Trustnet Magazine Issue 44 October 2018 | Page 40

While the core of Hughes’ US exposure is to a passive product, he notes there are still some pockets of excellence in active management, which is why he holds Dodge & Cox US Stock. He adds that while Dodge & Cox is not well FE TRUSTNET known in the UK, it is an old and well-established US manager. “This is a large cap strategy, but with a value bias as this is a style we want exposure to,” he explains. “The manager is very long term, essentially being a bottom-up research house that looks for well- established businesses that can deliver earnings growth and cashflow.” The perfect blend: Merian North American Equity Ben Yearsley says the blend of styles is key to this Merian (formerly Old Mutual Global Investors) fund, which is run by Ian Heslop. “Heslop arguments to be buying small caps, but overall we don’t think the investment case is currently made for us to re-enter the US small-cap space – especially at this point in the cycle.” PERFORMANCE OF FUND VS INDEX OVER 10YRS Merian - North American Equity (366.82%) S&P 500 (296.83%) 400% 350% 300% 250% 200% 150% 100% 50% 0% -50% almost every manager and across asset classes the same concerns around the ability to trade in a market downturn/sell off. Yet while many managers have this fear, investors seem to be ignoring it.” For Metcalfe, one of the main problems is it has become “almost impossible” to accurately model liquidity risk, as the bull run has been accompanied by exponential growth in passives – meaning there has been no “rush for the door”. “There are no guarantees liquidity issues will be restricted to small caps, but any issues will likely be worse for them,” he says. “Alongside these fears is the relative valuation argument and small caps look expensive relative to large cap peers and historically.” “We accept Trump’s tax cut and attempts to reduce red tape are “We hear from almost every manager and across asset classes the same concerns surround the ability to trade in a market downturn/sell off” Looking down Turning to small caps, Chris Metcalfe, investment director at IBOSS, notes IA North American Smaller Companies has made 1,100 per cent over the past 25 years, almost double the 640 per cent made by IA North America. The small cap sector has outperformed in 18 out of the 25 calendar year periods, which Metcalfe says has been heavily influenced by the performance of tech stocks, which make up approximately 20 per cent of the US sector. However, it is not all plain sailing in this area. “One of the main risks we see in the US small cap space is liquidity,” Metcalfe continues. “We hear from The value option: Dodge & Cox US Stock [ SECTOR PROFILE ] 38 / 39 In focus Source: FE Analytics believes that the biggest risk comes from having too much style bias within a portfolio and that by having a blend you help reduce downside risk,” he explains. “This fund is much more quant orientated, with five components to the process including company management and analyst sentiment. Stock bets are limited to +/- 1 per cent and the portfolio is clearly large- and mid-cap focused.” The passive pick: Fidelity Index US AJ Bell uses the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF in its passive MPS, but the £1.4bn Fidelity Index US fund in its active one. “The fund is very low cost with a strong record of tracking the index,” says Hughes. “Fidelity works on a full replication basis, which is what we prefer to see from our passive solutions. We are broadly agnostic on fund structure and in this case, there is little to choose between Fidelity’s fund structure versus an ETF.” trustnet.com