Strategy highlights

  • Aiming to deliver outperformance of the benchmark by investing in well-stewarded businesses that compound above cost-of-capital returns at above-average growth rates
  • Long-term strategy with low turnover. Not reliant on market cycles or chasing momentum
  • Company analysis, valuation and portfolio construction is all bottom-up
  • Research conducted by both fundamental and non-traditional resources within Newton
  • Stock selection driven by bottom-up proprietary research which incorporates consideration of environmental, social and governance (ESG) risks, issues and opportunities

Strategy profile

Objective

The strategy seeks to outperform the FTSE AW Asia Pacific ex Japan index by more than 2% per annum over rolling 5-year periods by achieving long-term capital growth from a portfolio comprised predominantly of securities from Asia Pacific markets, including Australia and New Zealand, but excluding Japan.

Performance benchmark

FTSE All World Asia-Pacific ex Japan

Typical number of equity holdings

40 to 60

Strategy inception

Composite inception: 1 January 1996

Strategy available through pooled UK vehicle

BNY Mellon Asian Opportunities Fund

View fund performance
View Key Investor Information Document
View prospectus

The Newton Asian Opportunities strategy changed its name from Newton Asian Equity strategy on 1 January 2023.
UK Inst Asian Equity strategy factsheet

Strategy factsheet

Performance and commentary for the last quarter.


RI report Asian Equity Strategy

Responsible investment report

Stewardship activities (voting and engagement) for the last quarter and ESG metrics.

Investment team

Our Asian Opportunities strategy is managed by an experienced team. In-house research analysts are at the core of our investment process, and our multidimensional research platform spans fundamental, thematic, ESG, quantitative, geopolitical, investigative and private-market research to promote better-informed investment decisions.

Want to find out more?

Liliana Castillo Dearth
Liliana Castillo Dearth

Head of emerging markets and Asia equities

Alex Khosla
Alex Khosla

Portfolio manager, Emerging Markets and Asia Equities team

Zoe Kan
Zoe Kan

Portfolio manager, emerging markets and Asia equities team

Fei Chen
Fei Chen

Investment analyst

Aditya Shah Shah
Aditya Shah Shah

Portfolio analyst, Emerging Markets and Asia Equities team

Your capital may be at risk. The value of investments and the income from them can fall as well as rise and investors may not get back the original amount invested.

ESG can be one of many inputs into the fundamental analysis. Newton will make investment decisions that are not based solely on ESG analysis. Other attributes of an investment may outweigh ESG analysis when making investment decisions. The way that material ESG analysis is assessed may vary depending on the asset class and strategy involved. As of September 2022, the equity investment team performs ESG analysis on equity securities prior to their recommendation. ESG analysis is not performed for all fixed-income securities. The portfolio managers may purchase equity securities that are not formally recommended and for which ESG analysis has not been performed.

Key investment risks

  • Objective/performance risk: There is no guarantee that the strategy will achieve its objectives.
  • Currency risk: This strategy invests in international markets which means it is exposed to changes in currency rates which could affect the value of the strategy.
  • Geographic concentration risk: The strategy primarily invests in a single market which may have a significant impact on the value of the strategy.
  • Derivatives risk: Derivatives are highly sensitive to changes in the value of the asset from which their value is derived. A small movement in the value of the underlying asset can cause a large movement in the value of the derivative. This can increase the sizes of losses and gains, causing the value of your investment to fluctuate. When using derivatives, the strategy can lose significantly more than the amount it has invested in derivatives.
  • Emerging markets risk: Emerging Markets have additional risks due to less-developed market practices.
  • Concentration risk: A fall in the value of a single investment may have a significant impact on the value of the strategy because it typically invests in a limited number of investments.
  • Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect and/or the Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect (‘Stock Connect’) risk: The strategy may invest in China A shares through Stock Connect programmes. These may be subject to regulatory changes and quota limitations. An operational constraint such as a suspension in trading could negatively affect the strategy’s ability to achieve its investment objective.
  • Counterparty risk: The insolvency of any institutions providing services such as custody of assets or acting as a counterparty to derivatives or other contractual arrangements, may expose the strategy to financial loss.