Alternative credit specialist CIFC launched a long/short high yield UCITS fund managed by industry veteran Jason Horowitz, who has been running similar strategies for more than 10 years.

Horowitz joined CIFC in January as head of U.S. high yield bond investments. He has been managing the strategy for CIFC since February 1, delivering a 12.69% net gain to the end of July compared with a 0.18% loss for the wider U.S. high yield market. The strategy made positive returns during March at the height of market anxiety around COVID-19.

The UCITS fund, which mirrors the existing strategy, is designed to seek high, single-digit returns while protecting capital in down markets. The strategy is offered as a new sub-fund of CIFC Credit Fund ICAV, a UCITS structure domiciled in Dublin.

“CIFC believes that this is the right time for a strategy like this, which has shown over the long term that it can deliver attractive returns in all weathers,” Josh Hughes, London MD for CIFC, said. “Jason has 25 years of investment experience and is supported by CIFC’s strong credit research team. By launching the strategy within a UCITS fund structure we can open it up to a wider audience, including wealth managers and private banks, as well as European-based pension funds, family offices and other investors.”

Horowitz previously worked at Millennium Management. Prior to that he spent 13 years at Muzinich & Co., overseeing a long/short corporate credit hedge fund. He was joined at CIFC by Brandon Hole and Eric Seiden, who worked with Horowitz at Millennium Management.

“I believe that the high yield market is well-suited for a long/short strategy because there are lots of market inefficiencies that create opportunities in either direction for those with the research capacity and technical expertise,” Horowitz said. “CIFC has a 47-strong investment team, with 20 analysts who will all bring ideas to this strategy.”

The strategy offered in UCITS form will seek to capture returns from four areas: identifying long/short opportunities through fundamental credit research, exploiting long and short technical opportunities and inefficiencies in different segments of the high yield market, investing in dependable credit from short-dated bonds with low-volatility characteristics, and arbitrage.

“We regularly stress-test the impact of possible macro events on industries and companies to understand where the risks lie and how we might mitigate them. We have a strict sell discipline for when our thesis changes or the outlook changes. And, of course, the ability to short means where we see particular risk, we have the opportunity to turn it to our investors’ advantage,” Horowitz said. “We do not look to generate our entire year’s return on one or two trades. We seek to maintain a diversified portfolio by credit and sector and closely monitor liquidity risk to the individual positions and portfolio overall. We focus on beta-adjusted portfolio-level net exposure, average rating, duration and yield as opposed to using a black box approach that may break down during periods of heightened volatility. We think that this gives us a good feel for what our risk is at any given time.

“The COVID-19 pandemic is unparalleled, but we have experienced tough markets before, and though nothing is ever guaranteed, we can see lots of opportunities to protect the portfolio and generate strong returns.”

“Jason, Brandon and Eric have a vast amount of expertise and experience in the high yield market,” Steve Vaccaro, CEO and CIO of CIFC, said. “When you add this to CIFC’s existing deep bench of corporate credit research analysts, it makes for a compelling proposition. This fund demonstrates our commitment to continuing to expand the range and flexibility of our investment solutions for investors around the world.”

Founded in 2005, CIFC is a credit specialist with more than $26 billion of assets under management.