ManagedFunds.nz

Fund-vs-fund · International FI

Hunter Global Fixed Interest Fund vs Milford Global Corporate Bond Fund

Both are International FI funds available to NZ retail investors. Numbers below are sourced from the FMA Disclose register via Sorted Smart Investor and reflect the latest published quarterly fund updates.

Metric Hunter Milford Lower / higher is
Annual fund charge 0.53% 0.85% Lower is better
Risk indicator (1–7) 4 3 Higher = more volatility
5-year return p.a. 0.05% 1.26% Higher is better
(past not future)
Fund size NZ$2.95b NZ$407m Larger = more stable, lower close-risk
Growth / income split 0% / 100% 0% / 100% More growth = higher long-run return + volatility

What each fund says it does

Hunter

Hunter Global Fixed Interest Fund

The Fund invests in a diversified portfolio of actively managed fixed interest securities, cash and derivatives. The predominant investment is in securities issued by governments, supranationals, local authorities, and corporates. The fund may also invest in emerging market debt, asset backed securities, mortgage backed securities, structured notes, bank loans, high yield securities, mortgage derivatives, preferred securities, unrated securities, cash and cash equivalents, and derivative instruments, including currency hedging instruments. The fund targets being f
Full Hunter Hunter Global Fixed Interest Fund profile →

Milford

Milford Global Corporate Bond Fund

The Fund's objective is to protect capital and generate a positive NZD-hedged return after the base fund fee but before tax, that exceeds the relevant benchmark over the minimum recommended investment timeframe of three years. It primarily invests in global corporate fixed interest securities.
Full Milford Milford Global Corporate Bond Fund profile →
Important: This comparison is general information only — not personalised financial advice. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns. The right fund for you depends on your personal circumstances. Read each fund's Product Disclosure Statement and consider speaking to a licensed financial adviser.