In a world of profound transformations and markets that are shaped by uncertainty and volatility, how do you set about building portfolios that remain resilient?

Read this article to understand:

  • What makes a portfolio efficient and why that matters
  • What makes a portfolio resilient and why it is essential in today's environment
  • How we combine efficiency and resilience across our fixed-income portfolios

During the post-financial crisis years of tight corporate bond spreads and low dispersion in returns, fixed income investors became heavily reliant on credit beta, or the direction of the overall market, rather than credit alpha – which relies on strong security selection – to deliver returns.

This beta-led approach delivered strong results in bull markets but left portfolios vulnerable during episodes of widening spreads when risk aversion surged, and drawdowns were severe (see Figure 1).

Figure 1: Excess returns highly correlated to market direction

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

Note: Global corporate bond peer group, returns in USD. Data from September 30, 2015 to November 27, 2025.

Source: Aviva Investors, Bloomberg, eVestment. Data as of November 27, 2025.

In today’s environment with compressed spreads and asymmetric risk profiles, investors need an alpha-led approach; one that maintains a disciplined, market-neutral positioning while targeting high-conviction opportunities.

Why efficiency alone is not enough

For decades, investors have focused on building efficient portfolios – those that maximise returns for a given level of risk. Efficiency works well in stable markets, it reduces unnecessary risk and avoids over-concentration.

But markets aren’t always stable. Efficiency assumes normal conditions, and today’s environment of compressed spreads and heightened volatility challenges that assumption. When shocks occur, an efficiency-only approach can leave portfolios vulnerable.

That’s why we believe efficiency is only part of the solution. The other key factor is resilience – and we have made it a cornerstone of our investment process.

Introducing ‘resilience’

Aviva Investors’ concept of resilience aims to take efficiency a step further. It’s not just about how a portfolio performs in calm waters – it’s about how it behaves in a storm. A resilient portfolio can absorb shocks, adapt, and recover without forcing the investor into costly decisions like selling at the bottom and/or reducing risk at the worst possible time.

Resilience considers factors beyond historical volatility. It looks at:

  1. Spread behaviour relative to government bonds: How credit spreads move compared to risk-free benchmarks during different market conditions.
  2. Potential for mean reversion: Whether an asset is trading wide or tight versus its historical average, signalling recovery potential or vulnerability.
  3. Likelihood of capital gains or losses under stress scenarios: Assessing how price and yield dynamics might play out in adverse environments.

In short, resilience provides a deeper insight into total return potential and helps build portfolios that can withstand shocks and recover effectively.

Our approach to bond selection uses an adjusted measure of efficiency that accounts for resilience in different market environments. For example: a five-year bond with an option-adjusted spread of 200 basis points (bps) and duration of five years might have a break-even spread of 40 bps and spread volatility of 20 bps. This gives an efficiency score of roughly two (earning two basis points of carry for each basis point of volatility).

If the bond trades 50 bps wide of its historical mean, the resilience score could be +4.5x, signalling strong upside potential (see Figure 2). If it trades 50 bps tight, the score might be ‑0.5x, indicating limited upside. Why? Because resilience accounts for positioning relative to historical norms and structural strength – not just carry. 

Figure 2: Calculating resilience

Efficiency adjusted for how spreads behave relative to government bonds and other factors

Calculating resilience

For Illustrative purposes only.

Source: Aviva Investors, as of December 2025.

Over time, resilient portfolios have the potential to lead to better information ratios and smoother performance across the credit cycle – not just higher returns, but more consistent ones.

An efficient portfolio assumes conditions stay calm while a resilient portfolio prepares for a storm.  

Combining efficiency and resilience in our portfolios

Resilience isn’t an abstract concept – it’s embedded in how we evaluate opportunities and construct portfolios. Take the earlier five-year bond example. On efficiency alone, it looks attractive: strong carry relative to volatility. But when we layer in expected mean reversion and historical positioning, resilience becomes the real story.

Resilience is embedded in how we evaluate opportunities and construct portfolios

Let’s take it one step further and think about how we can deliver alpha in portfolio construction with another example, a company whose non-cyclical business model and deleveraging trajectory were identified as catalysts for spread tightening by our analysts.

Through advanced analytics with our Opti-FI toolkit, analysts were able to stress-test the bonds against various risk metrics and help portfolio managers to model a portfolio switch (sell an existing bond holding to purchase this one) that is volatility-neutral, as well as scenarios on the impact of the switch.

The result? While the trade requires selling a larger position in single-A corporates to maintain risk parity in the portfolio, the upside from potential spread tightening, linked to the company’s deleveraging story, makes it compelling.

Conclusion

For investors seeking long-term success, resilience isn’t optional. It’s essential. Markets today are shaped by uncertainty – credit cycles, geopolitical tensions, inflation surprises, and liquidity shocks. In such an environment, efficiency alone can leave portfolios vulnerable. A highly efficient portfolio might look great on paper but may crumble under stress if it lacks resilience.

Building resilient portfolios isn’t about predicting the future. it’s about preparing for it. By combining efficiency with resilience, we create portfolios that not only perform well in normal conditions but also stand firm when markets turn turbulent.

Discover our fixed income solutions

Fixed income is an indispensable building block for meeting a variety of investment goals, including income, inflation protection, liability management and capital appreciation.

Find out more

Subscribe to AIQ

Receive our insights on the big themes influencing financial markets and the global economy, from interest rates and inflation to technology and environmental change. 

Subscribe today
Subscribe to AIQ

Related views

Key risks

Investment risk

The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up and can fluctuate in response to changes in currency and exchange rates. Investors may not get back the original amount invested.

Credit and interest rate risk

Bond values are affected by changes in interest rates and the bond issuer's creditworthiness. Bonds that offer the potential for a higher income typically have a greater risk of default.

Important information

THIS IS A MARKETING COMMUNICATION

Aviva Investors Global Services Limited (AIGSL). Unless stated otherwise any views and opinions are those of Aviva Investors. They should not be viewed as indicating any guarantee of return from an investment managed by Aviva Investors nor as advice of any nature. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable but, has not been independently verified by Aviva Investors and is not guaranteed to be accurate. Past performance is not a guide to the future. The value of an investment and any income from it may go down as well as up and the investor may not get back the original amount invested. Nothing in this material, including any references to specific securities, assets classes and financial markets is intended to or should be construed as advice or recommendations of any nature. Some data shown are hypothetical or projected and may not come to pass as stated due to changes in market conditions and are not guarantees of future outcomes. This material is not a recommendation to sell or purchase any investment.

The information contained herein is for general guidance only. It is the responsibility of any person or persons in possession of this information to inform themselves of, and to observe, all applicable laws and regulations of any relevant jurisdiction. The information contained herein does not constitute an offer or solicitation to any person in any jurisdiction in which such offer or solicitation is not authorised or to any person to whom it would be unlawful to make such offer or solicitation..

In Europe, this document is issued by Aviva Investors Luxembourg S.A. Registered Office: 2 rue du Fort Bourbon, 1st Floor, 1249 Luxembourg. Supervised by Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier. An Aviva company. In the UK this is issued by Aviva Investors Global Services Limited. Registered in England and Wales No. 1151805. Registered Office: 80 Fenchurch Street, London EC3M 4AE. Authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Firm Reference No. 119178. In Switzerland, this document is issued by Aviva Investors Schweiz GmbH.

In Singapore, this material is being circulated by way of an arrangement with Aviva Investors Asia Pte. Limited (AIAPL) for distribution to institutional investors only. Please note that AIAPL does not provide any independent research or analysis in the substance or preparation of this material. Recipients of this material are to contact AIAPL in respect of any matters arising from, or in connection with, this material. AIAPL, a company incorporated under the laws of Singapore with registration number 200813519W, holds a valid Capital Markets Services Licence to carry out fund management activities issued under the Securities and Futures Act 2001 and is an Exempt Financial Adviser for the purposes of the Financial Advisers Act 2001. Registered Office: 138 Market Street, #05-01 CapitaGreen, Singapore 048946. This advertisement or publication has not been reviewed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

In Canada and the United States, this material is issued by Aviva Investors Canada Inc. (“AIC”). AIC is registered with the Ontario Securities Commission as a commodity trading manager, exempt market dealer, portfolio manager and investment fund manager. AIC is also registered as an exempt market dealer and portfolio manager in each province and territory of Canada and may also be registered as an investment fund manager in certain other applicable provinces. In the United States, AIC is registered as investment adviser with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and as commodity trading adviser with the National Futures Association.

The name “Aviva Investors” as used in this material refers to the global organisation of affiliated asset management businesses operating under the Aviva Investors name. Each Aviva investors’ affiliate is a subsidiary of Aviva plc, a publicly- traded multi-national financial services company headquartered in the UK.