In-demand Asian small-cap value stocks drive Fidelity Asian Values NAV up 16.2%

Fidelity

Fidelity Asian Values plc (LON:FAS) monthly factsheet for August 2025.

Portfolio Manager Commentary

The Trust’s NAV rose +16.2% during the 12-month period ended 31 August 2025, outperforming its reference index which rose by +7.8%. The Trust’s share price increased by +20.4 over the same period.  

Our process is driven by owning good businesses run by management we trust and owning them only when we have ample margin of safety – this often leads us to take contrarian positions as it is easier to find undervalued businesses in such areas of the market. Following this philosophy, we have a significant percentage of our portfolio in China and Hong Kong which enhanced relative returns. Meanwhile, the overweight exposure to Indonesia compared to the index detracted as small caps saw a sharp fall in share prices. From a sector perspective, selections within materials and consumer discretionary added value.   Given this approach, stock selection was the key contributor to the Trust’s relative performance. Of late, investors seem to be rotating out of growth stocks and into value names in the Asian small-cap space. This trend should continue as small-cap value stocks remain at a significant discount to small-cap growth stocks in Asia.  

Overall, the Trust was overweight consumer discretionary, financials, consumer staples and energy. At a country level, it was overweight China, Indonesia and Australia. 

Fidelity Asian Values Plc (LON:FAS) provides shareholders with a differentiated equity exposure to Asian Markets. Asia is the world’s fastest-growing economic region and the trust looks to capitalise on this by finding good businesses, run by good people and buying them at a good price.

Share on:
Find more news, interviews, share price & company profile here for:

Latest Company News

AI optimism strengthens Asian market momentum

Asian stocks gained on AI optimism, with technology momentum supporting sentiment even as higher oil prices remain a factor to watch.

Why discipline matters as Asian markets diverge

Nitin Bajaj of Fidelity Asian Values explains why narrow market leadership, higher costs and stretched expectations make valuation discipline increasingly relevant for Asian equity investors.

AI-led gains put Asian markets back in focus

Asian stocks are rising on AI demand, while weaker currencies and higher oil prices add risk.

Fidelity Asian Values Up 23.5% as Energy and Materials Add Value in March

Fidelity Asian Values reported an 18.1% NAV gain for the year to 31 March 2026, with share price rising 23.5%, supported by stock selection and exposure to value opportunities across Asian small caps.

Asian markets reprice risk as AI momentum regains control

Asian investors looked past fresh Middle East tension and kept backing technology and AI-led growth, showing that earnings confidence is still outweighing geopolitical caution for now.

Asia stocks gain as tech strength and lower oil improve the near-term outlook

Asian stocks rose as stronger technology shares and lower oil prices improved sentiment, although currency weakness in Indonesia showed that regional risk has not fully cleared.

Search