The value of active
To be effective, we believe a long-term approach needs to be active. We think this is even more true today given the unsettling combination of heightened headline noise and structural change that we are currently experiencing. It entails thinking carefully about the nature of change: whether it is a cyclical or temporary headwind or a secular deterioration. In the former, we are prepared to lean in, adding to high-quality businesses when volatility creates opportunity. In the latter, we act decisively. If we lose confidence in the sustainability of returns on capital or in the stewardship underpinning them, we will sell our investment in full. In Global Stewards, these disciplined sell decisions have been a source of strength for the strategy, reflecting a willingness to reassess our conviction when facts change.
In our opinion, a long-term holding ambition should be just that — an ambition, not a rigid rule. For instance, even with our own 10-year-or-more orientation, we would expect meaningful turnover over a five-year period. Leadership changes, competitive dynamics, capital allocation missteps or structural industry shifts can alter future expectations to the extent that long-term outcomes are unlikely to be met. Having the discipline to underwrite a company for a decade sharpens entry criteria, but should not, in our view, preclude investors from remaining pragmatic in their implementation as circumstances change.
In periods of greater volatility and uncertainty, we believe active “long-termism” becomes more important. A higher bar for inclusion reduces the temptation to chase momentum or compromise on stewardship. It reinforces the focus on businesses that can reinvest through adversity and adapt strategy without compromising their commitment to all stakeholders. Our approach emphasises this pragmatism. We seek to identify companies that can execute through increasing complexity, make difficult trade-offs across stakeholders, and allocate capital efficiently in pursuit of durable long-term value creation.
With a longer holding period, the role of strong and empowered boards also grows in value. We favour companies where boards go beyond oversight, bringing foresight and fresh perspective to strategic challenges — such as the threats and opportunities presented by the emergence of AI or increasingly precarious global supply lines — and we look for agile decision-making that is anchored by long-term strategic logic.
We believe that combining a genuine long-term mindset with a pragmatic approach can help generate differentiated performance through the cycle as illustrated by our two case studies.