Skip to main content
  • Wealth management
  • Asset management
  • Wealth management
  • Asset management
  • MyRathbones login
  • Financial Planning login
  • Donor Advised Fund login
Home
  • Who we help
    Who we help

    We help a wide range of clients invest well so that they can focus on what matters

    Who we help
    • Individuals and families

      Focusing on you and your individual goals

    • Business owners and entrepreneurs

      Helping turn the success of your business into financial security for your family

    • Financial advisers

      Working with you, for your clients.

    • Charities

      Helping charities invest in line with their mission and values

    • Professional partners

      We work with lawyers, accountants and other professionals.

  • Our services
    Services

    See our wide range of services tailored for your needs

    Our services
    • Investment management

      Looking for someone to create an investment portfolio for you?

    • Wealth management

      Our combined investment and planning service for a holistic approach to your finances

    • Financial planning

      Need help reorganising your finances and planning for the future?

    • Asset Management

      Looking to invest in a fund? See our full range

    • Tax and trust

      Helping you pass on your wealth, manage a trust or gift to charity

    • Greenbank sustainable investing

      Looking for investments that align with your values? See our sustainable investment options

  • About us
    About us

    A top 3 UK wealth manager with roots dating back to 1742

    About us
    • Careers

      Learn more about what it’s like to work at Rathbones, and search our current vacancies

    • Corporate governance

      Explore our reports and accounts which ensure we comply with the UK Corporate Governance Code

    • Investor relations

      Find the Rathbones plc financials, investment case and key events

    • Media centre

      Read the latest Group news

    • Our purpose

      Our driving purpose is to help more people invest well, so they can live well

    • Responsible business

      We believe in doing the right thing for our clients and for others too

  • Insights
    Insights

    Read the latest news and market commentary from our specialists

    Insights
    • Financial planning

      Explore a range of topics effecting your finances, from retirement planning to the latest legislative changes

    • Investing

      Read about the key investment themes effecting global markets

    • Podcasts

      Listen to our specialists in one of our podcasts: Inspired sounds, Inspired minds, or Financial planning unlocked

    • Responsible investing

      Explore our articles, reports and events on Responsible Investment

  • Contacts
    Contacts

    Whether you have a question about our services, or need to talk someone specific, we can help

    Contacts
    • Our offices

      Find your local Rathbones office. We have 21 across the UK and Channel Islands.

    • Our people

      Find the contact details for your Rathbones team by searching our people’s directory.

    • Let's talk

      Our team will be in touch to help you book a no obligation consultation with an adviser.

    • Other contacts

      Need to contact us about something else? Here you'll find all the options

Let's talk

Search

Olyniaeth – it’s Welsh for succession

21 April 2023

The market to supply new-fangled electronics for tomorrow’s smarter, cleaner cars has captivated head of multi-asset investments David Coombs for several years. But in a costlier world, could there also be a resurgence in keeping older, dirtier, yet more economical, vehicles running for longer?

My father was an auto-electrician who got into selling autoparts from a small shop in front of the garage where he fitted car radios. For Millennials and Gen Zers, this used to be a thing. When you bought a car in the 1960s and early 70s it didn’t have a radio, Bluetooth was a form of gum disease and wifi was a term of marital endearment. To be honest, windscreen wipers were a luxury extra.

Growing up I spent my holidays working in Dad’s business – which, by the time I was a teenager, included a wholesale business distributing parts to all the garages in South Wales. My job was to clean the stockrooms full of exhaust pipes, clutches and shock absorbers. This was a dirty job, but my Dad believed that the owner’s son couldn’t have special privileges and therefore had to do the worst jobs to prove it. Succession this was not.

We had an exclusivity deal in South Wales on parts made by American firm AC Delco, which was a division of General Motors. This later became Delphi and eventually Aptiv which is a company we have in the funds’ portfolios today. Life comes full circle.

Of course, Aptiv doesn’t make clutch plates or spark plugs or big ends, so no more dirty cleaning jobs. Instead, it specialises in electric technology in the cars we drive today, from infotainment to advanced safety and connectivity. 

We hold Aptiv in our funds because it supplies most of the world’s leading car manufacturers, and it benefits from the huge growth of this nascent market as we move toward electric cars and autonomous vehicles. Crucially for us, Aptiv gets this benefit without having to invest as much as, say, BMW or Volkswagen, in designing and developing the switch from combustion engines to electric. Not only that, but because it supplies many carmakers it’s not an investment that must back the right horse.

Aptiv doesn’t care if Tesla or Ford wins in terms of selling more vehicles and it doesn’t have to worry about pricing and whether all that capex is eating away at its profit margins. It’s the classic ‘picks and shovels’ trade: invest in who’s supplying the tools on the road to the mine, not the miner chipping away underground.

Making cars go further

So far so logical. But it’s quite interesting to look at autos from another angle which is a far less obvious potential investment case.

When I was in Atlanta pre-COVID, I met up with one of the US’s largest autoparts companies and received a tour of the warehouse. This brought back vivid childhood memories of cupboards full of shock absorbers. I was surprised to see that, apart from a conveyor belt, not much had changed.

Initially I was quite dismissive. Given the move to electric and more complexity, surely the DIY need for autoparts was in long-term decline? The wholesale market largely distributes to independent garages, not the tied dealerships.

Effectively, this is linked to the second-hand car market. What is there to like?

A couple of bull thoughts:

What if, as petrol cars and hybrids are phased out, people keep their gas-guzzlers for longer as they are reluctant to move to full electric by 2030?

Given the rise in interest payments, will PCP (personal contract purchase) deals remain so popular? These hire purchase agreements work slightly like interest-only loans, with a balloon payment required at the end. After a decade of rock-bottom interest rates, it’s no surprise that roughly 90% of new cars are bought this way in Britain. But is that still going to be feasible with interest rates many times higher? The prevalence of PCP finance allowed many people to buy much higher spec cars than they could really afford – will they trade down for a new car or keep their existing higher-spec car for longer?

In the US the car is still king and distances are obviously large. Electric car ranges still have some way to go to mollify concerns about getting stranded. So, could we see petrol clunkers of 20-year vintages for some time?

This is an area we are exploring at the moment and we will let you know if we make a purchase.

What I am sure of is that the simple story of ‘just buy Tesla, it’s going to win’ is looking complacent. As always when a particular sector is experiencing a generational level of disruption, the identities of the ultimate winners and losers is shrouded. There are huge opportunities for both rewards and losses. We want to be involved, but are trying to find ideas outside the zeitgeist, where the results are hopefully less binary.

By the way, I’m not claiming any specialist expertise here. I may know the names of all the parts, and how to store them, but I still have no idea what they do. Perhaps that’s why Dad sold the business: he could see succession was pointless.

Tune in to The Sharpe End — a multi-asset investing podcast from Rathbones. You can listen here or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes monthly.

Most popular blogs

Computer microchip

5 mins

29 February 2024

Nvidia: from pastime to new paradigm

A business created to make computer game graphics more beautiful stumbled into driving AI, one of the most important technologies of the 21st century. Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainability Fund manager David Harrison explains what all the fuss is about.

Nvidia: from pastime to new paradigm
St Pauls

3 mins

4 December 2024

Why active management has a place in 2025 and beyond

The rise of passive investment is storing up risks that many investors may not realise they are taking. James Crossley, our head of Rathbones Asset Management distribution, makes the case for active managers.

Why active management has a place in 2025 and beyond
2024

3 mins

9 January 2024

2024: The Year. Maybe?

Our head of multi-asset investments David Coombs starts the new year making a three-point turn with a dump truck of salt. Behold, we have his predictions.

2024: The Year. Maybe?
dc-image-web-1920x1080-white.jpg

4 mins

18 January 2024

Ceasing to worship at the altar of stock-pickers

Back in secondary school, our head of multi-asset investments David Coombs was a champion stock-picker. Although, he had help from his teacher’s direct line to the market – which taught him markets tend to be unfair.

Ceasing to worship at the altar of stock-pickers

In The KNOW blog

Read the latest news and views from our fund managers

Blog posts

Subscribe to the In The KNOW blog

You can unsubscribe at any time. For details on how we handle your data, visit our Privacy policy.

Let's talk

Ready to start a conversation? Please complete our enquiry form, we look forward to speaking with you

Enquire
Rathbones Logo
  • Important Information
    • Modern Slavery Statement
    • Important Information
    • Complaints
    • Privacy
    • Accessibility
    • Climate reporting
    • Cookies
    • Update cookie preferences
    • Sitemap
  • Important information 2
    • Consumer duty manufacturer request for information
    • Financial Services Compensation Scheme
    • Financial Ombudsman Service
    • Banking services
    • Interest Rates
    • Keeping you safe
    • ScamSmart
    • Status of our websites
Address

Rathbones Group Plc
30 Gresham Street
London
EC2V 7QN

© 2025 Rathbones Group Plc
Incorporated and registered in England and Wales.
Registered number 01000403

Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Youtube

The value of your investments and the income from them may go down as well as up, and you could get back less than you invested.