You are currently viewing the United States website Institutional website. You can change your location here or visit other RBC GAM websites.

Welcome to the RBC Global Asset Management site for Institutional Investors

In order to proceed to the site, please accept our Terms & Conditions.

This RBC Global Asset Management (U.S.) Website is intended for institutional investors only.

For purposes of this Website, the term "Institutional" includes but is not limited to sophisticated non-retail investors such as investment companies, banks, insurance companies, investment advisers, plan sponsors, endowments, government entities, high net worth individuals and those acting on behalf of institutional investors. The Website contains information, material and content about RBC Global Asset Management (collectively, the “Information”).

The Website and the Information are provided for information purposes only and do not constitute an offer, solicitation or invitation to buy or sell a security, any other product or service, or to participate in any particular trading strategy. The Website and the Information are not directed at or intended for use by any person resident or located in any jurisdiction where (1) the distribution of such information or functionality is contrary to the laws of such jurisdiction or (2) such distribution is prohibited without obtaining the necessary licenses and such authorizations have not been obtained. Investment strategies may not be eligible for sale or available to residents of certain countries or certain categories of investors.

The Information is provided without regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any specific recipient and does not constitute investment, tax, accounting or legal advice. Recipients are strongly advised to make an independent review with an investment professional and reach their own conclusions regarding the investment merits and risks, legal, credit, tax and accounting aspects of any transactions.

Accept Decline
org.apache.velocity.tools.view.context.ChainedContext@586f3291

BlueBay Senior Portfolio Manager, Mihai Florian, and Portfolio Manager, Duncan Farley, recently sat down with Institutional Investor to share insights into private credit opportunities and how they’ve evolved over time.

Private equity and private credit have dominated the conversation around where institutional investors are targeting their assets in recent years, but of late intriguing opportunities have begun to surface in distressed credit and emerging markets credit – in part because they aren’t the same old same old.

“Funds have been focused on private credit for some time now, and frankly that’s been a good investment,” says Duncan Farley, Portfolio Manager, Leveraged Finance, RBC BlueBay Asset Management. “The first ones launched have done very well, and there’s a feel-good factor around that. Based on what we hear from clients, some are still happy to have that exposure – but more and more of them are suddenly suggesting they might want to increase their distressed exposure. Two years ago – even a year ago – they wouldn’t have been saying that.”

In Europe, for example, there are currently just under 1,500 high-yield bond issues out there, not including levered loans. Just shy of 650 of those are already trading below .90 cents.

“There’s already stress in the European high yield market. Investors – including our firm – are looking for stressed opportunities, and they have a lot more to consider today,” says Farley. “We’re not quite into what I might call a distress cycle – and no one really wants to be. That depends on whether today’s markets and global economies end up experiencing a hard or soft landing.

An evolving opportunity

Farley and the team are predominantly focused on stressed and distressed opportunities in the public and the private markets, and he is careful to distinguish between liquid and illiquid “because not everything private is necessarily illiquid, and illiquid has been hard to come by in distressed more recently,” he says.

Over the last 10 years or so it hasn’t been a deep market in the U.S. or Europe. As a result, distressed funds (or credit opportunity funds, among several other handles) have been more focused on the public markets.

“Given the price action that we’ve seen in those public markets for high yield or levered loans, it’s time to take a breath,” says Farley. “Many debt instruments are trading in the 80s, and that doesn’t strike us as an irresistible opportunity – whereas for the past 10 years, if you bought bonds and loans in the 80s you’ve ridden a nice wave. The current market requires a more nuanced and sophisticated view. By and large, tread carefully. At the same time, we are starting to see the opportunity set emerge for private markets and distressed, but it’s still early days.”

Cycle-proofing emerging markets

This has been a year of transition to what may be a new post-Covid normal, and in emerging market private credit that means (among many things) being prepared for whatever hand investors are dealt.

“We have a variety of sleeves in our emerging market strategies,” says Mihai Florian, Senior Portfolio Manager, RBC BlueBay Asset Management. “From secondaries to new money to stressed and more, the sleeves are there to ensure no matter where we are in a cycle we have a sleeve for the current market conditions.”

Florian has observed sources of opportunity result from the market dislocations of the past two years. For starters, more blue-chip corporates are willing to pay extra for accessing international markets.

“In that context, we’re seeing more new money opportunities from corporates that would not normally look at private credit in normal market conditions,” he says, “and we also expect the stress bucket to keep us busy farther down the line. Regardless of where the market could go on the EM side, we have various pockets that can help us shape a view.”

In addition, Florian sees opportunity for more than just the yield hunting institutional investors have done in EMs in recent years.

“Recently senior private credit strategies were barely producing low single-digit yield in developed markets,” he says. “At the moment, investors are being a bit more selective. At the same time, they have an appetite and the assets to allocate, and realize if they deploy capital now they can lock in a much better opportunity, both from a risk and return perspective. The market is definitely in flux, but ultimately see interest and value in our strategy.”

Identifying risk

Managing risk is vital to the opportunity in emerging market credit, and step one in mitigation is identification. Florian keeps an eye on three main areas of risk. Two are fairly commonly cited – legal risk and reputational risk. But neither is the leading reason EM companies experience fiscal challenges.

“The number one reason local corporates experience financial difficulties is FX,” he says. “We all know that emerging markets currencies typically go through devaluation periods, and it ultimately affects the performance of the local companies. It’s a risk you have to live with and mitigate for in EMs. That’s why we focus only on hard currency instruments. The underlying loans are actually dollars or euros.”

In fact, Florian and his team go an extra step by focusing on borrowers with hard currency revenues.

“It would surprise a lot of investors to learn how large a portion of revenue for some local corporates is hard currency because as borrowers they’ve been living with FX devaluation for decades,” he says. “It can be export lead or even internal local business. Infrastructure and ports, for example, have hard currency revenues.”

View the print version here.

Disclosure

This document is provided by RBC Global Asset Management (RBC GAM) for informational purposes only and may not be reproduced, distributed or published without the written consent of RBC GAM or its affiliated entities listed herein. This document does not constitute an offer or a solicitation to buy or to sell any security, product or service in any jurisdiction; nor is it intended to provide investment, financial, legal, accounting, tax, or other advice and such information should not be relied or acted upon for providing such advice. This document is not available for distribution to investors in jurisdictions where such distribution would be prohibited. RBC GAM is the asset management division of Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) which includes RBC Global Asset Management Inc., RBC Global Asset Management (U.S.) Inc., RBC Global Asset Management (UK) Limited, RBC Global Asset Management (Asia) Limited, and BlueBay Asset Management LLP, which are separate, but affiliated subsidiaries of RBC. In Canada, this document is provided by RBC Global Asset Management Inc. (including PH&N Institutional) which is regulated by each provincial and territorial securities commission with which it is registered. In the United States, this document is provided by RBC Global Asset Management (U.S.) Inc., a federally registered investment adviser. In Europe this document is provided by RBC Global Asset Management (UK) Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the UK Financial Conduct Authority. In Asia, this document is provided by RBC Global Asset Management (Asia) Limited, which is registered with the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) in Hong Kong. Additional information about RBC GAM may be found at www.rbcgam.com. This document has not been reviewed by, and is not registered with any securities or other regulatory authority, and may, where appropriate and permissible, be distributed by the above-listed entities in their respective jurisdictions. Any investment and economic outlook information contained in this document has been compiled by RBC GAM from various sources. Information obtained from third parties is believed to be reliable, but no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made by RBC GAM, its affiliates or any other person as to its accuracy, completeness or correctness. RBC GAM and its affiliates assume no responsibility for any errors or omissions. Opinions contained herein reflect the judgment and thought leadership of RBC GAM and are subject to change at any time. Such opinions are for informational purposes only and are not intended to be investment or financial advice and should not be relied or acted upon for providing such advice. RBC GAM does not undertake any obligation or responsibility to update such opinions. RBC GAM reserves the right at any time and without notice to change, amend or cease publication of this information. Past performance is not indicative of future results. With all investments there is a risk of loss of all or a portion of the amount invested. Where return estimates are shown, these are provided for illustrative purposes only and should not be construed as a prediction of returns; actual returns may be higher or lower than those shown and may vary substantially, especially over shorter time periods. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Some of the statements contained in this document may be considered forward-looking statements which provide current expectations or forecasts of future results or events. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance or events and involve risks and uncertainties. Do not place undue reliance on these statements because actual results or events may differ materially from those described in such forward-looking statements as a result of various factors. Before making any investment decisions, we encourage you to consider all relevant factors carefully.