Mairs & Power Growth Fund | |||||||
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (unaudited) | September 30, 2022 | ||||||
Shares | Security Description | Fair Value | |||||
COMMON STOCKS 99.4% | |||||||
COMMUNICATION SERVICES 7.1% | |||||||
2,730,000 | Alphabet Inc (a) | $ | 262,489,500 | ||||
420,000 | Walt Disney Co/The (a) | 39,618,600 | |||||
302,108,100 | |||||||
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY 7.1% | |||||||
1,730,000 | Amazon.com Inc (a) | 195,490,000 | |||||
157,999 | Gentherm Inc (a) | 7,857,290 | |||||
81,000 | Home Depot Inc/The | 22,351,140 | |||||
297,000 | Polaris Inc | 28,408,050 | |||||
510,000 | Sleep Number Corp (a) | 17,243,100 | |||||
180,000 | Target Corp | 26,710,200 | |||||
298,059,780 | |||||||
CONSUMER STAPLES 4.2% | |||||||
2,621,592 | Hormel Foods Corp | 119,125,141 | |||||
802,000 | Sysco Corp | 56,709,420 | |||||
175,834,561 | |||||||
FINANCIALS 11.0% | |||||||
1,091,000 | Charles Schwab Corp/The | 78,410,170 | |||||
627,000 | JPMorgan Chase & Co | 65,521,500 | |||||
364,000 | Northern Trust Corp | 31,143,840 | |||||
700,000 | Principal Financial Group Inc | 50,505,000 | |||||
3,925,000 | US Bancorp/MN | 158,256,000 | |||||
2,064,000 | Wells Fargo & Co | 83,014,080 | |||||
466,850,590 | |||||||
HEALTH CARE 20.2% | |||||||
515,000 | Abbott Laboratories | 49,831,400 | |||||
195,000 | Baxter International Inc | 10,502,700 | |||||
380,700 | Bio-Techne Corp | 108,118,800 | |||||
139,000 | Eli Lilly & Co | 44,945,650 | |||||
60,000 | Inspire Medical Systems Inc (a) | 10,642,200 | |||||
690,000 | Johnson & Johnson | 112,718,400 | |||||
1,624,000 | Medtronic PLC (b) | 131,138,000 | |||||
85,061 | Neogen Corp. (a) | 1,188,302 | |||||
3,145,000 | Roche Holding AG (c) | 127,749,900 | |||||
514,000 | UnitedHealth Group Inc | 259,590,560 | |||||
856,425,912 | |||||||
INDUSTRIALS 17.6% | |||||||
158,438 | 3M Co | 17,507,399 | |||||
492,000 | CH Robinson Worldwide Inc | 47,384,520 | |||||
104,000 | Chart Industries Inc (a) | 19,172,400 | |||||
1,510,000 | Donaldson Co Inc | 74,005,100 | |||||
1,588,000 | Fastenal Co | 73,111,520 | |||||
105,000 | Generac Holdings Inc (a) | 18,704,700 | |||||
2,295,000 | Graco Inc | 137,585,250 | |||||
225,000 | Honeywell International Inc | 37,568,250 | |||||
2,101,066 | nVent Electric PLC (b) | 66,414,696 | |||||
268,000 | Rockwell Automation Inc | 57,649,480 | |||||
942,966 | Tennant Co (d) | 53,334,157 | |||||
1,636,000 | Toro Co/The | 141,481,280 | |||||
743,918,752 | |||||||
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY 24.1% | |||||||
701,763 | Digi International Inc (a) | 24,259,947 | |||||
523,000 | Entegris Inc | 43,419,460 | |||||
1,031,000 | Fiserv Inc (a) | 96,470,670 | |||||
1,049,700 | Jamf Holding Corp (a) | 23,261,352 | |||||
500,000 | Littelfuse Inc | 99,345,000 | |||||
1,396,000 | Microsoft Corp | 325,128,400 | |||||
371,500 | Motorola Solutions Inc | 83,204,855 | |||||
690,000 | NVIDIA Corp | 83,759,100 | |||||
802,000 | QUALCOMM Inc | 90,609,960 | |||||
402,000 | salesforce.com Inc (a) | 57,823,680 | |||||
290,000 | Visa Inc | 51,518,500 | |||||
503,857 | Workiva Inc (a) | 39,200,075 | |||||
1,018,000,999 | |||||||
MATERIALS 7.5% | |||||||
1,039,000 | Ecolab Inc | 150,052,380 | |||||
1,385,000 | HB Fuller Co | 83,238,500 | |||||
403,953 | Sherwin-Williams Co/The | 82,709,377 | |||||
316,000,257 | |||||||
UTILITIES 0.6% | |||||||
471,000 | Alliant Energy Corp | 24,958,290 | |||||
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | $ | 4,202,157,241 | |||||
(cost $2,489,838,404) | |||||||
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS 0.5% | |||||||
23,057,862 | First American Government Obligations Fund, Class X, 2.770% (e) | $ | 23,057,862 | ||||
(cost $23,057,862) | |||||||
TOTAL INVESTMENTS 99.9% | $ | 4,225,215,103 | |||||
(cost $2,512,896,266) | |||||||
OTHER ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (NET) 0.1% | 5,202,506 | ||||||
TOTAL NET ASSETS 100.0% | $ | 4,230,417,609 | |||||
(a) | Non-income producing. | ||||||
(b) | Issuer headquartered overseas but considered domestic. The Adviser defines foreign issuers as those whose operational leadership or headquarters is located in a foreign country; provided, however, if an issuer is believed by the Adviser to be headquartered in a jurisdiction primarily for tax purposes, the Adviser will consider the following additional factors: 1) the location of the primary exchange trading its securities; 2) where it derives the majority of its revenues; and/or 3) where it earns the majority of its profits. | ||||||
(c) | American Depositary Receipt. | ||||||
(d) | Affiliated company at September 30, 2022. | ||||||
(e) | The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day effective yield as of September 30, 2022. | ||||||
The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS®) was developed by and/or is the exclusive property of MSCI, Inc. and Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC (“S&P”). GICS is a service mark of MSCI, Inc. and S&P and has been licensed for use by the Adviser. |
Significant Accounting Policies
The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently followed by the Funds in the preparation of the financial statements. These policies are in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America (“GAAP”).
Investment Valuation
Each equity security owned by a Fund that is listed on a securities exchange, except for securities listed on the NASDAQ Stock Market LLC (“NASDAQ”), is valued at its last sale price on the exchange on the date as of which assets are valued. When the security is listed on more than one exchange, the Fund will use the price of the exchange that the Fund generally considers to be the principal exchange on which the stock is traded. Fund securities listed on NASDAQ will be valued at the NASDAQ Official Closing Price (“NOCP”), which may not necessarily represent the last sale price. If the NOCP is not available, such securities shall be valued at the last sale price on the day of valuation. If there has been no sale on such exchange or on NASDAQ on such day, the security is valued at (i) the mean between the most recent quoted bid and asked prices at the close of the exchange on such day or (ii) the latest sales price on the Composite Market for the day such security is being valued. “Composite Market” means a consolidation of the trade information provided by national securities and foreign exchanges and over-the- counter markets as published by an approved independent pricing service (a “Pricing Service”).
Debt securities, such as U.S. government securities, corporate securities, municipal securities and asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities, including short-term debt instruments having a maturity of 60 days or less, are valued at the mean in accordance with prices supplied by a Pricing Service. Pricing Services may use various valuation methodologies such as the mean between the bid and the asked prices, matrix pricing and other analytical pricing models as well as market transactions and dealer quotations. If a price is not available from a Pricing Service, the most recent quotation obtained from one or more broker-dealers known to follow the issue will be obtained. Quotations will be valued at the mean between the bid and the offer. In the absence of available quotations, the securities will be priced at fair value. Any discount or premium is accreted or amortized over the expected life of the respective security using the constant yield to maturity method. Pricing Services generally value debt securities assuming orderly transactions of an institutional round lot size, but such securities may be held or transactions may be conducted in such securities in smaller, odd lot sizes. Odd lots often trade at lower prices than institutional round lots.
Money market funds, demand notes and repurchase agreements are valued at cost. If cost does not represent current market value the securities will be priced at fair value.
Redeemable securities issued by open-end, registered investment companies are valued at the net asset values (“NAVs”) of such companies for purchase and/or redemption orders placed on that day. If, on a particular day, a share of an investment company is not listed on NASDAQ, such security’s fair value will be determined.
When market quotations are not readily available, any security or other asset is valued at its fair value as determined under procedures approved by the Trust’s Board of Trustees. These fair value procedures will also be used to price a security when corporate events, events in the securities market or world events cause the Adviser to believe that a security’s last sale price may not reflect its actual fair market value. The intended effect of using fair value pricing procedures is to ensure that the Fund is accurately priced. The Board of Trustees will regularly evaluate whether the Fund’s fair value pricing procedures continue to be appropriate in light of the specific circumstances of the Fund and the quality of prices obtained through their application by the Trust’s valuation committee.
FASB Accounting Standards Codification, “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures” Topic 820 (“ASC 820”), establishes an authoritative definition of fair value and sets out a hierarchy for measuring fair value. ASC 820 requires an entity to evaluate certain factors to determine whether there has been a significant decrease in volume and level of activity for the security such that recent transactions and quoted prices may not be determinative of fair value and further analysis and adjustment may be necessary to estimate fair value. ASC 820 also requires enhanced disclosure regarding the inputs and valuation techniques used to measure fair value in those instances as well as expanded disclosure of valuation levels for each class of investments. These inputs are summarized in the three broad levels listed below:
Level 1 – Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2 – Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3 – Significant unobservable inputs (including the Fund’s own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments).
The inputs or methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. The following is a summary of the inputs used to value the Fund’s investments carried at fair value as of September 30, 2022:
Debt securities, such as U.S. government securities, corporate securities, municipal securities and asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities, including short-term debt instruments having a maturity of 60 days or less, are valued at the mean in accordance with prices supplied by a Pricing Service. Pricing Services may use various valuation methodologies such as the mean between the bid and the asked prices, matrix pricing and other analytical pricing models as well as market transactions and dealer quotations. If a price is not available from a Pricing Service, the most recent quotation obtained from one or more broker-dealers known to follow the issue will be obtained. Quotations will be valued at the mean between the bid and the offer. In the absence of available quotations, the securities will be priced at fair value. Any discount or premium is accreted or amortized over the expected life of the respective security using the constant yield to maturity method. Pricing Services generally value debt securities assuming orderly transactions of an institutional round lot size, but such securities may be held or transactions may be conducted in such securities in smaller, odd lot sizes. Odd lots often trade at lower prices than institutional round lots.
Money market funds, demand notes and repurchase agreements are valued at cost. If cost does not represent current market value the securities will be priced at fair value.
Redeemable securities issued by open-end, registered investment companies are valued at the net asset values (“NAVs”) of such companies for purchase and/or redemption orders placed on that day. If, on a particular day, a share of an investment company is not listed on NASDAQ, such security’s fair value will be determined.
When market quotations are not readily available, any security or other asset is valued at its fair value as determined under procedures approved by the Trust’s Board of Trustees. These fair value procedures will also be used to price a security when corporate events, events in the securities market or world events cause the Adviser to believe that a security’s last sale price may not reflect its actual fair market value. The intended effect of using fair value pricing procedures is to ensure that the Fund is accurately priced. The Board of Trustees will regularly evaluate whether the Fund’s fair value pricing procedures continue to be appropriate in light of the specific circumstances of the Fund and the quality of prices obtained through their application by the Trust’s valuation committee.
FASB Accounting Standards Codification, “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures” Topic 820 (“ASC 820”), establishes an authoritative definition of fair value and sets out a hierarchy for measuring fair value. ASC 820 requires an entity to evaluate certain factors to determine whether there has been a significant decrease in volume and level of activity for the security such that recent transactions and quoted prices may not be determinative of fair value and further analysis and adjustment may be necessary to estimate fair value. ASC 820 also requires enhanced disclosure regarding the inputs and valuation techniques used to measure fair value in those instances as well as expanded disclosure of valuation levels for each class of investments. These inputs are summarized in the three broad levels listed below:
Level 1 – Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2 – Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3 – Significant unobservable inputs (including the Fund’s own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments).
The inputs or methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. The following is a summary of the inputs used to value the Fund’s investments carried at fair value as of September 30, 2022:
Growth Fund | Balanced Fund | Small Cap Fund | Minnesota ETF | |||||||||||||
Level 1 * | $ | 4,225,215,103 | $ | 504,566,234 | $ | 318,874,918 | $ | 63,271 | ||||||||
Level 2** | - | 260,813,328 | - | 16,334,850 | ||||||||||||
Level 3 | - | - | - | - | ||||||||||||
Total | $ | 4,225,215,103 | $ | 765,379,562 | $ | 318,874,918 | $ | 16,398,121 | ||||||||
* All Level 1 investments are equity securities (common stocks and preferred stocks and short-term investments. | ||||||||||||||||
** All Level 2 investments are fixed income securities. | ||||||||||||||||
For detail of securities by major section classification for the Funds, please refer to the Schedule of Investments. | ||||||||||||||||
The Funds did not hold any Level 3 investments during the period ended September 30, 2022. | ||||||||||||||||
The Fund did not invest in any financial derivative instruments during the period ended September 30, 2022. |