Category Archives: Funds in Registration

March 2014, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

Cozad Small Cap Value Fund

Cozad Small Cap Value Fund will seek long term capital appreciation by investing domestic small cap stocks, with an anticipated holding period of 12-18 months. The underlying strategy calls for portfolio rebalancing every three or four months and, if the signals are right, it might “liquidate investment positions and hold the proceeds in money market funds, other highly liquid obligations or the electronically-traded iShares Russell 2000 Value Index Fund.”  The manager will be David Wetherell of Cozad Asset Management. This represents the conversion of a hedge fund of the same name but they have not yet released that fund’s track record. The initial expense ratio is 1.55%and the minimum initial investment is $2,500.

Dodge & Cox Global Bond Fund

Dodge & Cox Global Bond Fund will seek a high rate of total return consistent with long-term preservation of capital. They target a diversified portfolio of investment grade bonds and have the power to hedge the portfolio. The fund will be managed by  Dodge & Cox’s seven-person Global Bond Investment Policy Committee. This portfolio operated as a hedge fund (their term: “a private fund”) from December 2012 until its conversion in May 2014. In 2013 the fund made 2.6% while its benchmark, the Barclays Global Aggregate Bond index, lost 2.6%.  The initial expense ratio is 0.60% and the minimum initial investment is $2,500, reduced to $1,000 for IRAs.

Lazard Emerging Markets Income Portfolio

Lazard Emerging Markets Income Portfolio will seek total return consistent with the preservation of capital by investing in currencies, debt securities, and derivative instruments and other investments that are economically tied to emerging market countries.  A key driver of performance will be the intention to invest in very short term securities and higher-yield debt. The managers will be Ardra Belitz and Ganesh Ramachandran. Both have been managers on Lazard’s EM income team for more than a decade. The initial expense ratio is 1.20 %and the minimum initial investment is $2,500.

Lazard Fundamental Long/Short Portfolio

Lazard Fundamental Long/Short Portfolio will seek capital appreciation with a hope for principal preservation by investing, long and short, in a mostly domestic equity portfolio. They describe themselves as “relative value” investors looking to invest in “companies with strong and/or improving financial productivity that have attractive valuations.” They will at the same time short the stock of firms with “deteriorating fundamentals, unattractive valuations or other qualities warranting a short position.”  The fund might be anywhere from 100% long to 25% net short. The managers will be a team led by Dmitri Batsev. The initial expense ratio is 1.95%and the minimum initial investment is $2,500.

Payden Strategic Income Fund

Payden Strategic Income Fund will seek total return combined with income generation that is consistent with preservation of capital by investing globally in pretty much anything that might generate income, from US dividend-paying stocks to EM bonds and convertibles. They anticipate investing in both developed and developing markets and in both investment grade and high-yield debt. The manager will be Michael Salvay, CFA, a Managing Principal at Payden. The initial expense ratio is 0.80%and the minimum initial investment is $100,000, though it’s likely that lower minimum shares will become available through the various fund supermarkets.

Vertical Capital Innovations MLP Fund

Vertical Capital Innovations MLP Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation and current income through a diversified portfolio of investments in infrastructure and master limited partnerships. They intend to pay out a regular, consistent dividend at a range approximating what they receive from the MLPs.  One red flag is that the fund, like many MLP funds, will not be organized as a typical open-end mutual fund; but instead will be organized as and taxed as a corporation. The managers will be Michael D. Underhill and Susan L. Dambekaln of Capital Innovations, LLC. The initial expense ratio is 1.75%for Advisor class shares and the minimum initial investment is $1,000.

Vertical Capital Lido Managed Volatility Fund

Vertical Capital Lido Managed Volatility Fund will seek capital appreciation while seeking to limit short term risk.  It will be a fund of funds, investing in 8-12 funds that give it the best risk-adjusted performance.  They’ll target volatility of 30-70% of the S&P 500s.  Stocks, bonds, domestic, global, emerging, options, futures, long, short. The manager will be Jason Ozur of Lido Advisors. The prospectus doesn’t offer any documentation of Mr. Ozur’s success in executing this strategy. The initial expense ratio is 1.75%and the minimum initial investment is $1,000 for Advisor class shares which carry a sales load.

Whitebox Unconstrained Income Fund

Whitebox Unconstrained Income Fund will seek a high level of total return and low portfolio volatility. Their universe is anything that produces income.  Their plan is to use three broad strategies: (1) dynamically allocating between asset classes; (2) seeking the best investments in each class through bottom-up research; and (3) from time to time, hedge the portfolio. The fund will be managed by the usual gang.  The initial expense ratio is 1.67%and the minimum initial investment is $5,000, reduced to $1,000 for tax-deferred accounts.

February 2014, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

ActiveShares Large-Cap, Mid-Cap and Multi-Cap Funds

ActiveShares Large-Cap, Mid-Cap and Multi-Cap Funds will be a series of actively-managed ETFs advised by the Precidian Funds.  At the moment, their prospectuses are missing information about both expenses and management.

AR Capital BDC Income Fund

AR Capital BDC Income Fund seeks to provide a high level of income, with the potential for capital appreciation.  The strategy is to invest in the equities of business development corporations.  They’ll target BDCs which are paying attractive rates of distribution and appear capable of sustaining that distribution level over time. A secondary consideration is the potential for capital appreciation. The managers are employees of BDCA Adviser, LLC but are otherwise unidentified.  The initial expense ratio has not been released and the minimum initial investment is $2500, raised to $100,000 if you’re silly enough to try and buy shares directly from the fund company.

AR Capital Dividend and Value Fund

AR Capital Dividend and Value Fund (Advisor shares) seeks to provide a high level of dividend income, with the potential for capital appreciation.  The strategy is to invest in dividend-paying stocks, with special emphasis on energy infrastructure MLPs and REITs.  Up to 15% of the portfolio may be placed in illiquid investments and 20% in fixed-income.  The managers are Brad Stanley and Mark Painter, portfolio managers at Carnegie Asset Management.  Since February 2010, they’ve used this strategy in separate accounts which have trailed the S&P 500 by 150-250 basis points a year.  That said, we have neither income nor volatility data for the separate accounts so they might be much more attractive than the raw return numbers imply. The initial expense ratio has not been released and the minimum initial investment is $2500, raised to $100,000 if you’re silly enough to try and buy shares directly from the fund company.

ASTON/Guardian Capital Global Dividend Fund

ASTON/Guardian Capital Global Dividend Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation and current income by investing in a global portfolio of dividend-paying stocks whose firms have the ability to grow earnings and a willingness to increase dividends.  They will not hedge their currency exposure. The manager will be Srikanth Iyer, Managing Director and Head of Systematic Strategies for Guardian Capital LP. Guardian has been using this strategy in separate accounts since 2007, with mixed results as far as total return goes.  The initial expense ratio is 1.31% and the minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $500 for IRAs, ESAs and UTMAs.

ASTON/Pictet International Fund

ASTON/Pictet International Fund will seek capital appreciation by investing in developed market stocks which demonstrate growth at a reasonable price.  They will not hedge their currency exposure. The manager will be Fabio Paolini, Head of EAFE Equities at Pictet. Pictet has been around since 1805 and has been running this strategy in other accounts since 1995.  Those accounts have outperformed the EAFE by 200-250 basis points/year over the long-term.  The initial expense ratio is 1.51% and the minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $500 for IRAs, ESAs and UTMAs.

ATAC Beta Rotation Fund

ATAC Beta Rotation Fund will seek capital appreciation by investing in ETFs (and occasionally ETNs) based on the managers’ inflation expectations.  At base, high beta sectors thrive in rising inflation environments and low beta sectors in falling inflation environments.  Their plan is to rotate in the sectors best positioned for gains. They warn of turnover rates exceeding 1000% per year. The managers will be Edward Dempsey, founder and Chief Investment Officer of Pension Partners, and  Michael Gayed. The pair also runs ATAC Inflation Rotation Fund (ATACX) which uses the same strategy to rotate between bond sectors and cash.  The minimum initial investment is $2500.

BPV Large Cap Value Fund

BPV Large Cap Value Fund (Advisor shares) seeks to outperform the Russell Value index. Their sub-advisor has a quant-driven strategy for investing in large cap value stocks that have an attractive combination of value, management and momentum.  The managers are a team from AJO Partners.  (Nope, I’ve never heard of it either.)  AJO’s website describes them as “an institutional investment manager established in 1984 [who] manage tax-exempt portfolios of value-oriented U.S. and international equities.”  They’ve got $24B in AUM, $19B in their large cap strategy (not clear how they make that tax-exempt) and a really, really annoying website.  They’ve decided that all of their menu items need to start with the letter “P”. Clicking on the Performance tab starts with a cartoon (“We didn’t underperform, you overexpected”) and leads to a blank page with a 404 error.  The initial expense ratio hasn’t been announced and the minimum initial investment is $1000.

Catalyst Macro Strategy Fund

Catalyst Macro Strategy Fund (I shares) seeks to “positive returns in all market environments” and to “participate in the upside of the equity markets while seeking to minimize the impact of the market’s downside during periods of extreme market stress.”  They can invest, long and short, in a global portfolio of stocks and bonds. The lead manager is Al Procaccino of Castle Financial & Retirement Planning Associates Inc.  Castle’s website provides evidence of offices that look like a resort, but not of success with this (or any other) strategy. The initial expense ratio will be 1.75% after waivers and the minimum initial investment is $2500.

DoubleLine Flexible Income Fund

DoubleLine Flexible Income Fund will seek current income and capital appreciation by active asset allocation among market sectors in the fixed income universe.  It can invest anywhere and can short; you might profit by thinking of it as a sort of fixed-income hedge fund. The manager will be The Gundlach. The initial expense ratio is not yet set; the minimum initial investment is $2000, reduced to $500 for IRAs.

DoubleLine Low Duration Emerging Markets Fixed Income Fund

DoubleLine Low Duration Emerging Markets Fixed Income Fund will seek long-term total return by investing in governmental, quasi-governmental and private emerging markets bonds.  “Although the Fund may invest in individual securities of any maturity or duration, the Adviser will normally seek to construct an investment portfolio for the Fund with a dollar-weighted average effective duration of three years or less.” The managers will be Mark W. Christensen, Su Fei Koo and Luz M. Padilla.  The initial expense ratio is not yet set; the minimum initial investment is $2000, reduced to $500 for IRAs.

Innealta Fixed Income Fund

Innealta Fixed Income Fund (Class N) seeks “to maximize expected total return in the context of various risks across a wide spectrum of fixed income sectors” by investing in fixed-income ETFs. The manager is Gerald W. Buetow, Jr. (Ph.D.), Innealta’s Chief Investment Officer.  The initial expense ratio will be capped at 0.98% and the minimum initial investment is $5,000.

Liquid 8 Fund

Liquid 8 Fund seeks to generate current income with a low correlation to the risks and returns of major market indices.  (“Liquidate”?  Really?  Do managers have a “it’s better to be ridiculed than ignored” ethos?  Are you seeing funds with cutesy names – Giant 5, Bread & Butter, Palantir – drawing serious investor attention?) The strategy is to sell listed weekly put options on stocks, stock indices and ETFs with the goal of an annual shareholder yield of 8%.  The manager is C. Shawn Gibson of Liquid Alternatives (“a newly-formed investment advisor”), assisted by “co-decision makers … G. Bradley Ball and Adam C. Stewart.” The decision-makers, co- and otherwise, have worked for institutional investment advisers but have not established a public track record. The initial expense ratio will be capped at 1.50% and the minimum initial investment is $1000.

McKinley Non-U.S. Core Growth Fund

McKinley Non-U.S. Core Growth Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in 40-70 non-U.S. stocks.  There’s not much detail in the prospectus, except to note that they’re “bottom-up” guys, emerging markets are capped at 40% and they don’t hedge.  The managers will be a team from McKinley Capital Management.  The initial expense ratio is 1.45% and the minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $1000 for IRAs.

Pzena Mid Cap Focused Value Fund

Pzena Mid Cap Focused Value Fund seeks to provide long-term capital appreciation.  The strategy is invest in 30-40 stocks, ranging from about $1.5 – 25 billion in market cap, “sell at a substantial discount to their intrinsic value but have solid long-term prospects.”  The managers are a team led by founder Richard Pzena.  Morningstar describes the publicly-traded Pzena as having “a strong franchise [built] around its long-term, deep-value-oriented investing philosophy” but fretted that their strategies got hammered in 2008.  The firm has about $25 billion in AUM, up 50% in a year. The initial expense ratio will be 1.35% and the minimum initial investment is $5000, reduced to $1000 for IRAs.

Pzena Emerging Markets Focused Value Fund

Pzena Emerging Markets Focused Value Fund seeks to provide long-term capital appreciation.  The strategy is to use “a classic value strategy” to identify the 40-80 most attractive stocks from a universe of 1500 frontier and emerging markets securities.  The managers are John Goetz, Pzena’s president and co-CIO, Allison Fisch and Caroline Cai.  While Pzena does have an international strategy, their website doesn’t suggest the existence of an EM one. The initial expense ratio will be 1.75% and the minimum initial investment is $5000, reduced to $1000 for IRAs.

Pzena Long/Short Focused Value Fund

Pzena Long/Short Focused Value Fund seeks to provide long-term capital appreciation by investing long in “classic value” shorts and shorting “a broadly diversified basket of stocks that the Adviser believes to be expensive relative to their earnings history.” The managers are Antonio DeSpirito, III, TVR Murti and Eli Rabinowich.  The initial expense ratio will be 2.73% and the minimum initial investment is $5000, reduced to $1000 for IRAs.

Scout Equity Opportunity Fund

Scout Equity Opportunity Fund seeks to provide long-term capital gains by investing in a largely-domestic, all-cap portfolio.  Direct foreign investment is limited to 20% of the portfolio. The manager is Brent Olson, who just joined Scout from Three Peaks. From 2010-13, he co-managed Aquila Three Peaks Opportunity Growth Fund (ATGAX).  While I can’t prove a cause-and-effect relationship, ATGAX vastly underperformed its mid-cap growth peers for the decade prior to Mr. Olson’s arrival and substantially outperformed them during his tenure. The fund provides Scout with a successor to its mild-mannered Scout Stock Fund, which is liquidated in March 2013. The initial expense ratio has not been announced; the minimum initial investment is $1000, reduced to $100 for IRAs and accounts with an AIP provision.

Victory Emerging Markets Small Cap Fund

Victory Emerging Markets Small Cap Fund ( I shares) seeks to provide long-term capital appreciation by investing in, well, emerging markets small cap stocks.  They claim “a ‘bottom-up’ approach to identify companies that it believes have long-term growth prospects, are proven franchises, have sustainable margins and are financially stable.”  The managers are Margaret Lindsay, Victory’s CIO for non-U.S. small cap equity, Tiffany Kuo and Joshua Lindland.  Their EM small cap separate accounts have substantially outperformed their benchmark with relatively low volatility over the past five years.  The initial expense ratio will be 1.50% and the minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $1000 for IRAs.

January 2014, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

AR Capital BDC Income Fund

AR Capital BDC Income Fund will pursue a high level of income, with the potential for capital appreciation.  The plan is to invest in the common and preferred stock or warrants of business development companies that, in its view, are paying attractive rates of distribution and appear capable of sustaining that distribution level over time.  The fund will be managed by unnamed individuals affiliated with BDCA Adviser, LLC .  The minimum initial investment will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio has not yet been released.  There are Advisor shares but also curiously-priced “A” shares: they intend to charge 1.5% up front and a deferred charge of 1% if you’re redeeming a million or more at a time.

AR Capital Dividend and Value Fund

AR Capital Dividend and Value Fund, Advisor Share class, will pursue is to provide a high level of dividend income, with the potential for capital appreciation..  The plan is to invest in dividend-paying stocks, potentially including master limited partnerships and REITs.  Up to 15% of the fund might be in illiquid securities. The fund will be managed by Brad Stanley and Mark Painter, portfolio managers at Carnegie Asset Management.  (The managers both graduated from Carnegie-Mellon University, in Pittsburgh.)  The guys run about $168 million in this strategy and have modestly trailed the S&P500 since inception in early 2010). The minimum initial investment will be $2500 for financial intermediaries, $100,000 for other scoundrels trying to purchase directly from the firm and the initial expense ratio has not yet been announced.

Artisan High Income Fund

Artisan High Income Fund will pursue total return through a combination of current income and capital appreciation.  The plan is to invest primarily in the high-yield bonds and loans of “issuers with high quality business models that have compelling risk-adjusted return characteristics.” The fund will be managed by Bryan C. Krug who was a fixed income portfolio manager at Waddell & Reed Investment who ran the $10 billion, five star Ivy High Income Fund (WHIYX) for the past seven years.  He’s empowered to create his own independent team within Artisan.  The minimum initial investment will be $1000 for Investor shares and $250,000 for Advisor shares, but Artisan will waive the Investor minimum if you set up an account with an AIP.   The initial expense ratio will be 1.25% for both Investor and Advisor shares.

Brown Advisory Japan Alpha Opportunities Fund

Brown Advisory Japan Alpha Opportunities Fund will pursue total return by investing principally in equity securities of companies which are domiciled in or exercise the predominant part of their economic activity in Japan.  They intend to construct a series of “sleeves,” each with its own distinct risk profile but they don’t explain what they might be. They may invest in common and preferred stock, futures, convertibles, options, ADRs and GDR, REITs and ETFs.  While they advertise an all-cap portfolio, they do flag small cap and EM risks.  The fund will be managed by a team from Wellington Management.  The minimum initial investment will be $5000, reduced to $1000 for IRAs and $250 for accounts set up with an AIP.  The initial expense ratio will be 1.36%.  The fund will launch in March 2014.

Catalyst Macro Strategy Fund

Catalyst Macro Strategy Fund, I shares, will pursue capital appreciation with positive returns in all market conditions.  The plan is to invest in securities (foreign or domestic, equity or debt, long or short) which offer “a high probability of return or, alternatively, that provides a high degree of safety during uncertain market conditions.”  There is no evidence in the prospectus which demonstrates the probability that the managers will hit that lofty mark. The fund will be managed Al Procaccino, II, President, and Korey Bauer, Vice President, Analyst and Market Technician of Castle Financial & Retirement Planning Associates.  The minimum initial investment in all share classes of the Fund is $2,500 for regular and IRA accounts, and $100 for an automatic investment plan account. The initial expense ratio will be 1.75%.

Kalmar “Growth-with-Value” Small/Mid Cap Fund

Kalmar “Growth-with-Value” Small/Mid Cap Fund will pursue long-term capital appreciation.  The plan is to buy and hold high quality smaller companies (those with market caps between $1 – 10 billion) when their stock can be acquired for a value price.  The fund will be managed by Ford Draper and Dana Walker.  The same team has done a nice job with the strategy in their small cap fund (KGSCX) which now has nearly $900 million and a four-star rating.  This might serve as a tool for diverting cash flows from that still-open fund. The minimum initial investment will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio will be 1.40%.

Loeb King Asia Fund

Loeb King Asia Fund will pursue “attractive risk adjusted returns in the Asian capital markets.”  The plan is to invest “long or short in value-oriented and/or event-driven equity securities in Asian countries, including countries that may be considered emerging markets.”  They also have the option of hedging the portfolio against macro events.  The fund will be managed by Blaine Marder of Carl M. Loeb Advisory Partners L.P., also known as Loeb King Capital Management.  This fund is a converted hedge fund, which Mr. Marder has managed since 2008.  The hedge fund offered substantial downside protection (it dropped 0.25% in 2011 when most Asia funds were down by double-digits) but still managed to return 18% through the first three quarters of 2013. The minimum initial investment will be $10,000, reduced to $2500 for IRAs, but the initial expense ratio has not yet been announced.

Miller Income Opportunity Trust

Miller Income Opportunity Trust will pursue “a high level of income while maintaining the potential for growth.” The plan is to invest in let Bill Miller and his son invest in anything they want, with a focus on things which produce income.  The prospectus reads like an overpriced version of FPA Crescent (FPACX).  The fund will be managed by Bill Miller and Bill Miller IV.  It’s a Legg Mason fund, so there is a slug of share classes.  The minimum initial investment will be $1000 or a million and the initial expense ratio will be between 1 – 2%, depending on class.  The whole enterprise leaves me feeling a little queasy since it looks either like Miller’s late-career attempt to prove that he’s not a dinosaur or Legg’s post-divorce sop to him.

Navigator Fixed Income Total Return Fund

Navigator Fixed Income Total Return Fund, I Shares, will pursue “excess alpha over a full market cycle measured against the Barclays Capital U.S. Corporate High Yield Index and the Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Bond Index” by investing, long and short, in fixed income securities.  The fund will be managed by a team from Clark Capital Management, including its founder.  The minimum initial investment will be $5000 but the initial expense ratio has not been announced.

NWM Momentum Fund

NWM Momentum Fund will pursue long-term capital appreciation.  The plan is to invest in a variety of exchange-traded products using their “risk on / risk off proprietary screening model.”  The fund will be managed by Momentum Fund Group.  The minimum initial investment will be $5000, reduced to $1000 if you somehow conclude this is a good idea for your retirement account or if you establish an AIP account.  The initial expense ratio will be 1.65%.

Parametric Dividend Income Fund

Parametric Dividend Income Fund will pursue total return and current income.  (Curious, “total return” usually subsumes the notion “current income” ‘cause that’s what “total” means.)  The plan is to invest in a diversified portfolio of quality companies that have historically demonstrated high current income and lower levels of stock price volatility on a sector relative basis.  The fund will be managed by Thomas Seto and David Stein of Parametric, on behalf of Eaton Vance.  They’re run a tiny account using this strategy for less than a year and it has modestly trailed the market.  No word on its income production. The minimum initial investment will be $1000 and the initial expense ratio will be 0.95%.

Pax World International ESG Index Fund

Pax World International ESG Index Fund will come online soon to absorb the assets of two existing Pax funds, Pax World International (PXINX) and Pax MSCI EAFE ESG Index ETF (EAPS).  Details are maddeningly scarce but the ETF has about $57 million in assets and charges 0.55%, and Pax generally has a $1,000 minimum on their funds. 

Perritt Low Priced Stock Fund

Perritt Low Priced Stock Fund will pursue long-term capital appreciation by investing in small cap stocks priced at $15 or less.  The fund will be managed by Michael Corbett and Brian Gillespie.  Mr. Corbett also runs Perritt Microcap (PRCGX) and Ultra MicroCap (PREOX), both of which are very solid funds with good risk profiles. The minimum initial investment will be $1000, reduced to $250 for all sorts of good reasons, and the initial expense ratio will be 1.5%.  It feels a lot like a good fund about to be handicapped by a marketing gimmick.

Riverside Frontier Markets Fund

Riverside Frontier Markets Fund will pursue capital appreciation, mostly.  The plan is to “use proprietary algorithms and models employing a ‘top-down’ analysis of global equity markets and economic conditions, ‘bottom-up’ analysis of individual securities, momentum and market factors and any other methods determined to be appropriate.” The fund will be managed by Ana Kolar of Riverside Advisors.  The minimum initial investment will be $2500, reduced to $2000 for IRAs; the initial expense ratio has not been disclosed.

SkyBridge Dividend Value Fund

SkyBridge Dividend Value Fund, I Shares, will pursue total return by investing in dividend-producing securities.  They’ll typically hold 20-40 stocks, equally-weighted at the time of purchase.  “The first ten stocks will represent the ten highest yielding stocks within the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  The other stocks will be selected from across the market capitalization spectrum, generally excluding financial and utility stocks.” The fund will be managed by Brendan Voege, formerly of SunAmerica, but he will do do “under the supervision of SkyBridge Chief Investment Officer Raymond Nolte.” The minimum initial investment will be $1000 and the initial expense ratio will be $1000.

December 2013, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

American Beacon Global Evolution Frontier Markets Income Fund

American Beacon Global Evolution Frontier Markets Income Fund (oh, dear God) will seek income, with capital appreciation as a secondary objective, by investing primarily frontier and emerging market sovereign and quasi-sovereign debt. The fund will be managed by a team from Global Evolution USA, LLC, a subsidiary of Global Evolution Fondsmæglerselskab A/S.  But you already knew that, right?  The Global Evolution people have been running this strategy for about 30 months but the draft prospectus leaves the performance numbers blank. The minimum initial investment is $2,500 the opening expense ratio is 1.54%.

B. Riley Diversified Equity Fund

B. Riley Diversified Equity Fund will seek capital appreciation by investing in (here’s their text) “the equity securities of U.S. companies within a range of the market capitalizations of the issuers selected by the B. Riley & Co. Research Group (the “Research Group”) as “Buy” rated equity securities in its coverage universe.”  If one of my students had written that sentence, I would have scribbled “huh?” next to it. Charles P. Hastings has managed the Fund since its inception in February 2014.  The firm benchmark’s its equity composite against the small-cap Russell 2000; the composite has had some dismal years and some great ones.  The minimum initial investment is $5,000.  The opening expense ratio has not yet been revealed.

Conestoga SMid Cap Fund

Conestoga SMid Cap Fund will seek long-term growth by investing in mid- to large-cap common stocks.  The managers look to buy growth-at-a-reasonable-price.  The fund will be managed by Robert M. Mitchell and David M. Lawson, members of the firm’s four person investment management team.  I hope to talk with the managers in the month after launch.  The story is that Conestoga has a very good small cap fund and a very weak mid-cap fund.  They asked, some months ago, if the Observer might hold off writing anything about the mid-cap fund, presumably because they had this one in the works.  I still don’t have much of an explanation for the weakness of the mid-cap fund and no idea of whether the launch here signals imminent closure of the other.  They won’t be able to talk until after launch, but I’d certainly counsel having a long conversation with them before proceeding.  The minimum initial investment is $2500 and the opening expense ratio is 1.35%.

Centre Active U.S. Treasury Fund

Centre Active U.S. Treasury Fund will seek maximize investors’ total return through capital appreciation and current income.  The plan is to actively manage a portfolio of 0-12 year Treasury bonds, which an eye to profiting from, or minimizing the hit from, interest rate changes.    The fund will be managed by T. Kirkham Barneby of Hudson Canyon Investment Counselors.    The minimum initial investment is $5000 and the opening expense ratio is 0.85%.

Foundry Micro Cap Value Fund

Foundry Micro Cap Value Fund will seek capital appreciation by investing in microcap value stocks.  The fund will be managed by Eric J. Holmes of Foundry Partners, who managed this strategy in separate Fifth-Third Bank accounts from 2004.  The separate accounts seemed, on whole, to offer pretty good downside protection relative to their microcap benchmark.  The minimum initial investment will be $10,000 and the opening expense ratio is 1.62%.

Foundry Small Cap Value Fund

Foundry Small Cap Value Fund The fund will be managed by Eric J. Holmes of Foundry Partners, who managed this strategy in separate Fifth-Third Bank accounts from 2004.  They published performance numbers for their separate accounts but then benchmarked the small cap value accounts against a microcap value index, so I’m not entirely sure about what conclusion to draw.  The minimum initial investment will be $10,000 and the opening expense ratio is 1.42%.

Giralda Risk-Managed Growth Fund

Giralda Risk-Managed Growth Fund will seek to do something, somehow.  You may buy their “I” shares for $2500.  That’s all I know because the first 17 pages of the prospectus appear to be missing.  

Harbor Small Cap Growth Opportunities Fund

Harbor Small Cap Growth Opportunities Fund will seek long-term growth by investing in common and preferred stocks of small cap companies.  They will focus on rapidly growing small cap companies that are in an early or transitional stage of their development.  The fund will be managed by a team from Elk Creek Partners.  Harbor has a rep for hiring very good sub-advisors, often folks who offer a clone of an existing fund at a price discount.  The Elk Creek team appears to have started at Montgomery Asset Management, which was bought by Wells Capital Management just after the turn of the century, and has been managing money for Wells (as in “Fargo”) since then. The minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $1,000 for tax-advantaged accounts and the opening expense ratio is 1.27%.

KF Griffin Blue Chip Covered Call Fund

KF Griffin Blue Chip Covered Call Fund will seek to provide total return with lower volatility than equity markets in general.  They will invest in 25-35 dividend-paying, large-capitalization foreign and domestic stocks of domestic and will write covered call options on 50-100% of the portfolio. They’re looking for generating an equal percent of return from capital appreciation, dividends and call premiums. The fund will be managed by Douglas M. Famigletti, President and Chief Investment Officer of Griffin Assets Management.  The manager’s separate account composite averaged 13.8% from 2009 – mid 2013, while the benchmark S&P 500 Buy-Write Index clocked in at 10.3%. The minimum initial investment is $2500 and the opening expense ratio is capped at 1.50%.

PIMCO Balanced Income Fund

PIMCO Balanced Income Fund will seek to maximize current income while providing long-term capital appreciation by investing globally in dividend-paying common and preferred stocks and all flavors of fixed- and floating-rate instruments across all global fixed income sectors.   They might achieve sector exposure through derivatives and might invest up to 50% in high yield bonds.   The manager has not yet been named.   The minimum initial investment for “D” shares is $1000 and the opening expense ratio is not yet set.

QCI Balanced Fund

QCI Balanced Fund will seek to balance current income and principal conservation with the opportunity for long-term growth.  In pursuit of that entirely honorable objective they’ll invest in mid- to large-cap stocks and investment-grade bonds, with the potential for a smattering of high yield debt.  The fund will be managed by Edward Shill, who has been with QCI since the early 1990s and is now their CIO.  The prospectus offers no immediate evidence of his distinction in executing this strategy.  The minimum initial investment is $1,000 and the opening expense ratio is 1.25%.

SPDR Floating Rate Treasury ETF

SPDR Floating Rate Treasury ETF will track an as-yet unnamed index of the as-yet unissued floating rate Treasuries.  The fund will be managed by Todd Bean and Jeff St. Peters of State Street Global Advisors.  The opening expense ratio is not yet set.

WisdomTree Floating Rate Treasury Fund

WisdomTree Floating Rate Treasury Fund will track the WisdomTree Floating Rate Treasury Index which will, more or less faithfully, track the value of floating rate securities which are set to be issued by the Treasury in January 2014.  The fund will be managed by a team from WisdomTree. The opening expense ratio is not yet set.

World Energy Fund

World Energy Fund will seek growth and income by investing, long and short, in a wide range of energy-related financial instruments issued in the U.S. and markets around the world. The fund will be managed by a team from Cavanal Hill Investment Management.   Why yes, I do think that’s a potentially explosive undertaking.  Why no, the prospectus does not offer any evidence of the team’s experience with, or competence at, such investing.  Why do you ask? The minimum initial investment is $1000 the opening expense ratio is 1.17%.

Zacks Dividend Strategy Fund

Zacks Dividend Strategy Fund will seek capital appreciation and dividend income by investing, mostly, in dividend-paying large cap stocks.  The fund will be managed by Benjamin L. Zacks and Mitch E. Zacks.  The duo runs a bad market-neutral fund, mediocre all-cap one and entirely reasonable, newer small cap fund – all under the Zacks banner.  Zacks runs a stock-rating service whose ratings might contribute the portfolio construction but that’s not exactly spelled out. The minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $1000 for tax-advantaged accounts and $500 for accounts set up with an automatic investing plan.  The opening expense ratio is not yet available.

 

November 2013, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

Baird Ultra Short Bond Fund

Baird Ultra Short Bond Fund will seek current income consistent with preservation of capital.  .  They intend to invest in US and international government and corporate bonds, asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities and money market instruments.  No more than 10% of the portfolio may be invested in high-yield debt.  They’re willing to make sector and interest rate bets but will keep the duration under one year. The fund will be managed by a team led by Mary Ellen Stanek, Baird’s CIO.  The investment minimum will be $2500 for Investor class classes, reduced to $1000 for IRAs, and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 0.40%.

Balter Long/Short Equity Fund

Balter Long/Short Equity Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation.  They intend to invest in all of the predictable long/short stuff.  The fund will be managed by Apis Capital Advisors and Midwoods Capital Management.  Apis uses a fundamental bottom-up, research-driven process with a small/midcap bias. Midwoods invests predominantly long and short in U.S. small-cap equities based on lots of on-site/in-the-field research.  Both are small advisors (under $100 million AUM) that have very successful nine-to-ten year old private partnerships based on these strategies. The investment minimum will be $5000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is a daunting 3.22%.  While I know that you’ve got to pay to attract talent, I’d still disparage the fund for its expenses except for the managers’ record and their smaller-cap focus which is rare and can be quite profitable.

Bradesco Latin American Equity Fund

Bradesco Latin American Equity Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in the stocks of firms located in, or doing a majority of their business in, Latin America. For their purposes, Belize, French Guyana, Guyana, and Suriname are not Latin. (Nuts.  Do you know how hard it is to get appropriate Belizian exposure?) They anticipate a 30-40 stock portfolio but might also buy or sell derivatives.  The fund will be managed by Herculano Anibal Alves, the Equities Chief Investment Officer  of BRAM Brazil, and his team.  The investment minimum is not yet set and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 2.0%.

Bradesco Brazilian Hard Currency Bond Fund

Bradesco Brazilian Hard Currency Bond Fund will seek to achieve total return through income and capital appreciation. They intend to invest in fixed-income and floating rate debt instruments of the Brazilian government, Brazilian governmental entities, agencies, and other issuers the obligations of which are guaranteed by Brazil and Brazilian companies, each of which are denominated in U.S. dollars and foreign hard currencies.  The fund will be managed by Reinaldo Le Grazie, is the Chief Investment Officer of Fixed Income and Multi Strategies of BRAM Brazil, and his team.  The investment minimum is not yet set and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.75%.

Brown Advisory Mortgage Securities Fund

Brown Advisory Mortgage Securities Fund will seek to maximize total return consistent with preservation of capital.  They intend to invest in mortgage-backed securities such as residential mortgage-backed, commercial mortgage-backed, and stripped mortgage-backed securities, as well as collateralized mortgage and inverse floating rate obligations.  The fund will be managed by Thomas D.D. Graff, manager of Brown Advisory Tactical Bond Fund.  The investment minimum will be $5000, reduced to $2000 for IRAs and AIPs, and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 0.54%.

Catalyst/Equity Compass Share Buyback Fund

Catalyst/Equity Compass Share Buyback Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing primarily in the stocks of companies in the Russell 3000 that have announced their intention to repurchase a portion of the company’s outstanding shares.   Michael Schoonover will be the portfolio manager and Timothy M. McCann will be the Portfolio Management Consultant.  Apparently the consultant will be the fund’s risk-management specialist. The investment minimum for the no-load institutional shares will be $2,500 for a regular account, $2,500 for an IRA or $100 for an account established with an automatic investment plan.  The initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.25%.

Champlain All Cap Fund

Champlain All Cap Fund will seek capital appreciation.  They intend to invest in US and foreign firms with strong long-term fundamentals, superior capital appreciation potential and attractive stock valuations.  The fund will be managed by Van Harissis  and Scott Brayman.  These are the same folks who run Champlain Small Cap and Champlain Mid Cap, both of which are Silver-rated by Morningstar.  The investment minimum will be $10,000, reduced to $3,000 for IRAs and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.15% .

Clifford Capital Partners Fund

Clifford Capital Partners Fund will seek capital appreciation by investing in 25-35 stocks whose price reflects “a margin of safety.” The portfolio will be divided into three sleeves: Core, high-quality, wide-moat companies (50-75% of the portfolio), Contrarian, lower quality but higher return firms (0-50%) and cash (0-25%). The fund will be managed by Ryan P. Batchelor.  Mr. Batchelor founded the advisor.  Before that he was a strategist at Wells Capital and a Morningstar equity analyst.  The investment minimum will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.10%.

Consilium Emerging Market Small Cap Fund

Consilium Emerging Market Small Cap Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation.  They intend to invest in common and preferred stocks of firms with market caps below $3 billion.  The fund will be managed by Jonathan Binder, Chief Investment Officer of Consilium Investment Management.  Consilium is actually a sub-adviser and it’s possible that the adviser will add other teams in the future. Mr. Binder is a former hedge fund guy but the prospectus does not mention anything about his past performance. The investment minimum will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio is 2.05%.

CVR Dynamic Allocation Fund

CVR Dynamic Allocation Fund will seek “to preserve and increase the purchasing power value of its shares over the long term.”  The investment strategies section of their prospectus is quite poorly written; it appears that they have some mix of direct equity exposure, tactical equity exposure through ETFs and a managed futures strategy.  I have no idea of how they’re allocating between the strategies. The fund will be managed by Peter Higgins and William Monaghan, both CAIAs.  What, you might ask, is that?  Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst, a designation which, according to the CAIA website, “gives you professional credibility, access, and connections.”  The investment minimum will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio is not yet set.

EuroPac International Dividend Income Fund

EuroPac International Dividend Income Fund, Institutional Shares, will seek income and maximize growth of income.  (Me, too.) They intend to invest in dividend-paying stocks of  equity securities of companies located in Europe and the Pacific Rim.  They’re looking for “sustainably high dividends that grow over time.”  The fund is based on a limited partnership, Spongebob Ventures II LLC (apparently Viacom doesn’t mind if hedge funds infringe on their trademarks), which commenced operations February 28, 2010.  From inception the partnership returned 11.3% annually while its benchmark index made 3.75%.  The fund will be managed by James Nelson and Patrick B. Rien, both of Euro Pacific Asset Management.  The investment minimum will be $15,000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.25%.

Fidelity Event Driven Opportunities Fund

Fidelity Event Driven Opportunities Fund will seek capital appreciation.  They intend to invest in the stocks of firms involved in a “special situation event,” which may include corporate reorganizations, changes in beneficial ownership, deletion from a market index, material changes in management structure or corporate strategy, or changes to capital structure. They might also buy bonds.  Being Fidelity, they don’t feel compelled to offer much more than a series of bullet-pointed options.  The fund will be managed by Arvind Navaratnam, a Fidelity analyst whose 2012 wedding was covered by ModernLuxury.com.  (sigh) The investment minimum will be $2500, reduced to $200 for IRAs.  Expenses not yet set.

Geneva Advisors Mid Cap Growth Fund

Geneva Advisors Mid Cap Growth Fund, “R” shares, will seek capital appreciation by investing in US midcap stocks.  They’re looking for “quality growth companies.”  The fund will be managed by Robert C. Bridges, John P. Huber and Daniel P. Delany.  These are all former William Blair managers whose private accounts have consistently, and in some cases substantially, trailed their benchmark over the past 1, 3 and 5 year periods, and since inception.The investment minimum will be $1000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.45%.

Geneva Advisors Small Cap Opportunities Fund

Geneva Advisors Small Cap Opportunities Fund, “R” shares, will seek capital appreciation by investing in the stock of “smaller, quality companies with above average growth or emerging growth opportunities.”  “Smaller” translates to “under $2.5 billion.”.  The fund will be managed by Robert C. Bridges and Daniel P. Delany.  The investment minimum will be $1000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.45%.

Grant Park Multi Alternative Strategies Fund

Grant Park Multi Alternative Strategies Fund, “N” shares, will seek positive absolute returns which sets them squarely at odds with all those funds seeking negative absolute returns. (Perhaps The Kelvin Fund, which seeks absolute zero?)  Their strategy, like many relationships, is complicated. They intend to invest in four different strategies to give themselves exposure to 40-60 markets (though they don’t quite define what qualifies as “a market”). The strategies are Long/Short Global Financial, Dynamic Commodities, Upside Capture (“a permanent allocation to a basket of investments across multiple asset classes”) and Unconstrained Interest Rate Strategy (long/short investments in short- to intermediate term fixed income securities).  The fund will be managed by John Krautsack of EMC Capital Advisors.  There’s an entry in the prospectus’s Table of Contents entitled “Prior Performance of Sub-Adviser” but there is no such section in the document.  The investment minimum will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.98%.

Hodges Small Intrinsic Value Fund

Hodges Small Intrinsic Value Fund (HDSVX) will seek long-term capital appreciation. They intend to invest at least 80% in small cap (under $3.2 billion) stocks which have “a high amount of intrinsic asset value, low price to book ratios, above average dividend yields, low PE multiples, or the potential for a turnaround in the underlying fundamentals.”  The other 20% might go to larger cap stocks, bonds, or ETFs.  Up to 25% of the portfolio might be invested overseas.  The fund will be managed by a team led by Eric J. Marshall, Hodge’s president.  Mr. Marshall is part of the team which runs the five-star Hodges Small Cap Fund. The investment minimum will be $1000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.29%.

Hodges Small-Mid Cap Fund

Hodges Small-Mid Cap Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation through investments in the common stock of small and mid cap companies. .  They intend to invest in stocks “likely to have above-average growth or holds unrecognized relative value that can result in the potential for above-average capital appreciation.” The market cap range is $1 – 8 billion, though they’re not required to sell stocks which appreciate belong that level.  They might invest up to 10% in microcaps or large caps.  The fund will be managed by Don Hodges, Craig Hodges, their CIO and CEO, Eric J. Marshall, their president, and Gary M. Bradshaw. These are all pretty experienced guys, with the elder Mr. Hodges claiming 53 years in the industry.  The investment minimum will be $1000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.40%.

Lazard Global Equity Select Portfolio

Lazard Global Equity Select Portfolio will seek long-term capital appreciation through an all-cap global portfolio, about which they disclose little. The fund will be managed by a team of folks led by Andrew Lacey.  All of the team members are identified as working “on various” Lazard teams.  (Well, huzzah.) The investment minimum will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.40%.

Otter Creek Long/Short Opportunity Fund

Otter Creek Long/Short Opportunity Fund will seek long-term capital appreciation with below-market volatility through a long/short portfolio.  They’ll be positioned somewhere between 35% net short and 80% net long.  They can also invest in high yield bonds or go to cash.  The fund will be managed by a team from Otter Creek Capital Management. The team also runs an offshore fund and a hedge fund.  The latter has been around since 1991 and uses the same discipline as the mutual fund will.  From inception to the end of 2012, the hedge fund returned 11.3% annually while the S&P500 returned 8.5%.  The bad news is that the fund was bludgeoned in 2012 (down 2% while the market was up 16%) and 2013 through August (up 4.5% versus 16.5% for the benchmark). The investment minimum will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 2.38%.

SilverPepper Merger Arbitrage Fund

SilverPepper Merger Arbitrage Fund will seek “to create returns that are largely uncorrelated with the returns of the general stock market. Regardless of whether the stock market is declining or rising, the Merger Arbitrage Fund also seeks capital appreciation.” They hope to make a series of small gains in relatively short time periods on the difference between a stock’s current price and the price offered by an acquiring firm.  In general those deals close within a few months and, in general, the arbitrage gain can be realized regardless of the market’s general direction.  The fund will be managed by Jeff O’Brien and  Daniel Lancz of Glenfinnen Capital, LLC, a merger arbitrage specialist. The investment minimum will be $5000 and the expense is not yet set.

SilverPepper Commodity Strategies Global Macro Fund

SilverPepper Commodity Strategies Global Macro Fund, Advisor Shares, will seek “to create returns that are largely uncorrelated with the returns of the general stock, bond, currency and commodities markets.  Regardless of whether these markets are rising or declining” it will also seek capital appreciation. .  They intend to invest in both long and short positions in an array of asset classes based primarily on its views of commodity prices.” The fund will be managed by Renee Haugerud, Chief Investment Officer, and Geoff Fila, both of Galtere Ltd.  Galtere is an advisor to institutional and high net worth investors and this is their flagship strategy.  The investment minimum will be $5000 and the expense is not yet set.

Sirios Focus Fund

Sirios Focus Fund, Retail Class, will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in 25-50 mid- to large-cap stocks.  The portfolio will be global.  The fund will be managed by John F. Brennan, Jr.  Mr. Brennan used to be a portfolio manager for MFS.  His separate account composite was up 2.5% annually for the five years ending in December 2012, while the S&P 500 was up 1.7%. The investment minimum will be $10,000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.75% .

Vanguard Global Minimum Volatility Fund

Vanguard Global Minimum Volatility Fund will seek to provide long-term capital appreciation with low volatility relative to the global equity market. They intend to use a quantitative strategy to invest in a bunch of low-volatility stocks.  They’ll hedge their currency exposure.  The fund will be managed by James D. Troyer, James P. Stetler, and Michael R. Roach.  The investment minimum will be $3000 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 0.30%.

Westcore Small-Cap Growth Fund

Westcore Small-Cap Growth Fund will seek to achieve long-term capital appreciation by investing primarily in small-capitalization growth companies.  They intend to invest in stocks comparable in size to those in the Russell 2000 which have attractive growth prospects for earnings and/or cash flows. The fund will be managed by Mitch Begun and a team from Denver Investments.  The investment minimum will be $2500 and the initial expense ratio, after waivers, is 1.30%. 

October 2013, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

361 Multi-Strategy Fund

361 Multi-Strategy Fund pursues capital appreciation with low volatility and low correlation relative to the broad domestic and foreign equity markets by establishing long positions in individual equities and short positions in individual securities or indexes.  The strategy is quantitatively driven and non-diversified.  The fund will be managed by an interesting team: Brian P. Cunningham, Thomas I. Florence, Blaine Rollins and Jeremy Frank. Mr. Cunningham had a long career in the hedge fund world.  Mr. Florence worked at Fidelity and was president of Morningstar’s Investment Management subsidiary.  Mr. Rollins famously managed Janus Fund, among others, for 16 years.  Mr. Frank appears to be the team’s preeminent techno-geek. This is 361’s fourth fund, and all occupy the “alternatives” space.  The first three have had mixed success, though all seem to have low share-price volatility. The minimum investment in the “Investor” share class is $2500. Expenses not yet disclosed.  There’s a 5.75% front load, but it will be available without a load at places like Schwab.

Brookfield U.S. Listed Real Estate Fund

Brookfield U.S. Listed Real Estate Fund (“Y” shares) will pursue total return through growth of capital and current income.  The strategy is to invest in some combination of REITs; real estate operating companies; brokers, developers, and builders; property management firms; finance, mortgage, and mortgage servicing firms; construction supply and equipment manufacturing companies; and firms dependent on real estate holdings (e.g., timber, ag, mining, resorts). They can use derivatives for hedging, leverage or as a substitute for direct investment.  Up to 20% can be in fixed income and 15% overseas. The fund will be managed by Jason Baine and Bernhard Krieg, both portfolio managers at Brookfield Investment Management.  Brookfield’s composite performance for separate accounts using this strategy is 14.8% over the past decade.  MSCI Total Return REIT index made 10.8% in the same period. The minimum initial investment is $1000.  The e.r. will be 0.95%.

Baywood SKBA ValuePlus Fund

Baywood SKBA ValuePlus Fund will shoot for long-term growth by investing “primarily in securities that it deems to be undervalued and which exhibit the likelihood of exceeding market returns.”  (A bold and innovative notion.)  They’ll hold 40-60 stocks. The fund will be the successor to a private fund in operation since June, 2008.  That fund returned an average of 7.2% annually over five years.  Its benchmark (Russell 1000 Value) returned 4% in the same period.  The fund will be managed by a team from SKBA Capital, led by its chairman  Kenneth J. Kaplan.  The minimum initial investment is $2500. The expense ratio will be 0.95% after waivers.  The fund expects to launch on or about December 1, 2013.

Convergence Opportunities Fund

Convergence Opportunities Fund will pursue long-term growth through a global long/short portfolio, primarily of small- to mid-cap stocks.  They’ll be 120-150% long and 20-50% short.  The fund will be managed by David Arbitz of Convergence Partners.  Convergence, which has had several names over the years, operates separate accounts using the strategy but has not disclosed the performance of those accounts. The minimum initial investment is $2500 and expenses are capped at 1.50%.  They expect to launch by the end of November.

Croft Focus

Croft Focus will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in a global, all-cap value portfolio.  The fund will be managed by Kent G. Croft and G. Russell Croft.  Croft Value (CLVFX) uses the same discipline but holds more stocks (75 versus 25 at Focus) and is less global (Value is 95% domestic).  Value had a long string of great years, punctuated by a few really bad ones lately.  It is undoubtedly better than its current retrospective return numbers show but its volatility might give prospective investors here pause.  The minimum initial investment will be $2,000.  Expenses are capped at 1.30%.

First Eagle Flexible Risk Allocation Fund

First Eagle Flexible Risk Allocation Fund (“A” shares) will seek “long-term absolute returns” by investing, long and short, in equities, fixed income, currencies and commodities.  They’ll pursue “a flexible risk factor allocation strategy and, to a lesser extent, a tail risk hedging strategy.”  There is a bracing list of 36 investment risks enumerated in the prospectus. The fund will be managed by JJ McKoan and Michael Ning, who joined First Eagle in April 2013.  Before that, they managed the Enhanced Alpha Global Macro, Tail Hedge and Unconstrained Bond strategies at AllianceBernstein.  Mr. McKoan has a B.A. from Yale and Mr. Ning has a doctorate from Oxford. The minimum initial investment is $2500.  Neither the sales load nor the expense ratio has yet been announced. 

FlexShares® Global Quality Real Estate Index Fund

FlexShares® Global Quality Real Estate Index Fund will invest in a global portfolio of high-quality real estate securities.  They expect to hold equities issued by mortgage REITs, real estate finance companies, mortgage brokers and bankers, commercial and residential real estate brokers and real estate agents and home builders.  The managers will try to minimize turnover and tax inefficiency, but the prospectus says nothing about what qualifies a firm as a “quality” firm or how far a passive strategy can be tweaked to control for churn.  It will be managed by a Northern Trust team.  Expenses not yet set.

Gator Opportunities Fund

Gator Opportunities Fund will pursue capital appreciation by investing in high-quality domestic SMID-cap stocks.  It will be non-diversified, but there’s no discussion of how small the portfolio will be. The fund will be managed by Liron “Lee” Kronzon, who has managed investments but has not managed a mutual fund.  Its microscopically small sibling, Gator Focus, launched in May with pretty modest success.  The advisor’s headquartered in Tampa, hence the Gator reference. The minimum initial investment is $5000.  The expense ratio will be 1.50%.

Spectrum Low Volatility Fund

Spectrum Low Volatility Fund will be a fund of fixed-income funds and ETFs.  The goal is to capture no more than 40% of the stock market’s downside.  Color me clueless: why would a fixed-income fund benchmark to an equity index?  The fund will be managed by Ralph Doudera.  Mr. Doudera has degrees in engineering, finance and Biblical studies and has been managing separate accounts (successfully) since the mid1990s.  The minimum initial investment is $1000.  The expense ratio is capped at 3.20%, a breathtaking hurdle to surmount in a fixed-income fund.

RSQ International Equity Fund

RSQ International Equity Fund will seek long-term growth. It seems to be more “global” than “international,” since it commits only to investing at least 65% outside the US.  Security selection in the developed markets is largely bottom-up, starting with industry analysis and then security selection.  In the emerging markets, it’s primarily top-down.  The fund is managed by a team that famously managed Julius Baer International and infamously crashed Artio International: Rudolph-Riad Younes, Richard Pell and Michael Testorf, all of R-Squared Capital Management L.P. The minimum initial investment is $2500. The expense ratio is capped at 1.35% for Investor shares.  Frankly, I’m incredibly curious about this development.

September 2013, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

AdvisorShares YieldPro ETF

AdvisorShares YieldPro ETF will be an actively-managed ETF that seeks to provide current income and capital appreciation primarily investing in both long and short positions in other ETFs that offer diversified exposure to income producing securities.  They’ll mostly target securities that provide “competitive yield” but will add in “instruments which provide little or no yield for diversification or risk management purposes.” The fund will be managed by Joshua Emanuel, Chief Investment Officer of Elements Financial Group since 2010.  Before that he was a Principal, Head of Strategy and co-chair of the Investment Management Committee at Wilshire Associates.  The fund’s expense ratio has not yet been set.

American Century Emerging Markets Value Fund

American Century Emerging Markets Value Fund, Investor class shares, will pursue capital growth by investing in e.m. stocks.  They target the 21 markets in the MSCI E.M. index.  It’s a quant portfolio that starts by ranking stocks from most to least attractive based on value, momentum and quality. They then run a portfolio optimizer to balance risk and return.  It will be managed by Vinod Chandrashekaran, Yulin Long, and Elizabeth Xie. All are members of the Quantitative Research team. The expense ratio will be capped at 1.46%.  The minimum initial investment is $2,500.  Launch is set for some time in October.

Brown Advisory Strategic European Equity Fund

Brown Advisory Strategic European Equity Fund, Investor shares, seeks to achieve total return by investing principally in equity securities issued by companies established or operating in Europe.  They may invest directly or through a combination of derivatives.  The fund will be managed by Dirk Enderlein of Wellington Management. Wellington is indisputably an “A-team” shop (they’ve got about three-quarters of a trillion in assets under management).  Mr. Enderlein joined them in 2010 after serving as a manager for RCM – Allianz Global Investors in Frankfurt, Germany (1999-2009). Media reports described him as  “one of Europe’s most highly regarded European growth managers.” The expense ratio will be capped at 1.35%.  The minimum initial investment is $5,000.  Launch is set for some time in October.

DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE

DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE, Class N shares, looks for “total return in excess of the Shiller Barclays CAPE® US Sector TR USD Index.”  The Shiller CAPE (cyclically-adjusted price-earnings) index tracks the performance of the four (of ten) sectors which have the best combination of a low CAPE ratio and price momentum on their side.  The fund will attempt to outdo the index by using leverage and by holding a fixed-income portfolio similar to DoubleLine Core Fixed Income’s. The fund will be managed by The Gundlach (given that he sees himself as super-heroic, an Enhanced Cape fits) and Jeffrey Sherman.  The expense ratio will be capped at 0.80%.  The minimum initial investment is $2,000.  Launch is set for some time in October.

Driehaus Micro Cap Growth Fund

Driehaus Micro Cap Growth Fund (and, in truth, pretty much every Driehaus fund) seeks to maximize capital appreciation.  They anticipate investing at least 80% in a non-diversified portfolio of micro-caps then then trading them actively; they anticipate a turnover of 100 – 275%. The managers will be Jeffrey James and Michael Buck.  This is another instance of a limited partnership (or, in this case, two limited partnerships) being converted into mutual funds.  Those were the Driehaus Micro Cap Fund, L.P. and the Driehaus Institutional Micro Cap Fund, L.P.  Mr. James has been running the Micro Cap LP since 1998 and Mr. Buck has been assisting on that portfolio.  The current draft of the prospectus does not include the LP’s track record.  The expense ratio will be capped, but it has not yet been announced.  The minimum initial investment is $10,000.

Even Keel Managed Risk Fund

Even Keel Managed Risk Fund will seek to provide total return consistent with long-term capital preservation, while seeking to manage volatility and reduce downside risk during severe, sustained market declines.  It will be a hedged large cap equity portfolio.  The managers will be Blake Graves and Zack Brown of Milliman Financial Risk Management LLC.  The expense ratio will be capped at 0.97%.  The minimum initial investment is $3,000.

Even Keel Opportunities Managed Risk Fund

Even Keel Opportunities Managed Risk Fund will seek to provide total return consistent with long-term capital preservation, while seeking to manage volatility and reduce downside risk during severe, sustained market declines. It will be a hedged SMID cap portfolio.  The managers will be Blake Graves and Zack Brown of Milliman Financial Risk Management LLC.  The expense ratio will be capped at 0.97%.  The minimum initial investment is $3,000.

Even Keel Developed Markets Managed Risk Fund

Even Keel Developed Markets Managed Risk Fund will seek to provide total return consistent with long-term capital preservation, while seeking to manage volatility and reduce downside risk during severe, sustained market declines.  It will be an international equity portfolio hedged with long/short exposure to index, Treasury and currency futures.  The managers will be Blake Graves and Zack Brown of Milliman Financial Risk Management LLC.  The expense ratio will be capped at 0.97%.  The minimum initial investment is $3,000.

Even Keel Emerging Markets Managed Risk Fund

Even Keel Emerging Markets Managed Risk Fund will seek to provide total return consistent with long-term capital preservation, while seeking to manage volatility and reduce downside risk during severe, sustained market declines.  It will be an emerging markets equity portfolio hedged with long/short exposure to index, Treasury and currency futures.  .  The managers will be Blake Graves and Zack Brown of Milliman Financial Risk Management LLC.  The expense ratio will be capped at 0.97%.  The minimum initial investment is $3,000.

Fidelity Short Duration High Income

Fidelity Short Duration High Income will pursue high current income and is willing to accept some capital appreciation.  The prospectus is really kind of an ill-written jumble, they have an unnatural affinity for bullet-pointed lists.  At base, they’ll invest mostly in BB or B-rated securities with a duration of three years or less but they might slip in defaulted securities, common stock and floating rate loans.  It will be managed by Matthew Conti (lead portfolio manager) and Michael Plage. Mr. Conti also manages Fidelity Focused High Income (FHIFX) about which Morningstar is unimpressed, and bits of other bond funds. The expense ratio will be capped at 0.80%.  The minimum initial investment is $2,500.  Launch is set for some time in October.

Harbor Emerging Markets Equity Fund

Harbor Emerging Markets Equity Fund will seek long-term growth by investing at least 65% (?) of its portfolio in what the managers believe to be high-quality firms located in, or doing serious business in, the emerging markets. All Harbor funds are sub-advised.  This one is managed by Frank Carroll and Tim Jensen of Oaktree Capital Management. Oaktree is a first-tier institutional manager which has agreed to sub-advise very few (uhh, two?) mutual funds.  They have an emerging markets equity composite, representing their work for private clients, but the current prospectus does not reveal the composite’s age or performance.  The fund is scheduled to go live on November 1.  It would be prudent to check in then. The expense ratio will be capped at 1.62%.  The minimum initial investment is $2,500.

Hull Tactical US ETF

Hull Tactical US ETF will be an actively-managed ETF that pursues long-term growth by playing with fire.  It will invest in a combination of other ETFs that match the S&P, match the inverse of the S&P or are leveraged to returns of the S&P.  The managers will position that fund somewhere between 200% long and 100% short, with the additional possibility of 100% cash.  The fund will be managed by Blair Hull, Founder and Chairman of HTAA, and Brian von Dohlen, their Senior Financial Engineer.  Expenses not yet set.

Manning & Napier Equity Income

Manning & Napier Equity Income, Class S shares, wants to provide “total return through a combination of current income, income growth, and long-term capital appreciation.” They’re going to target income-paying equity securities including common and preferred stocks, convertible securities, REITs, MLPs, ETFs and interests in business development companies.  The fund will be managed by Michael J. Magiera, Managing Director of Equity Income Group, Christopher F. Petrosino, Managing Director of the Quantitative Strategies Group, Elizabeth Mallette and William Moore.  The expense ratio will be capped, but it has not yet been announced.  The minimum initial investment is $2,000.

Manning & Napier Emerging Opportunities

Manning & Napier Emerging Opportunities Series, Class S shares, will seek long-term growth by investing primarily in a domestic mid-cap growth portfolio.  Their target is companies growing at least twice as fast as the overall economy. The fund will be managed by Ebrahim Busheri, Managing Director of Emerging Growth Group, Brian W. Lester and Ajay M. Sadarangani. The expense ratio will be capped, but it has not yet been announced.  The minimum initial investment is $2,000.

Meridian Small Cap Growth

Meridian Small Cap Growth will pursue long-term growth of capital by investing primarily in equity securities of small capitalization companies.  The bottom line is that this is the new platform for the two star managers, Chad Meade and Brian Schaub, who Meridian’s new owner hired away from Janus. Morningstar’s Greg Carlson described them as “superb managers” who were “consistently successful during their nearly seven years at the helm of this small-growth fund,” referring to Janus Triton. The expense ratio is not set.  The minimum initial investment is $1,000.

Northern Multi-Manager Emerging Markets Debt Opportunity Fund

Northern Multi-Manager Emerging Markets Debt Opportunity Fund will seek both income and capital appreciation by investing in emerging and frontier market debt.  That includes a wide variety of corporate and government bonds, preferred and convertible securities and derivatives.  The sub-advisers include teams from a Northern Trust subsidiary, Bluebay Asset Management (a British firm with $56 billion in AUM) and Lazard. The expense ratio, after waivers, is capped at 0.93%.  The prospectus covers only an institutional class, with a $1 million minimum.

PIMCO TRENDS Managed Futures Strategy Fund

PIMCO TRENDS Managed Futures Strategy Fund, “D” shares for retail, will seek “absolute risk-adjusted returns.”  The plan is to invest in derivatives (and an unnamed off-shore fund run by PIMCO) linked to interest rates, currencies, mortgages, credit, commodities, equity indices and volatility-related instruments; they’ll invest in sectors trending higher and can short the ones trending lower.  They plan on having a volatility target but haven’t yet announced it.  In general, managed futures funds have been a raging disappointment (the group has losses over every trailing period from one day to five years).  In general, PIMCO funds excel.  It’ll be interested to see which precedent prevails.  The manager is as-yet unnamed and the expense ratio is not set.  The minimum initial investment is $2,500 for “D” shares purchased through a supermarket.

Redwood Managed Volatility Fund

Redwood Managed Volatility Fund, “N” class shares, will seek “a combination of total return and prudent management of portfolio downside volatility and downside loss.”  The strategy is pretty distinctive: invest in high-yield bonds when the high-yield market is trending up and in short-term bonds whenever the high-yield market is trending down.  The fund will be managed by Michael Messinger and Bruce DeLaurentis.  Mr. Messinger seems to be a business/marketing guy while DeLaurentis is the investor.  Mr. DeLaurentis’s separate accounts composite at Kensington Management, stretching back 20 years, seems fairly impressive.  He’s returned about 10% over 20 years, 11% over 10 years, and 15% over five years. The expense ratio is not set.  The minimum initial investment is $10,000.

Rx Fundamental Growth Fund

Rx Fundamental Growth Fund, Advisor shares, will seek capital appreciation by investing in stocks.  The description is pretty generic.  The highlight of this offering is their manager, Louis Navellier.  Mr. Navellier is a famous growth-investing newsletter guy.  He once had a line of mutual funds that merged with a couple Touchstone funds.  The Touchstone fund Navellier subadvises is fairly mild-mannered though its performance in recent years has been weak.  His separate account composites show mostly lackluster to abysmal performance over the past 7-10 years.  The expense ratio is capped at 2.06%.  The minimum initial investment is $250.

Steinberg Select Fund

Steinberg Select Fund, Investor class, will seek growth by investing in stocks of all sizes.  It will likely invest in developed foreign stocks as well, but there’s not much of a discussion of asset class weighting.  It seems like they’re looking for defensive names, but that’s not crystal clear.  Michael Steinberg will head the investment team.  Their all-cap concentrated value composite has a substantial lead over its benchmark since inception in 1990 and about a 150 bps annual lead in the past 10 years, but seems to have taken a dramatic dive in the 2007-09 crash.  The expense ratio is capped at 1.0%.  The minimum initial investment is $10,000.

Stone Toro Relative Value Fund

Stone Toro Relative Value Fund will seek capital appreciation with a secondary focus on current income. It invests in an all-cap portfolio, primarily of dividend-paying stock.  Up to 40% might be invested in international stocks via ADRs.  They warn that their strategy involves active and frequent trading. The manager will be Michael Jarzyna, Founding Partner and CIO of Stone Toro.  The expense ratio is capped at 1.57%.  The minimum initial investment is $1000.

T. Rowe Price Global Industrials Fund

T. Rowe Price Global Industrials Fund will pursue long-term capital growth by investing in a global, diversified portfolio of industrial sector stocks.  The general rule seems to be, if it requires a large factory, it’s in.  The fund will be managed by Peter Bates, an industrials analyst who joined Price in 2002 but who has no prior fund management record.  The expense ratio is capped at 1.05%.  The minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $1000 for IRAs.

Thomson Horstmann & Bryant Small Cap Value Fund

Thomson Horstmann & Bryant Small Cap Value Fund, Investor shares, is looking for capital appreciation.  The plan is to invest in small-value stocks but there’s nothing in the prospectus that distinguishes their strategies from anyone else’s.  The fund will be managed by Christopher N. Cuesta, who joined THB in 2002 and has managed micro-cap accounts for them since 2004 and small cap ones since 2005.  He’d previously worked at Salomon Smith Barney and Van Eck.  This private accounts composite shows persistently high beta, excellent upmarket performance and very weak downmarket performance.  The expense ratio is capped at 1.5%. The minimum initial investment is $100. 

WCM Focused Emerging Markets Fund

WCM Focused Emerging Markets Fund, Investor class, will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in emerging and frontier markets stocks and corporate bonds.  They can also invest in multinational corporations with large e.m. footprints.  The fund will be non-diversified.   Beyond being “bottom up” investors, details are a bit sketchy.  The fund will be managed by a team from WCM Investment Management, led by Sanjay Ayer. Their emerging markets composite has a two year history.  It appears to have substantially outperformed an e.m. equity index in 2011 and trailed it in 2012.  The expense ratio is not yet set. The minimum initial investment is $1000. 

WCM Focused Global Growth Fund

WCM Focused Global Growth Fund, Investor class, will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in a non-diversified portfolio of global blue chip stocks.  The fund will be managed by a team from WCM Investment Management, led by Sanjay Ayer. Their Quality Global Growth composite has a five year history.  It appears to have substantially outperformed a global equity index over the past five years, though it trailed it in 2012. The expense ratio is not yet set. The minimum initial investment is $1000. 

West Shore Real Asset Income Fund

West Shore Real Asset Income Fund, “N” class, will seek a combination of capital growth and current income.  30-50% will be in dividend-paying US equities, 30-50% in “foreign securities that the Adviser believes will provide returns that exceed the rate of inflation” and 20% in alternative investments, such as hedge funds.  There’s no evidence (e.g., a track record) to suggest that this is a particularly good idea.  The fund will be managed by Steve Cordasco, President of West Shore, Michael Shamosh, and James G. Rickards. The expense ratio is capped at 2.0%. The minimum initial investment is $2500. 

August 2013, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

AQR Style Premia Alternative Fund

AQR Style Premia Alternative Fund will seek to provide absolute returns by magically combining four investing styles (value, momentum, carry and defensive), five asset classes (equities, bonds, interest rates – how did interest rates get to be an asset class? – commodities and cash), both long and short, in an ever-changing mix which targets an as-yet unspecified volatility target and volatility band.  AQR famously manages such complex strategies which work except when they don’t (their Risk Parity fund, for example, dropped nearly 10% in the second quarter of 2013 while its Morningstar benchmark dropped a half percent).  It will be managed by Ronen Israel, Jacques A. Friedman, Lars Nielsen, and Andrea Frazzini, all of whom advertise their academic degrees after their names.  Expenses not yet disclosed.  The minimum initial purchase is $1 – 5 million, though places like Schwab tend to offer AQR funds at $2500.

AT Mid Cap Equity Fund

AT Mid Cap Equity Fund will pursue long-term growth by investing in midcap stocks (those in the $2 – 18 billion range).  Up to 25% might be invested overseas. The managers will look for companies that can deliver consistently strong earnings growth, free cash flow growth and above average return on equity, and which has a history of growth. They aspire to buy and hold for the long-term. The fund will be managed by Frederick L. Weiss and Jay Pearlstein. The minimum initial investment is $3,000. The expense ratio will be 1.39%

AT Income Opportunities Fund

AT Income Opportunities Fund seeks current income and long-term capital appreciation through a portfolio of common and preferred stocks and bonds.  Up to 25% might be investing in foreign securities and another 25% might be in the sale of call or put options.  They’ll start by trying to find attractive, well-positioned companies and then they look across the capital structure to find the most attractive way to invest in it. The fund will be managed by Gary Pzegeo and Brant Houston. The minimum initial investment is $3,000. The expense ratio will be 1.25%.

Baron Discovery Fund

Baron Discovery Fund will seek capital appreciation through investments in small growth companies with market capitalizations of less than $1.5 billion whose stock could increase in value 100% within four to five years.  This market cap is below the upper limit set for BMO Micro Cap, below. In a singular, and singularly-bizarre development two analysts, Laird Bieger and Randolph Gwirtzman, has been given the title of “co-managers” but Baron seems unsure that they’re ready for the responsibility so they’ve appointed a “Portfolio Manager Adviser.”   Here’s the text: “Cliff Greenberg has been the portfolio manager adviser of Baron Discovery Fund since its inception on [            ], 2013. In this role, he advises the co-managers of the Fund on stock selection and buy and sell decisions and is responsible for ensuring the execution of the Fund’s investment strategy. Mr. Greenberg has been the portfolio manager of Baron Small Cap Fund since its inception on September 30, 1997.”  $2000 minimum initial investment, reduced to $500 for accounts set up with an AIP.  Expenses not yet announced.

BFS Equity Fund

BFS Equity Fund (BFSAX) will pursue long-term appreciation through growth of principal and income.  The plan is to buy quality companies which have experienced an “opportunistic event” which might increase their value or temporarily decrease their price.  The managers can invest directly in stocks or in ETFs, which is hard to square with the desire to exploit opportunities which, presumably, affect individual firms.  The managers will be Keith G. LaRose, Timothy H. Foster, and Thomas D. Sargent, all of whom have some combination of substantial management experience with private and institutional accounts or hedge funds.  The firm has been managing private accounts in this style since the mid-1990s.  Their returns minutely trail the S&P500 throughout, though they did substantially outperform the market in 2008. $1000 investment minimum.  Expenses not yet set.

BMO Micro-Cap Fund

BMO Micro-Cap Fund  will seek long-term capital appreciation by investing in a diversified portfolio of micro-cap (under $2.3B) stocks.  No detail on stock selection processes, other to invoke normal “good companies at good prices” sorts of language.  Thomas Lettenberger and Ernesto Ramos, Ph.D. will co-manage the Fund.   The minimum initial investment will be $1000.  Expenses are not yet set.

BMO Global Low Volatility Equity Fund

BMO Global Low Volatility Equity Fund will pursue capital appreciation by investing in a globally diversified portfolio of “low volatility, undervalued stocks [selected] using a unique, quantitative approach based on the Adviser’s multi-factor risk/return models. This approach seeks to provide the Fund with lower downside risk and meaningful upside protection relative to the MSCI All Country World Index.” David Corris, Jason Hans, and Ernesto Ramos, Ph.D. will co-manage the Fund.  They also manage separate accounts using this strategy but (1) their composite dates back only 15 months and (2) they haven’t yet disclosed the composite’s performance. They’ve also run a domestic low volatility fund (BMO Low Volatility Equity, MLVYX) for rather less than a year and it’s not immediately apparent that the fund is less volatile than the market. The minimum initial investment will be $1000.  Expenses are not yet set.

DFA Short-Duration Inflation Protected Securities Portfolio

DFA Short-Duration Inflation Protected Securities Portfolio will seek to provide inflation protection and maximize total returns by investing directly or through other DFA funds in a combination of debt securities, including inflation-protected securities.  “At inception, the Portfolio will invest a substantial portion of its assets in the DFA Short-Term Extended Quality Portfolio, DFA Intermediate-Term Extended Quality Portfolio and DFA One-Year Fixed Income Portfolio, but it is contemplated that the Portfolio will also purchase securities, including inflation-protected securities and derivative instruments directly.” David A. Plecha and Joseph F. Kolerich will manage the fund. No minimum is specified. The expense ratio is 0.24%.  You can’t have the fund, but it’s always good to know what the “A”-level teams are thinking and doing.

FlexShares Global Infrastructure Index Fund

FlexShares Global Infrastructure Index Fund will try to match the returns of an as-yet unnamed Global Infrastructure Index.  They’ll invest in both developed and emerging markets.  Infrastructure assets, the fund’s target, includes “physical structures and networks upon which the operation, growth and development of a community depends, and include water, sewer, and energy utilities; transportation, data and communication networks or facilities; health care facilities, government accommodations, and other public-service facilities; and shipping.” Also unnamed is the expense ratio. 

Horizon Tactical Income Fund

Horizon Tactical Income Fund will seek “income” (they modestly avoid adjectives like “maximum” or “high”) by investing in ETFs, sovereign and corporate debt, preferred and convertible securities, REITs, MLPs and mortgage-backed securities.  They propose to make tactical shifts into whatever segment offers “the highest expected return for a given amount of risk” (though it’s not clear whether there’s a risk or volatility target for the fund).  It will be managed by Robbie Cannon, President and CEO of Horizon, Ronald Saba, Director of Equity Research, Kevin Blocker and Scott Ladner, Director of Alternative Strategies.  The minimum initial investment is $2500.  The expense ratio will be 1.44%.

Innealta Risk Based Opportunity Moderate Fund

Innealta Risk Based Opportunity Moderate Fund, “N” shares, will seek long-term capital appreciation and income by investing in a wide variety of ETFs.  Which ETFs?  The process appears to start by confusing tactics with strategies: “In the first stage, the Adviser defines its Secular Tactical Asset Allocation (STAA), which is a longer-term-oriented strategic decision that is steeped in classic portfolio construction approaches to asset allocation.”  From there they add a Cyclical Tactical Asset Allocation (stage two) and top it off with “a third stage of tactical management in which the Adviser augments the portfolio with those exposures it believes can further enhance risk-relative returns.”  That third stage might add “long/inverse and leveraged long/inverse equity, fixed income, commodity, currency, real estate and volatility asset classes.” The fund will be managed by Gerald W. Buetow, JR., Ph.D., CFA, CIO of AFAM (formerly Al Frank Asset Management).  $5000 investment minimum.  Expenses not yet disclosed.

Wavelength Interest Rate Neutral Fund

Wavelength Interest Rate Neutral Fund will seek total return through a global, fixed-income portfolio including “developed-market nominal government bonds, developed-market inflation-linked government bonds, emerging market local-currency fixed-income securities, emerging market USD-denominated fixed-income securities, sovereign debt, corporate debt, and convertible bonds.”  The manager plans to invest in “securities that are fundamentally related to growth and inflation, and in doing so, seeks to systematically balance investment exposures across potential interest rate changes.” Andrew Dassori, Wavelenght’s CIO, will be the portfolio manager.  The minimum initial investment is $100,000.  Expenses have not yet been announced.

July 2013, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

AdvisorShares Treesdale Rising Rates ETF

AdvisorShares Treesdale Rising Rates ETF will invest in “mortgage-related products with interest-only cash flows while managing duration risk with liquid interest rate products. To employ the Fund’s strategy, Treesdale Partners, LLC seeks to generate enhanced returns in an environment of rising interest rates by investing principally in agency interest-only mortgage-backed securities, interest-only swaps and certain other mortgage-related derivative instruments, while maintaining a negative portfolio duration with a generally positive current yield by investing in U.S. Treasury obligations and other liquid rate instruments.” Yung Lim, Managing Partner for Treesdale, will manage the fund.  Expenses not yet set.

Ashmore Emerging Markets Frontier Equity Fund

Ashmore Emerging Markets Frontier Equity Fund will invest in “equity securities and equity-related investments of Frontier Market Issuers.”   I mention it, primarily, as an example of the rising interest in frontier-targeted funds.   The portfolio managers will be Felicia Morrow, CIO of Ashmore EMM, Peter Trofimenko, John DiTieri, Bryan D’Aguiar, and Johan de Bruijn.  $1000 minimum.  Expenses not yet set.  Based on other Ashmore listings at Scottrade, this will be sold only to RIAs.

American Beacon Earnest Partners Emerging Markets Equity Fund

American Beacon Earnest Partners Emerging Markets Equity Fund will seek long-term growth by investing in the stock (common, preferred or convertible) of companies “economically tied to” the emerging markets.   The subadviser appears to use a fundamental approach with special sensitivity to limiting the downside.  Paul E. Viera of EARNEST Partners will manage the fund.  EARNEST describes itself as a fundamental, bottom-up bunch with $20 billion in AUM.  They sub-advise three other funds, though none of them is an e.m. fund and the prospectus does not cite a separate accounts record.  The minimum initial investment in its no-load Investor shares is $2500 and the expense ratio is 1.74%.

AT Disciplined Equity Fund

AT Disciplined Equity Fund seek long-term capital appreciation and, secondarily, current income. This is actually a repackaged  Invesco Disciplined Equity Fund  (AWEIX) and itself was a repackaged Atlantic Whitehall Equity Income Fund.  The adviser will be Stein Roe, a storied name in the no-load world. Patricia Bannan of Atlantic Trust (the “AT” in the name) has been managing the Invesco fund since 2010.  Brant Houston became a co-manager in 2013.  After conversion, the expenses rise from 0.78% to 1.19% and the minimum investment rises from $1000 to $3000.

Barrow SQV Hedged All Cap Fund

Barrow SQV Hedged All Cap Fund seeks to generate above-average returns through capital appreciation, while also attempting to reduce volatility and preserve capital during market downturns.  The long portfolio mirrors the construction of their Long All Cap Funds (see below).  The Hedged All Cap Fund’s short portfolio will generally be composed of: a) 150-250 companies identified as low quality and overpriced with the Adviser’s SQV ranking process; and b) 1,000-1,100 companies (assuming a “look through” to the underlying constituent companies of exchange traded funds) that represent the Adviser’s custom market index benchmark.  The short portfolio is balanced across the same market capitalization segments and sectors as the long portfolio.  The Adviser intends no individual short position to be greater than 1.5% of the portfolio, as measured at the time of purchase. Nicholas Chermayeff and Robert F. Greenhill, Jr.  of Barrow Street Advisors LLC, will manage the mutual fund.  Before founding Barrow Street, both guys with “acquisition professionals” (no, I have no clue and it sounds vaguely like a mob euphemism) for Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, respectively.   They have been investing money in long/short separate accounts since 2009.  Their accounts outperform the average long/short hedge fund by about 100 bps year.  The three-year record, for example, is 5.0% for them and 3.8% for hedged equity.  Expenses and minimums not yet set, though they do plan to award themselves a rich 1.50% as their management fee.

Barrow SQV Long All Cap Fund

Barrow SQV Long All Cap Fund seeks to generate long-term capital appreciation.  This is another former hedge fund (formerly Barrow Street Fund LP, which opened in 2009).  They use their proprietary Systematic Quality Value (“SQV”) strategy to create “diversified sub-portfolios” of high quality stocks.  It looks like each sub-portfolio will be a basket of stocks that will be traded as a group; they’re hopeful of holding each basket at least a year.  Nicholas Chermayeff and Robert F. Greenhill, Jr.  of Barrow Street Advisors LLC, the managers of the hedge fund, will manage the mutual fund.  No word yet on the hedge fund’s performance. Expenses and minimums not yet set, though the management fee is .99% and there’s a 12(b)1 fee of .25%.

Coho Relative Value Equity Fund

Coho Relative Value Equity Fund will seek total return by investing in 20 to 35 mid- to large cap stocks that meet their stability, dividend and cash flow growth criteria.  They anticipate dividends about 600 bps about the 5-10 year Treasury average. They describe their approach as “conservative, bottom-up and fundamental.”  The fund will be managed by Brian Kramp and Peter Thompson, both of Coho Partners, Ltd.  The minimum initial investment is $2000, reduced to $500 for an IRA.   The expense ratio, after waivers, is an entirely-reasonable 1.30% with a 2% redemption fee for shares held under 60 days.

Gotham Neutral Fund

Gotham Neutral Fund will be about what you expect: a long/short equity fund that’s pretty much market neutral.  They anticipate a net market exposure of 0-25%.  One of the other Gotham funds has had a promising start and one of the managers wrote the wildly popular The Little Book that Beats the Market (2006).   Joel Greenblatt and Robert Goldstein will co-manage the fund.  They also co-manage two other Gotham funds and the Formula Investing funds, whose record of performance excellence is … uhh, mixed.  Expenses, after waivers, will be 3.77% and the minimum investment will be $250,000.

Hilton Yield Plus Fund

Hilton Yield Plus Fund seeks total return consistent with the preservation of capital by investing in bonds and high-dividend equities.  The portfolio might contain REITs, MLPs and ETNs.  The managers start by making a macro-level assessment and then allocates to whatever’s going to work.  They also might engage in opportunistic trading in the fixed-income market.   Up to 30% of the portfolio might be in high yield debt.  William J. Garvey,  Craig O’Neill and Alexander D. Oxenham , all senior folks at Hilton Capital Management, will  be the managers.  The expense ratio is 1.6% for retail shares, 1.25% for institutional. The minimum initial investments will be $2500 for retail and $250,000 for institutional.

Probabilities Fund

Probabilities Fund seeks capital appreciation. The adviser uses an active trading strategy based on a proprietary rules-based trend-following methodology to determine the Fund’s allocation among Index ETFs, leveraged ETFs, and cash.  It’s a market-timing operation: usually invest in ETFs, use leveraged ETFs if you expect a market run-up and go to cash if you anticipate a sharp decline. Joseph B. Childrey, founder and chief investment officer of the adviser, is the portfolio manager and ran this thing as a hedge fund from 2008 to the present.  They haven’t yet disclosed how the hedge fund did.  $1000 minimum.  Expenses not yet set.

RiverPark Strategic Income Fund

RiverPark Strategic Income Fund seeks high current income and capital appreciation consistent with the preservation of capital.  The manager has substantial freedom to invest across the income-producing universe: foreign and domestic, short- to long-term, investment and non-investment grade debt, preferred stock, convertible bonds, bank loans, high yield bonds and income producing equities.  The manager intends to pursue an intentionally conservative strategy by investing only in those bonds that he deems “Money Good” and stocks whose dividends are secure.  Up to 35% of the portfolio might be in foreign fixed-income and 35% in income-producing equities.  He also can hedge the portfolio.    The manager’s intention is to hold securities until maturity.  David Sherman of Cohanzick Management, who also manages the splendid but closed RiverPark Short Term High Yield fund, will be the manager.  The expense ratio is 1.25% for retail shares, 1.00% for institutional. The minimum initial investments will be $1000 for retail and $1M for institutional.

The Texas Fund

The Texas Fund.   Buys the stock of Texas companies.   Ahl bidness, mostly.  Ever’thing is BIG in Texas, including the minimums and expenses.  It joins the likes of the Virginia Equity Fund (see below), the Arkansas Equity Growth Fund, the Atlanta Growth Fund, the Blue State Fund and the Home State Pennsylvania Growth Fund (ooops – deadsters).  They could aspire to Mairs & Power (MPGFX) but I’m not sure that folks in Texas are allowed to emulate Minnesotans.

Virginia Equity Fund

Virginia Equity Fund buys stocks of firms that have “a significant impact” on, or are located in, Virginia.  “Significant impact on.”  Uhhh … wouldn’t that be, say, Google, Microsoft and Exxon?  It’s managed by J.C. Schweingrouber of Virginia Financial Innovations. 4.25% load, 1.95% expense ratio, $2500 investment minimum.

June 2013, Funds in Registration

By David Snowball

Broadmark Tactical Fund

Broadmark Tactical Fund seeks to produce, in any market environment, above-average risk-adjusted returns and less downside volatility than the S&P 500 Index.  They’ll invest globally, long and short, using ETFs.  Mostly.  They might invest directly in stocks, go to cash, invest in fixed income securities or write options against the portfolio.  Christopher Guptill, CEO and CIO of Broadmark, will run the fund.  He previously ran Forward Tactical Enhanced (FTEAX), which is also a long/short fund.  Good news: he has somewhat above average returns during his 20 months on the fund.  Bad news: the portfolio turnover is reported as 6000%.  The expense ratio is 1.80%.  The minimum initial investment is $4,000, reduced to $2,000 for IRAs.

Calamos Dividend Growth Fund

Calamos Dividend Growth Fund will seek income and capital appreciation primarily through investments in dividend paying equities.  They may hold common and preferred stocks Master Limited Partnerships.  MLPs and foreign stocks are both capped at 25% of the portfolio.   Calamos the Elder and Black the Greater will lead the investment team. The expense ratio for “A” shares is 1.35% and the front-load is 4.75%.  The minimum initial investment is $2,500, reduced to $500 for IRAs.

Calamos Mid Cap Growth Fund

Calamos Mid Cap Growth Fund will seek “excess returns relative to the benchmark over full market cycles.”  They’ll invest mostly in domestic mid-cap growth stocks ($440m – $28b, which doesn’t feel all that mid-cappy), and may hold stocks after they grow out of that purchase range.  They also have the option of holding ADRs “in furtherance of its investment strategy.”  Calamos the Elder and Black the Greater will lead a nine-person investment team. The expense ratio for “A” shares is 1.25% and the front-load is 4.75%.  The minimum initial investment is $2,500, reduced to $500 for IRAs.

Forward Dynamic Income Fund

Forward Dynamic Income Fund will seek total return, with dividend and interest income being an important component of that return, while exhibiting less downside volatility than the S&P 500 Index. The plan is to mix the portfolio between a dividend-capture strategy (buy a stock shortly before it distributes a dividend, then sell it) and a tactical allocation strategy (long/short investing best on technical indicators; if the technicals aren’t clear, they’ll hold fixed-income).  To add to the jollies of it, the managers may leverage the portfolio by a third.  The portfolio managers will be David McGanney, Forward’s Head Trader, Jim Welsh, and Jim O’Donnell, Forward’s CIO.  The minimum initial investment is $4000 unless you select eDelivery (which reduces it to $2000) or an automatic investing plan (which reduces it to $500).  The expense ratio will be 2.31%. 

Forward Select Income Opportunity Fund

Forward Select Income Opportunity Fund seeks total return through current income and long-term capital appreciation. It will invest in a mix of value-oriented equities (including convertibles, MLPs, ADRs, ETFs, ABCs), corporate and government debt securities from around the world, and hybrids such as convertibles.  The fund is managed by a team led by Joel Beam, whose has been with Forward since 2009. The other members of the team are Forward’s CIO, Jim O’Donnell, and a bunch of guys who joined Forward with Mr. Beam from Kensington Investment Management. The minimum initial investment is $4000 unless you select eDelivery (which reduces it to $2000) or an automatic investing plan (which reduces it to $500).  The expense ratio will be 1.66%. 

Gold Bullion Strategy Portfolio

Gold Bullion Strategy Portfolio wants to “reflect the performance of the price of Gold bullion.”  It will do so by invest in bullion-related ETFs, ETNs and futures and in fixed-income funds and ETFs.  I don’t really understand what these folks are up to.  They promise to invest at least 25% of the portfolio in gold bullion securities (why doesn’t that violate the 80% rule) and the rest in fixed-income funds.  How do those funds help them track the price of gold?  It also plans to invest up to 25% in “a subsidiary,” which I’m guessing is an offshore fund. Jerry C. Wagner, President of Flexible Plan Investments, and Dr. George Yang, its Director of Research, will run the fund.  It describes itself as a mutual fund but it’s only available through life insurance company accounts and some retirement plans.   The expense ratio will be 1.80%.

T. Rowe Price Target Retirement 2005 – 2055 Funds

T. Rowe Price Target Retirement 2005 – 2055 Funds will pursue that usual goal of offering a one-stop retirement investing solution.  Each fund invests in a mix of other T. Rowe Price funds.  Each mix becomes progressively more conservative as investors approach and move through retirement.  T. Rowe Price already has an outstanding collection of retirement-date funds, called “Retirement [date]” where these will be “Target Retirement [date].”  The key is that the new funds will have a more conservative asset allocation than their siblings.  At the target date, the new funds will have 42.5% in equities while the old funds have 55% in equities.  For visual learners, here are the two glidepaths:

 newfundglidepath  oldfundglidepath

The new funds’ glidepath

The old fund’s glidepath

The relative weights within the asset classes (international vs domestic, for example) are essentially the same. Each fund is managed by Jerome Clark and Wyatt Lee.  The opening expense ratios vary from 0.60% – 0.77%, with the longer-dated funds incrementally more expensive than the shorter-dated ones (that is, 2055 is more expensive than 2005).  These expenses are within a basis point or two of the older funds’.  The minimum initial investment is $2500, reduced to $1000 for various tax-advantaged accounts.

Turner Emerging Markets Fund

Turner Emerging Markets Fund will, as Turner does, invest in growth stocks.   The managers plan a bottom-up, stock-by-stock portfolio that’s sector agnostic but “country aware.”  They plan to hold 60-100 positions, either directly or through derivatives.  Donald W. Smith and Rick Wetmore, both long-time Turner employees, will manage the fund.  They’ve been investing in emerging markets through private accounts since mid-2010; the record, frankly, is undistinguished.  The Fund’s minimum initial investment is $1,000,000 for Institutional Class Shares and $2,500 for Investor Shares, but is reduced to  $100,000 and $1,000, respectively, for accounts set up with automatic investing plans. The opening expense ratio for Investor shares will be 1.30%.

Walden International Equity Fund

Walden International Equity Fund seeks long-term capital growth through an actively managed portfolio of mid- to large-cap international stocks.  The portfolio will generally mirror the MSCI World (ex-US) index, except that the managers will apply environmental, social and governance screens in their portfolio construction.  They also reserve the right to be activist shareholders.   William Apfel, Executive Vice President and Director of Securities Research at Boston Trust Investment Management, will manage the fund.  Mr. Apfel also manages Walden Equity (WSEFX, since 01/2012) and Walden Asset Management (WSBFX, since 08/2010) funds.  Both tend to provide average returns with below-average volatility. The investment minimum is $1,000,000 but Walden funds are available through some supermarkets with a $2500 minimum.  The launch should occur around the beginning of August, 2013.

Westfield Capital Dividend Growth Fund

Westfield Capital Dividend Growth Fund will pursue long-term growth by investing in 40-60 large cap stocks whose companies have “a history or prospect of paying stable or increasing dividends.” Mostly domestic common stocks, but it might invest in MLPs and ADRs as well.  It appears that this fund is just absorbing an unnamed “predecessor fund,” but the predecessor was not a mutual fund The fund will be managed by William Muggia, President, CEO and CIO of the advisor.  Mr. Muggia runs nine other mutual funds under the GuideMark, VantagePoint, Touchstone, Harbor, HSBC, Consulting Group and Westfield brands.  The expense ratio will be 1.20%.