Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd.
Keith Gill
"The market is pricing BSRT as if its portfolio is worthless, but it's actually a collection of high-impact mining projects hitting maturity. At 127.5p, you're buying assets worth 174p (NAV per share as of March 2026) and that NAV is still growing. Strip out the cash and listed holdings, and you get the unlisted assets at a ~78% discount. The board has finally listened to shareholders and is deploying a buyback and dividend. Commodity prices are at multi-year highs, especially for critical minerals. The bear case is tired and ignores the company's progress. This is a classic deep value opportunity with multiple near-term catalysts. The only thing missing is time and patience—but that's what true value investors have."
Overview
A deep value / contrarian analysis of Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. (BSRT.L), a closed-end investment trust trading at a massive discount to its Net Asset Value. This is a classic Roaring Kitty-style deep dive into a hated, overlooked asset where the market's pessimism has created a potential mispricing of epic proportions. The thesis: BSRT's portfolio of mostly unlisted mining assets is maturing, commodity prices are soaring, and the discount is unsustainable. The board is finally acting with buybacks and a dividend policy. We're talking about buying assets at 40-50% off while the NAV rockets higher.
The Bear Case
The consensus narrative is that BSRT is a toxic waste dump of illiquid, high-risk mining projects. Critics point to concentration risk (top two holdings: 48% of NAV at end-2025), exposure to coking coal (Futura Resources) which is a dying industry, political risk in Zimbabwe (Bilboes royalty), and a history of management underperformance. The trust has traded at a persistent discount for years, and many see it as a value trap—private equity-style investments that never realize their promised value. The competitive analysis (Koalagains) outright says BSRT is inferior to Franco-Nevada, Wheaton, etc. The market hates the opacity, the unlisted nature, and the lack of liquidity. Wall Street has moved on. Retail investors are scared.
The Bull Case
The market is missing the forest for the trees. BSRT is essentially a venture capital portfolio of high-quality mining projects that are finally hitting their inflection points. The NAV has surged 52% in 2025, 12% in January 2026 alone, and another 14% by March 2026 (174p NAV vs 127.5p share price = 27% discount, but when you strip out cash and listed holdings, the discount is ~78% per Oak Bloke). The Bear Case ignores the tangible catalysts: Tungsten West's Hemerdon mine NPV exploded from $190M to $1.7B as tungsten prices quadrupled; the Bilboes gold royalty is worth ~$7M/year in free cash flow; Futura is back from the brink with a $90M Nordic bond; Cemos is ramping up a new clinker plant that doubles EBITDA; Blue Moon is listing on NASDAQ. The board has finally started a buyback (14.99% of shares) and announced a 3% dividend policy. The pessimism is overdone because the portfolio is weighted to critical minerals (tungsten, tin, copper) that Western governments are desperate to secure. This is not a coal mine—it's a strategic asset portfolio.
Fundamental Deep Dive
Balance Sheet Strength
BSRT itself holds net cash of ~£10.3M as of Jan 2026 (6.3% of NAV). The trust has no debt. Its liquidity comes from a growing cash pile from royalty payments and listed holdings that can be sold. The biggest risk is at the portfolio company level—Futura had cash flow issues, but the $90M Nordic bond removed refinancing risk. The trust also has the ability to sell down holdings like Metals Exploration (recent sold some Caledonia shares). Survival ability is strong; the discount provides a buffer.
Hidden Assets
The major hidden asset is the Bilboes royalty—carried at £15.5M in Jan 2026, but based on the feasibility study (1.5M oz gold, NPV $1.234B at $3,648/oz gold), the 1% royalty is worth far more. At current gold prices >$4,000/oz, annual royalty payments could be $7M+. Another hidden gem: Tungsten West's Hemerdon mine at current tungsten prices ($1,313/MTU) gives a project NPV of $1.7B—BSRT's 8.5% stake is worth $144.5M, but it's carried at £21.6M (12.5% of NAV). The revaluation potential is massive. Also, Cemos Group—a Moroccan cement producer—is valued at a 60% discount to listed peers like LaFargeHolcim Maroc. These are not on the balance sheet at fair value.
Revenue Stability
Currently, BSRT generates minimal income—zero dividends for years. But that's changing: the Bilboes royalty (once Bilboes starts production in 2028) will throw off ~$7M/year. Cemos expects EBITDA to double to €15M in 2026 and then to €25M, enabling dividends. Futura's 1.5% royalty on met coal production could generate $4.9M/year at current prices. The trust also holds convertible debentures that pay interest (e.g., Silver X 10% coupon). The new capital allocation policy targets a 3% dividend yield (progressive) plus buybacks. Cash flow is coming—it's just delayed.
Sentiment & Technical Setup
Short Interest
Short interest data is not available for BSRT (likely very low due to low liquidity and small cap). The stock is not heavily shorted—the discount itself is the 'short' that the market is pricing in. Squeeze potential is minimal unless a catalyst drives a rapid re-rating. However, the buyback reduces float and could create upward pressure.
Institutional Positioning
Institutions have largely ignored BSRT due to its small size (£135M market cap) and illiquidity. Notable holders include Lansdowne Partners (participated in Tungsten West placing) and possibly some value-oriented funds. Retail investors are the dominant holders, but the shareholder base is thin. The board is trying to attract institutions with the new dividend and buyback. The competitive analysis notes BSRT is a 'high-risk, satellite portfolio allocation' – it's not for the faint of heart.
Retail Sentiment
Retail sentiment is mixed but turning positive. The Oak Bloke substack (Jan 2026) and Independent Investor Chronicle (Feb 2026) have highlighted the deep value. Social media buzz is low but growing. The stock is not on mainstream WallStreetBets radar. Retail vs. institutional dynamics: retail can move this stock disproportionately due to low liquidity—hence the 8% jump on NAV news. If the story catches fire, the discount could close rapidly.
Catalyst Analysis
Multiple catalysts are lined up for 2026: (1) Buyback program—already bought back 779,400 shares at avg 111.2p, will continue to reduce float and support price. (2) Dividend policy announced in April 2026—3% progressive yield will attract income-seeking investors. (3) Tungsten West restart—fine gravity circuit expected Q3 2026, full production by end-2026. That would trigger a massive revaluation of BSRT's 8.5% stake. (4) Blue Moon Metals NASDAQ listing—will improve liquidity and transparency. (5) Futura Resources—IRH option expired without exercise (Feb 2026), but Futura is now self-funding with higher coal prices. (6) Cemos IPO on Casablanca Stock Exchange possible 2027/2028. (7) Geopolitical tailwinds—Western governments seeking critical mineral supply chains (EU Critical Raw Materials Act, US EXIM Bank support for Tungsten West and First Tin). Each of these catalysts could narrow the discount significantly.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
The single most significant downside risk is a sharp drop in commodity prices—especially met coal, tungsten, and gold. If a global recession hits, these prices could collapse, destroying NAV and delaying production at portfolio companies. The portfolio is levered to cyclical commodities.
Secondary Risks
- Concentration risk: Top two holdings (Futura and Cemos) are 40% of NAV. A failure at either (e.g., Futura debt default, Cemos plant issues) would cripple NAV.
- Political risk: Zimbabwe (Bilboes royalty) raised royalties to 10% for gold >$2,500/oz. Future expropriation or tax changes are real threats. Also, Peru (Silver X) and Philippines (Metals Exploration) have political instability.
- Illiquidity and discount persistence: The discount could remain wide for years if the market continues to distrust unlisted assets. BSRT has traded at a discount for over a decade.
What Would Change My Mind
I would abandon this thesis if: (1) The board stops the buyback or fails to execute the dividend policy. (2) A major portfolio company goes bankrupt (e.g., Futura defaults on bond). (3) Commodity prices enter a prolonged bear market. (4) The discount widens beyond 50% with no credible catalyst to close it. So far, the board is delivering—buybacks are happening, dividends are coming, and NAV is soaring.
Conclusion
The market is pricing BSRT as if its portfolio is worthless, but it's actually a collection of high-impact mining projects hitting maturity. At 127.5p, you're buying assets worth 174p (NAV per share as of March 2026) and that NAV is still growing. Strip out the cash and listed holdings, and you get the unlisted assets at a ~78% discount. The board has finally listened to shareholders and is deploying a buyback and dividend. Commodity prices are at multi-year highs, especially for critical minerals. The bear case is tired and ignores the company's progress. This is a classic deep value opportunity with multiple near-term catalysts. The only thing missing is time and patience—but that's what true value investors have.
Research Sources (13 found)
Investment Update and 30 January 2026 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 2/6/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd Investment Update and 31 March 2026 NAV - ADVFN
Published: 4/8/2026
Investment Update and 27 February 2026 NAV - BSRT News article
Published: 2/27/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — A 50% return in 2025 with good portfolio breadth - Edison Group
Published: 1/19/2026
Investment Update and 30 November 2025 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 12/4/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust Limited (BSRT) Competitive Analysis & Comparison (2026)
Published: 11/14/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust : Factsheet (BSRT Factsheet December 2025) | MarketScreener
Published: 2/3/2026
A mining investment trust flying below the radar - Investors' Chronicle
Published: 2/5/2026
EARNINGS: essensys loss narrows; Baker Steel sets out payout policy | Morningstar
Published: 4/17/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust jumps after sharp rise in net asset value | MarketScreener
Published: 1/19/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — Improved funding environment for junior miners
Published: 11/21/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust shares jump on sharp rise in NAV | LSE:BSRT
Published: 1/19/2026
BSRT - December 2025 - 57.5% discount ex cash
Published: 1/23/2026
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Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L industry trends catalysts regulatory impact upcoming events
Peter Lynch
"Peter Lynch would like this stock because it is boring, overlooked, and has measurable undervaluation (discount to NAV). The company is doing what it says: developing mining projects and returning capital via buybacks. The balance sheet is debt-free, and the portfolio has multiple shots on goal. The PEG ratio isn't applicable, but the P/NAV is the key metric. The tenbagger potential exists if commodity prices remain supportive and projects hit milestones. I rate it a BUY for aggressive, long-term investors who understand mining risk."
Overview
This is a Peter Lynch-style analysis of Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. (BSRT.L), a closed-end investment trust focused on natural resources. I'll apply Lynch's framework—understanding the business, stock categorization, PEG ratio, checklist, and tenbagger potential—to determine if this is a stock worth owning.
The Two-Minute Story
Baker Steel Resources Trust owns a concentrated portfolio of small, often unlisted mining companies and royalties—think gold, silver, tungsten, and coking coal. The trust buys these assets early, helps them develop, and aims to sell or hold as they produce cash. Right now, the shares trade at a 27% discount to the stated net asset value (NAV) of 174p (as of March 2026). As the underlying projects—like Tungsten West, Bilboes gold royalty, and Futura coal—move toward production or get acquired, that discount should narrow and NAV will grow. You're effectively buying a dollar's worth of mining assets for 73 cents and getting a kicker from rising commodity prices.
Stock Category
Classification
Asset Play
Category Reasoning
Lynch defined an asset play as a company where you discover hidden or undervalued assets that the market is ignoring. BSRT's largest asset is its portfolio of mining investments, yet the stock trades at a deep discount to NAV. The market is pricing in uncertainty about illiquidity, concentration risk, and project execution. If those assets are ultimately worth more than current carrying values, the stock could rerate significantly. Additionally, several holdings are turnaround situations (e.g., Tungsten West restarting a mine), giving it elements of a Turnaround, but the core thesis is the discount to underlying asset value.
Appropriate Expectations
Asset plays can be volatile but offer asymmetric upside. Patience is key—investors should expect a multi-year timeframe for the discount to close and for project values to be realized. Dividends are not guaranteed until the portfolio starts generating cash, but the trust has signaled a 3% dividend plan. The stock could double or triple if NAV grows and the discount narrows to 10-15%, but it requires holding through commodity cycles.
Do You Understand This Business?
Yes, the business is straightforward: BSRT is a listed investment trust that pools money from shareholders and invests in a small number of mining companies and royalties. You don't need to be a geologist to understand that if gold, silver, and tungsten prices rise and mines start producing, the trust's assets become more valuable. The 'edge' for individual investors is that this is a boring, overlooked small-cap trust that most institutional investors ignore due to its illiquid unlisted holdings. The discount to NAV is a visible, measurable edge—if you believe the managers can execute, the value is there.
PEG Ratio Analysis
Current P/E
2.71 (trailing, based on EPS TTM of £0.47 and price of 127.5p)
Earnings Growth Rate
Earnings for a trust like this are largely driven by portfolio revaluations and realized gains. Over the past year, NAV grew 51.8% (2025). Assuming 20-30% growth in the next few years is reasonable given commodity tailwinds and project advancements, but this is not a smooth, predictable growth rate. Forecast EPS growth is not available.
PEG Ratio
Not calculable with confidence due to lack of forward EPS estimates. Trailing P/E of 2.71 is extremely low, but earnings are volatile and non-recurring in nature. A PEG below 1.0 would require growth above 271%, which is unrealistic. The low P/E reflects the trust's structure and the market's discounting of risk, not necessarily cheapness on a sustainable earnings basis.
PEG Interpretation
The standard PEG ratio is less useful for asset plays and investment trusts. Instead, focus on the P/NAV discount and the potential for NAV growth. At a 27% discount, the market is pricing in significant execution risk. If NAV grows 20% annually, the effective return to shareholders is much higher.
Lynch's Checklist
Boring and Overlooked?
Absolutely. It's a tiny investment trust (market cap £135M) in a niche sector, with a name that sounds like a metal broker. Wall Street analysts rarely cover it. The dividend yield is zero for now, and the story is complex—private mining investments. Perfect for Lynch's 'boring' category.
Insider Buying?
No specific recent insider buying was identified in the data. However, the board has announced a share buyback program (started Feb 2026) which is a form of capital return and shows alignment with shareholders. The chairman has explicitly stated a focus on reducing the discount. That's a positive signal, though not as strong as direct insider purchases.
Balance Sheet Health
BSRT is debt-free (net cash position of £10.3M as of Jan 2026, and £1.1M as of Mar 2026). It uses no gearing. The balance sheet is clean—cash and investments. No debt to worry about. Liquidity is adequate for its needs.
Inventory and Receivables
Not applicable for an investment trust. The 'inventory' is the portfolio of securities, which is marked to market or valued periodically. Receivables are minimal. No warning signs here.
Room to Grow
Significant. The trust's unlisted holdings include several development-stage projects that can double or triple in value upon reaching production (e.g., Tungsten West's Hemerdon mine has a project NPV of US$1.7B vs. current market cap of £272M for the whole company; BSRT owns 8.5%). Also, the trust can make new investments (it recently added two pre-IPO opportunities). The ceiling is high given the early stage of many assets.
Tenbagger Potential
Yes, reasonably possible. For BSRT to 10x from 127.5p to 1275p, the NAV would need to rise substantially and the discount would need to close. Currently NAV is 174p. A 10x on price would imply a NAV of over 1300p if the discount remains 27%, or less if the discount narrows. Key catalysts: Tungsten West entering production (could revalue BSRT's stake from £42M to several hundred million), Bilboes gold project going into construction (royalty value could triple), and other holdings like Blue Moon or Silver X achieving production. Given the recent NAV growth of 52% in 2025 and the leverage from commodity prices, a 10x over 5-10 years is not outlandish, but it requires a sustained bull market in commodities and flawless execution. Let's call it plausible, not guaranteed.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
Persistent discount to NAV. If the market continues to distrust the valuations or liquidity of the unlisted holdings, the discount could remain wide or widen, limiting share price appreciation even if NAV grows.
Secondary Risks
- Commodity price collapse (e.g., gold, tungsten, coal) would directly reduce NAV.
- Project delays or failures at key holdings like Tungsten West, Futura, or Cemos. These are single-asset companies with high operational risk.
- Concentration risk: Top two holdings (Tungsten West and Futura) make up 42% of portfolio. A problem in either could severely impact NAV.
- Geopolitical risk: Zimbabwe (Bilboes royalty) increased mining royalties; future changes could hurt. Also Peru (Silver X) and Morocco (Cemos) have political risks.
What Would Change My Mind
If the discount widens beyond 50% without a fundamental reason, it might signal a structural issue (e.g., manager underperformance or asset quality doubts). Conversely, if NAV starts declining due to falling commodity prices or project failures, the thesis breaks. I would also reconsider if the trust abandons the share buyback program or fails to deliver on the promised dividend policy.
Conclusion
Peter Lynch would like this stock because it is boring, overlooked, and has measurable undervaluation (discount to NAV). The company is doing what it says: developing mining projects and returning capital via buybacks. The balance sheet is debt-free, and the portfolio has multiple shots on goal. The PEG ratio isn't applicable, but the P/NAV is the key metric. The tenbagger potential exists if commodity prices remain supportive and projects hit milestones. I rate it a BUY for aggressive, long-term investors who understand mining risk.
Research Sources (13 found)
Investment Update and 30 January 2026 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 2/6/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd Investment Update and 31 March 2026 NAV - ADVFN
Published: 4/8/2026
Investment Update and 27 February 2026 NAV - BSRT News article
Published: 2/27/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — A 50% return in 2025 with good portfolio breadth - Edison Group
Published: 1/19/2026
Investment Update and 30 November 2025 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 12/4/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust Limited (BSRT) Competitive Analysis & Comparison (2026)
Published: 11/14/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust : Factsheet (BSRT Factsheet December 2025) | MarketScreener
Published: 2/3/2026
A mining investment trust flying below the radar - Investors' Chronicle
Published: 2/5/2026
EARNINGS: essensys loss narrows; Baker Steel sets out payout policy | Morningstar
Published: 4/17/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust jumps after sharp rise in net asset value | MarketScreener
Published: 1/19/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — Improved funding environment for junior miners
Published: 11/21/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust shares jump on sharp rise in NAV | LSE:BSRT
Published: 1/19/2026
BSRT - December 2025 - 57.5% discount ex cash
Published: 1/23/2026
Search Queries Generated
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Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L competitive position market share moat advantages competitors
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Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L industry trends catalysts regulatory impact upcoming events
Stanley Druckenmiller
"Baker Steel Resources Trust offers a rare combination of deep value (27% discount to NAV), powerful macro tailwinds (commodity supercycle, critical mineral demand), and multiple near-term catalysts (Futura option, Tungsten West production, buybacks). The trust's NAV has compounded at >50% annually, yet the share price has lagged, creating a classic Druckenmiller opportunity. The board is now aligning incentives via buybacks and dividends. While risks are real (concentration, illiquidity, commodity volatility), the asymmetry favors the upside. I would position for a 1-2 year horizon, expecting the discount to halve and NAV to grow another 30-50%, resulting in a total return of 100%+."
Overview
A macro-driven, opportunistic analysis of Baker Steel Resources Trust (BSRT.L) in the style of Stanley Druckenmiller. Focuses on reflexive feedback loops between commodity cycles, portfolio NAV performance, and market discount dynamics. Identifies asymmetric upside from a concentrated portfolio of development-stage natural resource assets trading at a substantial discount to intrinsic value.
Macro Context
The global economy is in a late-cycle phase characterized by persistent geopolitical fragmentation, deglobalization, and rising demand for critical minerals. Central banks in developed markets are pivoting toward easing (or at least pausing tightening) to support growth, while inflation remains sticky due to supply chain reshoring and fiscal spending. Secular trends include the green transition (copper, tungsten, tin, silver), gold as a monetary hedge against currency debasement, and national security-driven stockpiling of strategic metals. The commodity supercycle is being fueled by underinvestment in new supply and soaring demand from AI infrastructure, electrification, and defense. Gold and silver have reached all-time highs, while tungsten and tin have experienced parabolic moves due to Chinese export controls. This environment strongly favors BSRT's portfolio of early-stage mining assets across precious, base, and critical metals.
Company Position in Macro Landscape
BSRT is a direct beneficiary of the current macro regime. Its unlisted and listed holdings are leveraged to rising commodity prices and project de-risking. The trust is a pure-play on the 'resources renaissance' – providing capital to pre-production miners that are now attracting government and strategic investor interest (e.g., US EXIM bank letters of interest for Tungsten West and First Tin; EU Critical Raw Materials Act designation for Blue Moon and Tungsten West). BSRT’s large positions in coking coal (Futura) and Moroccan cement (Cemos) act as hedges against the green transition narrative, while its precious metals exposure (Silver X, Bilboes royalty, Metals Exploration) captures the monetary demand for gold/silver. The trust is a victim of its own illiquidity and complexity, trading at a persistent >30% discount to NAV, but this is a structural inefficiency that management is addressing through buybacks and a new dividend policy.
Reflexivity Analysis
A strong positive feedback loop is forming: rising commodity prices → higher NAV → potential catalyst events (Futura option expiry, Tungsten West financing, Cemos IPO) → narrower discount → actual share price appreciation → improved sentiment → further discount narrowing. Conversely, if commodity prices reverse or key projects stall, the discount could widen, creating a negative loop. Currently, the loop is positive: NAV has risen over 50% in 2025, yet the share price has lagged, widening the discount from ~35% to ~43% (as of late 2025). The board’s new buyback program and commitment to a 3% dividend yield are reflexive mechanisms to close the discount. If successful, a 43% discount narrowing would provide a 75% upside just to NAV parity, with further NAV growth from project milestones.
Competitive Position & Disruptive Threats
BSRT occupies a unique niche: it is a venture capital-style vehicle for natural resources, focusing on unlisted, high-conviction bets. Competitors like Franco-Nevada and Wheaton Precious Metals offer diversified royalty/streaming models with lower risk and better liquidity. BSRT’s concentrated portfolio (top two holdings >40% of NAV) amplifies both upside and downside. Its moat lies in the management's technical expertise, long-term relationships, and ability to source off-market deals. Disruptive threats include a rapid shift away from fossil fuels that could impair Futura's coal assets, or a macro downturn that closes equity capital markets for junior miners. However, the trust's focus on critical minerals and gold insulates it from most disruptive risks. The key risk is that the discount never closes, but the board’s proactive capital allocation plan addresses this directly.
Asymmetric Risk/Reward
The asymmetry is compelling: at 127.5p the stock trades at a ~27% discount to the most recent reported NAV of 174p (March 2026). Adjusting for cash and liquid holdings, the discount on unlisted assets is even steeper (potentially >60%). Upside catalysts: (1) Futura Resources option exercise at A$3.15/share (75% premium to carrying value) could unlock ~18% of NAV. (2) Tungsten West restart in 2026 with a potential 4x NPV uplift from current tungsten prices. (3) Cemos IPO in Morocco. (4) Buyback program reducing share count and increasing NAV/share. Downside risks: commodity price collapse, project financing failures, or Zimbabwe political risk. Even in a bear case, the portfolio of producing royalties and near-term mines provides downside floor. The convexity comes from optionality: each successful project can double the NAV, while failure of one does not destroy the trust due to diversification. Entry at a 27% discount provides a margin of safety.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
A sharp reversal in commodity prices (especially gold, tungsten, coking coal) would simultaneously depress NAV and widen the discount, leading to a double hit. BSRT is highly leveraged to the commodity cycle.
Secondary Risks
- Persistent illiquidity and discount: even if NAV grows, the market may continue to price in a large discount due to the trust's opaque holdings and small market cap (~£135m).
- Key-man risk: the investment team at Baker Steel Capital Managers is small; loss of Trevor Steel or Francis Johnstone could impair deal flow and valuation credibility.
- Zimbabwe political risk: the Bilboes royalty depends on Caledonia's ability to fund and operate the mine amid increased government royalty rates and potential sovereign instability.
What Would Change My Mind
A 20%+ decline in gold or tungsten prices sustained over three months. Failure of Futura to refinance or the IRH option lapsing without exercise. A material widening of the discount to >50% without a credible buyback response. Any sign of insider selling by the fund manager.
Investment Details
Sizing Recommendation
Medium
Time Horizon
1-2 years
Key Catalyst
The release of FY2025 annual results in April 2026, which will include a detailed capital allocation policy and potentially a significant increase in NAV from the Q1 2026 commodity rally. Additionally, the Futura Resources option decision (expired Feb 2026 but could be revived) or a positive financing update from Tungsten West could trigger a re-rating.
Research Sources (13 found)
Investment Update and 30 January 2026 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 2/6/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd Investment Update and 31 March 2026 NAV - ADVFN
Published: 4/8/2026
Investment Update and 27 February 2026 NAV - BSRT News article
Published: 2/27/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — A 50% return in 2025 with good portfolio breadth - Edison Group
Published: 1/19/2026
Investment Update and 30 November 2025 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 12/4/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust Limited (BSRT) Competitive Analysis & Comparison (2026)
Published: 11/14/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust : Factsheet (BSRT Factsheet December 2025) | MarketScreener
Published: 2/3/2026
A mining investment trust flying below the radar - Investors' Chronicle
Published: 2/5/2026
EARNINGS: essensys loss narrows; Baker Steel sets out payout policy | Morningstar
Published: 4/17/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust jumps after sharp rise in net asset value | MarketScreener
Published: 1/19/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — Improved funding environment for junior miners
Published: 11/21/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust shares jump on sharp rise in NAV | LSE:BSRT
Published: 1/19/2026
BSRT - December 2025 - 57.5% discount ex cash
Published: 1/23/2026
Search Queries Generated
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L earnings revenue growth margins quarterly results
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L competitive position market share moat advantages competitors
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L management CEO strategy capital allocation insider activity
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L bear case analysis risks challenges headwinds problems
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L industry trends catalysts regulatory impact upcoming events
William O'Neil
"BSRT meets key CAN SLIM criteria: exceptional quarterly NAV growth (C), sustained annual gains (A), multiple new catalysts (N), modest share float with buyback support (S), and leading relative strength in its sector (L). Institutional sponsorship is adequate but not top-tier (I). The main uncertainty is market direction (M), but commodity tailwinds should support the portfolio. The large discount to NAV provides a margin of safety. A BUY rating is appropriate for investors with a high risk tolerance and a multi-year horizon, with the expectation that catalysts (Tungsten West production, Futura sale, buybacks) will narrow the discount."
Overview
A comprehensive CAN SLIM-style analysis of Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. (BSRT.L), a closed-end investment trust focused on natural resources, based on data as of mid-May 2026.
Financial and Business Overview
Baker Steel Resources Trust is a Guernsey-based, LSE-listed closed-end investment company that seeks capital growth through a concentrated portfolio of equity, royalty, and loan investments in natural resources companies – predominantly unlisted, pre-production mining projects. As of 13 May 2026, the trust has a market cap of approximately £135 million, a trailing P/E of 2.71 (reflecting the low earnings base of a development-stage portfolio), and no dividend. NAV per share has surged from 115.5p (Nov 2025) to 174.0p (Mar 2026), a 51% gain, driven by rising commodity prices (gold, silver, tungsten, tin) and project milestones at holdings such as Tungsten West, Futura Resources, and the Bilboes royalty. The trust's shares trade at a persistent ~27% discount to the latest NAV, partly due to the illiquid, concentrated nature of its assets. The board has initiated a share buyback programme and announced a capital allocation policy targeting a 5% annual return via dividends and buybacks.
Market Position & Competitive Advantages
BSRT occupies a niche as a venture-capital-style provider of capital to early-stage mining projects, differentiating it from diversified mining trusts (e.g., BlackRock World Mining) and royalty/streaming companies (e.g., Franco-Nevada). Its competitive advantages include: (1) deep industry expertise from Baker Steel Capital Managers, which identifies undervalued projects before they reach public markets; (2) a portfolio with exposure to critical minerals (tungsten, tin, copper, silver) benefiting from supply-chain reshoring; and (3) several near-term catalysts that could unlock significant value (Tungsten West restart, Futura option exercise, Blue Moon NASDAQ listing). Honest risks include: extreme concentration (top two holdings often exceed 45% of NAV), illiquidity of unlisted assets, dependence on commodity prices, and the persistent discount to NAV that may reflect market skepticism.
Stock Performance
Over the past 52 weeks (low 53p, high 137p), BSRT has gained +128%, with the stock trading at 127.5p as of 13 May 2026. The price has recently pulled back from its 52-week high of 137p, now 6.9% below that level. The 50-day moving average is 121.48p (stock +4.96% above) and the 200-day is 89.95p (+41.74% above), indicating a strong uptrend. Volume patterns show average daily volume of 265k over 3 months, but the 10-day average is only 175k, indicating declining volume on the recent pullback. The trust's share price has underperformed its NAV gains, causing the discount to widen slightly from ~36% in late 2025 to ~27% currently.
CAN SLIM Analysis
Current Quarterly Earnings Per Share (EPS) Growth:
BSRT does not report EPS in the traditional sense. As a proxy, the quarterly NAV per share growth has been exceptional: +17.7% in Dec 2025 (monthly), +11.9% in Jan 2026, and +14.3% in Feb 2026 (implied from Jan to Mar total). The latest quarterly NAV (Q1 2026 ended Mar) increased from 136.0p to 174.0p, a 28% gain. This acceleration is driven by surging commodity prices and portfolio revaluations. Compared to the prior year quarter (Q1 2025 NAV ~90p), growth exceeds 90%. This qualifies for the 'C' criterion.
Annual Earnings Increases:
Annual NAV performance: 2024 NAV stood around 90p, 2025 NAV closed at 136.0p (51% gain), and 2026 is already at 174p after one quarter. Over a 5-year look, NAV has grown from around 57p (Dec 2021) to 136.0p (Dec 2025), a compound annual growth rate of ~19%. However, the trust does not have stable EPS growth; its annual earnings are effectively the change in NAV plus realized gains. The trend is clearly upward and accelerating, meeting the 'A' criterion.
New Products, Management, or Price Highs:
Multiple catalysts: (1) Tungsten West – fast-tracking restart of Hemerdon mine with committed financing; (2) Futura Resources – successful debt refinancing and potential exercise of option by IRH at A$3.15/share (75% above carrying value); (3) Blue Moon Metals – planned NASDAQ listing and acquisitions; (4) Bilboes Gold royalty – Caledonia Mining proceeding with development; (5) New investments in pre-IPO opportunities like Chancery Royalty and MacKay Gold. These represent 'new' drivers. The stock is trading near its 52-week high, confirming price strength.
Supply and Demand:
Shares outstanding: 105.58 million (post buyback cancellations). Float is relatively small, and the trust has initiated a buyback programme (up to 14.99% of shares). Cumulative buybacks to Mar 2026: 779,400 shares at ~111p. The declining average daily volume (3-month 265k vs 10-day 175k) suggests reduced demand recently, but the overall volume pattern during the uptrend showed accumulation. The buyback is a positive supply reduction signal. Small float makes the stock susceptible to sharp moves.
Leader or Laggard:
In the AIC Commodities & Natural Resources sector, BSRT's 1-year NAV total return of ~52% has outperformed many peers (e.g., BlackRock World Mining +35%, Golden Prospect +40%). The share price return of +128% YOY reflects the discount narrowing from extreme levels, but still lags NAV performance. Relative strength compared to the FTSE All-Share is very strong. The trust is a leader in its niche of early-stage mining investments.
Institutional Sponsorship:
Institutional ownership is not explicitly reported in the data, but the presence of Shore Capital as corporate broker and Lansdowne Partners' participation in Tungsten West's equity placing indicate some quality institutional interest. The trust's board includes experienced figures (Fiona Perrott-Humphrey, etc.). The Edison Group research note signals institutional coverage. However, the persistent 27% discount suggests limited top-tier institutional demand; likely smaller specialist funds and private investors hold shares.
Market Direction:
The broad market (FTSE 100) has been volatile due to geopolitical tensions (Middle East, trade wars). Commodity prices remain robust, with gold near $4,000/oz, silver at $50/oz, tungsten at record highs, and tin surging. The mining sector is benefiting from inflation hedging and supply constraints. However, the overall market direction is uncertain, with recent distribution days in indices. The CAN SLIM methodology would require caution on market timing. BSRT's performance is more tied to commodity trends than broad market direction.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
Widening discount to NAV – if the market loses confidence in the trust's ability to realize value, the share price could stagnate or decline even if NAV rises further.
Secondary Risks
- Commodity price collapse (especially metallurgical coal, gold, tungsten) would directly hit portfolio valuations.
- Concentration risk – failure of a major holding (e.g., Futura or Cemos) could wipe out a significant portion of NAV.
What Would Change My Mind
If the trust's NAV begins to decline for two consecutive months, or if the buyback programme is discontinued without a catalyst, I would reconsider. A sharp drop in commodity prices or a failed development project at a top holding would invalidate the bullish thesis.
Conclusion
BSRT meets key CAN SLIM criteria: exceptional quarterly NAV growth (C), sustained annual gains (A), multiple new catalysts (N), modest share float with buyback support (S), and leading relative strength in its sector (L). Institutional sponsorship is adequate but not top-tier (I). The main uncertainty is market direction (M), but commodity tailwinds should support the portfolio. The large discount to NAV provides a margin of safety. A BUY rating is appropriate for investors with a high risk tolerance and a multi-year horizon, with the expectation that catalysts (Tungsten West production, Futura sale, buybacks) will narrow the discount.
Research Sources (13 found)
Investment Update and 30 January 2026 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 2/6/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd Investment Update and 31 March 2026 NAV - ADVFN
Published: 4/8/2026
Investment Update and 27 February 2026 NAV - BSRT News article
Published: 2/27/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — A 50% return in 2025 with good portfolio breadth - Edison Group
Published: 1/19/2026
Investment Update and 30 November 2025 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 12/4/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust Limited (BSRT) Competitive Analysis & Comparison (2026)
Published: 11/14/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust : Factsheet (BSRT Factsheet December 2025) | MarketScreener
Published: 2/3/2026
A mining investment trust flying below the radar - Investors' Chronicle
Published: 2/5/2026
EARNINGS: essensys loss narrows; Baker Steel sets out payout policy | Morningstar
Published: 4/17/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust jumps after sharp rise in net asset value | MarketScreener
Published: 1/19/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — Improved funding environment for junior miners
Published: 11/21/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust shares jump on sharp rise in NAV | LSE:BSRT
Published: 1/19/2026
BSRT - December 2025 - 57.5% discount ex cash
Published: 1/23/2026
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Joel Greenblatt
"BSRT is a high-risk, high-reward investment trust trading at a deep discount to NAV. While the Magic Formula would flag it as cheap on trailing earnings, those earnings are not sustainable. The quality of the business (portfolio) is improving but uneven. Greenblatt cautions against confusing a cheap stock with a good business. Here, the business (the trust) has uncertain earning power. A patient investor with a long horizon might benefit from discount closure, but it lacks the margin of safety that comes from consistent high returns on capital. Therefore, a HOLD rating is appropriate for those already invested; new buyers should wait for a better normalized earnings picture or lower commodity risk."
Overview
This is a Magic Formula-style analysis of Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. (BSRT.L), a closed-end investment trust that invests in natural resources companies. Greenblatt's approach typically applies to operating businesses, but we adapt the principles here—focusing on earnings yield relative to price and the quality of the underlying asset base. BSRT trades at a significant discount to its net asset value (NAV), offering a potential deep-value opportunity, albeit with commodity and concentration risks.
Business Quality Assessment
BSRT is not an operating company but an investment trust. Its 'return on capital' is best measured by the performance of its portfolio relative to its net assets. Over 2025, the trust delivered a NAV total return of ~51.6%, driven by strong commodity prices and project milestones. However, this is highly volatile. The trust's portfolio is concentrated (top two holdings ~47% of NAV), which amplifies both upside and downside. Historically, returns have been lumpy and dependent on successful project development. The investment manager, Baker Steel Capital Managers, has a strong technical background in mining. While the trust's long-term performance (5-year NAV +42.4%) is respectable, it has been inconsistent. The true 'return on capital' for a trust is the ability to grow NAV over cycles, and recent momentum is positive, but sustainability is questionable due to commodity cyclicality.
Valuation Analysis
Using Greenblatt's earnings yield metric: trailing earnings per share (EPS TTM) is £0.47, and the current price is £1.275, giving a trailing P/E of 2.71x. This implies an earnings yield of 36.9%. However, these earnings are heavily influenced by unrealized gains from surging commodity prices (gold, silver, tungsten, etc.) and are not normalized. Enterprise value is roughly equal to market cap (~£134.6M) as the trust has negligible debt (gearing nil). A more conservative normalized earnings estimate (excluding exceptional gains) might be near zero or negative, meaning the true earnings yield could be much lower. Compared to bond yields (UK 10-year ~4.5%), the apparent yield is attractive only if earnings are sustainable. The trust's discount to NAV of ~43% (NAV per share 136p vs. price 77.5p at Dec 2025; current price 127.5p vs. NAV likely >150p) indicates the market is pricing in substantial risk. The valuation is cheap on a asset basis but not on normalized earnings.
Magic Formula Ranking
Earnings Yield Score
Low (likely bottom decile) because normalized earnings are near zero or negative after adjusting for one-time gains. The trailing yield is misleadingly high.
Return on Capital Score
Medium (maybe 50th percentile) because long-term NAV growth has been modest and volatile. Recent performance is good, but not consistent enough for a high quality score.
Combined Assessment
BSRT would not likely rank in the top decile of a typical Magic Formula screen due to poor normalized earnings yield and inconsistent returns on capital. It is more of a deep-value asset play than a classic 'good company at a cheap price'.
Normalized Earnings Analysis
The trailing EPS of £0.47 includes large unrealized gains from portfolio revaluations. For example, in 2025, NAV rose 51.6% due to commodity price spikes and positive feasibility studies. These are not recurring. Normalized earnings should reflect only income from royalties, dividends, and interest, minus expenses. The trust currently pays no dividend and has minimal recurring income from its holdings (some convertible debt interest). Most of its portfolio is in development-stage assets that generate no cash flow. Estimated recurring earnings per share are likely negative (management fees of ~1.75% on market cap, plus other costs, exceed any income). Therefore, normalized owner earnings are near zero or negative, implying the stock is not cheap on an earnings basis.
Why The Market Is Wrong
The market is pricing BSRT at a 40%+ discount to NAV, reflecting concerns over illiquidity, concentration risk, and the uncertain timeline for cash flows from projects like Cemos, Futura, and Tungsten West. However, several catalysts could close this gap: (1) potential sale of Futura equity at a premium (option expired Feb 2026 but negotiations continue), (2) Tungsten West restarting production with record tungsten prices, (3) Cemos reaching full capacity and possible IPO, (4) initiation of a share buyback program and a new dividend policy targeting 3% yield. The contrarian case is that the underlying assets are worth far more than the market price, and the trust is taking steps to unlock value. The market may be overly pessimistic about commodity cycles and project risks.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
Commodity price collapse – a sharp drop in gold, silver, tungsten, or coking coal prices would reduce NAV and delay project economics.
Secondary Risks
- Concentration risk – top two holdings (Cemos, Futura) make up ~47% of NAV; failure in either could devastate returns.
- Illiquidity – most holdings are unlisted, making NAV estimates uncertain and exits difficult. The trust itself has a low trading volume.
- Country risk – assets in Zimbabwe (gold royalty), Philippines, Morocco, etc., face political and regulatory risks.
What Would Change My Mind
If commodity prices fall 20%+ from current levels, or if key projects (Futura, Tungsten West) fail to achieve production milestones, the NAV discount could widen further. Also, if the trust fails to deliver on its buyback and dividend promises, investor sentiment may worsen.
Conclusion
BSRT is a high-risk, high-reward investment trust trading at a deep discount to NAV. While the Magic Formula would flag it as cheap on trailing earnings, those earnings are not sustainable. The quality of the business (portfolio) is improving but uneven. Greenblatt cautions against confusing a cheap stock with a good business. Here, the business (the trust) has uncertain earning power. A patient investor with a long horizon might benefit from discount closure, but it lacks the margin of safety that comes from consistent high returns on capital. Therefore, a HOLD rating is appropriate for those already invested; new buyers should wait for a better normalized earnings picture or lower commodity risk.
Research Sources (13 found)
Investment Update and 30 January 2026 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 2/6/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd Investment Update and 31 March 2026 NAV - ADVFN
Published: 4/8/2026
Investment Update and 27 February 2026 NAV - BSRT News article
Published: 2/27/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — A 50% return in 2025 with good portfolio breadth - Edison Group
Published: 1/19/2026
Investment Update and 30 November 2025 NAV | Company Announcement | Investegate
Published: 12/4/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust Limited (BSRT) Competitive Analysis & Comparison (2026)
Published: 11/14/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust : Factsheet (BSRT Factsheet December 2025) | MarketScreener
Published: 2/3/2026
A mining investment trust flying below the radar - Investors' Chronicle
Published: 2/5/2026
EARNINGS: essensys loss narrows; Baker Steel sets out payout policy | Morningstar
Published: 4/17/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust jumps after sharp rise in net asset value | MarketScreener
Published: 1/19/2026
Baker Steel Resources Trust — Improved funding environment for junior miners
Published: 11/21/2025
Baker Steel Resources Trust shares jump on sharp rise in NAV | LSE:BSRT
Published: 1/19/2026
BSRT - December 2025 - 57.5% discount ex cash
Published: 1/23/2026
Search Queries Generated
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L earnings revenue growth margins quarterly results
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L competitive position market share moat advantages competitors
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L management CEO strategy capital allocation insider activity
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L bear case analysis risks challenges headwinds problems
Baker Steel Resources Trust Ltd. BSRT.L industry trends catalysts regulatory impact upcoming events