All articles by Joseph Mariathasan. – Page 4

  • Asset Class Reports

    Emerging Market Debt: What role do indices play?

    September 2010 (Magazine)

    The key sub-components of the emerging market debt (EMD) are the original hard currency sovereign debt, followed now by local currency sovereign debt and, increasingly, hard currency corporate debt. At some stage local currency corporate debt may also come to have significant size. There are two questions that need to ...

  • Asset Class Reports

    Emerging Market Debt: Local currency bonds

    September 2010 (Magazine)

    Emerging market debt (EMD) originated as a hard currency debt market but today it is the local currency issuance that dominates the sovereign debt marketplace, while hard currency issuance in 2007-08 was 70% corporate.

  • Credit: New world order
    Asset Class Reports

    Credit: New world order

    July 2010 (Magazine)

    Joseph Mariathasan finds corporate bond managers coping with the new realities around benchmarking, ‘risk-free’ rates and agency credit ratings

  • Asset Class Reports

    Credit: Far from junk

    July 2010 (Magazine)

    High yield was a screaming buy back in March 2009. Joseph Mariathasan finds that healthy fundamentals provide good support for latecomers to come in when the broader markets get jittery

  • US Equities: Style bias
    Asset Class Reports

    US Equities: Style bias

    June 2010 (Magazine)

    Joseph Mariathasan uncovers a wide range of strategies among top performers in US equities

  • Private Equity: Coping with the hangover
    Asset Class Reports

    Private Equity: Coping with the hangover

    May 2010 (Magazine)

    After the big binge on leverage, Joseph Mariathasan finds that the next generation of private equity investors will have to go cold turkey, not rely on a hair of the dog

  • Special Report

    Thematic Investing: Themes or fads?

    May 2010 (Magazine)

    Thematic investing in public markets is often biased towards small-caps with emerging business models or technologies. But Joseph Mariathasan finds that the process does not translate smoothly into private equity

  • Global fixed income: Outward bound
    Asset Class Reports

    Global fixed income: Outward bound

    April 2010 (Magazine)

    European investors are breaking free of local markets and global benchmarks in the search for yield, writes Joseph Mariathasan

  • European equities: Never out of style
    Asset Class Reports

    European equities: Never out of style

    March 2010 (Magazine)

    Managing European equities has to be about avoiding style biases, finds Joseph Mariathasan. He speaks to five managers who have squeezed alpha from very different markets with very distinct strategies

  • Special Report

    Corporatising Asia

    February 2010 (Magazine)

    It’s no news that Asia offers long-term growth. But the value locked up in its disparate corporate structures means private equity could represent the keenest form of Asian risk, writes Joseph Mariathasan

  • Asset Class Reports

    Not just all-in on BRICs

    February 2010 (Magazine)

    Joseph Mariathasan and Martin Steward research some of the top performers in emerging market equities and finds considerable diversification, not only between top-down and bottom-up approaches, but between valuation methodologies

  • Still the wild frontier
    Asset Class Reports

    Still the wild frontier

    January 2010 (Magazine)

    US small and mid caps remain the crucible of corporate capitalism and opportunity. But Joseph Mariathasan finds that the challenge is in steering through the sheer variety of stocks and managers

  • Crowded out
    Asset Class Reports

    Crowded out

    December 2009 (Magazine)

    One might imagine small-caps markets to be hives of alpha-generating inefficiency and anomaly – and yet Joseph Mariathasan finds that returns in Europe are dominated by beta

  • Sanctuary in the crisis
    Asset Class Reports

    Sanctuary in the crisis

    November 2009 (Magazine)

    Emerging market debt has had a good crisis and is now firmly established in the mainstream. But, as Joseph Mariathasan finds, the complex matrix of exposures it represents raises the question of whether it is one asset class or many, and demands a properly considered allocation process

  • A time to be selective
    Asset Class Reports

    A time to be selective

    September 2009 (Magazine)

    Uncertainty in sovereign markets and attractive credit spreads have seen risk concentrate in Europe’s investment grade corporate bond markets, finds Joseph Mariathasan

  • Asset Class Reports

    Alpha from uncertainty

    September 2009 (Magazine)

    The market crash and subsequent super rally has investors in disagreement over the prospects for US equities. This suggests that active management will now make a difference, writes Joseph Mariathasan

  • The hunt for treasure
    Asset Class Reports

    The hunt for treasure

    June 2009 (Magazine)

    Rather than worrying whether the recent emerging market equities rally is sustainable, investors who believe in a long-term growth story should not attempt to time the unpredictable, finds Joseph Mariathasan

  • Don’t fight the Fed...
    Asset Class Reports

    Don’t fight the Fed...

    June 2009 (Magazine)

    The Fed and the US Treasury combination sits like a heavyweight in the boxing ring of US fixed income. The ponderous moves open up ample opportunity for some quick jabs – but get on the wrong end of one of the swings and it’s a knockout. Joseph Mariathasan reports

  • Banking on animal spirits
    Asset Class Reports

    Banking on animal spirits

    April 2009 (Magazine)

    Global equity valuations – both absolute and relative to credit – are proving difficult to pin down. Joseph Mariathasan finds managers tiring of paying a premium for defensiveness but are hopeful that ‘animal spirits’ can sustain an upward trend

  • A nuclear winter?
    Asset Class Reports

    A nuclear winter?

    March 2009 (Magazine)

    Managers are working out when and how to position their portfolios to benefit from an eventual economic recovery,finds Joseph Mariathasan