Fixed Income

Emerging Markets Debt Corporate

A research-focused, actively managed, emerging markets corporate debt solution. We seek to generate strong relative performance versus the benchmark by using in-depth corporate research supplemented with the sovereign perspective and global macro assessment.

The team’s investment philosophy is based on the principle that emerging markets debt (EMD) is a heterogeneous, semi-efficient market with multiple sources of mispricing. We believe in casting the widest possible net to identify and seek to profitably exploit opportunities, looking for them at every level of analysis – asset class, country, industry, issuer and security.

Focus on deep research

  • Disciplined investment process with a focus on fundamental research and security selection that seeks to exploit semi-efficient EM corporate bond markets.

Nimble approach

  • Ability to be flexible and adapt the strategy to take advantage of the full array of opportunities to the benefit of our clients.

An experienced, well-resourced team

  • Dedicated EMD team comprising veteran investors with many years of experience of managing the full spectrum of EMD.

The team follows a methodical process that starts with the assessment of the global macro environment, then proceeds to the sovereign analysis, and ends with individual corporate assessment.

The objective of the global macro analysis is to anticipate the general direction of global credit spreads, developed market rates, and the US dollar by examining global macroeconomic trends.

A team of dedicated regional specialists conducts sovereign credit analysis. Our final assessments encompass all relevant economic and political variables.

Dedicated EM corporate analysts working together with industry specialists from our global credit research team conduct corporate analysis. We consider data quality/track record, financial profile, relative value versus peers, qualitative factors, deal structure, and environmental, social, and governance (ESG).  ESG is a core part of our corporate fundamental analysis, and the team employs a rigorous proprietary ESG rating system that scores companies for their material exposure to ESG risks. 


For more information about our Credit capabilities

Risks

Fixed income securities and bond funds can lose value, and investors can lose principal, as interest rates rise. They also may be affected by economic conditions that hinder an issuer’s ability to make interest and principal payments on its debt.

This includes prepayment risk, the risk that the principal of a bond that is held by a portfolio will be prepaid prior to maturity, at the time when interest rates are lower than what the bond was paying. A portfolio may then have to reinvest that money at a lower interest rate.

International investments entail risks including fluctuation in currency values, differences in accounting principles, or economic or political instability. Investing in emerging markets can be riskier than investing in established foreign markets due to increased volatility, lower trading volume, and higher risk of market closures. In many emerging markets, there is substantially less publicly available information and the available information may be incomplete or misleading. Legal claims are generally more difficult to pursue.

Fluctuations in exchange rates between various foreign currencies may cause the value of the investment to decline. The market for some (or all) currencies may from time to time have low trading volume and become illiquid, which may prevent the Strategy from effecting positions or from promptly liquidating unfavourable positions in such markets, thus subjecting the investment to substantial losses. 

IBOR risk is the risk that changes related to the use of the London interbank offered rate (LIBOR) or similar rates (such as EONIA) could have adverse impacts on financial instruments that reference these rates. The abandonment of these rates and transition to alternative rates could affect the value and liquidity of instruments that reference them and could affect investment strategy performance.

The disruptions caused by natural disasters, pandemics, or similar events could prevent the Strategy from executing advantageous investment decisions in a timely manner and could negatively impact the Strategy’s ability to achieve its investment objective and the value of the Strategy’s investments.

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