AJ Bell Youinvest Shares Magazine 18 February 2021

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VOL 23 / ISSUE 06 / 18 FEBRUARY 2021 / £4.49

1 YEAR SINCE THE MARKET CRASH

What’s changed and are there any bargain stocks left? VACCINE BOOST FOR MARKETS AS REOPENING EYED

CAN MOONPIG CONTINUE TO FLY HIGHER?

FUNDS WHICH PAY DIVIDENDS EVERY MONTH


BAILLIE GIFFORD MANAGED FUND

Investment world look like a big puzzle? We’ve solved it in one fund. The investment world likes to complicate everything. Our Managed Fund likes to keep it really simple. It’s made up of equities, bonds and cash, and we think to generate great returns, that’s all you need. The result is a balanced portfolio with low turnover and low fees. Beautifully straightforward, it’s been answering questions since 1987. Please remember that changing stock market conditions and currency exchange rates will affect the value of the investment in the fund and any income from it. Investors may not get back the amount invested. Find out more by watching our film at bailliegifford.com

Actual Investors

Baillie Gifford & Co Limited is the Authorised Corporate Director of the Baillie Gifford ICVCs. Baillie Gifford & Co Limited is wholly owned by Baillie Gifford & Co. Both companies are authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.


EDITOR’S VIEW

Why we should be fearful of zombies Recovery could be constrained by companies kept afloat thanks to state support

T

hey may not be too busy just yet but insolvency specialists are feeling fairly confident about their near-term prospects which, on the flipside, is bad news for UK businesses. On 12 February the recently-listed insolvency and business advisory firm FRP (FRP:AIM) signalled its confidence in the future with plans to pay quarterly dividends while also pointing to a ‘positive’ outlook. Fellow practitioner Begbies Traynor’s (BEG:AIM) latest quarterly Red Flag Alert Report (covering the three months to 31 December 2020) identified 630,000 businesses in significant distress – a 13% increase quarter-on-quarter and figure described as the ‘tip of a very large iceberg’, with executive chairman Ric Trayor commenting that there are ‘many zombie businesses which have been hanging on by a thread for years before this pandemic’. In short, based on what they are seeing, both Begbies and FRP reckon the Covid impact has merely been delayed rather than averted by the various support packages brought through by chancellor Rishi Sunak. Analyst Rachel May at FRP’s house broker Shore Capital said: ‘Whilst it is too early to call whether it is the start of an emerging trend, the latest insolvency statistics for December 2020 reported a 9% increase in company insolvency volumes, marking the first monthly year-on-year increase since the start of the pandemic.’ TURNING JAPANESE A lot of the affected businesses will be privatelyowned small and medium-sized enterprises but there will be listed small caps (and large caps in fairness) which will be under considerable pressure, particularly as state funding is scaled back. Many otherwise viable businesses have been hit hard by the pandemic and it made sense for the

Begbies Tray

nor Q4 2020

Red Flag rep o

rt shows

13% increase in UK firms in sign ificant distress

Government to step in and support them. However, what the UK will be desperate to avoid is a situation where there are lots of zombie companies, i.e. heavily indebted firms being kept afloat by a mixture of bank and state lending which could hamper the economic recovery from the pandemic. Or in other words Sunak will not want a repeat of the situation in Japan where companies caught out by the bubble bursting in the late 1980s were kept on life support and contributed to a ‘lost decade’ for the Japanese economy in the 1990s. From an investor perspective it is extremely important to pay close attention to the balance sheets of your holdings of individual stocks, particularly if they operate in a sector which is being heavily impacted by Covid-19. And in this context the latest and immediately preceding entries in our First Time Investor series should prove very useful as they help with getting to grips with the fundamentals of a balance sheet. By Tom Sieber Deputy Editor

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

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Contents

News Provider of the Year (Highly Commended) CFA UK Journalism Awards 2020

EDITOR’S 03 VIEW

Why we should be fearful of zombies

06 NEWS

Vaccine optimism builds as firms seek clear Covid-19 exit plan / Oil surge helps revive Shell after strategy concerns / Coupang targeting $50 billion IPO / Global stocks see largest ever week of buying / Cordiant Digital first of new breed of investment trust to IPO

GREAT 10 IDEAS

New: Elementis / Helios Updates: RWS / BHP

UNDER THE 16 BONNET

Moonpig shares: not cheap but a very interesting business

20 FEATURE

1 year since the market crash: What’s changed and are there any bargain stocks left?

30 RUSS MOULD

Blame game won’t stop the next Gamestop

34 FEATURE

Creating a plan to invest cash saved during lockdown

38 FUNDS

Funds, investment trusts and ETFs that pay dividends every month

42 ASK TOM

How will changes to the pension age impact me?

MONEY 43 MATTERS

Are annuities still relevant to investors and how much could you get?

FIRST-TIME 46 INVESTOR

More tricks and tips for analysing company financial statements

50 INDEX

Shares, funds, ETFs and investment trusts in this issue

DISCLAIMER IMPORTANT Shares publishes information and ideas which are of interest to investors. It does not provide advice in relation to investments or any other financial matters. Comments published in Shares must not be relied upon by readers when they make their investment decisions. Investors who require advice should consult a properly qualified independent adviser. Shares, its staff and AJ Bell Media Limited do not, under any circumstances, accept liability for losses suffered by readers as a result of their investment decisions. Members of staff of Shares may hold shares in companies mentioned in the magazine. This could create a conflict of interests. Where such a conflict exists it will be disclosed. Shares adheres to a strict code of conduct for reporters, as set out below. 1. In keeping with the existing practice, reporters who intend to write about any

4

CFA UK Publication of the Year CFA UK Journalism Awards 2019

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

securities, derivatives or positions with spread betting organisations that they have an interest in should first clear their writing with the editor. If the editor agrees that the reporter can write about the interest, it should be disclosed to readers at the end of the story. Holdings by third parties including families, trusts, self-select pension funds, self select ISAs and PEPs and nominee accounts are included in such interests. 2. Reporters will inform the editor on any occasion that they transact shares, derivatives or spread betting positions. This will overcome situations when the interests they are considering might conflict with reports by other writers in the magazine. This notification should be confirmed by e-mail. 3. Reporters are required to hold a full personal interest register. The whereabouts of this register should be revealed to the editor. 4. A reporter should not have made a transaction of shares, derivatives or spread betting positions for 30 days before the publication of an article that mentions such interest. Reporters who have an interest in a company they have written about should not transact the shares within 30 days after the on-sale date of the magazine.


SCOTTISH MORTGAGE INVESTMENT TRUST

Successful investing is as much about what you don’t know. So, we never stop learning. What’s next? It’s a question we ask ourselves every day. So, we speak to academia, to authors, to people who think differently, to help us imagine the future. This helps us seek out those genuinely innovative businesses which are providing new solutions, and disrupting existing industries. As actual investors we believe it’s our task to find these companies, and make sure they reach your portfolio. Over the last five years the Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust has delivered a total return of 351.7% compared to 96.8% for the index*. And Scottish Mortgage is low-cost with an ongoing charges figure of just 0.36%**. 2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

SCOTTISH MORTGAGE

Standardised past performance to 31 December*

16.5%

41.1%

4.6%

24.8%

110.5%

FTSE ALL-WORLD INDEX

29.6%

13.8%

-3.4%

22.3%

13.0%

Past performance is not a guide to future returns. Please remember that changing stock market conditions and currency exchange rates will affect the value of the investment in the fund and any income from it. Investors may not get back the amount invested. Find out more by watching our film at scottishmortgageit.com A Key Information Document is available. Call 0800 917 2112.

Actual Investors

*Source: Morningstar, share price, total return in sterling as at 31.12.20. **Ongoing charges as at 31.03.20 calculated in accordance with AIC recommendations. Details of other costs can be found in the Key Information Document. Your call may be recorded for training or monitoring purposes. Issued and approved by Baillie Gifford & Co Limited, whose registered address is at Calton Square, 1 Greenside Row, Edinburgh, EH1 3AN, United Kingdom. Baillie Gifford & Co Limited is the authorised Alternative Investment Fund Manager and Company Secretary of the Trust. Baillie Gifford & Co Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). The investment trusts managed by Baillie Gifford & Co Limited are listed UK companies and are not authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.


NEWS

Vaccine optimism builds as firms seek clear Covid-19 exit plan Cumulative number of global vaccinations has overtaken number of infections

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| SHARES | 18 February 2021

secure extra funding arguably in a better position to take advantage. Data from Australia which reopened in the Autumn suggests people are twice as likely to want to eat out compared with before the pandemic, pointing to strong pent-up demand. The opportunity to pick up market share from weaker operators while benefitting from strong demand means some companies could get back to profitability faster than anticipated. In addition, there has been significant capacity reduction over the last 12 months which has positive implications for margins. However, the potential for a strong growth hasn’t been lost on trade and private equity buyers. Pubs group Marston’s (MARS) turned down (4 February) an offer from US private equity firm Platinum Equity. Meanwhile, former chief Greene King chief Rooney Anand has raised £200 million from investors including US investor Oaktree Capital to invest in the sector. In the event that overseas travel remains off the agenda due to the risk of importing new strains of the virus, pubs and restaurants could get a much needed shot in the arm. [MG] Vaccine doses per 100 people in countries with the highest total vaccinations 80

74.4

70 60

Source: Our World Data 09:30 GMT 15 Feb 2021

2.8

2.7

2.5

India

Brazil

4.5

Russia

4.9

China

0

16

Turkey

10

23.4

Germany

20

US

30

UK

40

United Arab Emirates

51.1

50

Israel

T

he UK government hitting its target to vaccinate all vulnerable groups by 15 February and the virus replication rate falling below one is helping the market get very excited about the prospect of the economy being unlocked as ‘reopening trades’ in the travel and leisure sector regain their popularity with investors. The onus is now on Boris Johnson to articulate a clear Covid-19 exit strategy with an update scheduled for 22 February. The government’s prior reluctance to provide a clear plan has prompted some firms in the hospitality sector to tap shareholders for a second time in order to secure extra funding and provide headroom in the case of further slippage. Pub operator JD Wetherspoon (JDW) raised £93.7 million on 20 January at a 5% discount to its prior closing price, and on 25 February Mitchell’s & Butlers (MAB) which owns All Bar One and Nichols announced a heavily discounted (36%) £350 million rights issue. According to Numis analysts Wagamama owner Restaurant Group (RTN) and catering firm SSP (SSPG) are also likely to raise new money given the relatively tight headroom of their banking facilities. The extra funds come on top of the sector raising £400 million of cash from shareholders in 2020 as well as accessing £500 million of funding through the governments various coronavirus loan schemes. Numis reckons that most hospitality firms are working on the assumption that they won’t be able to reopen until the second quarter which implies, they will miss out on the boost that Easter trading would provide. This means an earlier opening than currently expected would have a positive impact on hospitality shares, with those that moved early to

0.6


NEWS

Oil surge helps revive Shell after strategy concerns Crude prices rally amid hopes for demand recovery and supply disruption

N

ew threats to supply and recovery of the recent GameStop phenomenon, Other hopes pegged on vaccine which could provide another leg to the commodities roll-outs and US stimulus are oil price rally. helping oil prices extend their stunning This rally has helped Shell to recover are surging too start to 2021. with copper hitting its losses after investors gave the As we write this is contributing to thumbs down to its 11 February its highest levels big gains for the FTSE 100 thanks to strategy update with Berenberg since 2012 the heavyweight status of BP (BP.) and noting that for all the talk on the energy Royal Dutch Shell (RDSB) on the index. transition the renewables arm ‘remains While the demand recovery story is a the division with the lowest return target for medium-term one, the problems on the supply the company’. [TS] side, other than the planned quotas imposed 64 Crude Oil BFO M1 Europe FOB $/BBl by producers’ cartel OPEC and Russia, appear to 62 be more short term in nature. 60 The freezing temperatures in Texas which have 58 56 disrupted oil production are starting to ease and 54 tensions in the Middle East seem to have simmered 52 down for now. 50 Though there are apparent signs of speculators 4 11 18 25 1 8 15 JAN FEB moving into the oil market, following in the wake

Coupang targeting $50 billion IPO BlackRock, Bill Ackman and RIT Capital Partners are among the Korean e-commerce disruptor’s backers SOFTBANK-BACKED COUPANG has filed to go public in the US, with reports suggesting the South Korean e-commerce giant is aiming for a valuation of around $50 billion as it aims to tap into voracious investor appetite for high-growth tech stocks. This would make Coupang the biggest IPO in New York by a company based outside of the US since Jack Ma’s Alibaba came to market in 2014.

Founded in 2010 by Bom Kim, Coupang is feared and admired by competitors in equal measure and is regarded as a rival to Amazon in South Korea, where its ‘Rocket Delivery’ service, which promises delivery within 24 hours, has shaken up the market. Also backed by Sequoia Capital, asset management behemoth BlackRock and billionaire investor Bill Ackman, Coupang’s sales for 2020 nearly doubled to nigh-on

$12 billion with losses narrowing to $475 million. Exposure to the Coupang story is possible through investment trust RIT Capital Partners (RCP), which invested in the company in April 2018. Coupang represented 2.4% of RIT’s net assets as of the end of June 2020 and a successful IPO could see the value of its stake increase. RIT has an objective of long-term capital growth while preserving shareholders’ money through market cycles and invests in a diversified, international portfolio across a range of asset classes, both quoted and unquoted. [JC]

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

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NEWS

Global stocks see largest ever week of buying Technology still ‘hot’ but the market may be at risk of over-heating

T

he opening week of February saw the largest ever weekly inflow of cash into global shares, according to Bank of America’s global research team, as well as the largest ever inflow into technology stocks. Of the total inflow of $58.1 billion into equities, some $25.1 billion or close to half flowed into US large-cap stocks, the second-highest figure on record, while $5.6 billion flowed into US small-cap stocks, the third highest figure on record. Technology stocks posted their best ever week of inflows at $5.4 billion, while flows into bonds reached $13.1bn, pushing the yield on US ‘junk’ or sub-investment grade loans to below 4% for the first time in history, despite a 33% increase in issuance compared with 2020. Part of these inflows were financed by investors taking $10.6 billion out of their cash holdings, with Bank of America noting it saw the biggest drawdown of cash by its own private clients since September 2019. Investors also withdrew $800 million from gold funds, marking the first month of net outflows in two months. Private client asset allocation at the bank marked a new high for equities at 63.1%, while bonds made up 19.1% and cash was reduced to 11.7%. Weekly global equity flows ($bn) 50 30 10 -10 -30 -50 ‘02

‘04 ‘06

‘08 ‘10

‘12 ‘14

Source: BofA Global Investment Strategy, EPFR Global

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| SHARES | 18 February 2021

‘16 ‘18 ‘20 ‘22

BofA Bull & Bear indicator Up to 7.7 from 7.5 this week

7.7 4 2

Buy Extreme Bearish

0

6 8 10

Sell Extreme Bullish

Source: BofA

Analysts warned that as more people are vaccinated and the US reopens, the ‘velocity’ of money through the economy will lead to a spike in inflation as consumers go on a spending spree. At the same time, companies are likely to use the reopening to lift prices, as seen in the latest small business survey which showed plans to raise prices in the next three months were at the highest level in two years. In that scenario, analysts believe, real assets such as commodities, real estate and ‘collectibles’ including art, fine wine and luxury goods are likely to outperform financial assets like stocks and bonds, which have a poor track record during periods of sharply rising inflation and interest rates. At the same time, the bank flagged that its Bull & Bear equity market indicator had moved another notch towards ‘Sell’ territory, from 7.5 to 7.7, with a reminder that the last time the indicator gave a ‘contrarian’ Sell signal was 30 January 2018. The median three-month return from a ‘Sell’ signal, of which there have been 12 since 2000, is minus 9% for global stocks and minus 45 basis points or 0.45% for the US 10-year Treasury yield, as investors dump stocks for the safety of US government bonds (bond yields fall as prices rise). [IC]


NEWS

Cordiant Digital first of new breed of investment trust to IPO Cordiant Digital The UK’s first digital infrastructure investment trust has floated and another hopes to follow suit

smashes initial target to raise

£370 million

I

nvestor appetite for all things digital and technology related has started to become apparent as a new breed of investment trust has launched on the London market. The UK’s first digital infrastructure investment trust, Cordiant Digital Infrastructure (CORD), floated this week after raising £370 million, smashing its initial target of £300 million. Hoping to follow in its footsteps is another trust of the same ilk, Digital 9 Infrastructure, which is seeking to raise £400 million. Cordiant Digital, which targets a 9% total return a year on net assets, will invest across the UK, Europe and North America in what it calls the core infrastructure of the digital economy, or ‘the plumbing of the internet’, comprised mostly of data centres, mobile towers and fiberoptic networks. It plans to capitalise on the ‘surging growth in data consumption and traffic’, and thinks consumption trends and traffic patterns, as well as the adoption of 5G technology, will provide ‘an economic tailwind’ that could last for over a decade. Digital 9 Infrastructure will invest in similar assets to Cordiant but also subsea cables. It’s been reported 98% of the world’s data is carried by subsea cables, and clients include almost all of the world’s big technology companies. The fact Cordiant actually managed to float, let alone beat its target, demonstrates the demand from investors for differentiated ways to play the ongoing digitisation of the economy, and brokers Numis call it a ‘strong result’ for the trust, given the fact investors are ‘typically highly reluctant’ to participate in IPOs. Numis bemoans that ‘a frustrating number’ of

investors ‘give feedback that they like the idea’ of a trust, but will back it in the second fundraising round and adds: ‘We believe this reflects the higher due diligence requirements on an IPO and the potential wasted time and reputational risk if it fails to get away. ‘As a result, many IPOs struggle to get away and we have also seen a number of IPOs coming back to the market and raising capital relatively shortly after launch.’ In the case of Cordiant, it’s also worth highlighting it has issued subscription shares as part of its IPO, which could’ve boosted demand as these have been used in the past to give a ‘kicker’ to IPO investors. Cordiant has issued subscription shares on a onefor-eight basis, which could lead to issuance of up to 12.5% of share capital, exercisable if the shares trade on a premium in the first six months or if the share price total return exceeds the target return over the first five years. Numis warns the cost of holding subscription shares for retail investors on platforms ‘can be significant compared to their value’. [YF] 18 February 2021 | SHARES |

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Profit from the reopening with FTSE 250 chemicals firm Elementis The stock is cheap compared to peers but analysts think earnings could recover rapidly and ‘positively surprise’ the market

F

TSE 250 chemicals firm Elementis (ELM) ticks all the boxes for an investor looking for an overlooked and undervalued stock set to benefit from the reopening of society and the economy. Elementis has the right mix of sales divisions to benefit from both economic activity picking up again and society reopening, and at a bargain price-to-book value of just 1.2 times, compared to a much higher 9.45 times for peers like Croda International (CRDA), we believe the firm has been unfairly overlooked by the market. BUSINESS OVERVIEW Elementis’ four main divisions are Personal Care (chemicals for deodorants, soap, skin care products, etc), Coatings Chromium returns at trough levels

Source: Elementis

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ELEMENTIS

 BUY

(ELM) 125.9p Market cap: £731 million

(used for the industrial and construction sectors), Talc (used in paper, paint, plastics, polyester, ceramics and even food) and Chromium, with 80% of its earnings now coming from the first three aforementioned divisions according to its 2019 annual report. Berenberg analyst Sebastien Bray says Elementis has been marked down by the market in the past over its Chromium division, with chromium prices generally having been weak for years. Bray says analysts ‘have spent so much of the past five years cutting numbers for this segment that we suspect many are instinctively reluctant to model a return of pricing growth and operating leverage, even if all macro indicators suggest this could emerge from H2 2021’.

CHEAP VS PEERS He thinks close to 50% of Elementis’ earnings in 2020 will likely come from coatings – an industry that has been quick to recover from the coronavirus crisis, and argues that Elementis trades cheaply versus peers because of this. He also points out the balance of supply and demand in talc may also tighten long term, which could add more than 10% to the firm’s earnings before interest and taxes. This viewed is echoed by analysts at Morgan Stanley, who think the strength and speed of Elementis’ earnings recovery in 2021 could ‘positively surprise, given the company’s gearing to cyclical end markets (c.55% of sales), as well as the reopening trade (15-20% of sales)’. Meanwhile both Bray and analysts at Morgan Stanley sees


the firm’s deleveraging story as potentially adding to the share price. Morgan Stanley analysts believe management’s continuing delivery on its objective to pay down debt could add ‘5% to equity value per year’, while Bray says the dividend cut and covenant extension in 2020 have ‘removed immediate danger and that the business’s high levels of cash generation should drive leverage down thereafter’. The firm’s net debt in recent years has ballooned to almost $500 million, compared to a net cash position of $77.5 million in 2016, something which has also weighed on its share price. GETTING DEBT UNDER CONTROL But the company said in September it was on track to deliver a ‘significant’ reduction in net debt in the second half of 2020. That and the fact net debt remained at the same level in the first half of 2020 as the same

period in 2019 has led analysts at Jefferies to estimate net debt could be cut by $45 million in the second half of 2020. Relative weakness in the company’s share price has also seen it become a takeover target, with US rival Mineral Technologies seeing three offers, the last worth 130p per share, rejected with Elementis arguing the offers ‘significantly undervalued’ the business and ignored the firm’s ‘clear strategy to create value for its shareholders’. Detailing the reasons why it thinks it is worth 200p per share when it rejected the last takeover offer in December, Elementis points to the fact it is the owner of ‘differentiated resources with high scarcity value’, including the world’s only commercially viable high-quality rheology grade hectorite mine. It also highlights the fact over 80% of earnings are now from Personal Care, Coatings and Talc, which benefit from ‘fundamentally attractive’ margins and GDP growth, with the divisions achieving an average adjusted operating profit margin of around 15%

over the last three years, with its medium term group adjusted operating profit margin objective being 17%. Elementis also argues that specialty chemicals companies with margins in the range of 14% to 17% currently trade at 17 times to 19 times 2021 EV/EBITA (enterprise value to earnings before interest, tax and amortisation), and that applying this range to average operating profit for the Personal Care, Coatings and Talc businesses over the last three years implies a valuation of 163p to 190p per Elementis share. The company adds that this excludes its Chromium business, which could be valued at an additional 35p per share, implying a group valuation of 200p or more per share as the firm ‘delivers on its medium term objectives’. 140

ELEMENTIS

100 60 20 2020

2020

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

11


Lloyd’s insurance investor Helios is set for big gains A hardening of rates means potential for significant profit growth

H

elios Underwriting (HUW:AIM) is unique as an acquirer and consolidator of Lloyd’s insurance market underwriters. So far the firm has bought 43 limited liability vehicles or LLVs, including some of the best Lloyd’s Names as they were formerly known, as their owners age or decide to exit the business. Commercial insurance rates have soared in the last year as a result of coronavirus, meaning that those who are prepared to put up capital can earn significantly higher returns in the next few years. For chief executive Nigel Hanbury, the current market represents a golden opportunity for Helios. ‘I have seen three “hard markets” in my 40 years in the business’, he says. ‘The last was almost 20 years ago, after 9/11. This is

HELIOS UNDERWRITING

 BUY

(HUW:AIM) 187p Market cap: £63 million

the third.’ Having raised £20 million of equity capital last November, and having protected itself from Covid claims, the firm is set to underwrite £110 million of risk this year, an increase of 60% on the size of the portfolio at the start of last year. More significantly, it will only reinsure slightly more risk than it did last year which means the amount of retained business will jump from just over £20 million to almost £60 million. Hanbury’s enthusiasm is echoed by others in the market. Andrew Horton, chief executive of Beazley (BEZ), described himself as ‘very positive about

Consolidation of Private Capital at Lloyds Helios’ model exploits a unique window as private capital evolves Business

Policyholder Brokers Coverholders

Private Capital £2bn of Capacity

Lloyds’ Market £36bn of Capacity £27bn of Underwriting Capital

Members (c.1,500/c.£1m) Helios

40 Members £69m of Capacity

the year ahead’ thanks to the ‘favourable rate environment’, while Lancashire (LRE) boss Alex Maloney cited ‘positive pricing trends across most of our business lines’. The last few years have been tough for the insurers as a wave of non-traditional investors piled the market, throwing money at the business in a desperate attempt to generate returns and depressing rates in the process. Having been hit with losses, those investors are now withdrawing from the market. Meanwhile, by keeping its head down and steadily adding capacity, Helios was able to weather the storm and now finds itself with a strong following wind and the ability to deploy significantly more capital to capture higher rates. As well as generating capital growth, Helios is aiming to pay out a rising proportion of earnings in dividends, with analysts estimating a 50% payout ratio within a couple of years, which would make it an attractive stock for income investors too. 220

HELIOS UNDERWRITING

180 140 100

Source: Lloyd’s & Members’ Agents Website

12

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

2020

2021


TIME FOR VALUE? Temple Bar Investment Trust Plc is a well-established investment company, with a new portfolio management team at the helm. RWC’s UK Equity Income team, was appointed to manage the trust in November 2020. Led by Nick Purves and Ian Lance, the team employs a disciplined, value-oriented investment approach. Value investing has a very long history of outperformance, but it has struggled in the growth-dominated markets of the last decade. Recent market behaviour suggests this may be beginning to change. The Temple Bar Investment Trust is well placed to benefit should this rotation into UK value stocks continue.

For further information, please visit templebarinvestments.co.uk

“In my 30-year career as a fund manager, there have been two occasions in which a market dislocation has created an opportunity for investors to potentially make very attractive, outsized returns. The 2000 dotcom boom, and in 2009 following the global financial crisis. I believe we are now witnessing a third.” Ian Lance, Portfolio Manager

No investment strategy or risk management technique can guarantee returns or eliminate risks in any market environment. Investments can go up and down in value and you may not get back the full amount invested. RWC Asset Management LLP is the appointed portfolio manager to the Temple Bar Investment Trust Plc and this is issued by RWC Partners Limited. Both firms are authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.


RWS (RWS:AIM) 619p

Gain to date: 15.9%

BHP TOP STOCKS (BHP) £22.71 FOR Gain to date: 14.5% 2021

TOP STOCKS FOR 2021

Original entry point: Buy at 534p, 23 December 2020

Original entry point: Buy at £19.83, 23 December 2020

LANGUAGE TRANSLATION technology firm RWS (RWS:AIM) signaled to the market this month that trading in its core business in the first quarter to the end of December had been ‘excellent’, with pre-tax profit up by double digits. At the same time, in its first two months as part of the group, new acquisition SDL delivered results in line with the previous year and the integration process is well on track, with new management already in place and ‘significant synergies already starting to be realised’. The firm held off from raising its full year forecasts and instead flagged the strength of sterling against the US dollar as providing ‘an unwelcome headwind’, but the strong start suggests there could be broker upgrades in the pipeline. Moreover, given RWS has no net debt, chairman Andrew Brode hinted at more deals to come, calling the firm ‘well-positioned to take advantage of further acquisition opportunities in a rapidly consolidating market segment’. Numis sees the stock as ‘good value’ given the encouraging trading update and especially the potential for higher than expected synergies to come from the SDL acquisition.

AS EXPECTED mining giant BHP (BHP) has felt the benefit of soaring iron ore prices and has decided to reward shareholders with a record $5.1 billion, or $1.01 per share, first half dividend – a 55% year-on-year hike. BHP makes half its money from iron ore currently, and the world’s largest miner has been a big beneficiary of an upswing in prices, which have risen 85% in the past year and peaked at $185 per tonne in December, mainly due to demand from China, the world’s biggest iron ore consumer. To put the impact into context, miners, including rivals like Anglo American (AAL) and Rio Tinto (RIO), can dig iron ore out of the ground profitably at prices around $15 per tonne. In its half-year results to 31 December, BHP reported a 16% jump in underlying attributable profit – the measure used by analysts and investors – to just over $6 billion on revenue of $25.7 billion. Net debt, also closely watched, dropped 7% to $11.8 billion. If iron ore and copper prices – another key commodity for BHP – remain at current levels in the first half of the year analysts think it can cut net debt significantly, which could pave the way for another big shareholder payout.

RWS

800

650

2400

1800

1200

BHP 500

2020 2020

SHARES SAYS:  Keep buying. [IC] 14

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

2021

2021

SHARES SAYS:  There’s increasing talk we’re in for a commodities super-cycle this decade. BHP would be a big beneficiary. [YF]


ADVERTISING FEATURE

SEARCHING FOR INNOVATIVE HEALTHCARE INVESTING? THAT’S WHAT WE DO.

BBH Total Return % (assuming reinvestment of dividends in security) Period ending 31.01.2021 BBH Share Price BBH NAV MSCI World Heathcare Index (GBP)

1 Year +30.2 +33.1 +12.6

3 Years +70.6 +76.0 +44.3

Since launch +102.6 +100.9 +66.9

Source Bloomberg/Bellevue Asset Management

More details are available via the Trust’s prospectus, factsheets and videos that can be found on our website: www.bbhealthcaretrust.com BB Healthcare Trust PLC (the “Company”) is a UK investment trust listed on LSE. Launched 02.12.2016. Past performance is not a guide to future performance. The value of an investment and income from it may fall as well as rise and is not guaranteed. An investor may not get back the original amount invested. This document is for information purposes only and does not constitute an offer or invitation to purchase shares in the Company and has not been prepared in connection with any such offer or invitation. This communication has been prepared by Bellevue Asset Management (UK) Ltd., which is authorised and regulated by the FCA in UK. The views expressed herein do not constitute investment or any other advice and are subject to change.


Moonpig shares: not cheap but a very interesting business We think they are worth buying for the clear growth opportunity and clever techniques to drive sales

S

hares in £1.4 billion company Moonpig (MOON) have flown 21% higher to 423.8p since the online greeting cards retailer joined the stock market on 2 February at 350p. While its valuation is certainly not cheap, we’re inclined to believe the share price has further to rise. Analysts think the company has been overly conservative with earnings guidance in order not to disappoint in its first year as a listed business. Ongoing lockdown conditions

mean people are far more likely to order a card online than bother going to one of the few shops open.

FORECASTS - £m Sales (£m)

Adj PBT (£m)

EPS (p)

PE

2020

173.1

31.8

9

47.1

2021

300.1

55.5

13.7

30.9

2022

284.5

38.1

9

47.1

2023

316.4

53.6

12.6

33.6

Years to April

Source: Peel Hunt, Moonpig, PE based on 423.8p share price

16

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

This habit could stick once lockdown restrictions ease, particularly when people experience the ability to put someone’s name inside a card design, which is nice personalised touch, and not have the added hassle of buying stamps. Being able to do everything from your phone or computer is so much more convenient. While online greeting cards retail is a competitive space, Moonpig is one of the bestknown brands and widespread media coverage of its successful IPO (initial public offering) will work in its favour in terms of further raising brand awareness. CLEVER MOVE We note that Moonpig was only taking orders via its app rather than the website in the run up to Valentine’s Day, citing high demand. This may or may not


be a savvy ploy to get people to download the app so that its brand is front of mind the next time they need to send a card or a gift. Once the app is on a customer’s phone, push notifications act as a powerful way to increase order frequency and average order value through nudges and personalised recommendations. All very clever. Moonpig’s management team, led by chief executive Nickyl Raithatha and finance director Andy MacKinnon and with former WH Smith (SMWH) chief executive Kate Swann in the chair, has sold Moonpig to investors as a technology play rather than as a plain vanilla retailer. The company uses customer data and predictive technology to remind people of key events and suggest add-on gifts. Getting people to buy more than just a card is key to the growth story because gifting is 10 times the size of the cards market. For example, for Valentine’s Day, Moongpig’s website was plastered with bundles such as a card with flowers or a big balloon. Visitors were also being incentivised to set up reminders for future card-giving dates with moneyoff deals. NOT JUST ABOUT THE UK The company trades as Moonpig in the UK and under the Greetz brand in the Netherlands, having made Holland’s market leader its first acquisition in 2019. The web-based business boasts a powerful market position with a 60% share of

Attachment rate of gifts to cards is high in the wider market

90%

>95%

>95%

>95%

72%

16% Moonpig

Total UK card market

Birthdays Valentine’s Father’s Day Day

Mother’s Day

Source: Moonpig data

the UK online greetings cards market. That is four times bigger than the number two player, Funky Pigeon which is owned by WH Smith. Broker Peel Hunt describes Moonpig as ‘a very impressive, ground-breaking business’, with a strong position in an online market that is growing.

‘A very impressive, groundbreaking business, with a strong position in an online market that is growing.’ Peel Hunt

It says approximately 70% of cards are ultimately sent with a present (which is likely to have been bought from another retailer), yet only 16% of Moonpig’s transactions involve an add-on product and only a small proportion of customers come to Moonpig solely for a gift, so there is significant scope to grow this part of the business. ‘Moonpig may have a large share of the online card market, but its share of the cards sent in the UK and Holland can grow. At last count, it had 12 million active customers out of a potential pool of 53 million. Those customers use Moonpig for three of their 23 annual cards: that can rise too,’ it adds, arguing that the group’s customer relationship management and data crunching abilities are ‘game changers’.

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

17


HALLMARKS OF QUALITY In the documents accompanying its stock market debut, Moonpig insisted it is a highly cash generative business due to its high margins, negative working capital profile and relatively low capital expenditure requirements. For the six months to October 2020, revenue grew 135% to £155.9 million, with £120.8 million contributed by the core Moonpig business and the balance by Greetz, where margins have expanded under Moonpig’s ownership. Peel Hunt’s retail experts believe the Moonpig model can be exported internationally too. The shift towards gifting solutions should help the company to grow on the continent, where Europeans tend to send less cards than the Brits. Moonpig already has a small operation in the US too and Peel Hunt says it would not be surprised if this became more material in time, either organically or via acquisitions. For the financial year to April 2021, with a tailwind from the

pandemic, the broker forecasts 75% jump in adjusted pre-tax profit to £55.5 million on £300.1 million of sales. These estimates could prove conservative if, as is likely with brick and mortar stores shut, Moonpig enjoys bumper business around the major card-sending events of Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day. Pre-tax profits of £38.1 million are on the cards for 2022 on £284.5 million of revenues as the boost from lockdowns

SHARES SAYS: Though the high valuation means the company is priced for perfection, Moonpig has a clear growth path as part of a structural shift in its part of the retail sector. Buy at 423.8p.

430 400 370 340

18

normalises. Peel Hunt forecasts a surge back to £53.6 million on £316.4 million of sales in 2023. Based on the broker’s 2023 earnings estimate of 12.6p, Moonpig’s shares trade on 33.6 times earnings. That is similar to what ASOS (ASC:AIM) trades on for the next 12 months’ expected earnings. ‘(Moonpig’s) growth rate, the “category killer” nature, the opportunity to move into the gifting market, and the extremely compelling data on customer retention, make this a highly prized asset, and we would be surprised if the valuation did not ultimately reflect that,’ concludes Peel Hunt.

MOONPIG 1

2

3

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

4

5 FEB

8

9

10

11

12

By James Crux Funds and Investment Trusts Editor


THIS IS AN ADVERTORIAL

Why Japan is well placed to perform in a global recovery Nicholas Price

Fidelity Japan Trust PLC AS THE VACCINE rollout begins in earnest and economic data starts tentatively to improve, positioning for recovery is becoming a priority for many investors. As a cyclical market dependent on global growth, Japan should be well-placed to perform in the post-pandemic environment. It also brings opportunities in long-term growth trends such as digital transformation and environmental efficiency. The Covid-19 pandemic clearly still poses risks, as new variants of the virus and rising infection rates across the globe push governments to reimpose or extend restrictions. However, the gradual roll out of vaccines and continued monetary and fiscal policy stimulus are positive for the global growth outlook and should be supportive of Japanese equities. Within this broadly supportive environment, a number of themes present themselves. Clean energy and environmental efficiency are areas where Japan has competitive companies that can supply solutions globally. Covid-19 has also accelerated trends in e-commerce and digital transformation. As profits recover, companies will prioritise those areas. Both these trends are wellrepresented in the portfolio. However, we are also widening the net and looking for companies with recovery potential in areas such as leisure and travel. As we start to see better performance, there will be an opportunity to pick up companies that are returning to growth. The ESG opportunity High standards of corporate responsibility make good business sense and at Fidelity, ESG (environmental, social and governance) analysis is integral to our investment decisions. However, it’s not just about buying companies

with already high standards. We also look for companies that are implementing real change and improving their governance. This is particularly relevant in the mid/smallcap space where third party coverage is limited and simple disclosure, especially in English, is often limited. When the efforts of these companies are recognised by the market, share prices may rise. Recently, we engaged with a diversified chemicals company that we hold in the trust. The quality of its business and products was not fully reflected in its share price due to ESG-related issues. We discussed this with the management team, who accepted that this stemmed primarily from poor disclosure on chemical safety and carbon emissions, as well as their reluctance to engage with shareholders. The company committed to dealing with these issues in line with best practice, setting medium-term financial targets, producing an integrated report and a detailed ESG data book. It implemented a reduction plan for CO2 emissions and established of a procurement policy that encompasses environmental and human rights issues. This has since been reflected in share price performance. Future growth With the Fidelity Japan Trust PLC, we look for companies with a long runway of growth and competitive advantages in a growing addressable market. With this in mind, fertile hunting grounds include energy efficiency solutions, medical technology, Asian consumption and digital transformation providers. There are also a lot of exciting under-researched mid-cap companies in Japan that are creating new markets. Being on the ground in Japan means that we see these ideas first-hand, meeting with pre-IPO companies to identify the most attractive opportunities. We continue to look for early-stage ideas and nascent disruptors, particularly among fast-growing services and internet-based companies, as well as innovative med-tech names. Japan offers many compelling options to benefit from the building economic recovery.

Important information The value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up so you may get back less than you invest. Investors should note that the views expressed may no longer be current and may have already been acted upon. Changes in currency exchange rates may affect the value of an investment in overseas markets. The shares in this investment trust are listed on the London Stock Exchange and their price is affected by supply and demand. The investment trust can gain additional exposure to the market, known as gearing, potentially increasing volatility. This trust invests more heavily than others in smaller companies, which can carry a higher risk because their share prices may be more volatile than those of larger companies and the securities are often less liquid. This information is not a personal recommendation for any particular investment. If you are unsure about the suitability of an investment you should speak to an authorised financial adviser. The latest annual reports, key information document (KID) and factsheets can be obtained from our website at www.fidelity.co.uk/its or by calling 0800 41 41 10. The full prospectus may also be obtained from Fidelity. Fidelity Investment Trusts are managed by FIL Investments International. Issued by Financial Administration Services Limited, authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Fidelity, Fidelity International, the Fidelity International logo and F symbol are trademarks of FIL Limited. UKM0221/33162/CSO10291/0821.


1 YEAR SINCE THE MARKET CRASH By Ian Conway Senior reporter

What’s changed and are there any bargain stocks left?

D

espite all the upheaval of the past year, anyone glancing at the financial markets today might find it hard to believe investors were in the throes of despair 12 months ago. Following the global markets crash in February 2020, the recovery has been spectacular. The US Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 indices are at all-time highs, Japan’s Nikkei index is at a multi-decade high, China’s Shanghai index is at a multi-year high and the MSCI All Countries World Index is at a record high.

20

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

In the UK the FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 are still in negative territory since February 2020 although the losses aren’t nearly as extreme as they were when the pandemic first took hold. Markets have been fuelled by support from central bank and government stimulus measures, low interest rates and optimism over the pace of economic recovery thanks to the creation of Covid vaccines. Risk appetite is alive and well as shown by the surge in crypto currencies, the volume of investment grade bonds now trading with negative


Change in major indices since 2020 market crash Index

Change

NASDAQ Composite (US)

44.8%

CSI 300 (China)

43.1%

Nikkei 225 (Japan)

29.7%

S&P BSE 100 (India)

28.0%

S&P 500 (US)

16.8%

Hang Seng (Hong Kong)

9.6%

DAX Xetra (Germany)

3.1%

FTSE 250 (UK)

-1.2%

CAC 40 (France)

-4.5%

FTSE 100 (UK)

-8.5%

Source: Sharepad, Google Finance, Shares Date range: 18 Feb 2020 market close to 15 Feb 2021 market close (12 Feb 2021 for US indices, 11 Feb 2021 for CSI 300)

yields (bond yields fall when prices rise), herd behaviour on social networks regarding stocks, the deluge of cash shells to acquire businesses, the warm reception for new stock market listings and the race by private equity firms to deploy their mountains of cash through acquisitions. Later in this article we look for cheap stocks that have still to play catch-up. First, we explore what’s changed in terms of how companies do business and how we manage our money.

STRUCTURAL CHANGES It almost seems as though nothing has changed; in fact, everything has changed. Much of what might be called ‘new’ isn’t new at all – many of the biggest trends to emerge in 2020 had been waiting in the wings for several years, the pandemic just brought them centre stage much earlier than expected. The greatest change has been the shift to remote working (see When will we return to the office - if at all?), which had always existed on the fringe but had never been considered viable on a large scale. The surprise for many business owners was how off-the-shelf technology enabled them to quickly move to remote working without a hitch. Moreover, remote working has brought benefits to many firms including cost savings, and it has improved the work/life balance for their employees. The flip side is that it is bad news for owners of city centre offices, transport companies and anyone who relies on either – or worse, both. Companies with large central offices are mostly

looking to downsize while those which were planning to expand have realised they can increase their staff numbers while staying in the same office and rotating their teams. Those with several smaller regional offices may look to do away with them altogether and concentrate on making the working from home experience more fulfilling for their staff. Bus and rail firms, which will have budgeted for a given level of revenue before the pandemic, now have to go back to the drawing board and rethink their plans, not least for capital spending, given they are likely to see far fewer passengers using their services in the future.

PERSONAL FINANCIAL HABITS HAVE CHANGED The pandemic has brought behavioural changes, too. Ian Mattioli, co-founder and chief executive of wealth manager Mattioli Woods (MTW:AIM), says his firm has found that many people who, prior to last year, thought nothing of spending their disposable income on two or three holidays a year, are now saving the bulk of their surplus wages to give themselves a buffer in case they lose their jobs. Recent announcements by holiday companies such as TUI (TUI) confirm that holidaymakers are being more selective. The ‘return to normal’ has failed to happen so far, with TUI reporting a 44% reduction in summer bookings compared with pre-pandemic (2019) levels, well short of its earlier expectation for a 20% drop.

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

21


WHEN WILL WE RETURN TO THE OFFICE (IF AT ALL)? THE LATEST ALPHAWISE survey from investment bank Morgan Stanley makes sobering reading for those hoping for a reopening of the economy by Easter. According to the bank’s monthly telephone survey of 12,500 European office workers, despite the rollout of vaccines since its previous survey, employees’ expectations of when they can return to work have slipped from April to June. As the survey says, ‘Clearly, this will not only impact office utilisation in 2021, but also leisure and retail property that depends upon the return to normal commuting patterns.’ Across Europe, 73% of office workers have been working remotely compared with half that proportion pre-Covid. Of these, 80% would like to work from home more in the future, with 51% happy to work out of the office one or two days a week, 29% three to four days a week and 14% every day of the week.

Chris Herd, founder and chief executive of remote infrastructure firm Firstbase, says remote work is ‘the biggest workplace revolution in history, and nothing will deliver a higher quality of life increase in the next decade than this’. Herd believes new companies will be ‘remote first’, without the need for a corporate headquarters. Aside from the obvious cost savings, this allows them to hire the best people wherever they are in the world, not just within a certain radius. At the same time, companies which want to retain their staff will have to offer remote working as an option or risk losing them.

22

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

We are also becoming more discerning when it comes to shopping online for fashion. Gone it seems is the habit of picking six dresses for an event and sending five back, with retailers such as ASOS (ASC:AIM) noting a steady decline in the volume of returns throughout the past year.

If we aren’t getting dressed up and going out, or planning several trips to foreign climes, what are we spending our money on? The latest Barclaycard study shows overall UK consumer spending fell 16% between 25 December and 22 January. Spending on essentials was up roughly 4%, with supermarket spending up 17% and online grocery spending up 127%, which is positive news for companies such as Ocado (OCDO). Spending on non-essentials fell almost 25%, with health and beauty sales down 27% and clothing sales down 25%. With restaurants closed, takeaway and delivery sales jumped 33%, the highest growth on record for the category. Total online spending was up 73% on the same period a year earlier and now accounts for a remarkable 55% of all retail sales, a genuine paradigm shift for the retail sector which has struggled to keep up with changing demand. Moreover, most consumers believe they will stick with online shopping once vaccinations are commonplace as they now prefer the experience of ordering via their phone or computer and having their items delivered rather than schlepping to the shops in all weathers.

A SHRINKING HIGH STREET Sadly, the flip side of this shift to online shopping is the high street as we knew it becoming a thing of the past. Footfall in January 2021 was down a staggering 77%, according to the British Retail


Consortium, and the outlook for February is not particularly encouraging. Few chains look to have the right financial strength and proposition to sustain a town centre presence long-term, with the list of likely survivors (among companies whose shares trade on the UK market) more or less measurable in single figures, principally Greggs (GRG), JD Sports (JD.),

600 600

JD Wetherspoon (JDW), Marks & Spencer (MKS), Next (NXT), Primark-owner Associated British Foods (ABF), Sports Direct-owner Fraser (FRAS) and WH Smith (SMWH). And, where previously an empty shop might have been turned into a café, bar or restaurant, the decimation of the hospitality industry means there are few players with the financial wherewithal to step in and take up the space, especially if footfall is permanently reduced. According to the Coffer Peach Business Tracker survey, turnover for the hospitality industry was down 54% last year from £133.5 billion to just £61.7 billion. If anything, the fourth quarter trend was worse than the annual average, down 57% from £33 billion to just £14.3 billion. All of this bodes poorly for commercial property companies for the next few years. Strong retailers will have their pick of the best sites and will likely demand low rents with much of the responsibility for upkeep passed onto the property owners. 21 Feb: Global stock market crash begins

MSCI AC WORLD U$ - PRICE INDEX MSCI AC WORLD U$ - PRICE INDEX

23 Mar: Fed reveals economic support measures, market crash bottoms

550 550

23 Jan: Wuhan quarantined

500 500 450 450 400 400

2020

350 350

700 700 650 650 600 600

17 Jan: Hong Kong stocks start to fall 11 Jan: China reports first known virus death JAN JAN

FEB FEB

APR APR

MSCI AC WORLD U$ - PRICE INDEX MSCI AC WORLD U$ - PRICE INDEX

18 May: Positive trial update on Moderna Coronavirus vaccine

550 550

8 Dec: First person in UK receives Pfizer vaccine

500 500 450 450 400 400 350 350

MAR MAR

2020 2020

9 Nov: Pfizer/BioNTech say their vaccine has 90% efficacy 2021 2021

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

23


STOCK MARKET

WINNERS AND LOSERS When sifting through what worked and what didn’t work over the past year in stock market terms, we have looked at both the broader FTSE 350 sector indices and individual stocks. Best performing FTSE 350 sector indices since 2020 market crash Sector Index

Change

Industrial Metals

52.6%

Industrial Transportation

51.6%

Leisure Goods

50.8%

Mining

31.2%

Industrial Engineering

21.8%

Source: Sharepad, Shares Date range: 18 Feb 2020 market close to 11 Feb 2021 market close

Worst performing FTSE 350 sector indices since 2020 market crash Sector Index

-36.2%

Aerospace & Defence

-34.6%

Oil Equipment, Services & Distribution

-33.9%

Banks Fixed-Line Telecommunications

It won’t be a surprise to investors that companies which were either already largely online or shifted their business model to online were among the biggest winners. The top performing FTSE 350 stock since the start of the Covid sell-off is AO World (AO.), up 307%. The online retailer of unglamorous items such as freezers, microwaves and washing machines became a stock market darling as domestic appliances became hot property during lockdown. Best performing FTSE 350 stocks since 2020 market crash Company

Share price gain

AO World

307%

Indivior

281%

-26.2%

Premier Foods

157%

-20.9%

CMC Markets

156%

Royal Mail

151%

888

139%

Ocado

126%

Ferrexpo

108%

Antofagasta

82%

Gamesys

80%

Source: Sharepad, Shares Date range: 18 Feb 2020 market close to 11 Feb 2021 market close

Unusually, industrial metals, mining, industrial transportation and industrial engineering have been the leaders in terms of performance, even though the global economy took an enormous hit during the pandemic and by most estimates it will take three to five years for world output to return to ‘trend’. On the other hand, considering the devastation wrought on the hospitality industry, it’s somewhat surprising travel and leisure or pubs, restaurants and hotels weren’t among the worst FTSE 350 sector performers. Instead, the worst sectors have been aerospace

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

STOCK-LEVEL ANALYSIS

Change

Oil & Gas Producers

24

and defence, banks, fixed-line telecommunications, oil and gas producers, and oil and gas equipment and services, the last two despite a sharp rally in crude oil prices since the start of 2021.

Source: Sharepad, Shares Date range: 18 Feb 2020 market close to 11 Feb 2021 market close

Spread betting firms like CMC Markets (CMCX) and Plus500 (PLUS) as well as gambling firms like 888 (888) and Flutter (FLTR) posted exceptional gains thanks to a surge in new account openings as those cooped up at home found new ways to entertain themselves by betting. Savvy investors played the strong performance of


Worst performing FTSE 350 stocks since 2020 market crash Company

Share price loss

Hammerson

-79%

Capita

-74%

Petrofac

-68%

International Consolidated Airlines

-65%

TUI

-62%

Rank

-60%

Rolls-Royce

-60%

Cineworld

-58%

SSP

-58%

Carnival

-58%

Source: Sharepad, Shares Date range: 18 Feb 2020 market close to 11 Feb 2021 market close

overseas markets through collective investments, especially those with a US/technology bias, with Baillie Gifford US Growth Trust (USA) and Scottish Mortgage (SMT) clocking up gains of more than 100%.

Asia-focused trusts also found favour with Fidelity China Special Situations (FCSS) almost doubling and JPMorgan Japanese (JFJ) rising by two thirds. Interestingly, less than half the constituents of the FTSE 350 index trade above their February highs today, and a third are still lagging the benchmark with losses of more than 10%. The list of big losers is littered with travel and leisure, aerospace, financial and industrial stocks, along with real estate investment trusts (REITs). Curiously, many of the housebuilders are still heavily in negative territory with losses of 30% or more despite the continued strength of demand in the housing market – as shown by their recent results – and a clutch of technology stocks are also nursing heavy losses which seems counter-intuitive. It is worth noting that since 9 November when Covid-19 vaccines started to be confirmed, recovery plays have been in fashion, with travel and leisure stocks such as Cineworld (CINE) picking up, and more defensives such as Unilever (ULVR) lagging the wider UK indices.

3 STOCKS TO BUY NOW We have chosen three stocks which we think have been overlooked, with varying degrees of risk attached.

THE ‘SAFE’ ONE Beazley (BEZ) 350p Market cap: £2.2 billion 12-month forward PE: 11.7 Shares in Lloyd’s market insurer Beazley (BEZ) are trading 38% below their pre-pandemic levels, which seems to us as though the market is driving with the rear-view mirror. The firm may have posted a $50m loss for last year due to claims for cancelled events and other Covid effects, but this was half the amount analysts were expecting.

What excites us is the 15% increase in renewal rates as the insurance market tightened conditions in response to the pandemic. Chief executive Andrew Horton described himself as ‘very positive about the year ahead’, as having raised capital in May the firm is well placed to capture the strong rate tailwind. With its strong underwriting discipline and focus on capital returns, Beazley can cover the same risks this year with a much greater profit margin which should lead to earnings upgrades and a sharp rerating of the shares. 600 550

BEAZLEY

500 450 400 350 300 250

2020

2021

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

25


THE ‘CHEAP’ ONE Bellway (BWY) £28.84 Market cap: £3.6 billion 12-month forward PE: 9.2 Trailing 12-month price to book value: 1.2 Mid-market housebuilder Bellway (BWY) posted a record build volume for the six months to the end of January, and what it called a robust forward sales book with orders for almost 5,900 new homes or 28% more than the same period a year earlier.

THE ‘RACY’ ONE Micro Focus (MCRO) 466p Market cap: £1.6 billion 12-month forward PE: 4.5 Infrastructure software supplier Micro Focus (MCRO) divides opinion like few other stocks. ‘Cheap for a reason’ is a typical response, which given its debt level and a surprise $2.8 billion writedown of goodwill in the 2020 results doesn’t seem unjustified. The firm began its three-year turnaround plan in January last year, which was unfortunate timing, but if anything, the pandemic has

26

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

It also pointed to full year completions of 9,800 homes, an increase of 30%, and an improvement in its underlying operating profit margin of ‘at least 200 basis points’ (2%) over last year’s 14.5% margin. Given how much brighter the outlook appears, it seems odd that the shares are still some 30% below their February 2020 level. Moreover, the valuation gap between Bellway and the rest of the sector seems abnormally wide. We can only assume that investors are worried the end of Help to Buy and/or the stamp duty holiday will lead to disappointment, yet the valuation offers a healthy margin of safety in our view. 4500 4000

BELLWAY

3500 3000 2500 2000 1500

2020

2021

forced it to grasp the nettle and cut down on unnecessary spending while focusing on key areas of opportunity. The firm’s new guidance is for revenues to stabilise in the 2023 financial year, while its in-house IT infrastructure plan starting this year will generate further operational improvements and efficiencies. For us, with the shares down 40% since last February, it’s a binary bet. Either the firm does what it promised which means the shares rerate, or it keeps disappointing and gets taken over by a private equity firm. This is a high-risk investment and investors should only get involved if they have money they can afford to lose. 900 800 700

MICRO FOCUS

600 500 400 300 200

2020

2021


ADVERTISING FEATURE

A NEW MOOD IN MARKETS:

POSITIONING FOR RECOVERY

The narrow focus of markets in 2020 may have left investors positioned for yesterday’s crisis rather than tomorrow’s recovery, says Thomas Moore, manager of the Aberdeen Standard Equity Income Trust. • A rotation in stock markets is being driven by the prospect of economic recovery as vaccinations allow economies to reopen • Stock markets are likely to move ahead of the economic data • There is a window of opportunity to benefit from low valuations as the wall of worry is set to be climbed In potentially delivering a route out of the pandemic, vaccines have also brought a notably different mood to markets. For much of

2020, investors were narrow in their focus, concentrating on a handful of consumer staples and technology companies that could deliver strong earnings even as economies shut down. However, in recent months investors have started to broaden their horizons. Given our focus on identifying under-appreciated UK income stocks with the potential for stock-specific change, the highlycharged macro environment that prevailed in 2020 was a difficult one for the Aberdeen Standard Equity Income Trust. Style analysis shows that there was general antipathy towards income stocks globally, with UK income stocks performing particularly badly on fears of a nodeal Brexit. However, as vaccines pave the way for economic recovery and an eleventh-hour EU-UK trade deal reduces political

uncertainty, investors have started to appreciate the robust prospects and inherent value in many unloved and unfashionable UK stocks. We believe investors should take note. We are still in the foothills of this rotation and many investors may be unprepared for what is to come. The strong performance of a handful of growth stocks has left global equity markets unbalanced, with many investors reluctant to shift away from the companies that have served them well through the crisis. However, it may be time to switch gears and think about recovery rather than crisis. POSITIONING FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH While there are risks to the vaccine rollout and the potential for resistant mutations of the virus, there are also reasons


ADVERTISING FEATURE

for optimism. For example, we see household finances as a powerful catalyst. For 12 months, many people have curbed their spending: holidays have been cancelled, commuting costs have disappeared and few have felt the need to update their wardrobe. A recent Bank of England survey showed around 28% of households had accumulated additional savings, mostly among wealthier and older people. Household savings ratios are at multi-year highs, hitting 16.9% in September 2020. We expect some of these savings to find their way into the economy once people have a little more certainty about the future. At the same time, governments are likely to continue spending, particularly in the UK. As the architect of Brexit, the incumbent government will be keen to prove its success, which could see lower taxes and deregulation. The EUUK free trade deal is not perfect, but it is a baseline. Subsequent free trade deals are likely to boost sentiment, highlighting that the UK remains open to the world. Gradually, this may start to unwind the Brexit discount that has been placed on the UK market. The UK has undoubtedly been held back by the sector composition of its stock market as global growth was slowing. It has a higher weight in more economically-sensitive areas such as energy and financials. Just as this held the UK market back during a time of uncertainty, it should be supportive as the economy recovers and capital rotates into these unloved areas. CHEAPER GROWTH It is worth noting that many of the companies in our portfolio have been out of favour not because of underlying weakness in their business, but simply because they

were unfashionable. The market has ignored many businesses whose operations have held up superbly well during the crisis. The divergence in valuation multiples within the UK market has increased as investors follow simple rules of thumb that have worked very well during a prolonged period of falling bond yields, but which may come into question should the external environment ever change. The result is that investors could be over-valuing the earnings stream of certain businesses and significantly undervaluing the earnings stream of others. The scale of the valuation opportunity is such that investors can position for recovery without taking on a huge amount of risk. We see many robust companies offering a combination of attractive yield and growth. Our experience tells us that the start of a new cycle offers the greatest opportunities,

as this is when investors are at their most uncertain despite the burgeoning growth that lies ahead. We are particularly excited about financial services companies which have weathered the downturn successfully and now look set to reap the benefits of the up-phase of the cycle. For example, emerging markets fund management group Ashmore turned out to be far more robust than the market anticipated, with a strong balance sheet supporting an attractive dividend and investment in growth. DIVIDENDS Covid-19 had a major impact on UK dividends and this has resulted in our portfolio income slipping back, requiring us to dip into reserves to support the payout to shareholders this year. We still have considerable reserves, but as a newly anointed AIC ‘dividend hero’, we are working hard to restore our portfolio income as soon as we can. Given


ADVERTISING FEATURE

the number of attractive income stocks available, we believe we can do so while remaining consistent in the investment process that we have set out. As well as adding to our holdings in attractively valued resilient income stocks, we are expecting around one fifth of our portfolio to reinstate dividends in 2021. The long period of sluggish

Dividend yield (5)

economic growth and low bond yields has conditioned investors to believe that there is only one formula that works. This has resulted in many well managed companies being left behind. While there are early signs of a shift in tone, we believe there is a very long way to go. Investors need to consider whether they are positioned for the economic

recovery that lies ahead or the crisis that has just happened. Company selected for illustrative purposes only to demonstrate the investment management style described herein and not as an investment recommendation or indication of future performance. Find out more by registering for updates or by following us on Twitter or LinkedIn.

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

3.73

3.72

4.06

5.37

8.17

Past performance is not a guide to future results. Important information Risk factors you should consider prior to investing: • The value of investments and the income from them can fall and investors may get back less than the amount invested. • Past performance is not a guide to future results. • Investment in the Company may not be appropriate for investors who plan to withdraw their money within 5 years. • There is no guarantee that the market price of the Company’s shares will fully reflect their underlying Net Asset Value. • As with all stock exchange investments the value of the Trust shares purchased will immediately fall by the difference between the buying and selling prices, the bid-offer spread. If trading volumes fall, the bid-offer spread can widen. • The Company may borrow to finance further investment (gearing). The use of gearing is likely to lead to volatility in the Net Asset Value (NAV) meaning that any movement in the value of the company’s assets will result in a magnified movement in the NAV. • The Company may accumulate investment positions which represent more than normal trading volumes which may make it difficult to • realise investments and may lead to volatility in the market price of the Company’s shares. • Yields are estimated figures and may fluctuate, there are no guarantees that future dividends will match or exceed historic dividends and

• •

certain investors may be subject to further tax on dividends. The Company may charge expenses to capital which may erode the capital value of the investment. The Alternative Investment Market (AIM) is a flexible, international market that offers small and growing companies the benefits of trading on a world-class public market within a regulatory environment designed specifically for them. AIM is owned and operated by the London Stock Exchange. Companies that trade on AIM may be harder to buy and sell than larger companies and their share prices may move up and down very sharply because they have lower trading volumes and also because of the nature of the companies themselves. In times of economic difficulty, companies listed on AIM could fail altogether and you could lose all your money. The Company invests in the securities of smaller companies which are likely to carry a higher degree of risk than larger companies.

Other important information: Issued by Aberdeen Asset Managers Limited which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority in the United Kingdom. Registered Office: 10 Queen’s Terrace, Aberdeen AB10 1XL. Registered in Scotland No. 108419. An investment trust should be considered only as part of a balanced portfolio. Under no circumstances should this information be considered as an offer or solicitation to deal in investments.


RUSS MOULD

AJ Bell Investment Director

Blame game won’t stop the next Gamestop Why regulation can’t necessarily stop bubbles from forming

T

oday’s (18 February) Congressional hearing in Washington into what happened with shares in Gamestop should make for fascinating listening. A host of luminaries – including Vlad Tenev from Robinhood, Ken Griffin from Citadel, Steve Huffmann from Reddit, high-profile retail trader Keith Gill (‘Roaring Kitty’) and Gabe Plotkin of Melvin Capital, the hedge fund pummelled by Gamestop’s meteoric, if short-lived, surge – will all testify on Capitol Hill. Meanwhile, the American markets’ key regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission, is planning to produce a report to see what lessons can be learned.

400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0

Gamestop appears to have hit the buffers – at least for now Gamestop ($)

EYE OF THE BEHOLDER The tricky bit is defining a bubble. Former US Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan went on the record as saying bubbles could only be spotted after the fact, after they have burst – by which time it was too late. Several current Fed officials, including chair Jay Powell, are now vigorously rebutting arguments that fresh bubbles are sprouting up everywhere, from Gamestop to Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs), to new company flotations and beyond.

Bitcoin keeps barrelling higher

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

Source: Refinitiv data

This column’s suspicion is that tighter regulation will follow – but not yet. History suggests that will only come after a deeper, longer, bear market across equities more generally that inflicts pain on a far greater number of investors and traders than the shenanigans involving Gamestop. That is when the real hunt for scapegoats and the apportionment of blame will begin, with hedge funds probably top of the list – even if, as Edward Chancellor writes in his excellent history of financial 30

speculation Devil Take the Hindmost: ‘Although short-sellers are invariably blamed for the collapse of stock markets, the problem is really caused by long-only buyers during the preceding bull market, who push stocks to unsustainable levels. No government has yet seen fit to ban stock purchases during a stock market bubble.’

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

Bitcoin

60,000 50,000 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

Source: Refinitiv data

One person’s bubble is another’s bull market and profit opportunity (as owners of bitcoin will tell you). One way to judge whether are in a bubble (or not) is to follow the classic cycle of bubbles outlined by Charles P. Kindleberger in his


RUSS MOULD

AJ Bell Investment Director magisterial history of financial mayhem, Manias, Panics and Crashes. The details of each episode may change but human behaviour clearly does not and the running order is consistent. Investors can therefore decide where in this cycle we might be right now. The starting points are cheap credit and the prospect of a fabulous, new investment opportunity that offers the prospect of big gains (anything from tulip bulbs to railroads to Japanese property to technology stocks will do if the mood is right).

1

I nitial price rises then catch the attention of newcomers, as ‘fear of missing out’ (FOMO) starts to gather steam.

2

I nvestment profits go into orbit and fresh money is attracted, often in the form of borrowed cash.

3

Copy-cats and imitators appear and more credit becomes available as asset prices keep rising.

4

T rouble starts. Insiders start to lock in their profits by selling at elevated prices. This leaves the last investors to get in holding the bag. Prices initially correct but then rally as loyal supporters ‘buy on the dips’.

5

new offering goes wrong and the queue A of copy-cat flotations and management teams looking to sell their stock on a secondary basis lengthens. The supply of paper begins to outstrip demand and asset prices fail to reach their previous peaks.

6

7

Then comes a scandal, in the form of a fraud or bankruptcy. Investors realise they have been had and their money has gone. Fear and revulsion replace greed, asset prices collapse as investors scramble to cut their losses and the blame game begins.

8

That takes us back to whether regulation is the only answer. This above potted history of every bubble from Dutch tulips in the 1620s through to American housing in 2007 would suggest not. Every meltdown has prompted regulation of some kind – from Sir John Banham’s Act in 1734 in the UK through to Dodd-Frank Act in 2010 in America – but to no ultimate avail. ACTION REPLAY This is because human behaviour does not change (and the memory of prior disasters ultimately fades). As Warren Buffett once tartly put it: ‘People start being interested in something because it’s going up, not because they understand it, or anything else. But the guy next door, who they know is dumber than they are, is getting rich and they aren’t. And their spouse is saying, can’t you figure it out, too? It is so contagious. It’s a permanent part of the system.’ Everyone will have their own views on whether we are in bubble territory or not and if so, in which asset classes. But if we are in a bubble, then investors face an invidious choice: either to be wrong by taking profits too early or to be wrong by trying to get out too late. How investors go about addressing that challenge will be a matter of personal taste, financial circumstance and risk appetite but industry professionals will generally take the latter option (at least based upon this column’s experiences as an equity analyst at a leading investment bank for 12 years). It is less obvious that you have erred (and less career-threatening) if you go over the cliff with everyone else, instead of standing aside as asset prices surge higher. Plus, even if a forecast of imminent doom is right, no thanks are offered, only blame to the Cassandras who sowed the first seeds of doubt. 18 February 2021 | SHARES |

31


THIS IS AN ADVERTISING PROMOTION

Value matters eventually Nick Brind, co-manager of the Polar Capital Global Financials Trust plc

Trust Highlights • The only UK-listed investment trust focused solely on financials • Historic Yield 3.2%1 • Actively managed and not benchmark-driven • Broad global, multi-cap remit • Managed by a team of 7 sector specialists with over 100 years’ investment experience Financials remains one of the cheapest equity market sectors. Their prices jumped sharply following the positive vaccine news in November, as the sector is one of the biggest beneficiaries of economies opening up. The improving outlook has driven the rally as confidence in the earnings outlook for the sector over the next couple of years has risen sharply. This should not be a surprise. Right now, the sector has discounted a much worse downturn than actually happened, thanks to government and central bank actions to reduce the economic impact of lockdowns and changes in spending patterns. Looking at previous recessions/ 2

market falls, having discounted the bad news financials have outperformed almost immediately, whether it was the failure of LTCM in 1998, the TMT bubble in 2000, Iraq war in 2003, the global financial crisis, the eurozone crisis or the UK referendum in 2016. This time is no different and history suggests there is much further to go. Earnings for the sector are forecast to be up 38.9% in 2021 and 10% in 2022, led by the recovery in the earnings of bank shares as new accounting rules have forced banks to make loan loss provisions much earlier in the cycle than previously. As a result, these provisions were set when the outlook in the middle of 2020 was much cloudier and will prove to be too conservative. The surprise of this downturn was that last year banks’ shares, as illustrated by the chart below, 2

2. Source: Polar Capital and Bloomberg as at 29 January 2021. Past performance is not indicative or a guarantee of future results.

1


THIS IS AN ADVERTISING PROMOTION

underperformed by more than they did in the global financial crisis, when banks failed and confidence in the financial system collapsed. Today, bank balance sheets are strong and they have been part of the solution, providing a conduit for governmentguaranteed lending to support businesses and allowing individuals and businesses to take payment holidays. Regulators are likely to remove all remaining restrictions on banks paying dividends and buybacks this year. US and Asian regulators took a pragmatic approach in allowing banks to continue to pay dividends last year albeit capping the payout levels. In December, the Fed announced banks could restart buybacks, which will be accretive to earnings. Insurance companies are also benefiting from the recovery, on the back of an acceleration in the increase in insurance rates for commercial businesses as losses due to business interruption claims and the cancellation or delay of sporting events such as the Olympics fall away. Asset managers and stock exchanges are also riding the recovery as fees generated from higher turnover from trading or the jump in assets under management from higher equity markets boosts profitability. Against this background, share prices of some growth companies are hitting stratospheric multiples. As interest in stock markets and crypto currencies surges the risks of a repeat of 2000 come to mind – share prices are jumping on little/ no news; companies with little/no revenues have seen multiples on their business that defy logic. Some investors are saying value no longer matters, however value always matters eventually. A basket of global financials purchased on the eve of the financial crisis in May 2007 would have returned 60%+ to today. By comparison, if you had

bought a basket of global technology shares on the eve of the collapse in technology shares in March 2000 you would still be nursing a loss of over 45% over the same time period because your starting valuation was so high – and still have to wait another three years (16 in total) just to get your money back. The financials’ sector, despite the recent bounce, has seen a significant derating in its relative valuation to global equity markets over recent years. Investors rightly focused on growth in recent years risk missing out on the rotation into those areas of the market hit hard by lockdowns which have much more upside. Global financials have risen 55% over the past five years versus UK financials’ rise of only 17.5%. One way to get exposure is via the Polar Capital Global Financials Trust, launched in 2013 to give investors a lower-risk way of getting exposure to the sector. It has around 50% of its portfolio invested in bank shares predominantly in the US and Asia but also Europe and the UK, along with exposure to other subsectors such as insurance, payments and asset managers. Its dividend yield is close to 3%.

Important Information. This document constitutes a financial promotion pursuant to section 21 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 and has been prepared and issued by Polar Capital LLP (“Polar Capital”). Polar Capital is a limited liability partnership with registered number OC314700, which is authorised and regulated by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) and is registered as an investment advisor with the US Securities & Exchange Commission (“SEC”). A list of members is open to inspection at the registered office, 16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD. This document does not constitute, or form part of, any offer or invitation to sell or purchase, or any solicitation of any offer to purchase or subscribe for, any shares in the Company in any jurisdiction nor shall it, or any part of it, or the fact of its distribution, form the basis of or be relied on in connection with or act as any inducement to enter into, any contract therefore. It is for information purposes only and is not designed to contain information material to an investor’s decision to invest in the Company. Polar Capital is not rendering legal or accounting advice through this announcement; viewers should contact their legal and accounting professionals for such information. All opinions and estimates in this announcement constitute the best judgement of Polar Capital as of the date hereof, but are subject to change without notice, and do not necessarily represent the views of Polar Capital. Potential investors should be aware that any investment in the Company is speculative, involves a high degree of risk, and could result in the loss of all or substantially all their investment. Results can be positively or negatively affected by market conditions beyond the control of the Company or any other person. This announcement may include statements that are, or may be deemed to be, “forward-looking statements”. These forward-looking statements include all matters that are not historical facts. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the future. This announcement has not been approved by any competent regulatory or supervisory authority.


FEATURE

Creating a plan to invest cash saved during lockdown 43-year-old Shaheen already pays into a pension and wants to put more money aside

S

haheen has been saving money during lockdown and now has excess cash he wants to put to work in the markets. The 43-year-old already has shares in the banking firm for whom he works through a SAYE (save as you earn) scheme and has additional exposure to the markets through a defined contribution pension, with money going into a mix of UK, US and emerging market stocks and bonds. He has paid off a significant portion of his mortgage, accumulated a rainy-day savings pot worth three months’ salary in an easy-access Cash ISA, and has no significant credit card or bank debt. Shaheen wants to build up a nest egg which could potentially help him towards a targeted retirement age in his late 50s. Being stuck at home in lockdown means he is spending £400 a month less on commuting, gym

membership and meals out. He has put aside 10 months’ worth of these savings since the first lockdown restrictions began in mid-March 2020, adding up to £4,000. He wants to use that money to invest now and find a way to keep squirreling away £250 a month into stocks or funds (on top of his pension contributions)

This is the first part in a regular series in which we will provide an investment clinic based on hypothetical scenarios. By doing so we aim to provide some insights which can help different types of investor from beginners all the way up to experienced market participants.

34

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

once lockdown ends. Shaheen is confident of having this spare cash every month as he intends to cycle to work which not only saves money on train fares but also keeps him fit, meaning he can cancel his gym membership. He has some knowledge of the markets but wouldn’t describe himself as an expert. Shaheen’s goal is to achieve an annual return of at least 6%. IS THAT A REALISTIC GOAL? The first thing to note is that Shaheen is in a good place to start investing more. He’s already putting money into his pension every month with his employer


FEATURE also making contributions. He has a decent level of emergency savings and, even in his best-case scenario, he is still more than 10 years away from retiring which provides some time to absorb any short-term market volatility. With interest rates so low, there is a good case for investing spare cash so that the money can work a bit harder. A 6% return feels realistic, particularly once you factor in dividends. On a total return basis (encompassing capital gains and reinvested income) the FTSE All-World index has delivered an annualised 6.8% over the last 10 years. To shelter these returns from capital gains and income tax it is worth considering a Stocks & Shares ISA. Even having used some of the current year’s ISA allowance in cash, Shaheen still has plenty of headroom to the generous £20,000 annual limit across the different types of ISA. It’s worth noting that he is too old to qualify for a Lifetime ISA. In terms of getting started it might make sense to put his £4,000 lump sum into a Stocks & Shares ISA and to spread it across a variety of investments. Going forward and assuming £250 monthly deposits into his ISA, he might want to invest £500 in a single asset every other month. Dealing fees are often charged at a flat rate so, in percentage terms, the more you are putting in the lower your costs. A typical £10 charge to buy shares in a company, investment trust or exchange-traded fund would equate to 2% of a £500 investment – but a less appealing 4% if investing £250 once a month.

Setting up a direct debit to fund the ISA is also a good idea as it will take the hassle out of remembering to transfer funds. INVESTMENT OPTIONS TO CONSIDER Given his pension includes a diversified mix of global stocks and bonds, Shaheen already has a solid ‘core’ to his investment portfolio. He could therefore consider adding some ‘satellite’ holdings to an ISA which are higher risk in nature. One option is for Shaheen to buy shares in individual companies, with an argument for looking outside the banking sector given he already has exposure through owning shares in his financial services industry employer. To begin with, it might make sense for Shaheen to look at businesses where he is familiar with their products or services as it is important to invest in things you understand. In this situation, it would be worth him

taking the time to read some annual reports to get a clear idea of a company’s performance and prospects before buying their shares. He likes to play games on his Nintendo Switch at home, so Shaheen might want to look at the computer games sector as he should know which games are popular and the companies that make them. One that might appeal is Sumo (SUMO:AIM) which started life as a ‘work for hire’ games developer and has since gone on to develop its own intellectual property. 400

SUMO

300

200

100

2020

2021

Another option for Shaheen is to buy a thematic exchangetraded fund that plays into a 18 February 2021 | SHARES |

35


FEATURE Worldwide (EWI), according to FE Fundinfo data which shows it has generated 607% total return over 10 years. While strong performance over a long timeframe would suggest the people running Edinburgh Worldwide know what they’re doing, it is important to consider that what’s done well in the past isn’t guaranteed to do well in the future. 450

EDINBURGH WORLDWIDE

350

FINANCIAL BENEFITS OF LOCKDOWN LOCKDOWN SAVINGS: Shaheen has saved £400 a month since March 2020 as he hasn’t had to incur costs associated with commuting, gym membership or eating out. He wants to invest that saved money. GOAL ONCE LOCKDOWN ENDS: Save £250 a month by cycling to work and not returning to the gym – and invest that money. specific investment theme. For example, L&G Healthcare Breakthrough ETF (DOCG) would provide Shaheen with exposure to innovation within healthcare, across both developed and emerging markets. It has an in-built charge of 0.5% a year to cover the costs of running the product. 1600

L&G HEALTHCARE BREAKTHROUGH ETF

1300 1000 700 2020

2021

Shaheen would have to pay additional charges on top to his investment provider, such as the 36

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

cost of buying shares in the ETF and potentially ongoing custody fees. The same would apply when making other investments, such as buying shares in individual companies, funds and bonds. A third option for Shaheen is to buy a fund or investment trust which invests globally in smaller companies. While small caps typically come with higher risks there can be more room for growth than with larger, more mature firms. There are five investment trusts in the Association of Investment Companies’ Global Smaller Companies sector. The only one to have a consistent top quartile position for performance over one, three, five and 10 years is Baillie Gifford-run Edinburgh

250 150 2020

2021

The investment trust invests in companies which it believes to offer long-term growth potential. The companies are typically valued at less than $5 billion at time of initial investment, but Edinburgh Worldwide will often hang on to them as they become a lot bigger. That explains why you have some very large companies like Tesla in the portfolio as well as smaller ones like engineer Ricardo (RCDO). DISCLAIMER. This article is based on a fictional situation to provide an example of how someone might approach investing. It is not a personal recommendation. It is important to do your research and understand the risks before investing. By Tom Sieber Deputy Editor


22

OFFICIAL LANGUAGES SPOKEN

HINDUSTAN UNILEVER SELLS

140M UNITS PER DAY MEGACITIES

LARGEST

MILK PRODUCER

22M

PASSENGERS DAILY

7 TAXPAYERS FOR

(FEET) research team searches the world to find companies that make their money from a large number of everyday, repeat, predictable transactions and will benefit from the rise of the consumer in developing economies.

30.5M TESTS

8.1M ACTIVE

LOYALTY CARD MEMBERS

WILL REACH

$2.2TN

121,407 KM

PORTIONS OF MAGGI NOODLES ARE CONSUMED ANNUALLY

The Fundsmith Emerging Equities Trust

CLICKS HAS

CONSUMER SPENDING

OF RAILWAY LINES.

2.5BN

73M

DIABETIC PATIENTS

5.9M KM OF ROADS EVERY 100 VOTES

2 OF THE TOP 10

INTEGRATED DIAGNOSTICS HOLDINGS DID

OF PAINT P.A.

180m

HOUSEHOLDS

OF DRINKS P.A.

1.8BN LITRES

1.3BN PEOPLE 2.5BN BY 2050

108M LITRES

INDIA

ASIAN PAINTS CAN PRODUCE

BRITANNIA PRODUCTS ARE IN MORE THAN

EAST AFRICAN BREWERIES PRODUCE

DR LAL PATHLABS PROCESSED MORE THAN 30M SAMPLES IN 2018

EDITA SELLS

2.6BN SNACKS A YEAR

AFRICA

HAJMOLA TABLETS PER DAY

54 COUNTRIES

AGE 19

26M DABUR

RATE 2%

INDIANS CONSUME

GROWTH

MEDIAN

IN 2019-20

POPULATION

OF FROM CONSUMERS

>100M TESTS

800M NIGERIANS BY 2100

45% GROWTH

THYROCARE PERFORMED

BY 2030

Prospective investors are strongly advised to take their own legal, investment and tax advice from independent and suitably qualified advisers. The value of investments may go up as well as down and be affected by changes in exchange rates. Past performance is not a guide to future performance.

% Total Return

Fundsmith LLP (“Fundsmith”) is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and only acts for the funds to whom it provides regulated investment management and transaction arrangement services. Fundsmith does not act for or advise potential investors in connection with acquiring shares in Fundsmith Emerging Equities Trust plc and will not

12 months ending January

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

Fundsmith Emerging Equities Trust

+29.5

-9.3

-3.6

+20.6

+17.4

AIC Global Emerging Markets Sector

+12.0

0.0

-7.2

+19.8

+34.8

be responsible to potential investors for providing them with protections afforded to clients of Fundsmith.

www.feetplc.co.uk

Source: Financial Express Analytics

Available through your stockbroker

Fundsmith LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales with number OC354233. Its registered office address is 33 Cavendish Square, London, W1G 0PW


Funds, investment trusts and ETFs that pay dividends every month Weighing up options for people in retirement as they seek ways to pay monthly bills

H

aving worked hard for decades and squirrelled away money for later life, once in retirement individuals need to find a way of generating an income to replace the money that used to come from pay packets. The state pension is a useful source of income but for many it isn’t enough to pay the bills. That puts a lot of emphasis on investments being a key source of cash to cover the cost of heating, electricity, council tax and so on. Traditionally funds, stocks and bonds pay dividends or coupon payments once every three or six months. However, funds are increasingly speeding up their payment frequency to meet demand from retired individuals who want a monthly inflow of cash to help fund their monthly outgoings. 60 FUNDS ON OFFER According to data from FE Analytics, there are currently around 60 funds available to UK retail investors which pay, or at least in the year before the pandemic paid, a monthly dividend. Most of the highest yielding funds are what’s called

38

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

INCOME FINDER SERVICE To help people find some dividend dates and see how of the best dividend-payers out much income they could there and organise payments receive over a year. into a smooth monthly This allows investors to schedule, investment trust customise their investment organization the Association trust portfolio to smooth of Investment Companies monthly income over the (AIC) has developed something year, ensuring there are no called the Income Finder. periods without dividend It enables investors to create payments, or shape income to a virtual portfolio of incomemeet their needs. paying investment trusts, For more information on also known as investment this, head to theaic.co.uk/ companies, track their income-finder. ‘enhanced income’ funds. These funds normally pay a slightly higher yield than a standard income fund because they sell options on some of their holdings. This gives the purchaser the right, but not an obligation, to buy a stock from the fund at a pre-determined ‘strike’ price on a specific future date. For this service, the fund receives a premium regardless

of whether the option is exercised or not. If the stock’s price does not hit the strike price by the time the contract expires the fund keeps the premium, which is distributed to investors as part of the overall dividend which also includes some or all of the natural income from the portfolio. If the strike price is reached the fund keeps the premium, but it must pay any additional


increase in the stock’s value over and above the strike price to the purchaser. That means the fund’s upside is limited – hence the investor is giving up potential gains in exchange for a higher dividend.

Other than that, monthly dividend-paying funds mostly feature in three main categories – bonds, property and multiasset funds. For this article, we’re going to focus on funds that pay a decent

3% yield or above. We take a look at monthly dividend paying funds, investment trusts and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in each asset class and discuss the things you need to know, plus we suggest some funds to buy.

BONDS MOST BOND FUNDS that offer a monthly dividend tend to be ones that invest in high yield bonds, which are bonds rated below investment grade (bonds that are considered to have a lower risk of default), though there are some like Baillie Gifford Strategic Bond (0594774) which invest in both investment grade and high yield. A non-investment grade rating is important as it suggests there is a greater chance of an issuer’s default, when the company does not pay the coupon/interest due on a bond or the principal amount due at maturity in a timely manner. Consequently, non-investment grade debt issuers must pay a higher interest rate – and in some cases they must make investor-friendly structural features to the bond agreement – to compensate for bondholder risk, and to attract the interest of institutional investors. High yield corporate bonds are invariably risker than others like UK government bonds, also known as gilts, for example, but in the bond market it’s the classic case of the higher the risk, the higher the reward. Plus, most of the bonds in the majority of respectable high yield bonds funds come from large, well-known companies

Monthly dividend paying bond funds Name

2020 Yield

Type

Pimco US High Yield Corporate Bond

5.26%

ETF

BNY Mellon Global High Yield Bond

4.61%

Fund

Vanguard USD Emerging Markets Government Bond

4.50%

ETF

JPM USD Emerging Markets Sovereign Bond

4.30%

ETF

iShares JP Morgan USD EM Bond

4.06%

ETF

Threadneedle High Yield Bond

3.79%

Fund

Fidelity Global High Yield

3.70%

Fund

Baillie Gifford Strategic Bond

3.42%

Fund

Royal London Corporate Bond Monthly Income Trust

3.34%

Fund

Vanguard USD Corporate Bond

3.03%

ETF

Source: FE Fundinfo

with strong balance sheets, so while there is higher risk, it’s not exactly like dabbling in cryptocurrencies. Take monthly dividend payer Threadneedle High Yield Bond Fund (B7SGDT8) as an example. The top five bonds it holds come from Japanese tech investment giant Softbank, carmaker Fiat Chrysler, French telecoms company Altice (the second

biggest in France behind Orange), Netflix and energy supplier EDF. Altice is the smallest company among that list, yet still has a market value of over £7 billion. SHARES’ TOP PICKS BAILLIE GIFFORD STRATEGIC BOND (0594774) The Baillie Gifford Strategic Bond fund stands out as a top pick for someone looking for monthly

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

39


income from a bond fund. It has a good track record of paying decent dividends with historic yields ranging between 3% and 3.5% over the past five years, while it also offers potential for good capital growth ahead of inflation with a five-year annualised return of 6.95%. It is also a lot cheaper than many other bond funds with an ongoing charge of 0.52% a year. The fund’s stated aim is to produce monthly income, though opportunities for

capital growth are also sought subject to prevailing market conditions. Top holdings include bonds from Netflix, National Grid (NG.), Virgin Media and Time Warner Cable. It’s worth noting that yields are currently very low across the bond market and there is no guarantee that you’ll get 3% yield in the near-term. VANGUARD USD CORPORATE BOND ETF (VUCP) There aren’t many ETFs that pay a monthly dividend, but one

which does in the bond space is Vanguard USD Corporate Bond ETF (VUCP). ETFs track the performance of a basket of assets, so in this case a basket of bonds. They are typically lower cost than an actively managed fund. The Vanguard ETF tracks the performance of 5,690 bonds, yielded just over 3% in 2020, and offers the potential for capital growth as evident by its three-year annualised total return of 7.13%. It charges 0.09% a year.

PROPERTY FUNDS AND INVESTMENT trusts can give investors access to a wide range of properties across different sectors and potentially geographies. In theory they should be able to rely on rental income from these properties and potentially benefit from any capital appreciation, which should translate into solid investment returns. It’s important to be aware however that many open-ended property funds have suspended dealing in times of difficulty in the past, meaning investors have been unable to withdraw their money. This happened most notably straight after the Brexit vote and then more recently during the market sell-off in March as the UK went into lockdown, with funds unable to accurately value their underlying properties in fast-moving markets. Investment trusts are often seen as a better vehicle for less liquid assets like property, which 40

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

Monthly dividend paying property funds Name

2020 Yield

Type

Aegon Property Income

5.23%

Fund

Ediston Property Investment Company

4.60%

Investment trust

BMO Commercial Property Trust

3.37%

Investment trust

Royal London Corporate Bond Monthly Income Trust

3.34%

Fund

Vanguard USD Corporate Bond

3.03%

ETF

Source: FE Fundinfo

are harder to buy and sell in short order, because they are listed on the stock market and the fund managers don’t have to factor in redemptions to how they invest. However, they will typically trade at a discount to net asset value at times of stress. A lot of property funds, particularly ones paying monthly dividends, have big exposure to commercial property. There is a debate whether investing in commercial property is still a viable option and whether it can be relied upon for income in the same

way as before, given the shift to online shopping and working from home. PROS AND CONS A good example is FTSE 250 investment trust BMO Commercial Property Trust (BCPT) which for a long time paid 0.5p per share dividend every month but had to stop payments for a period amid the height of the pandemic. Dividends restarted in August at the lower rate of 0.25p per month and they’ve been paid every month since. Importantly, dividends are now starting to go


up – rising 40% in December to 0.35p. On an annualised basis that equates to a 5.9% yield based on a share price of 70.7p. Although uncertainty remains regarding the impact of continued lockdown restrictions on the trust’s portfolio and tenants, it expects to continue paying dividends at this rate for the foreseeable future.

‘BMO Commercial Property’s 0.5% increase in net asset for the three months to December is a positive step for the fund, following NAV declines in each of the first three quarters of 2020,’ says the investment trust team at Numis. ‘The modest capital increase in portfolio value masks the continued divergence in

160 140 120 100 80

BMO Commercial Property Trust

60 40

2018

2019

2020

performance of underlying sub-sectors in the portfolio with industrial and logistics assets performing strongly in sharp contrast to the retail assets as well as alternative assets exposed to the leisure sector.’ Investors need to weigh up whether a 5.9% yield is a good enough reward for risks around rent collection, particularly as the backdrop for some of its tenants remains unfavourable. This is very important – if you’re relying on your pension or ISA to provide income in retirement, you must think very carefully about the risks you are taking.

MULTI-ASSET FUNDS IF THE PROPERTY space currently seems like too much of a headache, more comfort could be found in multi-asset investments. Multi-asset funds and trusts are those that invest in a range of different things, most commonly stocks, bonds and other assets like property or commodities like gold. They have been growing in popularity for a while as

investors seek a one-stop shop for their money, with the funds having the freedom to invest wherever they see fit to meet their objectives. A lot of funds in this sector have generally held up well following the March sell-off, though the diversification they provide while helping limit the downside, also means returns aren’t as strong when markets are rising.

Monthly dividend paying multi-asset funds Name

2020 Yield

Type

Aviva Investors Multi Strategy Target Income

4.31%

Fund

Premier Miton Cautious Monthly Income

4.31%

Fund

FP Russell Investments Multi Asset Income

3.95%

Fund

Fidelity Multi Asset Income & Growth

3.87%

Fund

Fidelity Multi Asset Balanced Income

3.83%

Fund

Fidelity Multi Asset Income

3.70%

Fund

TB Wise Multi-Asset Income

3.48%

Fund

Baillie Gifford Multi Asset Income

3.45%

Fund

Source: FE Fundinfo

SHARES’ TOP PICK PREMIER MITON CAUTIOUS MONTHLY INCOME (B79QBF9) Premier Miton Cautious Monthly Income invests across the major asset classes including company shares, government bonds, corporate bonds and gold, together with a very small amount in cash and property. It has a decent track record of dividend payments and capital growth. It has a historic yield of 4.3% based on payments from 2020 and has delivered a five-year annualised return of 6.83%. It has a reasonable ongoing cost of 0.81% a year. The fund distributes income on a monthly basis with 11 equal payments and whatever’s left in the pot at the end of the year. By Yoosof Farah Reporter

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

41


How will changes to the pension age impact me? The age at which you can access your retirement savings is set to move up to 57 I am 45 years old and currently have a SIPP worth around £130,000. Will I be able to access this at age 55 or will I have to wait until I’m 57? Andy Tom Selby AJ Bell Senior Analyst says:

Under current UK retirement rules, usually people can access their pension from age 55. When the pension freedoms rules were first announced back in 2014, the Government said this age – the ‘normal minimum pension age’ – would rise to 57 from 2028, alongside the increase in the state pension age to 67. At the time, ‘the Government said this was in order to reflect trends in longevity and to encourage individuals to remain in work and to build sufficient savings for retirement’. In the future the intention is for the normal minimum pension age to remain ten years below the state pension age. WORKING THROUGH THE DETAILS The Government is now working through details of how the increase in the normal minimum pension age to 57, scheduled for 6 April 2028, will be applied. It has confirmed people in 42

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

the armed forces, firefighters and police will be exempt from the rise and so will still be able to access their pension from an earlier age. People in schemes which contain specific provisions allowing them to access their pension before age 57 will also be able to retain their lower normal minimum pension age. This protection is expected to cover both existing and future benefits in the scheme. However, for pensions without such provisions and new pensions set up from 12 February 2021 the scheduled increase in the normal minimum pension age to 57 is expected to apply. In your case, assuming your current scheme doesn’t give you ‘the right’ to take your benefits from age 55, then it is likely the first point you will be able to access your SIPP will be age 57 (although it’s important to note these proposals are subject to consultation). While this increase in the normal minimum pension age may come as a blow to some people, it is important to remember that just because you can access your pension doesn’t mean you should. It’s worth bearing in mind that someone in their mid-50s might have another 35 years or more to live. Anyone accessing their fund

this early therefore needs to think carefully about the sustainability of any withdrawals and the impact they might have on their lifestyle as they grow older. Finally, if you have a defined benefit (DB) pension the age at which you can take an income will be determined by the ‘normal pension age’ in your scheme rules. You may, if the scheme rules allow, also be able to access your pension earlier than this at a reduced rate.

DO YOU HAVE A QUESTION ON RETIREMENT ISSUES? Send an email to editorial@sharesmagazine.co.uk with the words ‘Retirement question’ in the subject line. We’ll do our best to respond in a future edition of Shares. Please note, we only provide information and we do not provide financial advice. If you’re unsure please consult a suitably qualified financial adviser. We cannot comment on individual investment portfolios.


Are annuities still relevant to investors and how much could you get? The idea of a guaranteed income for life will appeal to a lot of people

I

n 2015, sweeping reforms gave people over 55 unlimited access to their pension schemes for the first time, and prompted Steve Webb, the pensions minister at the time, to suggest pensioners could blow their cash on Lamborghinis if they wanted. There hasn’t been a noticeable proliferation of supercars on the streets of retirement havens like Eastbourne, but there has been a significant shift in how people draw on their pensions. In particular, sales of pension annuities, previously the most common way to draw on a pension, have fallen off a cliff. WHAT IS AN ANNUITY? Prior to 2015, the main way you would draw on your pension was by buying an annuity. In exchange for the lump sum you had built up in your pension, insurers would pay you a set amount every year for life. Insurers combine investments in fixed interest products with their expertise of mortality trends, to calculate how much to pay out to members, plus a little profit for themselves. WHY ARE ANNUITIES NO LONGER POPULAR? It’s probably fair to say that even in their heyday, pension

In places like Eastbourne, there has been a significant shift in how people draw on their pensions

annuities weren’t ‘popular’ as such. People bought them reluctantly, mainly because the alternatives were expensive or complicated, or both. Many people objected to the fact that if they die only a few months or years after taking out an annuity, all the money they have spent their life building up is gone, at least as far as they and their beneficiaries are concerned. It is a fair point. However, pension savers probably failed to fully appreciate the flip side of the coin, that if they were still going strong at age 100, their annuity would still be providing them with a regular income. When the pension rules changed in 2015, the stage was set for annuities to take a back seat, as people simply drew their pension as cash, or invested it

and drew an income from bonds and shares instead. Low interest rates have also made annuities look unattractive. Insurance companies invest most of the money they get from selling annuities into government and corporate bonds, and these provide the returns annuity members effectively share. As interest rates have sunk, so have the yields on these bonds and consequently so have annuity rates. HOW MUCH COULD I GET? A standard annuity for a 65-yearold will now offer you an annual income of around 4.5%, so for each £100,000 you provide to an annuity company, they will provide you with an income stream of £4,500 every year, for the rest of your life. 18 February 2021 | SHARES |

43


That compares with a rate of around 7% before the global financial crisis of 2007/2008 and the introduction of ‘emergency’ interest rates, which were, remarkably, higher than they are today. If you compare this with an investment portfolio, it’s easy to see why people are taking advantage of the new pension rules which let people aged 55 and over access their defined contribution or money purchase pension pot in whatever way they want. An equity income portfolio will probably deliver a yield somewhere in the region of 4%, though unlike an annuity, investment income is variable, and will go down at some points such as we saw in early 2020. But unlike an annuity, you also keep hold of your capital, and over time, you would expect the dividends in your portfolio to grow with company earnings. SHOULD I BUY AN ANNUITY? At the moment buying an annuity with your pension means locking into low interest rates, but there are some circumstances in which you might wish to do it. One thing an annuity does offer is certainty. It might not 44

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

pay out a king’s ransom every year, but what it does provide is guaranteed for the rest of your life. You do need to be wary of the effects of inflation. If you opt for a level annuity with a fixed payment every year, rising prices will gradually eat into its buying power, and because an annuity can run for 20 or 30 years, possibly more, that effect can be extremely potent. You can buy an annuity which pays out an inflation-linked income, but this will start at a lower level. For example, currently a 65-year-old could expect about 2.8% from an annuity that rises each year in line with the RPI measure of inflation, compared to 4.5% from one which simply pays a level amount for good. You might also consider buying an annuity if you’ve got health issues. Some insurers offer enhanced annuities, which provide higher levels of income for those who have certain health problems that are likely to reduce their life expectancy. These don’t have to be life threatening conditions; you can apply for an enhanced annuity if you have high blood pressure, diabetes, or are a regular smoker. An insurance company might give

an uplift to your annuity income of 10%, maybe more, depending on your circumstances. IS IT WORTH SHOPPING AROUND? If you do decide to buy an annuity, make sure you shop around for the best rate. As with many insurance products, the path of least resistance is likely to be the costliest, so don’t simply accept the first annuity you’re offered by your pension provider. After all, this is a one-off transaction which will affect you for the rest of your life, so it’s much more important than shopping around for car or home insurance. Also bear in mind that you don’t have to choose between an annuity and investing your pension to provide an income, you can split your pension pot and do a bit both. By mixing and matching, you can secure a base level of income using an annuity and invest the rest to hopefully provide a variable stream of dividends that should hopefully grow in the long term. By Laith Khalaf Financial Analyst


02 2021 MAR

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FIRST-TIME INVESTOR

More tricks and tips for analysing company financial statements What you need to know about the balance sheet and cash conversion

T

he best way to test the theory around the analysis of company accounts is to put that theory into practice using a real-world example. In the second part of our in-depth examination of food producer Cranswick (CWK) we look at the strength of its finances and how effectively it turns revenue into cash flow. We then examine the factors which determine how much money investors might expect to make if historical growth trends are maintained. BALANCE SHEET STRENGTH As a reminder there are two types of financial risk that investors should monitor closely, liquidity and solvency. Liquidity risk refers to short term financing of day to day operations while solvency risk is more about long term viability. Looking first at liquidity risk, the tables show that Cranswick’s current assets easily cover current liabilities, indicating a current ratio of 1.7 times. The more stringent quick ratio, showing the company’s ability to pay its current liabilities without needing to sell inventory, indicates it has the necessary short-term cash and equivalents

46

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

with a ratio of 1. In addition, Cranswick has a £200 million unsecured credit facility with £100 million of headroom which runs until November 2023. Banks always prefer to lend against collateral (assets) to protect themselves against potential loss. So, when you see situations where banks are willing to provide substantial amounts of unsecured loans you can be assured that the bank isn’t worried about the creditworthiness of the company. Looking at the solvency risk, the tables show that Cranswick has a low debt to equity ratio of 27% (debt of £168 million and equity of £615 million). Equity finances 62% of the total assets of the business,

which signals a healthy position. We have highlighted before that accounts only provide a snap-shot of the business and therefore looking at historical trends is more informative. In this light, Cranswick has historically run its business with low financial gearing. Net debt increased in 2020 as a result of one-off items; the company recognized lease liabilities of £66 million under new accounting rules; it acquired Continental foods supplier Katsouris Brothers for £69 million; the company also invested heavily in its infrastructure and added £97 million to the asset base. Cranswick generated £155.3 million of EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes,


FIRST-TIME INVESTOR depreciation, and amortisation) in 2020 while net debt was £147 million, resulting in a net debt to EBITDA ratio of 0.95 times. This a low leverage ratio and not a concern for lenders or shareholders. Ratios under three are considered investment grade which means the loans are unlikely to go bad. The company has a defined pension scheme which has a small £7 million surplus, which means there is no need to adjust the net debt figure. CASH FLOW MANAGEMENT The long-term trend in cash management shows the company has been taking

longer to convert inventory into cash, from 20 days to 30 days. It has also taken longer to collect receivables (outstanding invoices) which have increased from 34 days to 44 days. At the same time payment terms to suppliers has remained stable around 28 days. This means the cash conversion cycle has widened out and working capital as a proportion of revenue has doubled to 12% (£194 million). One possible explanation is that supermarkets, which represent the largest channel for Cranswick have been leveraging their scale advantage and pricing power to delay payments.

SHAREHOLDER RETURNS ARE LINKED TO PROFITS GROWTH As a reminder, shareholder returns are comprised of dividends and capital gains (rising share prices). Capital gains are driven by future profit and cash flow. This means over long periods share prices follow profits. Over the last 50 years earnings per share for the UK stock market have grown by roughly 6% a year. Investors can easily get access to this profit growth by purchasing a tracker or exchange traded fund (ETF) very cheaply. Therefore, for Cranswick to make sense as a long term

Cranswick cash management analysis 2012 Revenues (£m) Cost of Goods Sold (£m) Receivables (£m) A Inventories (£m) B Payables (£m) C

2015

2020

821 719 76 39 63

1,003 879 104 60 82

1,667 1,446 200 117 123

Days Sales Receivables (Days) Days Sales Inventory (Days) Day Sales payables (Days) Cash Conversion (Days) Inventory Turnover (Times)

34 20 28 26 19

38 25 30 33 15

44 30 27 46 12

Receivables/ Sales Inventory/Sales Payables/ Sales

9% 8% 5%

10% 8% 6%

12% 7% 7%

Working Capital (£m) (A+B-C) % of Sales

52 6%

82 8%

194 12%

Source: Refinitv, Stockopedia

18 February 2021 | SHARES |

47


FIRST-TIME INVESTOR Cranswick balance sheet analysis £m Fixed Assets Plant and Machinery

426

Intangibles

207

Current Assets Inventories

117

Accounts receivable

200

Cash

21.5

Other

25

Total Assets (A)

996.5

Long Term debts (Liabilities )

168

Current Liabilities

123

Other

91

Total Liabilities (B)

382

Shareholders' Equity (A-B)

614.5

Total Liabilities+Equity

996.5

Source: Stockopedia, Refinitiv

investment we should expect its earnings to grow faster than the market’s. BEING ROUGHLY RIGHT As Warren Buffett said, it’s better to be roughly right rather than precisely wrong. Because the future is unknowable, it is better trying to figure out what is probable rather than making an explicit forecast. As we highlighted last week, Cranswick has grown pre-tax profit at a CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 17% a year and dividends at 10% a year over the last 30 years. However, over the last 10 years the rate of growth has slowed to 8.9% a year. As companies get larger, their growth rate tends to fall. According to Sharepad data, analysts expect pre-tax profit 48

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

growth of 25% over the next three years which equates to a CAGR of 7.7% a year. Dividends are expected to grow 7.2% a year. On balance, the evidence suggests that Cranswick is capable of growing earnings faster than the market. As a proxy for calculating future total return we add profit growth to the dividend yield (7.7%+1.97%) which gives a value of 9.7%. Remember things may play out very differently in the future for a variety of reasons that we failed to predict. CAVEATS We are making an explicit assumption that the multiple which investors are willing to pay for future profits remains roughly unchanged. Predicting future multiples is fraught with difficulty

RATIO ANALYSIS Solvency Ratios Debt to Assets

17%

Debt to Tangible Assets

21%

Debt to Equity

27%

Equity to Total Assets

62%

Liquidity Ratios Current Ratio

1.7

Quick Ratio (Acid Test)

1.0

Source: Stockopedia, Refinitiv

and is unknowable. In this context it is wise to remember Isaac Newton’s famous quote, ‘I can calculate the movement of stars, but not the madness of men’. In February 2021 Cranswick shares traded on 18.4 times next year’s earnings according to Stockopedia data, which was at the lower end of the range over the previous five years. (High 28.9, low 16.6) This at least provides some comfort that the rating is nearer the bottom end of the range rather than the top. Each investor must weigh their individual risk appetite against the potential rewards on offer before coming to a decision. Lastly, remember that building a diversified portfolio is just as important as single stock analysis. By Martin Gamble Senior Reporter


WEBINAR

WATCH RECENT PRESENTATION WEBINARS Destiny Pharma (DEST) – Neil Clark, CEO Destiny Pharma is a clinical stage biotechnology company. It is engaged in the development of new anti-microbial drugs to address the growing and unmet demand for prophylaxis and treatment of life-threatening drug-resistant bacteria.

Anexo Group (ANX) – Nick Dashwood Brown, Head of Investor Relations Anexo Group (ANX) is a specialist integrated credit hire and legal services group focused on providing replacement vehicles to consumers who have been involved in a non-fault accident.

Strix Group (KETL) – Mark Bartlett, CEO Strix Group (KETL) is a designer, manufacturer and supplier of kettle safety controls and other complementary water temperature management components involving water heating and temperature control, steam management and water filtration.

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INDEX Main Market

Next

23 24

888

24

Plus500

Anglo American

14

Restaurant Group

AO World

24

Ricardo

36

Associated British Foods

23

Rio Tinto

14

Beazley

25

Bellway

26

BHP

14

BP

7

6

RIT Capital

7

Royal Dutch Shell

7

SSP

6

Unilever

25

WH Smith

17, 23

Cineworld

25

CMC Markets

24

Cranswick

46

Croda International

10

Begbies Traynor

3

Elementis

10

FRP Advisory

3

Flutter

24

Helios Underwriting

12

Frasers

23

RWS

14

Greggs

23

Sumo

35

JD Sports

23

JD Wetherspoon

6, 23

AIM

Micro Focus Mitchells and Butlers Moonpig

6 26 6 16

Baillie Gifford Strategic Bond

39

Premier Miton Cautious Monthly Income

41

Threadneedle High Yield Bond

39

Coupang

7

Digital 9 Infrastructure

9

Investment Trusts Baillie Gifford US Growth Trust

25

BMO Commercial Property Trust

40

Cordiant Digital Infrastructure

National Grid

40

Full year results 19 February: NatWest, Segro, TBC Bank. 22 February: BATM Advanced Communications, RTC. 23 February: Conduit Holdings, Croda International, HSBC, InterContinental Hotels. 24 February: Lloyds, Petrofac, William Hill. 25 February: Anglo American, BAE Systems, Centrica, Derwent London, Drax, Evraz, Grafton, Hikma Pharmaceuticals, Howden Joinery, Impax Environmental Markets, Inchcape, KAZ Minerals, John Menzies, Mondi, Morgan Sindall, National Express, Serco, Spectris, St James’s Place, Standard Chartered, Vistry.

Half year results 22 February: Dechra Pharmaceuticals, Finsbury Food, Tristel. 23 February: Clinigen, Diurnal, McBride, Springfield Properties. 24 February: Haydale Graphene Industries, Netcall, Town Centre Securities. 25 February: Cap-XX, dotDigital, Genus, Ricardo.

Funds

IPO coming soon Marston's

KEY ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER THE NEXT WEEK

9

Edinburgh Worldwide

36

Fidelity China Special Situations

25

JP Morgan Japanese

25

Scottish Mortgage

25

Trading statements 22 February: Associated British Foods. WHO WE ARE Daniel Coatsworth @Dan_Coatsworth FUNDS AND INVESTMENT TRUSTS EDITOR:

James Crux @SharesMagJames

Vanguard USD Corporate Bond ETF

50

| SHARES | 18 February 2021

36 40

NEWS EDITOR:

Tom Sieber @SharesMagTom

Steven Frazer @SharesMagSteve

SENIOR REPORTERS:

REPORTER:

Yoosof Farah @YoosofShares

Martin Gamble @Chilligg Ian Conway @SharesMagIan

ADVERTISING Senior Sales Executive Nick Frankland 020 7378 4592 nick.frankland@sharesmagazine.co.uk

CONTRIBUTORS

Laith Khalaf Russ Mould Tom Selby

PRODUCTION Head of Design Darren Rapley

Designer Rebecca Bodi

CONTACT US: support@sharesmagazine.co.uk

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All chart data sourced by Refinitiv unless otherwise stated

Repro­duction in whole or part is not permitted without written permission from the editor.

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