JOHCM UK Equity Income
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Glossary
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Fund
A way for individual investors to pool their money together, allowing them to invest in assets that would otherwise be unobtainable
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Fund manager
The person who decides where the fund's money should be invested. As such, finding a talented manager (such as those with a Citywire rating) is of paramount importance
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Sector
Funds are grouped together into sectors, allowing fund managers to be judged against their benchmarks and peer group. Each sector has rules about what assets funds are allowed to invest in
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Assets
A generic term meaning 'what you own'. If you can buy it, it's an asset. In the world of investments the most common assets are shares, bonds, property and cash.
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Asset class
A group of assets with similar properties. For example, while shares will rise or fall in price individually, economic factors can affect all shares similarly. The same economic factors might affect bonds very differently – so shares and bonds are separate asset classes.
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Asset allocation
The process of deciding which asset classes to invest in. Successful asset allocation is often more important than selecting individual assets (for example deciding whether to invest mainly in shares, rather than which shares to invest in). Since most fund managers are tied to their sector rules, you need to either do your own asset allocation or buy a managed fund.
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Benchmark
A measure of how different areas of the markets are performing, against which funds can be compared. For example, a fund in the UK All Companies sector might be compared against the FTSE All-Share index of every company traded on the London Stock Exchange. A good fund manager will be able to beat the benchmark most of the time, but very few can.
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Securities
A contract representing something of financial value. Shares and bonds are the most common types of securities.
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Managed funds
Unlike most funds, which are restricted to investing in particular markets by the rules of their sector, managed funds can invest in just about anything. While they can have subtly different objectives, they are split into 'Active Managed', where the manager is given free reign; 'Balanced Managed', where the manager can invest a maximum of 85% in shares to reduce risk; and 'Cautious Managed' with a 60% maximum in shares.
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Shares
A share in a company represents part ownership of its assets (e.g. its buildings, intellectual property and so on) and its future income (paid out as dividends). The value of a share depends largely on other investors' expectations of the company's future growth and income.
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Bonds
Companies can issue bonds as a way of raising money. When you buy a bond, the company is agreeing to pay you a fixed income (hence the alternative name 'fixed income securities') for a certain time period, after which your money is repaid. If investors suspect a company may be unable to repay, they will demand a higher income or 'yield' - hence 'high yield bonds'.
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Risk
In investing, 'risk' can refer to different things, but essentially means the possibility that your objectives won't be met. In this context, risk is a calculation of the 'standard deviation' of returns each month – in otherwords, a measure of how rocky the returns are. The higher the rank, the less risk the fund takes with your money.
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Sharpe Ratio
This is a way of calculating 'risk adjusted returns' – i.e. how much value the fund is adding above the risk it takes to generate its returns. The higher the number the better.
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Return
A measure of how your investments have performed, relative to your initial investment. For example if you invest £1,000 in a fund, and a year later your investment is worth £1,100, you've made a 10% return.
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Maximum loss
Comparing the maximum loss for different managers (or between a manager and their benchmarks, as on these factsheets) over a given period is a good way of seeing who's doing the best job of safeguarding investors' money. Otherwise known as maximum 'drawdown', this is a measure of how much you would lose if you bought an investment at its most expensive and sold at its cheapest. For example if a fund was worth £1 a unit at one point but then fell to 50p – regardless of what happened in the meantime – the fund's loss would be 50%.
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LATEST PRICE
updated on 18/06/2013
- £2.45
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CHANGE IN PRICE
from 17/06/2013
- 0.45%
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TOTAL RETURN
over 3 years to 18/06/2013
- 62.5%
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Benchmark
37.8%
TOTAL RETURN over 1 month to 18/06/2013
Key:
JOHCM UK Equity Income Benchmark
Who runs this fund?
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Clive Beagles
Currently running 1 fund
Whilst at Newton, Clive Beagles managed the Newton Higher Income fund as well as various pooled and... View full manager factsheet
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James Lowen
Currently running 1 fund
James Lowen was born in Nottingham in the early 70s. He studied at the University of Exeter and grad... View full manager factsheet
Fund Group
J O Hambro Capital Management
How JOHCM UK Equity Income compares to the sector over
How has JOHCM UK Equity Income performed?
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How JOHCM UK Equity Income compares to the sector over
Sectors: What is this fund investing in? Updated 30-04-2013
Top 10 holdings Updated 30-04-2013
News about: JOHCM UK Equity Income
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Fund information
- Launch Date 30 Nov 2004
- Fund size (A GBP Acc) N/A
- Base Currency GBP
- ISIN GB00B03KR500
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Purchase Info
- Minimum initial investment £1000
- Minimum additional investment N/A
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Charges
- Annual management charge0.8%
- Initial chargeN/A
JOHCM UK Equity Income
by Frank Talbot on May 30, 2013 at 11:20
Less is more in mining

Clive Beagles and James Lowen, managers of the £1.8 billion JOHCM UK Equity Income fund, have initiated positions in Glencore and gold miner Polymetal, the first time they have held miners in the fund since 2009.
Beagles believes the consistent de-rating of the sector has presented selective opportunities and the Glencore board in particular have a very different mind-set to the expansionary vision that has been a staple of the industry for many years. With high share ownership among the new management he has conviction that this is not a false promise.
‘The euphoric view that the Chinese boom will last forever has come out of prices and has made these companies think about capital allocation and capital discipline,’ Beagles told Citywire Selection
‘The Glencore board have been very clear about how aggressively they are going to cut back on capital expenditure. This is a very different message from miners over the last few years.’
This is an attitude that Beagles feels will translate into income for his investors.
‘We believe the yield will grow quite quickly and free cash flow of between 13-15% can be expected, which within a couple of years could easily yield around 5%.’
While the prospects of traditional miners like Glencore are driven by this ‘economic euphoria’ he believes that gold miners, such as Polymetal, are in fact inversely correlated to this trend as a result of the precious metal's safe haven status. However, it does share the characteristics that Beagles looks for and ‘again, it has got a very clear capital allocation and dividend policy,’ he says.
While he does not have a firm view on the direction of the gold price from its current level, it is hard to ignore a firm with such strong fundamentals, he says. The total allocation to mining is 2.65%, less than half the market weight of 7.2%, with 1.9% in Glencore and 0.75% in Polymetal.
Limited upside in 2013
Despite this move into more traditionally cyclical stocks, the team has been ‘changing down a gear’ in the belief markets have run a little high. At the beginning of the year their assertion was that markets could be expected to make a 12-15% return in 2013 and despite gains of around 10% so far, they still believe this holds true.
‘It would not be a huge surprise if markets marked time for a while before resuming their upward momentum.’
Elsewhere in the portfolio, Beagles and Lowen have been taking profits in three of their core holdings- Standard Life, DS Smith and 3i Group, but they maintain that they all have scope to post further share price gains. They have also exited a position in CSR which has performed strongly but has disappointed on the dividend front by preferring to deploy capital for share buy-backs.
They have also shuffled the pack in their UK consumer facing stocks, trimming positions in Halfords, Restaurant Group and Marshalls in favour of Tesco, Segro and taking a new position in Kingfisher.
The fund offers a balance between growth and income and by tending to favour mid caps the managers have been able to generate strong outperformance. However, this approach tends to bring with it greater volatility than some of its peers. It is a welcome move then, with markets so buoyant, that they are bringing more focus onto stocks that have strong balance sheets and exhibit more absolute return characteristics.
Over five years to the end of April the fund has returned 84.6%, more than three times the FTSE 350 Higher Yield index’s 28.2% rise.
Citywire Verdict: This fund invests across the market cap spectrum and while its mid cap allocation may have increased the portfolio’s volatility it has worked to great effect. Always strong in a rally, the managers focus on attractive entry points with large positions in financials and media. Beagles and Lowen have maintained an overweight position in consumer-facing stocks while shunning traditional income areas such as tobacco and pharma. The fund is one to pick if you can handle short-term volatility in return for strong long-term outperformance.
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