This report covers the 12 month
period from 16th April 1997 when we
launched netPEP. During this time the market
performed outstandingly well rising by 42.84%
from 4286.8 to 6123.4. This compares with a rise
in the offer price of units on CF netPEP Tracker
Fund of plus 42.68% over the same period which
excludes the amount of distributed income in the
period of 1.78p per unit. Overall the Fund has
tracked the FTSE 100 Index very closely
throughout the period. The chart on the
netPEP statistics page shows the weekly tracking
error. Save for a problem when the new Stock
Exchange Trading System came into effect (and
with it, some share price anomalies), the
tracking error has been well within the error
range set by Barclays Global Investors, the
investment managers.
The Fund is managed on a fully replicated
basis which means that it holds the physical
stocks in direct proportion to their market
capitalisation. The most difficult problem to
handle has been the unusually large number of
changes to the holdings in the fund. These have
been the result of mergers, take-overs and
demutualisations and the altogether in the year
there have been 12 companies that have dropped
out of the Index and 12 new entries. Those
dropped out include companies like Tate &
Lyle (which simply got crowded out by big new
entrants and Grand Metropolitan and Guinness
which disappeared as a result of merger and
reappeared as Diageo.
These changes cost money in dealing and
settlement charges and since the Index makes no
allowance for charges of any sort the tracking
error can begin to increase. This illustrates one
of the real strengths of the appointment of a
company like Barclays Global Investors to manage
the fund. BGI are the biggest tracking fund
managers in the world and are able to command
competitively low dealing rates
As far as overall performance is concerned,
much of the rise over the last 12 months was
attributable to the strong performance put in by
most of the Financial stocks banks and
insurance companies. These have been re-rated on
account new FTSE 100 Index entrants as part of
the process of demutualisation. The new
financials added to the list include well-known
names such as Norwich Union, Woolwich, Halifax
and Alliance & Leicester were added in the
second six months of 1997. Of the new entrants to
the list of Financials, it was an insurance
company, Sun Life & Provincial, which
performed the best, putting in a rise of 55%
since joining in September.
However, this performance pales into relative
insignificance by comparison with the meteoric
rise of Bank of Scotland up 145%. But since this
only Accounts for 0.85% of the Index, its effect
overall has been limited.
At the other end of the list 3i Group, an
investment trust which specialises in small
companies, has been caught up in the demise of
this sector and managed a paltry rise of barely
19% which in any other circumstance would have
been regarded as very satisfactory. Next in line
for the wooden spoon is Standard Chartered up 20%
in the year. Its record has been hit by the Asian
economic crisis, a part of the world where the
banks main interests are to be found.
Other than the top Financials, Pharmaceuticals
also performed well as a sector although it was a
Utility, Vodafone (up 135%) which notched up the
second biggest rise in the Index. The growth of
the cellular telephone market has clearly been
massive. Other companies to get a ton
were Lloyds TSB, Hays, Commercial Union, General
Accident and Legal & General.
To dispel the idea that everything in the
Index has enjoyed supercharged performance in the
last 12 months and to prove that there is more to
picking shares than using a pin, the share prices
of no less than 12 companies actually fell with
the worst recorded by once old time favourite
high-flier BSkyB which fell by over 26%. This
group of shares also included other well known
companies such as British Airways down 8%
affected by the cabin staff strike and High
Street favourite Next down 16%. Altogether the
group of laggards accounted for nearly 5% of the
Index. This goes to prove that a basket of top
companies inherently carries less risk for
investors. These losses are minuscule compared
with the laggards amongst the rest of
Britains listed companies where losses are
huge. This is especially the case with past high
flying technology stocks where losses of 98% have
been seen.
It is exceedingly unlikely that the FTSE 100
Index will perform anything like last year. It is
possible that there will be star performers like
Bank of Scotland but perhaps not in the same
magnitude. Finding them is not so easy. The best
investment returns are those achieved over the
long term in a broad spread of companies. There
will inevitably be shorter term disappointments
but these should be regarded as opportunities to
top up investment holdings rather than to sell
and thus lock in gains. There is nothing wrong
with locking in gains but anyone taking profits
at some stage has to decide when to buy again. A
combination of missing the boat and dealing
charges usually erodes the earlier gains. That is
how the long term investors win the race against
the short term traders.
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