Fund news & updates

  • 27 July 2021

    Trust added to the IT Select list – Securities Trust of Scotland

    The AJ Bell Investment Trust Select list is designed to lighten your research load. There are hundreds of trusts out there – so we’ve narrowed the field by selecting a high-quality shortlist of trusts we believe can deliver their objectives over the long term. To make the list, each trust needs to pass our robust, independent selection process.

    Wha...
    1 min read
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  • 24 June 2021

    Liontrust IPO puts investment trusts in the ESG spotlight

    A couple of high profile investment trust launches failed to get off the ground last year, but Liontrust has a few aces up its sleeve. The vaccine roll-out has delivered a significant boost to investor confidence, and Liontrust is launching this trust in the ESG space, where we know there is a lot of demand right now. Liontrust already has a well...

    3 min read
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  • 9 April 2021

    Best performing funds and investment trusts Q1

    The first quarter of the year saw a resurgence of some areas of the market which have been badly beaten up by the pandemic, as investors look forward to life beyond covid. A number of funds even UK shopping centres posted a decent quarter of performance, though the REITs Drum and Hammerson are still significantly down on their pre-pandemic levels.

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    3 min read
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  • 8 March 2021

    Most popular AJ Bell Youinvest ISA funds, shares and investment trusts in 2021

    Some fund investors have been going for growth in their AJ Bell Youinvest ISA so far this year, filling their tax shelters with a raft of offerings from Baillie Gifford, and of course, the ubiquitous Fundsmith Equity. Rival growth fund Lindsell Train Global Equity looks to have declined in popularity this year, not making the top ten in January and...

    4 min read
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  • 5 March 2021

    Who wants to be an ISA millionaire?

    Today’s ISA millionaires have shown a definite preference for investing in individual shares rather than funds, with 83% of their portfolios sitting in stocks, compared with just 14% held in pooled funds.* Those with larger amounts in their ISA may be better placed to take the higher risks associated with investing in individual equities, and have...

    4 min read
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  • 31 March 2020

    Which investment trusts can survive the income drought?

    For those relying on their income to live on, the situation looks fairly dire at the moment. Plunging stock markets, companies cutting dividends and rock-bottom interest rates all make for fairly depressing reading for investors. With companies having cut more than £4.8bn of dividends and counting, fund investors are undoubtedly going to see their...

    4 min read
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  • 17 January 2020

    How to choose an investment trust?

    Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director, runs through a 10 point checklist to consider when researching investment trusts for your portfolio.

    10 min watch
  • 11 September 2019

    The UK investment trusts most exposed to Brexit

    Investors are understandably preoccupied with what Brexit means for their portfolio, but they need to make sure they’re aware of any hidden risks in their portfolios, and in the funds they own.

    A total of eight UK-focused investment trusts have gearing of 20% of more, meaning investors in these funds are exposed to more risk. Gearing works to...

    4 min read
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  • 25 September 2015

    How the need for income could underpin UK stocks

    Last week this column touched on the issue of the vexed issue of the valuation of the UK stock market, using market capitalisation to GDP as the key metric. The results provided a bit of a question mark over the long-term direction of stocks, given that on this metric the UK looks expensive relative to its own history, unless corporate...

    7 min read
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  • 31 July 2015

    Why clients may yearn for Japan despite the yen

    The scrapping of a proposed $2 billion design for the 2020 Olympic Stadium in Tokyo and a corporate accounting scandal at the giant Toshiba conglomerate put Japan firmly back in the headlines. Even if this is not the sort of news that Prime Minister Shinzō Abe would rather not be making, his “Three Arrows” reform package continues to chime with...

    12 min read
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  • 22 July 2015

    What we can all learn from China’s stock market slide

    You may well be aware of the extraordinary movement seen over the past month – indeed the past year - in the Chinese equity market. Whether you have any holdings or not, via funds, exchange-traded funds or London-listed Chinese stocks, there are clear lessons which we can all draw from the stunning rise and sudden collapse in the Shanghai and...

    12 min read
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  • 3 July 2015

    Macro and multi-asset funds look to make the headlines

    In a year when we have already seen the Swiss franc rocket, crude oil prices bounce and sovereign bond prices gyrate horribly investors could be forgiven for feeling exhausted as we approach the summer holiday season. Yet the ongoing Greek drama, an abrupt correction in Chinese stocks and debate over the timing and speed of interest rate rises in...

    12 min read
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  • 24 June 2015

    Asia look rattled by the greenback’s rise

    Whether the reason is concerns over the timing of US interest rate rises, fatigue with the ongoing Greek debt drama or a simply the traditional summer lull, equities are giving up some of the ground earned during the earlier part of the year. Moreover, Emerging and Frontier markets have ceded nearly all of their gains for 2015 and Developed arenas...

    12 min read
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  • 19 June 2015

    Markets look for a better deal from raw materials

    Investors know all too well that following the crowd – the consensus – is usually a quick way to the poor house. Meanwhile, going against the herd can often bring the best long-term results, even if the wait for market opinion to turn and go your way can often be longer than expected and therefore uncomfortable.

    At the moment the one asset class...

    11 min read
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  • 3 June 2015

    Staying with Asian equities for good long-term reasons

    ‘It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness.’ Famous words written about an earlier period of upheaval. But they could just as well be describing the contradictions in Asian markets this year.

    Investors may be confused, and with good reason. On the one hand, reform-minded leaders are...

    7 min read
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  • 1 June 2015

    Waiting for Uncle Sam to turn the corner

    One of the most interesting developments of 2015 is how the market's enthusiasm for US equities appears to be cooling. Even the dollar's strength relative to sterling offers only a minor amount of comfort to UK-based clients who will, ultimately, be banking their returns in pounds and pence rather than nickels and dimes.

    US is lagging the pack in...
    8 min read
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  • 29 May 2015

    How should investors react following the Election?

    The recent surprise General Election result in the UK has given the equity market a short term boost, but how should investors react? David Cameron’s Conservative party won an overall majority at the election on 7th May. This was not anticipated by polls which had indicated the likelihood of a hung parliament and the probable need for another...

    5 min read
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  • 18 May 2015

    Election result offers fresh questions as well as answers

    According to T.S. Eliot’s multi-layered poem The Waste Land April is the cruellest month, but if you are Ed Miliband, Nick Clegg or Nigel Farage then May is already proving to be no fun at all. Rough winds have given all three a vigorous shaking and potentially left their careers with all too short a date, from their perspective at least, if not...

    9 min read
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  • 20 April 2015

    Little fish can be sweet

    Small cap stocks tend to outperform while the good times roll, bulls are in charge and risk appetite is elevated. The chart below shows how the FTSE Small Cap index has left the FTSE 100 for dead during the course of the bull market which began in March 2009 and even the AIM All-Share has (just) managed to outpace the UK's megacap benchmark.

    Mid -...
    9 min read
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  • 10 April 2015

    Markets continue to follow the money

    This month (4 April) marks the second anniversary of Japan launching its own version of Quantitative Easing (QE). When the scheme was first announced by Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, the idea was to let QE run for two years and then stop. That deadline now looks to have been quietly dropped, especially as Kuroda actually sanctioned an...

    9 min read
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  • 13 March 2015

    Why banks are still too big to ignore

    Banks continue to make the headlines and not necessarily for the right reasons. Lloyds may have pleased investors by reinitiating dividends after a gap stretching all the way back to 2008's interim payment but earnings figures were generally disappointing and the sector has lagged the FTSE All-Share over the past year, as if to suggest the market...

    8 min read
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  • 27 February 2015

    Become a convert to the income cause

    While the majority of clients and advisers may have little time for dealing with the intricacies of stock-specific research the dividend cut announced by FTSE 100 Centrica earlier this month (19 February) is unlikely to have passed by unnoticed.

    The company's new chief executive, Iain Conn, who only took the reins from Sam Laidlaw in January...

    9 min read
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  • 20 February 2015

    Why China's central bank may hold sway in the Year of the Sheep

    Picking the right asset class, individual geographic market and the right funds or stocks to play that choice is not just about finding the best economic growth. Nowhere exemplifies this better than China.

    Despite a 140% increase in GDP in absolute, local currency terms over the past seven years, the Shanghai Composite languishes some 46% below its...

    9 min read
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