Aberdeen launches multi-asset funds in Singapore

Aberdeen Asset Management has launched two multi-asset funds in Singapore, the firm’s first such funds to be offered in the city-state.

Singapore

|

Nicholas Hadow, the firm’s director of business development, said that the firm’s multi-asset products offer low volatility and avoid complex derivatives.

The funds invest in areas such as catastrophe bonds, aircraft leasing and corporate loans, which are accessed via closed-end structures.

In launching the products, Aberdeen intends to meet demand from investors looking for yield and new sources of return amid mixed signals over the effect of a potential roll-back of quantitative easing and rising interest rates, the company said.

The two funds were first launched in Europe in 2015.

Besides the multi-asset funds, the firm launched two bond funds and one equity fund.

New Aberdeen funds in Singapore

Aberdeen Global – Australian Dollar Income Bond Fund

Aberdeen Global – Multi Asset Growth Fund

Aberdeen Global – Multi Asset Income Fund

Aberdeen Global – North American Smaller Companies Fund

Aberdeen Global – Select Emerging Markets Bond Fund

Source: Aberdeen Asset Management

Management

The manager of the two multi-asset funds is Mike Brooks, Aberdeen AM’s head of diversified multi-asset strategies, based in Edinburgh.

Irene Goh, who joined the firm in May last year as its Hong Kong-based head of multi-asset solutions for Asia, has been building local teams to manage regional assets, the company said.

“We think the market for multi-asset investments is still in its infancy despite billions having already been raised in the region,” Goh said. “Investors are keen to find more stable sources of return.”

The multi-asset funds, as well as the Australian bond fund, are currently available in Hong Kong, for sale to professional investors only, the spokesperson added.

Fund launches

The majority of fund managers surveyed by Boston-based research firm Cerulli Associates indicated they would promote mixed asset funds in both Hong Kong and Singapore.

So far this year, Asian currency bond funds and mixed-asset income funds have raised the most money in new fund launches in the region.

MORE ARTICLES ON