Robinhood is planning to launch a publicly traded fund to enable US investors to gain exposure to unlisted companies like SpaceX and Stripe.
It reminded me that this is one area where we UK investors actually have it better.
Similarly, the news of another soon-to-be listed venture fund in the US from an outfit called Powerlaw. It’s an investor in the likes of OpenAI and bleeding-edge weapons maker Anduril.
These kinds of risky but potentially revolutionary startups are meat and potatoes for Baillie Gifford, the Scottish manager that runs investment trusts like Scottish Mortgage and Edinburgh Worldwide.
And to my mind the investment trust structure is the ideal vehicle for holding private companies for the long term. It sidesteps the liquidity issues you inevitably get with open-ended funds that hold illiquid assets. And a trust’s transparency requirements and independent board of directors mean – at least in theory – extra safeguards for ordinary shareholders.
Ironically though, a big reason the investment trust sector has been under pressure for the past few years is precisely because some trusts have large holdings in unlisted companies!
Even storied RIT Capital still trades on a discount to net assets of over 25%, largely on account of its private holdings.
And this despite a track record of private investments previously delivering good returns for the fund.
Trusts worthy
The absolute amounts managed by such trusts is tiny in the grand scheme of things. Mighty Scottish Mortgage – by far the biggest – has an asset base of just £15bn. Many others – such as titchy Augmentum – manage only a fraction of that.
It wouldn’t take much new money flowing in for such trusts to grow. In an ideal world I think they would be gently expanding, not facing existential pressures for survival.
Of course they must deliver returns that make holding the trust worthwhile in the long run. Discount risk is a headache for many everyday investors, too.
But the trusts do offer genuinely different exposure (compared to say a trust that owns FTSE 100 stocks) and I think we take them for granted.
Investing in private assets is not for everybody today. But there’s an argument to be made that one day it could be. Public markets globally are shrinking. We’ve also seen the rise of multi-hundred billion dollar unlisted ‘start-ups’ that most investors have zero exposure to – and hence do not benefit from.
Hopefully we’ll still have a vibrant investment trust sector to serve private investors if and when we need them!
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I don’t know about you, but when I’m confronted with a technology poised to vapourise vast tracts of the economy, to put hundreds of millions out of work, and ultimately to preserve the dregs of human society in a genius robot’s version of an ant farm, well… I look to profit.
What did you expect? This is Moguls. We’ll leave the penning of laments to the poets. Or at least to those people pretending to be poets by using ChatGPT.
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When I began planning my financial future, I became obsessed with nailing a realistic rate of return. All of the investment calculators required one.
Plus, everything else flowed from that number – such as how much I needed to save, and how long it would be before I could declare financial independence.
It seemed important. Because if I highballed the number then I was telling myself a fairy story, wasn’t I?
Eventually I read enough fusty old PDFs and insomnia-curing books to convince myself I had an answer.
The average inflation-adjusted rate of return for a portfolio of global equites was about 5%. More than 100 years of returns data said so.
You could dig up a similar number for bonds, too, and all the rest.
Do the maths, and hey presto! One time-tested, personalised rate of return.
Data mining
Then you get down to the hard work. Years of hacking away at the FI coalface. Celebrating when you hit a seam of double-digit returns. Face blackened when you’re scorched by a fireball of negative numbers.
But it’s the damnedest thing. That oh-so-achievable looking positive average return hardly ever turns up. Because investment returns are rarely average:
No matter how many annual return charts I see, I never get used to how nuts the variance is. Yet this carnival of volatility is a far better portrayal of the actual investment experience.
In the chart above, the blue line is the average annualised return for World equities 1900 to 2025. It currently stands at 5.6%. (All returns in this post are inflation-adjusted, GBP total returns).
However you can count on your fingers the number of annual returns that remotely resembled that figure. Across 126 years!
Which is fine and dandy when returns come in over the blue line: “Yay, I’m above average – maybe I’ll get to retire early?”
But it’s super-bleak whenever the bad years roll in. Then, everyone wonders if they’ve been sold a pup.
Optimism biased
Luckily a string of defeats doesn’t happen very often, as you can see from the chart. We haven’t experienced more than a single negative year in a row since the Dotcom Bust of 2000 to 2002.
Since then though, interest in DIY investing has exploded. I can only imagine the fear and loathing that’ll reverberate through the community if (when…) we suffer a sequence more like the 2000s, the 1970s, or the 1930s.
There’s no cure for human nature I suppose. But the Pollyanna problem has been on my mind lately, given nerve-janglingly extreme US market valuations.
Gold fingered
The wide variation of returns we see with equities holds too for every other asset class you can plausibly take refuge in. Such as gold…
Gold won the past decade. It’s also having a great year (so far).
Tempted? Beware that gold annual returns are certifiably insane.
The last 20 years have been amazing. But the 20 years between 1980 and the year 2000? Not so much.
Necessary historical footnote: The GBP gold price before 1975 was mostly either fixed or distorted by the impact of government regulation. Find out more in our deep dive into gold.
Cash operates in a narrower range, sure. Yet inflation and abrupt interest rate swings can send returns haywire.
I still wonder why everyone piled into money market funds when interest rates spiked in 2022. Had they forgotten the enormous cash bear market that raged from 2009?
Money markets lost over 27% from 2009 to 2023. Every year bar one was a loser. But it just didn’t feel like it because we don’t keep it real. (By which I mean inflation-adjusted!)
Commodities are even scarier than equities. Some 42% of years are negative versus just 30% for World equities. You need a cast iron stomach to withstand that level of volatility.
But also look at the number of years commodities returned over 20% – and even 40% – in comparison to equities.
The penny finally drops when you discover that bonza commodities years often occur when equities are in the toilet.
Commodities’ average return looks pretty good, too: 4.3% annualised. Then again, this asset class is the epitome of ‘anything can happen and it probably will’.
Lastly, if not leastly, there’s government bonds – whose approval rating sank to Trumpian levels when gilts dished out their second-worst annual return on record in 2022.
All Stocks gilts (as featured in most UK government bond funds and ETFs) aren’t really much easier on the nerves than equities. Even worse, their average return is a miserable 0.76%.
The secret though is not to view bonds on their own. Bonds don’t make any sense in isolation. The magic happens when you throw them into a pot with other assets.
Kinda like how most people don’t eat raw chillies, but there’s widespread agreement that they add something to curries.
Enter the Pot-folio
Don’t even think about stealing my amazing new Pot-folioTM idea. I’ve trademarked the bejesus out of it. (What’s that? “Just stick to the charts, mate…?”)
The improvement wrought by sufficient diversification isn’t totally obvious in chart form. The down rods are definitely fewer and stumpier, though.
However looking at the raw numbers highlights the difference more clearly:
World equities
The Pot-folio
Annualised return
5.6%
5%
Deepest drawdown
-51.8%
-36.5%
Longest drawdown
13 years
10 years
% years -10% or worse
15%
9%
Volatility
16.2%
11.6%
Ulcer Index
18.4
9.8
Ulcer Performance Index
0.28
0.47
In exchange for giving up a little return, you get fewer and less severe down years. That means:
Shallower drawdowns
Shorter drawdowns
Less volatility
Better risk-adjusted performance
The Ulcer Index is a measure of downside pain that translates drawdown depth and length into a single metric. A lower number is better.
The Ulcer Performance Index is a risk-adjusted performance ratio that divides the excess annualised return by the Ulcer Index number. Here higher is better.
You say portfolio, I say Pot-folio, you say “Go do one”
I haven’t spent time optimising the Pot-folio. It’s just an equity-tilted variant of an All-Weather portfolio.
Essentially, you maintain positions in assets that when combined can cope with most people’s shopping list of worries:
However, as much as everyone buys into the concept of diversification, it’s fair to say investors spend more time thinking about how to satisfy their immediate desires. Such as making bank as quickly as possible, if not quicker. Right up to the point that the risk chickens come home to roost – and crap all over the place.
So if you’re nervous about AI bubbles or whatnot, be bolder with your diversification. By which I mean, consider investing in asset classes that look painful when viewed in a vacuum, but that can be blended together to smooth out your ride.
This way you can aspire to be a bit more average most years – and if that means the difference between you staying invested for the long run and bailing out at some market bottom, it’ll make all the difference.
Take it steady,
The Accumulator
Jordà O, Knoll K, Kuvshinov D, Schularick M, Taylor AM. 2019. “The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 134(3), 1225-1298.[↩]
Kuvshinov D, Zimmermann K. 2021. “The
Big Bang: Stock Market Capitalization in the Long Run.” Journal of Financial Economics,
Forthcoming.[↩]
Campbell G, Grossman R, Turner JD. 2021. “Before the cult of equity: the British stock market, 1829–1929.” European Review of Economic History. 25. 10.1093/ereh/heab003.[↩]
Chadha J, Rincon-Aznar A, Srinivasan S, Thomas R. “A Century of UK Economic Trends.” ESCoE, NIESR and Bank of England.[↩]
Radchenko P. “St. Petersburg Stock Exchange Project.” Yale School of Management, International Center for Finance.[↩]
Moore L. “World Financial Markets, 1900–25.” Working paper.[↩]
Jordà O, Knoll K, Kuvshinov D, Schularick M, Taylor AM. 2019. “The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 134(3), 1225-1298.[↩]
Cairns A, Wilkie D, ESCoE Historical Data Repository. “Heriot-Watt / Institute and Faculty of Actuaries / ESCoE British Government Securities Database.” ESCoE.[↩]
Thomas R, Dimsdale N. 2017. “A Millennium of Macroeconomic Data for the UK.” Bank of England.[↩]
Levine, Ooi, Richardson, Sasseville. 2018. “Commodities for the Long Run.” FAJ.[↩]
Bhardwaj, Janardanan G, Rajkumar, Geert Rouwenhorst K. 2020. “The First Commodity Futures Index of 1933.” Journal of Commodity Markets. 2020.[↩]
Jordà O, Knoll K, Kuvshinov D, Schularick M, Taylor AM. 2019. “The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 134(3), 1225-1298.[↩]
A flood of articles this week highlighted how people are abandoning Hargreaves Lansdown in favour of other – presumably cheaper – platforms.
I wasn’t surprised to hear it, going by comments from readers on our latest broker update and the broker comparison table.
Hargreaves’ fee rejig – effective from 1 March – was the firm’s first for donkey’s years. The headline platform charge was cut, and there are lower trading costs for ETFs, shares, investment trusts, and gilts. But total fee caps will rise, along with trading costs for funds.
Whether this leaves Hargreaves cheaper or dearer for you depends on how you invest.
Yes, I said it: cheaper! Potentially.
Virtually all Monevator readers who’ve commented have said they’ll see their costs rise. But calculations show Hargreaves Lansdown will be cheaper for me if I continue to trade as I have in the past.
That’s because I invest (too) actively, of course.
Most Monevator readers are much more passively invested – and they were cannily taking advantage of quirks in Hargreaves’ old fee structure to keep their costs low.
Investment site AJ Bell said it had seen “a big spike in applications from HL customers” following the adjustment. In a typical month, AJ Bell receives inbound transfers in the high hundreds of millions of pounds from other platforms and on a normal day 10-15 per cent of this would be from HL. However, on the day after HL’s announcement this jumped to 50 per cent.
Another platform, IG, said that as of Wednesday last week, inbound transfer requests from HL had reached 94 per cent of 2025’s total volume. The mean transfer value rose from £95,000 last year to £280,000 in the same period since the fee changes, it added.
Freetrade said its average daily transfer in requests had increased threefold since January 22, compared with the average total in all of December 2025, with Hargreaves one of the leading sources.
For its part, Hargreaves said its new fees would either be the same or lower for eight out of ten customers.
The company also told the FT that almost half the transfer requests it’s seen since it revealed the new fees were from the 400,000 or so customers set to pay more from March.
Flights of fancy
I imagine all these stories were driven by data being doled out by Hargreaves Lansdown’s rivals.
Nothing like kicking a competitor when they’re down!
However I wonder if these other platforms will regret their schadenfreude someday?
I’m not here to bat for Hargreaves Lansdown – or its new-ish private equity owners. At the last count Hargreaves was host to over £150bn in assets under administration. The Bristol-based behemoth can take care of itself.
But it is interesting – and to a great extent heartening – to see how footloose at least some of its millions of customers can be.
Go back 20 years and you would have assumed the bulk of its vast pool of client money was effectively locked up. Not through any de facto gating, but through inertia, the hassle factor, and very little regulatory drive to make it easier for customers to transfer elsewhere.
For a significant cohort of customers today, though, that’s clearly not the case.
We’re ready and able to move our money in order to keep more of it for ourselves. So platforms cannot get too greedy.
Hence I wonder whether the platforms now so happy to be chosen by Hargreaves Lansdown’s fleeing customers will just be the evacuation zones of tomorrow.
No enshittification, Sherlock
Either way, our willingness to move our money should be a good defence against what’s now called enshittification – essentially when a dominant supplier first crushes the competition with a superior offering, but once secure jacks up fees and degrades its service to boost its profits.
There are just too many competing investing platforms around to allow this currently. And more are being launched each year.
Indeed if the AI-fear-driven sell-off in wealth management firms this week is any guide, the competitive pressures will only grow.
Bad news if you’re a private equity firm that bought a giant platform for cashflow, maybe…
…but good news for small and nimble private investors like us!
Wondering whether you should switch?
Our recent platform update post highlighted the better offerings
See our broker table for a summary of all the contenders