Scottish Mortgage shares are on sale should I buy them?

The last year has been tough on Scottish Mortgage shares, but they’re so cheap that they’re beginning to look irresistible.

| 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.

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.

Young Black woman looking concerned while in front of her laptop

Image source: Getty Images

Scottish Mortgage (LSE: SMT) shares have taken a beating over the last 18 months, and the pain isn’t over yet. During 2022, they lost half their value. This year they’re down another 9.52%. Things look so bleak, I’m wondering if now may be the perfect time to buy them.

For a contrarian investor like me, Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust looks a no-brainer buy. Before its meltdown, it routinely traded at a premium to its underlying net asset value. Today, it’s on sale at a whopping 22.4% discount. So I should buy, right? Well, it’s not that simple.

The Scottish tech play

There’s a growing controversy about the state of those assets, many of which are “late-stage private companies”, according to managers Tom Slater and Lawrence Burns. They deny investing in start-ups, but critics say many of its holdings aren’t far off that definition, cranking up the risk factor. Some 28.6% of the portfolio is now invested in privately held assets, close to its 30% ceiling. Again, that spells unknowable risk to me.

Either way, Scottish Mortgage’s performance is likely to remain volatile. It made a big winning bet on Tesla, buying its shares in 2013. By 2021, its holdings were worth a staggering $30bn more.

That hugely successful trade has distorted both performance and investor perceptions. It helped push Scottish Mortgage into the FTSE 100 in 2017, giving this previously obscure trust mass market appeal, for better or worse.

Shoot-the-lights-out stocks like Tesla are few and far between, and identifying them early isn’t easy either. Investors who buy Scottish Mortgage today in the hope it will blithely return to former glories are placing a big bet.

Tesla is still its fourth-biggest holding at 4.3% of the portfolio, which is paying off today, with the electric car maker up a mighty 66.65% in 2023.

Another top 10 holding, Nvidia, has rocketed a staggering 118.4% year-to-date, while it’s number one holding ASML is up 24.47%. Naturally, others haven’t done as well, but Scottish Mortgage still has its fair share of winners.

Slater and Burns are under pressure after last year’s meltdown. which saw it go from being the best-performing UK trust to one of the worst. Soaring inflation and interest rates knocked the stuffing out of the tech sector in 2022.

It’s cheap but also risky

Yet this year’s tech recovery – another top 10 holding, Amazon, is up 35.46% – hasn’t translated into positive performance for the investment trust as a whole. Its portfolio must contain a fair number of underperformers too.

However, I believe Scottish Mortgage will benefit from the long-awaited interest rate ‘pivot’, when the US Federal Reserve and other banks start cutting interest rates rather than hiking them. That will improve sentiment across the board, and I’m tempted to buy Scottish Mortgage today, before that moment arrives.

Scottish Mortgage may struggle to pull off another Tesla or two, but I think it’s so cheap that some recovery is likely, for investors who take a long-term view.

I don’t have much exposure to the higher-risk end of the tech market, and this low-cost investment trust would give me it. There’s no point waiting for a dip. That’s already happened. My buying opportunity is here today. I’d better find the cash.

John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Harvey Jones has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended ASML, Amazon.com, Nvidia, and Tesla. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Petrochemical engineer working at night with digital tablet inside oil and gas refinery plant
Investing Articles

Up 50% in a month! Meet Quadrise, the soaring UK penny stock that offers an alternative to oil

Mark Hartley takes a closer look at a British penny stock that envisions a future less dependent on crude oil.…

Read more »

Senior couple crossing the road on a city street. They are walking with shopping bags while Christmas shopping.
Investing Articles

How much do I need in a SIPP for a £500 monthly passive income?

Looking to earn a reliable passive income from your SIPP? Royston Wild explains how this could be possible with some…

Read more »

Hand of person putting wood cube block with word VALUE on wooden table
Investing Articles

A P/E ratio of less than 7. Is this a red-hot value share to consider now?

James Beard uses a popular tool to identify a UK share that’s potentially undervalued. But he reckons judgement is also…

Read more »

Businessman with tablet, waiting at the train station platform
Investing Articles

£5,000 invested in cheap BP shares a month ago is now worth…

BP shares have rocketed by double-digit percentages over the last month. Can the FTSE 100 oil giant keep rising? Royston…

Read more »

This way, That way, The other way - pointing in different directions
Investing For Beginners

Why the next 4 weeks are going to be big for Barclays shares

Jon Smith points out upcoming earnings and ongoing geopolitical turmoil and explains how Barclays shares could be impacted in the…

Read more »

British flag, Big Ben, Houses of Parliament and British flag composition
Investing Articles

Scottish Mortgage has made a fortune on SpaceX and Tesla! Here are 5 UK stocks it owns

This FTSE 100 investment trust holds 101 growth stocks from around the globe, but only five from the UK. Which…

Read more »

Businessman hand stacking up arrow on wooden block cubes
Investing Articles

I think UK investors are missing out on this overlooked Dow Jones stock

Jon Smith flags a US stock in the Dow Jones index that has a price-to-earnings ratio over half the average,…

Read more »

Shot of an young mixed-race woman using her cellphone while out cycling through the city
Investing For Beginners

2 FTSE 100 shares that could outperform this year regardless of geopolitics

Jon Smith notes the volatile market but explains how to pick FTSE 100 shares that can be fairly insulated to…

Read more »