1 top FTSE 250 investment trust to consider in February

Despite solid long-term gains, this FTSE 250 investment trust is trailing the S&P 500. But now it’s tweaked its strategy, things could improve.

| 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.

The flag of the United States of America flying in front of the Capitol building

Image source: Getty Images

FTSE 250 stock Baillie Gifford US Growth Trust (LSE:USA) has put shareholders through the wringer since debuting at 100p in 2018.

It launched like a rocket, charging to almost 400p in the first two-and-a-bit years. Then the stock crashed 65% in the next two-and-a-bit years, falling all the way back to 135p. Ouch!

Since then though, the share price has more than doubled to 281p. So this has been some wild ride.

Despite the whipsawing volatility, I reckon this FTSE 250 stock’s worth considering for long-term investors. Here’s why.

Public and private markets

The £777m trust’s purpose is to give investors “access to the most exciting growth businesses in the US, whether listed on public markets or still privately held“.

It can allocate up to 50% of assets to unlisted businesses. The reason for doing this is important — US start-ups are choosing to stay private for longer, meaning that more and more value’s being created away from public markets.

Much of the most powerful growth now occurs before an IPO. Capturing that growth requires a structure that can invest patiently and flexibly.
Baillie Gifford US Growth Trust.

This strategy was recently validated in spectacular fashion when top holding SpaceX announced it was considering one of the largest IPOs in history. The trust’s made exceptional returns from rocket pioneer Elon Musk after investing in Space X soon after launch.

We’ve moved on from the age of the unicorns (privately-owned businesses worth over $1bn). We’re now onto ‘hectocorns’ — those worth at least $100bn!

Today, the trust’s invested in four hectocorns (SpaceX, Stripe, Databricks, and AI firm Anthropic). All of these high-growth firms could go public in the next couple of years, helping the trust crystallise some gains.

Underperformance

Last week, the investment company released its half-yearly report to 30 November. In this period, it delivered an 18% and 14.1% return on a share price and net asset value (NAV) basis respectively.

While that was solid, this compares with a total return of 18.6% for the S&P 500. And since launch, the trust’s share price and NAV have returned 181.1% and 207.9% respectively. This is also behind the blue-chip index (220.5%).

So the trust has underperformed. And anyone who invested five years ago would still be down around 18%, which is obviously disappointing for shareholders.

If the managers’ key stock picks don’t perform in future, investors could lose faith in the strategy, widening the NAV discount (it’s currently 7.5%).

Top 10 Holdings (November 2025)

Holding
1SpaceX
2Stripe
3Shopify
4Amazon
5BillionToOne
6Nvidia
7Meta Platforms
8Netflix
9Cloudflare
10Databricks

Strongly positioned

Looking at the top holdings though, I’m bullish on the trust’s prospects. There are multiple world-class companies here in various growth industries, including space (SpaceX), AI (Nvidia, Meta, Cloudflare) and e-commerce (Amazon, Shopify and Stripe).

Importantly, a key failure from 2020-21 — not banking some profits from highly-valued shares — has been acknowledged. In the first half, it reduced holdings where there had been significant share price appreciation. These included Shopify, Roblox, Affirm and SpaceX.

With this renewed discipline on valuation and the high-quality portfolio, I think the trust’s in a far stronger position than it was a few years ago. As such, I reckon it’s worth considering as part of a diversified Stocks and Shares ISA.

Ben McPoland has positions in Cloudflare, Nvidia, Roblox, and Shopify. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Amazon, Cloudflare, Meta Platforms, Nvidia, Roblox, and Shopify. 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

Lady wearing a head scarf looks over pages on company financials
Investing Articles

Is April a good time to start buying shares?

Wondering whether now's a good time to start buying shares to build wealth? History suggests it is, says Edward Sheldon.

Read more »

A senior group of friends enjoying rowing on the River Derwent
Investing Articles

How much passive income could a Stocks and Shares ISA pump out every year?

Regular investing inside a Stocks and Shares ISA could lead to the equivalent of £141 a week in tax-free passive…

Read more »

Fans of Warren Buffett taking his photo
Investing Articles

With the FTSE 100 down 5%+ investors should remember this legendary quote from Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett is widely regarded as the greatest investor of all time. And he says that the best time to…

Read more »

Inflation in newspapers
Investing Articles

1 FTSE 100 stock that could benefit from higher inflation

For most companies, inflation is a risk. But for one FTSE 100 firm, higher input costs could be an opportunity…

Read more »

Man hanging in the balance over a log at seaside in Scotland
Investing Articles

The 2026 stock market sell-off could be a rare opportunity to build wealth in an ISA

The recent stock market sell-off has led to some shares falling 20% or more. This could be a great opportunity…

Read more »

Thoughtful man using his phone while riding on a train and looking through the window
Investing Articles

It’s down another 13%! Analysts were dead wrong about the Greggs share price

The Greggs share price continues to fall and analysts have been revising their share price targets down further. Dr James…

Read more »

Burst your bubble thumbtack and balloon background
Investing Articles

Is the stock market about to reach breaking point?

Private credit has a problem with the emergence of artificial intelligence. And it could be set to create issues across…

Read more »

BUY AND HOLD spelled in letters on top of a pile of books. Alongside is a piggy bank in glasses. Buy and hold is a popular long term stock and shares strategy.
Investing Articles

A once-in-a-decade chance to buy this S&P 500 stock?

As investors focus on oil prices and the conflict in Iran, Stephen Wright's looking at potential opportunities in the S&P…

Read more »