Investment Trust Dividends

Month: February 2024 (Page 3 of 16)

2024 Snowball update

The snowball started with 100k of seed capital, no

funds to be added to the portfolio, only enough cash

to pay the platform fees.

The initial aim was to provide a yield of 5% but as Investment

Trusts prices plummeted this was increased to 7%.

7% compounded doubles your dividend take in ten years.

The target is a ‘pension’ of 14k and u keep control of

your capital.

The capital is needed to provide the dividends for the ‘pension’

although if an unexpected cost happened, one position

could be sold off to provide funds, the equivalent to

taking 10 years of dividends in advance.

The figure received for the first quarter will be 3k,

do not scale to achieve the total for the year.

Dividends expected for April £837.00

This years fcast is 8k with a target of 9k.

The target may depend on by how much RGL reduce

their dividend by.

If 9k is re-invested at 7% plus the 10 year plan total

could be increased to a ‘pension’ of 16k.

If u have no plan, u have no final destination, so it’s

more likely you will fail.

The yield u receive is the yield at the time of your purchase,

hopefully gently increasing over the years.

As prices rise, the yield falls but there should be one or

two unloved Trusts that could provide a yield of 7%.

Doceo Watch List

Funds on the Watch List this week include: SMT, SSIT, FSF, MNL, CHRY, BCPT, RSE, CTY, BUT, SAIN, FGT, JGGI, BSIF, FCSS, ACIC, UKCM, BBOX

Welcome to this week’s Watch List where you’ll find golden nuggets on trust discounts, dividends, tips and lots more…

ByFrank Buhagiar•19 Feb, 2024

BARGAIN BASEMENT

Discount Watch: 23

Our estimate of the number of investment companies whose discounts hit 12-month highs (or lows depending on how you look at them) over the course of the week ended Friday 16 February 2024 – five more than the previous week’s 18.

Nine of the 23 were on the list last week: VH Global Sustainable Opps (GSEO), Aquila Energy Efficiency (AEET) and Harmony Energy Income (HEIT) from renewable energy infrastructure; Digital 9 Infrastructure (DGI9) from infrastructure; VPC Specialty Lending Investments (VSL) from debt; LMS Capital (LMS) from private equity; and Custodian Property Income REIT (CREI), Regional REIT (RGL) and Life Science REIT (LABS) from property.

That leaves 14 new names: Greencoat UK Wind (UKW), Greencoat Renewables (GRP), Bluefield Solar Income Fund (BSIF), NextEnergy Solar (NESF), Octopus Renewables Infrastructure (ORIT) and The Renewables Infrastructure Group (TRIG) from renewable energy infrastructure; STS Global Income & Growth (STS) from global equity income; abrdn Equity Income (AEI) from UK equity income; BlackRock Sustainable American Income (BRSA) from North America equity income; Jupiter Green (JGC) from environmental; Residential Secure Income (RESI) from property; Schroder Asian Total Return (ATR) from Asia Pacific; Montanaro UK Smaller Cos (MTU) from UK smallers; and finally, CQS Natural Resources Growth & Income (CYN) from natural resources.

ON THE MOVE

Monthly Mover Watch: Seraphim Space (SSIT)

Still sitting pretty at the top of Winterflood’s list of top-five monthly movers in the investment company space. That’s despite further shrinkage in its monthly share price gain – up +34.1% compared to +36.5% the previous week. No meaningful releases since the space investor’s January shareholder letter, but perhaps the successful launch of the Odysseus mission to the moon is helping to keep space on the radar…

Meanwhile, last week’s second and third placees have swapped places. Chrysalis (CHRY) is now in second after extending its gain on the month to +26.1% from +20.9% previously. The private equity investor still benefiting from a well-received set of Annual Results in which the company made positive noises on the chances of one or two IPOs among its holdings this year.

In third, Foresight Sustainable Forestry (FSF) courtesy of a +19.6% monthly gain, a tad lower than last week’s +22.4%. With no news out this year, the shares appear to be still benefitting from the peak interest rate narrative which started to gain traction in December 2023.

Manchester & London (MNL) also keeps its place among the top five. A +17.4% share price rise, an improvement on the +11.6% gain seven days earlier, enough to claim fourth spot. Investors following investment manager Mark Sheppard’s lead? Mr Sheppard has been topping up his stake in the fund recently…

Finally, new entry in fifth, Riverstone Energy (RSE) up +14.4%. Not hard to find an explanation here. The launch of a US$200 million tender offer, a good enough reason for the share price rise.

Scottish Mortgage Watch: +7.9%

The monthly share price performance at Scottish Mortgage (SMT) as at close of play on Friday 16 February 2024 – an improvement on last week’s +2.5% gain. NAV near enough doubled its monthly gain to +9.7% from +4.9% the previous week. Finally, the wider global IT sector joined the party too, finishing the week up +7.4% compared to +4.9% seven days earlier.

THE CORPORATE BOX

Merger Watch: Tritax Big Box (BBOX) & UK Commercial Property (UKCM)

Announced “…a possible all-share offer…for the entire issued and to be issued share capital of UKCM at an exchange ratio of: 0.444 new ordinary BBOX shares per UKCM share…Based on BBOX’s share price of 160.2 pence per share as at 9 February 2024, the Possible Offer implies a value of 71.1 pence per UKCM share and approximately £924 million for the entire issued share capital of UKCM, which represents…a premium of 10.8 per cent. to UKCM’s closing share price of 64.2 pence per share on 9 February 2024; and…a premium of 23.0 per cent. to UKCM’s 6-month volume weighted average share price of 57.8 pence per share as at 9 February 2024.”

Raise Watch: £40 million

The maximum amount JPMorgan Global Growth & Income (JGGI) is looking to raise via a Placing and Retail Offer. Summary from broker Winterflood: “JGGI has been approached by a large wealth manager who has indicated interest in the fund’s shares. In light of this and the ongoing demand in the market, the Board has decided to undertake a placing, with shares to be issued at a 0.60% premium to cum-income NAV per share, representing a modestly lower premium than that at which the fund normally undertakes issuance…The fundraising will be for an amount up to £40m to ensure the fund has sufficient capacity to continue its ongoing premium management issuance programme. In order to allow existing retail shareholders to participate in the fundraising, JGGI is undertaking the WRAP retail offer, which will be capped at €8m (or the equivalent amount in Sterling).”

Buyback Watch: £20 million

The size of Bluefield Solar Income’s (BSIF) share buyback programme: “The Board notes the recent weakness in the Company’s share price and the significant discount that the current share price represents to the value of the Company’s assets…in the context of addressing what the Board views as the excessive discount at which the Company’s shares currently trade relative to the underlying NAV, the Board announces its intention to commence a share buyback programme. In the first instance it has allocated £20 million for the purchase of its own shares…following the release of the interims…”

Insider Watch: 25,000

The number of Finsbury Growth & Income (FGT) shares acquired by fund manager Nick Train: “…on 13 February 2024, Nick Train purchased 25,000 Ordinary Shares…at an average price of 844.00 pence per share. As a result of the transaction, Mr Train now holds interests in a total of 5,337,243 Ordinary Shares, representing an aggregate 2.8% of the Company’s issued share capital.”

Dividend Watch:

The number of consecutive years, City of London (CTY) is on course to grow its dividend by: “The Company’s diverse portfolio, strong cash flow and revenue reserve give the Board confidence that, in line with its objective to provide long-term income and capital growth, it will be able to increase the total annual dividend for the 58th consecutive year.”

52 – the number of consecutive years of dividend growth at Brunner (BUT): “…the total dividend for 2023, including the proposed final dividend, will be 22.7p. This represents an increase of 5.6% over the 2022 dividend of 21.5p and means Brunner has now reached 52 years of consecutive dividend increases, cementing its place near the top of the AIC’s ‘Dividend Heroes’ list.”

50 – the number of years in a row that Scottish American (SAIN) has increased its dividends: “The Board is recommending a final dividend which will bring the total dividends for the year to 14.10p per share, an increase of 2% over the previous year. The Company continues to meet its objective of growing dividends ahead of inflation over the long term, and the recommended dividend will also extend the Company’s record of raising its dividend to fifty consecutive years.”

MEDIA CITY

Tip Watch #1: Merger focuses minds on the tricky question of investing in China

The merger? “…the impending merger of Abrdn China Investment Company and Fidelity China Special Situations, two of the four UK-quoted investment trusts devoted to that country.” The mind that has been focused? The Times’ Tempus Column. As the article points out: “Fidelity, already by far the biggest of the quartet with net assets of over £1 billion, will dominate even more once it absorbs Abrdn China Investment’s £270 million portfolio…Its assets then will be transferred to Fidelity China Special Situations in return for that trust’s shares.”

Now, as the article goes on to say, it’s not been the best of times for the China funds: “The four China trusts’ shares have been sliding since early 2021, when Beijing began cracking down on its fast-growth internet companies, putting pressure on Ant, Alibaba and Tencent, all favourites of the UK trusts.” Despite this, “Abrdn China Investment investors should benefit from the switch to Fidelity…” which “…has returned 138.5 per cent over the past decade compared with Abrdn China Investment’s 10.5 per cent in the same period.” Furthermore, “There is a considerable overlap between the two trusts’ portfolios…”

In addition, Tempus thinks “Today’s depressed prices may look cheap in a year or two. Fidelity China Special Situations shares yield 4 per cent, compared with Abrdn China Investment Company’s 0.8 per cent, though that may turn off investors who see China as primarily a growth play…Advice: Hold”

Tip Watch #2: Balanced Commercial Property Trust (BCPT)

Tipped by The Investors’ Chronicle. In This unloved Reit is now a takeover target, the tipster first provides some background: “Balanced Commercial Property Trust (BCPT) is a generalist real estate investment trust (Reit)…As such, it is a pretty good barometer for UK real estate as a whole. In good times, such as between 2009 and 2018, its share price has performed well. However, things took a serious turn for the worse this decade as first Covid-19 and then high interest rates hit the UK. Like many Reits, BCPT is now trading at a hefty discount to net asset value, which reflects the lower returns expected by investors…BCPT’s recent performance has been poor: its share price has substantially underperformed the FTSE 350 Real Estate index and the FTSE All-Share index during the past five years.”

But it’s a different story “Over the past six months…” For “something has changed – and value and momentum investors should take note…At the time of writing, BCPT has achieved the best share price return of any of the top 45 Reits in the year to date. Once its monthly dividend is accounted for, it looks even more attractive. In other words, the stock has momentum and a generous dividend which is comfortably covered by cash…The year is still young, but BCPT looks well placed to lead the charge on any further Reit share price rally this year as interest rates stabilise and buyers return to the sector…” What’s more, while “The reversal of BCPT’s fortunes is largely due to the peaking of interest rates…underpinning its share price rally is solid trading…”

That’s because “…if you strip away valuation changes, BCPT posted an 11.2 per cent increase in core earnings. Put another way, BCPT’s rental revenue minus its day-to-day business costs – building maintenance costs, administrative procedures and asset manager costs – is rising. This non-IFRS figure is sometimes called ‘net rental income’, and the fact that BCPT’s is increasing is a sign of good asset and tenant management.” And it’s possible, “…if retail investors don’t buy into the bull case, private equity or another Reit might. Real estate takeover activity has picked up over the past two years as deep-pocketed buyers with long-term horizons have taken advantage of dire investor sentiment and heavy discounts to NAV…It’s impossible to say whether someone might have a go at buying BCPT, but the investment case for this stock is solid either way.”

Investment Trust views

Investment companies and a mirror on the wall moment

Mirror mirror on the wall, which is the most popular investment company of them all?” Don’t have a Magic Mirror to hand? Not to worry, have a read of the latest Doceo Insights instead…

ByFrank Buhagiar•

“Mirror mirror on the wall, which is the most popular investment company of them all?” Perhaps what Snow White’s arch nemesis, the Evil Queen, would have been bursting at the seams to ask the Magic Mirror had she been either a) an investment company fund manager or b) the Board Chair of an investment company. But, seeing as she was neither, it’s left to others to ask the question “Which are the most popular investment trusts?” And then to look for an answer. So, with 2023 still relatively fresh in the memory, which were the most popular investment companies.

Ground rules

To lay down first. In the absence of a fully functioning Magic Mirror, popular in whose eyes? Institutions/wealth managers? Retail investors? Or all the above?

For the purposes of this exercise, retail investors get to play the part of the Magic Mirror. That’s because retail is an increasingly important target audience for investment companies, particularly those at the smaller end of the spectrum. Why? Because wealth managers are getting bigger, possibly too big to invest in a large proportion of investment companies. Broker Winterflood touched on this very subject when commenting on last year’s mega-merger between wealth managers Rathbones and Investec Wealth & Investment UK:

“This has created one of the largest discretionary wealth managers in the UK, with £100bn in combined assets under management. As two significant owners of investment trusts, the announcement led to some concerns that there could be forced selling, or at least subdued future demand, if the merger led to the combined entity owning more than 30% of a fund’s shares (the threshold that would normally require a bid to be made under Takeover Panel rules). While this does not appear to have materialised to a significant extent, we note that cost pressures may well lead to more consolidation in the wealth management industry. As a result, we expect an increased focus on larger, more liquid investment trusts from these groups, particularly those with centralised investment propositions, and additional scrutiny on the relevance of sub-scale funds.”

Big wealth managers require big investment companies to invest their clients’ money in. All fine and dandy for investment companies of scale. Not so for the rest of the sector. For those funds deemed sub-scale, new investors may have to be found. One pool of potential buyers that investment companies can target: retail. With individual investors potentially becoming more important to London’s investment companies, this popularity contest will therefore be retail-centric.

A question of definition

For the second year in a row, City of London (CTY) finds itself in top spot. What’s more with a market cap of £2 billion, chances are it remains on the radar of the larger wealth managers. Same is true for most of the names in the table’s top 10. Second-placed JPMorgan Global Growth & Income (JGGI), something of a consolidator within the global equity income sector in recent years – market cap well north of £2 billion; Scottish Mortgage (SMT) in third – market cap of £11 billion; Murray International (MYI) in fifth (£1.5 billion market cap); Alliance (ATST) (£3.3 billion); F&C (FCIT) (£5 billion); and Bankers (BNKR) (£1.2 billion).

To be fair, two of the three non-£1 billion+ top 10ers are not far off joining the billionaire club themselves: fourth-placed Merchants (MRCH) £800 million market cap; while ninth-placed Scottish American (SAIN) is even closer – market cap is just under £900 million.

And £1 billion market caps can be found among those companies occupying the 11 to 20 spots too: BlackRock World Mining (BRWM); Law Debenture (LWBD); Caledonia (CLDN); and Greencoat UK Wind (UKW).

A degree of positive correlation between fund size and number of clicks on the AIC website, it seems. Let’s face it though, scoring highly on the AIC’s page view charts is a good start, but in the words of Tom Cruise in the 1996 film Jerry Maguire…

Show me the money!
For surely the ultimate test of popularity is to see which funds retail investors have been buying the most. Easier said than done, as retail investors typically use different platforms to buy and sell funds. Major platforms such as AJ Bell, Fidelity and ii, for example. Oh, to have a single table that aggregated buying activity across all three platforms so that an overall picture can be formed…

Enter Numis, the fairy godmother in this tale. For the broker has done precisely that: “We seek to give an indication of which Investment Companies (ICs) have consistently featured amongst the most popular ICs on the major retail platforms for which we have information, namely: AJ Bell, Fidelity and ii. We note that this does not consider the relative volumes traded on each platform or over time, rather it is based on the number of appearances on the most bought lists…Every month, for each platform, the top-ranking fund is assigned a score of 10, decreasing to 1 for the 10th ranking fund. The scores have been summed across each month to calculate a total ranking for 2023.” All sounds reasonable.

Before the big reveal though, Numis tantalisingly notes: “Looking across the whole of 2023, there is a significant degree of consistency across the lists and over time. This is to be expected as many investors will have built large positions in specific trusts over many years. It is typically long-established ICs with equity-oriented strategies that dominate the ‘most bought’ lists.” This can be clearly seen in the table below, along with the winner of course…

A final flourish
Winner revealed maybe, but here’s a thought – how many funds in the AIC’s top-20 view list make it into Numis’ table showing the 15 most bought funds?

Answer, a clear majority. In all nine of Numis’ top 15 appear in the AIC’s list:

Scottish Mortgage
City of London
JPMorgan Global Growth & Income
Greencoat UK Wind
F&C IT
BlackRock World Mining
Alliance
Merchants
Murray International
And the similarities don’t stop there. For the top-three names on both lists are also the same: Scottish Mortgage, City of London and JPMorgan Global Growth & Income – although in slightly different order.

Worth also taking a look at the funds that made it into Numis’ top 15 but not the AIC’s top 20:

Fidelity European
Fidelity Special Values
Renewables Infrastructure Group
Fidelity China
Polar Capital Technology
Personal Assets


As can be seen, half of the above funds herald from the Fidelity stable – remember Fidelity, one of the three feeder platforms used by Numis to compile the master list. Certainly, Numis is not surprised: “Fidelity’s list unsurprisingly comprised many of its own trusts, with Fidelity European (ten appearances), Fidelity Special values (nine), and Fidelity China (eight) making multiple appearances…”

Exclude the Fidelity names and both lists have a lot more in common than not. One might even go as far as to say, the two lists (Magic) Mirror each other rather well…

We have a winner. Scottish Mortgage (SMT) may have lost top spot in terms of London’s largest investment company to 3i Group (III) in recent years, but the fund’s long-term track record and philosophy still attracts the retail investor. Bravo Scottish Mortgage!

Doceo results wrap

InvestmentsInsightsAll VideosCompare Funds

A 360 view of the latest results from RCOI, RII, PIN, HRI, JMG

Question: which fund would have made you 22 times your money had you bought its shares at inception in 1994? Answer…can be found in the latest Doceo Weekly 360 round-up of investment company results and broker commentary…

ByFrank Buhagiar•23 Feb, 2024

Belief of the week

“…we have always believed that the success of our business goes beyond financial returns.” Riverstone Credit Opportunities Income (RCOI) Investment Manager’s Statement.

Consistently robust earnings

Riverstone Credit Opportunities Income (RCOI) reported a full-year “NAV total return of 6.4% and NAV total return of 40.1% since inception in May 2019.” No surprise then that Chairman Reuben Jeffery, III is “…pleased with the financial performance of the Company and the beneficial impact its loans are having on the journey towards greater environmental sustainability in global infrastructure.” As the Chairman explains: “The Company has a unique focus on short duration lending, which benefits from the current interest rate environment…” Furthermore, “…the re-balancing of the portfolio to energy-transition focused investments is now complete. As of 31 December 2023, all of the loans in the portfolio and over 95% of the Company’s SPVs’ underlying investments were either Green Loans or Sustainability-Linked Loans. Therefore, all loans in the Company’s portfolio are supporting the advancement of decarbonisation or enhancing sustainability across the broader energy complex.”

And, as the Chairman writes, “The Board is pleased with our diversified and dynamic portfolio of investments and the current pipeline of new opportunities, which we believe have the potential to continue to deliver attractive value to shareholders…We are finding that businesses at the forefront of energy transition view our first lien, short-duration, floating rate product as being highly attractive and a good fit for their development plans…” As for the discount “We are keenly aware of the persistent discount at which the shares trade, and the Board does not believe this reflects the value of the portfolio. As ever we continue to work assiduously with the manager on a number of initiatives to reduce the discount including active asset management and proactive and frequent engagement with equity market participants.”

Numis notes: “…the Chair of Riverstone Credit Opportunities Income (RCOI) highlights the upcoming realisation opportunity in May 2024 and comments that if net assets fall below $50m (currently $77m) then the fund will amend its investment objectives and adopt a realisation strategy. The exit opportunity is for the entire share capital, at NAV less costs. The shares currently trade on a c.20% discount to NAV. The shareholder register includes a number of value orientated investors including Almitas (9.3% of share capital) and Metage (7.4%).”

Backwards and forwards of the week

“…market sentiment shifted from relative optimism to doom and gloom and back again.” Rights & Issues Investment Trust (RII) Investment Manager’s Review.

A degree of balance

Full-year numbers from Rights & Issues Investment Trust (RII). As Chairman Dr Andrew J Hosty writes: “Overall shareholders achieved a return of 2.4% compared to 3.8% for our chosen benchmark.” While the new(ish) investment managers at Jupiter add: “Given the concentrated nature of the portfolio, relative performance is largely a result of individual stock returns…we have been working to reduce the level of concentration in the portfolio by bringing down some of the largest position sizes. We also set out to dispose some of the very smallest companies in the portfolio and introduce some new positions based on our team’s well established investment process…” Progress is being made: “At the start of the year the Company held positions in 22 stocks with the top five positions accounting for 50% of NAV and the top ten for 76%. As at the end of December 2023, the Company had investments in 22 stocks, but the top five positions accounted for 43% of NAV and the top ten for 68%.”

The investment managers continue: “…we are pleased that the investment portfolio is now broadly in the shape we intended. We believe we have added some attractive long-term investments which will complement the existing collection of quality businesses the Company owns and add thematic balance…While it is too early to say for certain that inflation is under control, there have been encouraging recent signs of a return towards central bank targets. This in turn should allow interest rates to moderate towards long-term norms and hence remove a source of significant uncertainty for companies and markets alike. While we are more confident in this outlook than we were six months ago, we do not expect a straight-line recovery and recognise the scope for significant bumps along the road. As such we continue to feel that a degree of balance is appropriate in portfolios and will continue to reflect this in the Company’s holdings. Looking further ahead, we believe that the UK mid- and small-cap equity market is attractively valued and hence offers an exciting opportunity for long-term investors as it emerges from this period of volatility.”

Winterflood writes: “Dan Nickols and Matt Cable of Jupiter have managed fund for just over 12 months. Board has consulted with number of shareholders regarding potential share split, but ‘clear and significant majority’ thought costs outweighed benefits, hence Board has placed ‘indefinite pause’ on plans.”

The less easy option of the week

“…we have been working on ideas to stimulate further demand for our shares at a price that more accurately reflects the NAV per share. It would be very easy to excuse inactivity on this front by blaming everything on cyclical causes resulting from the ebb and flow seen through different market environments…” Pantheon International (PIN) Chairman Statement.

All weather

Pantheon International’s (PIN) NAV per share and share price rose 3.1% and 8.1% respectively during the half year. According to the Half-year Report: “Valuation gains in the portfolio and NAV accretion from share buybacks were partially offset by unfavourable currency movements, given that PIP’s portfolio is predominantly USD-denominated.” Over the longer term: “Annualised NAV per share growth over the last 10 years was 13.8%. The NAV performance beats the public market benchmarks over the last three, five and ten years and since the Company’s inception in 1987.”

Comment from Chair John Singer CBE: “The past six months have clearly been an extremely busy period for PIP, which included a substantial share buyback programme of up to £200m, involving a tender offer, and a reworking of our capital structure. These activities are enabling us to fulfil our purpose, which remains to deliver excellent risk-adjusted long-term capital appreciation to a growing shareholder base of institutions and individuals, through easier access to diversified and well selected private companies, while offering the daily liquidity of a quoted stock.” The managers add: “PIP has been designed to provide an ‘all weather’, high quality portfolio that can withstand macroeconomic volatility and market cycles. The majority of PIP’s portfolio is invested in buyouts of profitable and differentiated businesses, with technology and healthcare companies making up a considerable slice of PIP’s exposure. Our preference is to ‘lean in’ to the dynamic parts of the economy, while avoiding cyclical businesses, and this underpins our strategy in generating stable, attractive risk-adjusted returns over the long term…”

Jefferies is a buyer: “Even beyond further positive declarations on share buybacks/capital allocation, there are a number of encouraging data points from within the underlying portfolio, which continues to generate healthy EBITDA growth and positive net cash flows.”

JPMorgan is staying overweight too: “If we adjust for net PIN level leverage of 5%, and the listed holdings (8%), which we mark to market, the implied discount on the unlisted portfolio is 35.2%, which is broadly in line with peers. But we retain a preference for PIN due to its proactive capital allocation policy, and overall quality of the portfolio, which is demonstrating good earnings growth. Thus we see no reason to change our Overweight recommendation, with the shares remaining in our model portfolio.”

Performance stat of the week

“Had you bought shares at inception in 1994, you would have made 22 times your money, a compound annual return comfortably into double figures.” Herald (HRI) Chairman Statement.

More sensible valuation levels

Finals from Herald (HRI). Chairman Andrew Joy gives a performance overview: “Growth in the Company’s NAV per share was 5.7% against stronger returns from the global stock markets…the main cause of the Company’s sluggish relative performance is illustrated by the divergence between the performance of the Company’s larger stocks and smaller ones, which was extreme in 2023. The 39 investments with a market cap of greater than $3bn delivered returns of 72.1% in the year against -9.2% for the 283 companies capitalised at less than $3bn. This reflects a similar, if less exaggerated, divergence within the wider stock markets of the world…The divergence was enhanced by the fact that 40% or so of the Company’s holdings by value are in the UK. With 2023 seeing an underperformance in wider markets for the UK against the rest of the world, the Company’s portfolio suffered from a ‘double whammy’ of focus on smaller stocks and the UK.”

Looking ahead, the Chairman notes: “The Company has entered 2024 with over £100m cash and near cash, representing some 8.5% of net asset value. Having avoided over-priced opportunities in recent years, this cash will allow the Company to take advantage of placings and perhaps IPOs at the more sensible valuation levels now prevailing…the Company has taken advantage of many takeover bids for its holdings, not unusually at 100% or more of the undisturbed price, and these have been the primary source of the Company’s current liquidity.” Investment manager Katie Potts adds “Although the macro environment is uncertain, we retain our belief in the growth prospects for the technology and communications sectors and that we will continue to discover entrepreneurial management teams that merit backing with the Company’s capital.”

Comment from Numis: “The results highlight a weak period for Herald IT compared to the global technology market, reflecting the bias towards small cap companies in a mega cap dominated environment. Herald IT’s mandate is differentiated from Polar Capital Technology and Allianz Technology…Herald IT focuses on a diversified portfolio of smaller quoted technology/media companies, with 40% of portfolio in the UK, and 30% in the US…The fund has a relatively low profile and the shares currently trade on a c.12.5% discount. It will be interesting to see if the fund faces pressure from activist investor, Saba Capital, which has disclosed a c.12% stake. The chair highlights…the long-term rationale for the vehicle, which utilises the investment companies’ structure to invest in a relatively illiquid portfolio of small caps, that it does not believe could be successfully executed in an open-ended fund.”

View of the week

“Part of the reason for the Company’s success is that it can take a long-term view of growth and value, and not be looking over its shoulder for short-term liquidity.” Herald (HRI) Chairman Statement.

Strong long-term performance

Chairman Aidan Lisser had this to say about JPMorgan Emerging Markets’ (JMG) half-year performance: “…NAV…total return…was 3.2%, while the total return to shareholders was 2.8%. This compares with a 4.4% increase in the benchmark, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index with net dividends reinvested, in sterling terms…Relative performance was adversely impacted by exposure to India, the Company’s largest overweight position, where the returns of portfolio holdings lagged the market as a whole, despite their strong fundamentals. The unexpected and continued weakness in Chinese consumer demand also detracted…On the positive side, returns were supported by the good performance of positions in South Africa, Argentina and Mexico.” Long-term track record remains intact though: “The Company has delivered an average annualised total return of 6.1% over the past five years and 8.1% over the past ten years on an NAV basis, outpacing the MSCI Index, which returned 3.7% per annum over five years and 5.4% over ten years, on the same basis.”

As for the outlook, the Chairman writes: “…the long-term case for investment in emerging markets remains strong, thanks to their superior economic growth prospects, and favourable demographics, which will continue to drive incomes and consumption. And there are many high-quality, innovative, disruptive businesses in these markets capable of capitalising on the various investment opportunities such economic vibrancy generates. While the Company’s Portfolio Managers monitor short-term macroeconomic and political developments, and longer-term structural themes, they do not attempt to predict events or top-down trends, but instead concentrate on identifying those companies that are best-placed to endure and grow regardless of the macroeconomic or political environment…There may be periods, such as the past six months, when the Company underperforms the Benchmark…However the strong long-term performance track record of outright gains and outperformance attests to the strategy’s effectiveness in maximising total returns over the long run…” What’s more, “Hargreaves Lansdown, one of the largest UK retail investment platforms, has recently nominated your Company as one of its ‘five funds to watch in 2024’.”

Winterflood points out: “Board introducing 5-year performance-related conditional tender offer. If NAV TR does not exceed benchmark over 5 years from 1 July 2024, shareholders will be able to redeem up to 25% of their holdings.”

Numis sees value: “The shares are currently trading at a c.12% discount to NAV, yielding 1.6%, which we believe offers value for a manager with a strong long-term record, and an ongoing buyback programme which tends to average repurchases at a c.10% discount. JPMorgan Emerging Markets has been managed by Austin Forey since 1994 using a consistent approach with a low portfolio turnover. He, alongside co-manager John Citron, invests in quality growth companies, with a particular focus on well managed businesses with strong market positions and positive cash flows. The approach means that the portfolio is generally underweight Cyclicals and Resources, in favour of Consumer, IT and Financials stocks.”

Hope of the week

“We must be optimistic and keep our fingers crossed that the regulations evolve such that we disclose costs, rather than double count.” Pantheon International (PIN) Chairman Statement.

Pension planning

MoneyWeek

PERSONAL FINANCE PENSIONS

What pension providers don’t tell you about your retirement money
Check the small print from your pension provider or risk losing thousands.


BY MERRYN SOMERSET WEBB

The money pages of the weekend papers are often pretty miserable. But one piece in the Financial Times particularly stands out.

Claer Barrett told us about Martin, a 59-year-old forced into early retirement after developing a disability. He checked up on the value of his pension in June 2021 and found it was worth £200,000. He checked again in October 2023 and that number was £134,000. A third was gone.

What on earth, you might ask, went wrong?

The answer, says Barrett, is “lifestyling”, a system used by pension-fund managers to cut the risk in portfolios as their beneficiaries age. When you are young, your manager invests your money in equities – after all, if things go wrong, you have plenty of time to make the money back, and history shows very few ten-year periods and even fewer 20-year periods in which equity investors don’t come out ahead. However, as you head towards retirement age, your risk of losing money in the equity market rises – there are plenty of five-year periods in which equity investors do not come out ahead. With that in mind, your provider moves your money into something safer as you age. That is, bonds.

I have a small pension, from a past employment, with Aviva, which, ten years before my retirement date, “aims to avoid large falls in the value of your pension by having a greater amount of money in less risky assets such as government and corporate bonds”. By the time you hit retirement, the odds are your fund will be entirely invested in various bond funds – as it looks like mine will be. This sounds good – and for years worked pretty well.

But as Martin found out, it doesn’t always work. Far from it. When interest rates rise, the capital value of bonds falls (to create a higher yield).

In the UK the bank rate has gone from nearly nothing to 5.25% over a matter of just two years. And here we are. Bond prices have nosedived. Last year some bond funds saw losses of 30% (just as bond prices rise when interest rates fall, they fall as interest rates rise). Martin was being lifestyled into a bond fund that fell 50% as rates rose.

So much for avoiding large falls in the value of your pension pot.

PENSION POT MISTAKES TO AVOID
1. You cannot and should not place blind trust in your pension provider
In the main, they do an adequate job, albeit at slightly too high a cost but when it comes to lifestyling, they have failed significantly. That the bond market was in a bubble – that rates could really go no lower and may well go rather higher – should have been no surprise at all. This was well flagged across the markets and in the press (MoneyWeek warned on it several times).

In sticking with lifestyling even as an obvious bond bubble built, the managers made portfolios more rather than less risky. That’s really not OK.

2. Inertia
Most of us end up in a default fund of some kind, structured based on the expectation that we will buy an annuity with our lifestyle pot when we retire.

The existence of one default encourages inertia: we mostly don’t buy annuities any more (we keep our pot and enter drawdown), but without being forced into choices we can easily just accept bad options (as I may have). The pension managers should perhaps encourage us to think a little more. That said, more of us should take the time to read the small print.

Aviva is careful to let its clients know the risks:

They move your money automatically on set dates, “so your money may not be moved at the time that gives the best return on your investment”.
They’ll be moving the money into lower-return assets over time, so “there is a greater possibility that the investment funds we move your money into may not cover your charges”.
And “there’s no guarantee that any of these strategies will prove beneficial to your pension pot”.
HOW TO SAFEGUARD YOUR PENSION?
Having read that small print, what should you do?

One answer is nothing. You might think the worst is over for the bond market. Inflation has been coming down (perhaps it was “transitory” after all) and that suggests that interest rates will, too – and that bond prices will be at least more stable.

But that inflation will fall back to 2% and stay there is very far from a given. Rising geopolitical conflict, and in particular the supply-chain disruption resulting from conflict in the Red Sea, could easily bring us another nasty bout of inflation – in our new world it is hard to be clear that the equity-bond shift will once again be consistently low-risk.

You might also ask yourself why, if you are not buying an annuity, you want to de-risk in the first place. You want your pension fund to provide you with an income for life. That means you need to hang on to significant equity exposure indefinitely (the dividends available on UK equities being, as one independent financial adviser puts it, “nature’s annuity”).

Once you have retired you should also question the wisdom of holding bond funds at all rather than just a couple of individual gilts. Hold these to redemption and you will definitely get your money back. You don’t have that reassurance with a corporate bond and you don’t have it with a bond fund, either.

As an aside, remember that if you are creating an income outside a self-invested personal pension (SIPP), capital gains on a bond fund will be subject to capital gains tax, whereas those on an individual gilt will not be.

NEXT STEPS
Step one, then, is to check on your pension – and how it is invested. Not all providers’ websites are good for this. You might need to telephone to ask what you have and what the other options are. You might be able to shift to a fund with less embedded risk for now and then find a way to de-risk your own portfolio (with gilts, for example) later.

Finally, if you are particularly lazy and simply want to avoid being lifestyled into bonds in the shorter term, you can go on to your provider’s website and change your retirement age. The later you make it, the longer until the automatic lifestyling kicks in. That might give you a bit more time to consider matters.

Building blocks for a Snowball portfolio

All articles are to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included below may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

Some Trusts to build a portfolio on sound foundations.

The intention is to never sell the Trusts in the portfolio *

but to use the dividends to buy more Trusts that pay a dividend

and repeat. *If/when a Trust rises in value and the yield falls

u could sell, crystallizing the capital gain and re-invest in

a higher yielding Trust.

If u buy a buy to let house and intend to use the rent to pay

for your retirement, the value of the house is unimportant

if u want to keep receiving the rent to pay your bills.

LWDB could be a buy if/when the next time the market crashes.

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