Friday HighlightMay 25 2018

Why Aim is a way for UK investors to go global

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Why Aim is a way for UK investors to go global

Despite recent stock market jitters, the underlying picture for many UK smaller companies remains very promising indeed.

What’s more, this area of the market offers investors a great way to tap into growing markets all around the globe.

Over the past couple of decades, ambitious companies on the Alternative Investment Market (Aim) have become increasingly successful on the global stage.

This has led to a reduction in the share of revenues generated in the UK, and increased exposure to global opportunities.

To give you a flavour, the largest 20 companies on Aim now generate less than 40 per cent of their combined earnings from the UK.

The market's biggest company, online clothing retailer Asos, is typical of a smaller company that’s grown by expanding internationally.

Asos now generates more than 60 per cent of its revenues outside the UK.

Today’s technology means small, UK-based companies can establish a global presence much more easily than used to be the case, and at a much earlier stage.

Moving into other territories has helped Asos go from being a minnow 15 years ago, to Aim’s biggest company.

The good news for today’s investors is that it’s not just the bigger players on Aim which are enjoying success in overseas markets. Companies still in the early part of their growth story are also spreading their wings.  

In the FP Octopus UK Micro Cap Growth fund, among the companies in the top 10 holdings, a fifth of their sales come from the US, while less than half are generated in the UK.

Today’s technology means small, UK-based companies can establish a global presence much more easily than used to be the case, and at a much earlier stage.

An example from the portfolio is York-based Gear4Music. The company, which sells musical instruments and equipment online, has now opened major distribution hubs in both Sweden and Germany.

There’s also been a marked increase in smaller companies making cross-border acquisitions.

Several companies in the portfolio have expanded their international footprint this way.

Keyword Studios - a services platform for the video games industry - acquired two businesses from US-based Volt Information Sciences in October.

In the same month, translation and intellectual property services company RWS announced its acquisition of Czech translation services provider Moravia.  

Meanwhile, in March last year Midwich, which provides services to the audio-visual industry, bought Spain’s Earpro and, in September, acquired a majority stake in Van Domborg in the Netherlands, marking the group’s entry into the Benelux. 

All these deals happened within the past 12 months. They will help UK shareholders benefit from growth in markets well beyond the UK’s shores.

The idea that the UK smaller companies sector is dominated by UK-focused companies is now very outdated.

Perhaps that was the case 20 years ago. Now, though, the sector is far less reliant on the UK economy than it used to be.

For Aim investors, this is great news.

It means they can invest in companies with huge growth potential, listed in London, without it having to be a bet on the broader fortunes of UK plc.

Richard Power is head of quoted smaller companies at Octopus Investments