Federated Hermes Global High Yield Credit Fund Class F GBP Accumulating Hedged
Category Global High Yield Bond - GBP Hedged
This fund can be held in an Investment ISA, SIPP and Investment Account
Last buy/sell price
£1.472/£1.472
£0.00 (+0.00%)
Fund Code
HGHHA
BBJPFN0
IE00BBJPFN04
Prices updated as at 09 Jan 2025
Prices in GBP
Investment objective
The investment objective of the Fund is to generate a high level of income. The Fund will seek to achieve its objective over a rolling period of any five years, by investing at least 80% in a diversified portfolio of debt securities (as referenced in the Categories of Investments section below). The Fund may take long positions and/or generate Synthetic Short Exposure through the use of FDIs. The securities in which the Fund may invest will be selected on a global basis.
Important notice: This product is based overseas and is not subject to UK sustainable investment labelling and disclosure requirements. Please refer to the FCA website which details further information in relation to sustainability disclosure requirements for retail clients.
Important documents: Please ensure that you have read the Key Information Document/Technical Guide
, Pre-sale Illustrations document & Doing Business with Fidelity document (incorporating the Fidelity Client Terms) and the fund information documents. These can be found within the Charges & documents section.
- Key stats
- Growth
- Performance
- Charges & documents
- Dividends
- Portfolio
- Risk & rating
- Management
Growth chart of 1,000
Please note that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns. The Growth of 1,000 chart shows growth of the asset based on an initial investment of 1,000 over a set period, using the actual daily returns for the asset over that period. It is plotted in the base currency of the fund (for example GBP, Euros or Dollars) which is the same as the price currency at top of this page. If the price currency is anything other than pound sterling the performance return may increase/decrease because of currency fluctuations.