Trustnet Magazine Issue 34 November 2017 | Page 22

/ FUND, PENSION, TRUST / Trust EDINBURGH INVESTMENT TRUST Mark Barnett’s trust is trading at a wider discount than its sector average, even though it is a top-quartile performer since he took charge 20 prospects regardless of the shifting economic weather.” Edinburgh Investment Trust has struggled over the past year, making just 11.91 per cent compared with 18.4 per cent from its IT UK Equity Income sector and 15.92 per cent from its FTSE All Share benchmark. It has done even worse over the past six months, losing 2.66 per cent – this means it has made just 3.65 per cent year-to-date, one of the lowest returns in the sector. However, the trust has made 42.22 per cent since Barnett took over from Neil Woodford back in 2014 – a top quartile return. For investors worried that this track record is not long enough from which to draw any conclusions, they should take note that the Perpetual Income and Growth Investment Trust, which Barnett has managed since 1999, is a top quartile performer in the sector over the past decade. Edinburgh Investment Trust is currently on a discount of 7.5 per cent, according to the latest data from the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), compared with 5.15 and 2.6 per cent from its one- and three-year averages. The sector average currently stands at 4 per cent. The trust is currently yielding 3.6 per cent, which was 1.1 times covered by earnings last year.  FILE MANAGER: Mark Barnett LAUNCHED: 08/02/1952 DISCOUNT/PREMIUM: -7.5% TER: 0.6% FE CROWN RATING: PERFORMANCE OF TRUST VS SECTOR AND INDEX OVER MANAGER TENURE 60% Edinburgh Investment Tst (40.44%) 50% FTSE All Share (33.99%) IT UK Equity Income (28.49%) 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% -10% T RYING TO TIME THE MARKET IS WIDELY ACCEPTED as something of a fool’s errand, but when a trust with a respected manager and excellent long-term track record is trading on one of the widest discounts in its sector, it is a different matter. This is the case with FE Alpha Manager Mark Barnett’s Edinburgh Investment Trust, which has slipped on to a wide discount following a period of underperformance. The four crown-rated trust invests primarily in UK securities (with up to 20 per cent overseas) and aims to increase NAV in excess of the FTSE All Share and dividends in excess of inflation over the long-term. Barnett is cautiously positioned even though corporate earnings growth has been strong across a number of sectors in 2017. This is because he is concerned the market has priced in the benefits of a weak pound while overlooking the numerous macro risks. In a recent note, research house Killik said: “The manager is sceptical of the need to raise rates aggressively in the short term, principally due to the absence of a strong backdrop of sustainably higher levels of inflation.” “The aim is therefore to invest, with sensible diversification, in companies with the prospect of making money in absolute terms, either driven by growing dividends or from companies that can improve or transform their financial Source: FE Analytics trustnetdirect.com