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Contents. Opportunities and Threats in 2010Liquidity: Engineered fundsCredit-Spreads: TOPS fundsInflation risk: Inflation-linked fundsAppendix. . . Opportunities and Threats in 2010. Risk/Return Factors in the Fixed Income Asset Class. . . . maturity. yield. . . . . . . credit risk premium. liqu
 
                
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1. Fixed Income  Challenges in a low interest rate environmentMaurizio PedriniApril 2010 
2. Contents Opportunities and Threats in 2010
Liquidity: Engineered funds
Credit-Spreads: TOPS funds
Inflation risk: Inflation-linked funds
Appendix 
4. Risk/Return Factors in the Fixed Income Asset Class 
5. De-leveraging process has just started 
11. Biggest Part of Budget Deficits in Europe is Structural 
12. EMU Sovereigns  Indebtedness relative to GDP (%) 
 
14. Inflation will Remain Tame in the Short Run 
16. Opportunities and Threats for 2010 Interest Rates
Interest rates are generally on a low level  risk of a sudden rise
Very steep yield curves mean high opportunity cost of capital
Considerable risks in sovereign bonds (Dubai, Greece,)
? Flexibility of chosen strategy is important (liquidity!)
Credit-Spreads
Economic recovery helps  what happens when government stimulus gets withdrawn? 
Credit spreads are still at historically attractive levels
? Focus needs to be on issuer selection 
Inflation
No immediate threat
Expansionary monetary policy and rising sovereign debts pose significant risks in the longer term
? Inflation risk is not sufficiently discounted by the market 
18. Traditional vs. Synthetic Fixed Income Funds 
19. Synthetic Money Market and Portable Alpha Portable Alpha Strategy
To enhance this money market return, a small part of the fund (5% to 10%) is invested in a portable alpha strategy 
This strategy is a mechanical equity index arbitrage strategy which invests in single stocks subject to corporate events (e.g. inclusions/exclusions from an index) and hedges the systematic equity risk with index futures
This means that the fund doesn't have any systematic equity risk, only a small additional volatility coming from the excess returns of the portable alpha strategy 
20. Interest Rate Risk        and Credit Risk (incl. Counterparty Risk) Interest rate risk: Positioning with respect to the benchmark along the dimensions duration and curve
Credit risk is implemented through index CDS (iTraxx) and single name sovereign CDS
Diversification
Liquidity
Credit risk can be quickly eliminated with low transaction costs
Counterparty risk is
only a fraction of the notional exposure
diversified across several counterparties (best execution)
subject to limits
constantly monitored
actively managed
 
21. Performance Credit Suisse Fund (Lux) Relative Return Engineered (Euro) 
22. Performance Credit Suisse Fund (Lux) Relative Return Engineered (Euro), (net) 
24. Focus is on Credit Duration 
27. Enhanced flexibility without higher risk 
28. Key Features 
29. Credit Suisse Bond Fund (Lux) TOPS US$ 
30. An Alternative to Reducing The Interest Rate Risk 
32. How do Inflation-Linked Bonds work? 
33. Impact of an inflation shock on the bond markets 
34. Efficient Frontier with Inflation Linked Bonds 
35. Investors are not Properly Compensated for Long Term Inflation Risk 
37. We use instruments that few people know that they exist: inflation swaps.
Work like plain vanilla interest rate swap: pay fixed and receive floating
Pay: Fixed leg is a fixed percentage (e.g. 2% over 10 years)
Receive: Floating leg is determined ex post as realised inflation
If inflation is high, I receive a larger payment and vice versa.
Value of swap increases with inflation; hence, the swap can be interpreted as an insurance against inflation.
Note: inflation swap market is very liquid; bid-ask spread of 3-5 bps; standardized contracts as plain vanilla interest rate swaps; transferable contracts (ISDA agreements); pricing is not complicatedWe use instruments that few people know that they exist: inflation swaps.
Work like plain vanilla interest rate swap: pay fixed and receive floating
Pay: Fixed leg is a fixed percentage (e.g. 2% over 10 years)
Receive: Floating leg is determined ex post as realised inflation
If inflation is high, I receive a larger payment and vice versa.
Value of swap increases with inflation; hence, the swap can be interpreted as an insurance against inflation.
Note: inflation swap market is very liquid; bid-ask spread of 3-5 bps; standardized contracts as plain vanilla interest rate swaps; transferable contracts (ISDA agreements); pricing is not complicated 
38. Slide shows central idea of our portfolio enhancement: Combination of traditional bonds with inflation swaps
Part of nominal coupon of traditional bonds is used to pay fixed leg of swap.
Floating leg has same effect as inflation adjustment in IL bond
Combination: bond + inflation swap = synthetic IL bond
In portfolio context:
build a standard fixed-income portfolio, independent of offer of IL bonds & with ratings as we like
use inflation swaps as insurance against inflation (like a swap overlay)
small number of swaps used to hedge overall exposure of total portfolio (e.g. 8 swaps for 60 bonds)
Slide shows central idea of our portfolio enhancement: Combination of traditional bonds with inflation swaps
Part of nominal coupon of traditional bonds is used to pay fixed leg of swap.
Floating leg has same effect as inflation adjustment in IL bond
Combination: bond + inflation swap = synthetic IL bond
In portfolio context:
build a standard fixed-income portfolio, independent of offer of IL bonds & with ratings as we like
use inflation swaps as insurance against inflation (like a swap overlay)
small number of swaps used to hedge overall exposure of total portfolio (e.g. 8 swaps for 60 bonds)
 
39. An Alternative to Reducing Interest Rate Risk 
40. Difference of Inflation  Switzerland, France and the USA 		France	USA	EMU (since 1998)
Average       	-2.07%	-1.17%	-0.97%
Standard Deviation	3.46%	2.55%	0.60%	
Correlation with Swiss Inflation 	0.5		0.54	0.81 
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