Swiss Manager Readies First CDO

© 2025 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions

Swiss Manager Readies First CDO

RMF Investment Group, a Swiss asset management firm specializing in alternative investment strategies, is ramping up collateral for its debut E300 million collateralized debt obligation, RMF Euro CDO, according to BW sister publication Loan Market Week. The collateral will be predominantly European leveraged loans, with a 10-30% bucket for high-yield bonds and up to 10% for synthetics.

Explaining the timing behind the decision to initiate the CDO, Mark Mink, RMF portfolio manager, said the European market is offering a very good pipeline for leveraged loans. "This is an environment conducive to asset divestiture among the large conglomerates," he noted. "In the past, companies such as Vivendi Universal, Siemens and Invensys may have turned to trade sales, but everybody is having difficulty stepping up to the plate," he said. But private equity firms are in a good position to buy these assets, he stated. RMF has managed high-yield portfolios for a number of years in Europe, but chose to use predominantly loans instead of high-yield bonds because of the security and low volatility of loans, Mink commented.

The deal has a very flexible structure, Mink said. This enables RMF to increase the quality of the portfolio and decrease the spread, or on the flipside, if RMF believes the economy is entering a positive credit cycle, it can migrate down the credit curve and buy more high-yield bonds to increase spread. Under a high default scenario, a trigger has been set that diverts over 50% of the excess interest for equity holders to pay down the triple-B notes. This pays down the most expensive liabilities first, subsequently leaving more cash flow for the equity holders over the life of the transaction, Mink noted.

Gift this article