Onward Opportunities: A new fund yet to justify its fees

Onward Opportunities is one of the few investment trusts to have floated in the past three years and has a solid record – but is it too expensive for investors?

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There have been just three initial public offerings (IPOs) of investment trusts between 2023 and 2025, and none of them raised over £100 million. Achilles Investment Company (LSE: AIC), an activist trust, raised £54 million last year, while Ashoka WhiteOak Emerging Markets (LSE: AWEM) raised £30.5 million in 2023. Both have received a reasonable amount of coverage.

By far the smallest and least well-known of the three is Onward Opportunities (LSE: ONWD), which has raised £12.8 million through a listing on Aim in 2023. It has since grown in size to £42 million via several follow-on raises and graduated from Aim to the main market this year.

Onward Opportunities has a focused approach

Onward, which focuses on UK smaller companies and micro-caps, set a target of earning an annualised return of at least 15% and doubling invested capital within a three-to-five-year holding period. A share-price return of 18.5% (and a total net asset value (NAV) return of 26%) over three years means that it has so far failed to meet this goal. Still, it has outperformed the UK Aim All-Share total return index (8.4%) and matched the performance of its peer group, the AIC UK Smaller Companies sector.

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The trust is managed by Laurence Hulse, who started his career at Gresham House in 2015. He worked on a number of equity funds – including Gresham House Strategic (which is now Rockwood Strategic (LSE: RKW)), the Strategic Public Equity Fund and the Gresham House Smaller Companies Fund – before he moved to Dowgate Wealth in 2022 to start Onward. Hulse and his team own 5% of the trust, and Dowgate owns 33%.

Onward has a concentrated portfolio of ten core positions and 12 smaller holdings (25% of the portfolio), which the team call “nursery” positions. It looks for profitable, cash-generative businesses, while also aiming to take meaningful positions in situations where an activist approach can unlock value.

The top two holdings at the end of June were Likewise (9.5%) and Angling Direct (8.3%). Likewise is a UK distributor of floor coverings, rugs, and matting that Onward first bought in 2024. It doubled down on the position at the end of last year, arguing that Likewise is well-positioned to outperform its “loss-making and heavily indebted rivals”, whose continued decline is a key part of the thesis. CEO Tony Brewer, who co-founded the firm in 2018, was previously at competitor Headlam, where he increased the firm's value tenfold between 2009 and 2015.

Angling Direct, a leading UK retailer of fishing equipment, has been a top holding for the trust since its inception. Onward wants management to reconsider the company's expansion into Europe amid continued losses and to focus on its app and social channels.

Pottery firm Portmeirion is a recent new nursery holding. While this firm has lost money over the past two years, Onward believes its new CEO Michael Scheepers, who comes from Le Creuset, can help drive the company forward.

Onward Opportunities is too expensive

While Onward is establishing a solid record in the small and micro-cap sector, the fees are quite pricey. The management fee is 1.5% of NAV up to £50 million and 1% above £50 million. On top of this, there is a performance fee of 12.5% of the excess return above a non-compounding hurdle of 6% per annum. While this gives managers an incentive to outperform, it's eating into returns.

Ongoing charges, including the performance fee, hit 4.4% in 2024 and 5.2% in 2025. This makes the trust nearly five times more expensive than the weighted average for its peer group, and 2.5 times higher than Rockwood Strategic, which has returned 56% over three years.

It's a shame that performance accrues to the managers rather than to investors. Strip out the fees and it would be a top performer.


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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.