BlackRock Income and Growth Investment Trust Plc - Portfolio Update
The information contained in this release was correct as at
https://www.londonstockexchange.com/exchange/news/market-news/market-news-home.html .
All information is at
Performance at month end with net income reinvested
Since
One Three One Three Five
1 April
Month Months Year Years Years
2012
Sterling
Share price 5.9% 4.0% 22.3% 37.1% 53.4% 195.1%
Net asset value 3.2% -1.5% 16.3% 28.7% 48.1% 182.4%
FTSE All-Share Total Return 2.8% 2.1% 25.2% 44.7% 66.9% 207.2%
Source: BlackRock
BlackRock took over the investment management of the Company with effect from
At month end
Sterling:
Net asset value - capital only: 246.70p Net asset value - cum income*: 250.89p Share price: 234.00p Total assets (including income): £52.7m Discount to cum-income NAV: 6.7% Gearing: 3.8% Net yield**: 3.3% Ordinary shares in issue***: 18,624,568 Gearing range (as a % of net assets): 0-20% Ongoing charges****: 1.15% * Includes net revenue of4.19 pence per share ** The Company's yield based on dividends announced in the last 12 months as at the date of the release of this announcement is 3.3% and includes the 2025 final dividend of 5.00p per share declared on28 January 2026 with pay date20 March 2026 and the Interim Dividend of 2.70p per share declared on19 June 2025 with pay date02 September 2025 . *** excludes 10,081,532 shares held in treasury. **** The Company's ongoing charges are calculated as a percentage of average daily net assets and using management fee and all other operating expenses excluding finance costs, direct transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT recovered, taxation and certain non-recurring items for the year ended31 October 2025 . In addition, the Company's Manager has also agreed to cap ongoing charges by rebating a portion of the management fee to the extent that the Company's ongoing charges exceed 1.15% of average net assets.
Sector Analysis Total assets (%) Banks 14.6 Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology 10.0Oil & Gas Producers 7.7Household Goods & Home Construction 5.6 General Retailers 5.4 Support Services 5.0 Mining 4.9 Tobacco 4.7 Electronic &Electrical Equipment 4.3 Aerospace & Defence 3.8 Software & Computer Services 3.3 General Industrials 3.0Nonlife Insurance 2.9 Life Insurance 2.8 Financial Services 2.7 Food & Drug Retailers 2.4Industrial Engineering 2.2 Real Estate Investment Trusts 1.8 Food Producers 1.6 Personal Goods 1.6 Electricity 0.9 Construction & Materials 0.8 Net Current Assets 8.0 ----- Total 100.0 ===== Percentage Country AnalysisUnited Kingdom 88.0United States 4.0 Net Current Assets 8.0 ----- 100.0 Fund % Top 10 Holdings AstraZeneca 8.1 Shell 5.6 British American Tobacco 4.7 HSBC 4.6 Standard Chartered 4.5 Lloyds Banking Group 4.3 Reckitt Benckiser Group 3.5 RELX 3.3 Phoenix Group 2.8 Next 2.7
Commenting on the markets, representing the Investment Manager noted:
Market Summary
Global markets remained volatile in April, extending themes from March as macro uncertainty, geopolitics and shifting policy expectations drove outcomes. Despite fragile sentiment and sharp moves across energy, rates and currencies, equities rebounded strongly, with the S&P 500 delivering one of its best Aprils.
From a macro perspective, the month was defined by an energy-driven inflation shock rather than weakening demand. Oil prices were volatile but remained elevated, feeding into inflation expectations and complicating the policy outlook. The
Emerging markets outperformed, rebounding sharply after March's weakness. Gains were led by technology-linked markets in
Oil prices were highly volatile amid geopolitical tensions, ending the month elevated, while broader commodity performance was mixed.
Stock comments
Standard Chartered contributed positively to relative performance following a rebound from a market-driven pullback in March and supported by a strong first - quarter beat. The strong results were driven by robust growth across their Wealth, Global Banking and Markets divisions more than offsetting a tougher interest - rate backdrop. Disciplined cost control supported profitability, while higher impairments reflected management caution rather than any underlying credit stress. An underweight position in HSBC detracted from relative performance as the shares also rebounded from March lows though results, reported in May, disappointed as impairments and costs exceeded expectations. We continue to prefer Standard Chartered, supported by stronger operational momentum and earnings delivery.
Standard Life contributed to relative returns over the period following the announcement of its £2bn acquisition of AEGON, which will significantly increase scale and position the group as the second
-
largest
Oxford Instruments contributed to relative returns as the shares were supported by a reassuring trading update, with continued steady growth in
Reckitt Benckiser detracted from performance after a weak update reinforced concerns around uneven regional growth, particularly in
Weir Group also detracted from relative returns during the month. A disappointing trading update and earlier-than-expected CEO succession weighed on the shares despite management reiterating its full-year guidance. The outlook for mining capital expenditure remains encouraging however the timing for this to flow through to Weir remains unclear.
Portfolio Changes
We initiated a new position in
We also started a new position in United Utilities, a
We have also trimmed exposure to Oils and SSE, following recent share price strength, reallocating capital into Babcock,
Outlook
The immediate outlook for the global economy, particularly for 2026, will largely be shaped by the duration of the war in
In the
Notwithstanding the uncertainty in the
Cash-generative businesses with enduring competitive advantages continue to be a priority, and we are confident they are best positioned to deliver long-term returns. While volatility is likely to persist, the opportunities it presents are encouraging - both in resilient growth stories and compelling turnaround cases.
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