Hybrid estate agency Purplebricks is among companies in a new portfolio being launched on the stock market by star fund manager Neil Woodford, where he is targeting annual 10% returns.
The Woodford Patient Capital Trust is Woodford’s second fund, and is an investment trust focused on young growth companies.
Trading in the shares on the London Stock Exchange is due to start in mid April when Woodford hopes to raise £200m.
Three-quarters of shareholders’ money will be invested in early stage companies in the UK and US, including Purplebricks. The other quarter will buy shares in established blue chip companies.
Unusually, the investors will pay only a small annual admin fee and not the usual percentage-based management fee. They will otherwise pay a performance fee in a year when they receive a positive return over a certain amount, and that performance fee will be paid in the form of shares
Woodford says that Patient Capital will allow investment opportunities in overlooked companies.
Fifteen businesses are already in the Patient Capital Trust, but a further 12 are in the pipeline and the trust will eventually hold up to 100.
* For those who did not see it, we added the following statement to last Friday’s Purplebricks story late in the day. It refutes comments that were made in some posts.
The statement says: “It is entirely inaccurate and untrue that anyone influences an independent review of a customer.
“All reviews of Purplebricks that appear on Trustpilot are provided by real customers entirely independently of Purplebricks.
“Where any of our reviews have reference to (NAME) it is because of a policy of Trustpilot where, for a period, they took out reference to names of any employee and replaced it with (NAME).
“Once we had provided permission for our Local Property Experts names to be included in any review placed by a customer they have been thereafter included. Unfortunately the ones that were deleted whilst their policy was in place were not reinstated.
“At no time have we given a customer a template on what they should write as a review or influenced them to post any particular words or comments.
“We use Trustpilot because all of their reviews are independent and verified. If anyone wishes to understand this policy further or requires additional verification, please do contact Trustpilot directly.”
Oh well that explains it and what a shame for them that they waited until the end of December to end that “period” where they hadn’t issued permission for names to be used.
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Ros, they are not a Hybrid Estate Agency, to refer to them as such gives them a credibility they simply do not deserve. Please bear in mind I tried to be a customer of theirs last week, they failed to even achieve a passive intermediary service.
It makes sense for Neil Woodford to include Purplebricks in his portfolio. The stock market is awash with not understanding Estate Agency and why this particular industry sector has failed to flourish in 16 years. People like Woodford earn from the signups and not the failures. There is no other firm he can slot into the ‘lubie du jour’ (fad of the day) gap in his portfolio so it might as well be Purplebricks
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