At a packed ceremony in London last night, Morningstar’s UK Awards for Investing Excellence for 2025 were announced. Royal London, JP Morgan, Dimensional and Artemis were among the fund firms picking up the accolades.
The awards recognize funds and asset managers that have served investors well over the long term, and which Morningstar’s manager research team believes will be able to deliver strong risk-adjusted returns over time.
“Congratulations to the winners and finalists of the Awards for Investing Excellence 2025, which recognize the outstanding fund offerings and groups within the industry,” says Monika Calay, director of UK manager research at Morningstar.
“Against the backdrop of geopolitical shifts and evolving markets, our analysts have carefully chosen the top performers across equity, fixed income, and multi-asset categories, leveraging Morningstar’s forward-looking ratings to identify the leading funds for investors in the UK.”
The Fund Award Winners Revealed
There were two types of Morningstar award up for grabs last night: the Morningstar Category Awards; and an overall Morningstar Asset Manager Award, which recognizes a parent company that is considered best of three nominees.
The winners of the Morningstar Awards for Investing Excellence are:
But that’s not all!
We are pleased to announce that the Morningstar Asset Manager Award for Best Asset Manager in 2025 goes to: Royal London Asset Management.
Congratulations to all the nominees and to all the winners.
UK Fund Awards Methodology Explained
Morningstar selects its UK fund award winners using a combination of past performance and risk.
Only funds recorded in the Morningstar database as available for sale in the UK are eligible to receive an award.
To select award winners, a quantitative score is first used to rank funds based on their past record. These awards are annual, so winning funds must have been in the top of their peer group in the last calendar year.
It would be inappropriate to hand awards to funds that have solely posted strong one-year returns, so they must have also delivered strong three- and five-year relative returns after adjusting for risk. They must also have been in the top half of their peer group median in at least three of the past five calendar years—unless Morningstar analysts believe a fund has exceptional merit that this performance consistency fails to capture.
Insurance funds and investment trusts are excluded from the process. So too are currency-hedged share classes of funds, unless they are in a category specifically for currency-hedged funds and share classes. All funds or share classes in unrated Morningstar categories are excluded.
Wherever possible, we use Morningstar’s forward-looking rating for funds—the Morningstar Medalist Rating—including its Parent Pillar component, which assesses parent companies’ capacity management, risk management, recruitment and retention, and the relationship between pay incentives and performance. Each Pillar (Process, People, and Parent) is summarized with either a Low, Below Average, Average, Above Average, or High rating.
As the summary expression of Morningstar’s investment strategy analysis, the Morningstar Medalist Rating relies on qualitative analysis or algorithmic techniques that mimic analyst decision-making—or a combination of both—to assign Pillar ratings. Ratings are set on a five-tier scale running from Gold to Silver, Bronze, Neutral, and Negative at the share class level.
For actively managed funds, Morningstar assigns Gold, Silver, or Bronze ratings to strategies expected to add value or “positive alpha” over the long term compared with their Morningstar Category index after accounting for fees and risk.
For passive strategies, Morningstar assigns Gold, Silver, or Bronze ratings to vehicles expected to deliver alpha that exceeds the lessor of their category median net alpha, or zero, over the long term.
Mathieu Caquineau, CFA, Wing Chan, and Sunniva Kolostyak contributed to this article
The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar's editorial policies.