Forgotten US Global Bond Funds Face ‘Show-Me-the-Money’ Moment

Jack McIntyre’s US global bond fund, aided by a slumping dollar, is posting one of the best performances in its almost two decades of existence. His challenge is convincing investors that it’s more than just a flash in the pan.

His $1.3 billion Brandywine Global Opportunities Bond Fund is up about 12% this year through Aug. 7, a return it’s only beat on a full-year basis twice in the past decade. It’s also trouncing virtually all of its peers, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The whole sector, in fact, is outpacing the US fixed-income market by the most since 2017, judging by a dollar-based index of global bonds. And yet hanging over this year’s success is the crucial question of whether the greenback will extend its decline, boosting the value of overseas debt holdings. The currency effect has accounted for roughly 60% of the global bond index’s 7% total return this year.

McIntyre, for one, is positioned for the dollar to slide further, after its steepest first-half loss since 1973. He has less exposure to the greenback than the benchmark he tracks. But he knows he needs more time to lure investors back to an asset class that had been essentially left for dead for most of the past decade.

“It’s more likely that we need to see a couple years of this” to rekindle interest in global bond funds, said McIntyre, whose fund is about a third of its 2015 peak size. “It’s kind of a ‘show-me-the-money’ sort of thing.”

This caution is understandable. The sector saw years of outflows as a strong greenback and attractive US yields penalized bond investors looking to diversify overseas while keeping foreign-exchange exposure. The segment’s assets slumped to $57 billion last year, from a peak of $146 billion in 2012, according to Morningstar Direct.

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