Robeco, The Investments Engineers
United Kingdom
International
Europe
Belgique (FR)
België (NL)
Deutschland
España
France
Italia
Nederland
Schweiz (DE)
Switzerland (EN)
United Kingdom
Other countries
Asia-Pacific
Australia
上海 (CN)
Hong Kong (EN)
香港 (ZH)
日本 (JP)
Singapore
Americas
América Latina (ES)
Latin America (EN)
United States
Africa & Middle East
Africa
Middle East
blue circle
Robeco, The Investments Engineers
  • Insights
    • Latest
    • Top stories
    • Market view & outlook
    • Education
    • Webinars
  • Products
    • Funds
    • Strategies
    • Opportunities
  • Sustainable investing
    • Journey
    • Expertise
    • Influence
    • Climate & Biodiversity
    • SDGs
  • About us
    • Who we are
    • Key strengths
    • Diversity & inclusion
    • Contact
International
Global website
Europe
Belgique (FR)
België (NL)
Deutschland
España
France
Italia
Nederland
Schweiz (DE)
Switzerland (EN)
United Kingdom
Other countries
Asia-Pacific
Australia
上海 (CN)
Hong Kong (EN)
香港 (ZH)
日本 (JP)
Singapore
Americas
América Latina (ES)
Latin America (EN)
United States
Africa & Middle East
Africa
Middle East
loader
Contact us

Robeco QI Global Multi-Factor Bonds DH USD

Systematic portfolio of government and corporate bonds for long-term capital growth

Contact us

Share classes

Share classes

Every share class of a product invests in the same portfolio of securities and has the same investment objectives and policies. However, their parameters might deviate. For instance and amongst others, their distribution type, currency exposure or fees and expenses might differ. The most common share classes at Robeco are:
a) D/DH shares, which are regular shares and available for all Investors;
b) I/IH shares, for institutional investors as defined from time to time by the Luxembourg supervisory authority.
For more information on share classes please go to the prospectus.

DH-USD

DH-EUR

FH-EUR

FH-USD

IH-EUR

IH-USD

ZH-GBP

Class and codes

Asset class:

Bonds

ISIN:

LU2067161856

Bloomberg:

ROMHBDU LX

Index

Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index

Sustainability-related information

Sustainability-related information

Under the EU Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation, products can be labelled as either Article 6, 8 or 9 fund.

Article 6 - The fund is not in scope of enhanced sustainability disclosures compared to Article 8 and 9.
Article 8 - The fund does not have a sustainable investment objective but promotes environmental or social characteristics and is subject to enhanced sustainability disclosures.
Article 9 - The fund has a sustainable investment objective and is subject to enhanced sustainability disclosures.

Regardless of Article 8 or 9, the companies in which investments are made must follow good governance practices, and sustainable investments must not do any significant harm.

Article 8

Morningstar

Morningstar

Copyright © Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. The information contained herein: (1) is proprietary to Morningstar and/or its content providers; (2) may not be copied or distributed; and (3) is not warranted to be accurate, complete or timely. Neither Morningstar nor its content providers are responsible for any damages or losses arising from any use of this information. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Download The Morningstar Rating for Funds (chapter: The Morningstar Rating: Three-, Five-, and 10-Year) on the Morningstar website.

Rating (28/02)

  • Overview
  • Performance & costs
  • Portfolio
  • Sustainability
  • Commentary
  • Documents
Switch funds

Fund topics

Overview
Performance & costs
Portfolio
Sustainability
Commentary
Documents
Switch funds

MISSING: fund.detail.tabs.

Key points

  • Globally diversified portfolio of bonds issued by governments, agencies and corporates managed with a systematic investment style
  • Uses low-risk, quality, value, momentum and size factors to select the most attractive bonds
  • Based on more than 25 years of experience and award-winning research in quantitative fixed income investing

About this fund

Robeco QI Global Multi-Factor Bonds is an actively managed fund that invests globally in bonds issued by governments, agencies and corporates. The selection of these bonds is based on a quantitative model. The fund's objective is to provide long-term capital growth. The fund uses low-risk, quality, value, momentum and size factors to select the most attractive bonds. The disciplined investment process aims to keep the credit and foreign exchange risk of the bond portfolio similar to that of the benchmark, but with the aim of generating higher returns due to its exposures to factors. The overall duration of the bond portfolio can be increased or decreased, depending on a systematic assessment of the bond market outlook.

Key facts

Per 28-02-2023

Total size of fund

$ 24,608,158

Size of share class

$ 98,718

Inception date fund

26-11-2019

1-year performance

-8.70%

Dividend paying

No

The value of the investments may fluctuate. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Fund manager

Olaf Penninga

Patrick Houweling

Lodewijk van der Linden

Olaf Penninga is Portfolio Manager Quant Fixed Income. He has been Portfolio Manager for the Dynamic Duration strategy since 2005 and Lead Portfolio Manager since 2011. These are all quantitative fixed income strategies. His previous positions with Robeco include that of Lead Portfolio Manager for Robeco’s fundamentally-managed Euro Government Bonds strategy and Researcher with responsibility for fixed income allocation research. Olaf was employed by Interpolis as Investment Econometrician for one year before returning to Robeco in 2003. He started his career in 1998 at Robeco. He holds a Master's in Mathematics (cum laude) from Leiden University. Patrick Houweling is Co-Head of Quant Fixed Income and Lead Portfolio Manager of Robeco’s quantitative credit strategies. Patrick has published seminal articles on Duration Times Spread, factor investing in credit markets, corporate bond liquidity and credit default swaps in various academic journals, including the Journal of Banking and Finance, the Journal of Empirical Finance and the Financial Analysts Journal. The article 'Factor Investing in the Corporate Bond Market' he co-authored received a Graham and Dodd Scroll Award of Excellence for 2017. Patrick is a guest lecturer at several universities. Prior to joining Robeco in 2003, he was Researcher in the Risk Management department at Rabobank International where he started his career in 1998. He holds a PhD in Finance and a Master's (cum laude) in Financial Econometrics from Erasmus University Rotterdam. Lodewijk van der Linden is Portfolio Manager Quant Fixed Income. He joined Robeco in August 2018. In the period 2015-2018 Lodewijk worked at Aegon Asset Management where he was Risk associate and Team Manager Client Reporting. Lodewijk started his career at PwC as an actuarial consultant in 2013. He holds a Master's in Actuarial Science from the University of Amsterdam and a Master's in Econometrics and Management Science from Erasmus University Rotterdam.

Key points
About the fund
Key facts
Fund manager

Performance

Per 28-02-2023
Per period Fund Index

1 month

-1.02%

-1.60%

3 months 

-0.21%

-0.52%

YTD

1.34%

0.67%

1 year

-8.70%

-7.97%

2 years

-6.11%

-5.13%

3 years

-4.30%

-3.34%

Since inception 11/2019

-3.42%

-2.27%

The value of the investments may fluctuate. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Annualized (for periods longer than one year).
Performances are net of fees and based on transaction prices.

Statistics

Statistics

Hit-ratio

Characteristics

  • Statistics
  • Hit-ratio
  • Characteristics
Per 28-02-2023
Statistics 3 years

Tracking error ex-post (%)

The ex-post tracking error is defined as the volatility of the fund's achieved excess return over the index return. In fund management, most managers are subject to an ex-ante (pre-determined) tracking error, which defines the extent of the additional risk they may take when aspiring to outperform the fund's benchmark. The ex-post tracking error explains the distribution of past fund performances compared to those of its underlying benchmark. With a higher tracking error, the fund's returns deviate more from its index's returns, hence there is a greater chance that the fund may outperform. The wider the spread of returns relative to the benchmark, the more "actively" a fund has been managed. In contrast, a low tracking error indicates more "passive" management.

1.32

Information ratio

This ratio serves to evaluate the quality of the excess return a fund manager has achieved because it takes the active risk involved into account. The information ratio is defined as the excess return over the benchmark return divided by the fund's tracking error. The higher the information ratio, the better. For example, a fund with a tracking error of 4% and an excess return of 2% over benchmark has an information ratio of 0.5, which is quite good.

-0.11

Sharpe ratio

This ratio measures the risk-adjusted performance and allows the performance quality of different investments to be compared. It is calculated by subtracting the risk-free rate from the fund's returns and dividing the result by the fund's standard deviation (risk). So the Sharpe ratio tells us whether a fund's returns are the result of smart investment decisions or stem from taking extra risk. The higher the ratio, the better, meaning that a greater return is achieved per unit of risk. This ratio is named after its inventor, Nobel Laureate, William Sharpe.

-0.85

Alpha (%)

Alpha measures the difference between a portfolio's actual return and its expected performance, given the level of risk, compared to the benchmark. A positive alpha figure indicates that the fund has performed better than expected, given the level of risk. Beta is used to calculate the level of risk compared to the benchmark..

0.25

Beta

Beta is a measure of a portfolio's volatility, or systematic risk, in comparison to the benchmark. A beta of 1 indicates that the portfolio will move with the benchmark. A beta of less than 1 means that the portfolio will be less volatile than the benchmark. A beta of more than 1 indicates that the portfolio will be more volatile than the benchmark. For example, if a portfolio's beta is 1.2 it is theoretically 20% more volatile than the benchmark.

1.08

Standard deviation

Standard deviation is a measure of the dispersion of a set of data from its mean. The more spread out the data is, the higher the deviation. In finance, standard deviation is applied to the annual rate of return of an investment to measure the investment's volatility (risk).

5.43

Max. monthly gain (%)

The maximum (i.e. highest) absolute positive monthly performance in the underlying period.

3.37

Max. monthly loss (%)

The maximum (i.e. highest) absolute negative monthly performance in the underlying period.

-3.92

Hit-ratio 3 years

Months out performance

Number of months in which the fund outperformed the benchmark in the underlying period.

16

Hit ratio (%)

This percentage indicates the number of months in which the fund outperformed in a given period.

44.4

Months Bull market

Number of months of positive benchmark performance in the underlying period.

16

Months outperformance Bull

Number of months in which the fund outperformed positive benchmark performance in the underlying period.

8

Hit ratio Bull (%)

This percentage indicates the number of months the fund outperformed a positive benchmark in an underlying period.

50

Months Bear market

Number of months of negative benchmark performance in the underlying period.

20

Months outperformance Bear

Number of months in which the fund outperformed negative benchmark performance in the underlying period.

8

Hit ratio Bear (%)

This percentage indicates the number of months the fund outperformed a negative benchmark performance in an underlying period.

40

Characteristics Fund Index

Rating

The average credit quality of the securities in the portfolio. AAA, AA, A en BAA (Investment Grade) means lower risk and BB, B, CCC, CC, C (High Yield) higher risk.

AA3/A1

AA2/AA3

Option Adjusted Modified Duration (years)

The interest rate sensitivity of the portfolio.

6.10

6.70

Maturity (years)

The average maturity of the securities in the portfolio.

7.80

8.50

Above mentioned ratios are based on gross of fees returns.

Costs

Per 28-02-2023
Cost of this fund Percentage

Ongoing charges

Indication of annual charges that are deducted for this fund. This indication is based on the costs over the last calendar year and may vary from year to year. Transaction costs incurred by the fund, any performance fees and other one-off costs are not included in the ongoing charges.

0.81%

Included management fee

A fee paid by the fund to the asset management company for the professional management of the fund.

0.60%

Included service fee

This fee is intended to cover official fees, such as the cost of annual reports, annual shareholders' meetings and price publications.

0.16%

Transaction costs

The transaction costs shown are the average annual transaction costs over the last three years calculated in accordance with European regulations.

0.09%

Fiscal product treatment

The fund is established in Luxembourg and is subject to the Luxembourg tax laws and regulations. The fund is not liable to pay any corporation, income, dividend or capital gains tax in Luxembourg. The fund is subject to an annual subscription tax ('tax d'abonnement') in Luxembourg, which amounts to 0.05% of the net asset value of the fund. This tax is included in the net asset value of the fund. The fund can in principle use the Luxembourg treaty network to partially recover any withholding tax on its income.

Fiscal treatment of investor

The fiscal consequences of investing in this fund depend on the investor's personal situation. For private investors in the Netherlands real interest and dividend income or capital gains received on their investments are not relevant for tax purposes. Each year investors pay income tax on the value of their net assets as at 1 January if and inasmuch as such net assets exceed the investor’s tax-free allowance. Any amount invested in the fund forms part of the investor's net assets. Private investors who are resident outside the Netherlands will not be taxed in the Netherlands on their investments in the fund. However, such investors may be taxed in their country of residence on any income from an investment in this fund based on the applicable national fiscal laws. Other fiscal rules apply to legal entities or professional investors. We advise investors to consult their financial or tax adviser about the tax consequences of an investment in this fund in their specific circumstances before deciding to invest in the fund.

Performance
Price development
Statistics
Cost of this fund
Fiscal: product
Fiscal: investor

Fund allocation

Currency

Duration

Sector

  • Currency
  • Duration
  • Sector
Per 28-02-2023
Allocations to currency denominations in government bonds are the result of the active selection of the most attractive government bonds across countries and maturities based on the multi-factor model. In credits, the allocations to currency denominations are incidental to the corporate bond selection, which is generated by the multi-factor ranking model. All currency exposures are hedged to the base currency of the fund class. There is no active currency policy. Small temporary deviations from the benchmark may arise due to market movements.

Policies

  • All currency risks are hedged.

  • All income earned will be accumulated and not be distributed as dividend. Therefore the entire return is reflected in the share price development.

  • Robeco QI Global Multi-Factor Bonds is an actively managed fund that invests globally in bonds issued by governments, agencies and corporates. The selection of these bonds is based on a quantitative model. The fund's objective is to provide long-term capital growth. The fund promotes E&S (i.e. Environmental and Social) characteristics within the meaning of Article 8 of the European Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation, integrates sustainability risks in the investment process and applies Robeco’s Good Governance policy. The fund applies sustainability indicators, including but not limited to, normative, activity-based and region-based exclusions, and engagement. The fund uses low-risk, quality, value, momentum and size factors to select the most attractive bonds. The disciplined investment process aims to keep the credit and foreign exchange risk of the bond portfolio similar to that of the benchmark, but with the aim of generating higher returns due to its exposures to factors. The overall duration of the bond portfolio can be increased or decreased, depending on a systematic assessment of the bond market outlook. The majority of bonds selected will be components of the benchmark, but bonds outside the benchmark may be selected too. The fund can deviate from the weightings of the benchmark. The fund aims to outperform the benchmark over the long run, while still controlling relative risk through the application of limits (on currencies, issuers and ratings) to the extent of the deviation from the benchmark. This will consequently limit the deviation of the performance relative to the benchmark. The Benchmark is a broad market-weighted index that is not consistent with the ESG characteristics promoted by the fund.

  • The fund aims to have its credit and currency exposure in line with that of the benchmark. The strategy can have moderate tracking error versus the benchmark. The portfolio volatility is restricted by a predefined threshold. The portfolio will make use of derivatives, which add to the leverage of the portfolio. The expected level of gross leverage is stated in the prospectus.

Fund allocation
Policies

Sustainability-related disclosures

Full sustainability-related disclosures
Download full report
Summary sustainability-related disclosures
Download summary

Sustainability profile

Per 28-02-2023
Exclusions
ESG Integration
Engagement

Environmental footprint

Per 28-02-2023

Carbon ownership - Credit allocation

Footprint ownership expresses the total resource utilization the credit allocation of the portfolio finances. Each assessed company's footprint is calculated by normalizing resources utilized by the company's enterprise value including cash (EVIC). Multiplying these values by the dollar amount invested in each assessed company yields the aggregate footprint ownership figures. The same is done for the corporate bonds in the index. Carbon efficient companies have lower ownership values. The portfolios score is shown in blue and the index in grey.

CGF GMFB_20230228-CGF GMFB_20230228-footprintOwnershipCo2.png
Robeco data based on Trucost data. *

Carbon intensity - Government bond allocation

Carbon intensity expresses the aggregate efficiency of the government bond allocation of the portfolio. Each country’s carbon intensity is calculated by normalizing the country’s greenhouse gas emissions (expressed in carbon equivalents) by its population size. The portfolio's aggregate intensity figure is calculated by multiplying each portfolio holding’s intensity figure by its respective portfolio weight. The same is done for the government bonds in the index. Carbon efficient countries have lower intensity values. The portfolios score is shown in blue and the index in grey.

CGF GMFB_20230228-CGF GMFB_20230228-footprintIntensityCo2Capita.png
Robeco data based on Trucost data. *
*Source: S&P Trucost Limited © Trucost 2021. All rights in the Trucost data and reports vest in Trucost and/or its licensors. Neither Trucost, not its affliates, nor its licensors accept any liability for any errors, omissions, or interruptions in the Trucost data and/or reports. No further distribution of the Data and/or Reports is permitted without Trucost's express written consent.

Sustainability

Per 28-02-2023

The fund incorporates sustainability in the investment process via exclusions, ESG integration, ESG and environmental footprint targets, and engagement. For investments in government bonds, the fund complies with Robeco's exclusion policy for countries and does not invest in countries where serious violations of human rights or a collapse of the governance structure take place, or if countries are subject to UN, EU or US sanctions. Via portfolio construction rules the fund targets a better ESG score and a lower carbon footprint compared to the government bonds part of the reference index. For investments in corporate bonds, the fund does not invest in issuers that are in breach of international norms or where activities have been deemed detrimental to society following Robeco's exclusion policy. Via portfolio construction rules the fund targets a better ESG score and lower carbon, water and waste footprints than that of the corporate component in the reference index. These portfolio construction rules ensure that issuers with a better ESG scores or a lower environmental footprint are more likely to be included in the portfolio, and vice versa. For corporate bonds, the investment process also includes a check of buy candidates and portfolio holdings by our credit analysts for ESG risks that may have material impact for bond holders. Lastly, where corporate issuers are flagged for breaching international standards in our ongoing monitoring, the issuer will become subject to engagement.

Information
Profile
Environmental footprint
Sustainability

Market development

Per 28-02-2023

Bond yields rose in February, reversing the rally seen in January. Strong US labor market data and a further rise in Eurozone core inflation point to further rate hikes. Markets moved to discount a higher peak in rates and the first rate cuts are now only expected in 2024. Yields rose and curves inverted further, with US and German 2-year yields reaching the highest levels since 2007 and 2008 respectively. US Treasuries returned -2.5% and German Bunds -2.4%. Australian bonds declined less and Japanese bonds even rallied. Professor Ueda will be the new Bank of Japan governor. The credit spread of the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporates Index increased somewhat from 133 to 135 bps.

Performance explanation

Per 28-02-2023

Based on transaction prices, the fund's return was -1.02%. The fund outperformed the index in February, with all three performance drivers contributing positively, just like last month. Value was the strongest factor within government bond selection. The resulting curve positioning within the US, Japan and Australia contributed the most. Value was also the strongest factor in credit selection, followed by the low-risk/quality factor. The duration overlay contributed the most to the overall performance, with underweight duration positions in Germany and the US, and an overweight position in Japanese futures.

Expectation of fund manager

Olaf Penninga

Patrick Houweling

Lodewijk van der Linden

Robeco QI Global Multi-Factor Bonds invests systematically in predominantly investment grade credits and government bonds. It offers balanced exposure to a number of quantitative factors. The bottom-up selection of government bonds and credits aims to systematically harvest factor premiums with a risk profile that is similar to the reference index. On top of that, the fund incorporates an active duration overlay, which is based on the outcomes of our quantitative duration model.

Market development
Performance explanation
Expectation of fund manager

Fund documents

  • Factsheet
  • Prospectus
  • Articles of association
  • Key Investor Information (KIID)
  • Full sustainability-related disclosures
  • Summary sustainability-related disclosures

(Semi) annual reports

  • Annual report 2021
  • Annual report 2020
  • Annual report 2019
  • Semi-annual report 2022
  • Semi-annual report 2021
  • Semi-annual report 2020

Announcements

  • Publication Semi-annual reports 2022 (31-08-2022)
  • Semi-annual 2021 available (31-08-2021)
Fund documents
Reports
Announcements

Related insights

Read

13-12-2022 · Insight

Fixed income outlook: Recession investing

Learn more

Read

14-10-2022 · Insight

Are credit factor premiums robust to rising inflation and interest rates?

Learn more

Read

06-10-2022 · Insight

Staying on track with multi-factor credits in a tough market environment

Learn more

Read

08-09-2022 · Insight

Building back bond exposure

Learn more

Read

30-06-2022 · Insight

Ten years of successful factor investing in credit markets

Learn more

Read

22-06-2022 · Insight

Inflation may be more about the destination than the peak

Learn more

Read

21-06-2022 · Insight

Fixed income outlook: The inflation game

Learn more

Read

18-05-2022 · Insight

The performance in government bonds is a reminder that it’s all relative

Learn more

Read

18-05-2022 · Insight

Navigating bond markets in times of stagflation

Learn more

Read

16-05-2022 · Insight

The role of green bonds in a fixed income portfolio

Learn more

Read

22-03-2022 · Quarterly outlook

Fixed income outlook: Czech mate

Learn more

Read

30-11-2021 · Quarterly outlook

Fixed income outlook: Pricing sigma

Learn more

Read

11-11-2021 · Insight

Shielding factor portfolios from credit downgrades and defaults

Learn more

Read

25-10-2021 · Insight

Enhancing the Paris-aware global bond index

Learn more

01-10-2021 · Insight

At the forefront of climate investing solutions

Learn more

Read

Read

24-09-2021 · Insight

Are credit factor premiums robust to inflation?

Learn more

Read

14-09-2021 · Quarterly outlook

Fixed income outlook: Tunnel vision

Learn more

Read

08-09-2021 · Research

Seizing opportunities in emerging markets credits

Learn more

Read

03-08-2021 · Insight

Water and waste as the next frontier in improving sustainability in factor credits

Learn more

Read

12-07-2021 · Insight

Deep evidence that factor investing works well in bond markets

Learn more

Read

09-07-2021 · Insight

How will carmakers survive the shift to electrification?

Learn more

Read

29-06-2021 · Insight

Creating sustainable multi-factor bond portfolios

Learn more

Read

09-06-2021 · Insight

Finding the downside risks in credit with ESG

Learn more

Read

01-04-2021 · Insight

There’s no quant crisis in credits

Learn more

Read

23-03-2021 · Insight

Fixed income outlook: Coming to America

Learn more

Read

02-03-2021 · Insight

70 years of evidence on our dynamic duration model

Learn more

Read

03-02-2021 · Insight

European utilities on the cusp of a decade-long investment opportunity

Learn more

Read

26-01-2021 · Insight

High yield indices don’t make good benchmarks

Learn more

Read

07-01-2021 · Insight

Letter from the CIO: Stay contrarian

Learn more

Read

29-10-2020 · Insight

Is there value in fallen angels?

Learn more

Read

30-06-2020 · Insight

New study reveals: you can predict when interest rates will rise

Learn more

Read

01-05-2020 · Research

Duration Times Spread: a measure of spread exposure in credit portfolios

Learn more

Read

01-04-2020 · Quarterly outlook

Fixed income outlook: The Covid shock and the Baa recovery

Learn more

Read

11-04-2019 · Insight

Enabling insurers to achieve capital-efficient returns

Learn more

24-07-2017 · Research

Robeco Global Total Return Bond Funds leading approach to ESG integration

Learn more

Read

Read

11-06-2017

Does Carry add value to existing credit factors?

Learn more

28-09-2016 · Insight

Rising benchmark durations threaten index-focused bond investors

Learn more

Read

Read

23-07-2015 · Insight

Balanced exposure to factors in credits

Learn more

Read

31-03-2015 · Insight

Duration management is key to bond returns

Learn more

Read

12-01-2015 · Insight

Smart credit investing: harvesting factor premiums

Learn more

Read

17-08-2012 · Research

Residual Equity Momentum for Corporate Bonds

Learn more

Read

09-12-2011 · Insight

Ibbotson's default premium: risky data

Learn more

Read

15-08-1999 · Research

Value of security selection versus asset allocation in credit markets

Learn more

Let's keep the conversation going

Keep track of fast-moving events in sustainable and quantitative investing, trends and credits with our newsletters.

Stay updated
Robeco

Robeco aims to enable its clients to achieve their financial and sustainability goals by providing superior investment returns and solutions.

Key topics
Insights
Funds
Strategies
Opportunities
Sustainable investing
About us
Quick links
Contact
Glossary
Insurers
Advisor education
Expertise
Sustainable investing
Quantitative investing
Thematic investing
Emerging markets
Credit investing

Disclaimer Privacy and Cookie Statement Security Policies Modern slavery statement

Important information This disclaimer applies to any documents and the verbal or written comments of any person in presentations or webinars on this website and taken together is referred to herein as the “Information”. The services to which the Information relate are NOT FOR RETAIL CLIENTS - The information contained in the Website is solely intended for professional investors, defined as investors which (1) qualify as professional clients within the meaning of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), (2) have requested to be treated as professional clients within the meaning of the MiFID or (3) are authorized to receive such information under any other applicable laws and must not be relied or acted upon by any other persons. This Information does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any financial product, and may not be relied upon in connection with the purchase or sale of any financial product. You are cautioned against using this Information as the basis for making a decision to purchase any financial product. To the extent that you rely on the Information in connection with any investment decision, you do so at your own risk. The Information does not purport to be complete on any topic addressed. The Information may contain data or analysis prepared by third parties and no representation or warranty about the accuracy of such data or analysis is provided.

In all cases where historical performance is presented, please note that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results and should not be relied upon as the basis for making an investment decision. Investors may not get back the amount originally invested. Neither Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. nor any of its affiliates guarantees the performance or the future returns of any investments. If the currency in which the past performance is displayed differs from the currency of the country in which you reside, then you should be aware that due to exchange rate fluctuations the performance shown may increase or decrease if converted into your local currency. Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. (“Robeco”) expressly prohibits any redistribution of the Information without the prior written consent of Robeco. The Information is not intended for distribution to, or use by, any person or entity in any jurisdiction or country where such distribution or use is contrary to law, rule or regulation. Certain information contained in the Information includes calculations or figures that have been prepared internally and have not been audited or verified by a third party. Use of different methods for preparing, calculating or presenting information may lead to different results. Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. is authorised as a manager of UCITS and AIFs by the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets and subject to limited regulation in the UK by the Financial Conduct Authority. Details about the extent of our regulation by the Financial Conduct Authority are available from us on request.