The Mail on Sunday

Tech fund that delivered 32% in just a year By Jeff Prestridge

- jeff. prestridge@ mailonsund­ay. co.uk

FUND manager Jonathan Curtis has made some serious money for investors in the recent past. And while he believes it might get harder to make returns from here on in because of inflated company valuations, he is adam ant that the case for investing in technology stocks remains a compelling one.

Curtis, based in California’s Silicon Valley – the home of many global t ech companies – is manager of Franklin Technology, a £3.7 billion investment fund that invests across the globe. Over the past year, he has generated a return of 32 per cent for investors while over the past five years he has turned a £1,000 investment into £3,300.

Like other investment experts, Curtis accepts that many technology stocks – especially those in the United States – are trading at a premium compared to other big listed companies. ‘Are we paying a fair price for tech companies at the moment?’ he asks. ‘Maybe, they are higher than I would like but they are not crazy. Share prices do not feel out of control.’

Yet he concedes t hat with a US presidenti­al election in November, stock markets will be volatile, triggering sharp price movement s on leading tech shares. But unlike some he is not fazed by the prospect of Democratic candidate Joe Biden winning. ‘Yes, Trump has been business friendly,’ he says, ‘but Biden would probably pave the way for an enormous spend on infrastruc­ture. That, in turn, would be good for many technology stocks.’

The Franklin fund has 75 holdings, 65 of which are listed. The rest are private companies that make up 2 per cent of the portfolio. The fund is heavily US-centric and has key holdings in traditiona­l tech stocks – the likes of Amazon, Apple and Microsoft. But Curtis says there is ‘lots of action’ elsewhere.

He points to a number of belowthe-radar US holdings that have been key recent drivers of the trust’s overall performanc­e – electronic­s agreement company DocuSign, website security specialist Cloudflare and software company ServiceNow.

All three, he says, have thrived as a result of the surge in digital-based services during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

‘DocuSign has helped businesses move from paper-based documents to those that can be digitally stored and signed,’ says Curtis. ‘ It’s a super powerful service in the current environmen­t. Cloudflare offers security software that has been invaluable to many companies which have turned to the internet to do business. ServiceNow has also helped firms become more efficient by digitalisi­ng certain business processes.’ Although private companies are normally off the radar of most investment funds, Curtis says such investment­s provide an important insight into the use of technology to create new services. ‘These companies are often trying to develop a new market. It allows us as managers to stay ahead of the curve,’ he adds.

Curtis believes the pandemic has speeded up digitalisa­tion – ‘we’ve seen two years of digital transforma­tion take place in little over two months’ – and he sees nothing that will inhibit its growth. ‘It will continue to throw up new opportunit­ies,’ he predicts.

The fund’s ongoing annual charge is 0.9 per cent and shares – denominate­d in dollars – can be bought through platforms such as Hargreaves Lansdown.

Fund Calibre’s two top technology fund recommenda­tions are Axa Framlingto­n Global Technology and Smith & Williamson Artificial Intelligen­ce.

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