Morningstar's former Silver rating on Dickie Hodges' L&G Dynamic Bond Trust has been placed Under Review following the manager's resignation from Legal & General. L&G confirmed on Tuesday that Hodges is to work out his notice period and leave the firm at the end of October. Management of the £2 billion Dynamic Bond Trust will pass to senior fixed income manager Martin Reeves, who also manages the L&G High Income Trust.
Hodges joined L&G Investment Management in 2007 and as head of High Alpha Fixed Income, he was responsible for the management of the firm's higher-alpha credit mandates. He has managed the Dynamic Bond Trust since its inception in April 2007, achieving a five-year annualised trailing return of 11%.
Performance has waned somewhat in recent years, however, with the Dynamic Bond Trust returning 15% in total over the three years to April 22, thus only marginally beating the fund’s Barclays Global Aggregate index benchmark, which has risen 14.5% in that time. Accounting for the fund's higher-than-category-average fees, fundholders will have seen personal returns that underperformed not only the fund's chosen benchmark but also both the IMA £ Strategic Bond sector (up 20% in three years) and the Morningstar GBP Flexible Bond category (up 20%).
Morningstar analysts have long held Hodges in high regard and believe he is a thoughtful manager who benefits from his experience in managing long-only bond funds and hedge funds. His departure will be a blow for the team. Reeves will obviously see his workflow increase with the addition of Hodges' flagship fund, and while he is an experienced fixed income practitioner, Morningstar analyst Karine Nowak notes: "his skillset is predominantly in the high yield bond space and it remains to be seen how Reeves will implement this strategic bond strategy."
L&G's UK institutional credit team – run by Robert Barnard-Smith – will take on the additional management of L&G Fixed Interest fund (formerly rated Neutral by Morningstar, now also Under Review), the Managed Monthly Income fund and the Sterling Income fund, which Hodges took on himself in January following the departure of Michel Canoy.
Hodges has not yet disclosed his plans for life after L&G, but as someone who describes himself first and foremost as a risk manager, one can bet he has something in the pipeline. Meanwhile, the team he leaves behind is considered by Morningstar to be well-resourced and effective, and is able to draw on the company's extensive internal resources. Still, our ratings have been placed Under Review pending meetings with the new management teams.
Hodges was in the Morningstar studio a few weeks ago and described the current bond investing environment as a 'sweet spot'. "When you are in the sweet spot you have to put investments or strategies in place for the eventuality of what's going to happen to interest rates," he said in an interview on the topic of preparing the fund for imminent interest rate hikes. Fundholders will be hoping he also put strategies in place for the eventuality that he would no longer manage their money.
Read our analyst's full response here.