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Please note that this is an actively managed product.
Class I shares are only available to certain qualifying institutional investors.
Seeks capital appreciation, measured in US dollars.
Ability to invest in cash, cash equivalents and derivatives to manage market exposure and downside risk
Concentrated portfolio of global stocks and bonds; unfettered by benchmark constraints
Invest with a long-term focus, with an emphasis on absolute, not relative value
The fund may not achieve its objective and/or you could lose money on your investment in the fund.
Stock: Stock markets and investments in individual stocks are volatile and can decline significantly in response to or investor perception of, issuer, market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions.
Bond: Investments in debt instruments may decline in value as the result of, or perception of, declines in the credit quality of the issuer, borrower, counterparty, or other entity responsible for payment, underlying collateral, or changes in economic, political, issuer-specific, or other conditions. Certain types of debt instruments can be more sensitive to these factors and therefore more volatile. In addition, debt instruments entail interest rate risk (as interest rates rise, prices usually fall). Therefore, the portfolio's value may decline during rising rates. Portfolios that consist of debt instruments with longer durations are generally more sensitive to a rise in interest rates than those with shorter durations. At times, and particularly during periods of market turmoil, all or a large portion of segments of the market may not have an active trading market. As a result, it may be difficult to value these investments and it may not be possible to sell a particular investment or type of investment at any particular time or at an acceptable price. The price of an instrument trading at a negative interest rate responds to interest rate changes like other debt instruments; however, an instrument purchased at a negative interest rate is expected to produce a negative return if held to maturity.
Derivatives: Investments in derivatives can be used to take both long and short positions, be highly volatile, involve leverage (which can magnify losses), and involve risks in addition to the risks of the underlying indicator(s) on which the derivative is based, such as counterparty and liquidity risk.
Value: The portfolio's investments can continue to be undervalued for long periods of time, not realize their expected value, and be more volatile than the stock market in general.
Strategy: There is no assurance that the portfolio will achieve a positive rate of return or have lower volatility than the global equity markets, as represented by the MSCI World Index, over the long term or for any year or period of years. In addition, the strategies MFS may implement to limit the portfolio's exposure to certain extreme market events may not work as intended, and the costs associated with such strategies will reduce the portfolio's returns. It is expected that the portfolio will generally underperform the equity markets during periods of strong, rising equity markets.
Please see the prospectus for further information on these and other risk considerations.
Article 6: Integrates sustainability risks into the investment process.
Article 8: Systematically promotes a stated environmental or social characteristic and provides enhanced disclosure accordingly.
Article 9: Typically for "impact" funds, which have a dual objective of financial return and specific environmental or social outcomes.
Active Security Selection | Derivative Positions 1 | Net Exposure | |
---|---|---|---|
Equity | 55.61% | 58.95% | |
Gold Related Investments | 5.49% | ||
Hedges* | -2.15% | ||
Debt Instruments, excluding Short-Term Government Securities | 18.78% | 18.78% | |
Cash, Cash Equivalents, and Short-Term Government Securities2 | 20.14% | ||
Other3 | 2.13% | ||
Total Net Exposure Summary | 100.00% |
Market exposure of derivative position utilized to adjust fund market exposure.
David P. Cole, CFA, is an investment officer of MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). He is also a co-portfolio manager of the firm's high-yield portfolios.
David joined MFS in 2004 after working for five years as a high-yield analyst for Franklin Templeton Investments. Before that, he served as a financial economist/Treasury market analyst for Thomson Financial Services and an economist for Standard and Poor's.
David has a bachelor's degree from Cornell University and an MBA from University of California, Berkeley. He holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation.
Our portfolio managers are supported by our entire team of investment professionals in nine worldwide offices. The team employs a proprietary investment process to build better insights for our clients. The core principles of our approach are integrated research, global collaboration, and active risk management.
Shanti Das-Wermes is an investment officer, equity research analyst, sector leader and portfolio manager at MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). As an analyst, he is responsible for identifying the most attractive investment opportunities in his assigned universe and works closely with portfolio managers to ensure investment ideas are properly positioned within MFS portfolios. Within the Prudent strategies, he is responsible for final buy and sell decisions, portfolio construction and risk and cash management. He is based in London. Shanti joined MFS in 2011 after participating in the firm's MBA analyst intern program. He assumed international financial sector leadership in 2019 and assumed portfolio manager responsibilities in 2022. Prior analyst coverage included consumer staples, building materials & infrastructure, telecoms & cable as well as banks and diversified financials. He was previously an associate with Audax Private Equity for two years and served as a business analyst at McKinsey & Company for two years. Shanti attended the London School of Economics and earned a Summa Cum Laude Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics and Political Science from Indiana University and a Master of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School.
Edward J. Dearing is an investment officer and equity portfolio manager at MFS Investment Management (MFS). In this role, he is responsible for final buy and sell decisions, portfolio construction, risk and cash management. He also participates in the research process and strategy discussions. He is based in London.
Edward joined MFS in 2014 as an equity research analyst and took on portfolio management responsibilities for the firm's Prudent Capital strategy in 2018. Prior to joining the firm, he worked at Deutsche Bank AG. Before that, he worked for three years as an attorney with Covington & Burling LLP and for three years at Clifford Chance LLP.
Edward earned his Master of Arts degree in Law with honors from Cambridge University and a Master of Business Administration degree from the London Business School.
12 month period ending: |
28-Feb-21
or Life
Life performance is only shown when 5 years of performance is not available. |
28-Feb-22 | 28-Feb-23 | 28-Feb-24 | 28-Feb-25 | YTD % * | Class Inception |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Class I1 Shares, US Dollars at NAV | 10.80 | 1.48 | -8.33 | 11.72 | 12.11 | 6.11 | 03-Nov-2016 |
MSCI World Index (net div) | 29.34 | 10.74 | -7.33 | 24.96 | 15.63 | - | - |
12 month period ending: | Class I1 Shares, US Dollars at NAV | |
---|---|---|
28-Feb-21
or Life
Life performance is only shown when 5 years of performance is not available. |
10.80 | |
28-Feb-22 | 1.48 | |
28-Feb-23 | -8.33 | |
28-Feb-24 | 11.72 | |
28-Feb-25 | 12.11 | |
YTD % * | 6.11 | |
Class Inception | 03-Nov-2016 | 03-Nov-2016 |
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
It is expected that the Fund’s deviation from the benchmark will be significant.
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Life
Life performance as of 28-Feb-25 |
2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
At NAV | 6.04 | 14.96 | -0.37 | 14.09 | 11.53 | 2.08 | -13.51 | 15.91 | 5.22 |
MSCI World Index (net div) | - | 22.40 | -8.71 | 27.67 | 15.90 | 21.82 | -18.14 | 23.79 | 18.67 |
At NAV | MSCI World Index (net div) | |
---|---|---|
2024 | 5.22 | 18.67 |
2023 | 15.91 | 23.79 |
2022 | -13.51 | -18.14 |
2021 | 2.08 | 21.82 |
2020 | 11.53 | 15.9 |
2019 | 14.09 | 27.67 |
2018 | -0.37 | -8.71 |
2017 | 14.96 | 22.4 |
Life
Life performance as of 28-Feb-25 |
6.04 | - |
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Historical NAV may not be available for all dates.
Historical MP may not be available for all dates.
NAV at Close of Trading on | Net Asset Value (NAV) |
---|
The Payable Date is the date on which the distribution is paid to shareholders.
Dividend Rate per Share is the amount of dividend that a shareholder will receive for each share held. It can be calculated by taking the total amount of dividends paid and dividing it by the total shares outstanding.
Dividend Reinvestment at NAV is the automatic reinvestment of shareholder dividends in more shares at net asset value.
Ex-Dividend Date is the date on which a fund goes ex-dividend. The interval between the announcement and the payment of the next dividend. An investor must own the fund before the ex-dividend date to be eligible for the dividend payout.
Alpha is a measure of the portfolio's risk-adjusted performance. When compared to the portfolio's beta, a positive alpha indicates better-than-expected portfolio performance and a negative indicates alpha worse-than-expected portfolio performance.
Beta is a measure of the volatility of a portfolio relative to the overall market. A beta less than 1.0 indicates lower risk than the market; a beta greater than 1.0 indicates higher risk than the market. It is most reliable as a risk measure when the return fluctuations of the portfolio are highly correlated with the return fluctuations of the index chosen to represent the market.
Information ratio is a measure of consistency in excess return. It is calculated by taking the annualized excess return over a benchmark and dividing it by the annualized standard deviation of excess return.
R squared represents the percentage of the portfolio's movements that can be explained by the general movements of the market. Index portfolios will tend to have values very close to 100. R squared is not a measure of performance.
The Sharpe Ratio is a risk-adjusted measure calculated to determine reward per unit of risk. It uses a standard deviation and excess return. The higher the Sharpe Ratio, the better the portfolio's historical risk-adjusted performance.
Standard Deviation is an indicator of the portfolio's total return volatility, which is based on a minimum of 36 monthly returns. The larger the portfolio's standard deviation, the greater the portfolio's volatility.
Tracking error is the standard deviation of a portfolio's excess returns. Excess returns are a portfolio's return minus the benchmark's annualized return.
Treynor Ratio: Treynor Ratio is a risk adjusted measure of performance. It is the ratio of the annualized excess return of the portfolio over the risk free rate for a given period divided by the Beta of the portfolio versus its benchmark for the same period. It measures the amount of excess return over the risk free rate earned per unit of systematic risk (beta) assumed.
Upside and downside capture is a measure of how well a manager was able to replicate or improve on phases of positive benchmark returns, and how badly the manager was affected by phases of negative benchmark returns. Upside capture ratio for a portfolio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during periods when the benchmark had a positive return and dividing it by the benchmark return during that same period. Downside capture ratio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during the periods of negative benchmark performance and dividing it by the benchmark return for that period.
10 Yr. | 5 Yr. | 3 Yr. | |
---|---|---|---|
Alpha | n/a | 0.00 | -0.75 |
Beta | n/a | 0.37 | 0.53 |
R-squared | n/a | 59.37 | 79.24 |
Standard Deviation % | n/a | 8.47 | 9.74 |
Sharpe Ratio | n/a | 0.32 | 0.05 |
Tracking Error | n/a | 12.15 | 9.00 |
Information Ratio | n/a | -0.71 | -0.61 |
Treynor Ratio | n/a | 7.15 | 0.94 |
Downside Capture % | n/a | 45.19 | 52.61 |
Upside Capture % | n/a | 41.93 | 50.01 |
Active Security Selection | Derivative Positions 1 | Net Exposure | |
---|---|---|---|
Equity | 55.61% | 58.95% | |
Gold Related Investments | 5.49% | ||
Hedges* | -2.15% | ||
Debt Instruments, excluding Short-Term Government Securities | 18.78% | 18.78% | |
Cash, Cash Equivalents, and Short-Term Government Securities2 | 20.14% | ||
Other3 | 2.13% | ||
Total Net Exposure Summary | 100.00% |
Market exposure of derivative position utilized to adjust fund market exposure.
Cash & Cash Equivalents includes any cash, investments in money market funds, and/or other assets less liabilities. The total also includes investments in short term securities (including short-term governments securities).
Portfolio characteristics are based on equivalent exposure, which measures how a portfolio's value would change due to price changes in an asset held either directly or, in the case of a derivative contract, indirectly. The market value of the holding may differ.
*Short positions, unlike long positions, lose value if the underlying asset gains value.
Fact Sheets are available approximately 15 days after month end.
Full Holdings available approximately 25 days after month end.
Quarterly Portfolio Review is available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Portfolio Review available approximately 15 days after month end.
Product Presentation available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Quarterly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after month end.
Fact Sheets are available approximately 15 days after month end.
Full Holdings available approximately 25 days after month end.
Quarterly Portfolio Review is available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Portfolio Review available approximately 15 days after month end.
Product Presentation available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Quarterly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after month end.
A careful approach to investing
See why our portfolio management team believes focusing on downside mitigation is the best way to grow and preserve capital over the long term.
Seeks capital appreciation, measured in US dollars.
Ability to invest in cash, cash equivalents and derivatives to manage market exposure and downside risk
Concentrated portfolio of global stocks and bonds; unfettered by benchmark constraints
Invest with a long-term focus, with an emphasis on absolute, not relative value
The fund may not achieve its objective and/or you could lose money on your investment in the fund.
Stock: Stock markets and investments in individual stocks are volatile and can decline significantly in response to or investor perception of, issuer, market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions.
Bond: Investments in debt instruments may decline in value as the result of, or perception of, declines in the credit quality of the issuer, borrower, counterparty, or other entity responsible for payment, underlying collateral, or changes in economic, political, issuer-specific, or other conditions. Certain types of debt instruments can be more sensitive to these factors and therefore more volatile. In addition, debt instruments entail interest rate risk (as interest rates rise, prices usually fall). Therefore, the portfolio's value may decline during rising rates. Portfolios that consist of debt instruments with longer durations are generally more sensitive to a rise in interest rates than those with shorter durations. At times, and particularly during periods of market turmoil, all or a large portion of segments of the market may not have an active trading market. As a result, it may be difficult to value these investments and it may not be possible to sell a particular investment or type of investment at any particular time or at an acceptable price. The price of an instrument trading at a negative interest rate responds to interest rate changes like other debt instruments; however, an instrument purchased at a negative interest rate is expected to produce a negative return if held to maturity.
Derivatives: Investments in derivatives can be used to take both long and short positions, be highly volatile, involve leverage (which can magnify losses), and involve risks in addition to the risks of the underlying indicator(s) on which the derivative is based, such as counterparty and liquidity risk.
Value: The portfolio's investments can continue to be undervalued for long periods of time, not realize their expected value, and be more volatile than the stock market in general.
Strategy: There is no assurance that the portfolio will achieve a positive rate of return or have lower volatility than the global equity markets, as represented by the MSCI World Index, over the long term or for any year or period of years. In addition, the strategies MFS may implement to limit the portfolio's exposure to certain extreme market events may not work as intended, and the costs associated with such strategies will reduce the portfolio's returns. It is expected that the portfolio will generally underperform the equity markets during periods of strong, rising equity markets.
Please see the prospectus for further information on these and other risk considerations.
Article 6: Integrates sustainability risks into the investment process.
Article 8: Systematically promotes a stated environmental or social characteristic and provides enhanced disclosure accordingly.
Article 9: Typically for "impact" funds, which have a dual objective of financial return and specific environmental or social outcomes.
Active Security Selection | Derivative Positions 1 | Net Exposure | |
---|---|---|---|
Equity | 55.61% | 58.95% | |
Gold Related Investments | 5.49% | ||
Hedges* | -2.15% | ||
Debt Instruments, excluding Short-Term Government Securities | 18.78% | 18.78% | |
Cash, Cash Equivalents, and Short-Term Government Securities2 | 20.14% | ||
Other3 | 2.13% | ||
Total Net Exposure Summary | 100.00% |
Market exposure of derivative position utilized to adjust fund market exposure.
David P. Cole, CFA, is an investment officer of MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). He is also a co-portfolio manager of the firm's high-yield portfolios.
David joined MFS in 2004 after working for five years as a high-yield analyst for Franklin Templeton Investments. Before that, he served as a financial economist/Treasury market analyst for Thomson Financial Services and an economist for Standard and Poor's.
David has a bachelor's degree from Cornell University and an MBA from University of California, Berkeley. He holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation.
Our portfolio managers are supported by our entire team of investment professionals in nine worldwide offices. The team employs a proprietary investment process to build better insights for our clients. The core principles of our approach are integrated research, global collaboration, and active risk management.
Shanti Das-Wermes is an investment officer, equity research analyst, sector leader and portfolio manager at MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). As an analyst, he is responsible for identifying the most attractive investment opportunities in his assigned universe and works closely with portfolio managers to ensure investment ideas are properly positioned within MFS portfolios. Within the Prudent strategies, he is responsible for final buy and sell decisions, portfolio construction and risk and cash management. He is based in London. Shanti joined MFS in 2011 after participating in the firm's MBA analyst intern program. He assumed international financial sector leadership in 2019 and assumed portfolio manager responsibilities in 2022. Prior analyst coverage included consumer staples, building materials & infrastructure, telecoms & cable as well as banks and diversified financials. He was previously an associate with Audax Private Equity for two years and served as a business analyst at McKinsey & Company for two years. Shanti attended the London School of Economics and earned a Summa Cum Laude Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics and Political Science from Indiana University and a Master of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School.
Edward J. Dearing is an investment officer and equity portfolio manager at MFS Investment Management (MFS). In this role, he is responsible for final buy and sell decisions, portfolio construction, risk and cash management. He also participates in the research process and strategy discussions. He is based in London.
Edward joined MFS in 2014 as an equity research analyst and took on portfolio management responsibilities for the firm's Prudent Capital strategy in 2018. Prior to joining the firm, he worked at Deutsche Bank AG. Before that, he worked for three years as an attorney with Covington & Burling LLP and for three years at Clifford Chance LLP.
Edward earned his Master of Arts degree in Law with honors from Cambridge University and a Master of Business Administration degree from the London Business School.
12 month period ending: |
28-Feb-21
or Life
Life performance is only shown when 5 years of performance is not available. |
28-Feb-22 | 28-Feb-23 | 28-Feb-24 | 28-Feb-25 | YTD % * | Class Inception |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Class I1 Shares, US Dollars at NAV | 10.80 | 1.48 | -8.33 | 11.72 | 12.11 | 6.11 | 03-Nov-2016 |
MSCI World Index (net div) | 29.34 | 10.74 | -7.33 | 24.96 | 15.63 | - | - |
12 month period ending: | Class I1 Shares, US Dollars at NAV | |
---|---|---|
28-Feb-21
or Life
Life performance is only shown when 5 years of performance is not available. |
10.80 | |
28-Feb-22 | 1.48 | |
28-Feb-23 | -8.33 | |
28-Feb-24 | 11.72 | |
28-Feb-25 | 12.11 | |
YTD % * | 6.11 | |
Class Inception | 03-Nov-2016 | 03-Nov-2016 |
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
It is expected that the Fund’s deviation from the benchmark will be significant.
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Life
Life performance as of 28-Feb-25 |
2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
At NAV | 6.04 | 14.96 | -0.37 | 14.09 | 11.53 | 2.08 | -13.51 | 15.91 | 5.22 |
MSCI World Index (net div) | - | 22.40 | -8.71 | 27.67 | 15.90 | 21.82 | -18.14 | 23.79 | 18.67 |
At NAV | MSCI World Index (net div) | |
---|---|---|
2024 | 5.22 | 18.67 |
2023 | 15.91 | 23.79 |
2022 | -13.51 | -18.14 |
2021 | 2.08 | 21.82 |
2020 | 11.53 | 15.9 |
2019 | 14.09 | 27.67 |
2018 | -0.37 | -8.71 |
2017 | 14.96 | 22.4 |
Life
Life performance as of 28-Feb-25 |
6.04 | - |
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Historical NAV may not be available for all dates.
Historical MP may not be available for all dates.
NAV at Close of Trading on | Net Asset Value (NAV) |
---|
The Payable Date is the date on which the distribution is paid to shareholders.
Dividend Rate per Share is the amount of dividend that a shareholder will receive for each share held. It can be calculated by taking the total amount of dividends paid and dividing it by the total shares outstanding.
Dividend Reinvestment at NAV is the automatic reinvestment of shareholder dividends in more shares at net asset value.
Ex-Dividend Date is the date on which a fund goes ex-dividend. The interval between the announcement and the payment of the next dividend. An investor must own the fund before the ex-dividend date to be eligible for the dividend payout.
Alpha is a measure of the portfolio's risk-adjusted performance. When compared to the portfolio's beta, a positive alpha indicates better-than-expected portfolio performance and a negative indicates alpha worse-than-expected portfolio performance.
Beta is a measure of the volatility of a portfolio relative to the overall market. A beta less than 1.0 indicates lower risk than the market; a beta greater than 1.0 indicates higher risk than the market. It is most reliable as a risk measure when the return fluctuations of the portfolio are highly correlated with the return fluctuations of the index chosen to represent the market.
Information ratio is a measure of consistency in excess return. It is calculated by taking the annualized excess return over a benchmark and dividing it by the annualized standard deviation of excess return.
R squared represents the percentage of the portfolio's movements that can be explained by the general movements of the market. Index portfolios will tend to have values very close to 100. R squared is not a measure of performance.
The Sharpe Ratio is a risk-adjusted measure calculated to determine reward per unit of risk. It uses a standard deviation and excess return. The higher the Sharpe Ratio, the better the portfolio's historical risk-adjusted performance.
Standard Deviation is an indicator of the portfolio's total return volatility, which is based on a minimum of 36 monthly returns. The larger the portfolio's standard deviation, the greater the portfolio's volatility.
Tracking error is the standard deviation of a portfolio's excess returns. Excess returns are a portfolio's return minus the benchmark's annualized return.
Treynor Ratio: Treynor Ratio is a risk adjusted measure of performance. It is the ratio of the annualized excess return of the portfolio over the risk free rate for a given period divided by the Beta of the portfolio versus its benchmark for the same period. It measures the amount of excess return over the risk free rate earned per unit of systematic risk (beta) assumed.
Upside and downside capture is a measure of how well a manager was able to replicate or improve on phases of positive benchmark returns, and how badly the manager was affected by phases of negative benchmark returns. Upside capture ratio for a portfolio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during periods when the benchmark had a positive return and dividing it by the benchmark return during that same period. Downside capture ratio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during the periods of negative benchmark performance and dividing it by the benchmark return for that period.
10 Yr. | 5 Yr. | 3 Yr. | |
---|---|---|---|
Alpha | n/a | 0.00 | -0.75 |
Beta | n/a | 0.37 | 0.53 |
R-squared | n/a | 59.37 | 79.24 |
Standard Deviation % | n/a | 8.47 | 9.74 |
Sharpe Ratio | n/a | 0.32 | 0.05 |
Tracking Error | n/a | 12.15 | 9.00 |
Information Ratio | n/a | -0.71 | -0.61 |
Treynor Ratio | n/a | 7.15 | 0.94 |
Downside Capture % | n/a | 45.19 | 52.61 |
Upside Capture % | n/a | 41.93 | 50.01 |
Active Security Selection | Derivative Positions 1 | Net Exposure | |
---|---|---|---|
Equity | 55.61% | 58.95% | |
Gold Related Investments | 5.49% | ||
Hedges* | -2.15% | ||
Debt Instruments, excluding Short-Term Government Securities | 18.78% | 18.78% | |
Cash, Cash Equivalents, and Short-Term Government Securities2 | 20.14% | ||
Other3 | 2.13% | ||
Total Net Exposure Summary | 100.00% |
Market exposure of derivative position utilized to adjust fund market exposure.
Cash & Cash Equivalents includes any cash, investments in money market funds, and/or other assets less liabilities. The total also includes investments in short term securities (including short-term governments securities).
Portfolio characteristics are based on equivalent exposure, which measures how a portfolio's value would change due to price changes in an asset held either directly or, in the case of a derivative contract, indirectly. The market value of the holding may differ.
*Short positions, unlike long positions, lose value if the underlying asset gains value.
Fact Sheets are available approximately 15 days after month end.
Full Holdings available approximately 25 days after month end.
Quarterly Portfolio Review is available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Portfolio Review available approximately 15 days after month end.
Product Presentation available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Quarterly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after month end.
Fact Sheets are available approximately 15 days after month end.
Full Holdings available approximately 25 days after month end.
Quarterly Portfolio Review is available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Portfolio Review available approximately 15 days after month end.
Product Presentation available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Quarterly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after quarter end.
Monthly Investment Update available approximately 25 days after month end.
A careful approach to investing
See why our portfolio management team believes focusing on downside mitigation is the best way to grow and preserve capital over the long term.