CLO equity has grown in popularity in recent years as asset owners have sought to diversify their portfolios and, in many cases, have turned to specialized credit strategies. Notably, asset owners often have a practical question when considering CLO equity allocations: “Where does it fit in my portfolio?”
This paper explores the role of CLO equity within an asset allocation framework, particularly in relation to three prominent parts of many portfolios: private equity (PE), private credit (PC), and public equity.
What are CLO equity’s key characteristics?
First, it’s essential to understand two characteristics an allocation to CLO equity can bring to a portfolio:
- High income: One of CLO equity’s key features is its ability historically to generate substantial and stable income (mid- to high-teens IRRs), outpacing both traditional fixed income and private credit.1
- Diversification potential:2 Another key attribute is its low historical correlation with other asset classes. For example, CLO equity historically has a 0.37 correlation to the S&P 500.3 In our view, this low correlation helps a CLO equity allocation mitigate overall portfolio risk over the long term and enhance the stability of returns.
CLO equity's role in asset allocation
So, what do these features mean in practice? In our view, CLO equity can help solve three of today's most common asset allocation challenges: slowing distributions in private equity, falling yields in private credit, and the need to maintain public equity-like returns in the face of high valuations and volatility.
#1 – Slowing distributions in private equity
As allocators have seen their distributions slow in the private equity portion of their portfolio, there is a growing desire to increase cash flows in other parts of their portfolio. Critically, PE vintages can be heavily impacted by the exit environment, creating a correlation between realized IRRs and IPO/M&A activity. While forward M&A activity is always hard to predict, we believe the uncertain growth outlook for the US economy over the next 12 – 24 months makes it likely the extension environment could persist.
Conversely, CLO equity returns are driven by a steady source of income, and their realized returns generally have a higher correlation to the difference in spreads between the loan and CLO liabilities markets. Though CLO equity’s historically mid-teen IRRs are lower than some parts of PE, they are higher than many areas of credit. The offset is it also provides higher income and, crucially, income that pays at the highest rate early in the life of the investment.
In our analysis, we model a hypothetical CLO drawdown portfolio hitting a 1.0x distributions-to-paid-in (DPI) by year six versus PE buyout hitting 0.4x by year six (Figure 1). Though the average PE fund has a higher cumulative distribution over the long term, it is over a longer horizon. We believe an allocation to CLO equity can help mitigate this ongoing DPI problem.