Connecting: 3.135.206.125
Forwarded: 3.135.206.125, 104.23.197.185:48790
Jupiter and Hiscox top financial funds | Trustnet Skip to the content

Jupiter and Hiscox top financial funds

09 February 2011

In light of George Osborne raising the levy on banks to £2.5bn, Trustnet reviews the best- and worst-performing financials funds.

By Mark Smith,

Reporter, Financial Express

In a study of funds with a purely financial focus, Jupiter Financial Opportunities and Hiscox Insurance Portfolio were the best performers, while the JPM Global Financials and AXA Framlington Financial funds fared the worst over three-, five- and ten-year periods.

Performance of funds over 10-yrs

Fund
3-yr growth (%)
5-yr growth (%) 10-yr growth (%)
Hiscox - Insurance Portfolio
23.29
25.48
64.45
Jupiter - Financial Opportunities
22.42
25.28
167.23
Thornhill - SPFM Global Growth
7.79
5.34
11.38
City Financial - Multimanager Growth
-1.54
4.28
26.85
Fidelity - Global Financial Services
9.35
3.8
30.62
SWIP - Financial 
-7.72
-3.91
26.1
JPM - Global Financials 
-14.23
-22.4
-3.16
AXA - Framlington Financial
-13.53
-25.53
-7.42

Source: Financial Express Analytics

Over the last decade, the Jupiter Financial Opportunities fund, managed by Guy de Blonay and Philip Gibbs, performed the best, returning 167 per cent.

Over periods of three and five years, Hiscox Insurance Portfolio had the strongest growth by a small margin.

At the other end of the performance table, the Richard Peirson-managed AXA Framlington Financial fund actually lost seven per cent in the last decade and 26 per cent over a five-year period. The JPM Global Financials fund, managed by Simon Poncet and Peter Kirkman, also posted significant losses.

Performance of funds vs index over 5-yrs

ALT_TAG

Source: Financial Express Analytics

The graph above shows how the funds performed versus the MSCI WRLD/FINANCIALS index. The AXA Framlington Financial and the JPM Global Financials funds only slightly underperformed the sector index by some three per cent over the five-year period.

Richard Hancock, investment analyst at Investment Maze, does not think Osborne’s levy will have a negative impact on the performance of financials stocks.

"Whilst it might come as a bit of a shock, and it seems a big chunk of cash, the levy is not going to affect the banks too greatly," he said.

Graham Toone, head of investment research at Margetts Fund Management, agrees, saying: "The share prices haven’t been affected this morning so I don’t think the levy’s going to have any great impact on investments going forward."

Trustnet Alpha Manager Philip Dicken says he will avoid funds with a financial focus in 2011 because he believes they lack innovation.

Editor's Picks

Loading...

Videos from BNY Mellon Investment Management

Loading...

Data provided by FE fundinfo. Care has been taken to ensure that the information is correct, but FE fundinfo neither warrants, represents nor guarantees the contents of information, nor does it accept any responsibility for errors, inaccuracies, omissions or any inconsistencies herein. Past performance does not predict future performance, it should not be the main or sole reason for making an investment decision. The value of investments and any income from them can fall as well as rise.