TZINX
Templeton Global Dynamic Income Fund
Templeton Global Investment Trust
Expense ratio1
0.96%
Net assets2
$315.86M
Holdings2
133
Category
Allocation
2025 return3
27.84%

Investment objective & strategy

As of April 28, 2025 · prospectus

Objective. To seek both income and capital appreciation.

Strategy. Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests in a diversified portfolio of debt and equity securities worldwide. The Fund normally invests at least 25% of its assets in fixed income securities and at least 25% of its assets in equity securities. The Fund seeks income by investing in a combination of corporate, agency and government bonds and other debt securities (including inflation-indexed securities) of any maturity issued in numerous countries, including developing markets countries, as well as stocks that offer or could offer attractive dividend yields. The Fund may invest in high-yield bonds. These bonds are rated below investment grade and are sometimes referred to as junk bonds. The Fund seeks capital appreciation by investing in equity securities of companies … Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests in a diversified portfolio of debt and equity securities worldwide. The Fund normally invests at least 25% of its assets in fixed income securities and at least 25% of its assets in equity securities. The Fund seeks income by investing in a combination of corporate, agency and government bonds and other debt securities (including inflation-indexed securities) of any maturity issued in numerous countries, including developing markets countries, as well as stocks that offer or could offer attractive dividend yields. The Fund may invest in high-yield bonds. These bonds are rated below investment grade and are sometimes referred to as junk bonds. The Fund seeks capital appreciation by investing in equity securities of companies from a variety of industries located anywhere in the world, including developing markets, but from time to time, based on economic conditions, the Fund may have significant investments in particular sectors. The equity securities in which the Fund invests are primarily common stock. The Funds investment manager searches for undervalued or out-of-favor debt and equity securities and equity securities that offer or may offer current income. In addition, under normal market conditions, at least 40% of the Fund's net assets are invested in non-U.S. investments and in at least three different countries. The Fund regularly uses various currency related transactions involving derivative instruments, principally currency and cross currency forwards and currency options, but may also use currency and currency index futures contracts. The Fund maintains significant positions in currency related derivative instruments as a hedging technique or to implement a currency investment strategy, which could expose a large amount of the Fund's assets to obligations under these instruments. The use of these derivative transactions may allow the Fund to obtain net long or net negative (short) exposure to selected currencies. The results of such transactions may represent, from time to time, a large component of the Funds investment returns. The Fund also regularly enters into various other transactions involving derivatives, including interest rate and bond futures contracts (including those on government securities) and swap agreements (which may include interest rate swaps). The use of these derivative transactions may allow the Fund to obtain net long or net short exposures to selected currencies, interest rates, countries or durations, and may be used for hedging or investment purposes. When choosing fixed income investments for the Fund, the investment manager performs an independent analysis of the securities being considered for the Funds portfolio, rather than relying principally on their ratings assigned by rating agencies. In its analysis of corporate debt securities, the investment manager considers a variety of factors, including the experience and managerial strength of the company; responsiveness to changes in interest rates and business conditions; debt maturity schedules and borrowing requirements; the companys changing financial condition and market recognition of the change; and a securitys relative value based on such factors as anticipated cash flow, interest or dividend coverage, asset coverage, and earnings prospects. With respect to sovereign debt securities, the investment manager considers market, political and economic conditions and evaluates interest and currency exchange rate changes and credit risks. When choosing equity investments for the Fund, the investment manager applies a fundamental research, value-oriented, long-term approach, focusing on the market price of a companys securities relative to the investment managers evaluation of the companys long-term earnings, asset value and cash flow potential. The investment manager also considers a companys profit and loss outlook, balance sheet strength, cash flow trends and asset value in relation to the current price of the company's securities. The investment manager uses various valuation tools to allocate assets between global equity and global fixed income investments. The investment manager also analyzes global economic trends to identify global macro trends (for example, regions with strong economic growth), and evaluates market inefficiencies to identify investment opportunities stemming from market mispricings. The investment manager may consider selling a security when it believes the security has become fully valued due to either its price appreciation or changes in the issuer's fundamentals, or when the investment manager believes another security is a more attractive investment opportunity. The Fund may also use a variety of equity-related derivatives, which may include equity futures and equity index futures, for various purposes including enhancing Fund returns, increasing liquidity and gaining exposure to particular markets in more efficient or less expensive ways. The Fund may also invest up to 20% of its net assets in equity-linked notes (ELNs).

Top holdings

As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
Franklin Institutional US Government Money Market Fund INFXX $8.96M 2.84%
BP PLC $8.93M 2.83%
India Government Bond $7.12M 2.25%
REPUBLIC OF KENYA SR UNSECURED 144A 02/31 9.75 KENINT $6.67M 2.11%
DAIMLER TRUCK HO $6.49M 2.06%
Colombia Titulos de Tesoreria, Series B $5.98M 1.89%
Uruguay Government International Bonds $5.92M 1.88%
TSMC $5.69M 1.80%
South Africa, Parliament of SAGB $5.47M 1.73%
Ecuador Government Bond $5.24M 1.66%
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Allocation by sector

As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT
View portfolio breakdown →

Portfolio moves

Dec 31, 2025 → Mar 31, 2026
Opened
33
Exited
28
Increased
12
Decreased
18
Unchanged
78

How many positions this fund opened, exited, grew, trimmed, or left unchanged between its two most recent N-PORT snapshots — net changes between point-in-time reports, not a trade log.

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Advisers

As of December 31, 2025 · N-CEN
FirmRole
Franklin Advisers, Inc. Sub-adviser
Templeton Global Advisors Limited Adviser
Templeton Investment Counsel, LLC Sub-adviser

Footnotes

  1. Expense ratio as of April 28, 2025, from the fund's prospectus.
  2. Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
  3. Total return for calendar year 2025, before tax and after fund expenses. Computed by compounding the twelve monthly total returns the fund reported in its SEC N-PORT filings for 2025 (the latest prospectus does not yet chart this year).

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