This article will review Guinness funds, that are widely sold within the expat market.
If you have financial pain points as an expat or high-net-worth individual, which is what I specialize in, you can email me (advice@adamfayed.com) or WhatsApp (+44-7393-450-837).
This includes if you are looking for a second opinion or alternative investments.
Some of the facts might change from the time of writing, and nothing written here is financial, legal, tax or any kind of individual advice, or a solicitation to invest.
Guinness are an asset management company, domiciled in Ireland. They also offer US investments, approved by the SEC, through Guinness Atkinson Asset Management Inc.
Most of the funds they offer, are focused on global, US, Chinese and European stock markets, whilst offering specialist funds in energy. Since 2010, Guinness has also started the EIS Service that is focused on value investments in EIS qualifying companies.
The full list of funds is
Most of the funds have an accumulation share, where the dividends is reinvested, and am income fund, where the dividends are paid out.
Each fund will have an investment class as well, such as Guinness Global Equity Income Fund C Class.
They are sold all around the world, but are particularly widely sold in cities with big expat populations, such as Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai, Shanghai, Qatar and Bangkok. They are usually sold in conjunction with the expat investments sold within the platforms and life companies reviewed at the bottom of the article.
Some of the funds have performed very badly, with others performing reasonably well. The energy funds, as an example, have been minus for over 10 years.
The Global Equities Fund has performed at +11% for the last 5 years, although the wider index has yielded 12% per year on average, as global markets have performed impressively well in recent years. Almost all of the funds seem to lag the benchmark. Even the US fund, which has increased by just over 20% so far in 2019, is lagging its benchmark by about 5% for the year.
Moreover, these are the net performances of the funds. In reality, many expat investors are getting less, due to the fee structure within the investments they are holding. So 8% gross return can often become 4% net return, adjusted for this reality.
The main positives about the funds is that they are liquid, meaning you can sell them daily. They are not an opaque, complicated, investment, that could go down to 0. They are also well-regulated within Ireland.
The biggest negatives with the funds is that they usually lag their benchmarks and are sold in conjunction with many high-cost expat investments, which brings down the net returns substantially. They are also not the cheapest funds available on the market and these fees compound over time.
If you have an underperforming expat portfolio with Guinness funds, you have 3 options. You can completely exit the investment, although penalties might be applied for doing so,
You can often partially exit the investment, meaning if you have $100,000 in your portfolio, you can take out a certain percentage, without penalty. Finally, you can simply change the funds within your existing portfolio, to lower the cost.
I have helped clients with all three in the past.