THE INVESTOR CENTRE
E
xpectations that central banks
would remain accommodative
helped risk sentiment over the period.
During July,US economic data was
broadly strong; European data mostly
held rm.The Federal Reserve was
hawkish, leaving the door open for a
rate rise.The ECB was in‘wait-and-
see’mode while the UK felt the e ect
of post-Brexit uncertainty,with
sterling at a 31-year low.
Both sterling and UK equities rallied
on the appointment of Prime Minister
Theresa May. InAugust, focus was on
Fed o cials’ statements as US
economic data presented a mixed
picture. European in ation stayed
subdued; in Japan,Q2 GDP painted a
grim picture of the economy with
in ation still subdued. Prime Minister
Abe announced scal stimulus,while
the Bank of Japan made clear it will
take further easing measures if
required.The Bank of England cut
interest rates to 0.25%, expanded the
bond-buying programme and
restarted corporate bond buying.
Despite the BoE’s move into crisis
mode, economic data from the UK
was surprisingly
positive.UKmanufacturing production fell,
contrary to expectations.
G
ilt yields fell to new lows in July
as the fallout from the UK’s
referendum vote continued. Risk
appetite returnedmid-month after the
bounce-back in US payrolls, some
abatement in Brexit concerns, and
heightened expectations of central
bank stimulus, particularly in the UK
where the Bank of England surprised
by keeping interest rates unchanged.
InAugust,UK benchmark gilts
dipped,while yields on 10-year gilts
reached a low of 0.5%on 15August.
To address fears of an economic
slowdown, the BoE cut interest rates to
a record-low of 0.25%.Although the
cut was anticipated,QEwas
introduced earlier than expected and
the £10 billion corporate bond-buying
package surprisedmarkets,which was
additional to £60 billion of government
bond purchases. Economic data was
mixed over the month – survey data
was weak, although employment and
retail sales data were stronger.
In September, employment was
resilient. InAugust,UK Services PMI
data and UKManufacturing PMI
gures showed an increase.
The fund has generally been
positioned in line with the benchmark
over the period.
Nimish Patel and Eleanor de Freitas
BLACKROCK
Core manager: Global Equity
Strong performance in the UK was
tempered by a Japanese slowdown
BLACKROCK
Index Linked Gilts
Portfolio has remained in line with
benchmark despite tough market
Central bank policy
continued tohelp risk
sentiment inmarket
Giltshit newlows as
themarket reacted to
theBrexit result
Francis Rayner
T
he stock market recovered from
the initial shock triggered by the
EU referendum.The swift
appointment of Theresa May as the
new Prime Minister helped limit the
immediate political uncertainty,
while the Bank of England moved to
support the UK economy with a
0.25% cut in interest rates and an
expansion of its bond purchase
programme.This contributed to a
recovery in more cyclical sectors
such as nancials, with weakness in
consumer staples and utilities.
Recent performance has been
driven by company fundamentals,
withMelrose announcing the purchase
of US ventilation and security
products group,Nortek, and Just Eat
reporting rapid revenue growth in its
half-year results, cementing its leading
position in most markets. Shire saw
strong take-up of its treatment for
dry eye disease. Sky underperformed,
and not holding HSBC andARM
impacted relative returns after the
rally in bank shares and takeover by
SoftBank respectively.
The fund holds companies with
strong cash ow generation and
international earnings.
BLACKROCK
UK & General Progressive
Strong performance was driven by
Melrose, Nortek and Just Eat
Swi Mayappointment
helpedUKmarkets to
recover fromBrexit
Luke Chappell
THE INVESTOR
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