2024 Kepler Ratings
Top of the Pops
We reveal the winners of our investment trust ratings for 2024…
Thomas McMahon
Updated 17 Jan 2024
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Disclaimer
This is not substantive investment research or a research recommendation, as it does not constitute substantive research or analysis. This material should be considered as general market commentary.
Our ratings seek to reward closed-ended funds which deliver attractive and persistent performance characteristics in three categories which we think match up to broad goals investors usually have: long-term growth, income and growth, and high current income. This includes strong performance versus a fund’s underlying market, as well as attractive risk characteristics which we think suggests they could continue to be premium options for investors looking for active exposure. Our ratings are purely quantitative, meaning the largest asset managers and boutiques are treated alike, and no commercial interests can interfere. In fact, only 56% of the trusts winning ratings this year are clients of ours, down from 59% last year.
Quant ratings are of necessity backward-looking, and tell us what has happened not what will happen. But we have tried to build in risk metrics to the calculations which may be more stable than alpha, as even for the best managers alpha is likely to be cyclical (for the full methodology, see the appendix at the end of this article). Our ratings also use benchmarks which are specific to the style of the manager. This means we are less likely to reward a manager when his or her style is in favour, but equally, we may be rewarding performance in a style which is on the verge of a rough patch. We think this means our ratings provide a palette of funds with different styles and strategies, all of which have a proven track record of strong risk-adjusted performance and a stable management team. They could be a good starting point for fund selection, although we think any selection process should include consideration of qualitative factors and changing macro conditions and correlations.
One of the interesting features of this year’s list of funds is that a number of income-focussed funds have done very well in total return terms, perhaps boosted by strong performance from value stocks at times. This includes Dunedin Income Growth (DIG) and Murray Income Trust (MUT) as well as JPMorgan Global Emerging Markets Income (JEMI). However, overall, there is a broad stylistic spread of funds, as the below table shows. Our Growth / Value Scores and Quality Scores are derived from underlying Morningstar data on which we have performed some calculations to try to build a picture of how funds compare. Both scores are relative, but relative to the underlying universe of funds, i.e. all funds scored, not just the ratings winners. As such, we think the broad spread of Growth (high) versus Value (low) scores is interesting, and suggests we are managing to reward alpha rather than style bias. We do think, however, that strong total returns from equity income funds could be a feature of the coming years, as we discussed in a recent strategy note. Low starting valuations, meaning high yields, and a higher interest rate environment could be creating a good setup for the strategy.
2024 Growth Rated funds
Our ratings look over five years, to try to give a decent amount of time for a track record to build up and to allow us to assess a fund’s performance in different market environments. The five years to the end of December 2023 saw a strong rally in growth in 2019, in tech, ecommerce and China in 2020 and then a surge in value over growth in 2021 and 2022, initially in a rising market and then in a terrible 2022. Last year, meanwhile, saw choppy style performance, with many markets ending, and looking cheap by historical standards, with the most glaring exception being US large-cap tech.
2024 GROWTH RATED FUNDS
Source: Morningstar, Kepler calculations
One trust worth highlighting in the above list is Ashoka India Capital. This is the first year AIE has had a track record long enough to be rated, and it has shot to the top of the rankings. While India has had a strong run, that is largely irrelevant to the rating, which is due to the trust’s outstanding active record. Our growth ratings are based on the information ratio and the upside/ downside capture ratio, and on both metrics, AIE has scored very well.
2024 Income & Growth Rated funds
2024 Income & Growth Rated funds
A striking feature of the Income & Growth Rated Funds this year is the number of small and mid-cap-focussed funds. These ratings first apply the same filters as for the growth ratings, and then look at income. We screen for funds which have delivered annualised income growth of 3% or more over five years, and then for those which have a starting yield of 3% or more. These funds are intended to be appealing to an investor who wants to draw a growing income stream over many years, while hopefully growing their capital too, as well as to those who like the more defensive attributes of equity income as a total return strategy. It is the 3% initial yield filter which has seen a number of SMID-cap funds qualify this year. Rock-bottom valuations, particularly in the UK, have created a really interesting opportunity. While a fund like Schroder UK Mid Cap (SCP) is obviously interesting as a long-term growth play – the FTSE 250 has historically been one of the best-performing growth markets – at the time of writing you can buy the shares on a 3% yield. For both classes of investors referred to above, this seems pretty exciting. Similar arguments could be made for Mercantile (MRC) and Schroder Oriental Income (SOI).
2024 INCOME & GROWTH RATED FUNDS
Source: Morningstar, Kepler calculations
There’s more of a value bias to the above list, as you would expect from a list of income funds, but there are a number with a decent growth bias too. Notable are JPMorgan China Growth & Income (JCGI) and JPMorgan Global Growth & Income (JGGI). These trusts pay a fixed percentage of capital out as a dividend rather than relying on the income from investments to fund it. The drawback of this approach is that if the value of the portfolio falls, the dividend will too. However, both these trusts have delivered strong annualised dividend growth over the past five years, illustrating the power of the approach over the long run. JCGI will need to see good capital returns this year to maintain this strong dividend-growth record, given the falls in the Chinese market over 2023.
2024 Alternative Income Rated funds
What is alternative income all about? Many of the funds do offer some diversification benefits, but ultimately, we think they are there to offer a high immediate yield to investors who are less concerned about capital growth. This is a relatively young space, with many new asset classes appearing over the years, and historically there haven’t been many funds with the track record. Additionally, this kind of strategy can often end up seeing capital depleted. For this rating, we look across the sectors to reward those that have managed to maintain or grow both their dividend and their NAV over five years. In our view, this rating rewards those that have ‘proof of concept’ and could be a starting point for investigation. It’s interesting to see the first energy storage fund appear on the list this year—Gresham House Energy Storage (GRID)—reflecting the growing maturity of that asset class. As many as 14 funds made the cut this year, up from 11 in 2023.
2024 ALTERNATIVE INCOME RELATED FUNDS
Source: Morningstar, Kepler calculations
Performance of 2023 lists
Last year was an odd one for markets. For much of the year, high interest rates and high inflation created an environment of fear about an upcoming recession. Equity returns were muted, bonds did poorly, and many investors preferred cash accounts to cheap equities. But it ended with a flurry of excitement, as hopes of any recession being mild in the US and UK increased. There were some potential signs of a broadening of performance in the US equity market too, as lagging equities started to catch up with the strong performance of the ‘Magnificent Seven’. While our ratings take a long-term view on performance, it is still interesting to see how last year’s winners performed through all this.
Pershing Square Holdings (PSH) was the strongest performer in absolute terms, although its 26.8% wasn’t enough to keep up to a benchmark heavy in large-cap tech. also delivered over 20% and outperformed Europe ex-UK equity markets substantially. The worst performers were in China and resources, with the materials markets affected by the slow recovery in China and by falling energy prices. There wasn’t really any pattern in terms of growth or value outperforming, which aligns with our observation that excluding the performance of the Magnificent Seven, style wasn’t as important in 2023 as it had been in the previous few years. Notably though, three European funds are near the top, reflecting perhaps that equities have done well in the region even as recession fears mount, and perhaps also that it is easier to deliver alpha in that market than in the US.
PERFORMANCE OF 2023 GROWTH-RATED FUNDS
Source: Morningstar, Kepler calculations
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results
The top performers of the Income & Growth rated funds include TR Property (TRY). TRY invests in the equities of real estate companies, and its strong returns of 17% on the year indicate that a recovery may have begun in this troubled sector. Also delivering good returns was Utilico Emerging Markets (UEM), which was boosted by holdings in the digital infrastructure space. The worst performers included China and materials portfolios, as well as Weiss Korea Opportunity Fund (WKOF), which suffered due to an underweight to Samsung.
PERFORMANCE OF 2023 INCOME & GROWTH-RATED FUNDS
Source: Morningstar, Kepler calculations
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results
Short-term returns are probably even less interesting when it comes to the Alternative Income Rated Funds. However, many have been under pressure at the NAV and the share price level due to high interest rates. The NAVs, which are mostly self-reported, generally delivered positive returns, with an average of 1.7%. Share prices have moved to significant discounts in all cases though, with an average of 15%. This compares to an average discount of 2.5% at the end of 2023 and means the average yield on offer is now 7%, up from 5.6% a year earlier. With rate cuts seeming likely to come earlier than previously expected, we think this part of the market could deliver interesting returns over the coming years.
PERFORMANCE OF 2023 ALTERNATIVE INCOME RATED FUNDS
Source: Morningstar, Kepler calculations
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results
Conclusions
If you want cynicism about active management then there is plenty on offer these days, but to mangle a quote by a former prime minister on a slightly different topic, we think passive investing is a philosophy of failure. The investment trust space is full of talented managers with interesting and idiosyncratic strategies that have delivered excellent returns to investors over the long run, and our ratings hope to highlight some of the best. It goes without saying, that past performance patterns cannot be guaranteed to repeat, but we think there is a variety of strategies winning a rating this year with the potential to outperform in multiple environments. It is the portfolio construction task to put these together in such a way as to balance risks and opportunities, and we can’t help our readers with that. But we think these lists could be a starting point for research.
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