Our approach
Drawing on our global investment expertise, the Aviva Investors Sustainable Income & Growth Fund aims to deliver five per cent gross income yield per annum and long-term capital growth (five years or more). We invest across a broad range of global asset classes and focus on long-term sustainability – both in terms of returns and ESG factors.
Unlike traditional multi-asset income funds, the fund is built from the bottom up, allowing us to be highly selective when looking for opportunities that can contribute to the outcome of the fund. We will not invest in securities with poor environmental, social & governance (ESG) scores, or companies linked to coal, tobacco, or controversial weapons.
In search of sustainable income
Benefits
By combining a bottom-up approach with a heritage in sustainable investing and real assets, we are able to create optimal multi-asset outcomes for income and income growth.
Key risks
For further information on the risks and risk profiles of our funds, please refer to the relevant KIID and Prospectus.
Finding sustainable income growers
Source: Aviva Investors, MSCI, February 2019, based on MSCI ACWI Index and holdings in Sustainable Income & Growth portfolio. Subject to change.

AI Elements is the Aviva Investors in-house ESG score. It reflects the environmental, social and governance credentials of the corporate or sovereign issuer to which it is applied, where one equates to weaker credentials and ten to stronger ones.
It's common for investors to frame their investment decisions in terms of either income or capital growth. The Aviva Investors Sustainable Income & Growth Fund aims to deliver both. A particularly useful characteristic for investors saving towards retirement, allowing them to compound returns towards retirement, and then in retirement to draw down the natural income while leaving their capital in place to grow over the long term.
Need more information?
For further information, please contact our investment sales team.
Fund in focus

Sustainable, bottom-up investing: Time for multi-asset investors to gain some perspective?
29 Jul 2020
It could be time to reconsider the traditional, top-down approach to multi-asset investing. A detailed, bottom-up approach to income investing can bring greater certainty about outcomes and help investors set aside concerns about short-term volatility, as Francois de Bruin explains.
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Defying uncertainty in retirement
29 Jul 2020
The unknowns of the future, complexity of investment markets and unique needs of every individual make ‘defying uncertainty’ a complicated problem for those looking to retire.
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Multi-asset & multi-strategy
Calibrating cycles: Why life and market cycles don’t always align and what to do about it
30 Oct 2019
Markets and our personal finances rarely march to the same beat. In this piece, Francois de Bruin highlights some investment strategies for successfully navigating the retirement journey.
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Defying uncertainty in retirement
The unknowns of the future, complexity of investment markets and unique needs of every individual make ‘defying uncertainty’ a complicated problem for those looking to retire. For those saving toward retirement, and for those who might have already stepped out of paid employment, this paper introduces some of the obstacles that investors may face in achieving their objectives.

Explore our multi-asset & multi-strategy range
Multi-asset & multi-strategy views

Multi-asset allocation views: Room to grow
16 Feb 2021
The early part of a year gives investors an opportunity to take stock. Sunil Krishnan reflects on how the current environment is shaping our views for multi-asset portfolios.
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Our annual letter to company chairpersons
15 Jan 2021
As part of our engagement efforts, every January we send a letter to the chairs of companies we invest in (and some we don’t, but still want to use our influence with) to set out our stewardship priorities for the year. Here, in full, is our 2021 letter.
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Vaccine hope, Biden and central bank policy: The outlook for multi-asset in 2021
17 Dec 2020
Sunil Krishnan highlights some of the themes that will shape multi-asset investing in 2021.
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Liquidity, uneven recoveries and debt sustainability: The outlook for emerging-market debt in 2021
17 Dec 2020
Liam Spillane, head of emerging market debt at Aviva Investors, picks three themes that could have a big say in how the asset class performs in 2021.
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COVID, climate and Black Lives Matter: The stories that defined 2020
10 Dec 2020
We select some of our key pieces of content in a year of unending drama.
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Income investing: The return of Goldilocks and the three bears
3 Dec 2020
The Goldilocks environment is back, but bears are lurking in the shadows. Francois de Bruin explores the risks and opportunities that need to be managed to get outcomes that are “just right”.
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Multi-asset allocation views: Changing seasons, changing dynamics
15 Oct 2020
After a strong summer, conditions are changing in asset markets. Sunil Krishnan assesses the risks and opportunities for investors.
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Short story: Why Fed action could be bad news for the dollar
12 Oct 2020
With US real interest rates sinking ever more deeply into negative territory as the Fed signals it is on hold for a prolonged period, the outlook for the dollar is bearish for the first time in a decade, argues Mark Robertson.
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Sustainability: Drawing force from lines of tension
6 Oct 2020
Much like a gem is forged under pressure, the ESG movement is powerful because it results from tension at multiple levels: between art and science, absolute and relative, exclusion and engagement. Francois de Bruin explores the lines of tension underpinning the investment approach to sustainability.
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The clockmaker and the longitude problem: A lesson for investors in bottom-up problem solving
25 Aug 2020
Bottom-up thinking is not a typical hallmark of multi-asset investing. However, Francois de Bruin believes the granularity that comes from this approach offers useful diversification and risk benefits.
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COVID-19: Can a lasting recovery happen without a vaccine?
21 Aug 2020
With the notable exception of China, countries around the world have struggled to get their economies firing on all cylinders without COVID-19 infections flaring up again. Until a way to contain the virus is found, recoveries are likely to remain stop-start and fragile, argue Ian Pizer, Mark Robertson and Sunil Krishnan.
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COVID-19 and antimicrobial resistance: The next health crisis?
19 Aug 2020
As the world grapples with COVID-19, antibiotics used to treat serious secondary bacterial infections associated with the coronavirus are making their way into wastewater with potentially dire consequences. Abigail Herron questions whether investors appreciate the seriousness of what antimicrobial resistance could lead to.
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Multi-asset allocation views: What we can learn from earnings season
14 Aug 2020
Investors have faced several surprises during Q2 earnings season. Sunil Krishnan discusses what the current results round means for multi-asset investors over the coming months.
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Education, entrepreneurship and biological age: An interview with Andrew Scott
6 Aug 2020
In part two of our interview with Professor Andrew Scott from London Business School, we look at how policy will shift to take account of people living for longer and how service providers will respond.
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Longevity, policy and technology: An interview with Andrew Scott
6 Aug 2020
Living longer brings enormous opportunities to reshape how we spend our time. But in the first of a two-part interview, Andrew Scott from London Business School explains how advances in longevity and technology have not been matched by innovation in social structures or our approach to financial planning.
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Multi-strategy investing and the COVID crash: Resilience and redemption?
29 Jul 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought many things into focus, reminding investors of the shock of a market crash. With bond and equity prices already back at levels that seem to belie the harsh economic reality, Peter Fitzgerald and Mark Robertson believe it could be time to reconsider absolute return multi-strategy investing once more.
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