Artemis Global Income Fund update
Jacob de Tusch-Lec and James Davidson, managers of the Artemis Global Income Fund, report on the fund over the quarter to 30 June 2025.
Source for all information: Artemis as at 30 June 2025, unless otherwise stated.
Objective
The fund’s objective is to grow both income and capital over a five-year period.
Performance
The Artemis Global Income Fund rose 11.7% in the quarter, compared with gains of 5.0% from its MSCI AC World benchmark1 and 2.8% from its IA Global Equity Income sector2 average.
This takes returns for the first half of this year to 20.1%, which is a significant degree of outperformance versus both the benchmark (up 0.6%) and the peer-group average (up 2.8%).
For full five-year discrete performance, please see the table below. Please remember that past performance is not a guide to the future.
The second quarter was one of the most action-packed in recent memory. Global stockmarkets sold off sharply in April following ‘Liberation Day’ when US president Donald Trump announced ‘reciprocal’ tariffs (a tax on imports) on America’s trading partners. However, thanks to several last-minute tariff suspensions and robust economic data, US and global shares posted a jet-propelled recovery in May and June3.
Technology companies were hit particularly hard in the sell-off, but the sector mounted a brisk recovery4, albeit with significant divergence across its biggest names.
Calendar year performance | YTD | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Artemis Global Income Fund | 20.1% | 26.8% | 9.7% | -2.5% | 26.5% | 0.4% |
MSCI AC World NR GBP | 0.6% | 19.6% | 15.3% | -8.1% | 19.6% | 12.7% |
IA Global Equity Income NR | 2.8% | 11.2% | 9.9% | -1.4% | 19.2% | 3.9% |
Positives
Our aerospace & defence allocation (some 20% of the portfolio5) was once again the most significant contributor to outperformance.
Rheinmetall beat increasingly lofty investor expectations by improving its profitability and free cashflow (the amount of cash available to a company after it has paid for all capital expenditures) significantly during the first quarter of this year6.
Hanwha Aerospace also reported strong growth7 as did BAE Systems, which announced significant new orders in 2024 and an increased backlog8.
Elsewhere, our power exposure was also additive to returns, helped along by policy announcements aimed at bringing a ‘nuclear renaissance’ to the US9. Siemens Energy’s quarterly earnings comfortably beat expectations, with management upgrading free cashflow expectations this year and announcing a lengthy order backlog10.
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which has the highest global market share in gas turbines for power stations11, also posted a strong quarter of performance12. It has been one of our top contributors to returns in recent years.
Finally, banks have once again played their part in a quarter of healthy outperformance. Commerzbank – like our other European banks – posted a strong recovery post ‘Liberation Day’ and healthy profits13. We recently exited the position on valuation grounds.
KB Kookmin Bank in South Korea rallied along with Korean shares more broadly (Korea’s Kospi was the best performing stockmarket in the first half of the year), as falling political uncertainty in the wake of the martial law saga and growing optimism around corporate governance reforms drove share prices higher14.
Negatives
The most significant detractor from relative performance during the quarter was our underweight (below average position) in technology. Nvidia, Microsoft and Broadcom, none of which we hold, all rose strongly. Generally speaking, dividend yields are low and valuations are high in the technology sector, so it is a challenging one for us to find appropriate investments in.
(A dividend is the amount, usually expressed on a per-share basis, that a company pays to its shareholders – or a fund pays to its investors – from after-tax earnings. The dividend yield is the annual dividend paid by a company or a fund on a per-share basis, divided by the current share price, expressed as a percentage.)
Purchases
We added some ‘core income’ names to the portfolio, including Hess Midstream and Plains (US pipelines with long-term inflation-linked cashflows) and a US shopping mall real estate investment trust (REIT) called Simon Property Group (SPG). The latter fell sharply in the wake of Liberation Day15. We have held SPG in the past so know the company well and have seen how much its balance sheet has improved in recent years.
Sales
In banks, we have exited some of the names that have performed well and now look expensive (such as Commerzbank). This capital has been recycled into regional banks – particularly in the US and Japan – which also benefit from higher interest rates, but by and large trade on lower valuations.
Outlook
The speed with which US shares recovered their sharp Liberation Day losses was surprising. Risk-on sentiment has returned, accompanied by robust economic data and positive profit announcements from several of the multi-trillion-dollar behemoths that sit atop US indices.
Despite this rally, however, we think something is afoot across financial markets. The dollar has had its worst six months in more than 50 years16 and South Korea is the best performing stockmarket in 2025 thus far17.
Long-dated bonds (those with more than 10 years until maturity) have sold off around the world18 as governments increase spending. Germany has released the ‘debt brake’ to finance a huge programme of fiscal expansion (when governments aim to increase economic activity via increased spending or tax cuts)19.
We believe all of this is evidence we find ourselves in a new regime that is entirely different to the post-Global Financial Crisis (GFC) era, characterised by uncertainty and volatility. Yet we continue to believe that the portfolio is appropriately positioned for this new world. We are highly contrarian and our portfolio looks very different from both our benchmark and our peers20. The portfolio is cheaper than the benchmark, with almost double the dividend yield21. These value characteristics – combined with a dividend that has grown 8% per year since the fund’s inception in June 201022 – give us a degree of comfort.
2The Investment Association (IA) Global Equity Income sector is 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.
3Source: Lipper Limited, using the MSCI AC World and S&P 500 indices as proxies for global and US stockmarkets, respectively, data to 30 June 2025.
4Source: Google Finance, iShares Global Tech ETF, data to 30 June 2025.
5Source: Artemis as of 30 June 2025
6Source: Rheinmetall: https://www.rheinmetall.com/en/media/news-watch/news/2025/05/2025-05-08-rheinmetall-news-quarterly-statement-q1
7Source: Hanwa Aerospace: Earning Release | Hanwha Aerospace
8BAE Systems: Results, reports & events archive
9Source: The Guardian: Trump signs executive orders to spur US ‘nuclear energy renaissance’ | Trump administration | The Guardian
10Source: Siemens Energy: Earnings Release Q2 FY 2025
11Source: Mitsubishi Heavy Industries: Mitsubishi Power Achieves #1 Global Gas Turbine Market Share in 2023-- According to McCoy Power Report -- | Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
12Source: Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Financial Results | Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
13Source: Commerzbank: Strong quarterly result - Group Website
14Source: The Korea Herald, quoting data from the Bank of Korea: Political uncertainty falls below pre-martial law levels: BOK - The Korea Herald
15Source: Google Finance
16Source: The New York Times, quoting data from the ICE US Dollar Index as at 30 June 2025: The Dollar Has Its Worst Start to a Year Since 1973 - The New York Times
17Source: FT Adviser, 3 July 2025: Is South Korea an opportunity for wealth managers? - FTAdviser
18Source: Bloomberg: Why Governments Around the World Face Higher Borrowing Costs - Bloomberg
19Source: The Guardian: European markets soar as Germany moves to lift ‘debt brake’ and raise defence spending | Germany | The Guardian
20Source: Morningstar as at 30 April 2025
21Source: Artemis as at 30 June 2025
22Source: Artemis as at 30 September 2024. The historic dividend yield does not include any preliminary charge and investors may be subject to tax on their distributions.