Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies
To print fund fact sheets, please use the print option in the Factsheet Tools section in the top right corner:
http://citywire.co.uk/fund/factsheet/c211197
Glossary
-
Fund
A way for individual investors to pool their money together, allowing them to invest in assets that would otherwise be unobtainable
-
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
-
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
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
Securities
A contract representing something of financial value. Shares and bonds are the most common types of securities.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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'.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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%.
-
LATEST PRICE
updated on 17/05/2013
- £0.77
-
CHANGE IN PRICE
from 16/05/2013
- 0.13%
-
TOTAL RETURN
over 3 years to 17/05/2013
- 23.1%
-
Benchmark
2.4%
Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies
TOTAL RETURN over 1 month to 17/05/2013
Key:
Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies Benchmark
Who runs this fund?
-
Guy Stern
Currently running 2 funds
Guy Stern is an investment director and head of multi-asset management at Standard Life Investments... View full manager factsheet
-
Euan Munro
Currently running 3 funds
Euan Munro is head of multi-asset investing and fixed income at Standard Life Investments. He focuse... View full manager factsheet
Fund Group
Standard Life
How Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies compares to the sector over
How has Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies performed?
- Fund Performance
- Return
- Discrete performance
- Change time period
- Compare
Add items for comparison
- Funds
- Managers
- Benchmarks
- £ or %
Currency or Percentage
- Reset
How Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies compares to the sector over
News about: Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies
-
Fund information
- Launch Date 29 Jan 2008
- Fund size (Inst Acc) N/A
- Base Currency GBX
- ISIN GB00B28S0218
-
Purchase Info
- Minimum initial investment £250000
- Minimum additional investment £50000
-
Charges
- Annual management charge0.8%
- Initial chargeN/A
Standard Life Inv Glo Abs Ret Strategies
by Jonathan Miller on Apr 17, 2013 at 11:08
The Standard Life Investments Global Absolute Return Strategies (GARS) fund has taken a 2% fund position in Chinese equities.
Its Citywire Alternative Ucits A-rated lead managers and see the Chinese market as attractively priced and even though its growth rates are now below historic highs, they view it as still attractive in a global context.
The fund's strategy involves running a diverse range of up to 30 strategies covering bonds, equities, currencies and more specialised areas such as the relative volatility of different markets. Its lack of correlation to traditional asset classes and strong performance pattern has seen assets in the strategy swell to over £21 billion.
China fundamentals

The move into China reflects the belief that it will generate solid economic growth of between 7% and 8% per year.
‘On our estimates, this level of growth is not currently priced into equity market valuations. We feel that the successful leadership transition and relatively loose monetary policy will provide a supportive backdrop for continued strong economic growth’, says .
Another emerging market position comes through a holding in Russian equities. The managers view this as a geared play on the oil price, given that the country is the world’s second largest producer and the index is largely made up of oil and gas stocks or banks that lend to these companies.
The falling oil price and underperformance of the Russian market means performance for this holding has been a detractor, but its use for diversification purposes means that if the oil price was to rise, some equity positions such as those in the US would be impacted, but this would help soften the blow.
Backing the dollar

Currency calls, where one currency is preferred over another, have been helping performance. The long US dollar versus short euro trade has been one of the longest standing strategies, initiated in 2008 when the euro was trading at 1.56 to the dollar. Its decline has continued this year and now stands at around 1.31.
One of the fund’s central aims is to protect capital during challenging times, meaning it is constructed to perform in a range of outcomes. One scenario is that the multi decade bull run in western government bonds could soon turn. As a result, the portfolio’s sensitivity to increasing yields is at its lowest level ever.
‘We feel that buying core sovereign bonds at current yields is the investment equivalent of picking up pennies in front of a steam roller,’ he says.
Given that the US dollar is likely to benefit from rising yields which will be accompanied by better economic growth, backs the long dollar versus the yen to shine.
‘Investors borrowing in dollars will face increasing funding costs, and likely switch this funding into lower-yielding currencies such as the yen, which will correspondingly fall versus the dollar’.
It has also been contributing to returns in recent months as the Bank of Japan announced its quantitative easing programme.
Avoiding equity falls

These examples of long term positions fit with how the managers and wider team of strategists make macroeconomic decisions they feel will work over the next three years.
If equity markets were to sell off, Stern believes that some of the currency positions would benefit, as would a strategy that backs US large companies over US small companies. He thinks the latter would struggle to meet their growth expectations if markets fall.
‘We believe the multi-year re-rating of small cap equities relative to large cap equities in the US has gone too far. This position provides defensive ballast for the portfolio as it works best in a declining equity market,’ he says.
Since launch in May 2008 until the end of March, the has returned 42.8% compared with a 35.3% increase for its target return of cash plus 5%. Performance has been generated with a third of the volatility of global equities over this period.
Citywire Selection Verdict: This successful fund has seen inflows continue to swell with total assets in the strategy reaching over £21 billion. Growth in size has not hampered returns with gains of 7% posted in 2012. The mix of decorrelated ideas across currencies, interest rates, commodities, equities and bonds have continued to deliver.Two of the four lead fund managers left in September 2012, but with more than 20 people involved in the process, we continue to back the strategy and depth of the team headed by Euan Munro.
What is Citywire Selection?
Citywire Selection is an investment guide containing around 150 of the best ways to invest in a range of areas, as chosen by our research team using a rigorous and transparent process.
We don't sell funds, so you can trust the independence of our recommendations.
Find out more or download the new Selection iPad App for free
Citywire Selection Updates
Latest updates on how the funds in Citywire Selection are investing
- Standard Life Investments UK Equity Unconstrained - 16/05/2013
- CF Miton Special Situations - 16/05/2013
- First State Asia Pacific Leaders - 09/05/2013
- GLG Japan Core Alpha - 08/05/2013
- Threadneedle UK Equity Income - 08/05/2013
- Investec Emerging Markets Debt - 01/05/2013
- Aberdeen Asia Pacific - 26/04/2013
- Standard Life Investments GARS fund - 17/04/2013
- Murray International Trust - 16/04/2013
- Cazenove Multi-Manager Diversity - 15/04/2013
- Allianz Gilt Yield - 11/04/2013
- Jupiter Merlin Income Portfolio - 04/04/2013
- Schroder Income - 04/04/2013
- Investec Global Bond - 29/03/2013
- Fidelity Special Situations - 29/03/2013
- Cazenove European - 29/03/2013
- Polar Capital Japan - 29/03/2013
- Old Mutual UK Select Smaller Companies - 29/03/2013
- Threadneedle European Smaller Companies - 29/03/2013
- Artemis Strategic Assets - 29/03/2013
Portions of the information contained in this factsheet were derived by Citywire Financial Publishers Ltd using content supplied by Lipper, a Reuters Company.





