Investments  

Should UK equity investors spread their wings and fly overseas?

Investors have been flocking into the IMA UK Equity Income sector. According to the latest data, it recorded net sales of £358m in September. But with overseas companies increasingly focusing on shareholders, should investors be looking more closely at global income products?

By comparison, the IMA Global Equity Income sector saw net retail sales of £111m in September, making it the fifth-most popular equity sector for the month.

Year to date, the sector has delivered a 19.84 per cent average return, with funds such as Artemis Global Income, Legg Mason Global Equity Income and Invesco Perpetual Global Equity Income sitting among the top-five performers.

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The Artemis Global Income fund, managed by Jacob de Tusch-Lec, has produced top-quartile returns in one year and three years, and since launch in 2010 has returned 66.29 per cent, compared with the sector average return of 48 per cent.

Mr de Tusch-Lec, who was recently profiled in Investment Adviser, says the fund’s recent good performance can be attributed to exposure to Europe, particularly Germany.

In his latest manager commentary, Mr de Tusch-Lec explains: “While we continue to monitor things closely, we continue to believe Europe provides a good risk-return trade-off compared to other regions. Two of the fund’s top-10 holdings, media groups RTL and ProSieben, are direct beneficiaries of the strong German economy.

“Another driver [of] the fund’s strong performance has been avoiding ‘expensive defensives’. These stocks are just too expensive (for us). Instead, our exposure is to relatively ‘unknown’ stocks such as Lorillard, a US company with a 40 per cent share of the booming US market for e-cigarettes, and Greencore, an Irish sandwich maker.”

Managed by Nick Mustoe, the Invesco Perpetual Global Equity Income fund also has a stellar track record, claiming the top spot for three years and ranking second in one year. The fund, which was launched in March 2009, has a significant weighting to Europe – 33.99 per cent – and is overweight sectors such as consumer products, healthcare and financials.

Mr Mustoe’s commentary on the fund’s latest factsheet notes: “Business activity in the eurozone grew faster than expected this month. Further signs of recovery in the eurozone came from Spain, which has just emerged from two years of recession. Equity markets dipped towards the end of the month as investors turned their attention from monetary policy to the fiscal impasse in the US.

“[In September,] we bought a new position in Atlantia, an Italian toll road operator, which also has operations elsewhere. In spite of having sound company fundamentals, in our view the shares have been held back, as they have been strongly correlated with Italian macro concerns.”

THE PICKS

Artemis Global Income Fund

With consistent top-quartile returns, Jacob de Tusch-Lec’s fund has earned a place in any income portfolio. Using a combined quantitative and fundamental analysis approach, Mr de Tusch-Lec has exposure to companies that are not frequently bought by his peers: South Korea-based automobile component manufacturer SJM Co, pharmaceutical research company AbbVie and Spanish commercial bank Bankinter all feature in the top 10. From launch in 2010 to November 25 2013, the fund has returned 66.29 per cent, compared with the sector average return of 48 per cent.