As the U.S. economy continues its slow crawl toward recovery, the global bond market remains rich with opportunities, according to Chris Diaz, co-manager of the $330 million ING Global Bond Fund (INGBX).
“Our strategy right now involves risk seeking,” he said. “As we see the U.S. having a smaller role in the global economy, the U.S. consumer is not going to lead the recovery.”
While the federal government tries to manage the country's economic woes by holding the line on interest rates — thus making government bonds less attractive — Mr. Diaz is allocating assets to countries such as Australia, Brazil and the New Zealand. Interest rates in those nations are already being increased.
The fund, which is advised by ING Investments LLC and benchmarked to the Barclay's Global Aggregate Bond Index, has the flexibility to invest in any fixed-income product, but outside the U.S., it invests primarily in government-issued debt.
With that in mind, most of the fund's U.S. exposure is concentrated in investment-grade and high-yield corporate debt since government bonds are yielding almost nothing these days.
“In the sovereign universe, there are better places to buy bonds than the United States right now,” Mr. Diaz said.
He expects to Federal Reserve to hold interest rates at current levels throughout next year as the government remains focused on the risk of deflation.
His general investment theme includes leveraging the increased production and use of commodities in developing countries such as Brazil, Russia, India and China.
Much of this exposure is enhanced through currency strategies that often involve owning foreign-government bonds in the local currencies, which appreciate as the value of the U.S. dollar continues to decline.
“I've been bearish on the U.S. dollar for most of the year,” Mr. Diaz said. “Our currency decisions are made separate from our other investment decisions.”
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