April 9, 2012
Filed under: Income — admin @ 9:42 pm

Guinness Funds’ Global equity Income Fund methodology referenced by Matthew Vincent in this weekend’s FT Money column (requires registration).


April 5, 2012
Filed under: Energy — admin @ 9:55 am

An in-depth profile of the Guinness Global Energy Fund and how the Fund’s managers are seeking the best way to play rising energy prices.


April 3, 2012
Filed under: Comment, Energy — admin @ 9:48 am

Tom Nelson, an energy specialist fund manager at Guinness Asset Management comments for an article in Mindful Money on how policy maker’s perceived ability to control oil prices is fast becoming the most divisive issue in US politics; but the ramifications are global.


March 5, 2012
Filed under: Comment — Tags: — admin @ 10:33 am

I met Terry Smith at a dinner a few weeks ago. Although both of have worked  in the City for all our workings lives I couldn’t recall having met before. When I saw today’s  Evening Standard headline “ Smith’s defence of the investor class” I thought I’d read it – he’d made a good impression on me then. It reported his speech the annual Tacitus lecture in the City. My goodness how much I agree with him.

He argued we should:

  • re-enact Glass Steagall in the US and introduce something similar here.  I support this strongly because this would both help make banks better – more manageable and practical to regulate; and it would also end casino banking – the use of capital supporting ordinary banking to double up and support highly leveraged investment banking balance sheets.
  • Ban securitisation which in his words led to disastrous mis-pricing of risks as banks made loans they would not keep on their books
  • Repeal Big Bang where again he saw the potential for profit at the expense of investors was manifold
  • Encourage shareholders to end the payment of cash bonuses that fail to align management and shareholders
  • Ban fund management investor platforms from taking commission from funds they host which gives them a vested interest in keeping fees high.

Wearing my Guinness Funds hat I couldn’t agree with him more about the pernicious effect the monopolistic structure of the platform. To pay to play on some platforms we have to offer share classes with 1.5% pa management fees because we have to pay away to the platform 0.75% to  1%. Now that RDR is nearly here we are offering share classes ( X class) which only carry 0.75%. pa management fee. I am sure that in due course we will see platforms that charge the retail investor  much less. May be 0.25% pa or maybe £25 pa.


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