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Portfolio Managers John Kerschner, Nick Childs, and Jessica Shill discuss how collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) are created, their key characteristics, and what they might offer investors.
CLOs are managed portfolios of bank loans that have been securitized into new instruments of varying credit ratings. They have increasingly become the link between the financing needs of smaller companies and investors seeking higher yields.
CLOs have been a part of the U.S. securitized products market since the late 1980s. Historically, most CLOs were privately sold to large institutional investors such as banks, insurance companies, and asset management companies. But as the market has grown, CLOs have become more broadly accessible to retail investors.
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