Monthly Investment Report - June 2026

Summary by AI BETAClose X

Ruffer Investment Company Limited reported a marginally negative performance for June 2026, impacted by declining protection assets and contrarian growth holdings, though an increased US dollar exposure and tactical bond additions provided some positive contributions. The company's gold mining equities suffered due to higher real yields and a stronger dollar, while software and China technology allocations also faced headwinds. Ruffer increased its position in LVMH and reduced its yen exposure, anticipating potential headwinds from sustained higher US interest rates. The company noted a tentative market broadening beyond AI beneficiaries, supporting its focus on less crowded areas with attractive valuations, while acknowledging the potential for higher yields and persistent inflation. The company's shares moved from a discount to a premium in April, with 500,000 shares issued at a premium, before returning to a narrow discount in May and June, during which 500,000 shares were repurchased.

Disclaimer*

Ruffer Investment Company Limited
10 July 2026
 

 

RUFFER INVESTMENT COMPANY LIMITED

(a closed-ended investment company incorporated in Guernsey with registration number 41966)

(the "Company")

 

Attached is a link to the Monthly Investment Report for June 2026:

http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/7782L_1-2026-7-9.pdf

June brought two important developments. First, new Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Kevin Warsh delivered a more hawkish than expected message, contributing to a rise in government bond yields. Second, a Memorandum of Understanding between the US and Iran triggered a sharp reversal in oil prices. The decline in geopolitical anxiety encouraged investors to broaden their exposure beyond the narrow group of AI beneficiaries that had previously led markets. The result was an unusual mix of rising bond yields and an equity market rally, as investors became more optimistic about growth whilst demanding higher compensation for inflation and policy risks.

 

Performance was marginally negative over the month, with some of the protection assets losing value as volatility retraced, and some of the contrarian growth exposure continuing to decline. The largest positive contribution came from our increased US dollar exposure, which benefited from the upward re-pricing of US interest rates. Bonds made positive contributions, helped by our tactical additions to five year gilts and ten year US TIPS as yields spiked in April. In June, we rotated some of the long-dated inflation-linked gilts into TIPS, reducing UK-specific risk whilst improving liquidity. Headwinds came primarily from the portfolio's gold mining equities as higher real yields and the firmer dollar weighed on precious metals. Whilst some of the fund's equities performed well, the allocation to software and China technology suffered, as AI victims. The fund's energy equities also fell with crude oil prices. During the month, we increased our position in LVMH, a global luxury company that should benefit from the wealth effect from AI-related export profits in Asia. We also took the opportunity to reduce the fund's yen exposure, acknowledging the near-term headwinds if the Fed keeps rates higher.

 

The tentative market broadening beyond AI capex beneficiaries is encouraging and supports our preference for less crowded areas. We are focused on areas where expectations are low, valuations are supportive and the asymmetry is attractive. Yet the Fed meeting underscored that stronger nominal growth may come with higher yields, stickier inflation and less policy support than markets would like. The AI capex boom is supporting growth, earnings and asset prices in the near term, but history suggests periods of concentrated investment often sow the seeds of their own reversal. So we remain reluctant to chase current momentum and favour more attractively valued AI exposure in both the US and China, whilst our Japanese equities are enjoying the East Asian hardware boom. We believe both conventional and unconventional forms of protection are required. If the AI investment cycle were to disappoint, the resulting growth shock would likely be deflationary, creating a more favourable backdrop for duration. However, if growth continues to broaden and inflationary pressures build, conventional bonds may not provide effective diversification, so derivative strategies remain an important component of investor toolkits.

 

Our objective is not to predict precisely how the current cycle evolves but to construct a portfolio which can both participate in the opportunities it creates and preserve capital if the market narrative reverses. Given more volatile inflation, periodic geopolitical shocks and highly concentrated markets, we believe resilience is the most important portfolio characteristic.

 

The discount narrowed over April, with the shares moving from a 1% discount at 30 March 2026 to a 1.4% premium by 30 April 2026. The Company issued 500,000 shares at a premium. During May and June 2026, the shares returned to a narrow discount. The Board recommenced buybacks, purchasing 500,000 shares in June.

 

 

 

Enquiries:

Aztec Financial Services (Guernsey) Limited

Company Secretary

Lewis Germain

DDI: +44 (0) 1481 749700

Email: ruffer@aztecgroup.co.uk

 

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