Having adopted an ‘AI maximalist’ approach almost three years ago, it is not a surprise to us to see the Magnificent Seven (Mag7) stocks lagging and Software and Information Services stocks struggling so far this year. We believe this is best understood as a continuation of trends that began to establish themselves last year and was one of the drivers of our strong performance in 2025 as we reallocated capital away from each group to capture a broadening of participation across both AI enablers and beneficiaries.

Prior to 2025, most of the Mag7, as well as Software and Information Services stocks, were perceived to be AI beneficiaries. However, the future has become less certain with credible two-way debates emerging for many stocks, creating uncertainty over the terminal values of these businesses. As such, we believe they are likely to remain less good conduits for AI progress for now.

Fund Performance vs. Indices
Fund Performance Vs. Indices
Source: Bloomberg 4 February 2026. Performance is representative of the USD Class I Dist share class which launched on 4 September 2009. All figures in USD terms.

With capital intensity increasing, the market is likely to become more focused on the returns generated by AI investment, rewarding those able to demonstrate strong returns and potentially punishing those unable to do so. This perhaps explains the negative reaction to the recent Microsoft results, which saw AI capex surprise to the upside, but Azure growth did not, suggesting that at least some of its AI spending may be defensive in nature (necessary to sustain the core Office franchise?). In contrast, Meta Platforms also increased AI spending but this was accompanied by robust results and an upbeat tone regarding AI returns as well as progress on its new AI model. Differences aside, we have continued to reduce our overall exposure to Mag7, although our allocations remain dynamic and we can use call options to partially mitigate the risks of being underweight.

Fund vs Benchmark: Mag7 - Actual & Active Exposure
Fund Vs Benchmark Mag 7   Actual & Active Exposure
Source: Polar Capital, Bloomberg, 5 February 2026.

How the Fund is positioned

Application software: The commoditisation of code and the growing role of AI as an alternative solution to managing and accessing data has created a significant overhang over terminal values. Across our fund range, our software exposure is at its lowest in more than a decade. In the Polar Capital Global Technology Fund, software accounts for less than 7% compared to a more traditional exposure in the past of c20-25%. Application software exposure is now negligible.

Infrastructure/security software: Although we have reduced exposure here too, especially in cybersecurity (due to an evolving threat landscape), we still hold a limited number of smaller positions in infrastructure software companies. AI should drive more code, more applications and more data, which should result in the need to store and analyse a great deal more data including more telemetry for ongoing training/ improvement purposes (the feedback loop). These are typically usage-based models which should benefit from any volume explosion, although this stack will likely evolve with new AI-centric competitors or self-built solutions from hyperscalers with less human involvement. We are watching individual stocks closely.

Information services: Information services appears to be right in the crosshairs of AI disruption, as new coworking tools from OpenAI and Anthropic appear increasingly competitive, with incumbent solutions and the scope and defensibility of proprietary data being challenged. Just a few years ago, data assets were considered a key advantage in an AI world, but the advent of better reasoning models able to interpolate is challenging that earlier assumption. Gartner, RELX, FactSet and Wolters Kluwer are some of the best managed in their industries, but AI progress and nascent AI competition are questioning the value of their competitive moats and their terminal values in an AI-centric world.

Fund vs Benchmark: Software - Actual & Active Exposure
Fund Vs Benchmark Software   Actual & Active Exposure
Source: Polar Capital, Bloomberg, 5 February 2026.

To us, this is following the classic pattern of technology disruption. Three years in, we are moving into the next phase of the AI cycle: initially inferior technologies (GPT-3.5) appear complementary to existing solutions (app software) but as AI models have improved so rapidly they are becoming substitutes. This dynamic challenges the value of incumbency and forces existing players to more fully embrace AI, which we believe is best understood as a defensive investment.

Improved AI model performance

Recent weakness in companies perceived to be at risk also reflects improved AI model performance. In 4Q25 Google Gemini 3.0 and Anthropic Claude 4.5 launched to strong reviews, with both delivering a notable improvement in performance, reduced hallucinations and, in the case of Claude Code, a breakthrough in coding capability. We expect this rapid pace of innovation to continue in 2026.

There have been several other linked developments that highlight the rapid progress.

  • Claude Cowork (Anthropic): an agentic desktop tool for knowledge workers; can be used to create entire code bases, run tests and fix bugs autonomously
  • Clawdbot (now Moltbot): an open-source agent that runs on edge devices (e.g. Mac mini) and connects large language models (LLMs) to your personal productivity tools to do tasks for you
  • Google Genie: highlighted the possible impact of world models and potential to generate probabilistic tools rather than deterministic code (impacting video game stocks)
  • Claude Cowork legal plugin: showed expanded capabilities in a complex legal environment, bridging the gap from model to workflow (the role of app software)

Why does this matter?

AI capable of writing code has changed the cost of creating software – built on code – which, all things being equal, means incumbents are likely to face intensifying competition from existing competitors, AI-natives as well as internal IT efforts. You can see it in the app store already, with an explosion in app creation as vibe coding takes off.

We should also highlight a number of comments made so far during Q4 earnings season that have highlighted recent AI progress. These include:

Shopify CEO: “I shipped more code in the last three weeks than the decade before. The top AI models/agentic systems right now are an entirely different thing to what people used until the beginning of December.”

Mark Zuckerberg (Meta Platforms CEO): “[We are] starting to see projects that used to require big teams now be accomplished by a single, very talented person”.

Palantir CEO: “Not only are we getting rid of third-party software, but we’ve also replaced their functionality and then beaten them to new features”.

The end of the ‘Information Age’

In the Information Age, value was created by accessing, organising and processing data. In the most optimistic scenario, leading software companies successfully invest aggressively in AI capabilities to reinvent their products to address growing competitive threats. Even if they succeed, this still leaves business model challenges – in particular a likely shift to outcome base pricing rather than seat-based recurring revenue seen in SaaS (Software as a Service) companies.

At a minimum, AI investment is diverting IT budget away from enterprise software. Anthropic’s ARR (annual recurring revenue) has grown from $1bn in 2024 to $9bn in 2025 and it is targeting $26bn in 2026. Given it is largely enterprise focused, this would make the company the fastest growing enterprise software or 'intelligence' company at scale ever seen before. ServiceNow, a leading enterprise software provider, estimates $16bn in 2026 revenue growing 20% by comparison.

The beginning of the ‘Cognition Era’

The reason we are more cautious than many regarding software exposure is the belief we are moving into the Cognition Era, where value is created by synthesising, reasoning and acting on data. For traditional software and data service companies, this shift is dangerous because it rapidly depreciates their primary assets: proprietary code bases and gate-kept information.

In the Cognition Era, the software itself is no longer the product; the intelligence it delivers is the product. Companies selling ‘tools for humans’ will lose to companies selling ‘agents that do the work’. In the Information Age, digital disruptors packaged and delivered information to humans, while In the Cognition Era, cognition rather than information is the new barrier.

Over the coming months, we expect to write more about the Cognition Era as we see it and how it may impact us. However, for now we include a few preliminary thoughts about why the commoditisation of coding matters.

1. The commoditisation of coding

As AI makes software development cheaper, the barriers to entry drop. Micro-SaaS competitors can spring up overnight, cloning features of established giants at a fraction of the cost, driving prices down across the industry. Historically, if you built a complex piece of software, it was hard for competitors to copy because coding was slow and expensive. Your ‘moat’ is no longer your code; it is your brand, user trust and unique data – only unique data matters, publicly available data can be easily replicated.

2. Move to outcome-based pricing

The SaaS business model has been the gold standard for two decades. It relies on selling seats (subscriptions) to humans who use tools to do work. AI reduces the number of humans needed to do a task. In the Cognition Era, customers do not want to pay for access to a tool; they want to pay for the outcome.

3. Disruption of data services

Data service companies traditionally thrived by collecting, cleaning and selling access to information (e.g. Gartner, FactSet, Bloomberg and Nielsen or specialised market researchers). In the Information Age, users paid for raw data tables to analyse themselves. In the Cognition Era, AI models can ingest vast amounts of unstructured public data to approximate those same insights, bypassing the need for expensive, structured proprietary datasets.

4. Disintermediation of platforms/databases

Platforms that functioned as knowledge intermediaries, like Chegg for homework or Stack Overflow for coding solutions, are being bypassed. Users no longer need to search a database for an answer; they ask an AI agent to generate the answer. The value of the ‘search engine’ model collapses when the ‘reasoning engine’ arrives.

5. Agentic disruption to the user interface layer

Agentic capabilities are advancing rapidly. Meanwhile many companies are working on new AI interface devices (pins; badges; glasses). While it is early yet, we may be entering the end of the software interface as multi-modal AI removes the need for traditional interactions with data. Software is just a way for humans to store, analyse and interact with data; machines do not need that user interface layer.

Our conclusions

We have long believed that only companies that own a frontier AI model are likely to control their own destiny – a view we believe is shared by many of the biggest AI spenders today, many of whom also enjoy the best vantage point on AI progress (e.g. Alphabet, OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI and the hyperscalers, all of which are spending aggressively on AI capex). They are locked in a battle for model supremacy and/or survival.

Meanwhile, those who rely on third-party models are best understood as passengers or spectators in future AI progress. Even close partnerships may not be enough, especially as we move close to artificial general intelligence (AGI) where AI capabilities exceed those of humans – the Microsoft/OpenAI relationship is a good example. The best software and information services companies may navigate this period successfully and reinvent themselves, but history suggests the intervening period is usually uncomfortable.

For now, our focus remains building a diversified portfolio of the broader enablers of the Cognition Era, including broader data centre infrastructure, and beneficiaries. Our Polar Capital Artificial Intelligence Fund includes the much broader beneficiaries across all industries (being careful to ensure their advantage is not linked to data that can easily be replicated by AI). As Meta Platforms put it during its earnings call: “2026 is going to be the year that AI starts to dramatically change the way that we work”.


Risks

  • Capital is at risk and there is no guarantee the Fund will achieve its objective. Investors should make sure their attitude towards risk is aligned with the risk profile of the Fund before investing.
  • Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of investments may go down as well as up and you might get back less than you originally invested as there is no guarantee in place.
  • The value of a fund’s assets may be affected by uncertainties such as international political developments, market sentiment, economic conditions, changes in government policies, restrictions on foreign investment and currency repatriation, currency fluctuations and other developments in the laws and regulations of countries in which investment may be made. Please see the Fund’s Prospectus for details of all risks.
  • The Fund invests in the shares of companies and share prices can rise or fall due to several factors affecting global stock markets.
  • The Fund uses derivatives which carry the risk of reduced liquidity, substantial loss and increased volatility in adverse market conditions, such as failure amongst market participants.
  • The Fund invests in assets denominated in currencies other than the Fund's base currency. Changes in exchange rates may have a negative impact on the Fund's investments. If the share class currency is different from the currency of the country in which you reside, exchange rate fluctuations may affect your returns when converted into your local currency. Hedged share classes may have associated costs which may impact the performance of your investment.
  • The Fund invests in a relatively concentrated number of companies and industries based in one sector. This focused strategy can produce high gains but can also lead to significant losses. The Fund may be less diversified than other investment funds.
  • The Fund invests in emerging markets where there is a greater risk of volatility due to political and economic uncertainties, restrictions on foreign investment, currency repatriation and currency fluctuations. Developing markets are typically less liquid which may result in large price movements to the Fund.


Important Information:
This is a marketing communication and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to any person to buy or sell and related securities or financial instruments. Any opinions expressed may change. This document does not contain information material to the investment objectives or financial needs of the recipient. This document is not advice on legal, taxation or investment matters. Tax treatment depends on personal circumstances. Investors must rely on their own examination of the fund or seek advice. Investment may be restricted in other countries and as such, any individual who receives this document must make themselves aware of their respective jurisdiction and observe any restrictions.

A decision may be taken at any time to terminate the marketing of the Fund in any EEA Member State in which it is currently marketed. Shareholders in the affected EEA Member State will be given notification of any decision and provided the opportunity to redeem their interests in the Fund, free of any charges or deductions, for at least 30 working days from the date of the notification.

Investment in the Fund concerns shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. Further information about fund characteristics and any associated risks can be found in the Fund’s Key Information Document or Key Investor Information Document (“KID” or “KIID”), the Prospectus (and relevant Fund Supplement), the Articles of Association and the Annual and Semi-Annual Reports. Please refer to these documents before making any final investment decisions. These documents are available free of charge at Polar Capital Funds plc, Georges Court, 54-62 Townsend Street, Dublin 2, Ireland, via email by contacting Investor-Relations@polarcapitalfunds.com or at www.polarcapital.co.uk. The KID is available in the languages of all EEA member states in which the Fund is registered for sale; the Prospectus, Annual and Semi-Annual Reports and KIID are available in English.

The Fund promotes, among other characteristics, environmental or social characteristics and is classified as an Article 8 fund under the EU's Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR). For more information, please see the Prospectus and relevant Fund Supplement.

ESG and sustainability characteristics are further detailed on the investment manager’s website: - https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/ESG-and-Sustainability/Responsible-Investing/.

A summary of investor rights associated with investment in the Fund can be found here.

This document is provided and approved by both Polar Capital LLP and Polar Capital (Europe) SAS.

Polar Capital LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) in the United Kingdom, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in the United States. Polar Capital LLP’s registered address is 16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD, United Kingdom.

Polar Capital (Europe) SAS is authorised and regulated by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) in France. Polar Capital (Europe) SAS’s registered address is 18 Rue de Londres, Paris 75009, France.

Polar Capital LLP is a registered Investment Advisor with the SEC. Polar Capital LLP is the investment manager and promoter of Polar Capital Funds plc – an open-ended investment company with variable capital and with segregated liability between its sub-funds – incorporated in Ireland, authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland and recognised by the FCA. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

For UK investors: The Fund is recognised in the UK under the Overseas Funds Regime (OFR) but it is not a UK-authorised Fund. UK investors should be aware that they may not be able to refer a complaint against its Management Company or its Depositary to the UK’s Financial Ombudsman Service. Any claims for losses relating to the Management Company or the Depositary will not be covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, in the event that either entity should become unable to meet its liabilities to investors. For information on the complaint process to the Management Company, please see the Country Supplement for this fund available at https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/

Benchmark: The Fund is actively managed and uses the Dow Jones Global Technology Net Total Return Index as a performance target. The benchmark has been chosen as it is generally considered to be representative of the investment universe in which the Fund invests. The performance of the Fund is likely to differ from the performance of the benchmark as the holdings, weightings and asset allocation will be different. Investors should carefully consider these differences when making comparisons. Further information about the benchmark can be found here. The benchmark is provided by an administrator on the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) register of benchmarks which includes details of all authorised, registered, recognised and endorsed EU and third country benchmark administrators together with their national competent authorities.

Third-party Data: Some information contained herein has been obtained from third party sources and has not been independently verified by Polar Capital. Neither Polar Capital nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any data contained herein.

Country Specific Disclaimers: Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. When considering an investment into the Fund, you should make yourself aware of the relevant financial, legal and tax implications. Neither Polar Capital LLP nor Polar Capital Funds plc shall be liable for, and accept no liability for, the use or misuse of this document.

None

Having adopted an ‘AI maximalist’ approach almost three years ago, it is not a surprise to us to see the Magnificent Seven (Mag7) stocks lagging and Software and Information Services stocks struggling so far this year. We believe this is best understood as a continuation of trends that began to establish themselves last year and was one of the drivers of our strong performance in 2025 as we reallocated capital away from each group to capture a broadening of participation across both AI enablers and beneficiaries.

Prior to 2025, most of the Mag7, as well as Software and Information Services stocks, were perceived to be AI beneficiaries. However, the future has become less certain with credible two-way debates emerging for many stocks, creating uncertainty over the terminal values of these businesses. As such, we believe they are likely to remain less good conduits for AI progress for now.

Fund Performance vs. Indices
Fund Performance Vs. Indices
Source: Bloomberg 4 February 2026. Performance is representative of the USD Class I Dist share class which launched on 4 September 2009. All figures in USD terms.

With capital intensity increasing, the market is likely to become more focused on the returns generated by AI investment, rewarding those able to demonstrate strong returns and potentially punishing those unable to do so. This perhaps explains the negative reaction to the recent Microsoft results, which saw AI capex surprise to the upside, but Azure growth did not, suggesting that at least some of its AI spending may be defensive in nature (necessary to sustain the core Office franchise?). In contrast, Meta Platforms also increased AI spending but this was accompanied by robust results and an upbeat tone regarding AI returns as well as progress on its new AI model. Differences aside, we have continued to reduce our overall exposure to Mag7, although our allocations remain dynamic and we can use call options to partially mitigate the risks of being underweight.

Fund vs Benchmark: Mag7 - Actual & Active Exposure
Fund Vs Benchmark Mag 7   Actual & Active Exposure
Source: Polar Capital, Bloomberg, 5 February 2026.

How the Fund is positioned

Application software: The commoditisation of code and the growing role of AI as an alternative solution to managing and accessing data has created a significant overhang over terminal values. Across our fund range, our software exposure is at its lowest in more than a decade. In the Polar Capital Global Technology Fund, software accounts for less than 7% compared to a more traditional exposure in the past of c20-25%. Application software exposure is now negligible.

Infrastructure/security software: Although we have reduced exposure here too, especially in cybersecurity (due to an evolving threat landscape), we still hold a limited number of smaller positions in infrastructure software companies. AI should drive more code, more applications and more data, which should result in the need to store and analyse a great deal more data including more telemetry for ongoing training/ improvement purposes (the feedback loop). These are typically usage-based models which should benefit from any volume explosion, although this stack will likely evolve with new AI-centric competitors or self-built solutions from hyperscalers with less human involvement. We are watching individual stocks closely.

Information services: Information services appears to be right in the crosshairs of AI disruption, as new coworking tools from OpenAI and Anthropic appear increasingly competitive, with incumbent solutions and the scope and defensibility of proprietary data being challenged. Just a few years ago, data assets were considered a key advantage in an AI world, but the advent of better reasoning models able to interpolate is challenging that earlier assumption. Gartner, RELX, FactSet and Wolters Kluwer are some of the best managed in their industries, but AI progress and nascent AI competition are questioning the value of their competitive moats and their terminal values in an AI-centric world.

Fund vs Benchmark: Software - Actual & Active Exposure
Fund Vs Benchmark Software   Actual & Active Exposure
Source: Polar Capital, Bloomberg, 5 February 2026.

To us, this is following the classic pattern of technology disruption. Three years in, we are moving into the next phase of the AI cycle: initially inferior technologies (GPT-3.5) appear complementary to existing solutions (app software) but as AI models have improved so rapidly they are becoming substitutes. This dynamic challenges the value of incumbency and forces existing players to more fully embrace AI, which we believe is best understood as a defensive investment.

Improved AI model performance

Recent weakness in companies perceived to be at risk also reflects improved AI model performance. In 4Q25 Google Gemini 3.0 and Anthropic Claude 4.5 launched to strong reviews, with both delivering a notable improvement in performance, reduced hallucinations and, in the case of Claude Code, a breakthrough in coding capability. We expect this rapid pace of innovation to continue in 2026.

There have been several other linked developments that highlight the rapid progress.

  • Claude Cowork (Anthropic): an agentic desktop tool for knowledge workers; can be used to create entire code bases, run tests and fix bugs autonomously
  • Clawdbot (now Moltbot): an open-source agent that runs on edge devices (e.g. Mac mini) and connects large language models (LLMs) to your personal productivity tools to do tasks for you
  • Google Genie: highlighted the possible impact of world models and potential to generate probabilistic tools rather than deterministic code (impacting video game stocks)
  • Claude Cowork legal plugin: showed expanded capabilities in a complex legal environment, bridging the gap from model to workflow (the role of app software)

Why does this matter?

AI capable of writing code has changed the cost of creating software – built on code – which, all things being equal, means incumbents are likely to face intensifying competition from existing competitors, AI-natives as well as internal IT efforts. You can see it in the app store already, with an explosion in app creation as vibe coding takes off.

We should also highlight a number of comments made so far during Q4 earnings season that have highlighted recent AI progress. These include:

Shopify CEO: “I shipped more code in the last three weeks than the decade before. The top AI models/agentic systems right now are an entirely different thing to what people used until the beginning of December.”

Mark Zuckerberg (Meta Platforms CEO): “[We are] starting to see projects that used to require big teams now be accomplished by a single, very talented person”.

Palantir CEO: “Not only are we getting rid of third-party software, but we’ve also replaced their functionality and then beaten them to new features”.

The end of the ‘Information Age’

In the Information Age, value was created by accessing, organising and processing data. In the most optimistic scenario, leading software companies successfully invest aggressively in AI capabilities to reinvent their products to address growing competitive threats. Even if they succeed, this still leaves business model challenges – in particular a likely shift to outcome base pricing rather than seat-based recurring revenue seen in SaaS (Software as a Service) companies.

At a minimum, AI investment is diverting IT budget away from enterprise software. Anthropic’s ARR (annual recurring revenue) has grown from $1bn in 2024 to $9bn in 2025 and it is targeting $26bn in 2026. Given it is largely enterprise focused, this would make the company the fastest growing enterprise software or 'intelligence' company at scale ever seen before. ServiceNow, a leading enterprise software provider, estimates $16bn in 2026 revenue growing 20% by comparison.

The beginning of the ‘Cognition Era’

The reason we are more cautious than many regarding software exposure is the belief we are moving into the Cognition Era, where value is created by synthesising, reasoning and acting on data. For traditional software and data service companies, this shift is dangerous because it rapidly depreciates their primary assets: proprietary code bases and gate-kept information.

In the Cognition Era, the software itself is no longer the product; the intelligence it delivers is the product. Companies selling ‘tools for humans’ will lose to companies selling ‘agents that do the work’. In the Information Age, digital disruptors packaged and delivered information to humans, while In the Cognition Era, cognition rather than information is the new barrier.

Over the coming months, we expect to write more about the Cognition Era as we see it and how it may impact us. However, for now we include a few preliminary thoughts about why the commoditisation of coding matters.

1. The commoditisation of coding

As AI makes software development cheaper, the barriers to entry drop. Micro-SaaS competitors can spring up overnight, cloning features of established giants at a fraction of the cost, driving prices down across the industry. Historically, if you built a complex piece of software, it was hard for competitors to copy because coding was slow and expensive. Your ‘moat’ is no longer your code; it is your brand, user trust and unique data – only unique data matters, publicly available data can be easily replicated.

2. Move to outcome-based pricing

The SaaS business model has been the gold standard for two decades. It relies on selling seats (subscriptions) to humans who use tools to do work. AI reduces the number of humans needed to do a task. In the Cognition Era, customers do not want to pay for access to a tool; they want to pay for the outcome.

3. Disruption of data services

Data service companies traditionally thrived by collecting, cleaning and selling access to information (e.g. Gartner, FactSet, Bloomberg and Nielsen or specialised market researchers). In the Information Age, users paid for raw data tables to analyse themselves. In the Cognition Era, AI models can ingest vast amounts of unstructured public data to approximate those same insights, bypassing the need for expensive, structured proprietary datasets.

4. Disintermediation of platforms/databases

Platforms that functioned as knowledge intermediaries, like Chegg for homework or Stack Overflow for coding solutions, are being bypassed. Users no longer need to search a database for an answer; they ask an AI agent to generate the answer. The value of the ‘search engine’ model collapses when the ‘reasoning engine’ arrives.

5. Agentic disruption to the user interface layer

Agentic capabilities are advancing rapidly. Meanwhile many companies are working on new AI interface devices (pins; badges; glasses). While it is early yet, we may be entering the end of the software interface as multi-modal AI removes the need for traditional interactions with data. Software is just a way for humans to store, analyse and interact with data; machines do not need that user interface layer.

Our conclusions

We have long believed that only companies that own a frontier AI model are likely to control their own destiny – a view we believe is shared by many of the biggest AI spenders today, many of whom also enjoy the best vantage point on AI progress (e.g. Alphabet, OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI and the hyperscalers, all of which are spending aggressively on AI capex). They are locked in a battle for model supremacy and/or survival.

Meanwhile, those who rely on third-party models are best understood as passengers or spectators in future AI progress. Even close partnerships may not be enough, especially as we move close to artificial general intelligence (AGI) where AI capabilities exceed those of humans – the Microsoft/OpenAI relationship is a good example. The best software and information services companies may navigate this period successfully and reinvent themselves, but history suggests the intervening period is usually uncomfortable.

For now, our focus remains building a diversified portfolio of the broader enablers of the Cognition Era, including broader data centre infrastructure, and beneficiaries. Our Polar Capital Artificial Intelligence Fund includes the much broader beneficiaries across all industries (being careful to ensure their advantage is not linked to data that can easily be replicated by AI). As Meta Platforms put it during its earnings call: “2026 is going to be the year that AI starts to dramatically change the way that we work”.

Risks

  • Capital is at risk and there is no guarantee the Fund will achieve its objective. Investors should make sure their attitude towards risk is aligned with the risk profile of the Fund before investing.
  • Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of investments may go down as well as up and you might get back less than you originally invested as there is no guarantee in place.
  • The value of a fund’s assets may be affected by uncertainties such as international political developments, market sentiment, economic conditions, changes in government policies, restrictions on foreign investment and currency repatriation, currency fluctuations and other developments in the laws and regulations of countries in which investment may be made. Please see the Fund’s Prospectus for details of all risks.
  • The Fund invests in the shares of companies and share prices can rise or fall due to several factors affecting global stock markets.
  • The Fund uses derivatives which carry the risk of reduced liquidity, substantial loss and increased volatility in adverse market conditions, such as failure amongst market participants.
  • The Fund invests in assets denominated in currencies other than the Fund's base currency. Changes in exchange rates may have a negative impact on the Fund's investments. If the share class currency is different from the currency of the country in which you reside, exchange rate fluctuations may affect your returns when converted into your local currency. Hedged share classes may have associated costs which may impact the performance of your investment.
  • The Fund invests in a relatively concentrated number of companies and industries based in one sector. This focused strategy can produce high gains but can also lead to significant losses. The Fund may be less diversified than other investment funds.
  • The Fund invests in emerging markets where there is a greater risk of volatility due to political and economic uncertainties, restrictions on foreign investment, currency repatriation and currency fluctuations. Developing markets are typically less liquid which may result in large price movements to the Fund.


Important Information:
This is a marketing communication and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to any person to buy or sell and related securities or financial instruments. Any opinions expressed may change. This document does not contain information material to the investment objectives or financial needs of the recipient. This document is not advice on legal, taxation or investment matters. Tax treatment depends on personal circumstances. Investors must rely on their own examination of the fund or seek advice. Investment may be restricted in other countries and as such, any individual who receives this document must make themselves aware of their respective jurisdiction and observe any restrictions.

A decision may be taken at any time to terminate the marketing of the Fund in any EEA Member State in which it is currently marketed. Shareholders in the affected EEA Member State will be given notification of any decision and provided the opportunity to redeem their interests in the Fund, free of any charges or deductions, for at least 30 working days from the date of the notification.

Investment in the Fund concerns shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. Further information about fund characteristics and any associated risks can be found in the Fund’s Key Information Document or Key Investor Information Document (“KID” or “KIID”), the Prospectus (and relevant Fund Supplement), the Articles of Association and the Annual and Semi-Annual Reports. Please refer to these documents before making any final investment decisions. These documents are available free of charge at Polar Capital Funds plc, Georges Court, 54-62 Townsend Street, Dublin 2, Ireland, via email by contacting Investor-Relations@polarcapitalfunds.com or at www.polarcapital.co.uk. The KID is available in the languages of all EEA member states in which the Fund is registered for sale; the Prospectus, Annual and Semi-Annual Reports and KIID are available in English.

The Fund promotes, among other characteristics, environmental or social characteristics and is classified as an Article 8 fund under the EU's Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR). For more information, please see the Prospectus and relevant Fund Supplement.

ESG and sustainability characteristics are further detailed on the investment manager’s website: - https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/ESG-and-Sustainability/Responsible-Investing/.

A summary of investor rights associated with investment in the Fund can be found here.

This document is provided and approved by both Polar Capital LLP and Polar Capital (Europe) SAS.

Polar Capital LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) in the United Kingdom, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in the United States. Polar Capital LLP’s registered address is 16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD, United Kingdom.

Polar Capital (Europe) SAS is authorised and regulated by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) in France. Polar Capital (Europe) SAS’s registered address is 18 Rue de Londres, Paris 75009, France.

Polar Capital LLP is a registered Investment Advisor with the SEC. Polar Capital LLP is the investment manager and promoter of Polar Capital Funds plc – an open-ended investment company with variable capital and with segregated liability between its sub-funds – incorporated in Ireland, authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland and recognised by the FCA. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

For UK investors: The Fund is recognised in the UK under the Overseas Funds Regime (OFR) but it is not a UK-authorised Fund. UK investors should be aware that they may not be able to refer a complaint against its Management Company or its Depositary to the UK’s Financial Ombudsman Service. Any claims for losses relating to the Management Company or the Depositary will not be covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, in the event that either entity should become unable to meet its liabilities to investors. For information on the complaint process to the Management Company, please see the Country Supplement for this fund available at https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/

Benchmark: The Fund is actively managed and uses the Dow Jones Global Technology Net Total Return Index as a performance target. The benchmark has been chosen as it is generally considered to be representative of the investment universe in which the Fund invests. The performance of the Fund is likely to differ from the performance of the benchmark as the holdings, weightings and asset allocation will be different. Investors should carefully consider these differences when making comparisons. Further information about the benchmark can be found here. The benchmark is provided by an administrator on the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) register of benchmarks which includes details of all authorised, registered, recognised and endorsed EU and third country benchmark administrators together with their national competent authorities.

Third-party Data: Some information contained herein has been obtained from third party sources and has not been independently verified by Polar Capital. Neither Polar Capital nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any data contained herein.

Country Specific Disclaimers: Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. When considering an investment into the Fund, you should make yourself aware of the relevant financial, legal and tax implications. Neither Polar Capital LLP nor Polar Capital Funds plc shall be liable for, and accept no liability for, the use or misuse of this document.