Like most credit products, the performance of securitized assets tends to be tied to the health of the economy. The difference is that securitized credit can provide exposure to specific parts of the economy (for example, consumer, housing, commercial real estate) with different performance drivers, thereby potentially reducing correlations with other fixed income sectors. Furthermore, large portions of the securitized credit universe have shorter durations versus other areas of credit, which can act as a hedge to longer-duration holdings in a scenario in which inflation or rates surprise to the upside.
We see opportunities in areas such as:
- Residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) and collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) — By sifting carefully through deal terms, we think it is possible to uncover attractive stories within RMBS and CLO segments. We think that RMBS have accumulated enough structural support from embedded home-price appreciation and previous prepayments to withstand meaningful home-price declines, while CLOs benefit from resilient bank-loan fundamentals, supportive demand, robust structures, and a favorable regulatory framework.
- Commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) — These face well-documented structural challenges (notably, working from home and higher interest rates), yet we believe the office sector may be finding a bottom. In our view, the market is pricing in overly pessimistic assumptions just as “green shoots” begin to emerge. What we’re watching closely: the risk of higher yields that could amplify refinancing concerns for already troubled office loans.
- Aircraft asset-backed securities (ABS) — This niche, undervalued sector requires deep, bottom-up diligence on structures and collateral characteristics. We believe structured finance research can help uncover attractive opportunities to be a liquidity provider with these investments.
Structural complexity
It is important to recognize that today’s securitized market is substantially more regulated, with stronger structures, and has vastly stricter underwriting standards compared to those that prevailed prior to the global financial crisis. One notable protection is the natural deleveraging that securitizations experience over time. Underlying collateral pools tend to be amortizing, with principal cash flows paying down senior bonds, deleveraging the structures, and building credit support. We believe the inherent complexity of this asset class also presents potential opportunity for those who have the appropriate tools and the willingness to conduct the deep research required to analyze these securities.
Opportunities to increase exposure as dislocations arise
In our view, securitized credit remains an attractive strategic allocation, benefiting from income at attractive yields and embedded protection provided by the potential for capital appreciation. At this stage of the cycle, we think it is important to remain focused on sector rotation, security selection, and carry while waiting for opportunities to increase exposure. Bouts of volatility — potentially driven by geopolitical/election developments or central bank policy mistakes — could generate greater idiosyncratic dispersion and create attractive entry points to add securitized credit exposure.
Equity Market Outlook
In our Equity Market Outlook, we offer a range of fundamental, factor, and sector insights.
By
Andrew Heiskell
Nicolas Wylenzek