March 2017 For intermediaries and professional investors only. Not for further distribution.

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Understanding Structured Credit March 2017 For intermediaries and professional investors only. Not for further distribution.

Contents Investing in a rising interest rate environment 3 Understanding Structured Credit 4 Structured Credit: What has changed? 7 Why HSBC Global Asset Management? 8 Overview of Structured Credit under management 9 Important information 10 2

Investing in a rising interest rate environment Current market conditions make structured credit an attractive investment Given current market conditions, structured credit is a valuable addition to a portfolio for the following reasons: Potential safeguard against rising interest rates: Traditional fixed income portfolios are exposed to losses as rates rise. Structured credit is largely floating rate. This means that the addition of structured credit can reduce the duration of a fixed income portfolio, thereby providing a potential safeguard against rising interest rates Yield pick-up: structured credit offers a pickup in yield to similarly rated corporate bonds. This is largely the result of a complexity premium. Adding structured credit to a fixed income portfolio can enhance portfolio yield without increasing credit risk or duration Diversification: Structured credit exhibits low correlation to traditional fixed income. Adding structured credit to a portfolio can therefore provide diversification benefits What does this mean for investors? In the current market environment in which rates are expected to rise, the only means of improving returns through traditional fixed income instruments is to take on additional risk (either more credit risk or duration risk). Structured credit offers an alternative: the opportunity to reduce portfolio duration and potentially enhance returns whilst maintaining a desired level of portfolio credit quality and benefit from added diversification The fundamentals: Structured Credit vs Fixed Income The three largest structured credit sectors, RMBS, CLO and CMBS (see page 6 for sector definitions), account for approximately 70% of all structured credit outstanding and can illustrate how structured credit is highly attractive compared to similarly rated corporate bonds on a valuation basis CLOs and RMBS and some CMBS are floating rate, meaning that they do not suffer from interest rate risk, unlike corporate bonds Spreads above Libor (bps) Credit Rating US CLOs RMBS US CMBS US Corporates AAA 125 110 95 50 AA 160 140 135 57 A 235 190 210 83 BBB 365 310 425 135 Duration <1 year <1 year 5.03 years 5.25 years Source: US Structured Credit spreads HSBC Global Asset Management. US Corporate Bonds Spreads Bank of America Merrill Lynch US Corporate Indices. Corporate yields are swapped into floating rate for comparison purposes. Spreads are taken from the 5-7 year indices. Duration is the weighted average duration across AAA to BBB indices. Data as of 31 st March 2017 How an allocation to structured credit can enhance a fixed income portfolio: A fixed income investor in AA US Corporate Bonds would be able to enhance their portfolio return and reduce duration without sacrificing credit quality by adding structured credit. The below table shows the effect of adding an investment grade structured credit portfolio. Spread refers to spread above Libor (bps) AA US Corporates 25% Structured Credit 50% Structured Credit 75% Structured Credit 100% Structured Credit Spread 57 78 100 121 142 Credit rating AA AA AA AA AA Duration 5.78 years 4.54 years 3.30 years 2.05 years 0.81 years Source: Structured Credit spreads HSBC Global Asset Management. US Corporate Bonds Spreads and Duration Bank of America Merrill Lynch US Corporate Indices 5-7 year AA. Corporate yields are swapped into floating rate for comparison purposes. Data as of 31 st March 2017. 3

Understanding Structured Credit What is Structured Credit? Structured Credit, also referred to as Securitisations, or Asset Backed Securities (ABS) are types of bonds Unlike traditional bonds, structured credit cash flows are generated from a specific pool of collateral backing the bond. There are several types of collateral used to back structured credit. These include residential mortgages, commercial mortgages, credit card receivables, auto loans and leveraged loans Structured credit are tranched. This means that the priority of payments received from the collateral by investors depends on how senior their note is in the capital structure: The most senior notes receive payments first and suffer losses last, and consequently have the highest credit rating and pay the lowest coupon as they are deemed the least risky. The most junior bonds receive payments only when all notes senior have received payment, and suffer any losses first. These junior tranches are consequently riskier, receive lower credit ratings, and pay more to compensate for this risk Structured credit is the largest class of floating rate fixed income. The coupon is a spread above a reference rate such as LIBOR. This makes it attractive compared to fixed income in a rising rate interest rate environment Understanding the structures Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) This is the entity which purchases the collateral and issues the notes. As the cash flows are received from the collateral, they are used to pay the investors periodically (e.g. quarterly) The SPV purchases the collateral from the originator (e.g. the bank which originated the underlying loans), meaning they are legally separate. This means investors have no credit exposure to the originator of the loans Senior tranche This is the most senior note issued by the SPV The holders of the senior tranche receive interest and principal payments first. If the collateral suffers losses, the senior tranches only incur losses if all tranches subordinate have defaulted This tranche is therefore considered the safest and as a result is often assigned AAA credit ratings and pays a lower spread compared to the other tranches SPV uses proceeds from note issuance to purchase pool of collateral. Securitisation SPV issues structured credit instruments and receives proceeds from investors. Senior tranche typically AAA rated Cash flows from the collateral repay the notes sequentially. Senior tranches receive interest and principal payments first. Collateral pool generates cash flows as borrowers repay loans. SPV receives repayments and aggregates. SPV Cash flow from collateral repays notes periodically, with senior notes receiving interest and principal first. Subordinate tranches Equity Credit enhancement Any losses on the collateral are allocated to equity and subordinate ( junior ) tranches once losses exceed credit enhancement. Collateral The assets that generate the cash flows to pay the notes are called the collateral. Structured credit consists of several sectors, with each sector defined by the type of collateral backing the notes. The main sectors, and the collateral they are backed by are: RMBS backed by residential mortgages CMBS backed by commercial mortgages CLOs backed by leveraged loans Student s backed by student loans Consumer ABS includes ABS backed by credit card receivables, auto loans and other personal loans Depending on the sector, the underlying collateral can be highly diversified (e.g. RMBS, CLOs which contain hundreds of underlying loans) or concentrated, such as in some CMBS which can have as little as one exposure 4 Subordinate tranches, Equity and Credit enhancement Subordinate tranches are notes those that receive interest and principal payments from the collateral once the senior tranches have been paid. They suffer any losses from the collateral once the value of losses exceeds the credit enhancement and equity. As they are considered riskier, they receive lower credit ratings and pay higher spreads than the senior tranche to reflect this risk Equity tranche this is the riskiest part of the capital structure - equity holders receive all excess cash flows once all the senior and subordinate tranches have been paid. They are unrated Credit enhancement refers to structural features which provides a cushion against collateral losses before investors begin to suffer losses. Credit enhancements include cash reserve funds and excess spread

Understanding Structured Credit (cont d) What are the benefits of Structured Credit structures? Structured Credit offers investors diversified exposure to illiquid, hard to access asset classes and allows them to choose how much risk they take on Access: Structured credit enables investors to gain exposure to illiquid asset classes that are difficult for investors to access directly, such as residential mortgages, which are originated by banks Diversification: Structured credit instruments are generally backed by large quantities of underlying loans, meaning that investors receive the systematic risk and reward profile of the illiquid assets that make up the collateral Risk and reward preference: This is the purpose of the tranched structure. Investors in structured credit can select how much risk they would like exposure to through which tranche they choose to invest in. Investors in the senior tranche are exposed to less risk and therefore lower returns, as they receive interest and principal payments from the collateral first, and only suffer losses once the junior tranches have defaulted. Investors in the subordinate tranches are exposed to more risk, but greater return, as the tranches effectively provide leveraged exposure to the collateral they receive a higher spread to reflect the higher risk of missed payments How is Structured Credit different to traditional Fixed Income? Bonds Generally, coupon payments are fixed rate and paid periodically and principal paid at maturity Cash flow to repay bonds generated from issuer s underlying business activity (e.g. HSBC will pay its bonds from revenue generated) Maturity dates are usually fixed Untranched all holders of the bond receive payments and suffer losses equally Credit rating depends on ability of the issuer to repay the bond The difference between Agency MBS and Structured Credit Structured Credit in this context means private label securities subject to credit risk. These are not the same as the much larger, well known Agency MBS market, which is sponsored by the US government and largely fixed rate. The key differences are: Private vs government sponsored: Structured credit are instruments that are backed by cash generating assets, such as mortgages or bank loans. MBS ( Mortgage Backed Securities ) are bonds that are guaranteed the US government sponsored agencies such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae Fixed vs floating rate: MBS generally pay a fixed rate coupon. Structured credit conversely, is largely floating rate Credit risks: MBS guaranteed by agencies such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae are considered obligations of the US government regardless of defaults on the underlying collateral pool. This means that there is almost no credit risk when investing in MBS. In contrast, investors in structured credit are exposed to potential losses if there are defaults in the underlying collateral that exceed credit enhancements, and are therefore rewarded for this risk MBS risks: The key risk is interest rate risk. MBS is particularly vulnerable to rising interest rates for two reasons: As interest rates rise, MBS prices will, all else equal, fall because they are fixed rate securities. Secondly, when interest rates rise, the rate of repayment in the underlying mortgage pool lengthens the maturity of the bond, which can further exacerbates the price fall We do not invest in MBS. We only invest in private label Structured Credit Structured Credit Structured Credit Coupons tend to be floating rate, offering a margin above a reference rate (e.g. LIBOR), paid periodically Cash flows to pay notes (each tranche) generated from underlying collateral (e.g. the repayments on mortgages) Life of the security depends on collateral characteristics such as principal prepayment and default rates and structural features such as call/refinancing options Tranched note holders receive payments and suffer losses depending on how senior their note is Credit ratings for each tranche depends on the tranche s probability of suffering losses, which depends on underlying collateral and structure of the securities (e.g. how much credit enhancement there is to protect against losses) Credit risk? Yes No Source: HSBC Global Asset Management. All data as at 31 December 2015. Source: AFME, SIFMA, Australian Statistics Bureau, Reserve Bank of Australia, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo. MBS Fixed vs floating Mostly floating Mostly fixed Currencies USD, EUR, GBP, AUD and some others USD only Outstanding USD 4.4trn USD 7.7trn 5

Understanding Structured Credit (cont d) Structured Credit Sectors Structured credit consists of several sectors. These are defined by the collateral backing the bonds. The main sectors are: RMBS Residential Mortgage Backed Securities are backed by diversified pools of residential mortgages (i.e. loans made to individuals to purchase a house) As homeowners pay their mortgages, these cash flows are passed through as interest and principal repayments to RMBS holders RMBS is the largest structured credit sector, accounting for approximately 40% of all structured credit outstanding globally 1 CMBS Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities are backed by commercial mortgages CMBS can be backed by a diversified pool of commercial mortgages, or by a loan made to finance the purchase of a single building, or to a single borrower Unlike other structured credit sectors which are floating rate, CMBS can be both floating and fixed rate CMBS accounts for approximately 16% of all structured credit outstanding globally 1 CLOs Collateralised Obligations are structured credit that are backed by a diversified pool of leveraged loans Unlike other structure credit sectors, CLOs are actively managed. This means the CLO manager buys loans over the life of the CLO as existing loans repay. The ability of the CLO manager in selecting loans is an important component of the CLO s performance CLOs account for approximately 17% of all structured credit outstanding globally 1 Student ABS Student ABS are backed by loans made to finance university degrees. The underlying loans can be either privately originated loans or government backed loans SLABS accounts for under 5% of all outstanding structured credit globally 1 Consumer ABS Consumer ABS is a broad term that includes a variety of structured credit instruments backed by different loans and receivables. The common factor is that the underlying collateral are loans made to consumers Examples of the collateral include Auto s and credit card receivables Consumer ABS collectively accounts for around 10% of all structured credit outstanding globally 1 What drives Structured Credit valuations? Structured credit valuations are driven by some of the same factors that drive other credit instruments as well as factors unique to structured credit, and unique to sectors within structured credit Credit conditions: As with traditional corporate bonds, structured credit valuations depend on credit conditions in the wider economy. When credit conditions are strong, it is expected that borrowers will repay their loans, meaning default rates on the collateral is expected to be low, consequently supporting valuations. When credit conditions deteriorate, loan defaults are expected to increase and therefore prices fall to reflect this risk. However, different tranches react differently, with senior tranches exhibiting less volatility than junior tranches given they are less exposed to defaults than the junior tranches Fundamentals: Factors affecting the underlying collateral will drive structured credit valuations. For example, if a residential mortgage backed security is highly exposed to property loans from a particular geographic region and house prices are falling in that region, the RMBS will likely fall in price to reflect the increased risk of defaults Interest rates: Unlike traditional fixed income, structured credit is largely floating rate. This means that there is no rates effect on prices as with traditional bonds. However, as the coupon is linked to interest rates, as rates rise, the total return from coupons can increase. Whether price changes depends on the impact the change in rates will have on the underlying; rising rates can increase the probability of default within the collateral pool and therefore increase the risk of the structured credit security Structural Features: These include the level of credit enhancement within the bond, which support prices as they reduce the chance of default, embedded call options which can put a ceiling on the price, and the details that govern how principal and interest from the collateral flow from the senior to junior tranches which impact relative valuations 1. Source: HSBC Global Asset Management. All data as at 31 December 2015. Source: AFME, SIFMA, Australian Statistics Bureau, Reserve Bank of Australia, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo. 6

Structured Credit: What has changed? The market has evolved since the crisis Following the financial crisis, structured credit received a reputation for being toxic following widespread defaults in the US housing market and the subsequent losses suffered by holders of US sub-prime RMBS and CDOs (structured credit in which the collateral consists of other structured credit instruments, including sub-prime RMBS) The entire asset class was tainted as a result, with investors perceiving all structured credit sectors to have suffered extensive defaults and losses. This is not true. US sub-prime RMBS (securities backed by mortgages to poor quality borrowers) and ABS CDOs did suffer extensive defaults, other sectors performed much better: Global Structured Finance Losses: 2000 2014 Issuance Prime RMBS Non-conforming RMBS Leverage CLO CDO US EMEA US EMEA US EMEA US EMEA Expected future loss 1.1% 0.2% 5.2% 0.4% 0.0% 0.2% 19.5% 0.8% Loss realised to date 1.7% 0.0% 6.1% 0.0% 0.2% 0.1% 11.8% 0.9% TOTAL 2.8% 0.2% 11.3% 0.4% 0.2% 0.3% 31.3% 1.7% CMBS Commercial ABS Student ABS US EMEA US EMEA US EMEA Expected future loss 3.3% 2.6% 1.8% 0.1% 0.5% - Loss realised to date 2.0% 1.4% 0.5% 0.0% 0.0% - TOTAL 5.3% 4.0% 2.3% 0.1% 0.5% - Fitch Ratings, Global Structured Finance Losses: 2000 2014 Issuance, Special Report. 17 February 2015. As shown above, the losses were largely concentrated in US residential mortgages and CDOs. Other sectors have performed robustly, with CLOs in particular exhibiting strong performance no AAA or AA rated CLO tranche has, to the best of our knowledge, ever defaulted. Furthermore, to the best of our knowledge, no investment grade European CLO has ever defaulted. The result of the poor performance of sub-prime RMBS reflected the originate to distribute model adopted by banks, the poor quality collateral backing the bonds, and the conflicts of interest and flaws inherent in the way the ratings agencies assessed these bonds This has however resulted in regulators and policymakers paying attention to the entire industry and passing extensive legislation that has resulted in greater investor protections and has improved transparency, consequently allowing for a more informed perception of risk. Changes in regulation and legislation include: Risk retention and alignment of interests: One of the reasons for the poor quality of collateral in pre-crisis subprime RMBS was that many lenders adopted an originate to distribute model whereby loans were made with the intention to sell into structured credit. The lenders therefore had no incentive to monitor the quality of the loans. EU and US regulation now require sellers to maintain a 5% or more stake in all new issue structured credit. Such rules that encourage skin in the game align interests Ratings agencies: One of the key areas of focus from the crisis was the role played by rating agencies. New regulations have been introduced to require multiple ratings, rotation of rating agencies for more complex deals and extra disclosure with an aim of encouraging new rating agencies to emerge. Transparency of rating methodologies has been improved and almost all rating methodologies for structured credit have been updated. This has resulted in simpler structures and increased subordination required to support a given rating. Issuers/sponsors will also be required to disclose substantially more information in relation to new transactions regarding cash flows, deal structure and quality of the collateral, which will better help investors to evaluate the risks of deals 7

Why HSBC Global Asset Management? Significant Resources 14 dedicated specialists whose sole focus is structured credit research and client investment 3 senior team members all with over 20 years experience and have worked together at HSBC for over 10 years Sector specialisation with focus on credit research Intensive asset monitoring with proprietary systems providing efficient management of available information Market Access USD13bn Structured Credit AuM The size of our platform gives us access to a wide range of investment opportunities and trading flows that are not easily replicated in this sector. Accessing Global Relative Value We invest in all major structured credit sectors and do so "globally" from one platform in London This allows us to move to where we find the best opportunities Source: HSBC Global Asset Management as of 31st December 2016. 8

Overview of Structured Credit under management Significant market access and presence Wide scope of investing across all asset classes, geographies and ratings We can source attractive Structured Credit paper within sectors and between regions By Sector Cards (0.0%) CLO/CDO (18%) CMBS (13.4%) Finance (0.7%) HELOC (1.2%) Other (3.8%) RMBS (35.8%) SLABS (27.1%) By Standard & Poor s (S&P) Rating Category AAA (18.8%) AA (16.9%) A (25.3%) BBB (3.9%) NIG / NR (35.1%) By Geography USA (69.3%) UK (24.4%) Europe (ex. UK) (5.9%) Other (0.4%) Source: HSBC Global Management. All data as at 31 December 2016. Pie charts represent distribution of assets under team management. Ratings shown are from S&P. 9

Important information This document is prepared for general information purposes only and does not have any regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and the particular needs of any specific person who may receive it. Any views and opinions expressed are subject to change without notice. This document does not constitute an offering document and should not be construed as a recommendation, an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase or subscribe to any investment. Investors may wish to seek appropriate professional advice where necessary. Investment involves risk. Past performance of any fund or the manager, and any economic and market trends or forecasts are not necessarily indicative of the future or likely performance of the fund or the manager. Unit values and income therefrom may fall as well as rise and the investor may not get back the original sum invested. Changes in rates of currency exchange may affect significantly the value of the investment. HSBC Global Asset Management (Singapore) Limited ( AMSG ) has based this document on information obtained from sources it reasonably believes to be reliable. However, AMSG does not warrant, guarantee or represent, expressly or by implication, the accuracy, validity or completeness of such information. HSBC Global Asset Management (Singapore) Limited 21 Collyer Quay #06-01 HSBC Building Singapore 049320 Telephone: (65) 6658 2900 Facsimile: (65) 6225 4324 Website: www.assetmanagement.hsbc.com/sg Company Registration No. 198602036R 10