Voya Intermediate Fixed Income SMA

Approach

The Voya Intermediate Fixed Income strategy seeks to provide total return while preserving capital largely through the use of treasuries, agencies, and corporate credit securities of 1-10 year maturities.

Investment Philosophy

We believe that intensive security level research paired with a broadly informed awareness of the economic and credit cycle are critical to identifying superior investment opportunities and managing downside risk.

The following key beliefs underpin our investment philosophy:

  • Security selection is a significant driver of risk and returns
  • Nimble sector and sub-sector allocations capture relative value
  • Risk management is critical throughout the entire investment process

These three key beliefs frame an integrated strategy that incorporates a dynamic blend of top-down and bottom-up approaches.

Investment Process

Our strategy employs an active investment style that seeks to identify attractive securities by combining our global macro-economic view with in-depth, original research and strict risk controls. By understanding where we are in the business cycle, our portfolio managers seek to adjust sector allocation, security selection and duration and yield curve management to take advantage of market opportunities. Top-down macro themes shape overall strategy and provide context for our bottom-up security selection. Ultimately, the portfolio is built one bond at a time selected by our seasoned senior analysts.

Performance

Performance

As of 10/31/241 Month3 MonthYTD1yr3yr5yr10yrSince Inception (1/01/93)
Gross-1.440.802.697.33-0.250.751.744.24
Net-1.560.421.435.75-1.73-0.91-0.092.83
Index*-1.600.613.008.20-0.180.851.734.26

* Bloomberg U.S. Intermediate Government/Credit Index

Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Periods greater than one year are annualized. Performance data is considered final unless indicated as preliminary. Monthly performance is based on full GIPS Composite returns. Access the GIPS page for full composite details.

"Gross Returns" are presented before the deduction of transaction costs and should be used as Supplemental Information only. "Net Returns" are calculated by subtracting a hypothetical maximum total wrap fee (estimated at 1.50% per annum) from the monthly "pure" gross-of-fee returns. For periods from January 2007 to June 2021 the hypothetical maximum fee was 2.00% per annum. The total wrap fee includes transaction costs, portfolio management, investment advisory, custodial and other administrative costs. Wrap fees vary amongst brokerage firms and may be negotiated based on account size and other factors. The hypothetical maximum total wrap fee used is deemed to be the maximum fee charged to any composite account but we cannot guarantee accuracy. More information about fees can be found in the Form ADV Part II of Voya Investment Management Co.

Literature

Investment Team

Rajen Jadav, CFA

Portfolio Manager

Years of Experience: 27

Years with Voya: 5

Raj Jadav is a portfolio manager at Voya Investment Management. Prior to joining Voya, Raj was a senior product specialist at Allianz Global Investors where he was responsible for covering and supporting sales and distribution of the global fixed income team’s product offering in North America. Prior to that, Raj was a portfolio manager at AllianceBernstein where he held various positions managing US multi-sector, US TIPS, stable value, global multi-sector and municipal money market portfolios. Raj earned a MA in economics from New York University and a BS in business management and economics from SUNY at Stony Brook. Raj is a CFA® Charterholder.
Sean Banai

Sean Banai, CFA

Head of Multi-Sector

Years of Experience: 25

Years with Voya: 25

Sean Banai is head of multi-sector for the fixed income platform at Voya Investment Management. Previously, Sean was a senior portfolio manager and before that head of quantitative research for proprietary fixed income. Prior to joining the firm in 1999, he was a partner in a private sector company. Sean received a BA and an MS in actuarial science from Georgia State University. He holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation.

Disclosures

Principal Risk

The principal risks are generally those attributable to bond investing. Holdings are subject to market, issuer, credit, prepayment, extension, and other risks, and their values may fluctuate. Market risk is the risk that securities may decline in value due to factors affecting the securities markets or particular industries. Issuer risk is the risk that the value of a security may decline for reasons specific to the issuer, such as changes in its financial condition. The strategy may invest in mortgage-related securities, which can be paid off early if the borrowers on the underlying mortgages pay off their mortgages sooner than scheduled. If interest rates are falling, the strategy will be forced to reinvest this money at lower yields. Conversely, if interest rates are rising, the expected principal payments will slow, thereby locking in the coupon rate at below market levels and extending the security’s life and duration while reducing its market value. High yield bonds carry particular market risks and may experience greater volatility in market value than investment grade bonds. Foreign investments could be riskier than U.S. investments because of exchange rate, political, economics, liquidity, and regulatory risks. Additionally, investments in emerging market countries are riskier than other foreign investments because the political and economic systems in emerging market countries are less stable.

Top