Investment Strategies
Fidelity International's Special Values Fund Likes Banks; Beats Drum For Value

The UK-listed trust, which at the end of August had total assets of £1.232 billion ($1.62 billion), is keen on a number of banks, and its manager explains why.
With the shadow of the 2008 financial crack-up taking time to fade, they [what?] haven’t always been investors’ darlings.
  As far as the Fidelity Special Values Plc trust is concerned
  - it marks its 30th anniversary - banks and certain
  financial stocks are attractive if one knows where to look.
  
  Alex Wright, manager on the fund since September 2012, recently
  outlined the value investing approach of this London-listed trust
  – a sister to the Fidelity UK Special Situations trust – and why
  he’s keen on particular sectors. In absolute sector weight terms,
  financials, at about 27 per cent, make up of the total portfolio
  - the largest category.
  
  “We see a lot of value in financials,” he told a group of
  journalists at the Fidelity International offices in the St
  Paul’s area of the City a few days ago. Names of banks on the
  trust’s ownership list include Standard
  Chartered, a UK-quoted bank that earns the bulk of its
  revenues in Asia, India and Africa, and NatWest, parent of Coutts. The
  trust recently sold its stake in Bank of Georgia, after a strong
  run in its shares; it holds banks such as Barclays and Secure Trust
  Bank.
  
  Some of the names in the ownership list have been through tough
  times. For instance, Close Brothers
  accounts for a tiny (0.3 per cent) stake in the trust; that stake
  had been larger before being sold down sharply last year. The
  UK-listed bank 
  recently sold its asset management arm, and braced itself for
  the result of a UK regulatory probe into allegedly questionable
  sales practices in the motor finance sector, an area which the
  firm has been involved in.
  
  “We dramatically reduced our position [in Close Brothers] in the
  fourth quarter of last year," Wright said in response to
  questions about its small exposure. Shares in Close Brothers have
  sunk by more than 50 per cent since the start of the year. How to
  measure what the issues and costs for Close Brothers might be
  needs to be considered, Wright said. “It is quite difficult
  in trying to model the liability.”
  
  The trust’s ownership of bank stocks marks it as a
  differentiator; Fidelity International has a talented crop of
  experienced financial sector analysts who cover the area
  thoroughly, Wright said. 
  The trust is also keen on a number of areas such as insurance.
  Aviva, for example, is in its top 10 holdings. The other top 10
  holdings, in descending order, are (as of 31 August 2024):
  Imperial Brands (tobacco, and related, UK)); DCC plc, the Irish
  international sales, marketing and support services group; Roche
  Holding AG (Switzerland); NatWest plc (UK); Reckitt Benckiser
  Group plc (health, hygiene and nutrition, UK); Standard Chartered
  plc (UK); National Grid plc (UK); AIB Group plc (Ireland); and
  MITIE Group plc (outsourcing, energy services firm, UK).
  
  There’s value in value investing
  Wright showed data illustrating how value investing – seeking to
  own firms that are, for various reasons, unjustly disliked by
  markets as a whole – has fallen out of favour in the investing
  world as a whole. And yet, Wright said, over the long term, value
  outperforms growth investing. Rises to interest rates post-Covid
  – although now easing off again – put growth stocks under
  pressure.
  
  “In the last four years, since the pandemic, value has
  outperformed growth…[2024] has been a really good year for
  outperformance,” he said. Wright showed data indicating that the
  number of fund managers playing in the value investing sphere,
  compared with other approaches, has contracted. That gives
  Fidelity's business an opportunity to stand out, he said.
  
  A combination of forces, such as Brexit, political wobbles, the
  perception that the UK has an “old economy” model, meant that
  investors de-rated the UK, even though UK earnings have fared
  relatively well. Wright said that in 2024 the fund’s portfolio of
  stocks had an underlying price/earnings (PE) ratio of 10 times
  earnings, with operating profit growth of 15.3 per cent; the PE
  ratio of the portfolio is actually below that of the FTSE
  All-Share Index, at 12.1x, Wright said. The trust employs modest
  leverage, based on net debt to earnings before interest,
  taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of 0.6 times,
  against 1.3 x for the wider market.
  
  When considered against major international peers, UK stocks, at
  12.6x earnings, are cheap. US stocks are almost twice that price,
  at 24.2x, while Europe excluding UK is 15.5x; Japan is 15.6x, and
  Asia-Pacific ex-Japan is 15.4x.
  
  The UK equity market continues to see an exodus of domestic
  investors, with pension funds, for example, being underweight,
  possibly as they are de-risking portfolios as payments are made
  to an ageing population, Wright added.