Subscribers iconSite access
Newsletter signup



home subscribe

Print
Email
Text size
Comment

One to watch: Gartmore Japan Absolute Return

26 May 2010

The fund aims to achieve a positive absolute return over the long term regardless of market conditions, by taking long and short positions primarily in equities or equity-related derivative contracts of companies having their registered office in Japan. Long positions may be held through a combination of direct investment and/or derivative instruments. Short positions will be held through derivative positions, primarily equity swaps and futures.

Shai Patel, co-founder of financial advice firm Generation Financial Services, reviews Gartmore's Japan Absolute Return fund.

'This absolute return fund launched by Gartmore at the end of January 2010 is attempting to deliver absolute returns (more than zero) over the long term, regardless of market conditions.

'Fund manager John Stewart has more than 18 years’ investment experience, including nine years successfully running a similar absolute return strategy at Gartmore. He hopes to achieve these returns by taking long and short positions primarily in equities or equity-related derivative contracts of companies having their registered office in Japan. The fund will typically have about 100 long and short positions, with a bias towards large-cap companies with a market cap of more than ¥100 billion (£680 million).

'There has been a wealth of absolute return funds that have been launched over the past few years, and choosing a market that has traditionally been erratic when it comes to consistent returns seems like a good idea.
Used properly, the ability to short certain stocks should be beneficial to the performance, as it should protect on the downside, but it needs to be done well.

'When it comes to managing Japanese equities and running absolute returns, Gartmore has a pretty strong record and, by building a well-diversified portfolio of stocks using the best ideas from the team at Gartmore, this fund should stand out from the crowd. Having said that, there are a couple of downsides.

'As a fund it’s a bit pricey, and a performance fee of 20 per cent in excess of the Bank of England base rate – which is currently 0.5 per cent – doesn’t help. More importantly, they do not hedge out the currency, which means your returns can be easily wiped out if the yen/pound rate moves against you (similarly, you could get further gains if the currency moves in your favour). In the past, the trend seems to be that the yen tends to move inversely to equity markets though so it is likely to be the first scenario.'

User comments

There are currently no comments on this post.

 

Advertisement

Related Content

Interesting links
 

Latest news

picture

F&C multi-manager duo to depart following Thames River deal  2 September 2010

F&C Asset Management has revealed that head of UK retail multi-manager Dean Cheeseman and fund manager Oliver Sonnbichler will leave the firm, following the completed acquisition of Thames River Capital. more

Recommendations Recommendations

 

Top ten  Top Ten Life Funds

Fund Offer 1y 3y 5y
UBS Life Structured Credit A 94.15 174.5 n/a n/a
Skandia Finland FIM Russia 11.29 60.6 -2.7 48.5
Skandia Finland Alfred Berg Ryssland 0.86 49.5 -18.0 n/a
Skandia Finland BlackRock Gold & General 2.57 45.6 41.3 150.3
Zurich American Property AL G4 43.30 44.7 20.9 39.3
Skandia Norway Alfred Berg Ryssland 0.87 41.2 -16.8 n/a
Aviva Investec Global Gold S4 0.00 41.0 n/a n/a
Skandia Finland JPM New European 2.07 40.7 -13.2 44.6
Skandia Finland First State Greater China Growth 1.35 40.0 n/a n/a
Skandia Finland Neptune Russia & Greater Russia 1.49 39.8 n/a n/a
 

Investment funds in depth

picture

Structured range in development at Barclays 2 September 2010

Barclays Wealth is planning to launch a new range of structured products in the coming weeks, What Investment has learnt. more

 

Guides

picture

Asset monitor: UK equities 29 June 2010

With investors reassessing their portfolios in light of fluctuating economic conditions, Joe McGrath asks the experts how they are riding the choppy markets. [Premium content] more

 

Special Offers