Investments  

Bezalel battens down the hatches

Jupiter’s new star asset-gatherer, bond fund manager Ariel Bezalel, is battening down the hatches as a flurry of red flags loom large over global markets.

The manager has overhauled his £2.2bn Jupiter Strategic Bond fund, which is able to invest across the fixed income spectrum from government bonds to investment grade and high yield, putting it on a more defensive footing.

Citing the deteriorating global geopolitical backdrop, most prominently in the Middle East, China/Hong Kong, as well as Russia and Ukraine, Mr Bezalel said he was “very much in capital-preservation mode”.

Article continues after advert

In addition, he pointed out that not only had there been a collapse in commodity prices, most notably in copper, but there was a “big whiff of deflation now hanging over markets”.

The fact the end of supportive monetary policy, known as quantitative easing, is edging ever closer – particularly in the US – is also a concern.

“This all makes me very uncomfortable to be invested in corporate credit,” he said.

“It feels like we are heading into quite a volatile environment and credit across the board does not feel very good right now.”

Mr Bezalel was recently hailed by group chief executive Maarten Slendebroek as being at the vanguard of its efforts to expand across Europe, with his Dynamic Bond fund selling well internationally.

The manager is one of a new breed of future stars for the firm, which has seen the departure of several big names, including Tony Nutt and Philip Gibbs in recent years.

In order to adopt a defensive stance on his UK-based Strategic Bond fund, he has been buying bonds with increasingly higher credit ratings, including government bonds.

“We have been upping the credit quality and buying, for example, medium- and long-dated, high-quality sovereigns in Australia – it is the only long-dated government bond we own,” he said.

But while he has taken the axe to the riskier section of the fund’s assets, such as shortening high-yield duration, Mr Bezalel has simultaneously been adding an overlay of protection.

He has done this by reducing his contingent convertible exposure and purchasing some put-options on the high-yield side.

“We have been boosting our dollar exposure as another way of protecting the fund, and in terms of credit quality we have shifted up to BBB, to investment grade to help us sleep better at night,” he said.

But the average duration of the fund’s assets – a measure of its sensitivity to rises in interest rates – has “aggressively moved up”, shifting from about 1.75 years to 4.5 years in the past month alone.

Mr Bezalel has moved to invest in bonds with a longer lifespan because he thinks rate rises are unlikely in the immediate future.

“In the US, we will see the Federal Reserve going from hawkish to more dovish,” he said.

“I do not see a rate rise in the next year in the US. Right now, with deflationary forces taking hold, it is in no hurry to raise rates.