Home / New managers in Russell’s global bond fund re-jig

New managers in Russell’s global bond fund re-jig

(Al Jalso)
Russell Investments has added two new managers to its international fixed interest fund while reducing allocations to incumbents and layering on a novel currency “positioning strategy”.
Al Jalso, Russell global bond fund portfolio manager, said the revised approach reflects the need to manage liquidity, introduce further diversity and add value in an increasingly challenging fixed income market.
Following the changes, UK-based fixed income managers BlueBay Asset Management and Insight Investment Management will take up 10 per cent and 15 per cent, respectively, of the Russell fund.
In an information sheet, Russell said the revamp should “increase the diversity of multi-sector managers and the global footprint of the underlying investors, as well as the potential levels of expected return as Insight and BlueBay focus intensely on establishing strong global bond track records”.
At the same time, Loomis Sayles and PIMCO will see their allocations reduced to 17 per cent from 30 per cent and 25 per cent, respectively. Colchester, meanwhile, has had its mandate trimmed from 30 per cent to 24 per cent.
London-based Jalso, in NZ last week for client visits, said while the two new managers were familiar to Russell – the firm uses them in other funds – they wiould be pursuing fresh global strategies outside their traditional regional ambits.
“We like getting in early with managers,” he said. “Managers tend to perform strongly in the early phase… that should deliver value, and it’s very difficult to find value in fixed income right now.”
Jalso said post-GFC it was easier to derive value in fixed income markets, for example, by investing in niche US securities mortgage manager, Brookfield – which retains its 10 per cent allocation in the Russell fund.
As part of the product re-engineering, Russell will also shift out of its Absolute Return Bond Fund (previously weighted at 5 per cent) and allocate 7 per cent to a new currency-focused “positioning strategy”.
“… the recently introduced positioning strategy will employ a dynamic strategy focusing on value, trend, and carry currency factors,” the Russell factsheet says. “Historically, currency strategies have had low correlations with interest rates and credit, offering the potential to diversify away from traditional fixed income risks without taking on equity-like risk.”
The strategy will be implemented via currency forwards, an enhanced cash portfolio composed of “high quality and short-dated corporates and governments” and other derivative instruments.
Jalso said with more volatility likely in global fixed income markets, liquidity management would assume a more important role.
“We wanted to hedge the portfolio against a liquidity crunch,” he said. “We’re not necessarily expecting one but [with more volatility] we need to buy some insurance.”
BlueBay, a bottom-up credit manager owned by the Royal Bank of Canada, currently has roughly £40.2 billion (A$78.7 billion) under management. BNY Mellon subsidiary, Insight, which recently purchased US bond manager Cutwater Asset Management, is a “macro sector rotator” with approximately £362.5 billion (A$709.9 billion) in assets.
– David Chaplin, Investment News NZ

Investor Strategy News




  • Print Article

    Related
    How to find hedge funds investing in ‘dynamism and change’: Panel

    There’s around 15,000 hedge funds in the world – but how many of them are really hedge funds? When you’re looking for non- or less-correlated returns, it might pay to stay away from a long bias.

    Lachlan Maddock | 27th Nov 2024 | More
    Optimising portfolio returns with new investing models

    Since the emergence of “Modern Portfolio Theory” and the “Capital Asset Pricing Model” in the late 1960s, institutional investors have taken a quantitatively driven approach to portfolio construction, looking to create portfolio diversification and obtain better risk-adjusted returns by balancing their asset-class exposures. This journey has seen several important advancements in thinking about how to optimally achieve desired results.

    Staff Writer | 22nd Nov 2024 | More
    For total portfolio approach to succeed, funds need more than good intentions

    Funds that want to take the total portfolio approach first need to get the total portfolio view. To do that they not only need data – and lots of it – but a rock-solid understanding of exactly how they’re going to use it.

    Lachlan Maddock | 22nd Nov 2024 | More
    Popular