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Niche trusts dominate 2011 | Trustnet Skip to the content

Niche trusts dominate 2011

17 January 2012

More than half of the investment companies launched last year were in specialist sectors, but income was still the dominant theme.

By Jemma Jackson,

Association of Investment Companies

Markets were tough to call in 2011, with some commentators resigning themselves to a lost decade following the crash of 2008. Structural debt problems in the eurozone combined with instability in the Middle East and natural disasters in Japan and elsewhere meant that volatility was the buzz-word of the year.

In the investment company world, more than half of new launches were in specialist sectors, as has been the trend in recent years; namely debt, infrastructure and forestry. Income was the dominant theme for launches, not surprising in this low interest rate, inflationary environment.

The top performer of the year was also a company with a specialist mandate. Greenwich Loan Income, which is listed on the AIM and invests in debt secured against small- to medium-sized technology companies, boasted a 56 per cent increase in share-price performance to the end of December. Even more impressive, a £100 investment in the company three years ago would have been worth £433 at the end of December.

The next top performer – El Oro, which was up 53 per cent – also belongs to a niche sector, Specialist Sector: Commodities and Natural Resources. Companies from the Private Equity and Global Smaller Companies sectors also featured among the top performers, showing that this was the year for considering specialist investment strategies. Although specialist sectors dominated performance tables, investors should still do their research before investing – companies in these sectors featured near the bottom of the tables too.

Five top-performing trusts in 2011*
 
Fund Sector
1-yr returns (%)
3-yr returns (%) 5-yr returns (%)
Greenwich Loan Income (AIM) Sector Specialist: Debt
156.11
432.72
62.44
El Oro Sector Specialist: Commodities and Natural Resources
152.07
N/A
N/A 
Northern Investors Private Equity
136.68
276.16
147.86
Marwyn Value Investors Global Smaller Companies
134.06
566.94
130.83
Real Estate Credit Investments Sector Specialist: Debt
132.9
240.86
17.22

Source: The AIC

Against such a tough back-drop, 2012 got off to a positive start, with the market slightly up at 5,668 points, from a 5,572 close at the end of 2011. A decisive 96 per cent of managers predict that volatility will continue throughout the next year, but encouragingly, 71 per cent are optimistic that markets will ultimately go up.

So will specialist sectors perform well again this year? Of the managers we polled in our end-of-year fund survey, one in five believed that blue chips would prove the best stocks for 2012. However, 8 per cent put their faith in biotechnology, while a further 8 per cent opted for technology as the sector most likely to outperform next year.

David Pinniger, manager of International Biotechnology Trust, said: "In a challenging economic and market environment, the risk-reward profile of backing innovation improves dramatically. Investors should be looking to invest in highly innovative sectors when the end markets are fundamentally insulated from the economy. Biotechnology is one such area – a global growth industry that is delivering an incredible new product cycle."

With so many issues affecting the global economy, the next 12 months look far from certain, although the London Olympics and the golden jubilee should at least add some light relief. The closed-ended structure of the investment company sector means it is in a better position than most to weather any uncertainties that lie ahead.

Jemma Jackson is PR manager at the Association of Investment Companies. The views expressed here are her own.

*Excluding VCTs (share price total return on £100, less 3.5 per cent expenses, to 31 December 2011).

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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.