To be clear, I am not suggesting that information about historical positions in GARS isn't available.
I actually ran a download from Morningstar in April and at the time the largest position in the fund was 687,575,000 in cash or cash equivalents. My first observation is that is a very high annual fee for investors to pay to have over 8% of the fund in money market funds with interest rates at a 300 year low.
The second largest position was 447,907,000 invested in Standard Life's own European Equity fund. Again, that's a high fee to pay for over 5% in a European Equity fund which I can get from an ETF for 0.20%pa. But of course I am paying for the "added value" from the tactical asset allocation decisions made by the managers.
In this instance, of course, the managers are Standard Life in both cases.
At least this confirms the earlier point that a large part of the fund is actually just invested in long positions in Standard Life's own Managed funds.
However, the real problem here is that although the data I obtained was extremely detailed it was, of course, already out of date by the time I had looked at it. In a tactical fund, the managers will have already moved on the funds holdings so that any assessment I make at a given instant will be increasingly out of date as time moves on.
My last point is that the 13th largest holding in the fund at the time was an allocation of 69,936,000 to the Trafalgar Discovery Fund. This is listed as a Hedge Fund by Morningstar and seems to be a distressed assets fund and seems to be listed in the Cayman Islands although I can't be sure as there is no ISIN or CUSIP listed.
So, not only do I have the uncertainty associated with the asset allocation decisions and charges of Standard Life's managers, I am also having asset allocation decisions and charges applied by external managers.
I therefore repeat that I have no idea what this fund is invested in and if they are using Hedge Funds to be honest neither do Standard Life!