News

News round-up: 28 November 2025

The biggest investment stories of the past seven days

Valeria Martinez
Valeria Martinez

The Australian miner will still be keen to add other copper assets to its portfolio. Mark Robinson reports

BHP (BHP) has formally ruled out making a fresh takeover bid for Anglo American (AAL), drawing a line under renewed speculation that the miner was preparing another cash-and-shares offer for its London-listed rival.

The board confirmed the ‘Big Australian’ was no longer considering a merger, after the Financial Times reported on Sunday that the company was back in the buyers’ circle and had made a new approach to acquire the company.

“Following preliminary discussions with the board of Anglo American, BHP Group confirms that it is no longer considering a combination of the two companies,” the miner said in a statement on Monday.

“Whilst BHP continues to believe that a combination with Anglo American would have had strong strategic merits and created significant value for all stakeholders, BHP is confident in the highly compelling potential of its own organic growth strategy.”

The news comes just weeks before a 9 December shareholder vote on the $53bn (£40bn) ‘merger of equals’ between Anglo and Canadian copper producer Teck Resources (CA:TECK.B), announced in early September. In an all-share deal, Teck shareholders will be entitled to receive 1.3301 new Anglo American shares for every share they hold.

The deal would leave Anglo and Teck shareholders controlling 62.4 per cent and 37.6 per cent, respectively, of the newly combined entity, which is to be named Anglo Teck plc. Anglo American also announced that it would pay a one-time special dividend worth $4.5bn to its existing shareholders prior to completion.

The merger proposal is the latest in a succession of potential deals, as the mining industry rationalises and consolidates in response to evolving demand trends linked to the energy transition, including the widespread investment in national grids across the globe.

If the Anglo-Teck deal were to go through, it would mean that the combined miner would have more than 70 per cent copper exposure – the critical element linked to the transition.

And there’s plenty of interest in the space. Mining heavyweight Glencore (GLEN) had made overtures to Teck Resources in 2023, while BHP first proposed getting into bed with Anglo American last year in a $49bn deal.

Speculation around BHP’s new approach for Anglo American came within a few days of Glass, Lewis & Co – an independent proxy advisory firm – endorsing the proposed Anglo-Teck tie-up.

Although BHP is walking away, the long-term upward trajectory for copper prices is expected to continue driving consolidation in the sector. Smaller producers with faltering ore grades are likely to become more commercially attractive as the break-even level on deposits increases alongside higher underlying commodity prices.


The disappointing run in Beazley’s (BEZ) share price since the summer has accelerated after the specialist insurer reported markedly weaker than expected premium growth in its third-quarter trading update.

It was the most definitive proof yet that the insurance cycle has entered a softer phase; coverage is plentiful, competition is fierce and underwriters are now scrapping for whatever business remains, putting downward pressure on premium prices. 

Gross written premiums rose by just 1 per cent to $4.7bn (£3.5bn) for the nine months, well below prior guidance. The cyber insurance line, once a growth engine, saw an 8 per cent drop in written premiums to $848mn.

Chief executive Adrian Cox acknowledged that “growth is running at the low end of our guidance, and below the level we delivered in the first half”. Consequently, Beazley downgraded its full-year growth outlook to flat to low single digits.

The company had previously signalled that it had missed the worst fallout from this year’s Los Angeles wildfires. This meant that management was able to upgrade guidance for the combined ratio outlook to the low 80s, though that is small consolation given the slowdown in top-line momentum. 

Peel Hunt analyst Andreas van Embden said Beazley would focus on maintaining the existing business, with an estimated 1 per cent premium decline in 2026, while investing in new areas of growth. “As such, the management team believes it can rebuild growth towards its mid-single-digit target over the medium term,” he added.

Still, a business that is built around scaling specialist, higher-margin lines is now signalling a slowdown, and the market is reacting accordingly. JH


S4 Capital (SFOR) has downgraded its full-year net revenue outlook for the second time this month, with Martin Sorrell’s digital advertising agency now expecting like-for-like net revenue to fall by just under 10 per cent in 2025, compared with the previously guided upper-single-digit drop.

Even after ongoing cost cuts, that worse-than-expected revenue decline is set to flow through to the bottom line: operational Ebitda is now forecast at £75mn, below the £81.6mn company-compiled market consensus.

Management blamed lower project-based revenue, client caution and a slower ramp-up of new business wins. The one area of stability was the balance sheet, with S4 maintaining its £100mn-£140mn year-end net debt target.

M&C Saatchi (SAA) also warned on profits, the ad agency revealing that the unprecedentedly lengthy US government shutdown had hit its high-margin Issues division, which normally delivers a chunky share of fourth-quarter revenue and profit.

As a result, the company now expects a like-for-like net revenue drop of around 7 per cent for the 2025 financial year, or 1.5 per cent excluding Australia, and operating profit of between £26mn and £28mn. That implies a margin of around 12.5 to 13 per cent and falls short of guidance given at the half-year point.

The Australian arm is still in turnaround mode after a sharp slump during the first half, with restructuring and management changes under way. To soften the blow, the board has committed to launching a £5mn share buyback programme over the next 12 months.

Management said the Issues division should return to double-digit growth in 2026 once US public sector work gets back to normal. VM


Andrew Rennie, chief executive of Domino’s Pizza (DOM), has stepped down with immediate effect after just over two years at the helm of the FTSE 250 business.

Chief operating officer Nicola Frampton is taking over on an interim basis, with the search process to identify a permanent successor under way. Shore Capital analyst Katie Cousins described the move as “unexpected” and a “loss to the business” given Rennie’s “wealth of experience”.

Rennie had worked at Domino’s for more than two decades, and his departure “by mutual agreement” marks the latest executive reshuffle at the struggling pizza delivery group. The shares are down more than 50 per cent over the past year.

Interim finance boss Richard Snow is set to be replaced by Andrew Andrea, who will join from drinks company C&C Group (CCR) in March. As a result, the company’s planned 9 December capital markets day has been postponed.

Hilton Food Group (HFG) also announced leadership changes this week. Chief executive Steve Murrells left with immediate effect, after agreeing with the board that “now is the right time to search for a new leader to take the business forward”.

Non-executive chair Mark Allen has been promoted to executive chair to oversee the search for a new boss. Murrell’s exit follows a profit warning earlier this month, which sent the shares down by more than a fifth on the day.

The company blamed ongoing operational issues at the group’s smoked salmon business, Foppen, and subdued demand for white fish hitting its UK seafood division. The outcome of a strategic business review is scheduled for 29 January. EW/VM


Mobico (MCG) has warned that full-year adjusted operating profit will land at the lower end of its £180mn to £195mn guided range. The group blamed tougher competition in its UK coach division, fewer passengers using its UK bus services and losses on a WeDriveU contract in the US.

The National Express parent said it has launched a “comprehensive” cost-cutting programme and confirmed it would not redeem its hybrid bond at the first call date. That means the coupon will reset in February 2026. Panmure Liberum estimated a new rate of around 8.1 per cent, adding roughly £19mn a year in interest costs from 2027 onwards.

Mobico also announced it had appointed KPMG as its new auditor after the resignation of Deloitte, prompting an immediate shift of the financial year end from 31 December to 31 March to give the firm more time to complete its work. 

“While this avoids the shares being suspended (assuming the audit of the extended 15-month period is completed by the end of July), this hardly inspires confidence,” said Panmure Liberum analyst Gerald Khoo.

Unaudited results for the 12 months to December 2025 will be released by the end of March next year, followed by audited accounts for the 15 months to March 2026 by the end of July. The shares are down more than 70 per cent over the past year. VM

Economics

The ECB nears the finish line – Economic week ahead: 1-5 December

Will the European Central Bank cut rates again in 2026?

Dan Jones
Dan Jones

One big economic focus for 2026 will be ‘terminal’ interest rates – the point at which central bankers end their easing cycles. The question remains an open one for the UK and the US, but the European Central Bank (ECB) may already be at this point. It last cut in June, and next week’s unemployment and preliminary inflation data are expected to support its decision to maintain the base rate at 2 per cent.

Eurozone price growth dropped back from 2.2 per cent to 2.1 per cent last month, and a similar level is expected in November’s reading next Tuesday. The unemployment rate remains very close to this summer’s record low of 6.2 per cent.

There is still some interest in the ECB meeting on 18 December: rate-setters already expect inflation to fall below target next year; a further lowering of projections would suggest its cutting cycle continues into 2026. After all, growth remains weak: a preliminary Q3 GDP estimate, due to be confirmed next Friday, put the increase at 0.2 per cent.

Monday 1 December

China: Manufacturing PMI

Eurozone: Manufacturing PMI

UK: Consumer credit, M4 money supply, mortgage approvals

US: Construction spending, manufacturing PMI


Tuesday 2 December

Japan: Consumer confidence

Eurozone: CPI inflation (preliminary), unemployment

UK: BRC shop price index


Wednesday 3 December

China: Services PMI

Eurozone: Composite and services PMIs, producer price index

Japan: Services PMI

UK: Composite and services PMIs

US: Composite and services PMIs


Thursday 4 December

Eurozone: Retail sales

UK: Construction PMI


Friday 5 December

Eurozone: Q3 GDP

UK: Halifax house price index

US: Consumer credit, Michigan consumer sentiment index (preliminary)

Funds

Expensive global funds (not) worth their fees

We look at the best and worst performing global funds with high charges

Val Cipriani
Val Cipriani

Whether (or to what extent) charges matter when picking an actively managed fund is one of those things experts never completely agree on.

The argument for worrying about them goes like this: higher costs make it harder for active managers to outperform. The manager of an expensive fund in effect has to be better at their job to achieve the same results as the manager of a cheaper equivalent.

Laith Khalaf, head of investment analysis at AJ Bell, calls charges “an extremely important component of the fund buying decision”, although he adds that of course they are not the only one, and that it can be worth paying for managers you have high conviction in.

“However, in today’s environment, where so few fund managers are outperforming passives, that’s a leap of faith most investors won’t be inclined to take,” he suggests.

The counter-argument is that because costs are included in performance figures, you don’t need to worry about them too much. “I don’t get as obsessed about fund fees as many others,” says Ben Yearsley, director at Fairview Investing. “You can worry about saving 0.1 per cent each year on fees, but if the more expensive fund outperforms then your ‘cost saving’ has cost you money… Fees are the last thing I look at before using a fund, not the first.”

“You can get good cheap funds, good expensive funds, bad cheap funds and bad expensive funds,” he adds.

Whichever side of the debate you lean towards, it’s fair to say that you need an especially good reason to invest once a fund’s charge is above a certain level. Yearsley, for example, concedes that an ongoing charges figure (OCF) of 0.85 per cent is probably the maximum he’s willing to pay.

The Investment Association’s (IA) global equity sector features a significant number of funds charging more than that. Note that often DIY platforms offer different share classes of the same fund, and so charges and performance might vary depending on which platform you use.

The table below lists 10 of the worst-performing funds in the IA global sector that have an OCF of 0.85 per cent or more, based on share classes available on AJ Bell or Hargreaves Lansdown. This is based on performance in the five years to 21 November. Funds not widely available on retail platforms were left out of the table.

10 underperforming expensive funds
Fund 1-yr 3-yr 5-yr 10-yr OCF (%)
MSCI All-Country World index 11.5 49.9 75.1 228.3 //
WS Montanaro Better World (GB00BJRCFP12) -6.1 -11.1 -13.6 // 1
abrdn Global Innovation Equity (LU0837983864) -0.9 19.9 -3.8 173 0.92
abrdn Global Smaller Companies (GB00B777SP34) -2.2 11.5 -1.1 131.8 0.94
FP WHEB Sustainability Impact (GB00B8HPRW47) 0.4 -2 0.2 90.5 1.03
Liontrust Global Smaller Companies (GB00B29MXF68) -5.8 15.7 3.5 113.9 0.87
Pictet SmartCity (LU0503635897) -5.3 13.9 4.6 86.1 0.9
Premier Miton Global Sustainable Growth (GB00B6740K61) -9.3 -4.3 8.8 92.4 1
Impax Environmental Markets (IE00BYQNSD98) -4.9 -2.9 10.3 // 0.89
SVS Aubrey Global Conviction (GB00BJ34P394) 0.9 59.2 10.8 205.6 1.01
AXA ACT Framlington Clean Economy (GB00B7G8XW93) -1 -0.4 10.9 66.5 0.86
Source: FE. As at 21 November

Many of these are not generic global equity funds. This does to an extent explain the costs, particularly as they often have some sort of sustainable focus. WHEB Sustainability Impact (GB00B8HPRW47), for example, is a fund with a rigorous ‘impact investing’ approach, which is likely to require plenty of research by its investment team: it “exclusively invests in companies providing solutions to sustainability challenges – businesses whose products and services have a positive impact on the world”.

WHEB Sustainability Impact also focuses on mid-caps. It is not the only trust in the table that is happy to go down the market cap ladder; comparing the performance of these funds to global stock markets is particularly ungenerous. Still, this is a good reminder that if you want to opt for genuinely green or ethically minded funds, you need to be prepared to forfeit some returns.

The table also features a few thematic funds, sometimes with a very narrow focus, such as Pictet SmartCity (LU0503635897). Thematic funds tend to be nice marketing devices but often struggle to deliver notable returns, so you may want to think twice before using them; high costs are an additional headwind to take into account.

On which note, while this article primarily looks at active funds, you should really keep an eye out for expensive ETFs too – it is not uncommon to have thematic passively managed ETFs with OCFs in the region of 0.5 or 0.6 per cent, which does beg some questions about what exactly investors are paying for.

Outside the top 10, a little further down the list of expensive and underperforming funds we also find Fundsmith Equity (GB00B41YBW71) and Fundsmith Stewardship (GB00BF0V6P41) – they returned 23 per cent and 32.2 per cent over the five-year period, respectively, with charges of 0.94 and 0.96 per cent. The Stewardship fund (formerly Fundsmith Sustainable Equity) is the asset manager’s ethically conscious option, which excludes companies with “substantial interests” in the fossil fuels, defence and tobacco sectors, among others. Note that Fundsmith Equity’s record looks a lot better on a 10-year basis, even though it still lags the MSCI ACWI index.

Are there expensive funds that are worth their money? Only a handful of funds in our analysis meaningfully outperformed. The top 10 are listed in the table below.

Top 10 outperforming expensive funds
Fund 1-yr 3-yr 5-yr 10-yr OCF (%)
MSCI All-Country World index 11.5 49.9 75.1 228.3 //
Schroder ISF Global Energy (LU0969110765) 8.5 19.1 202.9 68.8 1.06
Ranmore Global Equity (IE00B61ZVB30) 26.6 82.9 165.1 262 1.05
Thornbridge Global Opportunities (GB00B5TP8W88) 19.4 63.3 141 267.5 0.97
Jupiter Merian Global Equity (GB00B1XG9821) 13.9 62.9 101.7 274.3 1
Ninety One Global Special Situations (GB00B29KP103) 18.5 49.2 98.4 181 0.91
Artemis SmartGARP Global Equity (GB00B2PLJP95) 28 60.7 98 217 0.88
M&G Global Strategic Value (GB00B6173L33) 20.4 56.1 97.1 183.8 0.9
Fidelity Global Industrials (LU1033663482) 3.8 36.7 95.7 232 1.07
Waystone Latitude Global (IE00BMT7RH14) 20.3 38.4 89.8 // 1.16
Schroder Global Recovery (GB00BYRJXP30) 15.2 41.5 89.5 179.3 0.87
Source: FE. As at 21 November. OCF figures taken from major platforms

You may want to discount Schroder ISF Global Energy (LU0969110765) due to its specific sector focus. Meanwhile, Ranmore Global Equity’s (IE00B61ZVB30) performance looks impressive on pretty much any timeframe.

The fund has a value approach and is a recent addition to the IC’s Top 50 Funds list. As of the end of October, it only had a 21 per cent exposure to North American stocks, and a significant overweight to Asia (39 per cent). In their latest commentary, the managers are at pains to emphasise their value discipline.

“In recent years, the most popular strategy has been to buy the ‘best’ and fastest growing businesses. People worried less about valuation back then because inflation and interest rates were close to zero,” they say. “But that wasn’t a normal situation and it’s why we never wavered from our valuation discipline and tolerated some short-term underperformance. Our experience has shown us that the price of overpaying for growth is often not paid immediately. But when it is paid, it can be expensive.”

Jupiter Merian Global Equity’s (GB00B1XG9821) performance also looks solid over multiple time periods, but you may want to think about current valuations and overlaps with your existing portfolio – the fund’s top holdings include all the Magnificent Seven stocks and 75.9 per cent of the portfolio is in US companies.

Yearsley also mentions a couple of additional portfolios that are just below the 0.85 per cent cut-off point which he considers worth the money. One is Polar Capital Global Insurance (IE00B5339C57), which has delivered excellent performance in the long term by investing in its specific part of the financials universe. The other one is all-out growth fund Blue Whale Growth (GB00BD6PG563), which currently has a 45 per cent exposure to the tech sector. The two funds returned 88.6 per cent and 82 per cent over the five years to 21 November, respectively.

Companies

Victrex & AJ Bell: Stock market week ahead – 1-5 December

A summary of key company announcements expected in the coming week

Mark Robinson
Mark Robinson

Economics: Consumer credit, PMI manufacturing, mortgage approvals

Interims: Eco Animal Health (EAH), One Health (OHGR), Peel Hunt (PEEL), Solid State (SOLI)

AGMs: Croma Security Solutions (CSSG), Fidelity Emerging Markets (FEML), Pci-Pal (PCIP), Quantum Base Holdings (QUBE), Schroder Japan Trust (SJG)

Companies paying dividends: International Consolidated Airlines (€0.05), Marshalls (2.2p), Triple Point VCT 2011 (2p), JPMorgan China Growth & Income (3.39p), JPMorgan Claverhouse Investment Trust (8.4p), JPMorgan India Growth & Income (11.08p), Pacific Horizon Investment Trust (1.5p)


Interims: Celebrus Technologies (CLBS), DiscoverIE (DSCV), Foresight Holdings (FSG), IG Design (IGR), Mercia Asset Management (MERC), NewRiver Reit (NRR), Severfield (SFR), System1 (SYS1), TPXImpact (TPX), Vianet (VNET)

Finals: Gooch & Housego (GHH), On The Beach (OTB), Topps Tiles (TPT), Treatt (TET), Victrex (VCT)

AGMs: Contango Holdings (CGO), Crystal Amber Fund (CRS), Geo Exploration (GEO), PRS Reit (PRSR)


Economics: PMI composite, PMI services

Interims: NextEnergy Solar Fund (NESF), SDI (SDI)

Finals: Paragon Banking (PAG), Victorian Plumbing (VIC)

AGMs: 450 (450), Cordel (CRDL), Pensana (PRE), Schroder Oriental Income Fund (SOI)

Companies paying dividends: BAE Systems (13.5p), Coca-Cola Europacific Partners (€1.25), VinaCapital Vietnam Opportunity Fund (5.51037p), Kier (5.2p), Wilmington (8.5p)


Economics: PMI construction

Interims: Baltic Classifieds (BCG), Mind Gym (MIND)

Finals: AJ Bell (AJB), Future (FUTR), Premier Miton (PMI), SSP (SSPG)

AGMs: Bioventix (BVXP), CQS New City High Yield Fund (NCYF), Doric Nimrod Air Three (DNA3), First Tin (1SN), Gabelli Merchant Partners (GMP), Harena Rare Earths (HREE), KCR Residential Reit (KCR), Ruffer Investment Co (RICA), Supply@ME Capital (SYME), Volta Finance (VTA), YouGov (YOU)

Companies paying dividends: Burford Capital (4.785971p), Diageo (47.91p)


Economics: Halifax house price index

Finals: Schroder European Reit (SERE)

AGMs: Associated British Foods (ABF), James Halstead (JHD), VinaCapital Vietnam Opportunity Fund (VOF)

Companies paying dividends: Artemis UK Future Leaders (3.85p), Balfour Beatty (4.2p), Caledonia Mining Corporation ($0.14), Empiric Student Property (0.925p), Fair Oaks Income (1.5182317p), Fair Oaks Income Realisation (1.5182317p), Gresham House Energy Storage Fund (0.11p), London Security (55p), Majedie Investments (2.2p), Mincon (€0.01), Schroder Oriental Income Fund (6.2p), TwentyFour Select Monthly Income Fund (0.5p), Whitbread (36.4p), Young & Co’s Brewery (12.22p), Chenavari Toro Income Fund (€0.02), Unilever (39.28p), CVS (8.5p), Galliford Try Holdings (13.5p), Genus (21.7p), NWF (7.4p), Renishaw (61.3p), Sylvania Platinum (2p)

Companies going ex-dividend on 4 December
Company Dividend Pay date
Next 87p 05-Jan
Orchard Funding 1p 15-Dec
Bellway 49p 14-Jan
Octopus Apollo VCT 1.3p 22-Dec
Montanaro European Smaller Co’s 0.4p 05-Jan
Croma Security Solutions 2.4p 17-Dec
Seneca Growth Capital VCT 2 1.5p 19-Dec
SSE 21.4p 30-Jan
Goldplat 0.1171p 19-Dec
ninety One 6p 19-Dec
ICG 27.7p 09-Jan
Utilico Emerging Markets 2.42p 23-Dec
Foresight Environmental Infrastructure 1.99p 30-Dec
British Land Company 12.32p 14-Jan
BlackRock Energy and Resources 1.25p 06-Jan
VH Global Energy Infrastructure 1.45p 08-Jan
Babcock International 2.5p 16-Jan
Companies

The AI believers who are still happy with valuations

The AI narrative is starting to change, but there are still plenty of optimists out there

Arthur Sants
Arthur Sants

The US stock market is like a Rorschach test. Some investors see an economy on the brink of a technological revolution. Others see extremely expensive stocks on the brink of collapse. When it comes to new technology, there are always believers and doubters, but next year we will be one step closer to seeing which group is right.

The turbulence in the past few weeks is indicative of the growing flimsiness of the artificial intelligence (AI) narrative. In the weeks leading up to Nvidia’s (US:NVDA) third-quarter earnings release, its share price dropped 10 per cent. As the bellwether for the industry, Nvidia was suffering due to the growing angst surrounding AI. This was eased when its earnings came in well ahead of analyst expectations. It shares rose 7 per cent in after-hours trading.

Nvidia’s story isn’t just about speculation. There is clearly real demand for its AI chips, with its revenue rising 66 per cent year on year to $57bn (£44bn) – ahead of the FactSet analyst consensus forecast. “Blackwell [Nvidia’s newest chip] sales are off the charts, and cloud GPUs are sold out,” said Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang. “Compute demand keeps accelerating and compounding across training and inference, each growing exponentially.”

Even so, the Nvidia earnings rally didn’t last long. The market has come to expect big earnings beats from the AI computing company. In the days following the results, it lost all the gains and, despite comfortably beating expectations, the shares are down 14 per cent this month.

If investors evaluate Nvidia relative to last year’s results, it looks expensive. It is worth more than 40 times last year’s earnings and 55 times its free cash flow. However, compared with next year’s forecast earnings, its forward price/earnings (PE) ratio is 25, only a slight premium to the wider S&P 500, which trades at 22 times next year’s earnings.

Analysts’ growth expectations for Nvidia are still remarkable. In the year to January 2027, Nvidia is forecast to make $316bn in annual revenue. This would be 50 per cent more than it made in the past year and 12 times more than it made in 2023. If it keeps growing at this speed, its valuation is not unreasonable.

The reason for Nvidia’s share price stumble is not its PE valuation. It’s because the market is starting to doubt the growth assumptions that underpin the investment case. On Tuesday, Nvidia shares slumped further on signs that Alphabet (US:GOOGL) is gaining an edge in the AI race. Its new Gemini 3 model has been well received by the market, and crucially it is built using Alphabet’s own tensor processing units (TPUs), rather than Nvidia’s GPUs. A report this week that Meta (US:META) is in talks to buy TPUs for the first time also lends credence to this story, as the IC suggested earlier this month (‘Nvidia’s main rivals are finally emerging’, IC, 14 November 2025). Meanwhile, analysts at Rothschild have downgraded Microsoft (US:MSFT) and Amazon (US:AMZN), arguing that the costly AI investments will start to weigh on the companies’ earnings. “GPU deployments require roughly six times more capital to generate the same cloud 1.0 value, with risks skewed to the downside,” said analyst Alex Haissl.

The original cloud computing servers are made up of central processing units (CPUs). This is what Haissl refers to as “cloud 1.0”. These do everyday computing, such as hosting websites, managing databases and running software. This is the cloud computing of the 2010s.

The AI cloud, however, is made up of graphics processing units (GPUs). They perform parallel computing, which allows the training and running of AI models, but are a lot more expensive to install and run. The concern for Rothschild is whether the technology sector will be able to generate enough returns to justify the investment.

Half of Nvidia’s revenue is made up by the four largest ‘hyperscalers’ – Meta, Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet. If they decide not to increase capex next year, then Nvidia’s growth would grind to a halt. There have been recent signs that the market wants more cautious spending. When Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said during the last earnings call that Meta was investing to build “super intelligence”, its share price fell. Investors were scared by his last attempt to build the ‘metaverse’, and they don’t want him to pursue sci-fi stories again.

There are still investors who are confident we are in the early stages of this revolution. The co-heads of the Liontrust Global Innovation fund (GB0030679053), Storm Uru and Clare Pleydell-Bouverie, believe the market is still undervaluing the “exponential growth that is baked into” AI software. “Software 1.0 is deterministic, and every outcome has to be hard-coded for, whereas neural networking [AI] learns by itself, which leads to exponential growth,” Pleydell-Bouverie told Investors’ Chronicle.

In other words, the more the software is used, the better it gets. Their strategy is to own companies that will be disrupting the winners of the old internet era. They don’t own the old tech giants; instead, their biggest positions include Nvidia, Broadcom (US:AVGO) and TSMC (TW:2330). They also have stakes in Oracle (US:ORCL) and CoreWeave (US:CRWV), which are both attempting to challenge the traditional cloud computing hyperscalers.

The logic of this strategy is that traditional software will be usurped by AI-enabled products. This means the clouds that are geared towards AI will grow much faster. Currently, Oracle has only 5 per cent of the cloud computing market, but Liontrust estimates it has around 20 per cent of the AI computing market. “It is purpose-built for accelerated computing, it is a blank canvas, and they are being selected based on superior technology, and we are investing behind the winners,” says Pleydell-Bouverie.

Earlier this year, Oracle shares surged as it reported that its backlog had grown more than 359 per cent year on year to $455bn, as a result of a $300bn deal with OpenAI.

However, the market has since soured on Oracle’s prospects. From its early September peak, it’s down 39 per cent. More remarkably, it trades 10 per cent lower than it did before it announced its booked orders. The market clearly doesn’t believe its backlog will be converted into future cash flow.

The problem is that most of Oracle’s promised revenue comes from OpenAI, which isn’t a profitable business. OpenAI’s $20bn of annual revenue is less than a tenth of the spending it’s promised to Oracle. This doesn’t even include the $22bn of spend it has agreed with CoreWeave. Similarly, CoreWeave’s share price has almost halved in the past month.

There is no obvious reason the market has soured, but bubble talk has increased. A few months ago, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos said the market is in a “good” kind of bubble. Then last week Alphabet chief executive Sundar Pichai told the BBC there was some “irrationality” in the AI boom, but there have yet to be any particularly disappointing earnings figures.

Before Nvidia’s bumper earnings, Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet all reported that their cloud computing revenue growth accelerated off the back of AI demand. Amazon Web Services’ annual growth rate rose to 20 per cent, while Microsoft Azure grew 40 per cent and Google Cloud 34 per cent. The problem is too little supply, rather than not enough demand. Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella said it planned to increase its “AI capacity by over 80 per cent this year” but only as a reflection of the “demand signals we see”.

Melius Research analyst Ben Reitzes believes that Nvidia’s growth could reaccelerate from here. “Reasoning and other scaling laws continue to drive more compute, meaning Nvidia’s long-term outlook is very bright,” he says.

This optimism around the growth potential of AI leaves Reitzes concluding that Nvidia continues to be undervalued. “Revenue acceleration to 65 per cent with this kind of margin at scale, benefiting from the greatest paradigm shift of my lifetime is worth more than 25 times next year’s earnings,” he concluded.

During the internet age, there was an underappreciation of the exponential power of cheap telecommunications. No companies had ever had billions of customers until Facebook and Google emerged. The belief that the market is again making the same mistake continues to fuel the AI evangelists. After all, it’s hard not to back Silicon Valley’s wealth creation record.

However, as shares rise, the argument from the believers gets harder to make. The doubters will say that everything has a price. No matter the potential, companies need to generate returns on investment at some point and if AI doesn’t start delivering, then investment will slow. With competition also on the increase, the result of the Rorschach test lies in next year’s earnings.

Companies

Ticketmaster parent offers some risky upside

Sports and entertainment ticketing is growing rapidly, albeit in the face of near-term consumer anxieties

Mark Robinson
Mark Robinson

I was speaking to a friend recently about how major sporting events fail to elicit the same kind of excitement as they did when I was a youth – or so it would seem. It may simply be nostalgia on my part, given that I now fall under the general heading of ‘old duffer’, but I do think the excitement has been diluted to a degree by the sheer number of competitions we’re exposed to nowadays.

I’m willing to admit that my contention on this score is the minority position. But there can be little doubt that the number of live sporting entertainment events has increased markedly since the 1970s, not least due to the expansion of media and broadcasting rights, but also because of the role played by professional sporting agents, most notably Mark McCormack, the late founder of IMG, originally known as the International Management Group.

According to US management consultancy Kearney, the global sports market is set to grow from a value of $321bn (£245bn) at the start of the decade to around $602bn by 2030, albeit with expanding gambling revenues the principal catalyst. But it’s not just about sports. The global live entertainment market is projected to be worth around $320bn by the end of the decade, at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.9 per cent.

This growth profile has engendered a high-return investment class, but the opportunities tend to reside in the US. One potential investment option, Live Nation Entertainment (US:LYV), is worth examining. It is the world’s largest live entertainment producer and ticketing company, with its well-known Ticketmaster brand much to the fore. In addition to sporting events, the group offers tickets for concerts, performing arts, museums and other forms of live entertainment.

The group, which came into being through the 2010 merger of Live Nation and Ticketmaster, is undoubtedly operating within an expanding marketplace. But it is still vulnerable to consumer sentiment and discretionary spending budgets, along with the occasional ‘black swan’ event. The rug was pulled out from under the business in 2020 when the pandemic led to concerts and sporting events around the world being put on ice in response to social distancing provisions.

A $1.2bn capital raise duly followed to support working capital commitments. To this end, management also chose to focus on the rescheduling of events, rather than the issue of refunds. The difficulties faced by the group during the pandemic forced a rethink on the extent to which artists and/or sporting events take on the risks relating to live events.

The group’s stock price had previously headed south in the immediate aftermath of the financial crisis, when press reports emerged about a weak summer concert season in the US. But the merger of the two entities probably made sense from a diversification angle. Consider that demand in the sports industry is generally price inelastic in relation to ticketing, whereas demand in the entertainment industry is generally held to be elastic for many activities due to greater ‘substitutability’.

In the present day, the group’s share price has been under pressure since midway through September, when it hit an all-time high. Plenty of evidence is mounting that live entertainment festivals are finding the going increasingly tough, so many have been shelved or cancelled altogether – a clear sign that punters are feeling the pinch.

Regulatory issues have also weighed on investor sentiment. The company is dealing with a US Federal Trade Commission legal action charging that the group’s resale practices have violated consumer protection laws, while a recent Financial Times report indicates that the UK plans to ban the resale of tickets for live events at a price above their original cost. Lawyers for the group have also recently filed a motion asking for a quick end to an antitrust case brought by the US Department of Justice.

So, does the underlying long-term investment case outweigh the near-term legal challenges and shaky consumer sentiment? Rothschild obviously has its doubts, having recently downgraded its recommendation from ‘buy’ to ‘neutral’. Yet at $128 apiece, the shares now offer 34 per cent implied upside based on the consensus target. An enterprise value/Ebitda multiple of 14.9 times stands above the median peer average, so the valuation looks a little risky if growth stalls.

Much depends on whether the ticketing giant can achieve the targeted expansion of its worldwide customer base. But we think the stock’s down leg has some way to run, even though it would be safe to assume that its regulatory issues are already priced into the equation.

Ideas

This microcap’s explosive growth has gone unnoticed

Company profile: Aquis-listed IntelliAM AI has big-name partners, proprietary technology and fast-growing sales. Is there a catch?

Alex Newman
Alex Newman

Imagine you run a large bakery business, supplying hundreds of thousands of loaves a day to the nation’s supermarkets and corner shops.

Though margins are thin, your heritage brand and past investments in plant and machinery serve as high barriers to entry. A mass-market product and a growing population add some certainty. “Brits buy bread” isn’t a cutting-edge business strategy, but it’s a reliable one.

Still, a few things keep you up at night. The price of wheat is one, energy costs another, although in both cases you at least know your competitors face the same challenges. More pressing are the small unknowns, such as equipment failure. A few days or even hours of plant downtime can mean lower output, higher wastage, bigger maintenance bills and negative cash flows.

Suddenly, those wafer-thin margins collapse, leaving you less prepared for the next battle.

Knowing when your machines might fail is therefore a huge advantage. The issue is that traditional predictive tools offer limited insights. You can stick every kind of sensor on every part of the production line, but deciphering what those sensors say is its own separate challenge. What your workforce has in experienced plant managers, it probably lacks in data scientists.

This is where IntelliAM AI (INT) comes in. The Sheffield-based group, which is this week tapping shareholders for the first time since listing on Aquis in July 2024, has developed a set of machine learning tools that can parse millions of data points to spot issues ahead of time. Critically, these tools involve self-training algorithms, meaning IntelliAM offers a bespoke solution for each manufacturing site or process, rather than a standardised platform.

Although the product is still nascent, demand has been strong and customer testimonials are glowing. Amid all the noise surrounding artificial intelligence (AI), IntelliAM appears to have developed a real-world, productivity-enhancing application of the technology.

There are some clear signs to suggest IntelliAM’s product is the real deal. Chief among these is the calibre and profile of its external partnerships.  

Its customers include Müller, which processes half the UK’s milk, and today uses IntelliAM software across its entire milk production line. Another is Archer-Daniels-Midland (US:ADM), one of the world’s ‘big four’ agricultural companies, which having rolled out the monitoring and predictive software across its network of UK mills is now adding sites in the US.

Hovis, which is currently being acquired by Associated British Foods (ABF), has been another major success. Despite a tough few years for the bakery group, it hasn’t wavered in deploying IntelliAM’s platform. An initial contract for just over £100,000, first signed in September 2024, has since grown nine-fold. Hovis has described the product as “a game-changing shift” for its business that has reduced invasive maintenance costs by 80 to 90 per cent and reduced engineering support contracts by a fifth. The return on investment has taken less than a year.

The big-name associations don’t end there. Proceeds from this week’s fundraising will be used to advance an established partnership with SKF (SE:SKF.B), the world’s largest bearings and lubrication group, to integrate SKF’s technology with the IntelliAM platform.

Recently, the company also signed a deal with CTC, a US-based manufacturer of industrial sensors, which has agreed to build interfaces that foster smoother connections between clients’ legacy systems with IntelliAM’s software and work orders.

Having made good headway in the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) world, the company is pushing into other sectors. Alongside its half-year results, published on Tuesday, IntelliAM announced a series of new contracts in the building products industry, via tie-ups with CRH (CRH) subsidiary Tarmac, Marshalls (MSLH), H+H (DK:HH) and Knauf in the UK and Japan.

Although these contracts are only expected to generate £0.25mn in the current financial year, IntelliAM expects material growth from 2026 onwards.

Although IntelliAM AI was incorporated in the summer of 2023, it wasn’t from a standing start.

Its co-founders, chief executive Tom Clayton and chief operating officer Keith Smith, previously ran a small but profitable engineering consulting firm called 53 North, which provided a similar – albeit more analogue – set of services to an established manufacturing client base.

Then came technological convergence. Over a few years, Clayton and Smith saw how the development of cheap, network-connected sensors, cloud storage and machine learning could turn a bespoke consulting service into a bespoke software product.

Initially, the founders planned to spin out the business as its own entity. They then realised the burgeoning platform’s growth would be better served by a merger with 53 North, which could already boast solid cash generation and an existing client base. The tie-up was facilitated by last year’s float, backed by a sizeable subscription from Gresham House.

As well as keeping a degree of control over their company, Clayton and Smith say another benefit of a public listing has been access. Previously, IntelliAM’s salespeople and management could get the ear of plant managers. Today, contact is increasingly with clients’ boards and senior executives, where company-wide cross-selling opportunities are far more likely.

That’s understandable. Unlike some software-as-a-service businesses, IntelliAM will have a much clearer (and real-time) understanding of its customers’ savings from the platform.

There are, of course, risks. While a recent move to the Apex segment of the Aquis Exchange was intended to broaden the investor base, liquidity remains poor, and less than a quarter of shares are in public hands (see table). Put bluntly, smaller independent shareholders aren’t likely to have much of a voice and will have to submit to wide bid-offer spreads whenever they trade.

IntelliAM AI Shareholder Holding*
Thomas Clayton (CEO) 24.7%
Gresham House 23.7%
Yorkshire AI Labs 18.0%
Keith Smith (COO) 10.2%
Source: Company. *As of 26 November 2025.

Still, this week’s fundraising – which for retail investors closes at 2pm on 1 December – offers some hope. For one, an at-the-money share sale suggests the company is serious about balancing dilution with demand. The desire to involve both institutions and ordinary shareholders (who are being offered £0.15mn of the £0.4mn issuance) is another positive.

Then again, this is a tiddly fundraising even by the standards of microcap companies. If the company needs less than half a million pounds to seize the opportunities before it, you might conclude that the balance sheet isn’t yet fit for purpose, or that the next request for cash is just a few months away.

Such is the grand bargain with fast-growing small caps. For his part, Clayton is confident the company will reach break-even by March. As sales grow and become increasingly weighted to annually recurring software contracts, operational gearing should kick in. In a few months, attention could well switch to profit growth and margin expansion.

Dan Risdale, Edison’s head of technology research and the only analyst currently covering the stock, expects sales to rocket to £4.7mn in the second half of the current financial year, up from £2.4mn in the six months to September. IntelliAM’s board, for its part, “remains comfortable with estimates provided to the market at year-end”.

Against a market capitalisation of £22mn, this implies a price-to-sales ratio of around three. For a software company growing sales by triple digits and on the verge of profitability (Risdale expects earnings of 7.9p a share in the year to March 2027), that looks more than reasonable.

Ideas

Count on quality with this Swiss pharma company

A couple of pivotal years should see Novartis through its patent erosion lows

Julian Hofmann
Julian Hofmann

It still feels extraordinary that a relatively small Swiss city is host to two major European pharmaceutical companies.

The so-called ‘Sisters of Basel’ have been a regular source of investor returns over the years.

Novartis (CH:NOVN), created by the merger of Ciba-Geigy and Sandoz in the mid-1990s, now vies with the much older Roche (CH:ROG) for pre-eminence.

Novartis bull points

  • Pipeline looks robust

  • R&D productivity has improved

  • Return to margin growth expected

It is the younger sister that is our focus of interest. Like much of the industry, Novartis has spent the past few years reshaping itself from a sprawling pharma company, with products in almost every therapeutic area, into something that is nimbler and more focused.

Pharmaceutical companies currently face some of the trickiest market conditions in a generation as trade tariffs and economic nationalism fundamentally change the business model. However, amid the uncertainty there are grounds for optimism. A recent capital markets day (CMD) showed management’s thinking on how Novartis intends to overcome the challenge of patent expiries on its key medicines, while maintaining margins that, at around 40 per cent, are some of the highest in the industry.

Novartis bear points

  • Volatility in the short term

  • Big hit from legacy products

The problem for the company is that perceptions can change very quickly. What looks like a highly profitable business can also seem mature and ready to go ex-growth, depending on the market’s mood. Indeed, overcoming a lull in profitability in 2026 and extending sales growth through to 2030 is management’s top priority.

Clearly, this is necessary as worries over margin dilution have tended to dominate recent discussions. The purchase of Avidity Biosciences (US:RNA), a San Diego-based developer of therapies targeting genetic neuromuscular diseases, has added to these, with the $12bn (£9.1bn) all-cash deal set to close in the first half of next year.

Although the company has enjoyed a long run of expanding margins going back to at least 2018, Novartis will probably see operating margins fall as phase 3 clinical programmes peak in 2026-28. While management guidance for a return to 40 per cent core margins by 2029 looks credible, investors may treat any interim weakness harshly – particularly in a market that traditionally prizes short-term profitability over long-term pipeline strength.

The key question is how the company responds to the challenge.

Novartis’s CMD had to make its message unmistakably clear – the company will return to margin growth and it has enough in the tank to overcome the coming wave of patent-expired medicines. Indeed, management raised its 2024-29 compounded annual sales growth rate target to 6 per cent, which feeds into guidance that margins will recover by 2029, suggesting the expected dip in 2026-28 will reverse as new launches scale up.

The core of this optimism lies in a group of eight different assets whose sales Novartis expects to peak at annual levels of between $3bn and $10bn. Among these, breast cancer drug Kisqali (ribociclib), food-allergy treatment Rhapsido and prostate cancer drug Pluvicto (tetraxetan) stand out.

Kisqali is gaining a good reputation in breast cancer treatment. It gained a new US prescriptions market share of more than 50 per cent within weeks of its launch this January, making it one of the strongest immunology product launches in recent years. Pluvicto, the radioligand therapy for prostate cancer, focuses on a treatment area where Novartis currently has the lead.  

These high-growth medicines are complemented by drugs Kesimpta (ofatumumab) for multiple sclerosis, Scemblix (asciminib) for chronic myeloid leukaemia, and Fabhalta (iptacopan) for rare blood disorders. These all benefit from patent lives stretching into the 2030s, providing an unusually long runway in a sector that is often constrained by shorter patent expiry timelines.

Novartis’s pipeline also looks to have strength in depth, with the company highlighting that productivity has improved significantly. Management says it has accelerated times for late-stage trials, with some processes running 15 to 40 per cent faster than a year ago. Median peak sales estimates per project have risen by more than 50 per cent since 2022, suggesting that investment is being funnelled more effectively into higher‑quality, higher-yielding products.

Tariffs may be this year’s prominent story, but it was the pandemic that highlighted how brittle pharmaceutical supply chains could be under the wrong conditions. Like most pharmaceutical majors, Novartis is expanding its US manufacturing presence by investing $23bn over five years. Six new facilities – spanning radioligand therapy, biologics, small molecules and RNA medicine production – are planned or under construction. Building a ‘US‑to‑US’ supply chain should immunise the company against regulatory and trade flux.

Another competitive advantage for Novartis is that its commercial rollout is solid – one only needs to reference Novo Nordisk’s (DK:NOVO.B) increasingly shaky rollout of its weight-loss drugs in the US as a case study for when this goes wrong.

In short, Novartis is still managing to achieve early traction for its products at a time when generic competition and the hurdles put up by large payers make gaining quick market share much harder.

Yet despite its strengths, Novartis faces real challenges and investors must be mindful of all the risks.

The first is the patent cliff. Several significant medicines will lose exclusivity between 2025 and 2030, including Entresto, Cosentyx, Jakavi and Tasigna. These products generated $17bn in annual sales last year, and even though the new launches are scaling quickly, the erosion from these legacy therapies will be substantial (see charts below).

Secondly, the highly anticipated wave of clinical readouts in 2026-27 represents heightened binary risk. Cardiovascular studies are among those with the lowest chance of success, and pelacarsen and abelacimab, which are the two crown jewels in the company’s cardiovascular pipeline, must pass the test for the medium‑term growth narrative to hold true.

Meanwhile, remibrutinib, Novartis’s oral multiple sclerosis medicine, is another asset carrying both promise and risk. The MS market is growing fast, but regulators will scrutinise its safety closely.

Both generic and conventional big pharma competition is ever present. Novartis’s niche in immune therapy faces intensifying pressure from biosimilars and newly launched biologic competition in dermatology and rheumatology. Even hard-to-treat conditions such as multiple sclerosis are witnessing a crowding market, despite the strong lead that Novartis has built up. In short, success attracts imitators.

The shares on their own merits are not cheap, but then the range of valuations in European pharma is wider than it has been for many years. Novartis currently trades at a FactSet-compiled 2026 consensus price/earnings ratio of 13.9, which is a discount to both its five-year average and its neighbour in Basel.

The company trades in line with the European big pharma average, and to avoid falling behind, the quality of Novartis’s execution and its pipeline must be substantial over the next two years.

However, the business looks more like a long‑term compounder than at any point in the past decade. The combination of durable, growing products, a deep late‑stage pipeline, improving R&D productivity and strengthening US manufacturing makes for a compelling strategic picture that is greater than the sum of its parts.

But investors must be realistic; the next two years will be volatile, driven by a dense sequence of clinical readouts and temporary margin pressure. For those willing to hold through the noise, Novartis offers exposure to some of the most exciting scientific and commercial themes in global pharmaceuticals. Sometimes, as with AstraZeneca (AZN), it pays to go with the best in class.

Company Details Name Mkt Cap Price 52-Wk Hi/Lo
Novartis (NOVN) SFr217bn SFr102.88 SFr106.88/SFr81.10
Size/Debt NAV per share* Net Cash / Debt(-)* Net Debt / Ebitda Op Cash/ Ebitda
$23.25 -$22.3bn 0.9x 89%
Valuation Fwd PE (+12mths) Fwd DY (+12mths) FCF yld (+12mths) CAPE
14 3.4% 4.0% 19.7
Quality/ Growth EBIT Margin ROCE 5yr Sales CAGR 5yr EPS CAGR
31.7% 20.6% -1.3% 11.3%
Forecasts/ Momentum Fwd EPS grth NTM Fwd EPS grth STM 3-mth Mom 3-mth Fwd EPS change%
-3% 7% 0.0% 0.4%
Year End 31 Dec Sales ($bn) Profit before tax ($bn) EPS (¢) DPS (¢)
2022 50.5 11.9 580 290
2023 45.4 15.9 647 303
2024 50.3 18.7 781 336
f’cst 2025 55.5 20.5 893 334
f’cst 2026 57.1 20.6 918 347
chg (%) +3 +0.5 +3 +4
Source: FactSet, adjusted PTP and EPS figures. NTM = Next Twelve Months. STM = Second Twelve Months (i.e. one year from now). *Includes intangibles of $52bn, or 2,723¢ per share
Ideas

A wealth preservation trust for bearish investors

This trust is built to hold up well in a crisis

Val Cipriani
Val Cipriani

When equity valuations look as frothy as they do now, it becomes very difficult for investors to make decisions. Divesting entirely is the wrong choice for the long term, but you inevitably start wondering whether you should at least take some profits and reduce risk in your portfolio.

The questions don’t end there, either; if you do de-risk, where should the money go? Cash, bonds, perhaps some ‘boring’ income stocks?

There is an argument for letting a professional make those decisions for you. This is the job of wealth preservation strategies such as Capital Gearing Trust (CGT).

Capital Gearing Trust bull points

  • One-stop shop for wealth preservation

  • Defensively positioned for uncertain times

  • Low volatility

The primary aim of a wealth preservation trust is to protect your portfolio – although it tends to outstrip with inflation, growing its value over time beyond this is a secondary consideration. The focus on protection means the managers invest in a broad range of assets, usually a combination of equities, bonds and gold. The managers tweak the asset allocation based on their interpretation of market conditions.

Note that for this kind of investment, your time horizon and risk profile are a crucial consideration. If you have decades before you need the money, you are better off keeping it all in stocks and staying well clear of any attempt to time the market.

However, if you have a balanced portfolio, from which you may need to take income to fund your lifestyle, preserving your wealth becomes very important – particularly when the risk of a crash or correction in equity markets over the next year or so is significant.

Capital Gearing Trust bear points

  • Will underperform if equity markets keep rallying

  • Low levels of long-term growth

Confident investors, of course, can choose to handpick assets for the non-equity portion of their portfolios themselves – making calls on the types of bonds they want to hold and what kind of alternatives to add. However, this is not an easy job and it requires keeping a close eye on market dynamics. Wealth preservation trusts can be a useful, more hands-off alternative.

“Our aim is to spend time worrying so that you don’t have to. As we write this, the list of things we are worrying about is long,” the managers of Capital Gearing said in the trust’s latest interim report, for the six months to 30 September.

They then proceeded to list their concerns, which include: the risk of a fiscal crisis in developed countries, in particular France, the US and the UK (they deem this an “entirely plausible” scenario in the near future); high equity valuations; rising macroeconomic risks, including tariffs; and the artificial intelligence investment boom, which they fear will disappoint because the technology won’t generate enough revenue to wholly justify the costs.

“We are left with a world of unappealing choices,” they continue. “US equities are very expensive and much of the relative better value of other equity markets has, through good performance, been eroded. Bonds offer, on a long-term view, good value but are very vulnerable to fiscal crises in the near term. Credit spreads are exceptionally tight and gold is at record valuations.”

As all of the above makes abundantly clear, this is not a trust for people who are feeling optimistic about financial markets. UK investors can choose between three wealth preservation trusts: Capital Gearing, Personal Assets (PNL) and Ruffer Investment Company (RICA). None of them is particularly bullish at the moment, but Capital Gearing is the most defensively positioned.

In asset allocation terms, this translates to a split of 26 per cent equities, 42 per cent index-linked bonds, 19 per cent other government bonds, 9 per cent corporate credit, 3 per cent cash and 1 per cent gold. The chart below gives you an idea of how this approach compares with its peers’.

There is some additional nuance. Unlike Ruffer (39 per cent) and Personal Assets (11 per cent), Capital Gearing does not explicitly disclose how much of its bond allocation is in short-term instruments, which are generally lower risk – almost cash-like.

But in the interim report, the managers say: “Where we take interest rate risk, it is via inflation-linked bonds. We have a high weighting to cash-like assets within our managed liquidity reserve, which offer reasonable returns. We judge the opportunity cost of not being invested in the market to be very low.”

Capital Gearing’s defensive positioning has historically meant low volatility but also low returns, which investors should be very clear about before investing. As the chart below shows, its two peers have performed better in the past five years – although Ruffer has been much more volatile than an investor focused on wealth preservation might like.

It is also worth noting that Ruffer’s gold allocation includes exposure to gold mining stocks rather than just bullion, and that, unlike the other two, Ruffer also has some exposure to derivatives. This does mean it offers even more diversification, but it is also more expensive, with an ongoing charge of 1.07 per cent, against 0.56 per cent for Capital Gearing and 0.67 per cent for Personal Assets – meaning it needs to do better than the other two in order to achieve the same performance.

Capital Gearing’s biggest exposure is to index-linked bonds, a lot of which are in the UK. “Our UK inflation-linked bonds profited from strong inflation accruals that were partly offset by a steepening yield curve,” the managers say.

Improved yields prompted “the largest portfolio change” in the six months to 30 September, with the allocation to UK index-linked gilts rising from 5 per cent to 20 per cent of the portfolio. The rest is in US index-linked bonds, while most of the non-indexed bond allocation is in Japan.

Investment trust fans might want to check that the overlap with the rest of their equity portfolio isn’t too pronounced. The table below lists the trust’s biggest equity holdings as of 30 September.

Capital Gearing’s biggest equity holdings
Fund/trust Weighting as at 30 September (%)
North Atlantic Smaller Companies (NAS) 2.1
Vanguard FTSE 100 ETF (VUKE) 2
International Public Partnerships (INPP) 1.4
HICL Infrastructure (HICL) 1.3
Vanguard FTSE 250 ETF (VMID) 1.2
JPMorgan Japan ETF (JRJE) 1.2
3i Infrastructure (3IN) 1.1
BH Macro (BHMG) 1
BlackRock Energy and Resources Income (BERI) 1
Smithson (SSON) 0.9
Source: Interim report.

North Atlantic Smaller Companies (NAS) invests in quoted and unquoted smaller companies, mostly in the US and in the UK. Its share price performance has been poor this year and the trust is trading at a hefty discount to net asset value – 34.6 per cent as of 20 November.

Capital Gearing has a decent exposure to ‘core’ infrastructure trusts, which should be offering low-risk income. But it remains to be seen what will happen to HICL Infrastructure (HICL) following the announcement that it plans to merge with The Renewables Infrastructure Group (TRIG)Capital Gearing opposes the move.

Overall, Capital Gearing is a trust with a solid record of doing what it says on the tin, namely protecting its shareholders’ money and staying ahead of inflation in the long term. If you are concerned about the current state of financial markets and want someone else to take care of your defensive allocation, it could be a worthy addition to your portfolio.

Capital Gearing Trust (CGT)
Price 4,935p Gearing 0%
AIC sector Flexible investment Total assets £813mn
Fund type Investment trust Share price discount to NAV -1.60%
Market cap £800mn Ongoing charge 0.56%
Launch date 09/02/1973 Dividend yield 2.10%
Source: AIC as at 20 November
Capital Gearing’s performance
Fund/sector/index 1-yr 3-yr 5-yr 10-yr
Capital Gearing Trust 6.2 5.1 15.2 68.1
AIC Flexible investment sector 15.5 24.5 34.2 74.6
FTSE All Share 20.4 41.2 70.9 112.2
Sterling total return to 20 November. Source: FE
Small Companies

This property investor is in deep value territory

Simon Thompson: Shares trade 59 per cent below NAV even though net debt has been slashed

Simon Thompson
Simon Thompson

• First-half pre-tax profit up 28 per cent to £1.5mn

• Net debt almost halved to £10.1mn

• NAV up 6.6 per cent to £56.5mn (38.1p)

• £4.1mn disposals after period end realise profit of £1.2mn

• 59 per cent share price discount to NAV

European property investor and fund manager First Property (FPO:15.75p) continues to navigate challenging commercial property markets and is exploiting short-term trading opportunities, too.

The sharp reduction in debt relates to an office building in Gdynia, Poland, which operated on a break-even basis and was placed into administration after First Property failed to agree restructuring terms with the lender on a £10mn non-recourse, non-interest-bearing loan. It had no impact on the group’s financial position as First Property held no equity in the property.

At the half-year end, the group had net financial liabilities of £13.4mn secured against seven directly held properties valued at £48.5mn. Of this sum, £9.4mn is interest bearing, at an average borrowing cost of 3.7 per cent, and the balance relates to the £4mn non-interest-bearing deferred consideration due on the purchase of additional space in the group’s largest asset, Blue Tower, an office building in Warsaw. First Property’s 80 per cent interest in Blue Tower is valued at £31.8mn. The directly held properties generated a pre-tax profit of £1.3mn in the six months.

Shortly after the period end, First Property sold one trading property, a UK commercial building in Newbury, Berkshire (purchased for £0.57mn in the first half), and a directly held office block in Romania, which had a book value of £2.3mn. The Newbury property sold for £1.5mn and contributed the majority of the £1.2mn gain realised on the two disposals. It means that the group now holds cash of £7mn, and pro forma net debt has been further reduced to around £6mn.

Although the share price has risen by 15 per cent since I suggested bottom fishing at the annual results in mid-June, investors have yet to fully cotton on to the improvement in First Property’s financial situation. In fact, the £35.1mn (23.6p) equity in the remaining five directly held properties in Poland is worth 50 per cent more than its market capitalisation of £23.3mn (15.75p). In addition, First Property holds interests worth £24.2mn (16.3p) in nine of the 11 funds it manages, which contributed a pre-tax profit of £0.9mn.

Although third-party assets under management (AUM) declined by 12 per cent to £145mn, partly due to property disposals, the fund management division still operated marginally above break-even at the pre-tax profit level. Annualised fund management fee income increased by 8 per cent to £1.3mn year on year, and revenue from a UK commercial property fund accounting for 14 per cent of third-party AUM is expected to grow over time.

So, even if you attribute nil value to the fund management business, the equity held in the directly held properties and the equity stakes in the funds managed are still priced in for less than half their book value. Buy.

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