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Artemis Funds (Lux) – Short-Dated Global High Yield Bond update

David Ennett and Jack Holmes, managers of Artemis Funds (Lux) – Short-Dated Global High Yield Bond, report on the fund over the quarter to 30 June 2024 and their views on the outlook.

Source for all information: Artemis as at 30 June 2024, unless otherwise stated.

Objective

The fund is actively managed. It aims to generate a return greater than the benchmark, after the deduction of costs and charges, over rolling three-year periods, through a combination of income and capital growth.

Performance

The Artemis Funds (Lux) – Short-Dated Global High Yield Bond Fund made 2.0% during the second quarter of 2024, compared with gains of 1.3% from its Sterling Overnight Index Average (SONIA) benchmark and 1.1% from its IA Global High Yield Bond sector average. Having recently celebrated its fifth anniversary, the fund can look back at top-quartile performance over this timeframe, as well as over one, two, three and four years.

Markets were dominated by two developments towards the end of the second quarter. The first of these was positive news on the inflation front, with core US CPI surprising to the downside, especially in the crucial ‘services’ component.

As expected, government bonds took the development well, with global front-end rates rallying as the timing of Fed cuts was – again – brought forward.

The second major theme was the unexpected flare-up of French political risk when President Emmanuel Macron decided to call a snap election in the wake of a heavy defeat in the European Parliament election to Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally.

Markets feared France’s already weak fiscal position would be called into question if populist policies originating from the far left or right (which are often the same) came to pass. As could be expected, risk in
France underperformed, while the country’s five-year government bond yields were flat over the course of June, representing considerable underperformance against German bunds.

We were mercifully light in French risk, but later added some exposure to a higher quality name, Picard, to try to exploit the backdrop. See below for more details on the company.

Discrete performance, 12 months to 30 June
2024 (*) 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015
Artemis Funds (Lux) – Short-Dated Global High Yield Bond 5.0% 12.0% -3.9% 4.9% 1.5% -
Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) 2.7% 5.1% 1.6% 0.0% 0.4%
Past performance is not a guide to the future. Source: Lipper Limited for class I Acc USD. (*) To 30 June 2024. As this class is in a different currency to the fund’s base currency, a local-currency equivalent benchmark has been used. All figures show total returns with dividends and/or income reinvested, net of all charges. Performance does not take account of any costs incurred when investors buy or sell the fund. Returns may vary as a result of currency fluctuations if the investor's currency is different to that of the class.

Positives

The biggest contributors to performance during the quarter were German engineered wood-products maker Pfleiderer, Swedish real estate company Heimstaden and flooring manufacturer Victoria.

Pfleiderer had received a negative reaction to soft first-quarter earnings figures in April. After a part recovery in May, its bonds rallied further as its shareholders announced an equity injection. They are now trading well above their starting level for the quarter.

Meanwhile, Heimstaden rebounded along with the rest of the European property sector and Victoria reassured markets with its outlook and a clarification over a subsidiary’s accounting.

Negatives

Performance was hampered by positions in Sotheby's, which saw a softening auction outlook for the remainder of 2024; medical device maker Owens & Minor, whose chief financial officer left the group unexpectedly; and Ocado, which terminated an agreement with Canadian supermarket chain Sobeys.

Activity

We are fortunate that there continues to be new issuance of five to five-and-a-half years in the global high-yield market. In more sanguine times, higher-quality businesses tend to issue for longer, seven- to 10-year periods, with only the riskiest opting for five years out of necessity. The uncertainty around government bond yields has resulted in more high-quality issuers opting for shorter maturities from the outset. This is why the primary market has played an unusually prominent role in the fund’s activity this quarter.

For example, we bought bonds from cruise operators Carnival and TUI Cruises. These offer a high degree of revenue visibility, impressive pricing power and buoyant demand due to a trend for spending on experiences over physical goods. In our opinion, Carnival will likely re-enter investment-grade territory in two to three years given its prodigious cashflow generation and modest capex plans.

Another was Picard, a retailer of luxury, high-margin frozen food, at the other end of the scale to what would appear to be the closest UK comparison, Iceland. The company is well known to the European high-yield market and while we have owned its bonds in the past and long admired its business, valuations usually offered little in the way of risk versus reward. Yet political noise at the time it issued a new five-year bond meant it came with a 6.375% coupon and a spread of some 410bps, which we considered to be attractive for a business of that quality.

Due to less supportive valuations in what is an inherently risky sector, we continued to reduce exposure to autos via complete sales of our holdings in German drivetrain supplier ZF Friedrichshafen and French vehicle interiors specialist Forvia. We have tilted our cyclical exposure towards areas such as travel & leisure and equipment rentals in the US. In the case of the latter, we like rental firms’ ability to quickly adjust capex fleet spend to adapt to prevailing conditions.

Outlook

The soothing CPI prints we saw in June are good news. The balancing act between inflation, monetary policy and growth remains the dominant concern for markets and is likely to continue to oscillate between worries of further hikes and economic shocks caused by policy error.

We seek to position accordingly via our low-duration exposure (about two years) and avoiding the outer reaches of the high-yield market in CCC-rated or emerging market bonds.

At present, we see better news on the inflation front and while there is certainly a degree of softness in both labour markets and company outlooks, there is nothing to fear in terms of a recession. If we zoom out and 2024 comes to be characterised as the year ‘inflation was tamed’, it will be a good one for most markets and an excellent one for our area of focus. In the meantime, there is ample opportunity for us to continue to execute our strategy and we will seek to use periods of volatility to add exposure to attractively priced bonds.

Benchmark: Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR); the benchmark is a point of reference against which the performance of the fund may be measured. Management of the fund is not restricted by this benchmark. The deviation from the benchmark may be significant and the portfolio of the fund may at times bear little or no resemblance to its benchmark.

Investment in a fund concerns the acquisition of units/shares in the fund and not in the underlying assets of the fund.

Reference to specific shares or companies should not be taken as advice or a recommendation to invest in them.

For information on sustainability-related aspects of a fund, visit the relevant fund page on this website.

For information about Artemis’ fund structures and registration status, visit artemisfunds.com/fund-structures

Any research and analysis in this communication has been obtained by Artemis for its own use. Although this communication is based on sources of information that Artemis believes to be reliable, no guarantee is given as to its accuracy or completeness.

Any statements are based on Artemis’ current opinions and are subject to change without notice. They are not intended to provide investment advice and should not be construed as a recommendation.

Third parties (including FTSE and Morningstar) whose data may be included in this document do not accept any liability for errors or omissions. For information, visit artemisfunds.com/third-party-data.

Important information
The intention of Artemis’ ‘investment insights’ articles is to present objective news, information, data and guidance on finance topics drawn from a diverse collection of sources. Content is not intended to provide tax, legal, insurance or investment advice and should not be construed as an offer to sell, a solicitation of an offer to buy, or a recommendation for any security or investment by Artemis or any third-party. Potential investors should consider the need for independent financial advice. Any research or analysis has been procured by Artemis for its own use and may be acted on in that connection. The contents of articles are based on sources of information believed to be reliable; however, save to the extent required by applicable law or regulations, no guarantee, warranty or representation is given as to its accuracy or completeness. Any forward-looking statements are based on Artemis’ current opinions, expectations and projections. Articles are provided to you only incidentally, and any opinions expressed are subject to change without notice. The source for all data is Artemis, unless stated otherwise. The value of an investment, and any income from it, can fall as well as rise as a result of market and currency fluctuations and you may not get back the amount originally invested.