Murray Income Trust's fresh start with Artemis

The under-performing Murray Income Trust has appointed the team behind the high-flying Artemis Income Fund to turn its fortunes around. Can they succeed?

Business teamwork – Murray Income has got a new investment manager
(Image credit: Getty Images)

At the end of last year, Murray Income Trust (LSE: MUT) announced it had decided to drop Aberdeen as its investment manager and replace it with the team behind the top-performing Artemis Income Fund. The change was desperately needed.

The shares delivered a total return of just 26.9% over the five years to 19 November 2025, putting Murray Income firmly at the bottom of the UK equity income investment trusts sector rankings. Over the same period, the FTSE All-Share index returned 70.9%. Meanwhile, the Artemis Income Fund, managed by Andy Marsh, Nick Shenton and Adrian Frost, has outperformed the UK equity-income fund sector by around 1.70 percentage points per year over the past ten years.

The growth of this fund – which now has assets of around £5.3 billion – has been fundamental to Artemis's success. At the end of the first quarter, the boutique reported approximately £41 billion in assets under management, up from just £28.5 billion at the end of 2024.

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Murray Income has now become the second trust mandate that Artemis has won. It also took over the Invesco Perpetual UK Smaller Companies Investment Trust – renamed Artemis UK Future Leaders – in 2025.

Murray Income's new portfolio

The Artemis team officially took over the Murray Income portfolio at the beginning of March. They swiftly restructured all of the trust's holdings to mirror Artemis Income's portfolio.

At the end of 2025, Murray's top-five holdings were AstraZeneca, National Grid, Unilever, RELX and TotalEnergies, which together accounted for 21.6% of the portfolio. These have now been replaced by Tesco, GSK, Lloyds Bank, NatWest and Aviva, which make up a similar 23.6% of the total.

The key difference between the new Artemis approach and the former Aberdeen strategy is a focus on cash flow rather than yield. The team uses free cash flow to assess how much cash a company generates and whether its dividend is sustainable. They concentrate on companies that they believe have the best potential for free cash-flow generation, overall shareholder yield (they like companies that can buy back stock as well) and long-term growth.

Comparing the old and new portfolios illustrates the difference in approach. The new portfolio is trading at a free cash flow yield approximately 50% higher than the old portfolio, based on Morningstar's data.

The top-five holdings in the Artemis portfolio also yield around 1.7 percentage points more on average compared with the Aberdeen portfolio. All in all, the new holdings are cheaper, generate more cash and offer a better overall shareholder yield. That should help the trust maintain its 52-year record of dividend growth, which has earned it “Dividend Hero” status from the Association of Investment Companies (AIC).

The future looks bright for Murray Income

While Marsh, Shenton and Frost are new to Murray, they are not new to income investing. If their record at Artemis Income is anything to go by, the trust has an exciting future.

Investors who already back their existing open-ended fund may want to consider which vehicle is likely to offer the best returns. Recent research from the AIC found that a solid majority (77%) of investment trusts have outperformed open-ended funds run by the same manager over ten years, with average excess returns of 1.3 percentage points per year.

The new managers are already capitalising on a key difference between investment trusts and open-end funds by deploying leverage to enhance returns. The trust has a leverage targeting of 8%-10%, and borrowings stood at by the end of March.

At a 7% discount to net asset value (NAV) and yielding 4.3% (versus its open-ended peer's 3.5%), Murray Income now offers cheap exposure to a sector-leading strategy.


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Rupert Hargreaves
Contributor and former deputy digital editor of MoneyWeek

Rupert is the former deputy digital editor of MoneyWeek. He's an active investor and has always been fascinated by the world of business and investing. His style has been heavily influenced by US investors Warren Buffett and Philip Carret. He is always looking for high-quality growth opportunities trading at a reasonable price, preferring cash generative businesses with strong balance sheets over blue-sky growth stocks.

Rupert has written for many UK and international publications including the Motley Fool, Gurufocus and ValueWalk, aimed at a range of readers; from the first timers to experienced high-net-worth individuals. Rupert has also founded and managed several businesses, including the New York-based hedge fund newsletter, Hidden Value Stocks. He has written over 20 ebooks and appeared as an expert commentator on the BBC World Service.