Trustnet Magazine 57 December 2019 | Page 42

In focus [ 2020 OUTLOOK] 42 / 43 US UK While the FTSE 100 has posted a gain of 14.15 per cent year-to-date, open-ended UK equity funds suffered £2.9bn of outflows, thanks mainly to sustained political uncertainty. Given how far out of favour the UK has fallen, Alex Wright of the Fidelity Special Values trust says it still stands out as cheap relative to other global markets, meaning it provides a plentiful opportunity set for contrarian stock-picking. “It is true that the fundamentals are not great in the UK, but neither are they in many other parts of the world,” Wright says. “Importantly, what the UK has which other markets do not is a low starting valuation and potential for a positive catalyst. However, I do not want to claim that I have some insight into when this valuation gap will close.” While Wright adds that it is hard to ignore the effects of politics and economics, he sees selective TRUSTNET opportunities in UK domestics and currently owns positions in financial and consumer businesses. Trust pick: Schroder UK Mid Cap Following the Conservative landslide in the election, Callum Stokeld, analyst at Kepler Partners, picks out Andrew Brough’s Schroder UK Mid Cap trust. “The risk of a hard-left government may have been averted, and we will likely start to have better clarity on the shape of our future relationship with the EU,” he says. “This can help UK assets, and mid caps may be in the sweet spot – able to pick up any liquidity-driven rally if investors return, with higher sensitivity to a pick-up in the UK economy. “Schroder UK Mid Cap has previously displayed strong upside capture and the portfolio looks attractively positioned just now, while the discount certainly has room to narrow.” After another strong year from the S&P 500, rising 25 per cent, investors now face the question of whether equities can keep it going. Monks Investment Trust has 46.2 per cent of its portfolio in the US. Client services manager Jon Henry says this is because the managers consider it an economy “that is likely to cultivate and foster growth companies”. “However, in the last 12 to 18 months, we have seen a moderation in our US exposure which has largely been at the expense of more domestically focused US names,” he explains. “We still think the US is a good investment opportunity, [but] valuations now look more peaky.” Trust pick: JP Morgan US Smaller Companies William Sobczak, analyst at Kepler, highlights the “exceptional” long- term track record of the JP Morgan US Smaller Companies trust. “The trust runs a low-beta portfolio of high-quality companies and boasts an exceptional track record of alpha generation,” he says. “US small caps have underperformed large caps in the past two years, which we think means there is a possibility of a reversion in 2020. Added to the greater alpha potential in the small cap universe, this makes the trust an interesting way to access the late- cycle US market.” trustnet.com