Money Week

Profiting from pampered pets

Thematic funds have a bad reputation, but they can be useful. This new launch is a good example

- David C. Stevenson Investment columnist

Thematic funds – those that track a big, long-term trend – are popular with investors, but less so among more disinteres­ted observers and analysts. A few years ago, Nicolas Rabener, who runs a fantastic research firm called FactorRese­arch that makes its superb analysis free to use, looked at the three-year record of carefully chosen thematics against a broader benchmark. He found that many of the earlier thematic strategies underperfo­rmed, probably because they were chasing the wrong stocks. “Once an industry outperform­s, investors flock to it in a chase for performanc­e, which often leads to expensive valuations,” he said. “Eventually meanrevers­ion sets in, and with it less attractive subsequent returns.”

The wrong approach

Joachim Klement, a strategist at investment bank Liberum, is another sceptical smart analyst. In one of his blogs he notes that many thematic indices “all have a large bet against value stocks and against profitable “‘quality’ stocks”. Instead, they are heavily geared towards glamorous, expensive and unprofitab­le stocks – and thus funds following them are “likely to invest in overpriced and overhyped stocks”. The better bet has been to invest in the unloved, non-thematic baskets of stocks, such as coal and tobacco companies.

I could also add my own criticisms. Many thematic indices and funds sweep up a load of businesses with tangential links to a major theme – eg, crypto-related thematic funds investing in Microsoft. Still, I think that many dismissals of thematic funds are slightly missing the point. They aren’t meant to be compared with broad indices such as the MSCI World – they are a way for investors to play a particular idea as a more speculativ­e part of a diversifie­d portfolio. The most useful thematic ideas are those with specific frames of reference and small baskets of stocks.

For example, if airlines are about to boom again, you can buy one airline and then hope that company doesn’t have some stock-specific, idiosyncra­tic challenges. Or you can buy an exchange traded fund (ETF) that holds a diversifie­d basket of airline stocks and avoid any stock-specific risk.

Passing the test

All of which brings me to a new thematic ETF that passes my tests and stands a good chance of bucking the trend for thematic funds to underperfo­rm. The Rize Pet Care ETF is listed on the London Stock Exchange and trades under the tickers PETZ (priced in US dollars) and PAWZ (priced in sterling). It’s based on a propositio­n that’s simple to understand – invest in the fast-growing pet products economy. There seems to be an insatiable demand for more expensive pet products and there’s only a limited number of businesses that cater to this very specialise­d and selective market.

In January 2019, I wrote a Financial Times column on this subject and suggested investors focus on a handful of stocks because there wasn’t a UK-listed ETF. These included Pets at Home, Dechra Pharmaceut­icals, Idexx Laboratori­es and PetMed Express. Over the past three years, all of the highlighte­d stocks bar one (PetMed) have outperform­ed their local benchmark (the S&P 500 or the FTSE All Share). That may mean nothing about the future, but my hunch is that the trend is only going to grow as we in the developed world spend more hard-earned cash on our motley mutts and fussy felines and the emerging markets’ middle classes acquire more pets.

Rize Pet Care is weighted 47% towards pet healthcare, 29% pet retail and 17.8% pet food and care manufactur­ing. Ongoing charges are 0.45%. The are 30 stocks in the fund, with the top five being Pet Center, Patterson, Petco Health, Freshpet and Idexx. I reckon this is one theme that has legs and will run and run, almost as fast as my German Shepherd chasing a stick!

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Happy pets mean wealthier investors
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