Scottish Mortgage Ends Four-Year Discount: Premium Demand Triggers ÂŁ43m Treasury Release as SpaceX Nears IPO
30.05.2026 - 16:54:19 | boerse-global.de
After spending four years languishing at a discount to net asset value, the Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust has finally turned a corner. The £16.9 billion growth vehicle closed the final trading week of May at a premium of roughly 6.6% — a milestone not seen since the growth-stock rout of 2021. To satisfy the rush of demand, the board dipped into its own holdings, issuing 2.85 million shares from treasury.
The placement, priced at 1,521.59 pence per share, came at a 6.3% markup over NAV and raised approximately £43 million. Following the transaction, just over 1.11 billion shares now circulate, while the trust retains 371.9 million pieces in reserve. The stock ended Friday at 1,521 pence, up 0.86% on the day, and has gained roughly 30% in euro terms since the start of the year — a sharp recovery from the November low of €11.87.
A 27% NAV Return Fuels the Turnaround
The underlying performance has been robust. For the financial year ended 31 March 2026, Scottish Mortgage delivered a net asset value total return of 27.4%, comfortably outpacing the FTSE All-World Index’s 18.0%. The share price total return came in at 26.8%, reflecting a mild premium narrowing during the period. The trust’s cost ratio stayed flat at 0.33%, while gearing slipped to around 11% — not because of debt repayment, but because the expanding portfolio automatically reduced leverage.
Over a decade, the numbers are striking. NAV total return stands at 435%, more than double the FTSE All-World’s 234%. Those long-term results, however, were overshadowed by four years of persistent discount — a discount that now appears to have closed.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Scottish Mortgage Investment?
SpaceX Now Dominates the Portfolio
The engine behind both the NAV growth and the renewed investor enthusiasm is SpaceX. The rocket and satellite operator now accounts for 19% of total assets, making it the trust’s largest single holding. That position has swelled from an original £151 million investment to roughly £3 billion, lifting its weight from 7.8% to 19%.
Manager Tom Slater attributes much of that value creation to Starlink, describing the satellite-internet network as a global connectivity platform with software-like profit margins. The SpaceX stake alone has transformed Scottish Mortgage’s return profile, but it also introduces concentration risk — particularly as the company moves toward its long-anticipated public debut.
SpaceX’s initial public offering is expected on or around 12 June 2026, with a reported valuation range of $1.75 trillion to $1.85 trillion. How the trust will manage the transition of such a large position from unquoted to listed status is one of the most closely watched questions in the coming weeks.
Private-Equity Footprint Doubles
Beyond SpaceX, Scottish Mortgage has accelerated its push into unquoted companies. During the past financial year, ÂŁ254 million was allocated to private-equity investments, nearly double the ÂŁ132 million deployed a year earlier. The private-market tilt reflects a broader conviction that the most compelling growth stories are still outside public exchanges.
The public holdings that supported the fund’s recovery include several heavyweight names in artificial intelligence infrastructure. TSMC gained nearly 100% year-over-year, ASML climbed around 94%, and Nvidia added roughly 57%. Those three positions alone accounted for a significant portion of the outperformance.
A 43-Year Dividend Streak Continues
Despite the growth focus, Scottish Mortgage retains its status as an AIC Dividend Hero. The board has raised the total dividend for the 43rd consecutive year, lifting the payout to 4.57 pence per share — a 4.3% increase. The final dividend of 2.97 pence goes ex-dividend on 11 June 2026, with a record date of 12 June and payment scheduled for 10 July.
For income investors, the yield remains modest, but the unbroken 43-year growth record carries significant signalling value. It underscores management’s confidence in the underlying cash flows, even as the trust leans heavily into pre-IPO ventures and concentrated bets.
The Premium as a Barometer
The return to a premium is more than a technical footnote. For four years, Scottish Mortgage traded at a discount as speculative-growth investing fell out of favour. The shift signals that the market — concentrated, unquoted-heavy, and high-conviction — is once again willing to pay above asset value for access to the fund’s strategy. The treasury issuance, rather than the buyback programme that had been common, confirms that demand has swung decisively in the trust’s favour. Whether that premium holds beyond the SpaceX IPO will test the durability of the recovery.
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