growth, your share should at least follow the markets when they are going up.