Fahd Malik: I think the most important thing right now more than ever is being diversified. So the high-income investor needs to think about investing in assets outside of [the] US.
Fahd Malik: The US central bank is ahead of other G10 banks in terms of the credit cycle. So that could lead to US being a center of the storm or center of stress going forward. Secondly, valuations outside of US have gotten fairly attractive, so places—pockets in emerging markets [and] Europe—they have all gotten very attractive from a yield perspective compared to [the] US.
Will Smith: As a high-yield investor, we’re pretty excited when yields are going higher because that means all the cash flow that’s generated in our portfolios is being reinvested at higher and higher yields. Right, so in the short term, we are invested in a fixed-income asset class that, as yields go up, prices certainly go down. But the opportunity set as we see it keeps getting better as yields go higher.
Fahd Malik: Now there is a case where rising rates can cause stress in high-yield markets, and that could happen when we think inflation gets out of control—inflation rising much faster than what’s expected. But our base-case forecast is that while inflation—global inflation—is going to be higher, it’s going to move up slowly. So it should not be a big headwind for high-yield index returns.
Fahd Malik: [At] the same time we are going into a phase where liquidity could be challenged, where central banks are draining liquidity out of the system. So you want to keep powder dry, such that if there are opportunities you should be able to benefit from them. You don’t want to be a seller in a market that’s falling. You want to be buying and putting dry powder to work in that kind of environment.
Will Smith: From a pure credit perspective, there are certain sectors in high yield, for instance, that companies have really benefited from this “rising tide lifts all boat”¬–type mentality, right—where money was very easy [and] balance sheets were very easily refinanced. Now that’s probably not the case. So now you really need to do your deep credit underwriting work to make sure that the names and the sectors that you populate in your portfolios are able to withstand what probably will be more challenging macro conditions—where access to liquidity isn’t quite what it was three, four years ago, where growth probably isn’t quite as strong as it was 12 months ago. So you want to own sectors and names that you feel are very resilient—very resilient business models and very clean balance sheets.
Will Smith is Director of US High Yield Credit. He is also a member of the High Income, Global High Yield, Limited Duration High Income, Short Duration High Yield and European High Yield portfolio-management teams. Smith designed and is one of the lead portfolio managers for AB’s Multi-Sector Credit Strategy, which invests across investment-grade and high-yield credit sectors globally.
A disciplined process that focuses on a variety of approaches—including quantitative, liquidity and macro models—to generate returns is key to Smith’s investment philosophy. This is an aggressive style within tight limits, one that emphasizes risk management and a longer investment horizon.
“Building better credit portfolios isn't just about humans doing deep research,” Smith says. “It’s focusing that research where and when other approaches won’t be as effective.”
Fahd Malik joined AB in 2006 and has extensive experience in systematic, market-neutral, risk-mitigating and derivative strategies. Prior to his role as Senior Vice President and Portfolio Manager on the Fixed Income team, Malik served as a portfolio manager for AB's Absolute Return fund.
Drawn to AB's culture of innovation and meritocracy, Malik's first question when designing a portfolio is whether the strategy meets client needs. The dynamic nature of the market, combined with the challenge of making decisions in the face of incomplete information, drives him to learn something new every day.
Malik's degrees in electrical engineering and math finance influence his approach. “My strategies tend to be more quantitative in nature,” he says. “I like it when the numbers to do the talking.”