Trustnet Magazine 57 December 2019 | Page 22

Your portfolio Watch this clip from the latest episode of Trust TV, featuring Alex Barr, Fund Manager of Henderson Alternative Strategies Trust. Alex discusses the Trust’s investment’s objective and explains the purpose of the Trust’s alternative strategies mandate. These are the views of the author at the time of publication and may differ from the views of other individuals/teams at Janus Henderson Investors. Any securities, funds, sectors and indices mentioned within this article do not constitute or form part of any offer or solicitation to buy or sell them. Past performance is not a guide to future performance. The value of an investment and the income from it can fall as well as rise and you may not get back the amount originally invested. The information in this article does not qualify as an investment recommendation. For promotional purposes. structure, forced him to ditch his large-cap holdings and left him stranded in stocks he couldn’t sell. While his closed-ended fund, Woodford Patient Capital, is down by about 70 per cent since launch, this can be attributed to a 50 per cent discount and poor stock-picking, rather than structural problems with the vehicle. James Carthew, head of investment company research at Marten & Co, blames the poor performance of venture capital on the demise of Woodford, with only two of eight VCT sectors posting gains in 2019. “The whole private equity market has plunged and there is no good reason for that, other than a general fear around illiquidity driven by the press on Woodford,” he explains. “Most investors now seem to think illiquidity is bad, but it’s fine as long as you are doing it inside a closed- ended structure and doing it well.” The fate of the Patient Capital Trust now lies in the hands of Schroders, and while its prospects look uncertain, a rumoured buy-out of biotechnology stocks by WG Partners offers some hope. America first At a global level, one issue that continued to dominate the world of investment trusts in 2019 was 22 / 23 “Most investors now seem to think illiquidity is bad, but it’s fine as long as you are doing it inside a closed-ended structure and doing it well” the ongoing trade war between the world’s two biggest economies. “Uncertainty has, once again, been the big story this year and that has been led by disintegrating relations between the US and China,” says Carthew. Fallout from the dispute – which has seen huge tariffs placed on imports between the two countries PERFORMANCE OF REGIONAL SECTORS IN 2019 Sector  Returns (%) IT North America  23.67 IT Japan  21.57 IT Europe  20.45 IT Global  19.73 IT UK All Companies  16.93 IT Asia Pacific  8.42 Source: FE Analytics trustnet.com