Trustnet Magazine Issue 30 June 2017 | Page 22

FOLLOW THE LEADER Will Japan and Europe replicate the performance of the US market when they join it in stepping off the QE treadmill? Adam Lewis finds out T HE WEAKNESS OF STERLING meant 2016 was a strong year for investment trusts with an overseas focus. AIC North America, Europe and Japan were no exception, with each one generating returns of well over 30 per cent last year. For the US, this marks quite a turnaround from its previous appearance in a Trustnet Magazine sector focus, published in June 2015. Back then the strong dollar caused it to languish behind its European and Japanese peers, which were also being buoyed by low interest rates and large scale quantitative easing programmes. Two years on, with interest rates rising across the globe and sterling on the up, what are the prospects for these sectors today? PERFORMANCE OF AIC SECTORS 1yr (%) 3yr (%) 5yr (%) 10yr (%) AIC Europe 36.56 43.84 155.23 122.84 AIC Japan 34.02 82.75 181.26 139.16 AIC North America 36.07 42.98 80.4 160.6 Source: FE Analytics 20 trustnetdirect.com EUROPE EUROPE IS THE BEST- PERFORMING OF THESE THREE SECTORS over the past 12 months. Its eight funds are up by an average of 36.56 per cent over one year and have returned 43.84 and 155.23 per cent over the past three and five. Adam Carruthers, a collectives analyst at Charles Stanley, says this performance has been driven by the fall in sterling versus the euro and the flow of assets out of the US and into Europe. He adds that a lot of money had been sitting on the sidelines in the run-up to the Dutch and French elections. “Once the risk went away following the elections, many asset allocators took money out of the US, which is expensive, and put it into Europe. This pent up demand has narrowed discounts in the sector, with the average falling from 16 per cent just after Brexit, to 6 per cent today.” Topping the rankings over one year, with a 46.75 per cent return, trustnetdirect.com is John Bennett’s Henderson European Focus trust. It also tops the five-year rankings with a gain of 215.12 per cent. “Bennett has developed a strong long-term performance record with Henderson European Focus and we rate him and Henderson’s well-resourced pan European equity team highly,” says Innes Urquhart, a research analyst at Winterflood Investment Trusts. “He also makes good use of the investment trust structure through his allocation to small and mid-cap companies and the use of gearing.” Carruthers says an environment of negative interest rates and a European Central Bank that is reluctant to halt QE have been supportive of growth investing. One manager in particular who has benefited from this is Vincent Devlin, who runs BlackRock Greater Europe. On the opposite end of the scale is The European Investment Trust, run by Edinburgh Partners. With growth outperforming the value style favoured by this trust since the financial crisis, it is still on a 13 per cent discount, although this has narrowed from 19 per cent. “While both trusts have different styles, each has done well over the past 12 months,” says Carruthers. PROFILE THE EUROPEAN INVESTMENT TRUST Miton’s Nick Greenwood describes the European Investment Trust as a potential turnaround story. Craig Armour took charge in August last year after the departure of Dale Robertson. He is not expected to change the trust’s valuation approach, given this is established across the group, even though this has held back performance in recent years. “In the past it has tended to be overlooked and a bit forgotten,” says Greenwood. 21