Why you should give this China fund a miss

By MoneyWeek editor-in-chief Merryn Somerset Webb Mar 02, 2010

Merryn Somerset-Webb

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The forthcoming launch of Anthony Bolton's Fidelity China Special Situations Fund is bothering me. I've written before about my concerns for the Chinese equity market, and that, clearly, is one big thing that would stop me handing over my own meagre savings to Fidelity.

But that isn't really the problem – different opinions are what make a market, after all. The main problem is the cost of the fund. Take the management fee: at 1.5%, it is higher than the fee on the average investment trust. Assuming that Bolton brings in the $1bn he is after, it means that the fund will be immediately chucking out $15m a year in cash for its managers.

Then there is the performance fee: investors are to be charged 15% of any returns more than 2% over the returns made by the fund's benchmark index – the MSCI China index.

The total performance fee won't be more than 1.5% of the net asset value (NAV) every year  (so another $15m on the $1bn that Bolton is trying to raise) and there will be a high-water mark – if the fund under-performs, a fee will not be paid until that is made up.

That all sounds fine. But it isn't. Why? Because the words "under-performance" and "over-performance" cover up the fact that we are not talking about absolute returns here: everything is relative to the performance of the index.

So, if the MSCI China index falls 45% and Bolton's fund falls 35%, Fidelity will still get another 1.5%. That might make sense to the financial industry but it simply doesn't make any sense to me, and I suspect it won't to most other ordinary investors either.

It is also worth pointing out that the performance fee is paid not with reference to the market capitalisation of the fund – i.e. the level of its share price – but to its net asset value. And one of the irritations of investment trusts is that their shares, for various reasons, very often trade at discounts to their net asset values.

Let's go back to the example above, of the MSCI China index having fallen 45% and the NAV of the fund having fallen 35%. In an environment in which share prices are falling fast, there is a good chance that shares in all China investment trusts would start to trade at huge discounts (reflecting expectations that share prices would fall further).

So, while I gather that Fidelity intends to have some sort of mechanism to prevent too big a discount, it may be that the share price of this trust would fall 50%. The upshot? It could be possible for the share price to fall more than the MSCI China index but for investors to still be charged a performance fee. It's an extreme example, but you get the point.

I'm not completely opposed to performance fees (although, just as with bankers' bonuses, I'm at a loss to understand why people should be paid extra for doing well in a job we are already paying them to do as well as they can). But if they must exist, I can't see why they can't have targets attached to them that would really represent what an ordinary investor (not a fund manager) considers to be outperformance.

In my dream world – one where industries don't exploit individuals – that would mean getting an extra fee only after beating the risk-free return on cash plus 5%, or beating the relevant index by 5%, depending on which level was the highest in any given year.

Setting a target at 2% over a benchmark that is as likely to fall as rise just isn't good enough. After all, if we didn't think an active fund manager could beat the market by  a couple of percent, we wouldn't bother paying his fees in the first place, would we?

Finally, as I have said here before, I am concerned by the fact that Fidelity is paying commissions to advisers who persuade their clients to put the fund into their ISAs. I don't see why this is necessary, given that if any fund can stand alone on the merits of its manager, this one can.

Nor is it normal for investment trust managers to pay out commission. Note that the last big trust launches to do so were the Mercury European Privatisation Investment Trust and the Kleinwort European Privatisation Investment Trust in the 1990s. Both attracted vast amounts of money by paying high commissions to advisers at the top of the market. Both were disasters as investments.

I suspect it is beginning to look like I am picking on Anthony Bolton. I don't mean to – I have the utmost respect for his investing record. It is just that this launch has reminded me of all that is wrong with our financial services industry. The fee structure of the fund has barely raised an eyebrow in the City, simply because these kinds of fees are pretty common.

But while they might not be unusual, they are still too lucrative for the fund managers for comfort – and that tells us something bad about the industry: the fees it charges are of such an unjustifiably high level that its existence often represents little more than a consistent transfer of wealth from savers to money managers.

• This article was first published in the Financial Times

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  • 1. Mr S Smalley - Forbes Solicitors

    (02 March 2010, 11:51AM)  Complain about this comment

    Bolton's track record on his previous fund showed outperformance of 6% per annum over a period of 28 years!
    the interest in his new China fund will probably mean it trades at a premium and not a discount.
    you have to pay a premium for quality and if he resumes where he left - investors will be very happy and not be concerned with the charges.

  • 2. Bill Niblock

    (02 March 2010, 12:47PM)  Complain about this comment

    Mr Smalley doesn't appear to have listened to "Past performance etc"
    Nor does he subscribe to; "Revert to mean!"
    I wouldn't touch this fund with a barge pole but hope I'm wrong as my ETF's will plod along if China does well!
    MSW's arguments are simple and pretty compelling.

  • 3. DazO

    (02 March 2010, 02:08PM)  Complain about this comment

    This new fund will prove to a high degree if A.Bolton is very good or lucky. China may well be on course for a decent bull run but its already in the price! Not a great contrarian bet. Noticed from previous MW articles that A.B has timed the markets reasonably well but not always - having upped his exposure to financials in late 2007!
    I could be wrong but I don't know of any area that China is a world leader in, and from my experience the goods coming out of China is not of the highest quality. I'm staying out.

  • 4. freelski

    (02 March 2010, 02:33PM)  Complain about this comment

    Any idea what the size of the bid-offer spreads on these funds are since i believe this is an area where these guys also take large cuts out of gullible savers returns ?

  • 5. greenpark

    (02 March 2010, 04:06PM)  Complain about this comment

    you probably need to study what "high watermarks" means before you make your comments.
    If the market fall 45% and fund fall 35%, you will NOT need to pay the performance fee!

  • 6. Rob Marstrand

    (02 March 2010, 05:11PM)  Complain about this comment

    To Greenpark:

    If I understand this correctly, the high watermark is relative to index and not an absolute value. ie the performance fee only disappears if the fund underperforms the index, and only comes back if that underperformance is made back. The index could still go down, but the fund could ourperform (go down less) and still charge a performance fee.

    ie its not really a "high watermark" at all in the conventional sense, so a bit of a misrepresentation by Fidelity (intentional or unintentional......).

    Merryn - Can you please clarify?

  • 7. B Graham

    (02 March 2010, 05:52PM)  Complain about this comment

    I agree with the article. Also in terms of investment returns it matters much more which sector you invest in out of the whole investment universe than it does trying to beat the market in that sector. The only certainty with the Bolton Fund is that you will pay high fees, that will reduce say a 7% return to a 4% return. Go for the right sector and low fees every time.

  • 8. greenpark

    (03 March 2010, 08:02AM)  Complain about this comment

    To Rob Marstrand,
    From the fund Q&As
    If the trust outperforms MSCI China by more than 2%, a fee of 15% of the outperformance will be levied on the first 10% of the returns over MSCI China + 2%, subject to the high water mark also being exceeded (the high water mark is the previous highest share price for the trust).
    if the fund falls, it will be lower than the previous highest share price therefore no fees.

  • 9. Michael Lewis

    (03 March 2010, 09:45AM)  Complain about this comment

    The fees are a joke, longer term, statistics would indicate he won't beat the index. I'd rather invest in an ETF.

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