Active management vital to manage sovereign risk

In an era of downgrades managing sovereign risk is a growing concern, and in the current environment investors need to actively manage their fixed income portfolios, says Russell Investment’s Andrew Pease.

Pease (pictured), Russell’s Asia Pacific chief investment strategist, notes that investors which follow a fixed income index will find it hard to manage their risk. This is because, while equity indexes reward successful companies which, therefore, have large market capitalisations, fixed income indexes are dominated by large debt issuers.

“Basically, if you follow the index in fixed income you are essentially taking more and more exposure to entities that are issuing the most debt, and that may not always be the best thing to do,” Pease says.

When it comes to sovereign exposure investors should look closely not just at the balance sheet and the economic fundamentals of a country but at its particular domestic political situation.

“In addition to the level of debt, there are two factors that determine whether a sovereign default actually occurs,” he says.

“These factors are the ability and the willingness to repay. A country can default selectively on its obligations even when it has the capacity to service its debts. Willingness to repay the debts is very much a political consideration.”

Sponsored Content

Pease, who will be speaking at the Top1000funds.com Fiduciary Investors Symposium from October 23-26 in Beijing, compares the current situation in highly indebted Japan to that of Russia when it defaulted in 1998.

Russia defaulted with a debt to GDP ratio of 57 per cent, far below Japan’s debt levels, now hovering around 200 per cent debt to GDP.

“Japan is a high-debt country, but the issue with Japan is that it still runs a significant current account surplus, so they are getting more money from overseas than they send overseas,” Pease says.

“Something like 90 per cent of Japanese government bonds are also either directly or indirectly through their pension funds owned by the Japanese people. So, it makes it very hard for the Japanese government to default on its own electors.”

With credit ratings agencies lagging the market, it is also important that investors pay attention to changes in market expectations regarding a country’s sovereign debt, says Pease.

“Ratings agencies are forced to stand behind these static recommendations; it is very hard for them to change their views, whereas the market can change its views daily,” he says.

“Hence, the need for active management in fixed income.”

Outside of sovereign debt, Pease says that a low-returns environment, risk aversion in financial markets, and strong corporate balance sheets will see continuing strong demand for high quality corporate debt.

Traditionally, the difference between the corporate and sovereign debt yields has been approximately 150 basis points. But Pease says he expects this yield differential to narrow to around 100 basis points in the next five years.

From a regional standpoint Pease says credit default swap rates have improved for many countries in Asia, indicating that emerging markets are seen as less risky than they were in the past.

However, he says investors still need to consider issues of capital controls, and currency interventions by governments trying to shield their economies from the problems in Europe and the US.

He also cautions about the Chinese economy, saying it faces considerable challenges in the medium term as it seeks to re-balance its economy.

“China has got a relatively unbalanced growth model, with high reliance on investment and a declining share of consumption as a share of GDP,” he says.

“I think that is going to have to be one of the issues that will have to be resolved. The Chinese government’s stated plan is to lift the share of consumption from somewhere around 35 per cent to about 50 per cent over the next 10 years or so.

“But it is going to be very hard to achieve. The ability of China to be able to transform its economy will be one of the key watch points in the region.”

In a low-returns environment, where active management is increasingly needed to achieve alpha, Pease says deciding to use scarce active management resources on the fixed income side of the portfolio makes sense.

“It is about having a much better understanding of where risk is,” he says.

“Particularly on the sovereign side, it means thinking harder about what relative risk spreads mean and whether you are being adequately compensated for the risk you are taking.”

Leave a Comment

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest, the largest workplace pension in the UK, says that private credit managers who prioritise institutional clients will be more favourably viewed. The £61 billion ($82 billion) fund has awarded a £450 million ($605 million) US direct lending mandate to Crescent Capital this month, citing the manager's institutional-client-first approach as a key attraction.

Sort content by

Infra risks misunderstood

Investors in infrastructure do know how much risk they are taking and they are not happy about it, according to the 2019 EDHECinfra/G20 survey. This is the first installment of a three part series examining the results according to asset allocation, monitoring and risk management.

USS invests in EM linkers

The £65 billion Universities Superannuation Scheme is investing in inflation-linked emerging market bonds to profit from developing economies higher bonds yields and levels of inflation.

CalPERS wants PE ideas for new entity

The CalPERS’ board has approved the first step in the creation of a new private equity model, and now the fund’s CEO, Marcie Frost, is looking for advice on how to structure such an entity.

MetallRente builds risk return culture

A new fund in Germany combining liquidity, dynamic equity exposure and strong ESG focus is against the mould of the country’s more conservative, insurance-led investment style, and Heribert Karch, managing director of MetallRente which offers the fund, is determined to bring a return-seeking investment culture to Germany.

Oregon makes fees work

The $77. 3 billion Oregon Public Employee Retirement Fund has continued to achieve top decile returns at the same time as de-risking and reconstituting half its giant portfolio.

There’s alpha in Chinese equities

The returns of long-term investors are driven by economic growth so it is difficult to ignore China as a big part of the future investment opportunities, a panel of experts told delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium.

Previous