---
title: "Hartford Funds Q1 2026: $1.2B Mostly in Its Own ETFs"
type: research
slug: hartford-funds-q1-2026-fund-of-fund-own-etf-allocation
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/research/hartford-funds-q1-2026-fund-of-fund-own-etf-allocation
published_at: 2026-05-15T06:50:09.047Z
updated_at: 2026-05-15T06:50:30.648Z
author: Marcus Chen
author_title: Senior Market Analyst
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
word_count: 763
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# Hartford Funds Q1 2026: $1.2B Mostly in Its Own ETFs

> Hartford Funds Management's $1.15 billion Q1 2026 13F holds primarily Hartford-branded ETFs: HTRB at 37.97% portfolio, HCRB at 15.74%, RODM at 8.66%. This is the textbook fund-of-fund structure where an asset-management arm holds its own product family for client mandates.

Hartford Funds Management Co LLC is the asset-management arm of The Hartford Financial Services Group. Its Q1 2026 Form 13F-HR reports $1.15 billion in US-listed equity holdings — small by institutional-manager standards. The position list is what makes the filing distinctive: nearly all of the AUM sits in Hartford-branded ETFs and mutual funds. Top positions: Hartford Total Return Bond ETF (HTRB) at 37.97%, Hartford Core Bond ETF (HCRB) at 15.74%, Hartford Schroders International Multi-Cap ETF (RODM) at 8.66%, Hartford Multifactor Diversified International ETF (HFSI) at 4.63%, Hartford US Quality Growth ETF (HQGO) at 3.60%, and others. This is the textbook expression of a fund-of-fund structure where an asset-management arm holds primarily its own product family for client mandates.The structure reflects how some asset-management firms deploy capital across their own product lineup rather than buying outside funds or individual stocks. Reading the 13F as discretionary stock-picker output is a category error — Hartford Funds Management is implementing client allocation through its own ETF and mutual fund products as the primary holdings.The book at a glance$1.15 billion total AUM. 500 positions reported. WhaleScore 79.25 — placing Hartford Funds in the elite smart-money tier paradoxically high for a fund-of-fund structure because the WhaleScore methodology rewards concentration (Hartford runs concentrated allocation into its own ETFs) and stability (the position list is structurally stable quarter-over-quarter).The Hartford-branded ETF allocationThe top 8 positions are all Hartford-managed ETFs and mutual funds:HTRB (Hartford Total Return Bond ETF) at $437M / 37.97% — Active fixed-income ETF managed internally at Hartford.HCRB (Hartford Core Bond ETF) at $181M / 15.74% — Investment-grade core bond ETF.RODM (Hartford Schroders International Multi-Cap ETF) at $100M / 8.66% — International equity ETF subadvised by Schroders.HFGO (Hartford Schroders Tax-Aware Bond ETF) at $83M / 7.22% — Tax-aware fixed-income ETF.HFSI (Hartford Multifactor Diversified International ETF) at $53M / 4.63% — International multifactor equity ETF.ROUS (Hartford Multifactor US Equity ETF) at $51M / 4.44% — US multifactor equity ETF.VMAX (Vanguard S&P 500 ETF as comparison index) at $42M / 3.65% — Outside fund for benchmark comparison or beta sleeve.HQGO (Hartford US Quality Growth ETF) at $41M / 3.60% — Quality growth ETF.Combined Hartford-branded products absorb approximately 88% of the reported 13F. The remaining 12% is split between Vanguard ETFs for benchmark comparison and a small tail of individual stocks (AAPL, GOOGL at 0.86-0.90% each).The fund-of-fund structural logicThree drivers for the fund-of-fund pattern:Hartford Funds Management has discretionary authority over Hartford 401(k), retirement, and target-date fund allocations. The discretionary capital it manages flows into Hartford-branded ETFs and mutual funds as the implementation layer.The fund-of-fund structure produces revenue capture at multiple layers. Hartford Funds Management charges an asset-management fee on the overall portfolio plus benefits from the management fees on the underlying Hartford-branded ETFs and mutual funds.Internal-product allocation simplifies operational reporting. Managing client mandates through Hartford's own product line streamlines compliance, fund-of-fund disclosures, and performance attribution versus picking external managers.The top 10 vs the rest~88% of AUM in Hartford-branded positions; the long tail of small individual-stock positions is incidental. The structure is essentially Hartford's own ETF allocation served to retirement-plan and target-date clients via the Hartford Funds Management discretionary vehicle.What this 13F tells institutional readersNot a discretionary stock-picker output. Hartford Funds Management is implementing client allocation through its own products; the 13F is a window into Hartford's internal product distribution, not stock-picking conviction.Watch for product allocation shifts. Changes in the Hartford-branded ETF weights signal Hartford's strategic-asset-allocation decisions across its retirement-plan client base.Fund-of-fund pattern is replicated across competitors. Similar structures exist at T. Rowe Price (TROW), Invesco (IVZ), Franklin Resources (BEN), and other diversified asset-management firms that operate retirement-plan businesses with discretionary allocation authority.AUM trajectoryHartford Funds Management's reported 13F AUM has been stable through 2024-2026 as the firm's retirement-plan-and-target-date client base grows organically. The position structure is stable — Hartford-branded ETFs remain the dominant allocation across multiple consecutive quarters.What to trackHartford 401(k) and target-date assets growth. Hartford's retirement-plan-and-target-date business drives the underlying capital allocation in this 13F.Product mix shifts. Any meaningful reweighting between fixed-income (HTRB, HCRB) and equity (RODM, HFSI, ROUS, HQGO) Hartford-branded products signals broader Hartford strategic-asset-allocation views.Hartford Funds Management Q2 2026 13F (due August 14, 2026). Watch for any meaningful shift in product allocation. Track via the institutional signals feed.Hartford Funds Management's Q1 2026 13F is one of the cleanest examples of fund-of-fund 13F structure where an asset-management firm holds primarily its own product family. For more on reading non-stock-picker 13F structures, see our OCIO 13F reading guide.Source: SEC Form 13F-HR filed by Hartford Funds Management Co LLC (CIK 0001546587) for the period ending 2026-03-31; available via EDGAR — Hartford Funds Management filer index.

## FAQ

### What is Hartford Funds Management Co LLC?

Hartford Funds Management Co LLC is the asset-management arm of The Hartford Financial Services Group. The Q1 2026 13F reports $1.15 billion in US-listed equity holdings. The firm has discretionary authority over Hartford 401(k), retirement-plan, and target-date fund client mandates, which it implements primarily through Hartford-branded ETFs and mutual funds rather than individual stock selection.

### Why does Hartford Funds hold mostly its own ETFs?

Fund-of-fund structure produces three advantages: (1) Hartford Funds Management discretionary client mandates implement through Hartford own ETF and mutual-fund products; (2) revenue capture at multiple layers — asset-management fee on overall portfolio plus management fees on underlying products; (3) internal-product allocation simplifies operational reporting, compliance, fund-of-fund disclosures versus picking external managers.

### What is the largest Hartford ETF position?

Hartford Total Return Bond ETF (HTRB) is the largest position at $437.2 million and 37.97% of the firm's $1.15 billion 13F. HTRB is an active fixed-income ETF managed internally at Hartford. The dominance of fixed-income exposure reflects Hartford's retirement-plan and target-date client base, where bond allocation is a structural component of risk-managed mandate frameworks.

### How does this differ from an OCIO filer like Cambridge Associates?

Cambridge Associates' OCIO 13F holds primarily Vanguard and iShares ETFs (third-party low-cost ETFs from large index-fund providers) to implement client asset allocation. Hartford Funds Management holds primarily Hartford-branded ETFs (its own product family). The structural difference is OCIO firms typically use external low-cost ETFs for cost efficiency, while fund-of-fund managers at asset-management firms allocate to internal products for revenue-capture and operational reasons.

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Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/research/hartford-funds-q1-2026-fund-of-fund-own-etf-allocation
Author: Marcus Chen — https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
Last updated: 2026-05-15T06:50:30.648Z