Fixed income

Corporate Ladder (1–10 Years), (1–5 Years) Strategy

The strategy aims to provide stable income and limited volatility of principal by investing in a diversified portfolio of high-quality, investment-grade corporate bonds with laddered maturities between 1 and 10 years.

Competitive advantages

The Remi engine

The team’s systematic investment engine, Remi, supports multi-asset, customized, tax-managed solutions and portfolio optimization.

Systematic implementation

A factor-based systematic process provides a robust framework to deliver customized solutions for clients targeting specific outcomes.

Risk management

The team’s independent risk management provides a consistent, unbiased framework for evaluating risks and exposures within a portfolio.

Our team
Meet the investment team

The team philosophy is to leverage a continuous and repeatable process of predict-decide-learn to deliver differentiated investment solutions to clients.

Key risks

Market risk: Security markets are volatile and may decline significantly in response to adverse issuer, regulatory, political, or economic developments with different sectors of the market and different security types reacting differently to such developments.

Debt securities risk: Debt securities are subject to both credit and interest rate risk. Credit risk is the possibility that the issuer or guarantor of a debt security may be unable, or perceived to be unable or unwilling, to pay interest or repay principal when they become due, and credit risk increases as an issuer’s credit quality or financial strength declines. Interest rate risk is the possibility that interest rates will change over time such that when interest rates rise, the value of debt securities tends to fall and the longer the terms of the debt securities held the greater the impact of this risk.

High yield risk: If a strategy invests in high yield securities (commonly known as junk bonds), these securities are considered speculative and have a much greater risk of default or of not returning principal and their values tend to be more volatile than higher-rated securities with similar maturities.

Foreign securities risk: If a strategy invests in the securities of non-U.S. issuers, these investments may be subject to lower liquidity, greater price volatility, and risks related to adverse political, regulatory, market, or economic developments and may be affected by changes in foreign currency exchange rates.

Investors should know that this strategy deployed may be subject to additional investment risks. For important information about the investment manager, please refer to Form ADV Part 2.

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We look forward to helping you with your investment needs