Dodge & Cox

Dodge & Cox is an American mutual fund company, founded in 1930 by Van Duyn Dodge and E. Morris Cox, that provides professional investment management services.

Dodge & Cox
TypePrivate (Employee-owned)
IndustryInvestment Management
Founded1930
Headquarters555 California Street
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Key people
Charles Pohl
(Chairman and Chief Investment Officer)
Dana Emery
(CEO, President, and Director of Fixed Income)
Kenneth Olivier
(Chairman Emeritus)
AUMUS$327 billion (December 31, 2019)
Websitedodgeandcox.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Dodge and Cox specializes in value investing[2] and has been described as "best known for its conservatively managed funds with solid track records and modest fees."[3] Having been created during the Great Depression, the firm has "a razor sharp focus on capital preservation".[4] Co-founder E. Morris Cox, who worked at the firm into his 90s, objected to widespread practices he considered unethical during the early 20th Century history of investment banking and thus Dodge & Cox developed policies putting customer interests as a top priority.[5] Dodge & Cox practices a team-based management strategy and as of 2019, the firm had US$327 billion in assets under management,[6] and one of their funds was among the largest 25 American mutual funds.[7]

Headquartered in San Francisco, California, the company offers six no-load mutual funds as of December 2020: a domestic stock fund, an international stock fund, a balanced fund, an income fund, a global stock fund, and a global bond fund.[8] In August 2020, Dodge & Cox filed a registration statement with the SEC for an emerging markets stock fund.[9]

Their balanced fund, comprising 50-70% large company stocks and the remainder in bonds,[10] was established in 1931 and is one of the oldest US mutual funds still in operation as of February 2019.[11][12][13] Unusually for an investment firm, particularly of their size, Dodge & Cox does not advertise, has only one office and "has no public relations office and no sales force."[13] In 2007, Dodge and Cox ranked second after The Vanguard Group for overall customer satisfaction in a survey by Cogent Research of customers with at least $100,000 in mutual fund assets.[14]

Due to their devotion to the principles of value investing, Dodge & Cox avoided the worst of the dot com bubble during the late 1990s and early 2000 by limiting their exposure to overvalued and then-trendy internet stocks, thereby significantly out-performing the broader market when the bubble collapsed.[2] According to a 2017 Morningstar, Inc. analysis, the firm's low staff turnover and investing principles have been largely beneficial over the long-term, though with bouts of sluggishness when growth stocks were more in favor than value stocks.[6] From 2012 to 2016, their US large company fund saw substantial outflows of $10 billion dollars due in part to the increasing popularity of lower fee index funds, but in this same period their other funds saw more contributions than withdrawals.[13]

John C. Bogle of The Vanguard Group was a strong proponent of index funds, but singled out Dodge & Cox among a handful of active mutual fund managers he would recommend.[15][16]

References

  1. "2020 Dodge & Cox (Form ADV Part 2A) Brochure" (PDF). Dodge & Cox Funds. March 30, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  2. David B. Zenoff. The Soul of the Organization: How to Ignite Employee Engagement and Productivity at Every Level. Apress, Mar 1, 2014, p. 89
  3. Eric Tyson. Investing All-in-One For Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, Apr 10, 2017, p. 275
  4. Kunal Kapoor, "The Dodge & Cox Difference: An in-depth look at a model fund firm.", (Morningstar, Inc.)
  5. Daniel Ben-Ami (2017). Strategically speaking: Dodge & Cox. IPE.com, February 2017; accessed 2020-12-05
  6. Andrew Daniels (2017) Dodge & Cox: Built to Last, Morningstar.com, accessed 18 Jan 2020
  7. Lipper Performance Report
  8. [https://www.dodgeandcox.com/ourfunds.asp Dodge and Cox Funds: Our Funds[, accessed 2020-12-04
  9. https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2020/08/10/dodge-cox-to-launch-first-fund-in-six-years/
  10. Dodge & Cox Balanced Fund, US News & World Report, accessed 17 October 2019
  11. Barclay Palmer (2019) What Are the Oldest Mutual Funds? Investopedia.com, accessed 17 October 2019
  12. Paul B. Farrell (2004). The Lazy Person's Guide to Investing: A Book for Procrastinators, the Financially Challenged, and Everyone Who Worries About Dealing with Their Money. Grand Central Publishing, ISBN 9780759509894
  13. Landon Thomas, Jr. (2020-10-17), An Old-School Investment Manager That Builds Wealth Quietly. The New York Times, accessed 2020-10-04
  14. https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB117391803928937582
  15. John C. Bogle (2005). The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism, Yale University Press, ISBN 9780300119718 p. 127
  16. Motley Fool Staff and Tom Gardner (2014-03-12). 2 Managers Who Get a Thumbs-Up From Jack Bogle MySanAntonio.com, accessed 2020-10-04
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.