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Fixed Income

Madison Core Bond

Strategy Overview

Madison Core Bond is an active, total return strategy that aims to generate superior long-term risk-adjusted returns with diversified exposure to fixed income sectors. The strategy actively manages fixed income risks (duration, yield curve, sector, credit) through a disciplined investment process that emphasizes downside protection and capital preservation.

Key Facts

Benchmark Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index
Strategy Inception April 2013
Investment Vehicles Separate Account
Mutual Fund
Active ETF
Collective Investment Trust
Investible Securities US Treasury
US Agency
Investment Grade US Corporate
Asset-Backed and Mortgage-Backed Securities
Average Duration 4-6 years

Experienced Management

Managing Risks to Pursue Alpha

A circular infographic showing five segments around the text “Active portfolio construction, monitoring & rebalancing.” The segments are: Duration Decision, Yield Curve Positioning, Sector Analysis, Quality Assessment, and Credit Selection.

Defining Characteristics

Active risk management

Disciplined and repeatable process that actively manages fixed income risks (duration, yield curve, sector, credit).

High-quality

Proprietary credit research framework to build and monitor an approved list of high-quality securities.

Size advantage

Our size allows for institutional pricing scale with the nimbleness to pursue alpha with a high degree of conviction.

Long-tenured management

Portfolio Managers have over 45 years of combined investment experience.

Madison Fixed Income Team

Related Insights

Consider the investment objectives, risks, and charges and expenses of Madison Funds carefully before investing. Each fund’s prospectus contains this and other information about the fund. Call 800.877.6089 or visit madisonfunds.com to obtain a prospectus and read it carefully before investing.

In addition to the ongoing market risk applicable to portfolio securities, bonds are subject to interest rate risk, credit risk and inflation risk. When interest rates rise, bond prices fall; generally, the longer a bond’s maturity, the more sensitive it is to this risk. Credit risk is the possibility that the issuer of a security will be unable to make interest payments and repay the principal on its debt. Bonds may also be subject to call risk, which allows the issuer to retain the right to redeem the debt, fully or partially, before the scheduled maturity date. Proceeds from sales prior to maturity may be more or less than originally invested due to changes in market conditions or changes in the credit quality of the issuer.

Yield Curve is a line that plots yields (interest rates) of bonds having equal credit quality but differing maturity dates. The slope of the yield curve gives an idea of future interest rate changes and economic activity. There are three main types of yield curve shapes: normal (upward sloping curve), inverted (downward sloping curve) and flat. Yield curve strategies involve positioning a portfolio to capitalize on expected changes.

Duration is a measure of the sensitivity of the price of a bond or other debt instrument to a change in interest rates. Duration measures how long it takes, in years, for an investor to be repaid the bond’s price by the bond’s total cash flows.

Indices are unmanaged. An investor cannot invest directly in an index. They are shown for illustrative purposes only, and do not represent the performance of any specific investment. Index returns do not include any expenses, fees or sales charges, which would lower performance.

The Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index is a broad-based flagship benchmark that measures the investment grade, USD-denominated, fixed-rate taxable bond market. The index includes Treasuries, government-related and corporate securities, MBS (agency fixed-rate and hybrid ARM pass-throughs), ABS and CMBS (agency and non-agency).