Fund Management
A Singular Focus On US Equities At Findlay Park Partners
This publication recently spoke to a firm with one fund only – a portfolio holding US equities with a track record going back to the 1990s.
Banks, investment firms and other players push out funds and a
lot of marketing fanfare accompanies these launches. It therefore
comes as a jolt to find a business that only runs one fund which
covers one market.
UK-based Findlay Park
Partners, a business located in the St James’s area of
central London, runs the Findlay Park American Fund, a portfolio
that as of end-February 2023, had a net asset value of $10.2
billion. It is benchmarked against the Russell 1000 Net 30% Total
Return Index.
“We are in a minority of firms that are focusing on trying to
generate great compound returns for our clients,” Anthony
Kingsley, chief investment officer, told WealthBriefing
in a recent meeting. He argues that the firm can control its
distribution and ensure a focus on investment. It has no outside
pressure to gather assets. The private business has 14 partners,
and the fund is 25 years old.
The fund has a pool of diversified professional/intermediary
investors, predominantly wealth managers, private banks and
advisors in the UK and Europe, who in turn each have many
underlying investors.
“We have a clear investment philosophy that has guided our
approach to investing since 1998,” Kingsley said. “We believe
that there are so many investment opportunities in the US market;
if we can control the downside risk in each investment, the
result should be a portfolio capable of generating higher
compound returns than the benchmark with a lower level of risk.
We believe this focus on aiming to manage downside risk and
generating attractive compound returns aligns with how a typical
wealth manager might use the American Fund.”
“Our goal is to keep compounding at an attractive rate for
investors by trying to control risk in individual securities and
avoiding a permanent capital loss,” he continued.
Philosophy
The original/core philosophy was written by James Findlay,
founder of the business and who ran a US fund at F&C.
Kingsley and the team codified this several years ago into the 29
question checklist, Half of those questions focused on the
quality of a business and its people, such as what sort of “moat”
does a company have to protect its competitive position.
The firm’s fund has been able to chalk up a return of 11.8 per
cent since inception, as in CAGR (source: website). In 2022, it
fell 21.4 per cent as US equities tanked. The fund’s average
holding period runs for four years (as at end Dec 2022). The fund
is structured as an Ireland-domiciled UCITS vehicle.
Based on its February factsheet, the fund’s largest holding is
Microsoft (4.6 per cent), followed by Berkshire Hathaway (3.5 per
cent); EOG Resources (3.5 per cent); TopBuild (3.3 per cent);
MasterCard (3.1 per cent); Intuit (3.0 per cent); Ferguson (2.9
per cent); Arthur J Gallagher (2.8 per cent); S&P Global (2.7
per cent), and Martin Marietta (2.4 per cent). These 10 largest
holdings account for 31.8 per cent of the total.
The fund has a broad pool of diversified
professional/intermediary investors, predominantly wealth
managers, private banks and advisors in the UK and Europe, who in
turn each have a large number of underlying investors, Findlay
Park said.
The fund is diversified in various sectors. At present it does
not own banks as a rule because they “don’t screen well.” The
fund is not constrained by a market cap approach, Kingsley
said.
“We are moving to more mid-cap stocks and away from some of the
megacaps,” he said. (By mid-cap, the firm means companies worth
between $3 billion and $50 billion.)
Eight stocks have driven about 45 per cent of the US stock market
over the past 10 years (Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Meta,
Netflix, Nvidia and Tesla (data as of 31 January 2023,
according to Findlay Park Partners, FactSet).
One of the trends that Kingsley and colleagues watch is how
global supply chains are having to change, leading to a
“re-shoring” of activity such as silicon chip manufacturing.