Quality Growth Boutique
A steady hand in volatile markets
What does Russia’s invasion of Ukraine portend for China and Taiwan? How do you identify quality companies amid unpredictable regulatory and political environments? How should you consider absolute risks on a country level? Cheryl Gedvila, Client Portfolio Manager, addresses these difficult questions to help investors navigate markets today.
Quality Growth Boutique
Female leadership – what it looks like
Last year the Fortune 500 had a record 41 women CEOs. Yet US women earned just $83 for each $100 by men on average, reflecting the corporate ladder’s ‘broken rungs.’ This blog looks at female led company profiles, workplace headwinds for women, and ways to improve the flow of meritocracy.
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Investors are overreacting to banks’ Russia exposure
European bank equity has been among the hardest hit sectors since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as fears of losses and a flight to quality have prompted investors to change positioning.
Quality Growth Boutique
The thrill of being consistently boring
Unglamorous stock research, resisting the whims of the markets, and preparing for the worst can be downright boring. But it’s a great way to find quality international companies that can help reduce portfolio risk and improve downside protection – exciting results during these uncertain times.
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Steady Fed makes short end look attractive
Escalating geopolitical tensions have contributed to a volatile past week for investors, but uncertainty regarding central bank action continues to dominate the bond markets, with one investment bank now predicting nine straight hikes from the Fed beginning at its March meeting.
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Taking the temperature of credit markets
So far this year, the spread between two-year and 10-year US Treasury yields has declined from 77bp to 51bp.
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What are government bonds saying?
Yield curve shape and yield curve change are often good predictors of the state of the economy and its outlook.
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Managing the downturn
As 2021 wore on we became increasingly concerned that the disconnect between asset prices, economic fundamentals and monetary policy was becoming more acute.
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Buyers blunt BoE’s bond bombshell
Last week investors were faced with a double whammy of monetary tightening from the Bank of England (BoE), which on Thursday hiked interest rates by 25bp and announced the gradual unwind of its £20bn corporate bond portfolio.
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Why central bank policy errors should be top of your 2022 worry list
With inflation soaring and the economic recovery looking more fragile, we look at three famous central bank policy errors to demonstrate why they can be so dangerous for investors, and consider how a fixed income portfolio can be strengthened against the risk.
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TwentyFour Q1 2022 Investor Update
For our Q1 fixed income event, Mark Holman, portfolio manager at Vontobel boutique TwentyFour Asset Management, provided an update on the firm’s flagship, global unconstrained strategy, the Vontobel Fund – TwentyFour Strategic Income Fund.
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What will turn this market around?
For fixed income investors, the start to 2022 has been trickier than any we have experienced for many years, but we think this difficulty is to be expected and aligns with our macro view.
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Making sense of corporate bond softness
After a challenging January, which saw markets beginning to come to terms with a very hawkish Fed pivot and rising Russia-Ukraine tensions, it is worth taking stock of the moves we have seen in fixed income over the last few weeks.
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Catching up the curve
Yesterday was a noisy day for the Bank of England (BoE) and European Central Bank (ECB), usually an undesirable situation for market participants.
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The CLO factory pauses for breath
The first month of 2022 has passed, and it’s been quite a roller coaster for broader equity and credit markets, with volatility climbing to its highest level since January 2021.
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UK RMBS floating above the fray
After a relatively quiet period during the closing weeks last year, the primary ABS market has enjoyed a solid start to 2022.
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Yields soften blow of Powell’s hard words
Powell’s hard line may have surprised investors, particularly in light of recent market volatility and increasing geopolitical risk in Eastern Europe, but the Fed’s fear of prolonged higher inflation looks to be trumping those concerns.
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Strategic Income Quarterly Update – January 2022
A member of our Multi-Sector Bond team discusses market conditions in Q4 2021 and provides her outlook for the new year.
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Short Term Bond Quarterly Update – January 2022
TwentyFour Partner and Portfolio Manager, Gordon Shannon, discusses how the short term bond strategy has performed in Q4 2021 and provides his outlook for the new year.
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Asset-Backed Securities Quarterly Update – January 2022
TwentyFour Partner and Portfolio Manager, Douglas Charleston, explains how ABS markets have performed in Q4 2021 and provides his outlook for the new year.
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European ABS: Five things to expect in 2022
If 2021 was a bad year for global bond returns, it follows there were few natural shelters to be found within fixed income from the brunt of inflation and rates-driven volatility; the Barclays Global Aggregate Index (a widely used broad measure of bond performance) returned -4.7% in USD terms, while European investment grade credit returned -1.1% despite credit spreads tightening over the course of the year.
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Three strategies for beating inflation with bonds
Inflation was the dominant theme across financial markets in 2021, and we think it is likely to be a big driver of returns again in 2022.
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Why so quiet at the Bank of England?
It has been a very interesting start to the year in the rates sector of the market.
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French government pulls the plug on EDF
Électricité de France (EDF) shares fell by as much as 25% on Friday morning after the French government announced exceptional measures to limit the impact of high electricity prices on French consumers, at the expense of the energy provider – the shares are down over 30% since start of December.