Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained
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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
- £1.68
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CHANGE IN PRICE
from 17/06/2013
- 0.60%
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TOTAL RETURN
over 3 years to 18/06/2013
- 83.2%
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Benchmark
35.2%
Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained
TOTAL RETURN over 1 month to 18/06/2013
Key:
Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained Benchmark
Who runs this fund?
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Edward Legget
Currently running 1 fund
Edward Legget was born in Guildford in 1978. He attended the University of Cambridge where he gained... View full manager factsheet
Fund Group
Standard Life
How Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained compares to the sector over
How has Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained performed?
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How Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained compares to the sector over
Sectors: What is this fund investing in? Updated 31-03-2013
Top 10 holdings Updated 31-03-2013
News about: Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained
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Fund information
- Launch Date 28 Sep 2005
- Fund size (Ret) £590.8m
- Base Currency GBX
- ISIN GB00B0LD3B90
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Purchase Info
- Minimum initial investment £1000
- Minimum additional investment £500
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Charges
- Annual management charge1.8%
- Initial charge4%
Standard Life Inv UK Equity Unconstrained
by Saleem Shivji on May 16, 2013 at 10:00
Equities cheap as bond yields remain low

Edward Legget, manager of the SLI UK Equity Unconstrained fund, acknowledges that the absolute value of the stock market is in line with historical earnings-to-yield measures. However, he still sees equities as relatively cheap compared to other asset classes.
'The continuation of quantitative easing (QE) from the Bank of England (BoE), the Fed and Japan...has pushed bond yields down to new lows,' Legget explained.
'The market could re-rate significantly higher if people get confident in the world and policy makers continue to keep yields on other asset classes at very low levels.'
Legget foresees central banks continuing with quantitative easing until economies pick up and unemployment falls. He also believes the great rotation from bonds into equities is a 2014 story, as regulation has made it difficult so far for life companies and pension funds to invest in equities.
Opportunities in Europe

AA-rated Legget agrees that the tensions in Europe of last summer have abated but does not feel that sentiment is in line with macroeconomic data from the area.
'We certainly hoped that the decline in peripheral bond yields would lead to improvement or some stabilisation in those peripheral economies, in particular Spain and Italy. Evidence of that is pretty scant at the moment.'
As a result, his European plays focus on companies with the potential to increase their market share such as Easyjet and DS Smith. Legget sees a benefit for Easyjet in this area if smaller competitors go out of business.
'Both of these companies have strong balance sheets, good dividend yields and significant surplus cash flow.’
DS Smith used these characteristics to acquire SCA assets at the back end of 2012.
Legget had an excellent 2012 managing the SLI UK Equity Unconstrained fund, finishing the year top across all IMA sectors. He has outperformed the FTSE 100, mid cap 250 and All Share this year, whilst celebrating his five-year anniversary on the fund in April 2013.
A top performing stock in 2013 and the fund's largest holding, International Personal Finance, had a successful bond issue which Legget believes will provide an interest-cost benefit going forward.
Other successes include kitchen cabinet maker Howden Joinery, which has done well on the back of the improving UK housing market, and the industrials sector, in which some profits have now been taken.
Miners not pharma
Going forward, Legget is aware of current weak share prices in mining companies and has started to close his underweight position in Rio Tinto. In the financials space, he has shifted money from Barclays and Lloyds into Standard Chartered to gain emerging market exposure.
He predicts that improved first-quarter trading statements for UK corporates will translate to a pick-up in macro data in Q2.
However, sectors which Legget feels are struggling to generate significant free cash flow include pharmaceuticals, which he believes are experiencing significant pricing pressure from Europe; UK food retail, which is 'cannibalising opportunities through convenience stores'; telcos, which are experiencing voice usage declines as data moves from mobiles networks to wi-fi; and large cap oil.
Over five years to the end of April 2013, the SLI UK Equity Unconstrained fund has returned 120.3% versus the FTSE All Share return of 31.1% and the FTSE 250 Mid (ex IT) return of 66.8%.
Citywire Selection Verdict: Ed Legget is the most punchy UK equity manager in Citywire Selection. Not constricted by market share, he holds over half of the fund in medium-sized companies with a bias towards sectors like industrials which will benefit from a pick-up in global growth. The fund boasts an excellent long-term track record but is not for the risk averse, rising and falling much more emphatically than the benchmark. This was evident in the swing from bad to good in 2011-12. If you think markets are on the up there is no better place to be
What is Citywire Selection?
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Portions of the information contained in this factsheet were derived by Citywire Financial Publishers Ltd using content supplied by Lipper, a Reuters Company.


