AIC Archives | International Adviser https://international-adviser.com/tag/aic/ The leading website for IFAs who distribute international fund, life & banking products to high net worth individuals Wed, 09 Oct 2024 11:30:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://international-adviser.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/ia-favicon-96x96.png AIC Archives | International Adviser https://international-adviser.com/tag/aic/ 32 32 AIC calls on UK Treasury to include VCTs in cost disclosure exemption https://international-adviser.com/aic-calls-on-uk-treasury-to-include-vcts-in-cost-disclosure-exemption/ Wed, 09 Oct 2024 11:30:30 +0000 https://international-adviser.com/?p=310451 Draft legislation to exclude investment companies from the requirement to produce Key Information Documents does not apply to venture capital trusts (VCTs), the Association of Investment Companies (AIC) has learned.

The legislation, which would formally exempt investment companies from the requirement to comply with PRIIPs and the cost disclosure aspects of MiFID, explicitly excludes VCTs despite previous assurances from the Treasury they would be included. The FCA’s forbearance statement issued on 19 September indicated that all closed-ended funds on a regulated market would be included in the exemption.

Richard Stone, chief executive of the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), said: “We were surprised and disappointed to learn that the draft legislation exempting investment companies from cost disclosure requirements does not include VCTs. It is now widely accepted that cost disclosures mandated by PRIIPs and MiFID are misleading – and they are misleading for VCTs as well as for investment trusts. There is no logical basis on which they have been singled out for exclusion from this exemption.

“We are engaging with the Treasury to understand why this has happened and will be pressing for the legislation to be amended to include VCTs, which have such an important role in backing up-and-coming UK companies. I encourage our VCT members, VCT managers and other stakeholders to write to the Minister, Tulip Siddiq, to urge the Treasury to change its position.”

 

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Temporary suspension of cost disclosure rules is ‘breakthrough’ for investment trusts https://international-adviser.com/temporary-suspension-of-cost-disclosure-rules-is-breakthrough-for-investment-trusts/ Thu, 19 Sep 2024 09:41:10 +0000 https://international-adviser.com/?p=309713 The Association of Investment Companies (AIC) has described the temporary suspension cost disclosure rules as a “breakthrough following today’s (19 September) HM Treasury ‘Reforms to Financial Services retail-disclosure requirements’ announcement and the FCA’s ‘Statement on forbearance in relation to investment trust disclosure requirements’.

The new approach is against the backdrop of the replacement of EU-inherited consumer disclosure regulation with a new framework for UK markets and firms.

Richard Stone, chief executive of the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), said: “This leap forward on cost disclosure is great news for investment companies and their investors. The temporary suspension of the rules paves the way for a permanent solution to this long-standing and damaging problem.

“It’s good that the Treasury and FCA have recognised that the current cost disclosure regime is not working. The AIC has lobbied tirelessly on this issue and it’s encouraging that the Labour government has acted so swiftly.

“We look forward to working with the FCA as it consults on the new Consumer Composite Investments (CCI) regime. It’s vital that these new rules recognise the unique characteristics of investment companies, permanently end misleading cost disclosures which distort the market, and enable investors to make better informed decisions.

“Investment companies are a great UK success story and have a vital role in bridging the gap between private assets and public markets. Ending misleading cost disclosures will enable us to continue delivering for investors and make a critical contribution to the economy as the government drives forward its ambitions for growth, investment and wealth creation.”

 

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Private investors and wealth managers becoming keener on investment trusts again https://international-adviser.com/private-investors-and-wealth-managers-becoming-keener-on-investment-trusts-again/ Wed, 28 Feb 2024 12:52:35 +0000 https://international-adviser.com/?p=304672 Private investors who buy investment trusts are more positive about them than they were a year ago, according to a survey by Research in Finance.

The researchers quizzed 216 private investors and wealth managers as part of the annual UK Investment Trust Study.

They found three-fifths (60%) of investment trust investors described themselves as “fans” who prefer trusts to other kinds of investment. This was up from 55% the year before. However, the percentage is still below the record high of 64% saying this in 2021.

Other notable findings included 25% of investment trust buyers said they were “agnostic” about the vehicles, while 15% saw them as more specialist and only used them from time to time.

See also: Vanguard rolls out hub for UK advisers

The average age of respondents to the survey was 63, with “fans” being slightly older on average at 65 than non-fans at 61. Fans hold an average £305,000 in trusts, representing 56% of their total portfolio. The comparable figures for non-fans are £105,000 and 23%.

The study also found the biggest perceived benefits of investment trusts over other kinds of fund, such as Oeics (open-ended investment companies), include the fund manager not being forced to sell to meet redemptions, mentioned by 68% of respondents, and being able to buy or sell shares in investment trusts quickly (57%).

Dividend smoothing, pointed to by 55% of those spoken to, and long track records of dividend growth (49%) were also major plus points. Only 3% of respondents saw no benefits in investment trusts over an Oeic.

A third of respondents (33%) said they expect to invest more in investment trusts over the next six months, with 57% expecting to invest the same, and 9% less.

See also: The Lang Cat: Advised platforms suffer record outflows in 2023

Among those looking to invest more, the top reason was attractive discounts to net asset value, mentioned by 85% of respondents.

Nick Britton, research director at the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), said: “It’s encouraging to see sentiment towards investment trusts improving towards the end of last year, with more respondents describing themselves as fans than we saw in 2022.

“Clearly, the benefits of investment trusts are well recognised among this group, including the fact that they are not forced sellers of assets into down markets.”

See also: Premier Miton’s David Jane: Reframing income as an output rather than a style

Abbie Hines-Lloyd, senior research manager at Research in Finance, added: “This wave of our survey captured an increase in positive sentiment for investment trusts as discounts were bottoming out towards the end of October.”

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VCT investments drop to £506m but hold up better than wider industry https://international-adviser.com/vct-investments-drop-to-506m-but-hold-up-better-than-wider-industry/ Wed, 07 Feb 2024 15:20:24 +0000 https://international-adviser.com/?p=45085 Investments made by venture capital trusts (VCTs) fell by 28% to £506m in 2023, according to figures from the AIC.

While the drop from the £705m recorded in 2022 was notable, it was less than the wider venture capital industry experienced. UK and Ireland venture capital investments fell by nearly half (46%) in 2023 to £16.5bn from £30.3bn, according to figures from Pitchbook.

Most of the VCT investments made in 2023, £454m, went into 251 private companies, with a further £52m going into 24 AIM companies. In 2022 VCTs invested £658m in 341 private companies and £48m in 22 AIM companies.

Between 2021 and 2023, VCTs invested a total of £1.89bn in private companies and AIM companies.

See also: Premier Miton’s David Jane: Reframing income as an output rather than a style

Richard Stone (pictured), chief executive of the AIC, said: “Last year VCTs’ investment in private companies slowed due to challenging investment conditions. It took time for businesses to adapt to higher interest rates and sluggish economic growth which impacted valuations and deal times. However, VCT investment activity held up better than the broader venture capital industry.

“VCTs have many advantages for investors, including attractive tax benefits and good long-term performance, and their investee companies create jobs and social benefits for local communities across the UK,” Stone continued.

“These advantages help to shore up capital raising in difficult economic conditions and give VCT managers confidence to continue investing in tough times, when other venture capital investors are pulling back.”

See also: Why investors need to take outlooks with a pinch of salt

Ewan MacKinnon, a partner at Maven Capital Partners, added: “The first half of 2023 was certainly sluggish in terms of quality new opportunities, in line with the trend across the market, due to uncertainty arising from the Budget turmoil in late 2022.

“However, in the second half of 2023 and early 2024 we’ve seen an encouraging increase in activity and opportunities as economic conditions have improved and deal flow has now largely recovered across our UK regional teams.”

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Calls for judicial review into FCA as investment trust sector faces extinction https://international-adviser.com/calls-for-judicial-review-into-fca-as-investment-trust-sector-faces-extinction/ Wed, 23 Aug 2023 09:53:41 +0000 https://international-adviser.com/?p=44235 The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is facing the industry “calling time” on investment trusts, according to multiple senior spokespeople, who warn that if cost disclosure regulation isn’t revoked for closed-ended funds the sector could disappear altogether.

This comes following a stark warning from Baroness Bowles who, in the past three months, has called for the removal of cost disclosure twice in the House of Lords – both during the debate on the Financial Services and Markets Bill 2023 and again in a debate on the UK economy. Having also penned a letter to FCA chief executive Nikhil Rathi to no avail, she and a number of her colleagues are in talks with the Treasury in what she has described as an “emergency situation”.

“The FCA is not fulfilling its principal objective, which is for stability in the markets,” she told our sister publication Portfolio Adviser. “This does not mean stability of a graveyard – and leaving the trust sector to wither and die – but stability of fair and operating markets, accessible markets.

“By not taking action, this is a failure and really very dire. In my view, it fulfils all the criteria for a judicial review – procedural unfairness and irrationality. I think not fulfilling your principal objective is probably both illegal and irrational.”

Cost disclosure regulation: An explainer

Under Packaged Retail Investment and Insurance Products (PRIIPs) regulation, which first came into play in the UK in 2018, all listed investment trusts and closed-ended funds must produce a KID (key investor document), which outlines their ongoing charges figures (OCFs) and potential risks to investors.

It runs parallel to the 2009 Undertakings for the Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS) regulatory framework – which applies to the European Union and any UK-based open-ended fund marketing itself to EU investors – from which trusts have always been exempt. Open-ended funds are still only required to produce the UCITS Key Investment Information Documents (KIIDs) for information, but are expected to transfer to the new UK KIDs by 31 December 2026.

The UK is currently working on updating its own PRIIPs regime which it believes is better suited to the home market. A consultation into this began in December last year and finished in March 2023. However, the response to this – which was published last month – flagged a number of concerns, particularly the fact that KIDs require both funds and trusts to disclose their OCFs.

While this arguably improves transparency for open-ended funds, there is a problem with their closed-ended counterparts: trusts, despite investing in a collection of securities, are individually listed companies in their own right. They therefore have a share price and an underlying net asset value (NAV), on which their price trades at a discount, or premium to, depending on daily market dealings. Investors therefore buy shares in them and buy them at ‘price’, and yet their published OCFs are applied to their NAV. This was confirmed by the FCA via the introduction of cost disclosure guidance as part of the new PRIIPs regime on 1 July last year.

Richard Parfect, multi-asset portfolio manager at Momentum Global Investment Management, explained: “The share price that investors pay for a trust is what the market has adjusted downwards to in order to account for those internal costs having already been “paid”; resulting in the earnings per share (EPS) and NAV being lower than would otherwise have been without such costs, consequently giving a lower share price.

“Any listed company has costs to cover its operation. However, it is only investment companies that have to report them in this manner; other entities such as Marks & Spencer or GSK do not have to produce a KID and the investors in such companies do not have to report them in turn to their own investors.”

This can make investment trusts look far more expensive than they actually are – not only because it causes a ‘double layering’ effect with reported costs, but because many of them invest in illiquid assets with higher trading costs. According to data from Hawksmoor Investment Management, some 50% of new issuance over the last decade has been in alternative asset classes. But while they invest in ‘expensive’ assets, investors are buying the company’s shares and do not physically bear the brunt of these charges. And yet, the KID documents make it look as though they do.

“This anomaly slipped through the net and into PRIIPs in the UK,” Baroness Bowles explained. “What has happened now is that, in tidying up the rulebook, the UK has put a bad bit of PRIIPs into its regulation all by itself.

“This kind of issue was happening while we were in the EU and there is this notion that the UK is now more nimble [post Brexit]. But now the FCA says it will look at it in about three years’ time – it beggars belief.”

Impact on wealth managers

The additional layer of complication is that many wealth managers, fund-of-fund managers and discretionary fund managers are now unable to hold investment trusts, because their charges will appear far more expensive than they are to financial advisers.

Parfect said: “What the FCA has failed to understand is that, despite the best intentions, IFAs are time-strapped people who are not necessarily well-versed in their underlying investments – because that is not their job.

“Their job is to understand the tax and the financial planning aspects for their clients. They rely heavily on software packages, which have a very clean and easy column showing costs, but they can’t show a value figure.

“It means that, when they have 95% of their attention on the cost side and very little on the value side, they just cannot quantify it. If you mix that in with the fact it is a completely erroneous figure, then we have a complete market failure mapped out.”

Research from Gravis Capital’s William MacLeod, using AIC data, found that since confirmation of cost disclosure guidance on 1 July 2022, “investment products appeared to rise in price from sub 1% to well in excess of 1%”.

“Investors report anecdotally, and this is endorsed by brokers across the market, that they have been forced sellers of the affected companies much against their will and investment thesis, resulting in an artificial approach to investment management focused on cost rather than investor outcome,” he said.

“It also means that, if you’re running other people’s money, you cannot actually describe to them what it is that they are looking at. Our world is complex enough; what we should be trying to do is to simplify what we give to the end investor.

“We have fundamentally failed to do that – what we are actually doing is making it more and more complex with every move that we make. Because now that cost disclosure for an investment company is effectively double counting, it is being made to look artificially expensive. That is so unhelpful and just wrong.”

Parfect added that the regulator’s lack of action has led to double standards, given their recent roll-out of Consumer Duty means investment managers must “act in good faith towards customers, avoid causing them foreseeable harm, and enable them to pursue their financial objectives”.

“For firms to achieve those objectives, it is not unreasonable to expect the regulator to aspire to conducting its own business in the same spirit when dealing with a situation such as this,” he reasoned. “Particularly so given the direct impact the guidelines have in eroding the consumer’s understanding of costs, as well as the ability for investors to support products designed to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This means investors cannot pursue their financial objectives because it prevents portfolio diversification.”

Indeed, research from Baroness Bowles has found that cost disclosure regulation fails on 12 of the FCA’s key objectives and principles. These include: ensuring that markets function well and are fit for purpose, reducing risk, transparency of pricing, and the orderly operation of markets.

Widening discounts

Investment trust discounts are indeed becoming wider across the piste as their popularity wanes. According to research from Portfolio Adviser, using data from the AIC, 368 out of 400 (92%) trusts are currently trading on a discount to their net asset value (as at 10 August 2023). Some 235 of these (68.9%) are at more than a 10% discount to NAV, 16 (4.3%) are on more than a 50% discount, and the least popular investment trust – GRIT Investment Trust – is on an eye-watering 88% discount to NAV.

Of these discounted trusts, the average discount of 16.9% has almost doubled relative to their five-year average of 9.8%.

Lucy Walker, founder of AM Insights and chair of the Aurora Investment Trust, said trust discounts are at levels not seen since the 2008 global financial crisis, yet this does not correlate with wider equity markets.

“Anecdotally, the FCA’s requirement for funds to include trust’s fees in their OCFs has had a huge impact,” she reasoned. “Multi-asset funds that owned a chunk of trusts saw their OCFs rocket as a result. In a world where costs are a top consideration, how long will these trusts continued to be owned for?”

Other factors at play

Of course, trusts’ widening discounts are not solely the result of cost disclosure regulation. According to a recent series of articles from Hawksmoor IM entitled We Need to Talk About Investment Trusts, wealth management consolidation and subsequent requirements for greater scale and liquidity have reduced the number of trusts in their investable universe. The pieces also reference weakening governance from investment trust boards, with a number of investment managers falling out with their board of directors over recent months.

Annabel Brodie-Smith, communications director at the AIC, said: “The cost disclosure regime is having an impact on the popularity of investment trusts, but of course the poor investment environment and higher interest rates are also influences. It’s also worth pointing out that the development of centralised investment propositions, including model portfolios, has happened in a world where open-ended funds dominate.

“The structure of the market – from platforms to the model portfolios themselves – has been developed to suit the trading mechanisms and commercial dynamics of open-ended funds. These barriers are not insurmountable, as many advisers and wealth managers who use investment companies prove. However, they do make open-ended funds an easy ‘default’ option.”

Kamal Warraich, head of equity fund research at Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management, added: “Discounts are widening for a variety of reasons, including persistent outflows from UK assets, international shorting of UK assets through the FTSE 250 index (trusts are overwhelmingly part of this index), and due to the general risk-off approach since 2022.”

But perhaps the stubbornly wide discounts, the shrinking number of wealth managers and the falling number of investment trusts have created a vicious circle. Several investment trusts in 2023 alone have been merged into other larger trusts, as their discount means they are unable to raise fresh capital through markets.

This, according to Gravis Capital’s MacLeod, means the UK’s investment trusts could end up migrating overseas.

“Overseas-based investors are circling the UK’s investment company sector. They’re not vultures, but the outcome is the same and before long we could see ownership of more UK-based assets move abroad,” he warned.

Industry mistrust

Most commentators believe the requirement to provide OCFs on a trust’s NAV comes from mistrust and poor publicity of the investment industry.

Baroness Bowles pointed out that, around the time when PRIIPs first came into play, ‘closet trackers’ – funds which often mirrored benchmarks but charged investors active management fees – began dominating financial media headlines.

“I think there may be some memories of that episode lurking around,” she said. “It was likely right that something was done about this. But a huge portion of the investment trust market is focused solely on innovation and invests in the likes of wind farms, solar batteries, private equity firms and SMEs [small-to-medium enterprises] – none of which have traditionally been in the business of charging excess fees. And they are now put in the position where they have to declare costs that are inaccurate, to their detriment.”

Momentum’s Parfect concurred, adding: “There is a narrative out there that, somehow, we’re all greedy bankers and we are here to rip everyone off.

“This mistrust of the industry is so disruptive. As investors we can see all the sectors of the UK economy which need capital, and we are keen as mustard to fund them. But we can’t.”

A world without investment trusts

Baroness Bowles believes the regulatory misstep occurred because, despite concerns from investment professionals, “it seemed not to matter more broadly because one could still proceed under UCITS”.

However, investment trusts offer investors a number of benefits that their open-ended counterparts cannot.

Warraich pointed out: “There is board oversite, they can borrow money to potentially increase returns, they can manage their balance sheets to smooth dividend growth and investors can buy them at a discount. And, importantly, they plug the gap on the liquidity mismatch issue, because they are a perpetual capital vehicle – fund flows do not impact the NAV.”

Using AIC data, Brodie-Smith compared the performance of sister open-ended funds and investment trusts, those with the same manager and mandate, over ten years to the end of June 2023. She found that 69% of the investment trusts outperformed their sister open-ended fund over the decade.

“Investors get access to a broader range of assets from wind and solar farms to care homes and private equity,” she explained. “Investment trusts have a fixed pool of capital so fund managers can take a long-term view of their portfolio and, unlike open-ended funds, managers are never forced sellers.”

Investment trusts’ ability to invest in illiquid assets – such as renewable energy infrastructure – also offers vital funding to companies which are aiming to reduce the UK’s carbon footprint and dependence on fossil fuels.

Using AIC data, Portfolio Adviser found that assets across the IT Environmental, IT Renewable Energy Infrastructure, and IT VCT Specialist: Environmental sectors, hold combined assets of £25.7bn ($32.7bn, €30.2bn). This is not including other innovative trusts sitting within IT Biotechnology & Healthcare, IT Technology & Tech Innovation, and scattered across various other sectors such as infrastructure and property.

And yet, the average renewable energy infrastructure trust is currently trading on a 22.1% discount to NAV (as at 22 August).

Parfect said: “Certain types of infrastructure, such as GP surgeries or UK lab space – let alone all of the renewable infrastructure – are vital if we want to champion the UK as a good place to list and invest in going forward.

“But these businesses cannot raise enough primary capital because their trust’s shares are trading at discounts. And, because as multi-asset managers we are hamstrung, we cannot even see these significant discounts and buy into the trusts, which would narrow their discounts and benefit both our investors, and the broader economy.”

Why is the FCA not acting?

Baroness Bowles said she finds it “very difficult to understand” why the FCA is not looking into the cost disclosure issue, “especially given the devastating effect it is having on renewable energy”.

“Possibly, the scale of this is not as huge as other things. Perhaps the market does not have the time and resources to escalate this to the appropriate level. Or, perhaps they are too hung up on Consumer Duty. But I otherwise do not know why the FCA has buried its head in the sand.

“But it affects lots of smaller businesses. This does not take away from its importance, especially given this affects parts of the market with no alternative means of fundraising.

“It’s pretty dire and the entire investment trust sector could end up getting killed off.”

Solutions

A number of solutions have been offered by investment professionals. The AIC has been calling for a layered approach to cost disclosure for a while. However, not everybody believes this is the best solution.

MacLeod argued this “would be technically impossible to do”, given the way in which charges data is disseminated to fund-of-fund and wealth managers.

“Currently, a single line of data is inconsistently calculated, using a variety of sources, and distributed by ACD’s for every fund in the UK,” he said. “It is sent to primary and secondary information providers who publish the figure with varying degrees of accuracy. From there it is sent straight into clients’ investment reports. Can you imagine the confusion if one line of synthetic costs became many?”

Instead, he believes the information published in a KID – which he understands “are rarely downloaded” – should be absorbed into a fund’s factsheet, which is currently a marketing document and “widely read”.

“You would have a standard box of information made available to all investors – be they retail or professional – and all contained in one place,” MacLeod explained.

“By amalgamating the two documents and regulating elements of the content the investor would be presented with standardised and clearly presented information; the value of the factsheet should not be underestimated. They are used by investors of all levels of sophistication and downloaded and read in vast numbers every day.

“Investors would benefit from enhanced and regulated content as well as important information, such as market commentary (often the only direct communication between fund manager and investors), performance data, costs, share classes and accessibility. Adopting the factsheet in this way would be helpful to all investors. We know they are consulted and read as the principal source of information, so why not make them work harder for everyone’s benefit?”

Will trusts survive?

Brodie-Smith is optimistic that investment trusts will come through the other side of the crisis.

“Investment trusts have been in existence since 1868 and are the oldest form of collective investment,” she said. “Investment trusts have weathered the World Wars, the Great Depression, the recessions of the mid-1970s, the financial crisis and the pandemic. They continue to deliver strong total returns for investors and continue to adapt to meet investors’ needs.”

Others are less sure. MacLeod said this is different from a market shock in that the headwind “has been foisted upon us”.

“Like a balloon with a pin prick, we’re watching as things slowly deflate,” he warned. “The irony is that the pin and the sticking plaster are in the same hands.”

Parfect said the guidelines are akin to “throwing sand into an otherwise well-oiled machine”.

“Normally the machine will cope with the added strains of going uphill (such as when bond yields are rising), however these guidelines are at best friction against the wheels and cogs, and at worst cause lasting damage and for the machine to suffer a complete breakdown.”

Baroness Bowles said the FCA “should respond quickly to an emergency like this”.

“It should do something,” she urged. “Even if it decides it doesn’t want investment companies anymore, the FCA should be prepared to say that and let markets invent their alternative.

“Does it want investment companies or doesn’t it? Is it going to call time on them? Because that’s what the FCA is facing.”

In response, a spokesperson for the FCA said: “Transparency about both costs and charges and risk form an important part of the regulatory framework, so consumers and those acting for them know what they are paying for.

“We do know that some disclosure requirements can be improved. We have already taken action and have committed to designing a new disclosure regime which will consider what the right way to disclose costs and risks should be. We have previously intervened to ensure PRIIP manufacturers can provide appropriate risk disclosures.

“Many of the detailed requirements about disclosure are legislative and will require the Government to make changes.”

For more insight on UK wealth management, please click on www.portfolio-adviser.com

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