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Buy Fidelity, but not Anthony Bolton, for China
by Rob Kyprianou on Mar 29, 2010 at 07:01
Rob Kyprianou, former CEO of AXA Framlington, invests in China and is a fan of Anthony Bolton. So why won’t he buy Bolton’s China Trust?
I have a lot to thank Anthony Bolton for. As the manager of the Fidelity Special Situations Fund for nearly 30 years up to the end of 2007 he became responsible for the largest portion of my family ISA and SIPP portfolios thanks to strong investment performance and the periodic top up of new money as the strength of his investment track record became more apparent.
I am a fan of equity investment in China. Yes this is a trendy, non-contrarian view. It must be viewed as a long term investment theme, the case for which is well documented - size, increasing openness, social and demographic exigencies, stage of economic development, a massive supply of cheap labour and an even more massive pool of international financial reserves to help fuel growth, in contrast to the massive debt that threatens to constrain growth in much of the developed West. Add to this the fact that the Yuan is linked to the US dollar – a currency I favour right now – with the possibility of upward revaluation against the US currency, it is a favoured theme in my portfolio right now.
Although my SIPP is only 33% invested in equities today, nearly a quarter of this is invested in Asia-dedicated funds, with further exposure through global emerging market funds and, less directly, through companies in funds investing in developed markets but who trade and invest in Asia.
So if I like China and I like Bolton, why am I not buying Bolton’s China Trust? It has nothing to do with the fact that it is an Investment Trust or that it has a performance fee or that it can go short and leverage, all of which could complicate a buy decision.
The first decision you must make is whether you want China at all –don’t buy a fund in a sexy sector because it is being managed by a sexy manager if you are not interested in the underlying asset. The outlook for the underlying asset class is by far and away the most important decision you have to make.
If you are interested in China then you have a choice – do you prefer the Bolton fund over other alternative China products on offer? With a proven manager like Bolton, surely it is going to be a success!
Unfortunately life is not that simple. Bolton has been undoubtedly a great manager of UK equities. But investment management is one of those games where skills are not necessarily transferable. I have worked with a number of very good managers over the years and I know that beating the market consistently and for the long term is a rare capability. Those like Bolton who have done it have their own investment approach and, critically, their own investment discipline which together make up their personal style. At any time the ability for this style to outperform is at risk for many reasons.
In my experience the biggest risk comes from what I call ‘style creep’. It can come in many ways – new beliefs how markets works; extending into new areas of investment; changes to risk management discipline; changing investment style (for example long only managers managing hedge funds) etc. Any of these are danger signals for investment performance.
The fundamental underlying principle is do what you know best and stick to it. It takes years to become a good portfolio manager and that’s why I buy good track records – it is not a guarantee of future investment outperformance but it is the best indicator. As soon as Fidelity announced that Bolton would no longer be managing the UK Special Situations fund I began liquidating my holding which I had held for many years and have no holding today.
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2 comments so far. Why not have your say?
Mark Turner
Apr 28, 2010 at 21:29
Allan Liu has a great track record in managing Fidelity's SEA fund and its performance over the last 12 months has been excellent. Anthony Bolton has a lot to live up to.
report thisterry hutton
Oct 25, 2010 at 17:57
i wonder if anyone thought boltons fund would be 25% up after 6 months,good job i invested.
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