Australian investors have for a long time chosen Australian shares and property for their investment portfolio, typically balancing this with cash and term deposits. The asset allocation of Self-Managed Super Funds in Australia illustrates this, with more than 26% of all SMSF assets invested in Australian shares, 16% invested in Australian property and 21% allocated to cash and term deposits.
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Opportunity in Australian corporate credit
For decades institutions have invested in the mature private credit markets of Europe and North America, benefitting from an asset class defined by attractive, defensive investment returns. While once relatively inaccessible the opportunity for Australian investors to source the same types of opportunities domestically – to lend to quality Australasian companies – is becoming increasingly attractive.
What is Australian corporate credit?
For decades, institutional investors have accessed the more mature private credit markets of Europe and North America, with corporate credit investments providing an attractive, defensive pillar to their portfolios. Until recently, similar corporate credit investments in Australia have been difficult for investors to access, dominated by the internal balance sheets of large banks. These conditions are changing, with the dynamics between banks, borrowers, non-bank lenders and investors evolving to establish this new asset class to become a valuable and defensive tool for use in investor portfolios.
Investing for a regular income
Australian investors have for a long time chosen Australian shares and property for their investment portfolio, typically balancing this with cash and term deposits. The asset allocation of Self-Managed Super Funds in Australia illustrates this, with more than 26% of all SMSF assets invested in Australian shares, 16% invested in Australian property and 21% allocated to cash and term deposits.
Opportunity in Australian corporate credit
For decades institutions have invested in the mature private credit markets of Europe and North America, benefitting from an asset class defined by attractive, defensive investment returns. While once relatively inaccessible the opportunity for Australian investors to source the same types of opportunities domestically – to lend to quality Australasian companies – is becoming increasingly attractive.
What is Australian corporate credit?
For decades, institutional investors have accessed the more mature private credit markets of Europe and North America, with corporate credit investments providing an attractive, defensive pillar to their portfolios. Until recently, similar corporate credit investments in Australia have been difficult for investors to access, dominated by the internal balance sheets of large banks. These conditions are changing, with the dynamics between banks, borrowers, non-bank lenders and investors evolving to establish this new asset class to become a valuable and defensive tool for use in investor portfolios.
Investing for a regular income
Australian investors have for a long time chosen Australian shares and property for their investment portfolio, typically balancing this with cash and term deposits. The asset allocation of Self-Managed Super Funds in Australia illustrates this, with more than 26% of all SMSF assets invested in Australian shares, 16% invested in Australian property and 21% allocated to cash and term deposits.
Opportunity in Australian corporate credit
For decades institutions have invested in the mature private credit markets of Europe and North America, benefitting from an asset class defined by attractive, defensive investment returns. While once relatively inaccessible the opportunity for Australian investors to source the same types of opportunities domestically – to lend to quality Australasian companies – is becoming increasingly attractive.
What is Australian corporate credit?
For decades, institutional investors have accessed the more mature private credit markets of Europe and North America, with corporate credit investments providing an attractive, defensive pillar to their portfolios. Until recently, similar corporate credit investments in Australia have been difficult for investors to access, dominated by the internal balance sheets of large banks. These conditions are changing, with the dynamics between banks, borrowers, non-bank lenders and investors evolving to establish this new asset class to become a valuable and defensive tool for use in investor portfolios.
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