Interim Management Statement

RNS Number : 5038L
Securities Trust of Scotland PLC
12 August 2013
 



SECURITIES TRUST OF SCOTLAND PLC

INTERIM MANAGEMENT STATEMENT

COVERING THE PERIOD FROM 1 APRIL TO 30 JUNE 2013

 

Manager's commentary

In the second quarter, the MSCI World High Dividend Yield index fell 0.9%. The positive momentum enjoyed by global equity markets from the start of the year carried on until the end of May, but then petered out with June being a weak month. The strongest regions during the period were Japan and North America and the weakest were Asia and the emerging markets.

The Trust's NAV fell 0.4%, but outperformed the benchmark over the three months. The key detractors from performance were two Australian companies; WorleyParsons, the engineering consultancy firm, and Woolworths, the supermarket chain. WorleyParsons is suffering in the short term because resource-services markets are being impacted by project by project delays and reviews. Woolworths is facing a tough and competitive retail environment in Australia but is performing well within it, while improving market share and its customer offering. On the other side, key positive contributors included; Lockheed Martin, the US defence company; Safran, the French aircraft-engine manufacturer; and Allianz, the German insurance company. All three companies reported encouraging earning and positive outlook.

 

During the quarter, we made one new purchase - Kinder Morgan, the US pipeline operator. We like the company because of its attractive legacy assets, the appeal of its future growth opportunities, the relatively low-risk nature of the business, and its combination of dividend yield (approximately 4%) and dividend growth (approximately 10% CAGR expected). On the sales side, we fully exited Prosieben, the German TV-channel operator. The stock reached its target price in April; we had been reducing our position into strength before completing the exit.

 

Alan Porter

 

PROFILE

Objective       To achieve rising income and long-term capital growth by investment in global equities.

Benchmark    MSCI World High Dividend Yield index

Sector             Global Growth & Income

Launch           28 June 2005

 

PORTFOLIO

Asset class

31 Mar

30 Jun

Equities

104.3%

104.8%

Cash

2.1%

1.6%

Gearing

(6.4%)

(6.4%)

 

 

Equity allocation


31 Mar

 30 Jun

Healthcare

       19.4%

    20.5%

Consumer goods

15.4%

14.6%

 

Financials

14.4%

13.7%

 

Oil & gas

12.1%

13.2%

 

Telecommunications

10.7%

10.6%

 

Consumer services

11.9%

10.6%

 

Industrials

9.2%

9.8%

 

Basic materials

4.3%

4.4%

 

Utilities

1.7%

1.7%

 

Technology

0.9%

0.9%

 

           

Regional allocation


31 Mar

30 Jun

Europe

49.3%

47.8%

North America

40.1%

42.2%

Asia Pacific ex Japan

5.7%

5.0%

Japan

2.9%

3.0%

Emerging markets

2.0%

2.0%

 

Top 10 equity holdings (38.7% of total portfolio)

AT&T

5.1%

Pfizer

4.9%

Chevron

4.2%

Sanofi

3.9%

Novartis

3.9%

Nestlé

3.6%

Royal Dutch Shell

3.5%

Roche

3.4%

Philip Morris International

3.2%

Total

3.0%

 

Number of holdings     50

Number of countries    13

 

Key facts

Total Assets                                         £156.5m

Share price (p)                                    148.0

Net asset value per share (p)             140.5*

Discount (premium)                          (5.3%)

Net yield                                             3.2%**

*The NAV stated in our reporting is inclusive of current year revenue.

**Source: State street as at 30 June 2013. The historic yield reflects dividends declared over the past 12 months as a percentage of the mid-market share price, as at the date shown. Investors may be subject to tax on their dividends.

 

 

PERFORMANCE

Discrete performance over 12 months to 30 June


2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

Share Price

26.1%

9.7%

37.5%

16.9%

(16.0%)

NAV

22.3%

2.1%

32.2%

25.8%

(27.2%)

Benchmark

21.3%

3.6%

25.6%

21.1%

(20.5%)

 

Cumulative performance over periods to 30 June 2013


One

month

Three

months

Six

months

One

year

Three

years

Five

years

Share Price

(3.1%)

2.1%

19.8%

26.1%

90.2%

86.8%

NAV

(1.9%)

(0.4%)

16.6%

22.3%

65.1%

51.1%

Benchmark

(2.4%)

(0.9%)

15.3%

21.3%

57.8%

52.0%

 

Source: Martin Currie and Morningstar. Bid to bid basis with net income reinvested over the periods shown in sterling terms. These figures do not include the costs of buying and selling shares in an investment trust.

 

If these were included, performance figures would be reduced.

 

Prior to 1 August 2011, the Trust's benchmark was the FTSE All-Share index and the MSCI World High Dividend Yield index thereafter. 

 

Past performance is not a guide to future returns.

 

Capital structure

Ordinary shares 111,344,771*

*Source: Martin Currie as at 30 June 2013.

 

Board of directors

Neil Donaldson (chairman)

Andrew Irvine

Charles Berry

Edward Murray

Rachel Beagles

 

 

  

Material events and transactions

The fourth interim dividend for the year to 31 March 2013 of 1.3p per share was paid on 28 June 2013 to shareholders on the register on 7 June 2013 making a total for the year of 4.75p

 

The Trust issued 985,000 new ordinary shares during this period.

 

Website

The trust has its own website at www.securitiestrust.com. There you will find further details about the trust, information on Martin Currie, daily share prices (and associated risks), and you can access regular webcasts by the manager.

 

Key information

Year end                                                                      31 March

Annual general meeting                                            July

Interim dividends paid                                              March, June, September, December

Annual management fee as at 31 March 2013†       0.6%

On-going charges as at 31 March 2013*                   1.0%

Epic code                                                                    STS

Reuters code                                                               STS.L

†Percentage of net assets.

*Percentage of shareholders' funds. Includes annual management fee.

 

Net asset value and dividend history

 

As at

31 March

Share

price

NAV

per share

Discount/

(premium)

Dividend

per share

 

2006

125.5p

135.6p

7.4%

2.85p

2007

141.3p

148.4p

4.8%

5.05p

2008

116.0p

121.5p

3.8%

5.45p

2009

66.3p

75.4p

12.2%

5.45p

2010

99.0p

109.4p

9.5%

4.65p

2011

108.0p

117.4p

8.0%

4.65p

2012

122.0p

119.8p

(1.9%)

4.70p

2013

146.3p

141.8p

(3.2%)

4.75p

 

Past performance is not a guide to future returns.

 

 

  

Risk factors

 

Please note that, as the shares in investment trusts are traded on a stockmarket, the share price will fluctuate in accordance with supply and demand and may not reflect the underlying net asset value of the shares.

 

Depending on market conditions and market sentiment, the spread between the purchase and sale price can be wide. As with all stock exchange investments the value of investment trust shares purchases will immediately fall by the difference between the buying and selling prices, the bid-offer spread.

 

Investment trusts may also borrow money in order to make further investments. This is known as 'gearing' and can enhance shareholder returns in rising markets but, conversely, can reduce them in falling markets.

 

The value of investments and the income from them may go down as well as up and is not guaranteed. An investor may not get back the amount originally invested.

The majority of charges will be deducted from the capital of the trust. This will constrain the capital growth of the trust in order to maintain the income streams.

 

High exposure to a single country market increases potential volatility. Changes in the rates of exchange may cause the value of investments to go up or down.

 

The trust invests in emerging markets which tend to be more volatile than mature markets and the value of your investment could move sharply up or down. In some circumstances the underlying investments may become illiquid which may constrain the investment manager's ability to realise some or the entire portfolio. The registration and settlement arrangements in emerging markets may be less developed than in more mature markets so the operational risks of investing are higher. Political risks and adverse economic circumstances are more likely to arise putting your investment at risk.

 

Funds which invest in smaller and/or medium sized companies are specialist funds and as such are likely to carry higher risks than a more widely invested fund.


This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
 
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