ABS transactions provide exposure to the income generated by large, diversified pools of high-quality assets such as mortgages, car finance agreements, and corporate loans. Investors can gain exposure to these regular cashflows via bonds that are backed by the asset pool.
ABS remains poorly understood in parts of the investment community, but we believe the attractive income and flexibility it offers could benefit a much broader audience. ABS has historically shown low or negative correlations to traditional asset classes, making it a valuable tool for diversifying a portfolio away from more mainstream fixed income markets such as corporate and government bonds.
TwentyFour’s ABS funds cover the whole risk spectrum available, from enhanced cash to direct asset-backed lending. The breadth and size of what we manage enables us to leverage our relationship with both issuers and banks, which can offer potentially material benefits in yield and structuring for the investors in our strategies.
What are Asset-Backed Securities?
Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) are a type of bond, typically issued by banks or other lenders.
What makes ABS different to other parts of fixed income, such as government or corporate bonds, is that they are ‘secured’ against a specially designed pool of loans with similar characteristics.
This collateral pool will typically contain thousands of high-quality loans such as mortgages, and the repayments on those assets are directed straight to investors in the bonds.
This is where the phrase ‘securitisation’ comes from – investors’ coupons are secured by the cash flowing from the regular interest and principal paid on the assets included in the pool.
- Asset : Thousands of assets with regular repayments and similar characteristics, such as mortgages or car loans, are pooled together.
- Backed : The company issuing the ABS sets up a legally separated Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV), which purchases the asset pool. The bonds investors buy are backed by the interest and principal proceeds from the asset pool. This means bondholders’ exposure is to the assets themselves rather than the seller of those assets; in an RMBS, for example, investors have exposure to the mortgages but not the bank that made those loans to customers.
- Securities : The company sells bonds – or securities – via the SPV to investors, who are paid directly from the repayments on the assets in the pool.
At first glance, the ABS market can look like a confusing mix of acronyms (RMBS, CLOs, Auto ABS) but they simply identify the assets backing the bonds – residential mortgages, senior secured corporate loans, auto loans.
ABS at a glance
The European ABS market is split broadly into four areas, though certain sub-sets of these sectors are considered important distinct products in their own right, such as Auto ABS and Credit Card ABS.
- Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS) are backed by pools of mortgage loans extended by banks and other financial institutions. They represent the largest component of the European ABS market and they are also the most liquid. RMBS itself includes sub-categories such as Prime, Non-conforming and Buy-to-Let RMBS, broadly defined by the typical profile of borrower in the pool.
- Consumer Receivables (Consumer ABS) ) include a large variety of unsecured consumer debt types that have been securitised including auto loans, credit card receivables and unsecured personal loans.
- Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS) are backed by commercial mortgages rather than residential mortgages, and use structures similar to other forms of ABS.
- Collateralised Loan Obligations (CLOs) are pools of corporate loans, refinanced in a securitised structure. Pools can be static or actively managed by a specialist loan manager.
Why invest?
Yield
In part due to its perceived complexity, ABS normally offers a higher yield for a given rating or maturity than more mainstream investments such as government or corporate bonds.
Inflation protection
ABS in Europe are usually floating rate, with near-zero interest rate risk. Generally, less volatile than fixed rate bonds when inflation is high or when interest rates are rising.
Flexibility
ABS has something for every risk appetite. It is probably the most flexible part of the fixed income universe, with opportunities across ratings from triple-A to single-B and even unrated.
Transparency
Issuers provide frequent reporting detailed enough to view the performance of each individual loan in the asset pool, enabling investors to forecast, stress test and have confidence in their performance.
Investor protection
ABS transactions are structured into layers of risk, with junior tranches absorbing losses for more senior ones. The assets sit in a separate legal entity, protected from external events such as a lender's failure.
Low defaults
ABS has historically demonstrated a very low default rate through economic cycles due to asset quality, bondholder protections, and protection building as loans pay down, making tranches more likely to experience upgrades.
Funds
Insights
CLOs reprice as software and geopolitics test sentiment
Softer ABS rating trend calls for caution despite strong fundamentals
Asset-Backed Securities Quarterly Update – January 2026
CLOs get real on risk as performance dispersion rises
Asset-Backed Securities Quarterly Update – October 2025
An introduction to global CLOs
Contact us
To find out more about our range of ABS funds, you can contact one of the TwentyFour Asset Management sales team.