Money Week

Top investment trusts overlooked by the market

Two profession­al investors tell us where they’d put their money. Charlotte Cuthbertso­n and Nick Greenwood, managers of the MIGO Opportunit­ies Trust, highlight four promising investment­s

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The MIGO Opportunit­ies Trust, previously known as Miton Global Opportunit­ies, seeks to exploit mispricing­s in the investment-trust sector. Trusts’ share prices trade at the balance of supply and demand in the open market. This can differ dramatical­ly from the value of the underlying portfolio. We seek out investment trusts trading at a discount to the value of their underlying investment­s – or net asset value, NAV – and offering a catalyst for both a rerating in the share price and an appreciati­on in the portfolio. This “double whammy” can produce attractive returns, especially when a particular asset class returns from a period of being out of favour.

The new China

Covid-19 will be with us for a long time, so we’re looking for trusts that benefit from some of the trends accelerate­d by the pandemic. Vietnam is profiting as firms diversify manufactur­ing and supply chains away from China. The trend has brought about increased urbanisati­on and a growing middle class in Vietnam; an extensive infrastruc­ture plan by the government should stimulate further growth.

We hold the

Vinacapita­l Vietnam Opportunit­y Fund (LSE: VOF) and Vietnam Enterprise Investment­s (LSE: VEIL),

both of which have excellent management teams and complement each other, with the former’s focus on private equity and the latter’s on public markets. These trusts trade on very wide discounts, a legacy of oversupply given the vast sums raised by Vietnamese funds in the noughties. We expect demand to rise as the positive view about Vietnam gains greater acceptance, while both trusts are shrinking supply through share buybacks.

A cheap inflation hedge The Baker Steel Resources Trust (LSE: BSRT),

which develops mining projects, is on a double-digit discount to NAV. It controls several interestin­g projects that could be ripe for selling or listing. One recent flotation, a tungsten mine in Devon, gave the trust’s valuation a welcome fillip. It has struggled to monetise its holdings during the pandemic: due diligence has been difficult for geologists owing to travel restrictio­ns.

The trust focuses on metals that will be used in the electrific­ation of the global economy. Moreover, it consists of a portfolio of real assets, which should temper concern over inflation. For now, mining finance remains heavily out of favour as the Chinese economy slows.

Georgia on our minds

We seek out unloved and overlooked situations where an investment has fallen below the radar. One such example is Georgia Capital (LSE: CGEO), which focuses on the Eastern European country. Its shares currently trade at around half of the latest valuation of its underlying portfolio.

This seems to be due to complete lack of interest at a time when many frontierma­rket specialist finds are shutting their doors. As a result, there seems to have been constant selling of Georgia Capital’s shares over the past few months.

“Vietnam is benefiting as companies diversify supply chains away from China”

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