HL SELECT UK GROWTH SHARES
HL Select UK Growth Shares - Q4 2024 Review
Managers' thoughts
HL SELECT UK GROWTH SHARES
Managers' thoughts
James Jamieson - Fund Manager
18 February 2025
UK Equities delivered a total return of -0.4%* in Q4. During the quarter we saw both the re-election of Donald Trump and the delivery of the first budget by the new Labour government in the UK digested by investors. Whilst the market’s overall movement might have been modest, there was plenty of volatility which seems to be an increasing feature of markets presently.
Early announcements have led to higher bond yields on both sides of the pond. In the US, the Republican party winning the lower and upper houses (along with the Presidency) means that Donald Trump’s inflationary policies are more likely to be passed, resulting in upward pressure on borrowing costs. Similarly at home, the budget has resulted in rising yields given it contains more borrowing and less growth than previously anticipated. The difference being that the UK has much less headroom to absorb the increased cost of borrowing. Financials were the best performing group, led by significant out performance from the Banks as they continue to see strong earnings revisions and re-rating thanks to rising yields and a decent enough economic outlook.
Global growth expectations have softened a bit. November PMIs (the main proxy on economic activity) were little changed, and despite very substantial stimulatory initiatives being announced in China, the package under-shot expectations. It is fair to assume they are holding back some ammo in order to be able to respond when the new US administration takes office and begins firing their 'Tradewar' policies at them. This weighed on the Materials sector which is highly geared to Chinese demand. Healthcare was also weak due to an unrelated issue in China centred on AstraZeneca (see Stocks Review below). Representing over 6.5% of the FTSE All Share, this had an impact on the index.
The fund delivered a total return of -0.6% during the quarter. With an investment philosophy that centres on quality businesses and their long-term growth and cash generation potential, it was likely that the fund would face a headwind given the march back up in bond yields. This has been the case for some time and subsequently the Value style (i.e. stocks that are optically very good value, irrespective of their future prospects) continues to lead.
Under the bonnet, the main sector-level attribution of performance was different to that of the index and owes more to stock selection than the positioning of the fund. Financials made the strongest contribution but were led by Diversified Financials (rather than the Banks). Our Consumer Discretionary names also performed well, especially Games Workshop. Industrials were the principal detractor, most notably Experian and Ashtead. The Stocks Review fleshes out many of these trends.
Regarding portfolio activity during the quarter, we made two in-sector switches. In the Energy space BP was exited and the proceeds reinvested into Shell. Given a softer oil price outlook, we prefer Shell’s superior execution and lower-risk balance sheet which have enabled it to maintain the high level of shareholder returns. In the Real Estate space, we rotated PHP into Tritax Big Box as we see a higher level of structural growth in logistics and greater value creation when recovery materialises.
01/01/2020 to 31/12/2020 | 01/01/2021 to 31/12/2021 | 01/01/2022 to 31/12/2022 | 01/01/2023 to 31/12/2023 | 01/01/2024 to 31/12/2024 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
HL Select UK Growth A Acc | 2.3% | 8.6% | -8.5% | 7.6% | 6.9% |
FTSE All Share TR GBP | -9.8% | 18.3% | 0.3% | 7.9% | 9.5% |
IA UK All Companies | -6.2% | 17.2% | -9.2% | 7.4% | 8.0% |
Past performance isn’t a guide to the future. Source: *Morningstar Direct to 31/12/24
HSBC
Along with most of the Banks, HSBC had a strong run. Higher yields coupled with contained defaults and no recession is the right setup for lenders to perform. Furthermore, those with an investment banking franchise (like HSBC) enjoyed additional support on expectation of better deal and trading activity in 2025. Its Q3 update came in ahead of expectations, while the capital position also beat expectations. The new CEO announced a new simplified corporate structure along with various cost saves, nothing too radical and as expected. All in all, it was a good quarter.
Games Workshop
An excellent outcome from one of our highest conviction holdings. This is one of the least researched companies that communicates less to the market than any company that we cover, so it was an unusually eventful quarter. While we don't anticipate management to change their ‘focus on a day job’ attitude, analyst coverage could well increase having been promoted to the FTSE 100 in December. The H1 trading statement materially surpassed expectations. The core revenues from product sales continued to come through well which is especially impressive given a tough comparator in the previous year. Licencing revenues were also a big beat thanks to strong video game sales from the recently launched Space Marine 2 title.
In addition to the very satisfactory operational delivery, the most important development of all was the announcement that they have reached a final deal with Amazon Studios to create films, TV series and affiliated merchandise based on its Warhammer 40K universe intellectual property. While it will take time to materialise and flow through in the numbers, we believe that the deal will drive licencing revenues and raise awareness for the franchise, in turn driving core product sales as well. This exclusive agreement ratifies a core part of the investment thesis and where we see considerable upside to the Valuation medium term.
Visa
From our perspective, the strong share price run reflects Trump being elected and the expectation of a more benign regulatory environment as a result. There were other incremental positives that came through during the period too. Namely card payments data demonstrating resilience, which was subsequently affirmed at the Q4 report. The results were ahead of expectations and the all-important value added services that investors care so much about put out a strong showing, now representing approximately one third of group revenues.
LSEG
Great to see it featuring in the leaders board for a second consecutive quarter. In the way of news flow, the only thing to mention was a Q3 update which was decent all round and similar to investment banks, which saw the Capital Markets and Post Trade divisions lead the beat. Other areas were fine and the company is delivering well overall. The stock has re-rated over the last few years as the market recognises its credentials and that prospects have improved, with the core business now being a data and value-added analytics business. We think there is more to come and anticipate a step up in growth going forward.
Compass
Like LSEG, Compass appears again. Expectedly good full year results, combined with confident management outlook and tone confirms its status as a quality compounder. The detail suggests an acceleration on various fronts, so exit momentum into the new financial year looks decent. The financial guidance appears conservative to us and we expect a new buyback to be announced at the half year results which could enhance full year earnings.
Gain/loss % | Contribution to fund value (%) | |
---|---|---|
HSBC | 18.6% | 0.9% |
Games Workshop | 24.7% | 0.6% |
Visa | 23.3% | 0.5% |
LSEG | 10.4% | 0.5% |
Compass | 11.2% | 0.5% |
Past performance isn’t a guide to the future. Source: Bloomberg (30/09/24 – 31/12/24).
AstraZeneca
Last quarter it featured due to pipeline readouts. Weakness this time is ascribed to an opaque situation playing out in China that has raised concern about its ability to realise the full potential there. While the country only represents circa 13% of group revenue, it is materially more important to the future with growth tracking nearly +20%. A strong Q3 update provided limited support.
The story focuses on a corruption probe concerning certain oncology drugs, with the China Head and several other employees being detained by the authorities. An initial vacuum of information, misleading media information and a volatile market resulted in big moves. We can see some impact with local hospitals ceasing purchases of certain products pending the outcome. However, the local regulator has subsequently approved new drugs suggesting that its future is not in jeopardy. We believe the issue is over discounted and continue to maintain that the pipeline is undervalued.
Experian
It is hard to determine a clear cause of the recent weakness. The valuation had reached the fuller end of its historic range after a strong run. But as we have previously said it is now a better, broader business that merits a higher rating. Maturing investments should also see increasing growth and returns in the future. Our assumption is that higher yields and hawkish commentary from the US Federal Reserve has pushed out investor's short-term expectations for a US credit cycle recovery. H1 results were strong, with pick-ups observed in the detail. We remain constructive.
Rio Tinto
As mentioned in the Market Review, macro factors resulted in weakness among the Miners and Rio was no exception. In terms of company specifics, it was a busy period of communication including an uneventful production update and an investor day that resulted in a small downgrade to numbers. Of most note was a fairly significant acquisition of the Lithium producer Arcadium for $6.7bn. Lithium is currently in the doldrums due to the slowdown in electric vehicles so the countercyclical deal makes sense. The company also sanctioned $2.5bn of capital expenditure to expand Lithium production capacity at its Rincon site.
Ashtead
The stock re-rated strongly on Trump’s election given expectations of a stronger US domestic economy and that being where the majority of operations are located. So a profit warning at the Q2 update was taken very badly, despite the announcement of a new buy back worth 6% of the market capitalization. The update concerns us given that prior year comparators were easy and the recent elevated storm activity in the US should have proved more of a boon than was the case. Despite still seeing value, the business has not delivered as we expect and would like on several occasions, so our conviction reduces. After a long time coming the board has announced its intention to move the primary listing to the US which may serve as a positive catalyst.
Tritax Big Box
Real Estate is treated as a geared proxy for bond yields, irrespective of the fundamental value contained within the business. As a result of the recent march up in yields, the stock has de-rated aggressively. Its size and liquidity and the absence of updates from the company won’t have helped. Although frustrating we are not concerned and continue to see significant value.
Gain/loss (%) | Contribution to fund value (%) | |
---|---|---|
AstraZeneca | -9.7% | -0.6% |
Experian | -12.4% | -0.5% |
Rio Tinto | -10.9% | -0.5% |
Ashtead | -14.2% | -0.3% |
Tritax Big Box | -15.5% | -0.3% |
Past performance isn’t a guide to the future. Source: Bloomberg (30/09/24 – 31/12/24)
Big events have passed and by far the biggest outcome is known: that Donald Trump has taken up the US Presidency and that the Republican party now hold a majority in both the House of Representatives and the Senate (aka the ‘Red Sweep’). What we don’t know is how much of the hyperbole will stick, although the Red Sweep does increase the likelihood of making their initiatives a reality. While the range of outcomes is very wide, Q1 should reveal the majority of what is actually intended, with the remainder of the year seeing the work-through. Markets are predominantly driven by expectations around inflation, interest rates and growth. Below we draw out the three major topics that will determine these forces in 2025. Unlike the start of previous years where the high uncertainty was ascribed to the disruption wreaked by COVID, today the subject focus has changed with all three centered around the new US administration.
US domestic policy is important because many of the companies we invest in have significant US exposure. Furthermore, it determines the global appetite for risk given the dominance of its economy and capital market. Trump’s rhetoric has been contradictory. Many of his key policies such as deregulation and tax cuts are inflationary, and put upward pressure on bond yields (as we are seeing). But this hurts Joe Public who he purports to serve and can damage real growth (i.e. net of inflation) which is at odds with his pledge to invigorate growth. Our gut says that the inflationary deterrent will limit what actually comes to pass and part of the reason we believe interest rates are nearish their peak. We don’t expect the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency (aka ‘DOGE’) to deliver anything like its intended $2trn of cost cuts, but even a portion would be deflationary.
US foreign policy harbours the other two big issues for the year ahead. Firstly ‘Tradewars’ were integral during Trump’s first term and tariffs are a core topic this time around. Anecdotally only a fraction of what was promised previously came to be and had less of an impact on growth than economists had anticipated, although the headline risk during the duals can be painful for risk assets. Given tariffs can be inflationary, the extent of US action may be limited by the disincentive of stoking domestic inflation (as per our point above), especially as vulnerable countries now have a playbook and are better prepared to defend. Being the main antagonist, China’s response is key.
As leader of the free world, the US is very instrumental in determining both instigation and resolution of conflict. Trump has spoken extensively on his want to end the Ukraine war. This has major bearing on European fiscal policy, commodity prices and a peace dividend (for growth) short term, with even more profound and lasting implications for the geopolitical world order. The major question is how Europe respond if the US withdraw their support. The consensus among experts is that Europe do not have the Euros to continue if the Dollars stop flowing. The risk to this view is if a new government in Germany were to lift the fiscal debt brake and direct spend on rearming in order to defend the future of Europe (and in so doing stimulate the economy).
In summary, inflation expectations rising and growth expectations falling has called into question the consensus for a ‘soft landing’ (i.e. the scenario where central banks slow down economic growth to curb inflation but without triggering a recession). At this point we continue to believe in that prognosis and will be following the above three variables closely.
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