Morningstar releases fixed interest sector review
Morningstar has completed research on the fixed interest sector and new ratings, which includes five ratings upgrades as well as two downgrades.
No ‘recommended’ strategies from the 2007 review were able to make the leap to ‘highly recommended’, Morningstar said.
Dimensional Five-Year Diversified Fixed Interest, Macquarie Income Opportunities, PM Capital Enhanced Yield, and UBS Diversified Fixed Income all moved from ‘investment grade’ to ‘recommended’ on the basis of improved conviction. BlackRock Monthly Income also moved from ‘on hold’ to ‘investment grade’.
There were also two major downgrades. “The biggest change was undoubtedly the downgrade of Putnam Worldwide Income from ‘highly recommended’ to ‘investment grade’,” Morningstar said. “Our loss of conviction was due to team cutbacks and, most importantly, recognition that the strategy is far more aggressive than we had been led to believe by Putnam in the past.”
Aberdeen Australian Fixed Income also moved from ‘recommended’ to ‘investment grade’ due to uncertainties surrounding Aberdeen’s acquisition of parts of Credit Suisse’s global asset management business in early 2009.
“Investing with a broad based fixed interest fund manager may help investors sidestep sector-specific jolts, but it’s far more important to understand and accept the risks borne when building a truly diversified portfolio,” Morningstar said. “It’s important not to take fund labels at face value, especially so in an asset class commonly thought of as defensive.”
Several high profile funds did not perform as their names would suggest in 2008 and 2009, and also did not fully describe the risks within the portfolios, Morningstar said.
“We found that most funds we previously designated core holdings performed as expected, largely protecting capital in 2008 but not participating in a major way in the 2009 rally, while the more concentrated and riskier vehicles we typically allocate our supporting player designation to were often those that suffered on the downside in 2008 but rebounded most rapidly in 2009,” Morningstar added.
Recommended for you
With the final tally for FY25 now confirmed, how many advisers left during the financial year and how does it compare to the previous year?
HUB24 has appointed Matt Willis from Vanguard as an executive general manager of platform growth to strengthen the platform’s relationships with industry stakeholders.
Investment manager Drummond Capital Partners has announced a raft of adviser-focused updates, including a practice growth division, relaunched manager research capabilities, and a passive model portfolio suite.
When it comes to M&A activity, the share of financial buyers such as private equity firms in Australia fell from 67 per cent to 12 per cent in the last financial year.