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    • Silvercrest - Convertible Bond, Syst. NAV Hdg, (CHF) N D

    Silvercrest
    Convertible Bond

    ISINLU0699843123

    Silvercrest - Convertible Bond, Syst. NAV Hdg, (CHF) N D

    ISINLU0699843123
    funds listsustainability report

    General information

    Morningstar
    Asset ClassConvertibles
    CategoryGlobal
    StrategyGlobal Convertible Bonds
    Fund base currencyEUR
    Share Class reference currencyCHF Hedged
    BenchmarkFTSE Russell Global Convertible Composite Hedged CHF
    Dividend Policydistribution
    Total Assets (all classes) in mnCHF 733.9631.03.2025
    Assets (share class) in mnCHF 2.3831.03.2025
    Number of positions13331.03.2025
    TER0.87%30.09.2024
    Swinging Single PricingYes

    Documents

    Key Information Document
    Prospectus
    Fact Sheet (marketing document)
    Newsletter IM - Professional
    Reasons to invest (Retail)
    Sustainability-related disclosures

    Risk rating

    Lower riskHigher risk
    1
    1
    2
    2
    3
    3
    4
    4
    5
    5
    6
    6
    7
    7
    Typically lower rewardTypically higher reward
    Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. If the funds are denominated in a currency other than that in which the majority of the investor's assets are held, the investor should be aware that changes in rates of exchange may affect the value of the funds' underlying assets. The portfolio risk management process includes an effort to monitor and manage risk, but does not imply low risk.
    • Performance & Statistics
    • Highlights
    • Breakdowns
    • Managers
    • Legal information
    • Dealing
    • Security Numbers
    • Prices
    • Documents
    • Newsletter

    Performance & Statistics

    Rolling 12 months Performance (%)Cumulative performance (%)Annualised performance (%)
    Loading...
    As of 
    Share Class (Net)
    Benchmark
    Sorry, we could not retrieve the data for this share class.
    Any benchmarks/indices cited herein are provided for information purposes only. No benchmark/index is directly comparable to the investment objectives, strategy or universe of a fund.
    Loading...
    As of 
    Share Class (Net)
    Benchmark
    Sorry, we could not retrieve the data for this share class.
    Any benchmarks/indices cited herein are provided for information purposes only. No benchmark/index is directly comparable to the investment objectives, strategy or universe of a fund.
    Loading...
    As of 
    Share Class (Net)
    Benchmark
    Sorry, we could not retrieve the data for this share class.
    Any benchmarks/indices cited herein are provided for information purposes only. No benchmark/index is directly comparable to the investment objectives, strategy or universe of a fund.
    Export
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    Fund
    Total Return197.76%
    Annualized Return3.52%
    Annualized Volatility7.02%
    Sharpe Ratio0.38
    Downside Deviation4.84%
    Positive Months57.56%
    Maximum Drawdown-24.51%
    *  Risk-Free Rate 0.84%Target Rate 0.84%
    Calculations based on monthly time series
    Earliest Date: 06.12.1993, Latest date: 24.04.2025

    Key risks

    The following risks may be materially relevant

    but may not always be adequately captured by the synthetic risk indicator and may cause additional loss:


     
    Credit risk: A significant level of investment in debt securities or risky securities implies that the risk of, or actual, default may have a material impact on performance. The likelihood of this depends on the credit-worthiness of the issuers.
     
    Operational risk and risks related to asset safekeeping: In specific circumstances, there may be a material risk of loss resulting from human error, inadequate or failed internal systems, processes or controls, or from external events.
     
    Risks linked to the use of derivatives and financial techniques: Derivatives and other financial techniques used substantially to obtain, increase or reduce exposure to assets may be difficult to value, may generate leverage, and may not yield the anticipated results. All of this could be detrimental to fund performance.
     

     

    Highlights

    Silvercrest - Convertible Bond is an actively managed long-only global convertible bond strategy launched in December 2002. It invests mainly in global convertible bonds with a balanced profile. It seeks to deliver asymmetrical performance over the medium to long-term, profiting from equity market upturns while benefiting from the downside protection of a fixed income structure with a fraction of the volatility of equities. The investment approach is based on in-depth fundamental and technical research and combines ‘top-down’ economic analysis with ‘bottom-up’ stock selection. Two final hurdles include a minimum issue size of USD 150 mn (for liquidity purposes) and a minimum credit rating of B- (reflecting the search for an investment grade quality for the portfolio).

    Breakdowns

    Top 10 (in %)

    LOF - Convertible Asia, USD SA0.00% 5.07%
    Duke Energy Corp 4.125% 15/04/26 Cnv0.00% 3.05%
    Delivery Hero 1.5% 15/01/28 Cnv0.00% 2.91%
    Southern Co 4.5% 15/06/27 Cnv0.00% 2.88%
    Eux Euro Bund Jun25 Future (exp 06/06/25)0.00% 2.80%
    Jd.com 0.25% 01/06/29 Cnv 144a0.00% 2.14%
    Uber Technologies 0.875% 01/12/28 Cnv 20280.00% 2.09%
    Akamai Technologies 1.125% 15/02/29 Cnv0.00% 1.92%
    Southern Co 3.875% 15/12/25 Cnv0.00% 1.92%
    Coinbase Gbl 0.25% 01/04/30 Cnv0.00% 1.75%

    Countries (in %)

    USA0.00% 40.64%
    Luxembourg0.00% 10.88%
    China0.00% 8.96%
    Germany0.00% 5.62%
    France0.00% 5.18%
    Japan0.00% 4.24%
    Netherlands0.00% 3.92%
    Spain0.00% 3.68%
    Hong Kong0.00% 2.08%
    Italy0.00% 1.87%
    Canada0.00% 0.94%
    New Zealand0.00% 0.37%
    Sweden0.00% 0.32%
    Others (liquid assets Incl.)0.00% 11.30%

    CREDIT RATING (IN %)

    A+0.00% 0.58%
    A0.00% 3.92%
    A-0.00% 5.93%
    BBB+0.00% 10.24%
    BBB0.00% 12.79%
    BBB-0.00% 22.20%
    BB+0.00% 1.23%
    BB0.00% 7.62%
    BB-0.00% 6.70%
    B+0.00% 4.45%
    B0.00% 2.73%
    B-0.00% 9.21%
    Not rated0.00% 2.19%
    Liquid assets0.00% 10.21%

    Currencies (in %)

    CHF0.00% 100.00%

    Managers

    Arnaud GernathInvestment Management (Convertibles)
    Read more
    Arnaud Gernath is a co-portfolio manager for the Silvercrest–Convertible Bonds at Silvercrest Investment Managers (LOIM). He joined in December 2011. Prior to joining, Arnaud was head of UK sales at HPC SA, after initially setting up their convertible and high yield bond desk. Previous roles include: EMEA convertible bond market-maker (at Morgan Stanley from 2008 to 2009 and at JP Morgan from 2006 to 2008); hedge fund manager of multi-strategy funds at Neuflize-Arbitrage; proprietary trader at Fortis Bank from 2002 to 2004. Arnaud began his career in 1996 as a convertible and high yield market-maker at Schelcher-Prince Finance (now part of Crédit Agricole Group). Arnaud qualified as a certified actuary at the Institut de Science Financière et d’Assurances in Lyon in 1995.

    Legal information

    General information

    DomicileLuxembourg
    Legal FormSICAV
    Regulatory StatusUCITS
    Registered inAT, CH, DE, FI, FR, GB, LI, LU, NL, NO, SE
    Class launch date20.03.2014
    Close of financial year30 September
    Dividend Policydistribution
    - Distribution dateNovember
    - Last dividend paid  (27.11.2024) CHF 0.1

    Fiscal Information

    DE Investmentsteuergesetz (InvStG)Other Funds
    AT Investmentfondsgesetz (InvFG)Declared Fund
    UK Reporting StatusYes

    Management Company & Agents

    Management CompanySilvercrest Funds (Europe) S.A.
    CustodianCACEIS Bank, Luxembourg Branch
    AuditorPricewaterhouseCoopers
    Portfolio valuationCACEIS Bank, Luxembourg Branch

    Dealing

    Dealing

    Subscriptions and redemptions frequency daily
    Subscriptions and redemptions cut-off dayT-1
    Subscriptions and redemptions cut-off time15:00 CET
    Subscriptions and redemptions settlement dateT+2
    NAV valuation pointT
    NAV calculation dayT+1
    NAV calculation frequencydaily
    Minimum InvestmentCHF 1 million
    Management Fee0.65%
    Distribution Fee0.00%

    Security Numbers

    BLOOMBERGLCSHCID LX
    ISINLU0699843123
    REUTERS14156423X.CHE
    TELEKURS14156423

    Prices

    Export

    Prices over selected period

    LastCHF0.0029.5824.04.2025
    FirstCHF0.009.9306.12.1993
    HighestCHF0.0034.7115.02.2021
    LowestCHF0.009.0509.03.1995
    * Earliest Date: 06.12.1993, Latest date: 24.04.2025

    Documents

    Professional investors only

    Newsletter IM - Professional
    31.03.2025

    Annexe

    UK Reporting Status - Reportable Income
    31.03.2025

    Reporting

    Fact Sheet (marketing document)
    31.03.2025
    Performance Review
    31.03.2025

    Legal Documents

    Notice to Shareholders
    17.04.2025
    19.07.2024
    17.05.2024
    24.01.2024
    Key Information Document
    28.01.2025
    Annual Report
    30.09.2024
    Prospectus
    19.08.2024
    Semi-Annual Report
    31.03.2024
    Articles of incorporation
    21.03.2019

    Retail investors

    Reasons to invest (Retail)
    05.07.2024

    Sustainability-related disclosures

    Sustainability-related disclosures
    05.08.2024

    Newsletter

    MARKET COMMENTARY

    Most of the market activity in March can be summed up in two words: tariffs and Germany. There were clearly other forces at work, but the effects of the first 5% of Donald Trump’s second mandate on global trade, risk asset performance, sentiment and international relations have been keenly felt, with ripples progressively spreading to all corners of the investable universe. In the US, the initial euphoria after the elections has dissipated in the face of an administration which appears to be indifferent to the risk of a recession. Tariff-induced upward price pressure could lead to stagflation against a backdrop where lofty valuations are reliant on robust underlying growth. There is one possible glimmer of hope for investors who had pinned their hopes on the US driving global growth in 2025 – if the gradual roll-out of tariffs proves to be too punitive, President Trump could be amenable to negotiation and order could be restored. US confidence gauges are clearly reflecting weaker consumer sentiment but hard government statistical data (employment and manufacturing) remain firm, suggesting fears are overblown. This gap has waxed and waned for some time, but in the current turbulent environment, it has gained in importance. The hard data indicate that the economy is moderately cooling, but the labour market remains solid even if consumer spending (retail sales) figures are less encouraging. The Federal Reserve has so far chosen to look through the data and keep rates on hold, but the market is now expecting two or even three cuts in 2025. Treasuries were mixed, with some curve steepening, the dollar index fell for a third straight month, gold rallied over 9%, Bitcoin dropped, bringing year-to-date losses to nearly 12%, the oil price rose late in the month, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq slipped 8%.

    Thankfully other drivers of performance have come into play as the US wobbles. Better performance in Europe – a relative underweight for many in 2024 – has soothed many worried brows. With the suspension of the debt brake in Germany and infrastructure spending plans akin to those post-reunification, Berlin has removed the fiscal drag that has weighed on Europe for more than a decade. If the European domestic growth engine starts firing on all cylinders, the region could deliver above-trend growth, leading investors to reallocate while boosting valuations. The Dax has risen more than 11% year-to-date; Chinese stocks have also done well year-to-date, driven by strong underlying profits, enthusiasm over the development of AI in the region, regulatory relief and better sentiment. Recent data suggest there are some green shoots in the economy (even for the property market) and that Beijing is becoming more business-friendly, although the geopolitical situation remains tense.

    The encouraging news for convertible-bond investors is that a regionally well-diversified portfolio with a quality credit bias and strong stock selection has outperformed both bonds and equities year-to-date. As we saw in 2024, convexity is back and has largely protected investors during the turbulence of the past few weeks.

     

    NEW ISSUANCE

    Issuance volumes rebounded strongly in March as USD 13.3 billion in new deals came to market. The US led the way with USD 8.2 billion, followed by Asia with USD 3.7 billion and Europe with USD 1.4 billion. The sectors and structures were well diversified, with deals from the Healthcare, Financials, Technology, Consumer Cyclicals, Utilities and Materials sectors across regions. There were large mandatory deals in the US from KKR and Microstrategy, repeat issues in Europe for Iberdrola and TAG Immobilien, and a USD 2 billion issue in Asia from Baidu, exchangeable into shares of online travel management provider Trip.com.

     

    PERFORMANCE

    The Fund lost 1.5% in March, 50 bps behind the benchmark index. Investment-grade credit in EUR fell 0.6%, high-yield lost 1.0%, the MSCI World equity index fell 5.0%, the ITRAXX Xover credit gauge widened 40 bps to 330 bps, the VIX index of volatility rose above 20% and Value outperformed Growth by over 9%. The share basket underlying the benchmark index slipped by 3.5%. This brings quarterly returns to 2.1%, marginally behind the benchmark index return of 2.5%. Volatility contributed, but the equity effect detracted sharply in the face of poor returns for global stock markets. All regions were lower, led by the US (-1.2%) and followed by Europe (-0.2%), Asia (-0.1%) and Japan (-0.1%). Utilities (+0.3%) and Materials (+0.2%) rose, but the other sectors detracted – Technology (-0.8%, mainly in the US), Consumer Cyclicals (-0.3%), Financials (-0.3%, mainly in the US, with positive contributions from Europe and Asia), Communications (-0.2%), Industrials and Pharmaceuticals (both -0.2%, mainly in the US). In Technology, weakness across all sub-sectors in the US (Snowflake, Core Scientific, Seagate, Lumentum, Cloudflare, Salesforce, Datadog) was not offset by gains for VNET Group and Samsung in Asia. Although Alibaba and Trip.com did well in the Asian Consumer Cyclicals basket, Anta Sports and Li Auto detracted, as did Delivery Hero and Accor in Europe and Wayfair in the US. The weakness in cryptocurrencies pushed Coinbase 19 bps lower and the prospect of lower rates led to losses for Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan. Financial services platform Robinhood added 7 bps (we added back exposure mid-month and then sold into strength towards month-end). European heavyweight BNP Paribas also rose. A small gain for Deutsche Telekom was not enough to offset the weakness elsewhere in Communications. In the US, Spotify, Meta Platforms and Netflix detracted. Cellnex in Europe and Tencent in Asia also traded lower. The European defence/aeronautical exposure remains profitable (Rheinmetall, BAE Systems, Rolls Royce, Airbus), but IAG, JetBlue and American Airlines detracted in the passenger airline segment. There was also some profit taking in Siemens after recent gains for German exposure and for Schneider Electric after the unwind in some electrical names due to some dampening in AI enthusiasm.

    In relative terms, Technology and Consumer Cyclicals both detracted by 20 bps and Financials by 11 bps. In the Technology sector, the overweights in Lenovo and Xiaomi, the exposure to Core Scientific and the off-benchmark position in Salesforce detracted. In Consumer Cyclicals, some of the recent gainers detracted in March with losses for Alibaba, Delivery Hero and Trip.com, while in Financials, the overweight in Coinbase and the off-benchmark positions in Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan detracted.

     

    OUTLOOK

    During the recent market moves, convertible bonds resisted well as many of the main share indices traded lower. Convexity remains positive and the asset class exhibited limited participation in the equity downside in March. Issuance remains strong. We maintain our bias to quality credits and profitable growth companies across sectors, as well as the investments in themes aligned with government policy and our growth outlook for 2025. We have used periods of strength to lock-in profits and periods of weakness to add to exposure. We believe that convertible bonds are an all-weather vehicle which acts as the bridge between bonds and equities and can help investors navigate the markets in turbulent times.

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