Neil Woodford, Wm. Morrison Supermarkets plc And How Investors Are Being Mislead

You can’t trust lists of major shareholders in company annual reports, as the case of Wm. Morrison Supermarkets plc (LON:MRW) demonstrates.

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.

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.

So, you’ve read a company’s annual report and are delighted to see your favourite fund manager, or management house, listed as a major shareholder. Hold your horses! All may not be as it seems.

The current disclosure rules, in practice, far from increasing transparency, are misleading unwary investors.

At the extremes, a fund manager listed with a 4.99% shareholding in a company’s annual report may, in fact, hold no shares at all — while, conversely, a manager not listed as a major shareholder may actually have a stake of up to 4.99%. And no-one — aside from the management house — is any the wiser.

Disclosure rules

To explain the anomaly, I’ll have to leave out the complexities and technical language of the Disclosure Rules and Transparency Rules (DTR) of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

Essentially, a person must notify a company (and the company must notify the market) if the person’s interest in the company reaches 3%, and as certain thresholds above that level are reached. In the case of investment managers, such as Invesco Perpetual, the starting threshold for notifying the company is 5%.

The mischief arises when a management group with a notifiable holding reduces its stake back below the 5% disclosable level.

I’m going to give you a concrete example of how a below-5% notification can make a mockery of the list of major shareholders in a company’s annual report by looking at the recently published report of Wm. Morrison Supermarkets (LSE: MRW).

Morrisons’ major shareholders

For a number of years, Invesco Perpetual had an above-5% holding in Morrisons of about 133 million shares. The vast majority were held in star manager Neil Woodford‘s Income and High Income funds.

Last October it was announced that Woodford would be leaving Invesco this spring, and ‘transitioning’ the funds to new manager Mark Barnett. In November came a disclosure that Invesco’s holding in Morrisons had fallen by 22 million shares to 111 million (4.75%).

morrisonsInvesco could have simply stated that its holding had gone below 5%, without detailing the new level. However, because the shareholding was given, Invesco appeared as the fifth-largest of eight major shareholders in Morrisons’ annual report (p. 73) as at 12 March 2014.

Now, because Invesco’s holding had gone below 5% in November, any further trades (aside from back above 5%), were not required to be notified under the rules. At the time I explained to Motley Fool readers that Woodford’s successor, Barnett, wasn’t a fan of Morrisons, and that I wouldn’t be surprised if Woodford got shot of the supermarket from the funds.

I’ve just dug down into the recently published annual report of the High Income fund, and found that Woodford ditched all 68 million shares between June and December. I wouldn’t be surprised if he’d also sold the 53 million shares that were held by the Income fund at the end of September, but I can’t be sure of that, because the latest report of the Income fund has yet to be published.

In theory, far from being a top shareholder, with a stake of a little below 5%, per Morrisons’ annual report, Invesco could hold no shares at all. My best guess, though, is that the holding is somewhere around the 1% mark, because one fund manager at Invesco — Ciaran Mallon — has been keen on the company.

The position of Invesco in Morrisons’ annual report can be contrasted with that of another fund manager, BlackRock, whose shareholding in the supermarket also went below 5% at the backend of last year.

In contrast to Invesco, BlackRock simply notified its stake had passed below the disclosable threshold, without revealing any further details. As such, BlackRock doesn’t appear on the list of major shareholders in Morrisons’ annual report. In reality, it’s perfectly possible that BlackRock could hold a 4.99% stake, and thus be one of the supermarket’s top four shareholders.

So, there you have it: don’t put too much store in the lists of major shareholders in company annual reports!

G A Chester does not own any shares mentioned in this article.

More on Investing Articles

Middle-aged white man wearing glasses, staring into space over the top of his laptop in a coffee shop
Investing Articles

5 years ago £10k bought 4,484 Tesco shares. How many would it buy today?

Harvey Jones is astonished by how well Tesco shares have done lately. Can the FTSE 100 stock continue its strong…

Read more »

View of the Birmingham skyline including the church of St Martin, the Bullring shopping centre and the outdoor market.
Investing Articles

3,703 Legal & General shares pay £822 yearly passive income

Legal & General shares are a popular option for those looking to create passive income. But why are so many…

Read more »

Rolls-Royce engineer working on an engine
Investing Articles

5 years ago, £10,000 bought 9,827 Rolls-Royce shares. But how many would it buy now?

Without doubt, Rolls-Royce shares have been one of the UK's top success stories in the past five years. But what…

Read more »

Rear view image depicting two men hiking together with the stunning backdrop of Seven Sisters cliffs in the south of England.
Investing Articles

No savings at 30? How investing £5 a day in an ISA could target a stunning second income of £40,208 a year

At 30, investors still have the world at their feet. Harvey Jones shows how they can aim for a brilliant…

Read more »

Two elderly people relaxing in the summer sunshine Box Hill near Dorking Surrey England
Investing Articles

Here’s how much an investor needs in Lloyds shares to earn a £125 monthly income

Harvey Jones crunches the numbers to show how Lloyds' shares can deliver a high-and-rising regular income, with potential capital growth…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Down 45% in 5 years, this UK stock now offers a stunning 11% dividend yield!

Among the highest UK dividend yields, one immediately begs for closer inspection. Can this double-digit marvel really pull it off?

Read more »

Middle-aged black male working at home desk
Investing Articles

Here’s how Aviva shares could soon rise a further 20%… or fall 15%!

Aviva shares have fallen back a bit, with Q1 results due in May. But analysts are mostly optimistic, and see…

Read more »

Dominos delivery man on skateboard holding pizza boxes
Investing Articles

£5,000 invested in high-yield FTSE 250 stock Domino’s Pizza on 7 April is now worth…

Anyone who put £5,000 into FTSE stock Domino’s Pizza after the Easter break would now be laughing as its share…

Read more »