Scottish Mortgage backs growth and warns of no hiding places as Trump's tariffs rattle investors
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Investment trust Scottish Mortgage says its commitment to finding long-term, growth from disruptive companies should pay off as Donald Trump rattles stock markets.

Few companies will be unaffected by changes in the global trading status quo, Scottish Mortgage says, warning the US administration is ‘accelerating that moment of reckoning [for the US and global economies]’.

Tom Slater, the trust’s investment manager, said: ‘Equity markets offer no hiding places in such a landscape. Our task as investors is to seek out businesses with the adaptability to recalibrate and the cultural foundations to withstand disruption.’

In spite of global volatility and fragile confidence, the trust said its holdings have performed well, delivering ‘quietly impressive operational results’.

Revealing its annual results this week, Scottish Mortgage delivered a net asset value return of 11.2 per cent for the year ended 31 March. During the period, the firm’s share price return was 6 per cent, beating the FTSE All-World Index’s 5.5 per cent return.

The results, released on Thursday, do not account for the weeks that have followed Trump’s tariff ‘liberation day’. After taking a steep tumble after the announcement, Scottish Mortgage shares have since clawed back all the ground lost and are up 4.7 per cent on their 2 April level.

Scottish Mortgage manager Tom Slater warns a 'reckoning' could be approaching Trump's administration

Scottish Mortgage manager Tom Slater warns a ‘reckoning’ could be approaching Trump’s administration

Slater said: ‘Just after our financial year end, the United States announced sweeping new tariffs on several of its key trading partners. The reaction from markets was immediate and severe.

He added: ‘We are cautious about leaping to conclusions, but we do not view these developments as transitory. 

‘The underlying imbalances in the US and global economy whether in trade, debt accumulation, inequality or political cohesion are increasingly unsustainable.’

The trust said its discount to NAV had widened to 9 per cent form a previous 4.5 per cent in the financial year just ended, however it says this is in line with the investment trust sector average of 9.1 per cent.

During the year, the trust deployed £132m of new capital in private companies – up from £109.4m during the previous 12 months. 

Scottish Mortgage said its most promising holdings share a capacity to absorb shocks and ‘reorient without losing momentum’.

Amazon, its says, is now reaping the benefits of its investment into fulfilment, while Shopify has refocused towards enabling merchants by offloading its logistics infrastructure.

Slater said: ‘In a world that is becoming more fragmented, more protectionist, and more unpredictable, this kind of organisational flexibility will matter more than ever.’

The trust has also been reorienting itself, shifting its AI holdings to target businesses that can benefit from the adoption of AI technology.

Slater said: ‘Few developments this year were more consequential than the rise of generative AI… AI is not a distant promise. It is driving real operational leverage today.’

Scottish Mortgage has decided to cut its holding in Nvidia ‘significantly’, which was its largest investment at the beginning of the financial year.

‘This does not reflect diminished respect for the company. It reflects our long-held discipline: we seek asymmetric outcomes. And at the prevailing valuations, the risk/reward looked more balanced than we prefer,’ Slater added.

Instead, the trust has added to firms it thinks will benefit from adopting AI into their current operations.

It said both Spotify and Meta were large contributors to its returns over the past year, with the latter having embedded AI further into its business model.

‘It has many opportunities to drive its revenue growth today using this technology. Last year the company noted an 8 per cent increase in time spent on Facebook as a result of AI driven content recommendations to its users,’ Slater said.

The trust also invested into chipmaker TSMC. It said: ‘compute demand will remain structurally strong as AI moves from the training phase to deployment at scale.’

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Investing online is simple, cheap and can be done from your computer, tablet or phone at a time and place that suits you.

When it comes to choosing a DIY investing platform, stocks & shares Isa, self invested personal pension, or a general investing account, the range of options might seem overwhelming. 

 This is Money’s full guide to the best investing platforms 

Every provider has a slightly different offering, charging more or less for trading or holding shares and giving access to a different range of stocks, funds and investment trusts. 

When weighing up the right one for you, it’s important to to look at the service that it offers, along with administration charges and dealing fees, plus any other extra costs.

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Platforms featured below are independently selected by This is Money’s specialist journalists. If you open an account using links which have an asterisk, This is Money will earn an affiliate commission. We do not allow this to affect our editorial independence. 

DIY INVESTING PLATFORMS AND STOCKS & SHARES ISAS 
Admin charge Charges notes Fund dealing Standard share, trust, ETF dealing Regular investing Dividend reinvestment
AJ Bell*  0.25%  Max £3.50 per month for shares, trusts, ETFs.  £1.50 £5  £1.50 £1.50 per deal  More details
Bestinvest 0.40% (0.2% for ready made portfolios) Account fee cut to 0.2% for ready made investments Free £4.95 Free for funds  Free for income funds More details
Charles Stanley Direct* 0.30%  Min platform fee of £60, max of £600. £100 back in free trades per year  £4  £10 Free for funds  n/a More details
Etoro*   Free Stocks, investment trusts and ETFs. Limited Isa, no Sipp. Not available  Free  n/a  n/a  More details 
Fidelity* 0.35% on funds £7.50 per month up to £25,000 or 0.35% with regular savings plan.  Free £7.50 Free funds £1.50 shares, trusts ETFs £1.50 More details
Freetrade*  Basic account free,  Standard with Isa £5.99, Plus £11.99 Stocks, investment trusts and ETFs. No funds  Free  n/a  n/a  More details 
Hargreaves Lansdown* 0.45% Capped at £45 for shares, trusts, ETFs Free £11.95 Free  Free  More details
Interactive Investor*  £4.99 per month under £50k, £11.99 above, £10 extra for Sipp Free trade worth £3.99 per month (does not apply to £4.99 plan) £3.99 £3.99 Free £0.99 More details
InvestEngine* Free  Only ETFs. Managed service is 0.25%  Not available Free  Free  Free  More details 
iWeb Free  £5 £5 n/a 2%, max £5 More details
Trading 212*  Free  Stocks, investment trusts and ETFs.  Not available  Free  n/a  Free  More details 
Vanguard  Only Vanguard’s own products 0.15%  Only Vanguard funds Free  Free only Vanguard ETFs  Free  n/a  More details 
(Source: ThisisMoney.co.uk April 2025. Admin % charge may be levied monthly or quarterly

 

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