logo
FINSBURY GROWTH & INCOME TRUST PLC: AI is the key to getting out of doldrums

FINSBURY GROWTH & INCOME TRUST PLC: AI is the key to getting out of doldrums

Daily Mail​a day ago
Before the pandemic, Nick Train's Finsbury Growth & Income Trust reliably beat the market. But the past five years have not been kind to Train's concentrated buy-and-hold portfolio of well-known UK companies.
Finsbury Growth & Income last beat the market in 2020, when its shares fell just 0.7 per cent in a year in which the UK stock market fell 11.6 per cent.
Although the UK stock market staged a post-lockdown bounce, since then it has been out of favour and some of the big hitters in the Finsbury Growth & Income portfolio, such as Diageo, Burberry and Schroders, have been deeply unloved by investors.
But Train is optimistic, saying he believes there is a cohort of more growth-orientated companies coming through in the UK that are world class and can profit from rapid advances in technology.
While investors have focused on chasing up US tech giants' share prices amid the artificial intelligence boom, Train says they are some FTSE-listed companies that also offer a huge opportunity to profit from the application of AI.
He says: 'If you look at the shape of Finsbury's portfolio over the past four or five years, there has definitely been a shift towards these London-listed data and data analytics software companies that seem to us to have an extraordinary opportunity ahead of them. And arguably a really intriguing valuation opportunity as well.'
Chief among those is RELX, formerly Reed Elsevier. The information-based analytics provider for businesses is a global leader in its field and Train says that is reflected in how it has gone from the 68th largest company in the FTSE 100 in 2000 to sixth today.
He says the next 20 years could be as good for RELX as the past two decades, citing its AI tool for lawyers delivering a 280 per cent return on investment for early adopters. Train says if this can be repeated in the scientific and drug research market, the potential for investors 'and humanity' is great.
Among Train's other holdings that he believes can benefit from AI to improve their services and profits are property firm Rightmove and credit scorer Experian.
He also took a rare new position last year, buying into the world's largest shipping broker Clarkson. He says it is a 'truly world class UK company with a clear opportunity to use technology to create new value.'
Though the UK stock market has staged a recent resurgence, with the FTSE 100 up 11 per cent since the start of the year, Finsbury has continued to lag, with a return of just 0.3 per cent. The trust has a share price total return of 9.7 per cent over the past year, but just 15.8 per cent over five years. Over the past decade though, the return is a much healthier 90 per cent.
Train, who has run Finsbury for almost 25 years, says he has tackled the past tough years making sure he 'stuck to a clear set of principles'.
He says: 'It is no fun underperforming. And it really behoves you in those circumstances to behave in a disciplined way. I hope that we have done that.'
Train believes his Warren Buffett-influenced investing style of constructing a concentrated portfolio of high-quality shares will shine through.
Finsbury Growth & Income shares are trading at 7 per cent below net asset value, offering the chance to buy in at a discount. Ongoing annual charges are 0.61 per cent and its unique stock market identification code is 0781606.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former Citibank boss sues builders over ‘botched' construction of £3m home
Former Citibank boss sues builders over ‘botched' construction of £3m home

Telegraph

time12 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Former Citibank boss sues builders over ‘botched' construction of £3m home

A former Citibank executive and her husband are suing builders for allegedly botching the construction of their £3m home. Lisa Klaver and her husband Tim are taking North Downs Construction to the High Court claiming the property has so many issues it cannot be lived in, according to the Daily Mail. The building firm had agreed to construct the couple's property near Farnham, Surrey, next to an existing property, which was set to be knocked down once their new home was built. They now claim to have found 69 defects including to timber cladding, the terrace, balcony, and lower ground floor roof, external walls, windows and doors, basement tanking, internal and external work, and structural steelwork. Other builders told the couple they will not be able to finish the work unless they knock the new property down and start from scratch, which would cost around £3.4m. The couple are suing for more than £3m as well as damages for distress, inconvenience and loss of amenity. Work on the project began in July 2021 and the couple moved in a year later. After they moved in, their architect spotted defects but they had already paid £836,000 towards the builders' bill at this point, it was said. The architect asked the builders to fix a problem with the exterior timber cladding, which did not conform to the contract or good building practice. 'Inadequate remedial action' Further issues led to the couple withholding a payment of the July 2022 invoice, High Court documents said. Vernon Blake, of North Downs Construction, said the firm would withdraw from the site immediately unless it was paid immediately, and then did so. No further work has taken place since then. The couple claim the builders did not take adequate remedial action and terminated the contract in April last year. They say the firm was responsible for the work until the contract ended and the builders did not finish the job within the agreed 50 weeks, or ask for a time extension. Rain and floodwater got into the house in late 2022. While the firm came to accept some of the defects, and put forward proposals for fixing them, it did not address more serious ones in the structural steelwork, according to the claim. The couple claim redesigning the new house to fix the defective work is not their job and that the building firm has refused to meet any of the costs of doing so. The couple and North Downs Construction did not comment when approached by the Daily Mail.

Private equity group Advent to acquire U-Blox for $1.3 billion
Private equity group Advent to acquire U-Blox for $1.3 billion

Reuters

time12 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Private equity group Advent to acquire U-Blox for $1.3 billion

Aug 17 (Reuters) - Private equity group Advent International said on Sunday it has agreed to take over Switzerland's U-Blox Holding (UBXN.S), opens new tab in a cash offer worth some 1.05 billion Swiss francs ($1.30 billion). Advent said its public tender offer for U-Blox's shares would be carried out by its indirect subsidiary ZI Zenith. The 135 Swiss francs per share offer represents a 53% premium to the undisturbed volume-weighted average share price of the last six months, Advent said in a statement with U-Blox. The tender offer is subject to terms and conditions, and regulatory approvals customary for such transactions, and is expected to be settled within the next six months, it added. U-Blox, a maker of microchips and software for car navigation, said on Friday it was in talks with Advent. The Swiss technology group, which went public in 2007, said last week it cut its first-half loss before interest and tax to 7.7 million francs from a loss of 28 million a year earlier. Earlier this year, the firm sold a unit making cellular modules for wireless communication to focus on navigation and positioning technology used in cars, robots and farm equipment. ($1 = 0.8063 Swiss francs)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store