
Schroder British Opportunities

The Schroder British Opportunities trust (SBOT) seeks to tap into the unloved status of UK equities by targeting companies which have been in the eye of the storm. The portfolio consists of 30-50 small and medium-sized public and private businesses requiring fresh injections of equity, with the trust aiming to provide a net asset value total return of 10% per annum.
Our Opinion
Fund Manager
Fund Manager

Peraveenan Sriharan, Fund manager Before joining Schroders Capital Private Equity in January 2022, Peraveenan (Pav) worked in the Schroders Corporate Development team for six years assisting the Group with M&A and other corporate strategic partnership & alliance projects. Prior to that, he was in a dedicated illiquid asset valuation role within the firm with a principal focus of private equity investments. Before joining Schroders, Pav worked at Standard & Poor’s for 5 years within their Valuation and Risk Strategy services function with a focus on Private and Illiquid Debt. Pav Sriharan holds a BSc honours in Actuarial Science from the Cass Business School, London and is a CFA charterholder.
Fund Performance
Risk
Company Description
Investment process
The trust targets two specific businesses, these are ‘high growth’ firms which are set to benefit from the rapid change in corporate and consumer behaviour due to Covid-19; and ‘mispriced-growth’ companies which, despite their current struggles, offer products and services with long-term structural growth drivers.
The managers plan to keep both the private and public segments of the portfolio as diversified as possible from a sector perspective. The trust also has a fixed seven-year life cycle.
The trust initially invested in listed companies worth between £50m and £2bn, before transitioning towards an equal mix of public and private equity investments across 30-50 firms. However, this has now shifted with private equity currently accounting for around two-thirds of the portfolio (figures at 18 August 2023). The private equity allocation will have a prominent focus on growth and buyout opportunities.
The trust has an ongoing charge of 0.6%, but there is also a performance fee of 15% on the private equity element of the portfolio – this is activated if it outperforms by 10% each financial year.
Risk
This trust is a pure play on the recovery of UK equities, with returns likely to be tied to market sentiment around the economy following the challenges posed by the likes of Brexit and Covid-19 in recent years. The trust also invests in small and medium-sized companies, both of which tend to be higher risk than larger companies. As with most trusts, this one borrows money to invest (i.e. uses gearing), which also increases risk levels for shareholders.
The trust also invests in private equity companies, which can be difficult to value. Information from underlying investee companies may be delayed, missing or restricted which would lead to valuations being made on incomplete information. It is difficult to accurately time the exit of private equity investments. Exits will take time and the portfolio managers may have very little influence on any decisions around the timing on exits. However, the team have a huge resource in the private equity field with over 45 investment professionals and over £9bn of assets managed in this space.
ESG
ESG - Integrated
Both the public and private equity teams have their own dedicated ESG specialists – they will then collaborate to maximise the overall ESG impact across both segments of the portfolio. ESG is present across all three stages of the trust’s investment process. The selection process has both exclusions that go against the firm’s ESG principles (tobacco, gambling and fossil fuels) as well as a positive screen favouring investments which follow the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which define the biggest challenges facing global societies.
The next stage is assessment criteria, where the team uses tools to provide greater clarity on sustainability features. Examples include SustainEx, which quantifies the positive and negative impacts on the environment and society, while the World-check service conducts contracting third party risk assessment. The final stage is engagement (interacting with portfolio companies to encourage and enforce positive change with regard to SDGs and ESG) as well as enhanced ESG reporting.
Gearing
The managers are able to gear up to 10% of net asset value, calculated at the time of drawdown.