'Fixed income' is a broad asset class that includes government bonds, corporate bonds, and asset-backed securities. It is called 'fixed income' because these assets provide a return in the form of fixed periodic payments.
Fixed income investments are defensive in nature, and generally less volatile than equities. They have the potential to provide investors with benefits such as capital preservation, income generation and diversification.
Fixed income comes in many forms
Historically investors had a limited choice of fixed income securities; most were government bonds. Over the past 20 years, there has been a significant increase in the types of fixed income investments in the market. Types of fixed income managed funds include a range of cash, credit, currency, Australian fixed income, and global fixed income solutions, as well as exchange traded funds.
The types of fixed income investments and their relative risk levels are summarised below.
Type | Description | Typical Risk Profile |
Government | Government bonds are also known as Sovereigns and Treasuries. Governments issue bonds to pay for government activities and pay off their debt obligations. |
Low to moderate risk, depending on term length (1 year Government bonds typically have the lowest risk) |
Semi Government or Agency | Semi government bonds are issued by Australian states and territories to support their mandates, typically to ensure that various constituencies have access to sufficient credit at affordable rates. | Moderate risk |
Corporate | Corporate bonds are also referred to as credit. Corporations issue bonds to expand, modernise, cover expenses and finance other activities. | Moderate to high risk |
Asset-backed | Banks and other lending institutions pool assets, such as mortgages, and offer them as security to investors. This raises money so the institutions can offer more mortgages. | Moderate to high risk |
High-yield | High-yield bonds are fixed income securities that are described by investment ratings agencies as ‘below investment grade'. They are usually issued by corporations, and they pay higher rates of return to compensate for their higher risk. | High risk |
Why invest in fixed income?
An allocation to fixed income assets can play a vital role in managing total portfolio risk. It can be used to provide diversification from equity risk, a potential source of liquidity, potential regular income or even as a potential source of total return.
1. Potential regular income: Fixed income can provide a regular and reliable source of income
Coupon income is the key source of returns for fixed income securities, or bonds. Coupons are regular, contractual payments, paid throughout the lifetime of a bond. As a result, fixed income generally contains an explicit income obligation, providing more predictable income streams.
In comparison, dividends from equities are highly reliant on company profit and ultimately are discretionary, so they can fluctuate significantly. As such while not guaranteed, an allocation to fixed income has the potential to provide more predictable and reliable sources of income.
2. Diversification: Fixed income can offer diversification benefits against equity risk; potentially with benefits greater than what could be sourced from cash
Economist and Nobel Prize winner Harry Markowitz coined the phrase “diversification is the only free lunch” in investing. This refers to the concept of diversifying risk across multiple asset classes in order to maximise risk adjusted returns and smooth the overall investment journey.
An allocation to more defensive assets, such as fixed income, has the potential to help to protect portfolios against equity market volatility. Bonds generally exhibit a lower risk, or variation in returns, and over the long term are negatively correlated to equity returns, with the ability to provide a buffer to a diversified portfolio during times of stress.
For example, a simplified balanced portfolio of 60% equities* and 40% bonds* would have recovered its losses during the Global Financial Crisis in almost half the time of a 100% holding in equities*.
Months to recover from a crisis
Source: Macquarie and Bloomberg. For Japan, calculation based on the *Tokyo Stock Exchange Price Index and *10-year Japanese government bonds. For Australia, calculation based on *Australian All Ordinaries index and *10-year Australian Commonwealth Government Bond. 1987 period begins October 1987, 2007, period begins November 2007, 1986, period begins December 1986.
3. Liquidity: Fixed income can provide a source of liquidity
Liquidity is the ability to convert an asset into cash quickly and efficiently, when needed. The liquidity profile of an asset is a significant consideration when investors seek to access the wealth they have built. As the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated, liquidity remains an important requirement for investors. Even though the COVID impacts on markets were transient, some investors were left with illiquid assets and forced to sell in weak market conditions.
Fixed income provides access to a large, global market of securities, more than double the size of global equity markets and almost 80% larger than Australian equity markets. As such, an allocation to daily liquid, fixed income assets have the potential to provide an important source of liquidity for investors, enabling access to investments quickly and efficiently. Examples of more liquid fixed income investments include government bonds, semi-government bonds and some corporate bonds.
^Source: BIS quarterly review, September 2021. *Total market capitalisation on the MSCI All Country All World Index as at May 2022. +Total market capitalisation on the Australian All Ordinaries Index as at May 2022
4. Return potential: The fixed income universe is wide and diverse, and can offer opportunities for compelling returns
Fixed income markets are the largest capital markets in the world, providing a range of attractive opportunities for investors across the risk / return spectrum over the long term.
Importantly, actively managed solutions can help to provide additional potential returns derived from fixed income markets. Professional fixed income managers seek out active investment opportunities whilst managing downside risks with the aim of delivering a smoother return profile for investors.
Average yield-to-maturity across fixed income markets*
Source: Bloomberg
The following indices have been used to represent the different parts of the fixed income investment universe above: Global bonds – Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index; Global investment grade corporate – Bloomberg Global Aggregate Credit Total Return Index; EMD sovereign – ICE BofA Emerging Markets Sovereign Bond Index; ICE BofA Emerging Markets Diversified Corporate Index; Global high yield – Bloomberg Global High Yield Index.
*Yield-to-maturity is the return that would be earned over the next year if there were no changes to interest rates and assuming there are no changes to the underlying investments. The number which is quoted is before fees.
Yield-to-maturity is not the actual return that an investor can expect to receive investing in these indices. Average yield-to-maturity has been calculated as the average of the monthly yield-to-worst over the last 20 years or since inception of the relevant index.
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