Aberforth Split Level Income 30 April 2019
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Disclosure – Non-Independent Marketing Communication
This is a non-independent marketing communication commissioned by Aberforth Split Level Income. The report has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and is not subject to any prohibition on the dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research.
Aberforth Split Level Income Trust (ASLIT) is a high yielding smaller companies fund with a disciplined value approach, offering a historic yield of 4.9%. This is the highest natural yield on offer from a pure smaller companies trust.
The trust is in its second year, having launched on 3 July 2017 (as a rollover vehicle for Aberforth Geared Income Trust). Relative total return performance has been held back by the value style being out of favour, particularly in the second half of 2018 – although Q1 2019 was much more positive in performance terms.
The trust met its first-year dividend target of 4p, supplementing that with 0.6p of specials in a bumper year for those. The first interim dividend of 2018/19 saw a slight increase over last year, while income received from specials on the portfolio has been considerable, though lower than in 2017/18.
The trust has built up a revenue reserve already, holding back 0.8p last year, or 20% of the full-year dividend. This is consistent with the approach taken by the antecedent trust AGIT, which built up substantial reserves in the first few years in order to provide greater security to the dividend – we would note that three of the six board members of ASLIT, including the chairman, previously served on AGIT.
The trust is team managed, with decades of experience between its members. The two remaining founding partners, Alistair Whyte and Richard Newbery, have been part of the team managing the trust since 1990. Richard retires at the end of this month (April 2019), leaving a committed team of six experienced investors who follow the same philosophy and approach.
Being contrarian and value investors, the managers have built up an overweight to UK domestic stocks on a bottom-up basis. They are also biased to the small end of the market and do not buy AIM stocks, meaning the exposures are different from the average smaller companies fund.
The managers aim to have ASLIT near fully invested at a portfolio level at all times. The company has structural gearing in the form of zero dividend preference shares (ZDPs), which means that the ordinary shares are 28% geared, considerably higher than most smaller company trust peers, most of which do not have any gearing at all.
The Aberforth approach, the income mandate and the company’s structure mean that ASLIT is highly differentiated to its peers. ASLIT has the most extreme positioning towards value (according to Morningstar data) in both the closed- and open-ended sectors. Relative to peers, the ordinary shares of ASLIT have the highest gearing to equities of peers thanks to the ZDP shares.
The trust’s discount has been volatile. The current discount of 9.9% is wider than the sector average of 7.4%. The board is able to buy back shares, but has not done so to date, with the trust’s limited life representing a hard form of discount control.