Ideas

An industrial specialist on track to repeat past glories

The managers behind this company are looking to double shareholder returns within three to five years

Michael Fahy
Michael Fahy

Lately, there has been a steady flow of listed UK engineering companies falling prey to takeovers from US-based competitors.

Over the past 12 months, Spectris and Dowlais (DWL) have followed a similar path to the likes of Ultra Electronics and Cobham in recent years by succumbing to a bid from a US company.

It made for a refreshing change, then, when Rosebank Industries (ROSE) announced the $1.9bn (£1.4bn) takeover of Electrical Components International (ECI) from private equity firm Cerberus in June.

As takeovers go, this was an eye-catching approach, not only because it was a reversal of the regular state of affairs, but because Rosebank was essentially a cash shell, having raised $50mn on its stock market debut less than a year earlier.

Rosebank Industries bull points

  • Proven improvers

  • Early progress made with ECI

  • Deleveraging should lift equity value

Yet the company’s management has a strong enough record of turning around underperforming industrial businesses for investors to agree to stump up £1.14bn to fund the buyout. Rosebank increased its share count around 20-fold, selling 380mn new shares at 300p each. It also borrowed $900mn of debt.

The faith placed in Rosebank is down to the past achievements of chief executive Simon Peckham and senior independent director Christopher Miller who, together with the now-retired David Roper, floated Melrose (MRO) on Aim in 2003 and achieved a total shareholder return of 3,396 per cent by the time they stepped down from the company in March 2024. Over the same period, the FTSE 100 returned a mere 209 per cent.

Peckham and Miller have brought several other former Melrose team members to Rosebank, including finance director Matt Richards, North American head Jim Slattery and transactions chief Joff Crawford – each of whom were at Melrose for more than a decade before their switch.

Their intention is to recreate the ‘buy, improve, sell’ model they developed at Melrose, under which they bought six businesses. Of the five they sold, the average return was 2.5 times equity, according to company documents.

The sixth business, GKN, proved more challenging. The Melrose team paid £8.1bn in 2018 for a business that principally served the automotive and aerospace industries, both of which then faced crises as Covid-19 hit.

Five years later, with few signs on the horizon that the purchase would deliver anything like the type of returns achieved on previous deals, the automotive arm was spun out in April 2023 as Dowlais, and Melrose became a pure-play listed aerospace engineering business. Peckham et al exited a year later to start again as Rosebank.

Using the market capitalisation of both companies on the date of their departure in March 2024 (when Melrose was worth £8.4bn and Dowlais £1.2bn), Rosebank’s management said their actions had created “an initial £2.9bn of shareholder value” from the GKN deal, including returns through buybacks.

Rosebank Industries bear points

  • Competition stepping up

  • Returns will take time

  • Dilutive fundraisings could follow

However, those who bought in expecting Melrose to weave the same type of magic on GKN as it had on previous deals will be less happy. Since gaining control of GKN in April 2018, Melrose has generated a total return to shareholders of 25.6 per cent, compared with 81 per cent for the FTSE 100, according to FactSet. And although shareholders were also handed a stake in Dowlais when it was spun out, it too has underperformed. Even after accepting a bid from American Axle & Manufacturing (US:AXL), its shares are worth about 40 per cent less than they were on their debut.

Melrose has also faced anger over the generous rewards that executives have received on hitting certain targets. At last year’s AGM, two-thirds of shareholders voted against the company’s decision to award more than £200mn in bonuses – £57mn of which went to Peckham and £50mn to Miller. These bonuses were granted as part of the resigning directors’ settlement agreements, including the vesting of entitlements agreed under a 2020 incentive plan, Melrose’s management later explained.

Similar incentive structures are in place at Rosebank, with specific classes of incentive shares split among five of the group’s co-founders. In its Aim admission document, the company argued that its incentive scheme has been set up to reward directors only if shareholder value is created, “thereby aligning the interests of management with shareholders”. The co-founders (with friends and family) have also put £15mn of their own money into the business so far, according to Berenberg analysts.

Payouts seem some way off yet, though, and would be well earned if management achieves its aim of doubling shareholders’ investment over a three- to five-year period.

Although Rosebank described ECI in its placing document as the “market leader in critical electrical distribution systems”, it has faced challenges. Over the past 15 years, it has been through a bankruptcy process, then subsequently owned by two funds focused on special situations and distressed debt.

While acquisitions have boosted ECI’s scale, a byproduct of that has been a highly levered balance sheet. Net debt had risen to $950mn, or more than five times 2024’s adjusted Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) of $189mn, and ECI had a further $100mn of costly factoring and supplier financing deals in place.

At the same time, sales have recently been under pressure – in 2024, they fell by more than 7 per cent to $1.25bn.

Rosebank has therefore used $400mn of the capital raised to cut leverage to three times Ebitda and exited the factoring and supplier financing deals. It aims to maintain a leverage range of between 2.5 and three times cash profit, which should halve debt servicing costs.

It is also injecting $150mn over three years, according to analysts. Some $80mn has been allocated to a two-year restructuring, which management has said will lift adjusted operating profit by about $30mn.

This is already under way, with a duplicate head office in St Louis closed in November and 12 of the company’s 39 manufacturing sites expected to be consolidated. It is also migrating production to lower-cost locations.

Alongside the cost cuts, Rosebank is targeting growth through expansion outside North America (where it generates four-fifths of its revenue) and a greater focus on its higher-margin electrical and instrumentation business.

The eventual aim is to lift ECI’s adjusted operating margin by 5 percentage points, from 13 per cent in 2024 to a target of 18 per cent. Working capital optimisation and other measures should also help to eventually boost cash flows, which can be used to fund bolt-on deals.

Management’s experience in handling large-scale restructurings – on both sides of the Atlantic – means brokers are confident that Rosebank can pull off its plan to double shareholder returns from ECI, which explains why the 12-month consensus target is a fifth higher than the current share price.

It is operating in a competitive space, though. Volex (VLX) recently brought in Dave Webster, who ran ECI for 20 years, as its new chair. Volex’s chief financial officer, Jon Boaden, told the IC in November that Webster’s appointment will help to open doors to customers in sectors such as wiring for domestic appliances and off-highway vehicles, where it is targeting US growth.

Rosebank has indicated it is unwilling to get into a fight for volumes. Its preference is for pricing discipline and new contracts featuring inflation recovery clauses and minimum gross margin acceptance levels.

Moreover, building sustainable cash flows will take time. And since ECI is Rosebank’s first deal, there is a chance that investors could be asked to fund another. In a November trading update, Peckham said management was “looking into a number of other opportunities”.

On its stock market debut, the company told investors that it planned to target industrial companies valued at up to $3bn, so any deal of a similar size to ECI could mean further significant dilution.

Yet for those prepared to ride out the swings, the prospect of the Rosebank team repeating the highs they hit at Melrose could justify the prospect of getting in early.

Company details Name Mkt cap Price 52-Wk Hi/Lo
- Rosebank Industries (ROSE) £1.42bn 349p 871p / 313p
Size/Debt NAV per share^ Net Cash / Debt(-)^ Net Debt / Ebitda Op Cash/ Ebitda
- 29.6p -£391mn - -
Valuation Fwd PE (+12mths) Fwd DY (+12mths) FCF yld (+12mths) CAPE
- 21 1.5% 2.4% -
Quality/Growth Ebit margin ROCE 5yr Sales CAGR 5yr EPS CAGR
- - - - -
Forecasts/ Momentum Fwd EPS grth NTM Fwd EPS grth STM 3-mth Mom 3-mth Fwd EPS change%
- 56% 16% -3.90% 11.00%
Year end 31 Dec Sales (£mn) Profit before tax (£mn) EPS (p) DPS (p)
2024* n/a -8.6 -0.4 n/a
f’cst 2025 273 28.7 10.3 0
f’cst 2026 928 94.9 16.2 5.13
chg (%) 240 231 57 -
Source: FactSet, adjusted PTP and EPS figures. NTM = Next Twelve Months. STM = Second Twelve Months (ie one year from now). ^2025 consensus forecasts. *Seven-month period as a shell company incorporated in July 2024.
Ideas

Buy into growth and buybacks with this bargain airline

The company is ahead of most rivals when it comes to margins and is planning smart acquisitions to entice shareholders

Christopher Akers
Christopher Akers

There are mixed signals for the airline industry’s outlook as 2026 takes off. Passenger growth is still robust in the aftermath of the post-pandemic travel rebound, but supply chain delays continue to stalk the sector. While the International Air Transport Association (IATA) forecasts that global passenger numbers will rise by 4 per cent to 5.2bn this year, it expects the industry’s net margin and return on invested capital to remain flat.

Among European airlines, margin leader Ryanair (IE:RYA) stood out last year with a share price gain of 55 per cent. FTSE 100 group International Consolidated Airlines (IAG) is its closest rival in terms of returns, and the British Airways owner looks undervalued despite its share price rising by 37 per cent in 2025.

After some wobbles last year in the key north Atlantic market, the signs indicate stronger trading ahead at IAG, and this could be a good time to look at the company ahead of an update on capital returns in February and a potential acquisition in Portugal.

IAG bull points

  • Operating margin well ahead of most peers’

  • Undemanding valuation

  • Low leverage gives wide headroom for capital returns

While IAG carries most of its passengers in Europe, transatlantic travel provides the majority of its most profitable routes. The share price has been boosted in recent years by solid demand for premium transatlantic seats.

But north Atlantic weakness was evident last year, as visitor numbers to the US were knocked by geopolitical tensions, immigration policy changes and a six-week government shutdown. European citizen traveller numbers to the US were down in the majority of months in 2025 on a year-on-year basis, and were 5 per cent lower in November, per industry data cited by Bank of America.

IAG bear points

  • Demand challenges in US market

  • Latest quarter underperformed market hopes

In IAG’s third quarter to 30 September 2025, north Atlantic passenger revenue per available seat kilometre (PRASK) fell 7 per cent year on year, as management flagged “softness in US point-of-sale economy leisure”. However, it’s important to note that around half of the decline was due to foreign exchange (FX) movements.

Chief executive Luis Gallego said there had been an “improving [north Atlantic performance] trend with a strong October and November, and we are booked positively”.

“The effect of the ‘liberation day’ [US tariffs announcement] is far away,” he added.

Looking ahead, the men’s football World Cup being held across the US, Canada and Mexico this summer will provide a helpful boost. While there are demand risks to consider from a UK consumer perspective, given an increased unemployment rate and lacklustre economic outlook, the group’s progress with its premium strategy and focus on higher-income customers through BA’s London position and lucrative transatlantic routes softens the potential damage.

On the pricing front, fares are being supported by the constrained outlook for passenger capacity growth. The industry faces a huge plane delivery backlog as aircraft builders Boeing (US:BA) and Airbus (FR:AIR) continue to struggle with engine delivery delays.

In its latest update, IAG confirmed it expected to take delivery of 25 new planes in 2025 (up on last year but lower than in 2023) and guidance is for annual capacity to rise 2.5 per cent. IAG ordered 53 wide-bodied long-haul planes from Boeing and Airbus in the second quarter of last year.

Despite coming in slightly below consensus forecasts, IAG’s third quarter provided some positive signs even as overall PRASK fell by 2.4 per cent. Operating profit was up, while fuel unit costs were down by 11 per cent (non-fuel unit costs were up by 0.2 per cent).

While BA is the jewel in IAG’s crown, the company has a diverse brand portfolio. Its seven operating companies include five airlines. Iberia (which serves Latin America and north Atlantic routes) generates the second-highest amount of operating profit for the group after BA, and until recently covered low-cost carrier Level, which has now become an independent operator within the group. This is followed by Vueling (which operates intra-European routes) and Aer Lingus (north Atlantic). Travel rewards and loyalty schemes business IAG Loyalty generates material profit, and posted better numbers than both Vueling and Aer Lingus in 2024.

The group’s operating margin was 22 per cent in the third quarter, and came in at 15 per cent on an annualised basis.

IAG lags behind Ryanair, its closest European rival, on margins but it is comfortably ahead of continental competitors such as Air France-KLM (FR:AF) and Deutsche Lufthansa (DE:LHA). It is also more profitable than the big US operators American Airlines (US:AAL) and Delta (US:DAL).

Medium-term targets are for a 12-15 per cent operating margin and a 13-16 per cent return on invested capital.

Meanwhile, low leverage supports the continued return of capital to shareholders. Leverage sat at 0.8 times in the third quarter of last year, against a medium-term target of less than 1.8 times through the cycle.

The group completed a €1bn share buyback programme in December and will update the market about the next stage of returns when annual results are released at the end of February. Panmure Liberum analyst Gerald Khoo estimates that the group has headroom to return €9bn (just under half its market cap) over the next two years.

The dividend, reinstated in 2024 after a five-year absence, is expected to grow with inflation this year. Management announced a €220mn interim dividend alongside the third-quarter results, and it plans to return to its historical practice of the interim payout being around 50 per cent of the annual outlay.

Capital could potentially be needed for a stake in TAP Air Portugal, the southern European country’s state-owned airline. The company is being partly privatised again, after it was nationalised in 2020, through the sale of a 49.9 per cent stake (5 per cent of this will go to employees). IAG, as well as Air-France KLM and Lufthansa, have expressed interest.

Lufthansa boss Carsten Spohr described TAP as being “of great strategic importance to the European aviation industry”.

However, noises from IAG indicate that it is much more interested in a full, rather than partial, stake. Group chief financial and sustainability officer Nicholas Cadbury told Bloomberg last month that “we’d need a real clear path to ownership – full ownership or majority ownership – and at the moment that’s not on the table”.

If some sort of stake is taken, it would increase IAG’s exposure to locations in Brazil and south and Central America, as well as destinations in north America, Europe and Africa. In the first nine months of 2025, TAP carried 12.7mn passengers. It generated a pre-tax profit of €68.8mn, down 51 per cent on the prior year as it faced “continued competitive pressures and operational disruptions”, including strikes by Portuguese airport staff.

IAG’s valuation remains undemanding despite the shares having almost trebled since 2022. The group trades on six times forward consensus earnings for 2026, in line with the five-year average but well below Ryanair (14 times) and a slight discount to rival Lufthansa (on seven times).

The shares sit at a double-digit discount to analysts’ consensus target price. Margins are at the top end of guidance and earnings per share growth is expected to exceed 20 per cent when the annual results are disclosed next month, with returns backed up by an attractive brand range and geographical footprint. In short, there is enough momentum behind the group to suggest the shares can take off in 2026.

Year end 31 Dec Sales (€bn) Profit before tax (€bn) EPS (¢) DPS (¢)
2022 23.1 0.41 5.6 0
2023 29.5 3.01 50.6 0
2024 32.1 3.67 56.8 9
f’cst 2025 33.5 4.53 68.9 11
f’cst 2026 34.7 4.72 74.1 12
chg (%) 4 4 8 9
Source: FactSet, adjusted PTP and EPS figures. NTM = Next Twelve Months. STM = Second Twelve Months (ie one year from now). *Converted to £, includes intangible assets of £3.0bn, or 66p a share
Company details Name Mkt Cap Price 52-Wk Hi/Lo
International Consolidated Airlines SA (IAG) £18.9bn 414p 429p / 210p
Size/Debt NAV per share* Net Cash / Debt(-)* Net Debt / Ebitda Op Cash/ Ebitda
112p -£4.68bn 1.1 x 85%
Valuation Fwd PE (+12mths) Fwd DY (+12mths) FCF yld (+12mths) P/Sales
6 2.50% 11.90% 0.6
Quality/ Growth Ebit Margin ROCE 5yr Sales CAGR 5yr EPS CAGR
14.20% 19.60% 4.00% -0.20%
Forecasts/ Momentum Fwd EPS grth NTM Fwd EPS grth STM 3-mth Mom 3-mth Fwd EPS change%
8% 10% 7.30% 3.10%
The Editor

Defence vs AI: the 2026 battle to watch

Investors have a quandary 

Rosie Carr

It’s been a drama-filled start to the year for the FTSE 100, mainly due to Donald Trump’s decision to launch a military strike in Venezuela, and threaten to take over Greenland. With Taiwan in China’s sights, it adds up to a climate of (for the fourth year on the trot) rising global tensions. That has once more boosted British defence companies and gold miners, and pushed the index to an all-time high at the time of writing.

Defence and mining companies were the shining stars of the main UK index in 2025, helping it to deliver its best performance in years with a gain of 21.5 per cent, which placed it ahead of the S&P 500 (up 17 per cent). It is likely to benefit again this year from investors buying into the same sectors and the continuing flight into good value, internationally focused dividend-paying London shares. Absent from the UK market, however, is the most powerful factor at work in the S&P 500: AI.

But if AI is the US market’s chief girder, it is also its biggest risk. Arguments that valuations are not unreasonable given the growth in companies’ earnings are countered with warnings of unsustainable levels of AI capex, competition and comparisons with the dotcom crisis. The quandary for investors in the US market, and in particular holders of Nvidia, is the risk that the AI music will stop. 

Still, many managers, BlackRock among them, are overweight the AI-dominated US market because of strong earnings, resilient profit margins and healthy balance sheets. An Amundi survey of investment professionals in September 2025 showed most expect the S&P 500 to deliver gains of up to 10 per cent this year, with almost a fifth believing returns will exceed this level. Just 12 per cent expect negative or zero returns. 

Certainly, investors who held their nerve when Nvidia’s share price fell sharply last April were rewarded with a rise from $94 to more than $207, although it has since dropped back to $189. The company delivered another batch of strong results for its third quarter in November. Revenues were up 62 per cent year on year and 22 per cent on the prior quarter. Q4 revenue guidance was also increased to $65bn (from $57bn in Q3).

Some fund managers have left the party, but not Blue Whale Growth fund manager Stephen Yiu. He divides the AI market into three parts. First there are the private AI companies, which he avoids. “If you are asking me if there is a bubble in terms of the valuation of the private AI companies, I would say 100 per cent so,” he says. “Anthropic has a value of $350bn, with projected revenues of around $30bn in 2026 (versus $10bn in 2025) and is heavily lossmaking. How do you justify that?”

Both Anthropic and ChatGPT developer OpenAI are believed to be gearing up for flotation this year or next.

Yiu also sidesteps listed companies with high AI capex. While he’s a true believer in the technology changing the world, companies are in an arms race to be the ultimate winner yet “investing money doesn’t make you a winner”.

Having held Microsoft for seven-and-a-half years, he has sold the stake over concerns about future returns on investment capital and falling free cash flows. Instead Yiu is heavily invested in the AI infrastructure companies that are, crucially for him, on the receiving end of the AI spending. This includes Nvidia, the only Magnificent Seven stock he holds, which generated $100bn of free cash flow in 2025; Broadcom; Vertiv, which builds liquid cooling systems for data centres; and SK Hynix.

Nvidia’s isn’t in bubble territory, argues Yiu. “This is a firm that has sold all its product for the next year, that trades on less than 25 times 12-month forward earnings, has net cash on the balance sheet and a free cash flow margin of 50 per cent,” he asserts. 

Demand for Nvidia chips shows little sign of slowing from its “off the scale” level, and they are embedded in the AI ecosystem. Analysts argue that were it not for investor caution around the sustainability of growth rates, the company would attract an even higher valuation.

Of 56 analyst views on Nvidia as per FactSet, only 1 is a sell. Four are holds and the remainder buys or overweight. 

How bad would an AI boom-to-bust be? John Higgins, chief markets economist at Capital Economics, says the S&P 500 would be 25 per cent lower without the AI boom. He thinks drops of at least 30 per cent in the index, assuming it reaches a level of  8,000, which is Capital Economics’ year-end target, and 60 per cent in the three big-tech sectors are possible. On a more positive note, his view is also that any correction is unlikely to happen for another year or so, and would then be shorter-lived than that seen in the early 2000s.

Feature

The complete guide to diversifying your portfolio

We look at how to get the balance right between risk and returns, and whether bonds and gold are still up for the job

Val Cipriani

Depending on which guru you ask, diversification is either the only free lunch in investing – or something that only makes sense if you don’t know what you are doing.

The first quote is commonly attributed to Harry M Markowitz, Nobel Prize winner and father of model portfolio theory. The second idea is from Warren Buffett, who called diversification “protection against ignorance”. So who is right?

The answer is both, potentially. Markowitz argues that you can use diversification to achieve better risk-adjusted returns – a better balance between performance and volatility. As for Buffett, another way to look at his argument is that unless you know what you are doing to the extent that he does, you probably need to diversify.

Experts generally agree that for the vast majority of investors, putting all your eggs in one basket is a bad idea. But what does diversification actually look like, and how do you make it work for you?

There are degrees of diversification. Rather than diversify for the sake of it, you need to consider the idea in light of your time horizon, risk appetite and investment goals.

In the context of a multi-asset portfolio, diversification is typically seen through the lens of correlation, a measure comparing the behaviour of two assets over a certain period of time. A positive correlation means the two tend to go up and down in tandem. Multi-asset investors instead look for assets that, ideally, have a negative correlation with equities: they go up when stocks go down, cushioning the impact of crashes and bear markets.

Not every investor needs this. If you have a decades-long horizon as well as the risk appetite and sangfroid to sit tight during the ups and downs, you can afford to stay fully invested in stocks. Perhaps with one eye on this kind of time horizon and risk appetite, Buffett has argued that the average investor only needs a straightforward 90/10 portfolio – 90 per cent in an equity tracker, and the rest in short-term bonds.

So first, ask yourself what kind of investor you are, and what risk means for you. Technically speaking, risk is often measured through standard deviation – a statistical measure that looks at how much a variable (for example the price of an asset) deviates from its mean over a certain period of time. It is basically a measure of volatility.

But if you ask financial planners and investment managers about risk, they’ll often talk about the risk of losing their clients’ money, or the risk of not meeting their clients’ financial goals. When you consider risk this way, volatility suddenly becomes a lot less important.

Being a long-term investor with a high risk tolerance does not mean that you don’t have to consider diversification, however.

You may not need to worry about how your portfolio will behave in the event of a stock market crash tomorrow, but you need to consider that the fortunes of different countries, investment styles and sectors could change over the long term. Nobody can predict with any degree of certainty whether the US market or the Asian market will outperform the other over the next 20 years. So, you buy both US and Asian stocks, and avoid disappointment.

At the opposite end of the spectrum is an investor with a shorter time horizon, for example because they need to regularly draw money from their portfolio, or because they are risk averse. The short-term correlation between assets is a lot more important here.

This is the type of investor who might find it useful to understand how an investment trust such as Ruffer Investment Company (RICA) operates. The trust is focused on wealth preservation, so has two basic goals: not to lose money in any 12-month period, and to return “meaningfully” more than cash. A year is a very short time in investing, so its managers spend a lot of time on the hunt for uncorrelated assets.

Ruffer fund manager Ian Rees explains: “For one side of the portfolio, we’ll say: ‘which are the growth assets that will make us money in the good times?’ And typically, that’s going to be equities . . . then on the other side, we think: ‘what could go wrong? Are there any immediate risks that we see or worry about, whether in markets or in the economy?’ And connected to that: ‘how would we protect the growth assets if they fell?’”

“We would always expect parts of the portfolio to be making money, and also parts [of the portfolio] to be losing [money],” he adds.

Scott Robertson, investment specialist at St James’s Place, says diversification is a little like starting a business that sells both ice cream and umbrellas. “When it’s sunny, happy days, your ice cream is going to be selling, and when it is chucking it down, your umbrellas are going to be selling,” he explains. However, doing the same with investing is easier said than done.

In the IC’s Alpha section, you can find a range of multi-asset portfolios suitable for different investors and risk profiles, focused on achieving the best possible risk-adjusted returns.

Trust in shares and ditch the dollar (for now)

Diversified asset portfolio for 2026

How to think about asset allocation

Market regimes and diversification

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If you are aiming for true diversification, adding a lot of different positions to your portfolio is unlikely to do the trick on its own. If you don’t pick carefully, there’s a decent chance that many of those positions will actually behave in the same way.

In doing so, you may end up with the exact opposite of what Markowitz was advocating for. ‘Diworsification’, a term coined by fund manager Peter Lynch, can apply to portfolio construction as well as stockpicking: by adding too many positions, or the wrong ones, you can actually add risk to your portfolio and/or worsen its returns. A classic example is holding so many active funds doing different things that you find yourself owning the entire market – as a single tracker fund would – but paying active management fees for the privilege.

On top of this, when there’s a shock to the system, assets do not always behave as you expect. “The interesting part, but also the difficult part, is that correlations change through time,” Rees says. A recent example was 2022, when equities and bonds fell at the same time, raising serious questions about the rationale behind the traditional ‘60/40’ portfolio. This is a common balanced portfolio, with a 60 per cent exposure to stocks and the rest in bonds.

David Storm, chief investment officer at RBC Wealth Management, says he thinks about diversification in terms of assets whose returns are driven by different factors. “Most people have portfolios that are dominated by two basic factors: interest rate risk and equity risk,” Storm says. If you want diversification that works in a broader range of scenarios, you might need something more sophisticated.

“For example, we like [betting for and against] commodities because commodities are, in the main, driven by something quite different from just GDP growth and central bank policy. They might be driven by . . . the weather in Texas, which is quite a diversifier for a portfolio,” he says.

Diversifying an equity portfolio is fairly straightforward, especially if you use funds. A passive global tracker is a decent starting point, as it gives you access to hundreds of different companies in one go, operating in different sectors and geographies.

However, at present, global trackers are very exposed to US technology stocks, meaning that they are arguably not as diversified as they used to be. It can make sense to add more diversification with dedicated exposure to other regions, sectors and styles.

Giulio Renzi-Ricci, head of asset allocation at Vanguard Europe, lists the many reasons why this seems sensible. As a starting point, other regions and sectors offer cheaper valuations. The Magnificent Seven tech stocks also have a number of risks to contend with: artificial intelligence (AI) might not deliver all the disruption it has promised, or not do so fast enough; capital expenditure might not translate into significant enough revenues; current winners might be replaced by other players. Finally, he thinks AI could prove disruptive to a range of other sectors, including healthcare and financials, where its impact has not yet been fully priced in.

When it comes to equities, diversification does not necessarily mean negative correlation – a market crash in the US would most likely affect the rest of the world, particularly in the short term. When the US sneezes, the world catches a cold, as the saying goes.

But correlation doesn’t need to be negative for an asset to offer some degree of protection and diversification; a low positive correlation can still help cushion the blow of a crash. And when it comes to correlation between US stocks and the rest of the world, things might be shifting a little.

Dina Ting, global head of index portfolio management at Franklin Templeton, notes that the relationship between certain Asian markets (particularly Japan, South Korea and China) and US equities has been positive but very low over the past three years, and was even lower over the course of 2025.

“To us, this reflects shifting supply chains, trade policy uncertainty and country-specific growth drivers rather than broad US equity momentum,” she says. “That said, short-term investor sentiment can still overwhelm fundamentals. Tech-led risk-off episodes have triggered cross-border selling in Asia. In November, for example, we saw the largest monthly foreign outflows in nearly six years, following AI and tech valuation scepticism.”

She lists India and south-east Asia as the most insulated markets from a potential AI-related shock. Taiwan is likely to be the most impacted, while South Korea would also suffer due to its heavy exposure to chips and AI hardware (but exposure to shipbuilding and heavy industries would help). Japan is “middle of the pack”, she says, although the Nikkei benchmark is now more heavily weighted to AI plays than it once was. “Moves in US AI stocks can transmit through semiconductor equipment makers and electronics exporters, but Japan’s broader equity market is more diversified than Taiwan or Korea,” Ting says.

There are other correlation issues to consider. The 60/40 portfolio was built around the idea that bonds are uncorrelated to stocks. But since 2022, experts are divided on whether this still applies, and to what extent bonds still work as diversifiers.

The argument on the one hand asserts that the problem was artificially low interest rates – when bond yields hovered near zero, there really was just one direction for prices (which move inversely to yields) to move, and that direction was down.

Now that base rates have broadly normalised and yields are closer to more conventional levels, we are no longer likely to see bonds and equities meaningfully fall at the same time. If the stock market crashes, this argument says, we should see a classic flight to the safety of fixed income.

“You will have some protection from using fixed interest, if for example a more recessionary outlook unfolds [in 2026] and interest rates fall faster than expected,” says Rob Morgan, chief investment analyst at Charles Stanley.

You don’t need anything other than this to diversify your portfolio, adds SJP’s Robertson. “We’re fine having just equities and bonds because bonds are back, bonds are doing what they should be doing,” he says.

Others are not quite as confident, their main concern being inflation. Inflation is bad news for bonds, both because it erodes their real-term returns, and because it can raise interest rate expectations, pushing bond prices down.

“If we go from a disinflationary world to a more inflationary world, we don’t think you can rely on the bond/equity correlation being negative,” says Ruffer’s Rees. While he agrees that 2022 constituted an especially big shock, he expects inflation and the macroeconomy to continue to be much more volatile than they used to be, making for a bumpy ride for fixed income.

Renzi-Ricci argues that the correlation between equities and bonds has been higher than usual since the Covid-19 pandemic. Covid, he explains, was a supply-side shock to the economy, rather than your standard demand-side shock, and prompted central banks to take a more ‘proactive’ approach to monetary policy in order to stimulate the economy. In turn, this created a situation that combined both economic fears (bad for equities), and high inflation, which was then followed by aggressive base rate hikes (bad for bonds).

But the level of correlation between equities and bonds has been decreasing, and he expects this to continue as more conventional economic conditions are restored. Shocks can happen, he says, but that doesn’t necessarily imply that we now permanently live in an environment where equities and bonds are correlated.

However, he acknowledges that more surprises of this kind, which are usually caused by the likes of natural disasters or wars, are certainly not impossible. If you envisage them becoming more frequent, it will take more time to restore normalcy, and bonds and equities might be more positively correlated in the future. “It’s not our base case, but I think it is a downside risk scenario that it is fair to consider,” he says.

Beyond bonds, investors can use alternative assets to diversify their portfolio.

Infrastructure, property and even private equity can play this role to an extent, particularly for institutional investors. Part of the rationale is that private assets’ valuations are updated much less frequently than those that are traded daily on public markets, which reduces the overall volatility.

Investment trusts remain the best way for retail investors to access alternatives, but as listed vehicles they do not have this advantage: they can be quite volatile. Still, certain areas of infrastructure and property are especially focused on safe income streams rather than growth, and as such can act as diversifiers.

Another common diversifier, commodities, are not the domain of the average private investor – with the exception of gold.

Asset managers are divided on what role gold can play in a portfolio. In 2025, the gold price rose more than 50 per cent in sterling terms, far outperforming equities. The precious metal held up well as equity markets crashed in April as a result of Donald Trump’s so-called “liberation day” – and then it just kept going up.

Gold doesn’t have fundamentals and produces no cash flow. It’s all about sentiment. As Storm puts it: “It’s a momentum-driven asset. Supply is relatively stable, so demand is what really matters.”

In theory, when global investors are concerned about the global economy, they flock to bullion as a safe haven – so it should hold up well when equities struggle. But in reality things are a little more complicated than that; for example, if there’s a dash for liquidity during a crisis, the gold price is likely to fall with everything else, at least initially.

Additionally, investors are particularly nervous about this year’s returns. “Something that’s gone up 50 per cent in a year isn’t a safe haven, because if it’s gone up by that much it can fall by a significant margin as well,” says Morgan.

The price increase has been partly driven by gold purchases from central banks, which are less price sensitive than the average investor. Rees explains that together with a fractured geopolitical landscape, the sanctioning of Russian foreign exchange reserves following the invasion of Ukraine in 2022 played a major role. “That told you, or anyone in the world, that if you have assets in the wrong domicile, they can be taken from you,” he explains. So central banks are looking to diversify their reserves.

Storm argues that gold can still work as a hedge against certain specific scenarios – namely, an extreme equity shock or the debasement of fiat currencies (which can be caused, for example, by governments printing more money or running large deficits).

“But is gold a great long-term diversifier against inflation? Absolutely unproven. Is it a great diversifier against a minor growth shock? Absolutely unproven,” he says. And while the precious metal is traditionally almost uncorrelated to equities, that has not quite been the case in the past year.

“We’ve seen them sell off together and go up together. So is it as effective as a portfolio hedge, particularly when most of the risk in the portfolio is equity risk? Probably not right now,” Storm says.

Logically, the most straightforward ways to hedge against an equity downturn is cash and derivatives such as put options. But the latter are quite a complicated option for private investors, and should be handled carefully and by those with experience.

Your emergency cash fund should be treated separately from your diversification efforts, but if you want to reduce the equity risk in your portfolio and are not sure about long-dated bonds, you can also increase your allocation to cash or cash-like instruments (such as very short-term bonds), to reduce volatility and build a bigger buffer. For many, the best strategy will be to simply stay the course: keep in mind that if you have a long time horizon, it’s always better to stay invested and do nothing through the inevitable ups and downs.

Feature

This payments innovator isn’t cheap – but it is undervalued

One Aim-traded company has consistently done well in our Alpha quality screens

James Norrington

We’re fond of stock screens as a source of inspiration, but they are just the starting point for investment analysis. For instance, while our Aim quality shares screens isolate companies with solid operating margins and returns on capital, we must dig deeper to answer important questions about profit growth, cash generation and how much investors should pay up for the shares.

One Aim-traded stock that scores well on our quality screen is payment technology business Boku (BOKU), a company that had operational successes in 2025 and has a pathway to further profit growth if it executes its plans effectively.

Boku is a technology provider that helps merchants leverage the accelerating global trend of local payment methods, which in aggregate are overtaking globalised networks such as Visa and Mastercard in transaction volumes. Boku provides vendors with a single contract and technical integration to access hundreds of interfaces.

Throughout the world, and especially in fast-growing economies where people are less likely to have a traditional bank account, consumers are paying via direct carrier billing (whereby transactions made with mobile devices are added to phone bills), real-time account-to-account (A2A) transfers and digital wallets. Boku connects merchants not only to wallets from western providers including Google, Apple and Meta, but also other global giants Alipay, GrabPay and GoPay as well as real-time transfer systems such as India’s UPI, which allow transactions to be made from a phone using just a virtual payment address.

It’s not all about the big players. Boku’s custom connections with more than 300 payment methods raises the possibility of selling via more than 7bn consumer touch points in more than 90 countries.

Merchants such as Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Google, Sony, Spotify, Netflix and Tencent use Boku’s platform to sell products and subscriptions, so it is well integrated. Supposedly, the competitive moat of Boku’s business model is complexity – overcoming technical and legal challenges across multiple system specifications and jurisdictions is too much of a distraction for a sprawling tech giant with its fingers in many pies.

That said, the market size opportunity (Boku estimates the value of mobile wallet transactions alone will be $9.6tn per year by 2028) may make Big Tech feel the effort of customising their own solutions is worthwhile, especially if advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and quantum computing simplify the task.

Analysts at Peel Hunt (one of Boku’s house brokers) argue that AI more generally is not an immediate threat to the company, and that its background effects could even boost growth. Boku’s proposition is solving regulatory friction with bespoke technical and settlement needs, notes Peel Hunt’s Damindu Jayaweera; and AI’s impact is more likely to be focused on accelerating the subscription economy, which could increase the total addressable market for Boku’s services.

Being cautious, however, competition and disruption are never risks that can be dismissed even when an advantage has been earned.

Leaving conjecture aside, there are reasons for optimism. FactSet consensus figures (based on eight analyst opinions) show Boku is expected to have delivered earnings per share growth of 14 per cent in the financial year ended December 2025, with 26 per cent growth to follow over the next 12 months. Double-digit operating margins for the past two financial years are testimony to progress and the respectable returns on invested capital (ROIC) – which, although not eye-catching are above the Aim median – allow Boku to meet our definition of a quality stock.

Full-year 2025 results are released in March, but the half-year numbers to June 2025 were positive, with underlying revenue up 27 per cent. The smaller digital wallet and A2A businesses are growing fastest, but direct carrier billing revenues were also up 15 per cent year on year in the first half. This is forecast to remain the largest segment by revenue out to the end of 2027, according to FactSet consensus data, which also implies sales should grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 20 per cent over that time.

Importantly, the amount of profit Boku is making per transaction has been rising, with its “take rate” up to 0.85 per cent in the first half compared with 0.81 per cent a year earlier.

Being a growth stock, with a potentially bright future, it is unsurprising that Boku commands a high price/earnings (PE) valuation. The reason for a next-12-months forward PE ratio of 28 times is because the market believes earnings will continue to grow rapidly beyond that timeframe.

Examining whether that rating is fair involves making sense checks with appropriate valuation models. As a growth company, it is unsurprising that Boku doesn’t pay a dividend, so dividend discount methods such as the Gordon growth model won’t work in this case.

Therefore, it would be more appropriate to value Boku based on either predicted free cash flow or the residual income (which means economic profit after taking into account investors’ opportunity cost) the shares could generate. Assessment of Boku’s cash position must take account of monies owed to merchants, although it does report its “own cash”, which was $87mn at the half-year 2025 stage – 9 per cent up on the 2024 full year.

Estimates of free cash flow per share are available for the years to 2027, with the annualised rate of growth being 13.7 per cent from the actual figure reported at the end of the 2024 financial year. It is notable that while cash flow per share is expected to come in lower for the 2025 year just ended, 2026 and 2027 are each predicted to see year-on-year growth at a rate of around 25 per cent.

Ideally, we would be looking at predicting free cash flow to the firm (FCFF), a measure derived from net income by adding back non-cash charges and after-tax interest expense, then subtracting fixed capital and working capital investments in the period. Per-share figures a few years out can then be discounted back at the firm’s weighted average cost of capital (WACC). We then subtract the value of debt per share to derive a fair value for the share price today.

Making fair estimates of these inputs is easier said than done, however, and there are a good many considerations even when preparing inputs for the calculation. Still, cash flow gives us a good way to consider a growth company from the perspective of a market price valuation, although it counts against Boku that it doesn’t look cheap versus similar UK-listed fintech companies.

For example, mobile-focused international payments business Wise (WISE), is rated on about 16 times the forecast of cash flow per share for its financial year ending in March 2028. By contrast, Boku is rated on 21.5 times its December 2027 forecast cash flows.

The premium rating Boku trades on shows a disconnect between its own growth narrative and what may yet prove conservative long-term growth forecasts. There are execution risks to the business model, but arguably these ought to be reflected in a higher required rate of return being used to discount the present value of future cash flows, rather than lowballing the estimates for cash flow growth rates.

Peel Hunt uses a high discount rate of 15 per cent as the required return in its models, which culminated in a fair value of £3.61 for the shares following publication of the last half-year accounts. The consensus figure on FactSet is £3.19, which still implies considerable upside to the £2.19 share price at the time of writing.

Investors can be forgiven for being circumspect, however. Many will remember getting burned on Bango (BGO), which made significant progress on its subscription bundling and payments packages but disappointed against revenue targets. It also repeatedly got caught out by higher than expected operating costs and research and development expenditure.

Unexpected costs are the type of surprise that could derail a business like Boku, but it has made strategic progress and has a significant opportunity to grow its revenues just from existing merchants’ use of its technology. Recent highlights include the agreement with Australian graphic design software company Canva, which it signed last August, and the addition of 60 new connections in total for merchants in the first half of 2025.

Along with other UK-listed tech companies, Boku’s share price dropped in the last quarter of 2025, but this runs counter to analysts upgrading views on its longer-term prospects, with consensus for the 2028 financial year earnings seeing a particularly strong jump.

Long-run growth rates are often related to expected economic growth in countries where revenues are earned. Although Boku makes 57 per cent of its revenue from the Asia Pacific region and 39 per cent from Europe, Middle East and Africa, the sustainable growth rate being assumed beyond the next five years for earnings and cash flows is likely to be conservative. That may be prudent given the heightened geopolitical uncertainty and the fact demographics are emerging as a challenge even in many developing countries.

Still, technological adoption in these countries is driven by mobile, and there will be a growing addressable market of consumers. They’ll have disposable income and demand flexibility to make purchases and international transactions without needing to keep details such as bank cards saved online. Boku meets these needs and, importantly, it has also been successful in facilitating a user experience that doesn’t compromise Big Tech vendors’ insistence on smooth single-click, in-app purchases. These make up around 40 per cent of Boku’s payment volumes, with traditional checkout experiences accounting for just 5 per cent.

Further innovations Boku has invested in include a cross-border settlement platform offering merchants a foreign exchange liquidity network and a banking footprint. Future areas of focus could include the ability for merchants to make payouts to local influencers – an offering that fits modern marketing techniques and which is an intriguing prospect.

The bull case for Boku shares rests on confidence that the extraordinary growth phase used in valuation models can be extended. Should there be more signs of good news ahead of the company’s results, Boku could benefit from earnings upgrade momentum.

In the meantime, the company has been putting some of its excess ‘own cash’ to use on buybacks. On 2 January, Boku announced that the board had approved the repurchase of up to 5 per cent of outstanding common stock. Purchases will be added to the 2.1 per cent of shares already held in treasury, with the plan being to meet obligations to warrant holders or staff remuneration programmes without diluting ordinary shareholders in future. Clearly, the board thinks the shares are cheap given Boku’s opportunity. They may have a point.

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Companies

Tesco grabs market share – but at what cost?

Trading update: The grocer’s actions have been designed to appeal to the UK’s increasingly price-conscious shoppers

Mark Robinson
Mark Robinson
  • Greater focus on price points

  • Full-year profits at the upper end of guidance

Shareholders in Tesco (TSCO) will be pleased enough with the grocer’s Christmas and third-quarter (Q3) trading update. The company now expects to deliver full-year adjusted operating profits at the upper end of the £2.9bn-£3.1bn guidance range it issued in October, while free cash flow is predicted to land within the medium-term guidance range of £1.4bn-£1.8bn. 

The company has achieved its highest market share for over a decade, with the 12-week market share up 23 basis points to 28.7 per cent. Growth here accelerated through the Christmas trading period, marking “32 consecutive four-week periods of year-on-year gains”. This may well have been at the expense of both Asda and the Co-op, both of which lost ground in the months leading up to Christmas. 

Given the rate of food inflation, it makes sense that greater attention to price points would translate into increased footfall. Management maintains that the increased use of seasonal customer rewards, along with the expansion of its ‘Everyday Low Prices’ range, have had the desired effect. But Tesco’s determination to support market share, though wholly understandable, could conceivably constrain the net margin, even though the successful rollout of 150 new own-brand Christmas products is likely to have supported profitability through the all-important festive season. 

There were mixed outcomes across the group’s product categories, with like-for-like sales at the home and clothing segment up 2.1 per cent, while core retail sales at the Booker wholesale unit were down by 0.4 per cent. In common with industry rivals, Tesco’s fresh food business was the standout performer, which, in turn, underpinned the double-digit increase in online traffic.

Shares in Tesco have increased in value by 16 per cent over the past 12 months, but they remain below the peer average at 6.6 times on an enterprise/cash profit (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) basis. Potential investors would be minded to determine whether the measures undertaken to boost volumes have placed undue strain on the bottom line.

Last IC view: Buy, 439p, 11 Sep 2025

Opinion

Bearbull Income Portfolio: Winners and losers in 2025

The hits, misses and mixed results from another year of investing for dividends

Bearbull

Two years ago, the head (and what will have to suffice as the brains) behind Bearbull’s two-headed mask changed.

When it came to the long-running Income Portfolio, this meant two things. The first was a need for continuity: for the new keeper to both grasp the portfolio and keep the dividends flowing.

The second, as the last person behind the mask noted, was the need for change. The prior few years had been a tricky period for UK income seekers, as evidenced by a slew of underwhelming positions in the portfolio. This hit to capital values ultimately depressed the cadence and scale of distributions, which meant a new approach was required.

My predecessor’s other parting gift – a £100,000 recapitalisation – paved the way for international diversification, via JPMorgan’s European Income & Growth (JEGI) and Asian Income & Growth (JAGI) trusts, plus SPDR’s S&P US Dividend Aristocrats (USDV) fund.

But some fat would also need trimming and replacing with leaner cuts that offered a clearer path to earnings growth, rather than the hope of relatively secure rents.

At a portfolio level, this meant resetting distributions at a level that would allow for progressive, above-inflation increases. What’s more, twice-yearly payouts would no longer simply pass on dividends once received but reflect the need to preserve some cash for new positions. Although the portfolio’s overall yield would fall, the goal was to get future income streams growing again.

In 2025, these dual aims saw mixed success. The main issue has been my tanker captain’s approach to repositioning the portfolio; conscious of the need to make enough changes to have an impact, but reluctant to give up the motley crew of dividend payers assembled over a quarter of a century.

On a headline basis, however, capital growth was a solid 12 per cent, while the yield averaged 3.5 per cent. The full-year distribution edged up 10 per cent, after an 8 per cent rise in 2024. And three of the four positions initiated since the start of 2024 comfortably outperformed the market, the rest of the portfolio and my expectations.

As things stand, we look to be in reasonable shape. In 2026, distributions could surpass the high-water mark set in 2019 – all without committing to that year’s 5.7 per cent average yield. Against a portfolio now valued at around £401,000 (excluding accrued dividends and cash on hand), a 4.9 per cent weighted forecast yield should spit out almost £20,000.

Aside from my newer, much-discussed finance-flavoured newer picks – Just (JUST), Plus500 (PLUS) and now NatWest (NWG) – there were a few notable successes.

In an eventful (and frequently volatile) year, GSK (GSK) rewarded my often-wavering faith. Like much of the global pharma sector, the FTSE 100 giant started 2025 on the back foot on expectations of a tougher US line on drug pricing. Matters were hardly helped by the April tariff shock, but strong sales of oncology and other specialist medicines, together with signs of life in the drug pipeline, all helped to turn the dial on a business that still needs an answer to the looming patent cliff in its HIV arm.

Improving sentiment, perhaps inspired by news that chief executive Emma Walmsley would step down at the end of 2025, coincided nicely with a buyback programme to push the drugmaker’s shares up 35 per cent in the year. Handily, a falling share count also allowed the group to increase the quarterly dividend from 15p to 16p, and led analysts to raise their consensus forecast to 17.5p in 2026 and 18.75p in 2027.

Anglo American (AAL) proved a more curious case. After years of copper bulls pointing and shouting at a looming supply deficit, a proper rally finally arrived in 2025 and demonstrated why BHP (BHP) was right to seek a merger in 2024, and wrong to do so on such parsimonious and restrictive terms.

However, the failed bid continues to cast ripples. Given its size, I sold the resulting spin-off Valterra Platinum (VALT) too soon, as the stock’s subsequent rally proved. I should have backed my belief that platinum group metal bearishness was overdone. At least my shares in Johnson Matthey (JMAT), which also rebounded strongly in 2025, offered a platinum lining to the affair.

Anglo’s shrewd post-BHP response has been to merge with Teck Resources (US:TECK) to form a copper powerhouse. While the move has coincided with a much-reduced income stream, this is the sort of growth story the portfolio needs, and I’m not about to bet against the ongoing bull market in the red metal, which has the potential to run and run. The challenge, for an investor looking to convert capital into cash, will be working out when to occasionally top slice the stake, and by how much.   

While I’m a big believer in renewable energy, and remain awed at its rate of adoption, 2025 continued to deliver a painful lesson for investors hoping to turn the technology into an annuity-like income.

Greencoat UK Wind (UKW) raised its quarterly dividend from 2.5p to 2.59p in April, but again failed to inspire any conviction in the market. Worse was NextEnergy Solar Fund (NESF), whose June purchase I flagged as potentially “wildly optimistic”. I wasn’t wrong: despite resilience in both the dividend and power generation, the logic of getting paid double the targeted rate of return while waiting for a strategic resolution has failed. As a long-term subscriber recently emailed to stress, the shares have cratered since the summer.

The two stocks share several issues. Softer power prices, an uncertain regulatory outlook, higher interest costs and variable performance have contributed to declining net asset values (NAVs). Dividend payouts, while technically covered, now look worryingly reliant on the liquidation of both trusts’ net assets – precisely the kind of false economy I am trying to banish from the portfolio.

Cumulative payouts since Greencoat was added to the mix in 2022 now come to £4,614. Although that offsets two-thirds of the rout in the equity, it’s hardly a win, particularly given its reputation as the largest and best-performing UK-listed renewables trust since inception. Buybacks have had little impact bar a slight improvement in dividend cover, while gearing has crept up, meaning reinvestment needs to now properly step up (even if it leads to an awkward revision to the dividend policy).

NESF’s challenges are more pressing. Following a recent covenant breach linked to the preference shares, Panmure Gordon analyst Shonil Chande believes a sale at a discount to NAV is the only viable option for the board. Sadly, I’m inclined to agree. The results of a strategic review can’t come fast enough.

Finally, although contributions from the JPMorgan trusts were positive – thanks to a resurgent Europe and growing recognition at the quality investment stories to be found in Asian markets – US dividend stocks haven’t felt like a great place to park capital in the two years since we bought the Aristocrats fund.

This doesn’t mean it’s time to give up. If a widely discussed US market crash happens this year, steady-eddy dividend payers look a safer bet than anything related to artificial intelligence or above-trend growth. Granted, this is rarely what investors want from the S&P 500, but dividend seeking requires a sometimes odd balance of caution, stasis and optimism. With any luck, we can strike that balance (or something like it) in 2026.

    BEARBULL INCOME PORTFOLIO            
Shares bought Holding Date dealt Price (p) Value (£) Change (%) v All-Share (%) Industry Weight (%)
1,332 GSK Feb-00 1,825 24,302 42.3 -21.7 Pharmaceuticals 6.1
13,150 NatWest 9% Prefs Nov-12 156 20,514 28.9 -27.8 Fixed interest 5.1
14,000 Real Estate Credit Inv Jan-13 124 17,290 12.8 -32.7 Speciality finance 4.3
26,800 Record Sep-14 56 15,062 54.0 4.8 Financials 3.8
4,550 Vesuvius Aug-15 397 18,054 1.3 -30.5 Industrials 4.5
400 The Williams Co’s Aug-18 60 18,197 101.2 55.0 Utilities 4.5
8,000 Henry Boot Jul-19 225 18,000 -7.6 -28.8 Real Estate Inv’t 4.5
575 Anglo American Aug-20 3,085 17,739 58.7 1.3 Basic materials 4.4
4,400 Fevara (formerly Carr’s) Aug-20 134 5,874 -2.9 -38.0 Foods 1.5
8,500 Primary Health Prop’s Nov-21 98 8,322 -36.0 -50.1 Real Estate Inv’t 2.1
13,000 Greencoat UK Wind May-22 98 12,753 -34.8 -48.7 Closed-end funds 3.2
750 Johnson Matthey Aug-22 2,132 15,990 -6.2 -27.0 Chemicals 4.0
8,550 JPMorgan Asia Inc & Gr Nov-23 441 37,706 26.4 -3.8 Inv Trusts 9.4
31,500 JPMorgan Euro Inc & Gr Nov-23 140 44,100 46.8 11.7 Inv Trusts 11.0
570 S&P US Div Aristocrats Dec-23 5,759 32,826 9.3 -16.6 Inv Trusts 8.2
14,500 Just Group Apr-24 216 31,320 108.1 68.2 Insurers 7.8
660 Plus500 Nov-24 3,630 23,958 48.2 25.0 Brokers 6.0
40,000 NextEnergy Solar Jun-25 50 20,000 -30.5 -38.1 Closed-end funds 5.0
2,889 NatWest Oct-25 652 18,831 10.8 9.4 Banks 4.7
-  -  - Total 400,837 - - - 100.0
-  -  - Cash 4,985  
-  -  - Interest accrued 2  
-  -  - Ex-divs 1,176  
Invested capital -  £200,000 Total £407,001        
Source: Investors’ Chronicle, FactSet. Portfolio as of  1 Jan 2026, following the year-end distribution.
Small Companies

Lock in this double-digit dividend yield

Simon Thompson: Shares in this funding provider are a bargain even though it is increasing revenue and generating cash flow

Simon Thompson
Simon Thompson

• First-half operating profit down slightly to £9.6mn

• Quarterly dividend declared for 33 consecutive quarters

• 10.9 per cent dividend yield and free cash flow yield

• 2026 PE ratio of 8.9

• 26 per cent discount to NAV

Hybrid funding provider Duke Capital (DUKE: 25.75p) offers investors a tantalising dividend yield of 10.9 per cent even though the board has maintained the 0.7p-a-share quarterly payout for the past four years and paid out cumulative dividends of 21.4p a share over 33 consecutive quarters since inception.

The company makes its money by taking equity stakes in businesses and providing long-term capital in exchange for a percentage of their future revenues. In the latest six-month trading period, recurring cash revenue increased modestly to £13.2mn and was matched by total cash revenue, reflecting the absence of exit-related income. Free cash flow (FCF) of £5.9mn (1.18p) was shy of the £7mn (1.4p) cash cost of the first-half dividend, but with recurring revenue up 5 per cent year on year to £6.8mn in the final quarter of 2025 and forecast by house broker Cavendish to rise to £7.8mn in the current quarter, analysts expect annual FCF of £14.1mn to cover the cash cost of the payout.

The growth in Duke’s recurring revenue reflects deployment of more than £15mn across six existing capital partners in the first half, the largest of which was a £6mn investment in a care home provider that facilitated an acquisition. Since the period end, Duke made a £3.7mn follow-on investment in Step Investments, an investment group with core interests in education, advertising and radio stations, to fund its acquisition of Irish commercial radio station Galway Bay FM. The financing increases Duke’s total credit financing in Step to £15.2mn.

In addition, Duke has made a follow-on investment of £3mn in another existing capital partner, Tristone Healthcare, moving from 28.4 per cent ownership to 51 per cent as well as assisting in the funding of future deferred consideration payments relating to prior bolt-on acquisitions. Tristone provides specialist residential, nursing and domiciliary care and support to high acuity adults with severe mental, physical or learning disabilities and young people who require care, support and specialist education. Investment terms are in line with Duke’s typical cost of capital, including a starting yield of 13.5 per cent and annual revenue adjustment factors in respect of hybrid credit payments due.

The steady growth in the investment portfolio has been delivered against a tough market backdrop for small and medium-sized enterprises, particularly in the UK. Inflationary pressures have remained stubbornly high, resulting in the UK having higher interest rates and borrowing costs than other wealthy OECD countries. Moreover, persistently weak macroeconomic data releases point to credit conditions tightening and consumer discretionary spend either being curtailed or delayed.

Despite the headwinds, economists anticipate a gradual reduction in interest rates over the next 12 to 18 months to put the UK economy more in line with its OECD peers. Any such movement would be beneficial to Duke, lowering its own borrowing costs while improving its relative attractiveness to income-focused investors given its strong yield profile.

The shares also trade on a 26 per cent discount to net asset value (35p) even though net borrowings are less than half equity shareholders’ funds of £175mn, and forecast full-year operating profit of £23.3mn is almost three times net finance cost estimates. While sentiment across UK small-cap equities remains cautious, Duke’s differentiated offering – providing long-term, secured debt capital to profitable private businesses in the UK, Ireland and North America – is showing its resilience, as highlighted by a growing recurring cash revenue base and visibility of future cash generation.

I selected the Aim-traded shares, at 29p, in my 2021 Bargain Shares Portfolio and although the share price has dipped below that entry level, the holding has still delivered a 35 per cent total return (TR). The FTSE Aim All-Share TR index has shed 30 per cent of its value in the same period. A dividend yield of 10.9 per cent, forward price/earnings ratio of 8.9, and 26 per cent discount to book value point to deep value. Buy.

Special offer. Simon Thompson’s books Successful Stock Picking Strategies and Stock Picking for Profit can be purchased online at www.yorkbookshop.com at the special discounted price of £5 per book plus UK P & P of £5.15, or £10 for both books plus UK P & P of £5.75, subject to stock availability.

They include case studies of Simon’s market-beating Bargain Share Portfolio companies, outlining the characteristics that made them successful investments. Simon also highlights many other investment approaches and stock screens he uses to identify small-cap companies with investment potential. Full details of the content of the books can be viewed on www.yorkbookshop.com.

Ideas

A two-tier investment trust sector is starting to emerge

As equity-focused trusts’ discounts normalise, sentiment towards alternatives remains weak

Alex Newman
Alex Newman

Happy New Year, investment trust shareholders. Or is it? According to newly compiled figures from the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), today’s average market-weighted trust discount of 13.7 per cent – though a big improvement on 2023’s 19.2 per cent nadir – remains something of a modern outlier.

Since 1989, there have only been four years when trust sentiment started from a lower base. The past two years were, as we know, worse. But for deeper market scars, we have to head back to the collapse of emerging markets in 1998 or the collapse of developed ones in 2008.

Sure, discounts were consistently more pronounced from 1972 until 1989. But so was inflation, which meant interest rates averaged 11 per cent during the period. Punitive capital gains taxes, exchange controls, the dollar premium and waning institutional ownership all added to the pain.

Despite this, AIC data shows that investment trust numbers steadily climbed, accelerating both with City deregulation in 1986 and either side of the global financial crisis. Although the ongoing depopulation of the trust sector is a real and recent phenomenon, history suggests discounts can’t be the only cause.

What else can we deduce, then? Although sustained equity market rallies have sometimes acted as lead indicators for a narrowing of the average discount, there’s little correlation between the size of a discount and the trailing returns for the FTSE All-Share.

In another sense, the historical record only tells us so much. In the 1970s, the 30-odd trusts in the AIC’s time series were primarily focused on listed stocks. Balance sheets had little space for unquoted companies, or other assets such as loans, property or government bonds (despite the considerable yields on offer from the latter).

Today, while equities still make up the lion’s share of investment trust assets by value, the range of mandates is much broader. About half are either multi-asset focused, or – in the case of the wide array of infrastructure, property and private equity trusts out there – dedicated to unquoted, illiquid or hard-to-sell assets. Compounding matters, these models often use a lot more gearing, thereby reducing the flexibility to buy back shares at a discount.

Strip out these trusts, and the sector’s more traditional names trade at a much fairer level. By my calculations, their discount is closer to 5 per cent – less than half the AIC’s headline figure, and near the high watermarks seen at the start of both the 1990s and noughties. That’s down from 10 per cent in October 2024, just after the Bank of England’s current rate-cutting cycle began.

While alternative and mixed-asset trusts have seen similar percentage point improvements in their discounts, they are starting from much lower bases. Exclude outlier 3i (III), and their market-weighted discount is still above 20 per cent, suggesting there may be limits to how much more alternative asset trusts might rally in the new year, even as the cost of borrowing continues to fall.

Ironically, given the evidence from the 1970s, the market appears much more confident in the ability of stockpickers to deliver value once the current rate-cutting cycle stalls (or reverses). Then again, perhaps investors are simply rediscovering the purpose of the trust structure – including why it is so suited to listed equities.

Ideas

How our 2025 stock and fund ideas performed

We published 100 Ideas of the Week last year – with some more than doubling in value

Michael Fahy
Michael Fahy

The past 12 months were a pretty good time for markets – especially for UK investors, with the FTSE 100 index closing above 10,000 points for the first time in its history in only the third trading day of 2026.

In local currency terms, the large-cap index generated a total return of 25.8 per cent last year, beating most of its global peers, according to FactSet. The broader FTSE All-Share market was also up 24 per cent, outperforming the 20.6 per cent gain from Europe’s Stoxx 600 index and the 17.9 per cent earned by the S&P 500.

While the UK had been a market to avoid for many in recent years given its lack of exposure to booming tech stocks, several factors have played in its favour.

Investor concerns about the fiscal positions of many western governments and the likelihood of them inflating debts away led to a rush for gold and other safe-haven assets, boosting the fortunes of many miners. Banking and defence stocks also fared well.

In sterling terms, spot gold rose by 54 per cent last year, while the silver price leapt by 129 per cent.

The so-called debasement trade “was the defining feature of 2025”, according to Robin Brooks, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the former chief economist at the Institute of International Finance.

Exposure to gold and copper miners certainly helped to boost the overall performance of the 100 companies that made up our weekly ideas in 2025.

All three of the best-performing shares were miners, with gold specialist Greatland Resources (GGP) trebling in value, while copper producers Atalaya Mining (ATYM) and Taseko Mines (TKO) rose by 138 per cent and 95 per cent, respectively.

These little nuggets meant our basket of ideas comfortably outperformed its index. The 100 share ideas generated a total return of 13.9 per cent, 3.5 percentage points better than our benchmark’s 10.4 per cent.

Our ideas’ collective performance
Average return Index Out/underperformance
Buys 11% 8.6% 2.4%
Sells -4.6% 4.9% -9.5%
All Ideas 13.9% 10.4% 3.5%

Once we move away from the rich mining seams, some of the sheen is removed from our picks. Although only 36 per cent of our ideas actually lost money in simple sterling price returns, more of them (53 per cent) underperformed their benchmark than overperformed.

Thankfully, however, the scale of our losses was generally smaller than our gains – 40 per cent kept losses to within 10 per cent of their benchmark return and three-quarters were within 20 per cent.

As ever, it’s worth stressing that the companies we highlight each week are a source of varying types of ideas, and that we’re not looking to pick shares that we think will shoot the lights out over the course of a single calendar year.

We will highlight where we think there are short-term opportunities, but in the main we are looking at fundamentals, which can take time to play out. And in some cases, we are just as focused on an investment’s dividend-generating potential as its share price returns. Moreover, as these ideas have featured over the course of a calendar year, the average holding period we are judging is just six months.

We have tracked each idea against the most relevant benchmark, since shares with a larger market capitalisation should (at least in theory) be less volatile than small-cap players.

Yet in our case, our FTSE 100 picks were the worst-performing part of our portfolio, dragged down by student property specialist Unite (UTG) and by Rightmove (RMV).

The latter underperformed by 38 percentage points and was one of several data and technology-related shares that proved a drag last year, as investors grew concerned about the cost of investing in artificial intelligence and the potential for it to disrupt business models. GlobalData (DATA) and publisher Future (FUTR) fell victim to similar trends.

FTSE 100 Ideas of the Week

Our FTSE 250 picks also proved to be a slight drag, despite an 89 per cent gain from Spectris following its buyout by US private equity giant Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (US:KKR) – the only successful bid we caught last year. Whether this is a sign that domestic equities are no longer the bargain they once were (particularly for US dollar buyers) is open to question.

Where we fared much better was in choosing smaller (both main market and Aim) shares. The miners again played a part, as did our faith in beaten-down retailers DFS (DFS) and Wickes (WIX).

Our best fund pick of the year, RTW Biotech Opportunities (RTW), also fared particularly well, boosted by a decision to buy back a further $15mn (£11mn) of its shares after several companies in its portfolio were taken over by big pharma players, many of which need to restock pipelines as patent cliffs threaten greater competition from generic drugmakers.

FTSE 250 and small caps

The performance of our basket of foreign shares (a quarter of our ideas were overseas buys) suggests that some of these are handling this process better than others. Bayer (DE:BAYN), Merck (US:MRK) and Roche (CH:RO) all did well, and although Pfizer (US:PFE) and Novo Nordisk (DK:NOVO.B) appear to have achieved little in terms of a return, the latter’s small gain is justified by the fact that it was one of our last picks of the year.

It has risen by 14 per cent in the three weeks since it featured, and will be one of many of the late picks we made in 2025 that we will continue to monitor in 2026.

Our global Ideas of the Week

Finally, our short ideas. We only featured four shorts last year, and with good reason. Although one of these, Bloomsbury Publishing (BMY), did see its share price fall in real terms, this wasn’t enough for it to beat its benchmark. Combined, they underperformed their benchmarks by 9 per cent.

Although our two US short ideas, Palantir (US:PLTR) and Tesla (US:TSLA), continue to look incredibly stretched in terms of fundamentals (on 2026 price/earnings ratios of 175 and 209, respectively), the old Keynesian quote about markets remaining irrational for longer than investors can stay solvent should be borne in mind. Both are more volatile than the wider market and the asymmetrical risk involved in shorting shares (prices can fall to zero but have unlimited upside) means these are trades that are only recommended for investors with the strongest of constitutions.

Our Ideas of the Year were published last week, and our first two weekly ideas for 2026 can be found here. Here’s to a prosperous year ahead.

Read our short Ideas of the Week

BUYS
Name TIDM Published Out/underperformance Performance
Greatland Gold  GGP-GB 13 March 176ppt 190%
Atalaya Mining  ATYM-GB 09 January 120ppt 138%
Taseko Mines TKO-GB 03 July 83ppt 95%
TSMC  2330-TW 24 April 67ppt 90%
Spectris SXS-GB 15 May 81ppt 89%
RTW Biotech Opportunities  RTW-GB 27 March 53ppt 68%
Seplat Energy SEPL-GB 10 April 35ppt 60%
Wickes WIX-GB 16 January 43ppt 60%
Johnson Matthey  JMAT-GB 30 January 44ppt 52%
Rheinmetall  RHM-DE 13 March 27ppt 45%
Anglo American AAL-GB 08 May 28ppt 44%
Serco SRP-GB 19 June 30ppt 43%
AMD AMD-US 24 July 28ppt 37%
Renew Holdings RNWH-GB 16 April 20ppt 35%
Merck MRK-US 12 June 20ppt 35%
Bayer BAYN-DE 16 October 30ppt 33%
Elementis ELM-GB 03 April 13ppt 30%
Templeton Emerging Markets TEM-GB 26 June 23ppt 28%
Mitie  MTO-GB 24 April 10ppt 25%
Tharisa THS-GB 04 September 18ppt 24%
CrowdStrike CRWD-US 20 March 9ppt 24%
Roche  RO-CH 01 May 3ppt 23%
BMW BMW-DE 10 July 10ppt 21%
DFS DFS-GB 20 March 6ppt 20%
SDCL Energy Efficiency Income SEIT-GB 12 June 12ppt 17%
Canal+ CAN-GB 21 November 16ppt 17%
AstraZeneca AZN-GB 18 September 9ppt 17%
Monks Investment Trust  MNKS-GB 09 January 8ppt 16%
McBride MCB-GB 30 October 14ppt 15%
Big Yellow BYG-GB 21 August 12ppt 15%
Barclays BARC-GB 21 November 11ppt 15%
St James’s Place STJ-GB 17 July 2ppt 13%
OSB Group OSB-GB 12 December 10ppt 13%
Restore RST-GB 05 December 9ppt 12%
Cisco CSCO-US 20 February 5ppt 12%
Rollins  ROL-US 03 April -12ppt 11%
Qualcomm QCOM-US 19 June -6ppt 9%
Rathbones RAT-GB 18 September 5ppt 9%
Lundbeck  HLUN.B-DK 30 January 2ppt 8%
Edinburgh Investment Trust  EDIN-GB 01 May -9ppt 8%
Philip Morris PM-US 07 November 7ppt 8%
Volex VLX-GB 03 July 4ppt 7%
Berkeley Group BKG-GB 07 August -2ppt 7%
Patria Private Equity Trust PPET-GB 23 October 8ppt 7%
Novartis NOVN-CH 28 December 7ppt 6%
Brunner BUT-GB 22 May -2ppt 6%
F&C Investment Trust FCIT-GB 06 February 0ppt 5%
Mitchells & Butlers MAB-GB 02 October 3ppt 5%
VinaCapital Vietnam Opportunity Fund  VOF-GB 06 March -9ppt 5%
Polar Capital Global Insurance IE00B61MW553 31 July -3ppt 5%
Mercantile Investment Trust MRC-GB 25 September 0ppt 4%
Essentra  ESNT-GB 16 April -16ppt 4%
3i Infrastructure 3IN-GB 09 October -21ppt 4%
Schroder Income Growth Fund SCF-GB 12 December 1ppt 4%
Informa INF-GB 07 August -7ppt 2%
Scottish American Investment  SAIN-GB 19 December 2ppt 2%
Pfizer PFE-US 14 August -6ppt 2%
AVI Japan Opportunity AJOT-GB 14 November -1ppt 2%
Novo Nordisk NOVO.B-DK 19 December 1ppt 1%
Tesco TSCO-GB 11 September -6ppt 1%
BlackRock Greater Europe BRGE-GB 14 August -3ppt 1%
Capital Gearing Trust CGT-GB 28 December -1ppt 0%
Bellway BWY-GB 08 May -10ppt 0%
discoverIE DSCV-GB 06 February -10ppt -3%
Roblox RBLX-US 05 June -20ppt -3%
Capital Limited CAPD-GB 30 October -4ppt -3%
Publicis PUB-FR 15 May -19ppt -4%
Castings CGS-GB 10 July -14ppt -5%
Melrose Industries  MRO-GB 27 February -19ppt -5%
NewRiver Reit  NRR-GB 27 March -20ppt -5%
Forterra FORT-GB 05 June -12ppt -5%
London Stock Exchange LSEG-GB 14 November -8ppt -6%
Qinetiq QQ-GB 29 May -13ppt -6%
Vaalco Energy EGY-GB 22 May -20ppt -7%
Mortgage Advice Bureau  MAB1-GB 06 March -18ppt -8%
Experian  EXPN-GB 23 January -24ppt -8%
Everplay EVPL-GB 02 October -6ppt -9%
Mondi MNDI-GB 25 September -17ppt -9%
LBG Media LBG-GB 24 July -17ppt -10%
Trifast TRI-GB 07 November -13ppt -10%
Next 15 NFG-GB 23 October -12ppt -12%
Stelrad SRAD-GB 16 October -18ppt -13%
FirstGroup FGP-GB 04 September -19ppt -14%
Pets at Home PETS-GB 28 August -18ppt -15%
Victrex VCT-GB 29 May -23ppt -16%
Unite UTG-GB 11 September -27ppt -20%
Breedon BREE-GB 23 January -31ppt -22%
Rightmove RMV-GB 20 February -38ppt -24%
Eagle Eye Solutions  EYE-GB 10 April -43ppt -24%
Caledonia Mining CMCL-GB 09 October -4ppt -27%
Sodexo SW-FR 13 February -41ppt -36%
Oxford Nanopore ONT-GB 31 July -42ppt -39%
WHSmith SMWH-GB 21 August -44ppt -41%
GlobalData DATA-GB 27 February -50ppt -42%
Future  FUTR-GB 13 February -51ppt -44%
Warpaint W7L-GB 26 June -67ppt -55%
SELLS
Name TIDC Publication date Out/underperformance Performance
Bloomsbury BMY-GB 17 July -1ppt 2%
Land Securities LAND-GB 05 December -6ppt -3%
Tesla  TSLA-US 16 January -10ppt -4%
Palantir PLTR-US 28 August -21ppt -14%
Source: FactSet, accurate to 6 January 2026. ppt = percentage points. Global shares benchmarked against FTSE World; UK shares against the FTSE 100/250/All-Share/Aim 100 index as appropriate. Sells’ performance constitutes the inverse of their actual share price return.