Delaware Ivy VIP High Income
Historical Performance
Objective And Strategy
ObjectiveTotal return through a combination of high current income and capital appreciation.
Strategy
The Fund invests primarily in a diversified Portfolio of high yield, high-risk, fixed-income securities of domestic and, to a lesser extent, foreign issuers. The manager looks at a number of factors in selecting securities for the Fund, beginning with the economic environment, interest rate trends and industry fundamentals, progressing to analysis of a company's fundamentals, including financial strength, growth of operating cash flows, strength of management, borrowing requirements and potential to improve credit standing.
Tax Inefficient Fund
Principle Risks
* This portfolio invests in securities of foreign issuers which involves risks not typically associated with domestic issuers, including currency fluctuations and the possibility of political and economic instability. Emerging markets involve risks in addition to those generally associated with foreign securities, because political and economic structures in many emerging markets may be undergoing significant evolution and rapid development.
* This portfolio invests (or may invest) in securities of companies with micro-, small-, or mid-capitalization. Any investment in micro-, small-, or mid-capitalization companies involves greater risk than that customarily associated with investments in larger, more established companies because of the greater business risks of smaller size, limited markets and financial resources, narrower product lines, and frequent lack of management depth. As such, micro- or small-cap companies may be more subject to erratic and abrupt market movements than securities of larger, more established companies.
* This portfolio can leverage or use leveraged instruments or derivatives. Portfolios that use leverage, that is, borrow money, are subject to the risk that the cost of borrowing money to leverage will exceed the returns for the securities purchased or that the securities purchased may actually go down in value. Thus the portfolio's net asset value can decrease more quickly than if the portfolio had not borrowed. Portfolios that use leveraged instruments or derivatives such as futures, options and swap agreements, may expose the portfolio to additional risks that it would not be subject to if it invested directly in the securities underlying those derivatives. The more a portfolio invests in leveraged instruments, the more the leverage will magnify any gains or losses on those investments.
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High Yield07/1987
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Documents
- Fund Prospectus and Other Forms