Schroders tables FCA application to launch private markets LTAF for wealth clients

Subject to regulatory approval by the regulator, this new LTAF will provide wealth investors with access to a private equity strategy managed by Schroders Capital, the firm’s private asset investment arm. The asset manager unveiled the UK’s first LTAF, Schroders Capital Climate+, last year for UK defined contribution pension funds. In February this year, the firm launched the Schroders Greencoat Global Renewables+ LTAF, also for the DC market. Outgoing Schroders UK wealth head Doug Abbott: Retail LTAF will offer alternative route to private markets Currently, the majority of the LT…

Schroders tables FCA application to launch private equity LTAF for wealth market

Subject to regulatory approval by the regulator, this new LTAF will provide wealth investors with access to a private equity strategy managed by Schroders Capital, the firm’s private asset investment arm. The asset manager unveiled the UK’s first LTAF, Schroders Capital Climate+, last year for UK defined contribution pension funds. In February this year, the firm launched the Schroders Greencoat Global Renewables+ LTAF, also for the DC market. Outgoing Schroders UK wealth head Doug Abbott: Retail LTAF will offer alternative route to private markets Currently, the majority of the LT…

How to Invest in Gold Right Now

Last month the spot price of gold reached an all-time high at $2,431 an ounce. Since then, the value of bullion has fallen slightly to around $2,300, a range that is still historically high, yielding about 25% over the past seven months.

“Gold has already metabolised the Federal Reserve’s expected downsizing of its monetary policy easing outlook for 2024, yet it is continuing its upward trajectory,” explained Ned Naylor-Leyland, manager of Jupiter AM Gold & Silver fund.

“This suggests that other factors are at play, such as the return of significant demand for physical gold, particularly from China and the Middle East. This wave of physical buying could be driven by a confluence of reasons, including inflationary concerns and rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.”

Curiously, $15.6 billion of client funds flowed out of precious metals exchange-traded funds (ETCs) over the past year, most recently at a monthly all-time-high rate in April. Amid such profit-taking, those investment vehicles clearly aren’t the drivers of globally elevated gold prices. 

Who is Buying All this Gold?

China has become one of the most important gold buyers in the world. The China Gold Association (CGA) reported that the country’s gold consumption in 2023 amounted to almost 1,090 tonnes, an increase of 8.73% year-on-year. Another indicator of overall gold demand in China, the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE), reported a 95% year-on-year increase in demand in January 2024.

“Behind the record demand from China, an interesting demographic shift is taking place,” Ned Naylor-Leyland continued in his April 30 report. “Younger buyers, aged 25-34, have increased their share of total gold purchases from 16% to 59% in 2023. The decline in the stock market and local property values has contributed to the rise of the younger generation, but it is the form of investment that indicates the true nature of the demographic shift. Younger buyers in China are choosing to buy one-gram gold grains to preserve wealth for the long term.”

Such high demand may be confined to Asia for longer. According to co-founder of Flossbach von Storch Bert Flossbach, in the US, “the real interest rate on inflation-linked bonds is +2% and would have to fall significantly to make gold attractive again to US investors as an inflation hedge.”

On April 22, Flossbach wrote that “it is not possible to make serious predictions about the gold price. Over the past ten years, investors have enjoyed an annual increase in the

Julius Baer International makes Pictet hire to boost markets advisory offering

Working closely with the markets team in Zurich, Lupi will identify a strategy to build and broaden the firm’s markets offering, ranging from derivatives and securities to foreign exchange and structured products.  Lupi joins the firm from Pictet’s London office, where he was in charge of global market trading. He joined the Swiss firm in 2011 as a senior managing director, based in Singapore. Jefferies reiterates ‘Buy’ rating for Julius Baer on rebound potential “I am thrilled to join Julius Baer International in this new role as the company continues to sharpen the personalised o…

Equity funds inflows soar fivefold during ISA season

Cumulative inflows during ISA season (15 February to 5 April, inclusive) hit £5.2bn, up from £981m the same time last year.  April marked the thirteenth highest inflows level in Calastone’s records and followed a record quarter for equity fund subscriptions, which reached £7bn in the first quarter of 2024. Interest in North American equities remained high, with net inflows reaching £1.2bn, the fourth-best month on record. Investor optimism also spread to global and European equities, which took in £1.5bn and £471m, respectively. Equity funds take majority of sustainable inflows in …

Kepler Partners’ Alan Ray: Reports of investment trusts’ demise are greatly exaggerated

One thing I have learned in my career is that the day you relax and walk into work thinking ‘I have got this’ is the day that things start to unravel. That is not at all meant to be a bleak assessment of the world of work, and it is equally important not to spend one’s career in a permanent state of paranoia. But a little bit of stress can be quite invigorating, no? The investment trust sector had its own ‘I have got this’ moment in 2022, when interest rates finally rose around the world and while the most obvious effect was felt in those trusts we loosely refer to as alternatives, eq…

Schroders places European Alpha Plus fund under review as underperformance lingers

In its assessment of value (AoV) report, the asset manager noted “disappointing” portfolio performance over the past year, influenced by stock selection and market-relative positioning dragging on performance. The biggest detractors to relative performance were small and mid-sized companies, with key underperforming stocks including Worldline, Hellofresh, DoBank and Ubisoft. Recession fears in Europe also resulted in “larger outflows than usual” from European equities. As such, the viability of the fund is currently under review and Schroders said it is in the process of “determining …

The Best-Performing ETFs of the Month

Exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, are often low-cost instruments for investors to track popular indexes or leverage experienced manager choices in an attempt to beat the market. The best ones serve as building blocks for a portfolio, and unlike open-end funds, all ETFs are traded throughout the day on an exchange.

In April 2024, the top-performing ETFs included Turkey equity funds Amundi MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF (TUR) and iShares MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF (IDTK). Data in this article is sourced from Morningstar Direct.

To find the month’s best-performing ETFs, we screened those in Morningstar’s Equity, Allocation, or Fixed-Income categories that are available in the UK. We excluded exchange-traded notes, known as ETNs, and ETFs with less than $25 million (£20.0 million) in total assets. We also excluded funds that fall into Morningstar’s “trading” categories, as these funds are designed for active traders and are not suitable for long-term investors.

Within our list, two funds fell into the Turkey equity category, where the average fund rose 15.94% in April.

The 10 Best-Performing ETFs for April 2024

1. Amundi MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF (TUR)
2. iShares MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF (IDTK)
3. Global X Silver Miners UCITS ETF (SILV)
4. Global X Copper Miners UCITS ETF (COPX)
5. iShares Copper Miners UCITS ETF (COPM)
6. Market Access NYSE Arca Gold BUSIndex UCITS ETF (M9SD)
7. Invesco STOXX Europe 600 Optimised Basic Resources UCITS ETF (SC0W)
8. iShares STOXX Europe 600 Basic Resources UCITS ETF (DE) (EXV6)
9. Xtrackers FTSE China 50 UCITS ETF (XX2D)
10. iShares China Large Cap UCITS ETF (FXC)

Metrics for the Best-Performing ETFs

Amundi MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF

• Morningstar Rating: ★★
• Ongoing Charge: 0.45%
• Morningstar Category: Turkey Equity

The £57 million Amundi MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF was the best-performing ETF in April, with a 15.45% return. The passively managed Amundi ETF performed roughly in line with the 15.94% gain on the average fund in Morningstar’s Turkey equity category for the month. Over the last 12 months, the Amundi MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF has returned 46.21%, underperforming the 48.61% gain on the average fund in its category, leaving the ETF in the 50th percentile.

The Amundi MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF has a Morningstar Medalist Rating of Neutral. It was launched in March 2019.

iShares MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF

• Morningstar Rating: ★
• Ongoing Charge: 0.74%
• Morningstar Category: Turkey Equity

The second-best-performing ETF in April was the £93 million iShares MSCI Turkey UCITS ETF. The passively managed iShares ETF returned 15.20%, roughly

FCA fines and bans ex-Shard Capital CEO from working in financial services

The UK’s financial regulator also fined Lewis with £120,300. The fine was reduced from £171,900 after Lewis agreed to cooperate during the investigation, and therefore qualified for a 30% reduction of the penalty. In the first instance, Lewis told auditors that between 2015 and 2017, Shard Capital, which he founded in 2010, held hundreds of millions in cash for a particular client. FCA’s Sacha Sadan: SDR will help bring ‘trust and integrity’ back to the sector However in reality, the sum represented debt owed by one of the client’s connected companies to the other. In the second…

WisdomTree’s largest shareholder returns with fresh attempt opposing CEO

In a letter to shareholders on Monday (6 May), Graham Tuckwell, chair of ETFS Capital, which holds around an 18% stake in WisdomTree, asked investors to vote against the re-election of Steinberg and two other board members at the firm’s annual meeting on 12 June.  Laying out its own letter in response, WisdomTree asked shareholders to ignore the activist’s callout, calling Tuckwell’s latest move “against three of WisdomTree’s directors – his third attempt against the board in the past three years – that is a waste of time and resources and not in the best interests of the company and all…