Man Dynamic Income Strategy

A corporate bond strategy aiming to provide income and capital growth over the medium to long term. The strategy employs an established bottom-up driven investment approach.
  • The strategy is led by Jonathan Golan, a multi-award-winning fund manager with a wealth of experience running credit strategies.
  • The strategy has a flexible approach, investing across geographies and different sectors, allowing the strategy to benefit from the team’s best ideas, whilst ensuring diversification. The strategy is also able to invest across the credit rating spectrum, with no limit to the strategy’s exposure in below investment grade securities.
  • The team’s rigorous bottom-up driven approach involves a robust underwriting criteria, focusing on individual bonds where the yield greatly overstates the default risk.

Approach

The investment approach has three pillars:

Margin of Safety: The team works relentlessly to identify undervalued individual securities from a bottom-up perspective. That is, only buying bonds where the yield greatly overstates the default risk. The team assesses the default risk by undertaking rigorous credit research, combing through the financials line by line, focusing on cash generation, rather than adjusted earnings.

Alpha not Beta: Each company in the portfolio has an individual credit improvement story, which is typically uncorrelated to the macro or the rates cycle. These bonds tend to be less correlated to one another and the broader market. The result is that we aim to outperform in both rising and falling markets, due to multiple uncorrelated drivers of risk and return.

Small is Beautiful: Whilst the credit market is hugely diversified, it is also concentrated. Large issuers that dominate benchmarks tend to have worse risk/reward, because they typically have higher leverage and a lower yield. Therefore, we focus our time analysing small and medium sized issuers which are less well researched and can often offer attractive expected returns relative to credit risk. Small and medium sized issuers are large companies in the absolute sense.

Approach Long-only
Asset Class Credit
Geographic Focus Global