Scottish Mortgage Faces a Fork in the Road as July AGM Tests Private-Market Ambition
08.06.2026 - 16:37:31 | boerse-global.deScottish Mortgage Investment Trust’s shareholders gather in Edinburgh on 2 July for a vote that could reshape the fund’s risk profile for years. On the agenda: a controversial proposal to loosen the cap on private investments, a tighter buyback mechanism, and the promise of a 43rd consecutive annual dividend increase. The meeting comes as the trust tries to reconcile a soaring net asset value with a share price that has been left behind.
NAV Hits New Highs as SpaceX Dominance Grows
The portfolio’s recent rally has been powered overwhelmingly by one name. Following a fair-value adjustment, Scottish Mortgage’s net asset value rose to 1,500.90 pence, up from 1,493.98 pence. The catalyst was a revaluation of its stake in SpaceX, which now accounts for 21.0% of total assets – up from 17.9% at the end of April. The private space company has become the fund’s single largest holding, pushing the overall exposure to unquoted businesses beyond the 40% mark. Other notable private positions include ByteDance, Stripe and Databricks.
Yet the market has not fully rewarded this strength. The trust’s shares are changing hands at around €16.89, down 1.26% on the day and 6.25% lower over the past seven days. The stock now sits roughly 13% below the 52-week high of €19.50 recorded as recently as 25 May. With a relative strength index of 45, the technical momentum is neutral at best.
Private Equity Faces a Triple Shock – and a Liquidity Squeeze
The timing of the AGM is awkward. The private-equity landscape is under severe pressure, according to the Bain Midyear Report released today. The study describes a “triple shock” of credit stress, geopolitical tensions and a downturn in the software segment. Tech-related deal volumes in the first quarter of 2026 collapsed by 70% compared with the final quarter of 2025, while software valuations in PE portfolios slid 8% over the same period.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Scottish Mortgage Investment?
Scottish Mortgage’s heavy allocation to private companies means these valuation declines hit the net asset value directly. At the same time, a wave of high-profile artificial-intelligence initial public offerings – with SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI among the most anticipated – threatens to pull institutional capital away from existing growth names. Jefferies analysts have warned that the IPO pipeline could create a powerful suction effect, prompting investors to sell down established positions to free up cash. That dynamic is already visible in Asia: Samsung shares tumbled more than 10% on concerns that the AI rally has become overheated.
Buyback Support Fades as Rules Tighten
One of the mechanisms that had cushioned the trust’s share price is now being wound down. Over the past two financial years, Scottish Mortgage repurchased 307.7 million shares at a cost of £3.02 billion – representing roughly 22% of its then share capital. In the last fiscal year alone, £1.31 billion was spent on buybacks. However, management has hardened the conditions: buybacks will only be triggered when the share price falls below net asset value, effectively ending the previous more activist approach.
A new buyback authority of up to 14.99% of issued ordinary shares is on the ballot at the AGM, but it will be constrained by the same NAV-based trigger. For a trust with such a large private-market footprint, the removal of a predictable support floor sends a sensitive signal to the market.
Dividend Tradition Continues, but the Real Battle Is Over Private-Investment Limits
The dividend is unlikely to cause controversy. A final payout of 2.97 pence per share is proposed, bringing the full-year distribution to 4.57 pence – a 4.3% increase that would extend the trust’s unbroken run of annual dividend growth into its 43rd year.
The key vote is on the private-investment cap. Currently set at 30% of assets, with an additional £250 million exemption, management wants more flexibility to participate in late-stage funding rounds. Given that the trust already holds more than 40% in unquoted companies, the proposed loosening has drawn scrutiny. A clear mandate would strengthen the growth narrative; a close result would keep the spotlight on the widening gap between the portfolio’s intrinsic value and the discount at which the shares trade.
Long-Term Record Remains Formidable
Even with the near-term headwinds, the investment trust’s historical performance is hard to dismiss. In the fiscal year through March 2026, the NAV rose 27.4% and the shares delivered a total return of 26.8%. Over a decade, the NAV has compounded at 435.2%, compared with 233.9% for the FTSE All-World index. Ongoing charges are a mere 0.33% of average net assets, with no performance fee. Year to date, the share price is still up 21.56%.
Thursday’s expected 25-basis-point interest rate increase from the European Central Bank will add another layer of pressure on growth-oriented assets. But for Scottish Mortgage, the most consequential day of the week is Saturday 2 July, when the outcome of the AGM will decide whether the trust can double down on its private-market conviction – or whether the market forces a more cautious course.
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