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Fund research and insight

Invesco Tactical Bond: January 2025 fund update

Senior Investment Analyst Hal Cook shares our analysis on the manager, process, culture, ESG integration, cost and performance of the Invesco Tactical Bond fund.
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Important information - This article isn’t personal advice. If you’re not sure whether an investment is right for you please seek advice. If you choose to invest the value of your investment will rise and fall, so you could get back less than you put in.

  • The managers invest flexibly, in all types of bonds, with few constraints placed upon them

  • Invesco has a strong reputation for fixed income investing and follow a disciplined investment process

  • We think the managers have the ability to interpret the economic picture and invest the fund accordingly

  • The fund is on our Wealth Shortlist of funds chosen by our analysts for their long-term performance potential

How it fits in a portfolio

The Invesco Tactical Bond fund aims to provide some income and capital growth over the long term, while trying to keep losses during periods of market stress to a minimum. The fund isn’t as income-focused as some bond funds, with the overall return a higher priority.

We think this is a great option to diversify an investment portfolio focused on shares or could bring some stability to a more adventurously invested portfolio.

The managers can invest in high-yield bonds and use derivatives, both of which add risk.

Manager

The fund is co-managed by Stuart Edwards and Julien Eberhardt since August 2020 and 2021 respectively. Despite their relatively short tenure on this fund, both managers have been part of the fixed income team at Invesco for over a decade and have contributed investment ideas for a number of years.

Edwards began his investment career in 1997 at Standard & Poor’s as an economist before joining Invesco in 2003 as a fixed income specialist. He specialises in the analysis of macro-economic data and trends and has been a fund manager since 2010.

Eberhardt began his investment career in 2005 at Moody's as an analyst specialising in high yield and investment grade corporate bonds. He joined Invesco in 2008 as a fixed income credit analyst, specialising in the analysis of financial companies. He’s been a fund manager since 2014.

Edwards and Eberhardt are supported by a well-resourced fixed income team, who help to generate ideas for the fund and provide expertise in some of the more specialist areas of bond investing. For example, Senior Portfolio Strategist Jack Parker works closely with the managers around how derivatives are used in the fund. We like that the managers make use of the knowledge and experience of the wider team.

Each co-manager has a number of other fund management responsibilities, but we’re satisfied that there’s appropriate overlap, applicable experience, and they have the support of a strong fixed income team. There’s relevant analytical crossover between some of these other responsibilities, most notably with Edward’s management of the Invesco Global Bond fund. Edwards leads on formulating wider economic views and the way the fund’s invested off the back of this, while Eberhardt contributes more to credit selection.

Process

The managers combine their analysis of the economy and individual bonds to shape the fund. They can invest in all types of bonds, with few constraints placed on them so the fund is invested in whichever parts of the market the managers think offer the best value.

They aim to shelter the fund when they see tough times ahead by increasing investments in cash and government bonds and seek stronger returns as more opportunities become available. This means the fund’s performance relies on the managers' ability to interpret the bigger economic picture and their success in altering the fund's investments based on what they see.

During 2024, the managers reduced their investments in government bonds from 36.7% at the end of 2023 to 29.8% at the end of 2024. They also increased some investments in banks, especially higher-risk subordinated bonds. The amount invested here increased from 15.0% to 17.4% over the year.

The team was active in managing their duration positioning across 2024. Duration is measured in years and reflects how sensitive the fund is to interest rate changes. The higher the duration value (number of years), the more sensitive the fund is to interest rate changes. The managers started the year with a duration of 4.98 years, altered it throughout the period and ended 2024 with a duration of 6.42 years.

It's good to see the full flexibility of the fund continuing to be used by Edwards and Eberhardt. The willingness to invest differently to peers is expected to continue, meaning performance could be different too.

Culture

The fixed interest team at Invesco has a strong reputation and follow a clear and disciplined investment process, aiming to achieve the best returns for investors. The managers are incentivised based on the performance of the fund which we think aligns their interests with those of investors.

ESG Integration

The managers consider ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) factors when analysing bonds as they believe that over the long term these factors can affect the creditworthiness of bond issuers (the ability of companies to pay off their debts). This doesn’t mean that the managers won’t take ESG-related risks within the fund though, they just need to be rewarded appropriately for the associated risks. They’ll also engage with company management in instances where ESG risk is material for bondholders.

While the approach to ESG integration differs between investment teams at Invesco, all teams are supported by a centralised team of ESG professionals, located in three regions; the US, Asia and EMEA. The Global ESG team is responsible for implementing best practice across the firm including ESG integration, research, voting and engagement, supporting the distribution team with client engagement, and advising the product teams on ESG innovation. Invesco also has dedicated ESG specialists within certain individual investment teams, who are closely connected with the Global ESG team.

Fund managers use insights from a wide range of third-party research and service providers and have access to Invesco’s proprietary ratings tool, ESGintel, which provides data and insights on a large number of companies across the globe.

The firm’s ESG approach, engagement case studies and headline voting records are all available in the annual ESG Investment Stewardship report. They also offer a voting dashboard which allows a user to view how each fund voted on each resolution. However, no voting rationale is provided.

Cost

This fund has an ongoing annual charge of 0.70%, but we've secured HL clients an ongoing saving of 0.25%. This means you pay a net ongoing charge of 0.45%. The fund discount is achieved in the form of a loyalty bonus, which could be subject to tax if held outside of an ISA or SIPP. The HL platform fee of up to 0.45% per year also applies, except in the HL Junior ISA, where no platform fee applies.

Performance

Since Edwards became co-manager of the fund in August 2020, the fund has delivered a return of 9.34%* to investors, ahead of the peer group average return of 4.73%. Past performance isn’t a guide to the future.

Over the last year the fund has underperformed the peer group, returning 1.55% compared to the peer group average return of 4.62%. 2024 provided many ups and downs for bonds, with expectations around the future of interest rates changing a lot over the year. At the start of 2024, lots of investors were expecting the Federal Reserve (Fed) in the US to cut rates up to five times. In the end the Fed only cut twice.

This had a big impact on bond markets, with yields having to react to the change in expectations for interest rates staying higher for longer. It also meant that corporate bonds performed more strongly than government bonds. Even though the investments in corporate bonds in this fund added value, the managers had less invested in them compared to many of their peers, hurting performance on a relative basis. This meant that the fund didn’t benefit from the strong performance as much as some other funds.

In terms of other positives, the fund’s duration position added to returns over the year. Some of the fund’s currency exposures detracted from returns though.

We think the managers have the potential to reward those who are prepared to take a long-term approach. There's no guarantees though. We continue to expect the fund to lag a strongly rising bond market but have the potential to hold up better when the market is falling.

At the end of December 2024, the fund had a distribution yield of 4.11%, although yields are variable and aren’t a reliable indicator of future income.

Annual Percentage Growth

31/12/2019 To 31/12/2020

31/12/2020 To 31/12/2021

31/12/2021 To 31/12/2022

31/12/2022 To 31/12/2023

31/12/2023 To 31/12/2024

Invesco Tactical Bond (UK)

12.93%

1.59%

-4.64%

6.46%

1.55%

IA £ Strategic Bond

6.05%

1.02%

-11.73%

8.13%

4.62%

Past performance isn't a guide to future returns.
Source: *Lipper IM to 31/12/2024.
Important information - Please remember the value of investments, and any income from them, can fall as well as rise so you could get back less than you invest. This article is provided to help you make your own investment decisions, it is not advice. If you are unsure of the suitability of an investment for your circumstances please seek advice. No news or research item is a personal recommendation to deal.
Written by
Hal Cook
Hal Cook
Senior Investment Analyst

Hal is a part of our Fund Research team and is responsible for analysing funds and investment trusts in the Fixed Interest and Multi-Asset sectors.

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Article history
Published: 28th January 2025