RWDNX
Redwood Managed Volatility Fund
Two Roads Shared Trust
Expense ratio1
2.45%
Net assets2
$81.17M
Holdings2
11
Category
US Equity
2025 return3
4.39%

Investment objective & strategy

As of Feb. 27, 2026 · prospectus

Objective. The Redwood Managed Volatility Fund (the ?Fund?) seeks a combination of total return and prudent management of portfolio downside volatility and downside loss.

Strategy. To pursue its investment objective the Fund uses a trend-following strategy that seeks to identify the critical turning points in the markets for high yield bonds (also known as ?junk bonds?) and bank loans. The Fund?s adviser, Redwood Investment Management, LLC (?Redwood? or the ?Adviser?) uses a quantitatively driven process that seeks to invest in diversified high yield bond, bank loan, and other fixed income exposures with similar characteristics when the high yield bond and bank loan markets are trending upwards, and short-term fixed income securities when the high yield bond and bank loan markets are trending downwards. By tactically allocating its investments, the Fund seeks to reduce its exposure to declines in the high yield bond and bank loan … To pursue its investment objective the Fund uses a trend-following strategy that seeks to identify the critical turning points in the markets for high yield bonds (also known as ?junk bonds?) and bank loans. The Fund?s adviser, Redwood Investment Management, LLC (?Redwood? or the ?Adviser?) uses a quantitatively driven process that seeks to invest in diversified high yield bond, bank loan, and other fixed income exposures with similar characteristics when the high yield bond and bank loan markets are trending upwards, and short-term fixed income securities when the high yield bond and bank loan markets are trending downwards. By tactically allocating its investments, the Fund seeks to reduce its exposure to declines in the high yield bond and bank loan markets, thereby seeking to limit downside volatility and downside loss in down-trending markets. The Fund?s exposure to these asset classes will be achieved through investments in derivative instruments such as total return swaps, which may include swaps on either individual or baskets of underlying diversified high yield bond exchange-traded funds (?ETFs?), bank loan funds, multi-sector bond funds and other fixed income funds, and credit default swaps. A total return swap is a contract that exchanges a floating rate for the total return of a security or index in which a payer and receiver exchange the credit risk and market risk of an underlying asset for the payment of a fee. The payer owns the underlying asset, also called the reference asset, and agrees to pay the receiver the total return on the asset, including its market appreciation and coupons, while the receiver agrees to pay a set rate, which could be fixed or variable. If the reference asset depreciates, the receiver pays the depreciation to the payer because the payer has transferred default risk, credit deterioration risk and market risk to the receiver. The Fund?s investments in total return swaps, where the Fund will pay a counterparty a set fee in exchange for the total return of a reference asset, will usually be on mutual funds or ETFs that are determined by the Adviser to be representative of the various fixed income classes described above. A credit default swap is a contract that enables an investor to buy or sell protection against a pre-determined issuer credit event. One party, acting as a ?protection buyer,? makes periodic payments, which may be based on, among other things, a fixed or floating rate of interest, to the other party, a ?protection seller,? in exchange for a promise by the protection seller to make a payment to the protection buyer if a negative credit event (such as a delinquent payment or default) occurs with respect to a referenced bond or group of bonds. Credit default swaps may also be structured based on the debt of a basket of issuers, rather than a single issuer, and may be customized with respect to the default event that triggers purchase or other factors. As a credit protection seller in a credit default swap contract, the Fund would be required to pay the par (or other agreed-upon) value of a referenced debt obligation to the counterparty following certain negative credit events as to a specified third-party debtor, such as default by a U.S. or non-U.S. corporate issuer on its debt obligations. In return for its obligation, the Fund would receive from the counterparty a periodic stream of payments, which may be based on, among other things, a fixed or floating rate of interest, over the term of the contract provided that no event of default has occurred. If no default occurs, the Fund would keep the stream of payments, and would have no payment obligations to the counterparty. The Fund may sell credit protection in order to earn additional income and/or to take a synthetic long position in the underlying security or basket of securities. The Fund may also enter into credit default swap contracts as protection buyer in order to hedge against the risk of default on the debt of a particular issuer or basket of issuers or attempt to profit from a deterioration or perceived deterioration in the creditworthiness of the particular issuer(s). The purchase of credit default swaps involves costs, which will reduce the Fund?s return. In certain circumstances, credit default swaps could be used to assist in managing the duration of the Fund. The derivative instruments in which the Fund invests may obtain their investment exposure from underlying securities of any maturity or quality, including securities rated below investment grade. The Fund may also gain exposure to the high yield bond and bank loan markets (both public and private debt) through direct investments in bonds or through investments in investment companies, including open-end mutual funds, ETFs, closed-end funds, including tender offer and interval funds and business development companies, and real estate investment trusts (?REITs?). The investment companies in which the Fund invests may invest in securities of any maturity or quality, including securities rated below investment grade. The bonds in which the Fund may directly invest may be of any maturity or quality, including securities rated below investment grade. The Fund may gain exposure to foreign (non-U.S.) securities, including emerging market securities, to the extent the Fund invests in derivatives of other investment companies that hold securities of foreign (non-U.S.) issuers. The short-term fixed-income securities in which the Fund invests may include corporate bonds and other corporate debt securities, asset-backed securities, securities issued by the U.S. government or its agencies and instrumentalities, securities issued by non-U.S. governments or their agencies and instrumentalities, money market securities and other interest-bearing instruments or any derivative instrument meant to track the return of any such instrument, and cash. The Fund may also invest in money market funds or other investment companies whose assets are comprised primarily of short-term fixed income securities. The Fund may invest in short-term fixed income strategies of any maturity and credit quality, including securities rated below investment grade (?junk bonds?). The Fund may invest in affiliated and unaffiliated registered investment companies. The Adviser employs a total return and downside volatility management investment approach, which seeks to reduce exposure to losses in the markets while capturing gains during up-trends in these markets. However, the Fund?s downside volatility may be higher than the general global equity, fixed income, currency and commodity markets over short-term periods. The Fund has the ability under federal law to leverage its portfolio by borrowing money from a bank in the amount of up to one-third of the Fund?s assets (which includes the borrowed amount). The Fund may borrow money to enter into swap contracts that may leverage the Fund?s portfolio to a significant degree. In addition, the Fund may engage in active and frequent trading.

Top holdings

As of Jan. 31, 2026 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
Lord Abbett High Yield Fund $15.07M 18.57%
BLKR-HI YLD-INS $15.05M 18.54%
American High-Income Trust - Class F-3 HIGFX $14.99M 18.47%
JPM-HIGH YLD-I $14.94M 18.41%
RDWD-R/E INC-I $10.60M 13.06%
GS-HI YLD-INS $8.18M 10.08%
GS-GOVT-ADM FOAXX $1.20M 1.47%
Vanguard High-Yield Corporate Fund, Class Admiral shares VWEAX $42.63K 0.05%
PRINC-H/Y-INS $14.87K 0.02%
NYLI MacKay High Yield Corporate Bond Fund, Class I $166 0.00%
View all holdings →

Allocation by sector

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

Portfolio moves

Oct 31, 2025 → Jan 31, 2026
Opened
0
Exited
1
Increased
5
Decreased
6
Unchanged
0

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 October 31, 2025 · N-CEN
FirmRole
Redwood Investment Management, LLC Adviser

Footnotes

  1. Expense ratio as of February 27, 2026, from the fund's prospectus.
  2. Net assets and holdings count as of January 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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