The Market’s Fastest-Growing Shares Just Got Cheaper

The AIM is riskier than the main market – but the returns can be higher…

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

When investing, your capital is at risk. The value of your investments can go down as well as up and you may get back less than you put in.

Read More

The content of this article is provided for information purposes only and is not intended to be, nor does it constitute, any form of personal advice. Investments in a currency other than sterling are exposed to currency exchange risk. Currency exchange rates are constantly changing, which may affect the value of the investment in sterling terms. You could lose money in sterling even if the stock price rises in the currency of origin. Stocks listed on overseas exchanges may be subject to additional dealing and exchange rate charges, and may have other tax implications, and may not provide the same, or any, regulatory protection as in the UK.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

Last Monday, investing became cheaper. That’s right: the government axed the Stamp Duty payable on investments in shares traded on London’s smaller-company AIM market.

And growth-oriented AIM, of course, is where some of the market’s juiciest gains are to be had.

Look no further than fashion retailer ASOS (LSE: ASC), which fell below 3p a share shortly after listing in 2001, to then rise to over £70 a share earlier this year. Even taking a five-year view, it’s still up more than 990%.

So the axing of Stamp Duty, announced in the 2013 Budget by Chancellor George Osborne, ought to be good news.

But is it?

Easy access

To answer that, let’s just quickly remind ourselves why AIM – London’s Alternative Investment Market – exists in the first place.

Launched in 1995, it provides a way for small, fast-growing companies to gain access to investment funding. Over the years, some 3,000 companies have joined, in the process raising more than £60 billion in new capital.

But it’s also true that companies sign up to AIM – as opposed to London’s main market – to benefit from what the Stock Exchange coyly refers to as AIM’s “pragmatic” approach to regulation.

In short, to join AIM, companies are not required to have a particular financial track record or trading history. Regulation, in short, is ‘light touch’.

Wealth traps

Now, these relaxed entry requirements are great for fast-growing companies that simply haven’t been trading long enough to be eligible for London’s main market, or for companies with less-than-perfect trading records or finances, which might struggle to gain access to the main bourse.

But it’s also a route to market for companies that might exhibit dodgy governance, possess weak business models, have debt-laden balance sheets, or which simply fail to find the oil, gas, gold or other mineral wealth that they were set up to drill for…

Companies, in short, that are likely to go bust, taking investors’ stakes with them.

What’s more, it’s the case that companies can join AIM, find the gaze of public scrutiny not to their liking, and then promptly go private – rarely choosing to do so at a time that does much for the wealth of the AIM investors who backed them.

Decent picks

But as with fashion retailer ASOS, AIM is also home to some first-class businesses that prefer the freedoms – and lower costs – of an AIM listing.

Look at flooring company James Halstead, for instance. Some 100 years old next year, it possesses one of the best dividend records of the entire London stock market, having posted unbroken increases in dividend for 36 years.

Or intellectual property specialist RWS Holdings, where soaring patent applications have delivered an average dividend growth of 14% in recent years.

Or lighting specialist FW Thorpe, another rock-solid business with a solid reputation for delivering cast-iron returns to shareholders.

Not only are these very decent businesses, they’re also shares that in many cases are under the radar screens of the City’s fund managers – providing an opportunity for canny investors to sit and bank some juicy dividends until the City does wake up to what it’s been missing.

At which point, the share price can soar – just look at the long-term chart for ASOS, or indeed, any of the companies I’ve mentioned.

asos
Source: Google

Take the plunge?

So does the abolition of Stamp Duty open up an opportunity for investors?

Well, yes. With no Stamp Duty to pay, investing just got cheaper. But not much cheaper – Stamp Duty was only 0.5% of the deal cost, anyway.

Which – for many AIM shares at least – is rather less than the buy-sell spread on the shares in question. So for me, it’s a ‘nice to have’, but not a ground-breaking shift in the whole investing thesis of AIM.

Of bigger import, quite frankly, was the associated relaxation of the rule that prevented investors from holding AIM shares inside an ISA, unless these shares were also quoted on a main market elsewhere.

For as one of our most-popular free special reports, Ten Steps To Making A Million In The Market, points out, the combination of below-the-radar shares, rising dividends, dividend re-investment, and low-cost tax shelters is a powerful way of building wealth. (To learn more, click here—as I say, it’s free to download.)

Hidden treasures

And in any case, the biggest challenge of investing in AIM continues to be the difficulty of sifting through AIM’s dross in search of the relatively few golden nuggets that are there.

They are there – of that be in no doubt – but they’re harder to find than in the market’s very highest echelons, the blue-blooded blue chips of the FTSE 100.

Should you invest, the value of your investment may rise or fall and your capital is at risk. Before investing, your individual circumstances should be assessed. Consider taking independent financial advice.

Malcolm does not own any share mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool owns shares in FW Thorpe and RWS Holdings.

More on Investing Articles

Investing Articles

6 stocks that Fools have been buying!

Our Foolish freelancers are putting their money where their mouths are and buying these stocks in recent weeks.

Read more »

Google office headquarters
Investing Articles

1 reason I like buying S&P 500 shares – and 1 reason I don’t

Will this investor try to improve his potential returns by focusing more on S&P 500 shares instead of British ones?…

Read more »

Young woman holding up three fingers
Investing Articles

3 SIPP mistakes to avoid

Our writer explains a trio of potentially costly errors he tries to avoid making when investing his SIPP, on an…

Read more »

Smiling white woman holding iPhone with Airpods in ear
Investing Articles

Here’s how (and why) I’d start buying shares with £25 a week

Our writer uses his investment experience and current approach to explain how he would start buying shares on a limited…

Read more »

Aerial shot showing an aircraft shadow flying over an idyllic beach
Investing Articles

Here’s my 5-step approach to earning passive income of £500 a month

Christopher Ruane explains the handful of steps he uses to target hundreds of pounds in passive income each month.

Read more »

Investing Articles

2 UK shares I’ve been buying this week

From a value perspective, UK shares look attractive. But two in particular have been attracting Stephen Wright’s attention over the…

Read more »

Investing Articles

A lifelong second income for just £10 a week? Here’s how!

With a simple, structured approach to buying blue-chip dividend shares at attractive prices, our writer's building a second income for…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Here’s how I’d use a £20k Stocks and Shares ISA to help build generational wealth

Discover how our writer would aim to turn a £20k Stocks and Shares ISA into a sizeable nest egg by…

Read more »