Trustnet Magazine 57 December 2019 | Page 44

In focus [ 2020 OUTLOOK ] 44 / 45 Europe Monks’ exposure to Europe has fallen from 16 to 12 per cent over the past few years, of which around 3 per cent is held in non-EU companies. “We have an eclectic mix of companies in Europe, but the overall backdrop has been unhelpful and led us to sell some names,” Henry says. “While there remain some good investment opportunities, there are more in the US and Asia.” Sam Morse, manager of the Fidelity European Values trust, acknowledges the main risks for the region in the near term remain anchored around geo-politics and central bank activity. “The latest package from the ECB has been well received and there is more confidence that the Federal Reserve will continue to ease,” he says. “The extra liquidity should help to support stocks in the short term, even if the fundamentals don’t improve markedly.” TRUSTNET Trust pick: Henderson Euro Trust For the second year running, Kepler identifies the Henderson Euro Trust as its pick for the region. “The trust has a fine track record of consistent outperformance in rising and falling markets, achieved through a rigorous focus on bottom- up stock-picking,” Sobczak says. “However, it was taken over by a new manager this year, Jamie Ross, which has, we think, been the reason the shares have traded on a wider discount than the sector average. “As Ross’s performance in his first year has been equally impressive, there could be an opportunity to see the discount narrow as well as good NAV performance. “He uses the same approach as his predecessor, but has made the portfolio more concentrated, increasing the alpha-generating potential.” Emerging markets Despite being dragged down by constant talk of a trade war between the US and China, the MSCI Emerging Markets index has still managed to post a positive gain in the year-to-date, up more than 7 per cent. “Looking into 2020, the most important risks have not changed: slowing global growth, trade tensions and a stubbornly strong US dollar,” says Austin Forey, manager of the JP Morgan Emerging Markets Investment Trust. “However, it appears central banks globally are in a full-blown easing cycle, which may offset these risks. He adds: “Over the past six months, key emerging and developed market central banks have cut interest rates a cumulative 37 times, a number larger than at any time in the past decade.” Trust pick: Baring Emerging Europe Thomas McMahon, senior analyst at Kepler, notes the Baring Emerging Europe trust has more than 60 per cent of its assets invested in the “extremely cheap” Russian market. “The low valuation is partly explained by the 2014 Ukraine war and confrontation with the West, but those tensions have been diminishing,” he says. “What remains is more to do with bad corporate governance, but that is changing, too. The Russian government is conducting an anti-corruption drive and forcing companies to be more shareholder friendly, pay higher dividends and boost investment. It is therefore a potential self-help story which could be less dependent on the US/China trade war than the rest of the emerging markets.” trustnet.com