Active bond funds are outperforming their passive counterparts
Bonds are different
- Noneconomic investors make up roughly 47% of the $102 trillion global bond market.Central banks, insurance companies and other noneconomic investors typically have objectives other than generating alpha. Central banks, for instance, may buy bonds to weaken their currency or boost inflation and asset prices. Commercial banks and insurance companies may care more about book yield or credit ratings than total return. The result: noneconomic investors leave alpha potential on the table for active bond managers.
- The composition of bond indexes changes frequently. When fixed income securities join or leave an index, their prices tend to rise or fall as passive investors rush to buy or sell. Active investors seek to anticipate and profit from these changes.
- Bonds, unlike stocks, mature after a number of years, leading to more turnover in the bond market. New securities make up about 20% of bond market capitalization annually, compared with about 1% in equity markets. Importantly, they typically are offered at concessional pricing to drive demand. Yet these discounts are generally not available to passive managers, who tend to buy new securities when they join an index, often a couple of weeks after they've been issued.
- Structural tilts can be an important source of durable added value. Active managers, for instance, can target factors such as duration and exposures to high yield credit, mortgages, high yielding currencies and other sources of potential alpha.
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IMAGE: REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
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Published May 17, 2017
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