Gundlach and Sherman Hold DoubleLine Strategic Commodity Fund Webcast
Long-Biased Fund Buys and Shorts Commodities under a Rules-Based Strategy,
Outperformed Benchmark & Peer Group Average, Inception through 2017
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 30, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Jeffrey Gundlach and Jeffrey Sherman will hold a webcast today to discuss the DoubleLine Strategic Commodity Fund ("the Fund"), the firm's outlook for commodities and the reasons for commodities in a diversified investment portfolio.
The Fund is distributed via two share classes: I shares (DBCMX) and N shares (DLCMX). The Fund is benchmarked to the Bloomberg Commodity Index. Mr. Gundlach is CEO and chief investment officer of DoubleLine Capital LP. Mr. Sherman is deputy chief investment officer of DoubleLine Capital LP, president of DoubleLine Alternatives LP, head of DoubleLine's Cross Asset team and portfolio manager of the Fund.
The webcast will start at 4:15 pm Eastern (1:15 pm Pacific) Tuesday January 30. To register for the webcast, please click on this link:
https://event.webcasts.com/starthere.jsp?ei=1177808&tp_key=ed0ed2656c
The Fund's objective is long-term total return. Under a rules-based (aka smart-beta) strategy designed by DoubleLine's Cross Asset team, the Fund maintains a core long-biased commodity weighting while tactically allocating to a market-neutral portfolio of long and short commodities positions when a long-only exposure may not be as attractive.
The Fund has exposure to a broad basket of commodities. Examples of commodities to which the Fund may have exposure include, but are not limited to, industrial metals (e.g., copper, nickel); energy products (e.g., crude oil, unleaded gasoline, natural gas); agricultural products (e.g., soybeans, sugar, cotton); and livestock (e.g., live cattle). The Fund gains commodity-related investment exposure primarily through derivatives contracts. The Fund's long-only strategy excludes precious metals (e.g., gold, silver) as these are held directly by many investors. The Fund's market-neutral strategy may take long or short positions on precious metals as well as on other individual commodities.
Rationale for Long-Biased Commodities Investing
Allocation to commodities can serve strategic and tactical roles. Broadly speaking, strategic investments are held over full market cycles or longer while tactical trades are aimed at timely opportunities. Two strategic reasons for holding commodities are portfolio diversification and inflation hedging. A broad basket of commodities historically has exhibited low correlation to the traditional asset classes of stocks, bonds and cash. Commodities can hedge against dollar weakness – in other words, hedge against inflation. Examples of tactical trades include the buying or shorting of commodities based on relative valuation or some other input.
As its name signifies, the DoubleLine Strategic Commodity Fund aims to serve the strategic roles of portfolio diversification and inflation hedging. The Fund aims to do this by giving investors long-biased exposure to the broad commodities markets while seeking lower volatility and downside risk than would be incurred under passive indexation.
Passive, long-only exposure to commodities can serve the same objectives of portfolio diversification and inflation hedging. However, passive indexation can subject investors to the full volatility of the asset class. In particular, market swings to the downside confront investors with the decision of whether to ride out "paper losses" in hope of a market recovery or to close out positions, realizing actual losses. The stress of such episodes can test people's ability to make rational decisions.
Standardized Performance |
|||
Periods Ended December 31, 2017 |
4Q2017 |
1-Year |
Since Inception |
I-share |
10.73% |
9.13% |
2.45% |
N-share |
10.60% |
8.88% |
2.14% |
Bloomberg Commodity Index (Benchmark) |
4.71% |
1.70% |
-6.00% |
Morningstar Commodities Broad Basket Fund Average |
5.87% |
3.41% |
-4.94% |
I-Share |
N-Share |
|
Gross Expense Ratio |
1.84% |
2.30% |
Performance data quoted represents past performance; past performance does not guarantee future results. The investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate so that an investor's shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than the original cost. Current performance of the fund may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Performance data current to the most recent month-end may be obtained by calling 213-633-8200 or by visiting www.doublelinefunds.com.
Since-Inception Performance |
|||
May 19, 2015 through December 31, 2017 |
Total Return (Annualized) |
Standard Deviation (Annualized) |
Maximum Drawdown |
I-share |
2.45% |
13.66% |
-17.01% |
Bloomberg Commodities Index (Benchmark) |
-6.00% |
16.05% |
-30.61% |
Morningstar Commodities Broad Basket Fund Average |
-4.94% |
16.40% |
-30.58% |
For the period after the Fund's inception on May 18, 2015 through December 31, 2017, the Fund's I shares delivered an annualized total return of 2.45% versus -6.00% for the Bloomberg Commodity Index. Morningstar categorizes the Fund as a Commodities Broad Basket fund. The average annualized total return for the category, I shares, was -4.94% for the same period.
Risk-Adjusted Return
The Fund generated its since-inception excess return over the benchmark and peer-group average while incurring less volatility as measured by standard deviation and less downside volatility as measured by maximum drawdown. (Please see above chart. Definitions for standard deviation and maximum drawdown appear near the end of this release.)
Investment Process and Portfolio Allocation
The Fund seeks to generate returns through long exposures to a broad basket of commodities and through a market-neutral portfolio of equally weighted long and short positions on individual commodities. The portfolio construction occurs monthly under a rules-based or smart-beta strategy.
Portfolio allocation varies between the long-only and market-neutral portfolios. When conditions for commodities prices appear most bullish, virtually 100% of the portfolio will be long commodities. When conditions for commodities prices appear most bearish, the Fund will allocate as little as 50% of assets to the long-only portfolio and 50% of assets to the market-neutral portfolio (25% long individual commodities, 25% short individual commodities). Thus the Fund will always have net long exposure to the broad commodities market.
For example, the Fund was allocated 99.7% long (strategic), 0.3% market neutral (tactical) at the end of December 2017. By comparison, the Fund was allocated 80.2% long, 19.8% market neutral at the end of December 2016; 52.9% long, 47.2% market neutral at the end of December 2015.
For more information on the DoubleLine Strategic Commodity Fund, please click on the following links to the Fund prospectus and most recent fact sheet:
https://doublelinefunds.com/wp-content/uploads/DoubleLine_Strategic_Commodity_Fund.pdf
https://doublelinefunds.com/wp-content/uploads/strategic-commodity-fund-fact-sheet.pdf?c=1516294398
Terms and Definitions
Smart beta indexation is defined by DoubleLine and some others as a rules-based investing strategy which deviates from market capitalization-weighting or stock price-weighting, popularly known as passive indexation.
Total return represents a fund or asset's generation of income plus its capital appreciation (or minus its capital depreciation), expressed as a percentage of invested principal.
Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) is an index calculated on an excess return basis that reflects commodity futures price movements. The index rebalances annually weighted 2/3 by trading volume and 1/3 by world production and weight-caps are applied at the commodity, sector and group level for diversification. Roll period typically occurs from 6th-10th business day based on the roll schedule. It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
Correlation is a measure of the interdependence of two random variables that ranges in value from -1 to +1, indicating perfect negative-correlation at -1, absence of correlation at zero and perfect positive-correlation at +1.
Maximum drawdown is a measure of downside return volatility. Maximum drawdown is an index or asset's largest peak-to-trough decline over a given time period, calculated as a percentage.
Standard Deviation is a measure of the variation or dispersion of a set of data from its mean or expected/budgeted value. A low standard deviation indicates that the data points tend to be very close to the mean, whereas a high standard deviation indicates that the data is spread out over a large range of values. A measure of an investment's volatility.
About DoubleLine Alternatives LP and DoubleLine Capital LP
DoubleLine Alternatives LP and DoubleLine Capital LP are registered investment advisers under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. DoubleLine Alternatives LP is also a registered commodity pool operator and commodity trading adviser with the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and is a member firm of the National Futures Association.
DoubleLine Capital and its related companies ("DoubleLine") managed $118 billion in assets across all vehicles, including open-end mutual fund, closed-end fund, exchange-traded fund, hedge fund, variable annuity, UCITS, collective investment trust and separate accounts as of the December 31 end of the fourth quarter of 2017. DoubleLine's offices can be reached by telephone at (213) 633-8200 or by e-mail at [email protected]. Media can e-mail DoubleLine at [email protected]. DoubleLine® is a registered trademark of DoubleLine Capital LP.
The Fund's investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses must be considered carefully before investing. The statutory prospectus and summary prospectus contain this and other important information about the investment company and may be obtained by calling 1 (877) 354-6311/1 (877) DLINE11, or visiting www.doublelinefunds.com. Read carefully before investing.
DoubleLine Alternatives LP is the investment adviser to the DoubleLine Strategic Commodity Fund. DoubleLine Capital LP is the investment adviser to the other DoubleLine Funds which are distributed by Quasar Distributors, LLC.
Mutual fund investing involves risk; Principal loss is possible. Investments in debt securities typically decrease when interest rates rise. This risk is usually greater for longer-term debt securities. Investments in commodities or commodity-linked derivative instruments may involve additional costs and risks such as changes in commodity index volatility or factors affecting a particular industry or commodity, such as drought, floods, weather, livestock disease, embargoes, tariffs and international economic, political and regulatory developments. Investing in derivatives could lose more than the amount invested. Investing in foreign securities involves political, economic, currency risks, greater volatility and difference in accounting methods. These risks are greater for investments in emerging markets. Any index used by the Fund may not be widely used and information regarding its components and/or its methodology may not generally be known to industry participants, it may be more difficult for the Fund to find willing counter parties to engage in total or excess return swaps or other derivative instruments based on the return of the index. ETF and ETN investments involve additional risks such as the market price trading at a discount to its net asset value, an active secondary trading market may not develop or be maintained, or trading may be halted by the exchange in which they trade, which may impact a fund's ability to sell its shares. The Fund may use leverage which may cause the effect of an increase or decrease in the value of the portfolio securities to be magnified and the fund to be more volatile than if leverage was not used. The Fund is non-diversified meaning it may concentrate its assets in fewer individual holdings than a diversified fund. Therefore, the Fund is more exposed to individual stock volatility than a diversified fund. The Fund may make short sales of securities, which involves the risk that losses may exceed the original amount invested. Diversification does not assure a profit, nor does it protect against a loss in a declining market.
Morningstar Commodities Broad Basket Fund Category represents an average of all of the funds in the Morningstar Commodities Broad Basket Fund Category.
SOURCE DoubleLine
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