Source for all information: Artemis as at 29 September 2025, unless otherwise stated.
CAPITAL AT RISK. All financial investments involve taking risk and the value of your investment may go down as well as up. This means your investment is not guaranteed and you may not get back as much as you put in. Any income from the investment is also likely to vary and cannot be guaranteed.
This is a marketing communication. Before making any final investment decisions, and to understand the investment risks involved, refer to the fund prospectus (or in the case of investment trusts, Investor Disclosure Document and Articles of Association), available in English, and KIID/KID, available in English and in your local language depending on local country registration, available in the literature library.
The fund’s objective is to grow capital over a five-year period.
Global stockmarkets advanced in the third quarter of 20251, but the US’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, cut interest rates after a run of weaker employment data2.
Despite the cuts, Treasury (US government bond) prices remained broadly stable over the period, while gold rallied 17% to a new record and the dollar stabilised after a torrid first half of the year3.
Although the US expanded tariffs (taxes on imports)4, new trade deals with the EU and Japan tempered fears of a wider escalation5.
While risks persist, we believe the broader picture remains one of resilience, with the US continuing to demonstrate relative economic strength.
Artemis US Select made 9.6% over the three-month period, behind the 10.0% from its first benchmark, the S&P 500 index6, but ahead of the 8.3% made by its second benchmark, the IA North America sector average7.
| 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Artemis US Select I Acc GBP | 29.5% | 21.8% | -14.9% | 22.7% | 15.2% |
| S&P 500 | 27.2% | 19.2% | -7.8% | 29.9% | 14.7% |
| IA North America sector average NR | 23.1% | 17.6% | -10.5% | 26.1% | 16.4% |
Past performance is not a guide to the future.
Source: Lipper Limited, class I accumulation units, to 30 September 2025. All figures show total returns with dividends and/or income reinvested, net of all charges. Performance does not take account of any costs incurred when investors buy or sell the fund. Returns may vary as a result of currency fluctuations if the investor's currency is different to that of the class. This class may have charges or a hedging approach different from those in the IA sector benchmark.
Bloom Energy, the fuel-to-electricity converter, delivered another record quarter with 20% revenue growth8. Towards the end of July, it was announced Bloom is to provide power to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure data centres in the US9.
Memory chip manufacturer Western Digital saw revenue rise by 30% year-over-year and profit margins expand, buoyed by strong demand from AI (artificial intelligence) servers10.
Comfort Systems, which supplies high-skilled labour for building systems, delivered another record quarter, with revenue up 20%11.
Pharmaceutical AbbVie announced a strong set of results for the second quarter, with $15.4bn in revenue driven by exceptional growth from arthritis drugs Skyrizi and Rinvoq12.
Analogue chip producer Texas Instruments detracted from performance as semiconductor demand fell13. We reduced our holding until we see more evidence of a recovery.
From a relative point of view, our underweight (lower-than-average position compared with the benchmark) in Apple counted against us following better-than-expected uptake of the iPhone 1714. We increased our position.
Another underweight position that counted against us was in electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Tesla. While the car business is struggling, the end of EV tax credits pulled forward orders to the third quarter15. We expect them to drop in the fourth quarter. Admittedly we believe Tesla’s longer-term initiatives such as robotaxis and the Optimus robot (to help humans) warrant having a small position.
We took profits in a range of names relating to AI, such as Bloom Energy and Nvidia. We redeployed capital into home care provider Cardinal Healthcare and bank JP Morgan.
Sector-wise we are most overweight (a higher-than-average position compared with the benchmark) capital goods (man-made items sold to other businesses rather than consumers), semiconductors and financial services, with underweights in tech hardware (mainly Apple) and software, which we see as challenged in the world of AI.
As we enter the last quarter, we think there are many reasons to be positive on the US stockmarket: the consumer appears to be in good shape16, we believe the tax cuts in Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act should boost the economy and further expected reductions in interest rates tend to help riskier assets such as shares (by making safer asset classes such as cash and government bonds look less appealing in comparison).
There is also continued momentum in spending around AI with very little sign of let-up17. We remain vigilant against overexuberance in the stockmarket and are moving investors’ money towards those areas where we see the most attractive risk/reward trade-off. In our view, this discipline should stand us in good stead as we close out the year.
1Bloomberg to 30 September 2025
2https://www.ft.com/content/088d3368-bb8b-4ff3-9df7-a7680d4d81b2
3Bloomberg to 30 September 2025
4https://www.piie.com/blogs/realtime-economics/2025/trumps-trade-war-timeline-20-date-guide
5https://www.piie.com/blogs/realtime-economics/2025/trumps-trade-war-timeline-20-date-guide
6S&P 500 TR A widely used indicator of the performance of 500 large publicly traded US companies, some of which the fund invests in. It acts as a ‘comparator benchmark’ against which the fund’s performance can be compared. Management of the fund is not restricted by this benchmark.
7IA North America NR A group of other asset managers’ funds that invest in similar asset types as this fund, collated by the Investment Association. It acts as a ‘comparator benchmark’ against which the fund’s performance can be compared. Management of the fund is not restricted by this benchmark.
10https://investor.wdc.com/static-files/13186e61-6895-4f40-aa0c-fc7fe5f698cf
11https://finance.yahoo.com/news/earnings-watch-comfort-systems-fix-031129544.html
12https://investors.abbvie.com/stock-information/stock-quote
13https://www.investopedia.com/texas-instruments-earnings-q2-fy2025-11776588
14https://www.macrumors.com/2025/10/02/iphone-17-strong-demand-morgan-stanley/
15https://www.businessinsider.com/tesla-q3-delivery-numbers-ev-tax-credit-2025-10

The intention of Artemis’ ‘investment insights’ articles is to present objective news, information, data and guidance on finance topics drawn from a diverse collection of sources. Content is not intended to provide tax, legal, insurance or investment advice and should not be construed as an offer to sell, a solicitation of an offer to buy, or a recommendation for any security or investment by Artemis or any third-party. Potential investors should consider the need for independent financial advice. Any research or analysis has been procured by Artemis for its own use and may be acted on in that connection. The contents of articles are based on sources of information believed to be reliable; however, save to the extent required by applicable law or regulations, no guarantee, warranty or representation is given as to its accuracy or completeness. Any forward-looking statements are based on Artemis’ current opinions, expectations and projections. Articles are provided to you only incidentally, and any opinions expressed are subject to change without notice. The source for all data is Artemis, unless stated otherwise. The value of an investment, and any income from it, can fall as well as rise as a result of market and currency fluctuations and you may not get back the amount originally invested.
Artemis US Select Fund Q3 2025 update