UNITED STATES |
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION |
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549 |
-------- |
FORM N-CSR |
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CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT |
INVESTMENT COMPANIES |
INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT FILE NUMBER 811-4325 |
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS |
(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter) |
40 Wall Street |
New York, NY 10005 |
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code) |
Joseph I. Benedek |
Foresters Investment Management Company, Inc. |
Raritan Plaza I |
Edison, NJ 08837-3620 |
(Name and address of agent for service) |
REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE: |
1-212-858-8000 |
DATE OF FISCAL YEAR END: DECEMBER 31 |
DATE OF REPORTING PERIOD: JUNE 30, 2019 |
Item 1. Reports to Stockholders
The semi-annual report to stockholders follows |
FOREWORD |
This report is for the information of the shareholders of the Funds. It is the policy of each Fund described in this report to mail only one copy of a Fund’s prospectus, annual report, semi-annual report and proxy statements to all shareholders who share the same mailing address and share the same last name and have invested in a Fund covered by the same document. You are deemed to consent to this policy unless you specifically revoke this policy and request that separate copies of such documents be mailed to you. In such case, you will begin to receive your own copies within 30 days after our receipt of the revocation. You may request that separate copies of these disclosure documents be mailed to you by writing to us at: Foresters Investor Services, Inc., Raritan Plaza I, Edison, NJ 08837-3620 or calling us at 1-800-423-4026.
You may obtain a free prospectus for any of the Funds by contacting your representative, calling 1-800-423-4026, writing to us at the following address: Foresters Financial Services, Inc., 40 Wall Street, New York, NY 10005, or by visiting our website at www.firstinvestorsfunds.com. You should consider the investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses of a Fund carefully before investing. The prospectus contains this and other information about the Fund, and should be read carefully before investing.
An investment in a Fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any other government agency. Although the Government Cash Management Fund seeks to preserve a net asset value at $1.00 per share, it is possible to lose money by investing in it, just as it is possible to lose money by investing in any of the other Funds. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. There is no guarantee that a Fund’s investment objective will be achieved.
A Statement of Additional Information (“SAI”) for any of the Funds may also be obtained, without charge, upon request by calling 1-800-423-4026, writing to us at our address or by visiting our website listed above. The SAI contains more detailed information about the Funds, including information about their Trustees.
Foresters FinancialTMand ForestersTMare the trade names and trademarks of The Independent Order of Foresters (Foresters), a fraternal benefit society, 789 Don Mills Road, Toronto, Canada M3C 1T9 and its subsidiaries.
There are a variety of risks associated with investing in variable life and annuity subaccounts. For all subaccounts, there is the risk that securities selected by the portfolio manager may perform differently than the overall market or may not meet the portfolio managers’ expectations. For stock subaccounts, the risks include market risk (the risk that the entire stock market will decline because of an event such as a deterioration in the economy or a rise in interest rates), as well as special risks associated with investing in certain types of stock subaccounts such as small-cap, global or international funds. For bond subaccounts, the risks include interest rate risk and credit risk. Interest rate risk is the risk that bonds will decrease in value as interest rates rise. As a general matter, bonds with longer maturities fluctuate more than bonds with shorter maturities in reaction to changes in interest rates. Credit risk is the risk that bonds will decline in value as the result of a decline in the credit rating of the bonds or the economy as a whole, or that the issuer will be unable to pay interest and/or principal when due. There are also special risks associated with investing in certain types of bond subaccounts, including liquidity risk and prepayment and extension risk. To the extent a subaccount uses derivatives, it will have risks associated with such use. You should consult the Funds’ prospectus for a precise explanation of the risks associated with your subaccounts.
Understanding Your Fund’s Expenses(unaudited)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
As a mutual fund shareholder, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, and (2) ongoing costs, including advisory fees and other expenses. This example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.
The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 in each Fund at the beginning of the period, January 1, 2019, and held for the entire six-month period ended June 30, 2019. The calculations assume that no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.
Actual Expense Example:
These amounts help you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The “Ending Account Value” shown is derived from the Fund’s actual return, and the “Expenses Paid During Period” shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the Fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid during the period.
To estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period simply divide your ending account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.60), then multiply the result by the number given for your Fund under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period”.
Hypothetical Expense Example:
These amounts provide information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund’s actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund’s actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds.
Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight and help you compare your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transactional costs. Therefore, the hypothetical expense example is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs would have been higher.
1 |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
COVERED CALL STRATEGY FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,138.62 | $4.93 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.18 | $4.66 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .93%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). Expenses paid | |
during the period are net of expenses waived. |
Portfolio Composition
BY SECTOR
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
2 |
Portfolio of Investments
COVERED CALL STRATEGY FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—100.8% | ||||
Communication Services—3.9% | ||||
13,300 | AT&T, Inc. | $ 445,683 | ||
7,800 | CBS Corp. – Class “B” | 389,220 | ||
834,903 | ||||
Consumer Discretionary—10.4% | ||||
4,200 | Best Buy Co., Inc. | 292,866 | ||
3,200 | Carnival Corp. | 148,960 | ||
3,400 | Home Depot, Inc. | 707,098 | ||
4,900 | Ross Stores, Inc. | 485,688 | ||
4,300 | Whirlpool Corp. | 612,148 | ||
2,246,760 | ||||
Consumer Staples—9.7% | ||||
1,700 | Constellation Brands, Inc. | 334,798 | ||
3,400 | Costco Wholesale Corp. | 898,484 | ||
9,000 | Mondelez International, Inc. – Class “A” | 485,100 | ||
4,900 | Philip Morris International, Inc. | 384,797 | ||
2,103,179 | ||||
Energy—5.4% | ||||
7,200 | Chevron Corp. | 895,968 | ||
5,500 | Occidental Petroleum Corp. | 276,540 | ||
1,172,508 | ||||
Financials—16.0% | ||||
4,600 | Allstate Corp. | 467,774 | ||
5,000 | American Express Co. | 617,200 | ||
18,400 | Bank of America Corp. | 533,600 | ||
3,700 | BB&T Corp. | 181,781 | ||
1,500 | BlackRock, Inc. | 703,950 | ||
8,500 | JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 950,300 | ||
3,454,605 |
3 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
COVERED CALL STRATEGY FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | |||||
Health Care—10.2% | |||||||
4,400 | * | Celgene Corp. | $ 406,736 | ||||
9,500 | Medtronic, PLC | 925,205 | |||||
6,200 | Merck & Co., Inc. | 519,870 | |||||
1,700 | Stryker Corp. | 349,486 | |||||
2,201,297 | |||||||
Industrials—17.0% | |||||||
8,500 | Delta Air Lines, Inc. | 482,375 | |||||
5,600 | Honeywell International, Inc. | 977,704 | |||||
1,500 | Lockheed Martin Corp. | 545,310 | |||||
2,600 | Parker Hannifin Corp. | 442,026 | |||||
2,300 | Raytheon Co. | 399,924 | |||||
2,500 | Union Pacific Corp. | 422,775 | |||||
3,100 | United Technologies Corp. | 403,620 | |||||
3,673,734 | |||||||
Information Technology—24.3% | |||||||
5,600 | Apple, Inc. | 1,108,352 | |||||
2,400 | Broadcom, Inc. | 690,864 | |||||
17,400 | Cisco Systems, Inc. | 952,302 | |||||
4,400 | Intel Corp. | 210,628 | |||||
3,300 | Mastercard, Inc. – Class “A” | 872,949 | |||||
8,600 | Microsoft Corp. | 1,152,056 | |||||
2,400 | Texas Instruments, Inc. | 275,424 | |||||
5,262,575 | |||||||
Materials—3.9% | |||||||
4,000 | Dow, Inc. | 197,240 | |||||
8,700 | DuPont de Nemours, Inc. | 653,109 | |||||
850,349 | |||||||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $18,804,082) | 100.8 | % | 21,799,910 | ||||
Excess of Liabilities Over Other Assets | (.8 | ) | (177,357) | ||||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $21,622,553 |
* | Non-income producing |
4 |
Expiration | Exercise | |||
CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN—(2.0)% | Date | Price | Contracts | Value |
Allstate Corp. | 8/16/19 | $ 105.00 | (46) | $ (6,555) |
American Express Co. | 7/19/19 | 125.00 | (5) | (997) |
American Express Co. | 7/19/19 | 120.00 | (45) | (22,050) |
Apple, Inc. | 7/26/19 | 207.50 | (56) | (12,096) |
AT&T, Inc. | 9/20/19 | 33.00 | (133) | (16,359) |
Bank of America Corp. | 7/19/19 | 29.00 | (184) | (13,892) |
BB&T, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 50.00 | (37) | (2,886) |
Best Buy Co., Inc. | 9/20/19 | 77.50 | (42) | (6,006) |
BlackRock, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 490.00 | (15) | (3,675) |
Broadcom, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 295.00 | (24) | (12,840) |
Carnival Corp. | 8/16/19 | 47.50 | (32) | (3,680) |
CBS Corp. – Class “B” | 7/5/19 | 50.00 | (78) | (3,900) |
Celgene Corp. | 7/19/19 | 90.00 | (44) | (15,686) |
Chevron Corp. | 7/26/19 | 128.00 | (64) | (7,200) |
Chevron Corp. | 1/17/20 | 120.00 | (8) | (7,520) |
Cisco Systems, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 55.00 | (174) | (14,703) |
Constellation Brands, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 210.00 | (16) | (1,040) |
Constellation Brands, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 195.00 | (1) | (585) |
Costco Wholesale Corp. | 7/19/19 | 265.00 | (30) | (11,775) |
Costco Wholesale Corp. | 1/17/20 | 230.00 | (4) | (16,050) |
Delta Air Lines, Inc. | 9/20/19 | 57.50 | (85) | (19,125) |
Dow, Inc. | 9/20/19 | 52.50 | (40) | (4,100) |
DuPont de Nemours, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 77.50 | (35) | (2,660) |
DuPont de Nemours, Inc. | 9/20/19 | 80.00 | (52) | (9,308) |
Home Depot, Inc. | 9/20/19 | 215.00 | (34) | (15,725) |
Honeywell International, Inc. | 9/20/19 | 175.00 | (56) | (31,500) |
Intel Corp. | 7/19/19 | 50.00 | (16) | (664) |
Intel Corp. | 8/16/19 | 48.00 | (28) | (5,600) |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 7/12/19 | 113.00 | (28) | (2,212) |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 7/19/19 | 115.00 | (57) | (3,990) |
Lockheed Martin Corp. | 8/2/19 | 370.00 | (15) | (9,225) |
Mastercard, Inc. – Class “A” | 7/19/19 | 275.00 | (33) | (4,075) |
Medtronic, PLC | 8/2/19 | 101.00 | (95) | (5,225) |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 7/19/19 | 85.00 | (7) | (595) |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 7/19/19 | 82.50 | (55) | (12,485) |
Microsoft Corp. | 7/19/19 | 140.00 | (43) | (3,590) |
Microsoft Corp. | 7/19/19 | 135.00 | (43) | (10,642) |
Mondelez International, Inc. – Class “A” | 9/20/19 | 55.00 | (90) | (12,690) |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. | 7/19/19 | 50.00 | (55) | (8,305) |
Parker Hannifin Corp. | 7/19/19 | 175.00 | (26) | (4,875) |
Philip Morris International, Inc. | 7/19/19 | 80.00 | (49) | (7,522) |
Raytheon Co. | 1/17/20 | 185.00 | (20) | (12,400) |
5 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
COVERED CALL STRATEGY FUND
June 30, 2019
Expiration | Exercise | |||
CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN(continued) | Date | Price | Contracts | Value |
Raytheon Co. | 1/17/20 | $ 180.00 | (3) | $ (2,340) |
Ross Stores, Inc. | 11/15/19 | 105.00 | (49) | (18,130) |
Stryker Corp. | 9/20/19 | 210.00 | (8) | (4,760) |
Stryker Corp. | 9/20/19 | 200.00 | (9) | (10,440) |
Texas Instruments, Inc. | 7/26/19 | 115.00 | (24) | (9,900) |
Union Pacific Corp. | 8/16/19 | 175.00 | (25) | (7,663) |
United Technologies Corp. | 8/16/19 | 130.00 | (31) | (12,788) |
Whirlpool Corp. | 7/19/19 | 145.00 | (43) | (10,428) |
Total Value of Call Options Written(premium received $464,079) | $(442,457) |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Assets | ||||||||||||
Common Stocks* | $ | 21,799,910 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 21,799,910 | ||||
Liabilities | ||||||||||||
Call Options Written | $ | — | $ | (442,457) | $ | — | $ | (442,457) |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for common stocks. |
Transfers from Level 1 to Level 2 for the six months ended June 30, 2019 were $38,974. Transfers, if | |
any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
6 | See notes to financial statements |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
EQUITY INCOME FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,132.19 | $4.28 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.77 | $4.06 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .81%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
TOP TEN SECTORS
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
7 |
Portfolio of Investments
EQUITY INCOME FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—90.9% | ||||
Communication Services—6.0% | ||||
61,084 | AT&T, Inc. | $ 2,046,925 | ||
54,050 | Comcast Corp. – Special Shares “A” | 2,285,234 | ||
44,200 | Verizon Communications, Inc. | 2,525,146 | ||
5,000 | Walt Disney Co. | 698,200 | ||
7,555,505 | ||||
Consumer Discretionary—3.5% | ||||
10,800 | Acushnet Holdings Corp. | 283,608 | ||
12,800 | American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. | 216,320 | ||
12,750 | Designer Brands, Inc. – Class “A” | 244,417 | ||
5,900 | Lowe’s Cos., Inc. | 595,369 | ||
5,750 | McDonald’s Corp. | 1,194,045 | ||
5,900 | Oxford Industries, Inc. | 447,220 | ||
16,450 | Penske Automotive Group, Inc. | 778,085 | ||
6,650 | Tractor Supply Co. | 723,520 | ||
4,482,584 | ||||
Consumer Staples—7.9% | ||||
34,050 | Coca-Cola Co. | 1,733,826 | ||
10,000 | Kimberly-Clark Corp. | 1,332,800 | ||
15,700 | PepsiCo, Inc. | 2,058,741 | ||
13,850 | Philip Morris International, Inc. | 1,087,641 | ||
18,250 | Procter & Gamble Co. | 2,001,113 | ||
15,550 | Walmart, Inc. | 1,718,120 | ||
9,932,241 | ||||
Energy—9.1% | ||||
39,851 | BP, PLC (ADR) | 1,661,787 | ||
17,450 | Chevron Corp. | 2,171,478 | ||
16,950 | ConocoPhillips | 1,033,950 | ||
62,750 | EnCana Corp. | 321,907 | ||
24,450 | ExxonMobil Corp. | 1,873,603 | ||
38,650 | Kinder Morgan, Inc. | 807,012 | ||
17,864 | Marathon Petroleum Corp. | 998,240 | ||
28,000 | PBF Energy, Inc. – Class “A” | 876,400 | ||
10,550 | Royal Dutch Shell, PLC – Class “A” (ADR) | 686,489 | ||
33,450 | Suncor Energy, Inc. | 1,042,302 | ||
11,473,168 |
8 |
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Financials—21.2% | ||||
30,200 | * | AllianceBernstein Holding, LP (MLP) | $ 897,544 | |
7,950 | American Express Co. | 981,348 | ||
78,450 | Bank of America Corp. | 2,275,050 | ||
18,150 | Bank of New York Mellon Corp. | 801,322 | ||
9,100 | * | Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. – Class “B” | 1,939,847 | |
1,500 | BlackRock, Inc. | 703,950 | ||
12,767 | Chubb, Ltd. | 1,880,451 | ||
19,600 | Citigroup, Inc. | 1,372,588 | ||
4,550 | Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | 930,930 | ||
27,455 | Hamilton Lane, Inc. – Class “A” | 1,566,582 | ||
62,700 | Investors Bancorp, Inc. | 699,105 | ||
25,200 | iShares S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index Fund (ETF) | 928,620 | ||
29,050 | JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 3,247,790 | ||
17,000 | MetLife, Inc. | 844,390 | ||
31,900 | Old National Bancorp of Indiana | 529,221 | ||
7,850 | PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | 1,077,648 | ||
11,050 | Popular, Inc. | 599,352 | ||
47,650 | Regions Financial Corp. | 711,891 | ||
41,000 | Sterling Bancorp | 872,480 | ||
10,450 | Travelers Cos., Inc. | 1,562,484 | ||
24,650 | Wells Fargo & Co. | 1,166,438 | ||
5,950 | Willis Towers Watson, PLC | 1,139,663 | ||
26,728,694 | ||||
Health Care—12.6% | ||||
13,250 | Abbott Laboratories | 1,114,325 | ||
3,200 | Anthem, Inc. | 903,072 | ||
18,850 | Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | 854,847 | ||
5,400 | Eli Lilly & Co. | 598,266 | ||
22,850 | GlaxoSmithKline, PLC (ADR) | 914,457 | ||
15,850 | Johnson & Johnson | 2,207,588 | ||
19,012 | Medtronic, PLC | 1,851,579 | ||
29,670 | Merck & Co., Inc. | 2,487,830 | ||
50,935 | Pfizer, Inc. | 2,206,504 | ||
16,866 | Phibro Animal Health Corp. – Class “A” | 535,833 | ||
29,650 | Smith & Nephew, PLC (ADR) | 1,290,961 | ||
3,700 | UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | 902,837 | ||
15,868,099 |
9 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
EQUITY INCOME FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Industrials—8.6% | ||||
15,450 | Eaton Corp., PLC | $ 1,286,676 | ||
5,100 | General Dynamics Corp. | 927,282 | ||
8,350 | Honeywell International, Inc. | 1,457,827 | ||
11,550 | Ingersoll-Rand, PLC | 1,463,039 | ||
8,050 | Kansas City Southern, Inc. | 980,651 | ||
3,430 | Lockheed Martin Corp. | 1,246,942 | ||
3,350 | Northrop Grumman Corp. | 1,082,419 | ||
11,600 | Republic Services, Inc. | 1,005,024 | ||
10,850 | United Technologies Corp. | 1,412,670 | ||
10,862,530 | ||||
Information Technology—10.1% | ||||
48,100 | Cisco Systems, Inc. | 2,632,513 | ||
24,950 | Corning, Inc. | 829,088 | ||
35,150 | HP Enterprise Co. | 525,492 | ||
37,400 | HP, Inc. | 777,546 | ||
41,500 | Intel Corp. | 1,986,605 | ||
14,400 | Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | 861,408 | ||
19,150 | Microsoft Corp. | 2,565,334 | ||
16,700 | QUALCOMM, Inc. | 1,270,369 | ||
19,700 | Teradyne, Inc. | 943,827 | ||
3,650 | Texas Instruments, Inc. | 418,874 | ||
12,811,056 | ||||
Materials—4.0% | ||||
7,500 | Avery Dennison Corp. | 867,600 | ||
12,310 | Dow, Inc. | 607,006 | ||
9,110 | DuPont de Nemours, Inc. | 683,888 | ||
7,400 | Eastman Chemical Co. | 575,942 | ||
8,250 | FMC Corp. | 684,337 | ||
3,900 | Linde, PLC | 783,120 | ||
10,300 | LyondellBasell Industries NV – Class “A” | 887,139 | ||
5,089,032 |
10 |
Shares or | |||||||
Principal | |||||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||||
Real Estate—3.0% | |||||||
24,000 | Americold Realty Trust (REIT) | $ 778,080 | |||||
39,634 | Brookfield Property Partners (REIT) (MLP) | 750,272 | |||||
12,550 | CyrusOne, Inc. (REIT) | 724,386 | |||||
18,090 | Douglas Emmett, Inc. (REIT) | 720,706 | |||||
6,800 | Federal Realty Investment Trust (REIT) | 875,568 | |||||
3,849,012 | |||||||
Utilities—4.9% | |||||||
8,250 | American Electric Power Co., Inc. | 726,082 | |||||
23,000 | CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | 658,490 | |||||
10,350 | Dominion Energy, Inc. | 800,262 | |||||
7,100 | Duke Energy Corp. | 626,504 | |||||
16,450 | Exelon Corp. | 788,613 | |||||
15,200 | FirstEnergy Corp. | 650,712 | |||||
5,000 | NextEra Energy, Inc. | 1,024,300 | |||||
12,500 | PPL Corp. | 387,625 | |||||
9,900 | Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund (ETF) | 590,337 | |||||
6,252,925 | |||||||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $84,565,007) | 114,904,846 | ||||||
SHORT-TERM U.S. GOVERNMENT | |||||||
OBLIGATIONS—7.1% | |||||||
U.S. Treasury Bills: | |||||||
$ 7,000M | 2.05%, 7/2/2019 | 6,999,622 | |||||
2,000M | 1.989%, 7/16/2019 | 1,998,296 | |||||
Total Value of Short-Term U.S. Government Obligations(cost $8,997,943) | 8,997,918 | ||||||
Total Value of Investments(cost $93,562,950) | 98.0 | % | 123,902,764 | ||||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 2.0 | 2,494,878 | |||||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $126,397,642 |
* | Non-income producing | |
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ADR | American Depositary Receipts | |
ETF | Exchange Traded Fund | |
MLP | Master Limited Partnership | |
REIT | Real Estate Investment Trust |
11 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
EQUITY INCOME FUND
June 30, 2019
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Common Stocks | $ | 114,904,846 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 114,904,846 | ||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 8,997,918 | — | 8,997,918 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | 114,904,846 | $ | 8,997,918 | $ | — | $ | 123,902,764 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for common stocks. |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
12 | See notes to financial statements |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
FUND FOR INCOME
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,090.55 | $4.25 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.72 | $4.11 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .82%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
TOP TEN SECTORS
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
13 |
Portfolio of Investments
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
CORPORATE BONDS—91.4% | ||||
Aerospace/Defense—1.4% | ||||
Bombardier, Inc.: | ||||
$ 425M | 6%, 10/15/2022 (a) | $ 428,948 | ||
275M | 7.5%, 12/1/2024 (a) | 281,187 | ||
TransDigm, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 6.5%, 7/15/2024 | 253,750 | ||
250M | 6.25%, 3/15/2026 (a) | 263,750 | ||
325M | Triumph Group, Inc., 5.25%, 6/1/2022 | 320,125 | ||
1,547,760 | ||||
Automotive—2.8% | ||||
225M | Adient Global Holdings, Ltd., 4.875%, 8/15/2026 (a) | 180,000 | ||
475M | American Axle & Manufacturing, Inc., 6.25%, 4/1/2025 | 474,406 | ||
125M | Asbury Automotive Group, Inc., 6%, 12/15/2024 | 130,000 | ||
400M | Cooper Standard Automotive, Inc., 5.625%, 11/15/2026 (a) | 357,000 | ||
250M | Dana Holding Corp., 5.5%, 12/15/2024 | 257,500 | ||
Hertz Corp.: | ||||
250M | 5.875%, 10/15/2020 | 250,438 | ||
250M | 7.625%, 6/1/2022 (a) | 260,000 | ||
75M | IAA Spinco, Inc., 5.5%, 6/15/2027 (a) | 78,188 | ||
300M | J.B. Poindexter & Co., 7.125%, 4/15/2026 (a) | 307,500 | ||
250M | LKQ Corp., 4.75%, 5/15/2023 | 253,750 | ||
250M | Panther BF Aggeregator 2, LP, 8.5%, 5/15/2027 (a) | 258,125 | ||
275M | Tenneco, Inc., 5%, 7/15/2026 | 222,750 | ||
3,029,657 | ||||
Building Materials—1.4% | ||||
Building Materials Corp.: | ||||
325M | 5.375%, 11/15/2024 (a) | 337,594 | ||
200M | 6%, 10/15/2025 (a) | 213,250 | ||
400M | Griffon Corp., 5.25%, 3/1/2022 | 399,500 | ||
350M | New Enterprise Stone & Lime Co., 6.25%, 3/15/2026 (a) | 356,125 | ||
200M | Standard Industries, Inc., 5.5%, 2/15/2023 (a) | 206,000 | ||
1,512,469 | ||||
Chemicals—2.9% | ||||
250M | Avantor, Inc., 9%, 10/1/2025 (a) | 279,375 | ||
175M | Blue Cube Spinco, Inc., 10%, 10/15/2025 | 198,844 | ||
350M | CF Industries, Inc., 4.95%, 6/1/2043 | 314,562 | ||
375M | Chemours Co., 5.375%, 5/15/2027 | 359,062 | ||
150M | CVR Partners, LP, 9.25%, 6/15/2023 (a) | 157,417 |
14 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Chemicals(continued) | ||||
$ 275M | Koppers, Inc., 6%, 2/15/2025 (a) | $ 259,188 | ||
250M | Kraton Polymers, LLC, 7%, 4/15/2025 (a) | 254,375 | ||
175M | Neon Holdings, Inc., 10.125%, 4/1/2026 (a) | 172,813 | ||
350M | Rain CII Carbon, LLC, 7.25%, 4/1/2025 (a) | 325,500 | ||
275M | Rayonier AM Products, Inc., 5.5%, 6/1/2024 (a) | 236,500 | ||
150M | Tronox, Inc., 6.5%, 4/15/2026 (a) | 149,250 | ||
375M | Univar USA, Inc., 6.75%, 7/15/2023 (a) | 383,906 | ||
3,090,792 | ||||
Consumer Non-Durables—1.1% | ||||
Energizer Holdings, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 5.5%, 6/15/2025 (a) | 253,750 | ||
125M | 6.375%, 7/15/2026 (a) | 128,750 | ||
300M | KGA Escrow, LLC, 7.5%, 8/15/2023 (a) | 312,375 | ||
509M | Reynolds Group Holdings, Inc., 5.75%, 10/15/2020 | 510,689 | ||
1,205,564 | ||||
Energy—13.1% | ||||
175M | Andeavor Logistics, LP, 6.875%, 12/29/2049 | 174,656 | ||
125M | Antero Resources Corp., 5.375%, 11/1/2021 | 123,906 | ||
250M | Apergy Corp., 6.375%, 5/1/2026 | 253,125 | ||
50M | Baytex Energy Corp., 5.125%, 6/1/2021 (a) | 50,250 | ||
Blue Racer Midstream, LLC: | ||||
200M | 6.125%, 11/15/2022 (a) | 203,750 | ||
250M | 6.625%, 7/15/2026 (a) | 253,125 | ||
Buckeye Partners, LP: | ||||
325M | 3.95%, 12/1/2026 | 288,306 | ||
200M | 5.6%, 10/15/2044 | 165,067 | ||
325M | California Resources Corp., 8%, 12/15/2022 (a) | 246,594 | ||
225M | Callon Petroleum Co., 6.375%, 7/1/2026 | 228,375 | ||
Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc.: | ||||
50M | 6.25%, 4/15/2023 | 48,500 | ||
75M | 8.25%, 7/15/2025 | 74,250 | ||
Chesapeake Energy Corp.: | ||||
150M | 4.875%, 4/15/2022 | 142,500 | ||
400M | 7%, 10/1/2024 | 360,500 | ||
550M | 8%, 6/15/2027 | 487,437 | ||
500M | CITGO Petroleum Corp., 6.25%, 8/15/2022 (a) | 501,875 | ||
375M | Consolidated Energy Finance SA, 6.16025%, 6/15/2022 (a)† | 374,851 | ||
250M | Covey Park Energy, LLC, 7.5%, 5/15/2025 (a) | 181,250 |
15 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Energy(continued) | ||||
Crestwood Midstream Partners, LP: | ||||
$ 250M | 6.25%, 4/1/2023 | $ 256,250 | ||
450M | 5.75%, 4/1/2025 | 457,875 | ||
350M | CrownRock, LP, 5.625%, 10/15/2025 (a) | 352,187 | ||
DCP Midstream Operating, LP: | ||||
250M | 3.875%, 3/15/2023 | 252,500 | ||
175M | 5.125%, 5/15/2029 | 180,031 | ||
275M | Delek Logistics Partners, LP, 6.75%, 5/15/2025 | 273,625 | ||
Diamondback Energy, Inc.: | ||||
125M | 4.75%, 11/1/2024 (a) | 129,062 | ||
75M | 4.75%, 11/1/2024 | 77,437 | ||
EnLink Midstream Partners, LP: | ||||
375M | 4.85%, 7/15/2026 | 379,219 | ||
200M | 5.45%, 6/1/2047 | 172,000 | ||
400M | Exterran Partners, LP, 6%, 10/1/2022 | 407,000 | ||
Genesis Energy, LP: | ||||
100M | 5.625%, 6/15/2024 | 96,750 | ||
250M | 6.5%, 10/1/2025 | 245,312 | ||
300M | Global Partners, LP, 6.25%, 7/15/2022 | 304,500 | ||
Gulfport Energy Corp.: | ||||
200M | 6.625%, 5/1/2023 | 173,000 | ||
175M | 6.375%, 5/15/2025 | 136,281 | ||
300M | 6.375%, 1/15/2026 | 228,750 | ||
Laredo Petroleum, Inc.: | ||||
200M | 5.625%, 1/15/2022 | 186,500 | ||
300M | 6.25%, 3/15/2023 | 280,590 | ||
125M | Matador Resources Co., 5.875%, 9/15/2026 | 126,875 | ||
200M | McDermott Escrow 1, Inc., 10.625%, 5/1/2024 (a) | 187,686 | ||
225M | MEG Energy Corp., 6.375%, 1/30/2023 (a) | 215,156 | ||
Murphy Oil Corp.: | ||||
200M | 5.75%, 8/15/2025 | 208,280 | ||
250M | 5.875%, 12/1/2042 | 225,000 | ||
275M | Nabors Industries, Inc., 5.75%, 2/1/2025 | 245,094 | ||
151M | Northern Oil and Gas, Inc., 8.5%, 5/15/2023 | 156,403 | ||
Oasis Petroleum, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 6.875%, 1/15/2023 | 250,625 | ||
175M | 6.25%, 5/1/2026 (a) | 170,188 | ||
Parkland Fuel Corp.: | ||||
250M | 6%, 4/1/2026 (a) | 256,563 | ||
225M | 5.875%, 7/15/2027 (a)(b) | 229,151 |
16 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Energy(continued) | ||||
Parsley Energy, LLC: | ||||
$ 125M | 5.25%, 8/15/2025 (a) | $ 127,500 | ||
50M | 5.625%, 10/15/2027 (a) | 52,500 | ||
Precision Drilling Corp.: | ||||
72M | 6.5%, 12/15/2021 | 72,311 | ||
150M | 7.125%, 1/15/2026 (a) | 145,875 | ||
200M | QEP Resources, Inc., 6.875%, 3/1/2021 | 206,500 | ||
Range Resources Corp.: | ||||
75M | 5%, 8/15/2022 (a) | 71,531 | ||
175M | 4.875%, 5/15/2025 | 154,438 | ||
SM Energy Co.: | ||||
300M | 5%, 1/15/2024 | 276,750 | ||
50M | 6.625%, 1/15/2027 | 46,500 | ||
100M | Southwestern Energy Co., 7.5%, 4/1/2026 | 95,238 | ||
Suburban Propane Partners, LP: | ||||
150M | 5.5%, 6/1/2024 | 151,500 | ||
375M | 5.875%, 3/1/2027 | 377,813 | ||
300M | Sunoco, LP, 4.875%, 1/15/2023 | 307,125 | ||
142M | Transocean Pontus, Ltd., 6.125%, 8/1/2025 (a) | 146,711 | ||
250M | Tullow Oil, PLC, 6.25%, 4/15/2022 (a) | 252,750 | ||
200M | USA Compression Partners, LP, 6.875%, 9/1/2027 (a) | 211,022 | ||
400M | Whiting Petroleum Corp., 6.625%, 1/15/2026 | 387,750 | ||
14,102,021 | ||||
Financials—6.2% | ||||
175M | Acrisure, LLC, 8.125%, 2/15/2024 (a) | 181,016 | ||
225M | Ally Financial, Inc., 8%, 11/1/2031 | 298,510 | ||
225M | Credit Suisse Group AG, 7.5%, 12/11/2023 (a) | 248,118 | ||
275M | CSTN Merger Sub, Inc., 6.75%, 8/15/2024 (a) | 259,187 | ||
DAE Funding, LLC: | ||||
175M | 5.75%, 11/15/2023 (a) | 184,187 | ||
550M | 5%, 8/1/2024 (a) | 574,062 | ||
200M | Dresdner Funding Trust I, 8.151%, 6/30/2031 (a) | 270,150 | ||
550M | Eagle Holding Co. II, LLC, 7.75%, 5/15/2022 (a) | 555,500 | ||
275M | Eagle Intermediate Global Holding, 7.5%, 5/1/2025 (a) | 262,281 | ||
325M | GTCR (AP) Finance, Inc., 8%, 5/15/2027 (a) | 327,438 | ||
Icahn Enterprises, LP: | ||||
200M | 6.25%, 2/1/2022 | 205,250 | ||
275M | 6.75%, 2/1/2024 | 286,688 | ||
350M | 6.25%, 5/15/2026 (a) | 355,688 | ||
200M | Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, 5.017%, 6/26/2024 (a) | 200,692 |
17 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Financials(continued) | ||||
Ladder Capital Finance Holdings, LLLP: | ||||
$ 200M | 5.25%, 3/15/2022 (a) | $ 204,500 | ||
400M | 5.25%, 10/1/2025 (a) | 402,000 | ||
575M | Navient Corp., 5.875%, 3/25/2021 | 599,438 | ||
Springleaf Finance Corp.: | ||||
250M | 5.625%, 3/15/2023 | 266,250 | ||
100M | 6.125%, 3/15/2024 | 107,750 | ||
250M | 6.875%, 3/15/2025 | 274,370 | ||
150M | 7.125%, 3/15/2026 | 164,625 | ||
200M | UniCredit SpA, 5.861%, 6/19/2032 (a) | 191,718 | ||
225M | Wand Merger Corp., 8.125%, 7/15/2023 (a) | 230,063 | ||
6,649,481 | ||||
Food/Beverage/Tobacco—2.4% | ||||
250M | HLF Financing Sarl, LLC, 7.25%, 8/15/2026 (a) | 251,563 | ||
100M | JBS USA, LLC, 5.875%, 7/15/2024 (a) | 103,125 | ||
300M | JBS USA LUX SA, 6.75%, 2/15/2028 (a) | 327,000 | ||
275M | Pilgrim’s Pride Corp., 5.875%, 9/30/2027 (a) | 286,000 | ||
Post Holdings, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 5.5%, 3/1/2025 (a) | 259,063 | ||
400M | 5.75%, 3/1/2027 (a) | 415,000 | ||
250M | 5.5%, 12/15/2029 (a)(b) | 251,563 | ||
550M | Sigma Holdco BV, 7.875%, 5/15/2026 (a) | 511,500 | ||
225M | Simmons Foods, Inc., 5.75%, 11/1/2024 (a) | 205,875 | ||
2,610,689 | ||||
Food/Drug—.3% | ||||
Albertson’s Cos., LLC: | ||||
200M | 5.75%, 3/15/2025 | 202,560 | ||
100M | 7.5%, 3/15/2026 (a) | 107,250 | ||
309,810 | ||||
Forest Products/Containers—3.1% | ||||
Ardagh Holdings USA, Inc.: | ||||
200M | 4.625%, 5/15/2023 (a) | 203,750 | ||
475M | 7.25%, 5/15/2024 (a) | 502,312 | ||
250M | Berry Global Escrow Corp., 4.875%, 7/15/2026 (a) | 255,937 | ||
Berry Global, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 5.5%, 5/15/2022 | 253,750 | ||
225M | 7%, 2/15/2026 (a) | 219,375 | ||
250M | BWAY Holding Co., 5.5%, 4/15/2024 (a) | 251,062 |
18 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Forest Products/Containers(continued) | ||||
$ 200M | Crown Americas, LLC, 4.5%, 1/15/2023 | $ 208,750 | ||
200M | Graphic Packaging International, LLC, 4.75%, 7/15/2027 (a) | 205,750 | ||
200M | Greif, Inc., 6.5%, 3/1/2027 (a) | 207,000 | ||
Mercer International, Inc.: | ||||
50M | 7.75%, 12/1/2022 | 51,937 | ||
175M | 6.5%, 2/1/2024 | 181,781 | ||
150M | 7.375%, 1/15/2025 (a) | 159,750 | ||
175M | Multi-Color Corp., 4.875%, 11/1/2025 (a) | 184,406 | ||
225M | Owens-Brockway Glass Container, 5.875%, 8/15/2023 (a) | 243,518 | ||
250M | Schweitzer-Mauduit International, Inc., 6.875%, 10/1/2026 (a) | 256,250 | ||
3,385,328 | ||||
Gaming/Leisure—5.5% | ||||
200M | AMC Entertainment, Inc., 5.75%, 6/15/2025 | 186,010 | ||
AMC Networks, Inc.: | ||||
375M | 5%, 4/1/2024 | 386,719 | ||
100M | 4.75%, 8/1/2025 | 101,375 | ||
375M | Boyd Gaming Corp., 6.875%, 5/15/2023 | 388,594 | ||
Cedar Fair, LP: | ||||
200M | 5.375%, 6/1/2024 | 206,500 | ||
125M | 5.25%, 7/15/2029 (a) | 127,695 | ||
1,075M | CRC Escrow Issuer, LLC, 5.25%, 10/15/2025 (a) | 1,081,047 | ||
225M | Golden Nugget, Inc., 8.75%, 10/1/2025 (a) | 236,812 | ||
200M | Hilton Domestic Operating Co., LLC, 4.875%, 1/15/2030 (a) | 206,500 | ||
475M | IRB Holding Corp., 6.75%, 2/15/2026 (a) | 473,813 | ||
575M | Jack Ohio Finance, LLC, 6.75%, 11/15/2021 (a) | 592,078 | ||
150M | Lions Gate Entertainment Corp., 5.875%, 11/1/2024 (a) | 154,500 | ||
200M | MGM Resorts International, 6%, 3/15/2023 | 217,250 | ||
250M | National CineMedia, LLC, 6%, 4/15/2022 | 253,125 | ||
525M | Scientific Games International, Inc., 5%, 10/15/2025 (a) | 531,563 | ||
Viking Cruises, Ltd.: | ||||
600M | 6.25%, 5/15/2025 (a) | 621,000 | ||
175M | 5.875%, 9/15/2027 (a) | 177,625 | ||
5,942,206 |
19 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Health Care—7.3% | ||||
$ 125M | AMN Healthcare, Inc, 5.125%, 10/1/2024 (a) | $ 127,834 | ||
Bausch Health Cos., Inc.: | ||||
50M | 6.5%, 3/15/2022 (a) | 51,875 | ||
73M | 5.5%, 3/1/2023 (a) | 73,858 | ||
500M | 7%, 3/15/2024 (a) | 532,550 | ||
350M | 6.125%, 4/15/2025 (a) | 358,302 | ||
525M | 9%, 12/15/2025 (a) | 588,551 | ||
225M | 8.5%, 1/31/2027 (a) | 247,955 | ||
300M | Centene Corp., 6.125%, 2/15/2024 | 314,625 | ||
375M | CHS/Community Health Systems, Inc., 6.25%, 3/31/2023 | 362,344 | ||
1,125M | DaVita, Inc., 5.125%, 7/15/2024 | 1,128,150 | ||
225M | Endo Finance, LLC, 6%, 7/15/2023 (a) | 163,125 | ||
HCA, Inc.: | ||||
475M | 5.875%, 5/1/2023 | 517,693 | ||
225M | 5.375%, 2/1/2025 | 243,422 | ||
125M | 5.875%, 2/15/2026 | 138,437 | ||
HealthSouth Corp.: | ||||
175M | 5.125%, 3/15/2023 | 178,938 | ||
184M | 5.75%, 11/1/2024 | 188,057 | ||
Mallinckrodt Finance SB: | ||||
275M | 5.75%, 8/1/2022 (a) | 237,875 | ||
225M | 5.5%, 4/15/2025 (a) | 151,875 | ||
300M | MEDNAX, Inc., 6.25%, 1/15/2027 (a) | 295,875 | ||
Molina Healthcare, Inc.: | ||||
400M | 5.375%, 11/15/2022 | 417,500 | ||
250M | 4.875%, 6/15/2025 (a) | 254,688 | ||
125M | MPH Operating Partnership, LP, 7.125%, 6/1/2024 (a) | 117,838 | ||
175M | Par Pharmaceutical, Inc., 7.5%, 4/1/2027 (a) | 172,375 | ||
250M | Polaris Intermediate Corp., 8.5%, 12/1/2022 (a) | 221,875 | ||
675M | Syneos Health, Inc., 7.5%, 10/1/2024 (a) | 708,750 | ||
100M | Tenet Healthcare Corp., 5.125%, 5/1/2025 | 100,750 | ||
7,895,117 | ||||
Home-Building—.8% | ||||
350M | Century Communities, Inc., 6.75%, 6/1/2027 (a) | 355,687 | ||
William Lyon Homes, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 6%, 9/1/2023 | 255,000 | ||
275M | 6.625%, 7/15/2027 (a)(b) | 275,000 | ||
885,687 |
20 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Information Technology—4.6% | ||||
$ 980M | Alliance Data Systems Corp., 5.375%, 8/1/2022 (a) | $ 996,415 | ||
275M | Anixter, Inc., 6%, 12/1/2025 (a) | 299,062 | ||
250M | CDW, LLC, 5%, 9/1/2025 | 261,094 | ||
125M | CommScope Finance, LLC, 6%, 3/1/2026 (a) | 128,750 | ||
50M | CommScope Technologies, LLC, 6%, 6/15/2025 (a) | 47,110 | ||
Diamond 1 Finance Corp.: | ||||
375M | 5.875%, 6/15/2021 (a) | 381,356 | ||
225M | 7.125%, 6/15/2024 (a) | 237,540 | ||
250M | J2 Cloud Services, LLC, 6%, 7/15/2025 (a) | 262,813 | ||
375M | Nielsen Finance, LLC, 5%, 4/15/2022 (a) | 375,938 | ||
Nuance Communications, Inc.: | ||||
350M | 6%, 7/1/2024 | 363,563 | ||
150M | 5.625%, 12/15/2026 | 156,795 | ||
250M | Rackspace Hosting, Inc., 8.625%, 11/15/2024 (a) | 230,625 | ||
575M | Solera, LLC, 10.5%, 3/1/2024 (a) | 624,594 | ||
325M | Symantec Corp., 5%, 4/15/2025 (a) | 333,407 | ||
275M | Verscend Holding Corp., 9.75%, 8/15/2026 (a) | 286,688 | ||
4,985,750 | ||||
Manufacturing—2.9% | ||||
325M | Amsted Industries, Inc., 5.625%, 7/1/2027 (a) | 339,625 | ||
375M | ATS Automation Tooling Systems, Inc., 6.5%, 6/15/2023 (a) | 388,125 | ||
500M | Brand Energy & Infrastructure Services, Inc., 8.5%, 7/15/2025 (a) | 455,625 | ||
250M | Cloud Crane, LLC, 10.125%, 8/1/2024 (a) | 269,375 | ||
275M | Grinding Media, Inc., 7.375%, 12/15/2023 (a) | 264,688 | ||
300M | H&E Equipment Services, Inc., 5.625%, 9/1/2025 | 309,675 | ||
200M | HAT Holdings I, LLC, 5.25%, 7/15/2024 (a)(b) | 204,500 | ||
325M | Manitowoc Co., Inc., 9%, 4/1/2026 (a) | 325,813 | ||
200M | Park-Ohio Industries, Inc., 6.625%, 4/15/2027 | 201,000 | ||
350M | Wabash National Corp., 5.5%, 10/1/2025 (a) | 333,375 | ||
3,091,801 | ||||
Media-Broadcasting—3.1% | ||||
Belo Corp.: | ||||
200M | 7.75%, 6/1/2027 | 221,000 | ||
225M | 7.25%, 9/15/2027 | 243,000 | ||
450M | LIN Television Corp., 5.875%, 11/15/2022 | 461,250 | ||
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.: | ||||
225M | 6.125%, 2/15/2022 (a) | 228,375 | ||
200M | 5.625%, 8/1/2024 (a) | 207,692 | ||
150M | Nexstar Escrow, Inc., 5.625%, 7/15/2027 (a)(b) | 153,938 |
21 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Media-Broadcasting(continued) | ||||
Sinclair Television Group, Inc.: | ||||
$ 300M | 5.625%, 8/1/2024 (a) | $ 307,500 | ||
100M | 5.875%, 3/15/2026 (a) | 102,595 | ||
225M | 5.125%, 2/15/2027 (a) | 221,625 | ||
Sirius XM Radio, Inc.: | ||||
450M | 4.625%, 7/15/2024 (a)(b) | 461,601 | ||
725M | 6%, 7/15/2024 (a) | 747,838 | ||
3,356,414 | ||||
Media-Cable TV—7.5% | ||||
Altice Financing SA: | ||||
525M | 6.625%, 2/15/2023 (a) | 539,437 | ||
200M | 7.5%, 5/15/2026 (a) | 201,520 | ||
Altice France SA: | ||||
200M | 6.25%, 5/15/2024 (a) | 206,750 | ||
300M | 7.375%, 5/1/2026 (a) | 308,250 | ||
200M | 8.125%, 2/1/2027 (a) | 210,500 | ||
CCO Holdings, LLC: | ||||
200M | 5.25%, 9/30/2022 | 203,395 | ||
275M | 5.125%, 2/15/2023 | 280,032 | ||
150M | 5.75%, 9/1/2023 | 153,702 | ||
500M | 5.875%, 4/1/2024 (a) | 523,750 | ||
275M | 5.875%, 5/1/2027 (a) | 290,812 | ||
150M | 5%, 2/1/2028 (a) | 153,555 | ||
125M | 5.375%, 6/1/2029 (a)(b) | 129,375 | ||
600M | Clear Channel International, 8.75%, 12/15/2020 (a) | 616,500 | ||
Clear Channel Worldwide Holdings, Inc.: | ||||
650M | Series “A”, 6.5%, 11/15/2022 | 667,875 | ||
300M | 9.25%, 2/15/2024 (a) | 326,250 | ||
CSC Holdings, LLC: | ||||
750M | 5.375%, 7/15/2023 (a) | 772,500 | ||
200M | 6.625%, 10/15/2025 (a) | 214,500 | ||
DISH DBS Corp.: | ||||
225M | 5%, 3/15/2023 | 218,250 | ||
250M | 5.875%, 11/15/2024 | 237,500 | ||
Gray Television, Inc.: | ||||
50M | 5.125%, 10/15/2024 (a) | 51,063 | ||
275M | 5.875%, 7/15/2026 (a) | 286,000 | ||
900M | Midcontinent Communications & Finance Corp., | |||
6.875%, 8/15/2023 (a) | 938,250 |
22 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Media-Cable TV(continued) | ||||
Netflix, Inc.: | ||||
$ 100M | 4.375%, 11/15/2026 | $ 102,530 | ||
100M | 4.875%, 4/15/2028 | 103,375 | ||
375M | Unitymedia GmbH, 6.125%, 1/15/2025 (a) | 391,969 | ||
8,127,640 | ||||
Media-Diversified—1.7% | ||||
25M | E.W. Scripps Co., 5.125%, 5/15/2025 (a) | 24,062 | ||
375M | Gannett Co., Inc., 6.375%, 10/15/2023 | 387,656 | ||
300M | iHeart Communications, 8.375%, 5/1/2027 | 315,756 | ||
225M | Outdoor Americas Capital, LLC, 5.875%, 3/15/2025 | 233,437 | ||
900M | Tribune Media Co., 5.875%, 7/15/2022 | 920,160 | ||
1,881,071 | ||||
Metals/Mining—4.7% | ||||
475M | Allegheny Technologies, Inc., 7.875%, 8/15/2023 | 510,767 | ||
250M | Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc., 5.875%, 6/1/2027 (a) | 243,750 | ||
Commercial Metals Co.: | ||||
525M | 4.875%, 5/15/2023 | 531,562 | ||
175M | 5.375%, 7/15/2027 | 174,562 | ||
250M | Constellium NV, 5.75%, 5/15/2024 (a) | 257,500 | ||
350M | First Quantum Minerals, Ltd., 6.5%, 3/1/2024 (a) | 328,562 | ||
175M | HudBay Minerals, Inc., 7.25%, 1/15/2023 (a) | 180,906 | ||
450M | Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Inc., 11%, 5/15/2022 (a) | 476,016 | ||
75M | Mineral Resources, Ltd., 8.125%, 5/1/2027 (a) | 78,281 | ||
25M | Mountain Province Diamonds, Inc., 8%, 12/15/2022 (a) | 24,969 | ||
375M | Natural Resource Partners, LP, 9.125%, 6/30/2025 (a) | 387,188 | ||
250M | Northwest Acquisitions, ULC, 7.125%, 11/1/2022 (a) | 173,125 | ||
Novelis, Inc.: | ||||
275M | 6.25%, 8/15/2024 (a) | 289,014 | ||
225M | 5.875%, 9/30/2026 (a) | 228,375 | ||
700M | SunCoke Energy Partners, LP, 7.5%, 6/15/2025 (a) | 686,000 | ||
525M | TMS International Corp., 7.25%, 8/15/2025 (a) | 509,250 | ||
5,079,827 | ||||
Real Estate—1.5% | ||||
Geo Group, Inc.: | ||||
100M | 5.125%, 4/1/2023 | 90,000 | ||
225M | 6%, 4/15/2026 | 196,807 | ||
325M | Greystar Real Estate Partners, 5.75%, 12/1/2025 (a) | 332,313 |
23 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Real Estate(continued) | ||||
Iron Mountain, Inc.: | ||||
$ 225M | 5.75%, 8/15/2024 | $ 227,844 | ||
250M | 5.25%, 3/15/2028 (a) | 251,563 | ||
175M | Lennar Corp., 4.875%, 12/15/2023 | 185,063 | ||
80M | MPT Operating Partnership, LP, 6.375%, 3/1/2024 | 83,900 | ||
225M | Sabra Health Care, LP, 5.125%, 8/15/2026 | 234,410 | ||
1,601,900 | ||||
Retail-General Merchandise—1.7% | ||||
1011778 B.C., ULC: | ||||
500M | 4.625%, 1/15/2022 (a) | 501,250 | ||
250M | 5%, 10/15/2025 (a) | 252,575 | ||
AmeriGas Partners, LP: | ||||
50M | 5.625%, 5/20/2024 | 53,500 | ||
225M | 5.5%, 5/20/2025 | 237,937 | ||
225M | J.C. Penney Co., Inc., 8.625%, 3/15/2025 | 111,375 | ||
150M | KFC Holding Co., LLC, 5%, 6/1/2024 (a) | 155,438 | ||
425M | L Brands, Inc., 6.75%, 7/1/2036 | 367,625 | ||
125M | SRS Distribution, Inc., 8.25%, 7/1/2026 (a) | 121,875 | ||
1,801,575 | ||||
Services—2.8% | ||||
525M | ADT Corp., 3.5%, 7/15/2022 | 525,656 | ||
225M | AECOM, 5.125%, 3/15/2027 | 235,125 | ||
GCI, Inc.: | ||||
300M | 6.75%, 6/1/2021 | 300,375 | ||
825M | 6.875%, 4/15/2025 | 864,187 | ||
525M | GW Honos Security Corp., 8.75%, 5/15/2025 (a) | 521,062 | ||
50M | KAR Auction Services, Inc., 5.125%, 6/1/2025 (a) | 51,125 | ||
91M | Prime Security Services Borrower, LLC, 9.25%, 5/15/2023 (a) | 95,739 | ||
United Rentals, Inc.: | ||||
150M | 4.625%, 10/15/2025 | 152,813 | ||
325M | 5.5%, 5/15/2027 | 342,875 | ||
3,088,957 | ||||
Telecommunications—2.6% | ||||
Frontier Communications Corp.: | ||||
175M | 8.5%, 4/1/2026 (a) | 170,187 | ||
75M | 8%, 4/1/2027 (a) | 78,187 | ||
400M | GCI, LLC, 6.625%, 6/15/2024 (a) | 420,120 | ||
225M | Qwest Corp., 7.25%, 9/15/2025 | 250,707 |
24 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Telecommunications(continued) | ||||
$ 125M | Telecom Italia Capital SA, 7.2%, 7/18/2036 | $ 138,437 | ||
200M | Telecom Italia SpA, 5.303%, 5/30/2024 | 207,750 | ||
375M | Telesat Canada, 8.875%, 11/15/2024 (a) | 406,875 | ||
Zayo Group, LLC: | ||||
350M | 6%, 4/1/2023 | 359,625 | ||
250M | 6.375%, 5/15/2025 | 255,925 | ||
525M | 5.75%, 1/15/2027 (a) | 536,224 | ||
2,824,037 | ||||
Transportation—2.1% | ||||
375M | BCD Acquisition, Inc., 9.625%, 9/15/2023 (a) | 395,156 | ||
Fly Leasing, Ltd.: | ||||
275M | 6.375%, 10/15/2021 | 282,219 | ||
250M | 5.25%, 10/15/2024 | 256,250 | ||
225M | Mobile Mini, Inc., 5.875%, 7/1/2024 | 232,313 | ||
300M | VistaJet Malta Finance, PLC, 10.5%, 6/1/2024 (a) | 300,000 | ||
750M | XPO Logistics, Inc., 6.125%, 9/1/2023 (a) | 779,063 | ||
2,245,001 | ||||
Utilities—3.2% | ||||
150M | AES Corp., 6%, 5/15/2026 | 159,750 | ||
Calpine Corp.: | ||||
100M | 5.75%, 1/15/2025 | 99,625 | ||
275M | 5.25%, 6/1/2026 (a) | 280,844 | ||
75M | Clearway Energy Operating, LLC, 5.75%, 10/15/2025 (a) | 76,406 | ||
300M | Drax Finco, PLC, 6.625%, 11/1/2025 (a) | 308,121 | ||
257M | Dynegy, Inc., 7.375%, 11/1/2022 | 266,959 | ||
21M | Indiantown Cogeneration Utilities, LP, 9.77%, 12/15/2020 | 22,114 | ||
400M | Nextera Energy Operating Partners, 4.25%, 7/15/2024 (a) | 403,258 | ||
125M | NRG Yield Operating, LLC, 5%, 9/15/2026 | 123,338 | ||
289M | NSG Holdings, LLC, 7.75%, 12/15/2025 (a) | 311,310 | ||
Talen Energy Supply, LLC: | ||||
100M | 7.25%, 5/15/2027 (a) | 102,750 | ||
175M | 6.625%, 1/15/2028 (a)(b) | 174,563 | ||
850M | Targa Resources Partners, LP, 4.25%, 11/15/2023 | 853,188 | ||
250M | Terraform Power Operating, LLC, 5%, 1/31/2028 (a) | 251,875 | ||
3,434,101 |
25 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Waste Management—.8% | ||||
$ 100M | Clean Harbors, Inc., 4.875%, 7/15/2027 (a)(b) | $ 101,885 | ||
275M | Covanta Holding Corp., 5.875%, 7/1/2025 | 287,031 | ||
GFL Environmental, Inc.: | ||||
175M | 5.625%, 5/1/2022 (a) | 177,187 | ||
250M | 8.5%, 5/1/2027 (a) | 269,687 | ||
835,790 | ||||
Wireless Communications—3.9% | ||||
275M | Consolidated Communications, Inc., 6.5%, 10/1/2022 | 257,727 | ||
175M | Hughes Satellite Systems Corp., 6.625%, 8/1/2026 | 184,406 | ||
150M | Inmarsat Finance, PLC, 4.875%, 5/15/2022 (a) | 151,688 | ||
275M | Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA, 8.5%, 10/15/2024 (a) | 273,625 | ||
Level 3 Financing, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 6.125%, 1/15/2021 | 251,875 | ||
75M | 5.375%, 8/15/2022 | 75,281 | ||
250M | 5.125%, 5/1/2023 | 253,025 | ||
300M | 5.375%, 1/15/2024 | 307,500 | ||
175M | Sprint Capital Corp., 8.75%, 3/15/2032 | 203,000 | ||
Sprint Corp.: | ||||
1,150M | 7.875%, 9/15/2023 | 1,252,063 | ||
125M | 7.125%, 6/15/2024 | 132,850 | ||
150M | 7.625%, 2/15/2025 | 160,125 | ||
450M | 7.625%, 3/1/2026 | 480,825 | ||
T-Mobile USA, Inc.: | ||||
50M | 6.5%, 1/15/2024 | 51,875 | ||
200M | 5.125%, 4/15/2025 | 208,906 | ||
4,244,771 | ||||
Total Value of Corporate Bonds(cost $97,549,197) | 98,765,216 | |||
LOAN PARTICIPATIONS†—5.0% | ||||
Chemicals—.4% | ||||
Flint Group: | ||||
69M | 5.5811%, 9/6/2021 | 59,066 | ||
423M | 5.5811%, 9/7/2021 | 361,805 | ||
420,871 | ||||
Financials—.5% | ||||
598M | TransUnion, LLC, 4.4023%, 6/30/2025 | 598,118 |
26 |
Principal | |||||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||||
Food/Beverage/Tobacco—.2% | |||||||
$ 237M | Chobani, LLC, 5.9023%, 10/9/2023 | $ 233,886 | |||||
Gaming/Leisure—.4% | |||||||
400M | Dorna Sports SL, 5.883%, 4/12/2024 | 393,418 | |||||
Health Care—.3% | |||||||
347M | Inovalon Holdings, Inc., 5.9375%, 4/2/2025 | 347,809 | |||||
Media-Cable TV—.1% | |||||||
150M | Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc., 2.75%, 6/19/2026 (b) | 149,562 | |||||
Media-Diversified—1.1% | |||||||
125M | DiscoverOrg., LLC, 6.9023%, 2/2/2026 | 124,337 | |||||
550M | iHeart Communications, 4%, 5/1/2026 (b) | 551,238 | |||||
500M | Tribune Media Co., 5.4023%, 1/29/2024 | 500,625 | |||||
1,176,200 | |||||||
Metals/Mining—.5% | |||||||
500M | Zekelman Industries, Inc., 4.6523%, 6/14/2021 | 499,062 | |||||
Telecommunication Services—1.2% | |||||||
497M | CenturyLink, Inc., 5.1523%, 1/31/2025 | 486,593 | |||||
800M | Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA, 6.9041%, 1/2/2024 | 804,000 | |||||
1,290,593 | |||||||
Utilities—.3% | |||||||
Edgewater Generation: | |||||||
120M | 6.1524%, 12/12/2025 | 119,926 | |||||
160M | 3.75%, 12/15/2025 (b) | 159,600 | |||||
279,526 | |||||||
Total Value of Loan Participations(cost $5,419,977) | 5,389,045 | ||||||
Total Value of Investments(cost $102,969,174) | 96.4 | % | 104,154,261 | ||||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 3.6 | 3,859,401 | |||||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $108,013,662 |
(a) | Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933 (see Note 5). |
(b) | A portion or all of the security purchased on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis (see Note 1G). |
† | Interest rates are determined and reset periodically. The interest rates above are the rates in effect |
at June 30, 2019. |
27 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
FUND FOR INCOME
June 30, 2019
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
LLLP | Limited Liability Limited Partnership | |
ULC | Unlimited Liability Corporation |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Corporate Bonds | $ | — | $ | 98,765,216 | $ | — | $ | 98,765,216 | ||||
Loan Participations | — | 5,389,045 | — | 5,389,045 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | — | $ | 104,154,261 | $ | — | $ | 104,154,261 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization of corporate bonds |
and loan participations. | |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
28 | See notes to financial statements |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
GOVERNMENT CASH MANAGEMENT FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,008.26 | $3.83 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.97 | $3.86 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .77%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). Expenses paid | |
during the period are net of expenses waived and/or assumed. |
Portfolio Composition
BY SECTOR
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
29 |
Portfolio of Investments
GOVERNMENT CASH MANAGEMENT FUND
June 30, 2019
Principal | Interest | ||||||
Amount | Security | Rate | * | Value | |||
SHORT-TERM U.S. GOVERNMENT | |||||||
OBLIGATIONS—65.7% | |||||||
U.S. Treasury Bills: | |||||||
$800M | 7/5/2019 | 2.38 | % | $ 799,788 | |||
350M | 7/11/2019 | 2.40 | 349,765 | ||||
800M | 7/18/2019 | 2.36 | 799,106 | ||||
400M | 7/25/2019 | 2.40 | 399,353 | ||||
500M | 7/30/2019 | 2.28 | 499,079 | ||||
500M | 8/1/2019 | 2.30 | 499,008 | ||||
200M | 8/8/2019 | 2.06 | 199,565 | ||||
400M | 8/8/2019 | 2.37 | 398,995 | ||||
600M | 8/22/2019 | 2.19 | 598,103 | ||||
400M | 9/19/2019 | 2.17 | 398,071 | ||||
500M | 10/17/2019 | 2.39 | 496,407 | ||||
400M | 10/24/2019 | 2.35 | 396,985 | ||||
350M | 10/31/2019 | 2.35 | 347,199 | ||||
400M | 11/21/2019 | 2.23 | 396,448 | ||||
Total Value of Short-Term U.S. Government Obligations(cost $6,577,872) | 6,577,872 | ||||||
VARIABLE AND FLOATING RATE NOTES—30.4% | |||||||
Federal Farm Credit Bank: | |||||||
400M | 7/2/2019 | 2.30 | 399,999 | ||||
400M | 8/9/2019 | 2.60 | 400,104 | ||||
900M | 11/14/2019 | 2.57 | 900,684 | ||||
Federal Home Loan Bank: | |||||||
440M | 7/5/2019 | 2.44 | 440,007 | ||||
400M | 7/25/2019 | 2.31 | 399,992 | ||||
500M | 10/11/2019 | 2.32 | 499,864 | ||||
Total Value of Variable and Floating Rate Notes(cost $3,040,650) | 3,040,650 |
30 |
Principal | Interest | ||||||
Amount | Security | Rate | * | Value | |||
SHORT-TERM U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY | |||||||
OBLIGATIONS—4.0% | |||||||
$400M | Federal Home Loan Bank, 7/12/2019 (cost $399,718) | 2.30 | % | $ 399,718 | |||
Total Value of Investments(cost $10,018,240)** | 100.1 | % | 10,018,240 | ||||
Excess of Liabilities Over Other Assets | (.1 | ) | (7,000) | ||||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $10,011,240 |
* | The interest rates shown are the effective rates at the time of purchase by the Fund. The interest |
rates shown on variable and floating rate notes are adjusted periodically; the rates shown are the | |
rates in effect at June 30, 2019. | |
** | Aggregate cost for federal income tax purposes is the same. |
31 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
GOVERNMENT CASH MANAGEMENT FUND
June 30, 2019
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Obligations | $ | — | $ | 6,577,872 | $ | — | $ | 6,577,872 | ||||
Variable and Floating Rate Notes: | ||||||||||||
U.S. Government Agency | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 3,040,650 | — | 3,040,650 | ||||||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Agency Obligations | — | 399,718 | — | 399,718 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities | $ | — | $ | 10,018,240 | $ | — | $ | 10,018,240 |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
32 | See notes to financial statements |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
GROWTH & INCOME FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,153.73 | $4.17 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.92 | $3.91 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .78%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
TOP TEN SECTORS
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
33 |
Portfolio of Investments
GROWTH & INCOME FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—92.6% | ||||
Communication Services—8.8% | ||||
4,950 | * | Alphabet, Inc. – Class “A” | $ 5,359,860 | |
226,550 | AT&T, Inc. | 7,591,690 | ||
52,100 | CBS Corp. – Class “B” | 2,599,790 | ||
217,450 | Comcast Corp. – Special Shares “A” | 9,193,786 | ||
86,650 | Fox Corp. – Class “B” | 3,165,324 | ||
36,250 | * | Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. | 4,115,463 | |
162,600 | Verizon Communications, Inc. | 9,289,338 | ||
19,927 | Walt Disney Co. | 2,782,606 | ||
44,097,857 | ||||
Consumer Discretionary—4.1% | ||||
35,650 | Aptiv, PLC | 2,881,590 | ||
1,650 | * | Booking Holdings, Inc. | 3,093,271 | |
10,000 | * | Burlington Stores, Inc. | 1,701,500 | |
24,350 | Home Depot, Inc. | 5,064,069 | ||
24,100 | Lowe’s Cos., Inc. | 2,431,931 | ||
18,900 | McDonald’s Corp. | 3,924,774 | ||
15,700 | Ross Stores, Inc. | 1,556,184 | ||
20,653,319 | ||||
Consumer Staples—6.8% | ||||
106,668 | Coca-Cola Co. | 5,431,535 | ||
65,079 | Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize NV (ADR) | 1,461,674 | ||
73,300 | Mondelez International, Inc. – Class “A” | 3,950,870 | ||
43,300 | PepsiCo, Inc. | 5,677,929 | ||
50,300 | Philip Morris International, Inc. | 3,950,059 | ||
62,200 | Procter & Gamble Co. | 6,820,230 | ||
62,350 | Walmart, Inc. | 6,889,052 | ||
34,181,349 | ||||
Energy—8.3% | ||||
131,638 | BP, PLC (ADR) | 5,489,305 | ||
64,700 | Chevron Corp. | 8,051,267 | ||
65,500 | ConocoPhillips | 3,995,500 | ||
22,800 | EOG Resources, Inc. | 2,124,048 | ||
101,350 | ExxonMobil Corp. | 7,766,450 | ||
45,700 | Hess Corp. | 2,905,149 |
34 |
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Energy(continued) | ||||
76,652 | Marathon Petroleum Corp. | $ 4,283,314 | ||
111,607 | Suncor Energy, Inc. | 3,477,674 | ||
45,550 | Valero Energy Corp. | 3,899,536 | ||
41,992,243 | ||||
Financials—18.5% | ||||
44,506 | American Express Co. | 5,493,821 | ||
46,500 | American International Group, Inc. | 2,477,520 | ||
298,150 | Bank of America Corp. | 8,646,350 | ||
82,950 | Bank of New York Mellon Corp. | 3,662,242 | ||
36,650 | * | Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. – Class “B” | 7,812,680 | |
55,500 | Chubb, Ltd. | 8,174,595 | ||
93,250 | Citigroup, Inc. | 6,530,297 | ||
104,850 | Citizens Financial Group, Inc. | 3,707,496 | ||
29,093 | Discover Financial Services | 2,257,326 | ||
18,250 | Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | 3,733,950 | ||
110,288 | JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 12,330,198 | ||
51,100 | MetLife, Inc. | 2,538,137 | ||
54,950 | Morgan Stanley | 2,407,360 | ||
34,400 | PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | 4,722,432 | ||
27,600 | Travelers Cos., Inc. | 4,126,752 | ||
120,200 | U.S. Bancorp | 6,298,480 | ||
173,667 | Wells Fargo & Co. | 8,217,922 | ||
93,137,558 | ||||
Health Care—14.4% | ||||
53,000 | Abbott Laboratories | 4,457,300 | ||
8,639 | Anthem, Inc. | 2,438,012 | ||
66,750 | * | Centene Corp. | 3,500,370 | |
34,850 | Eli Lilly & Co. | 3,861,032 | ||
54,000 | Gilead Sciences, Inc. | 3,648,240 | ||
38,100 | Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | 3,986,022 | ||
44,925 | Johnson & Johnson | 6,257,154 | ||
54,600 | Koninklijke Philips NV (ADR) | 2,379,468 | ||
72,512 | Medtronic, PLC | 7,061,944 | ||
107,943 | Merck & Co., Inc. | 9,051,021 | ||
198,993 | Pfizer, Inc. | 8,620,377 | ||
60,350 | Smith & Nephew, PLC (ADR) | 2,627,639 | ||
20,943 | Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | 6,150,540 |
35 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
GROWTH & INCOME FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Health Care(continued) | ||||
6,759 | UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | $ 1,649,264 | ||
42,700 | Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc. | 5,027,498 | ||
15,772 | Zoetis, Inc. | 1,789,964 | ||
72,505,845 | ||||
Industrials—10.4% | ||||
4,200 | Boeing Co. | 1,528,842 | ||
45,350 | Eaton Corp., PLC | 3,776,748 | ||
59,400 | * | Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. | 2,055,240 | |
39,300 | Honeywell International, Inc. | 6,861,387 | ||
35,950 | Ingersoll-Rand, PLC | 4,553,787 | ||
64,250 | Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. | 5,422,058 | ||
13,608 | Lockheed Martin Corp. | 4,947,052 | ||
97,600 | Masco Corp. | 3,829,824 | ||
16,300 | Northrop Grumman Corp. | 5,266,693 | ||
12,748 | Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | 1,843,488 | ||
33,600 | Union Pacific Corp. | 5,682,096 | ||
49,550 | United Technologies Corp. | 6,451,410 | ||
52,218,625 | ||||
Information Technology—11.6% | ||||
53,200 | * | Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. | 1,615,684 | |
73,021 | Applied Materials, Inc. | 3,279,373 | ||
8,909 | ASML Holdings NV | 1,852,448 | ||
184,050 | Cisco Systems, Inc. | 10,073,056 | ||
130,850 | Corning, Inc. | 4,348,145 | ||
89,350 | eBay, Inc. | 3,529,325 | ||
5,500 | * | FleetCor Technologies, Inc. | 1,544,675 | |
88,656 | HP, Inc. | 1,843,158 | ||
125,750 | Intel Corp. | 6,019,653 | ||
60,000 | Microsoft Corp. | 8,037,600 | ||
45,300 | Oracle Corp. | 2,580,741 | ||
69,688 | QUALCOMM, Inc. | 5,301,166 | ||
22,350 | * | Synopsys, Inc. | 2,876,222 | |
29,500 | TE Connectivity, Ltd. | 2,825,510 | ||
25,250 | Texas Instruments, Inc. | 2,897,690 | ||
58,624,446 |
36 |
Shares or | |||||||
Principal | |||||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||||
Materials—2.7% | |||||||
25,700 | Celanese Corp. | $ 2,770,460 | |||||
28,666 | Dow, Inc. | 1,413,520 | |||||
28,666 | DuPont de Nemours, Inc. | 2,151,957 | |||||
26,520 | FMC Corp. | 2,199,834 | |||||
13,150 | Linde, PLC | 2,640,520 | |||||
28,800 | LyondellBasell Industries NV – Class “A” | 2,480,544 | |||||
13,656,835 | |||||||
Real Estate—2.0% | |||||||
8,100 | American Tower Corp. (REIT) | 1,656,045 | |||||
21,800 | Crown Castle International Corp. (REIT) | 2,841,630 | |||||
12,800 | Federal Realty Investment Trust (REIT) | 1,648,128 | |||||
43,421 | iShares U.S. Real Estate (ETF) | 3,791,088 | |||||
9,936,891 | |||||||
Utilities—5.0% | |||||||
28,100 | American Electric Power Co., Inc. | 2,473,081 | |||||
46,350 | CMS Energy Corp. | 2,684,128 | |||||
26,950 | Entergy Corp. | 2,773,963 | |||||
50,450 | Exelon Corp. | 2,418,573 | |||||
64,100 | FirstEnergy Corp. | 2,744,121 | |||||
15,600 | NextEra Energy, Inc. | 3,195,816 | |||||
18,052 | Pinnacle West Capital Corp. | 1,698,513 | |||||
47,050 | Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund (ETF) | 2,805,592 | |||||
24,250 | WEC Energy Group, Inc. | 2,021,723 | |||||
42,300 | Xcel Energy, Inc. | 2,516,427 | |||||
25,331,937 | |||||||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $329,279,491) | 466,336,905 | ||||||
SHORT-TERM U.S. GOVERNMENT | |||||||
OBLIGATIONS—6.8% | |||||||
U.S. Treasury Bills: | |||||||
$20,000M | 2.05%, 7/2/2019 | 19,998,920 | |||||
14,000M | 1.989%, 7/16/2019 | 13,988,072 | |||||
Total Value of Short-Term U.S. Government Obligations(cost $33,987,255) | 33,986,992 | ||||||
Total Value of Investments(cost $363,266,746) | 99.4 | % | 500,323,897 | ||||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | .6 | 3,105,836 | |||||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $503,429,733 |
* | Non-income producing |
37 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
GROWTH & INCOME FUND
June 30, 2019
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ADR | American Depositary Receipts | |
ETF | Exchange Traded Fund | |
REIT | Real Estate Investment Trust | |
SPDR | Standard & Poor’s Depository Receipts |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Common Stocks | $ | 466,336,905 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 466,336,905 | ||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 33,986,992 | — | 33,986,992 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | 466,336,905 | $ | 33,986,992 | $ | — | $ | 500,323,897 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for common stocks. |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
38 | See notes to financial statements |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
INTERNATIONAL FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,189.12 | $4.67 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.53 | $4.31 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .86%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
BY SECTOR
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
39 |
Portfolio of Investments
INTERNATIONAL FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—96.6% | ||||
France—12.7% | ||||
30,605 | Air Liquide SA | $ 4,282,257 | ||
5,883 | L’Oreal SA | 1,675,735 | ||
6,105 | LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE | 2,598,389 | ||
34,855 | Safran SA | 5,106,793 | ||
19,846 | Teleperformance | 3,976,286 | ||
34,773 | VINCI SA | 3,561,007 | ||
21,200,467 | ||||
United Kingdom—12.4% | ||||
86,609 | Ashtead Group, PLC | 2,479,162 | ||
81,983 | Bunzl, PLC | 2,162,461 | ||
35,024 | DCC, PLC | 3,122,417 | ||
60,714 | Diageo, PLC | 2,609,199 | ||
38,230 | London Stock Exchange | 2,663,472 | ||
173,469 | RELX NV | 4,197,515 | ||
691,049 | Rentokil Initial, PLC | 3,488,462 | ||
20,722,688 | ||||
India—11.0% | ||||
226,669 | HDFC Bank, Ltd. | 8,024,662 | ||
114,721 | Housing Development Finance Corp., Ltd. | 3,643,184 | ||
1,138,336 | Power Grid Corp. of India, Ltd. | 3,411,998 | ||
101,800 | Tata Consultancy Services, Ltd. | 3,284,618 | ||
18,364,462 | ||||
Canada—10.1% | ||||
101,232 | Alimentation Couche-Tard, Inc. – Class “B” | 6,370,531 | ||
91,755 | CAE, Inc. | 2,467,026 | ||
39,705 | Canadian National Railway Co. | 3,674,733 | ||
4,540 | Constellation Software, Inc. | 4,278,947 | ||
16,791,237 | ||||
United States—9.8% | ||||
3,245 | * | Alphabet, Inc. – Class “C” | 3,507,553 | |
2,826 | * | Booking Holdings, Inc. | 5,297,930 | |
18,788 | Mastercard, Inc. – Class “A” | 4,969,990 | ||
25,748 | Medtronic, PLC | 2,507,598 | ||
16,283,071 |
40 |
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Netherlands—6.5% | ||||
15,161 | Heineken NV | $ 1,691,892 | ||
94,809 | Unilever NV – CVA | 5,774,161 | ||
46,207 | Wolters Kluwer NV | 3,363,738 | ||
10,829,791 | ||||
Switzerland—5.2% | ||||
41,813 | * | Alcon, Inc. | 2,581,938 | |
59,220 | Nestle SA | 6,130,684 | ||
8,712,622 | ||||
Germany—5.0% | ||||
11,564 | Adidas AG | 3,570,069 | ||
34,140 | SAP SE | 4,687,976 | ||
8,258,045 | ||||
Belgium—3.4% | ||||
64,336 | Anheuser-Busch InBev SA | 5,694,500 | ||
Spain—3.4% | ||||
45,052 | * | Cellnex Telecom SA | 1,666,980 | |
134,298 | Grifols SA – Class “A” | 3,970,467 | ||
5,637,447 | ||||
China—3.2% | ||||
19,412 | * | Alibaba Group Holding, Ltd. (ADR) | 3,289,363 | |
44,510 | Tencent Holdings, Ltd. | 2,009,067 | ||
5,298,430 | ||||
Ireland—2.5% | ||||
18,411 | Flutter Entertainment, PLC | 1,384,651 | ||
51,838 | Kingspan Group, PLC | 2,815,213 | ||
4,199,864 | ||||
Brazil—2.5% | ||||
79,781 | Equatorial Energia SA | 1,919,132 | ||
232,826 | Itau Unibanco Holding SA (ADR) | 2,193,221 | ||
4,112,353 |
41 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
INTERNATIONAL FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares or | |||||
Principal | |||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||
Japan—2.4% | |||||
6,422 | Keyence Corp. | $ 3,939,033 | |||
Hong Kong—2.2% | |||||
469,440 | Techtronic Industries Co., Ltd. | 3,593,650 | |||
Mexico—1.9% | |||||
1,138,160 | Walmart de Mexico SAB de CV | 3,106,647 | |||
Taiwan—1.2% | |||||
52,949 | Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. , Ltd. (ADR) | 2,074,012 | |||
Australia—1.2% | |||||
13,330 | CSL, Ltd. | 2,012,040 | |||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $115,915,787) | 160,830,359 | ||||
SHORT-TERM U.S.GOVERNMENT | |||||
OBLIGATIONS—1.8% | |||||
United States | |||||
$3,000M | U.S. Treasury Bills, 2.05%, 7/2/2019 (cost $2,999,829) | 2,999,838 | |||
Total Value of Investments(cost $118,915,616) | 98.4 | % | 163,830,197 | ||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 1.6 | 2,619,512 | |||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $166,449,709 |
* | Non-income producing | |
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ADR | American Depositary Receipts |
42 |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Common Stocks | ||||||||||||
France | $ | 21,200,467 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 21,200,467 | ||||
United Kingdom | 20,722,688 | — | — | 20,722,688 | ||||||||
India | 18,364,462 | — | — | 18,364,462 | ||||||||
Canada | 16,791,237 | — | — | 16,791,237 | ||||||||
United States | 16,283,071 | — | — | 16,283,071 | ||||||||
Netherlands | 10,829,791 | — | — | 10,829,791 | ||||||||
Switzerland | 8,712,622 | — | — | 8,712,622 | ||||||||
Germany | 8,258,045 | — | — | 8,258,045 | ||||||||
Belgium | 5,694,500 | — | — | 5,694,500 | ||||||||
Spain | 5,637,447 | — | — | 5,637,447 | ||||||||
China | 5,298,430 | — | — | 5,298,430 | ||||||||
Ireland | 4,199,864 | — | — | 4,199,864 | ||||||||
Brazil | 4,112,353 | — | — | 4,112,353 | ||||||||
Japan | 3,939,033 | — | — | 3,939,033 | ||||||||
Hong Kong | 3,593,650 | — | — | 3,593,650 | ||||||||
Mexico | 3,106,647 | — | — | 3,106,647 | ||||||||
Taiwan | 2,074,012 | — | — | 2,074,012 | ||||||||
Australia | 2,012,040 | — | — | 2,012,040 | ||||||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 2,999,838 | — | 2,999,838 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities | $ | 160,830,359 | $ | 2,999,838 | $ | — | $ | 163,830,197 |
Transfers between Level 2 and Level 1 securities as of June 30, 2019 resulted from securities priced |
previously with an official close price (Level 1 securities) or securities fair valued by the Valuation |
Committee (Level 2 securities). Transfers from Level 2 to Level 1 for the six months ended June 30, 2019 |
were $18,957,557. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
See notes to financial statements | 43 |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
INVESTMENT GRADE FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,091.47 | $3.63 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,021.32 | $3.51 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .70%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). Expenses paid | |
during the period are net of expenses waived. |
Portfolio Composition
TOP TEN SECTORS
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on thetotal value of investments. |
44 |
Portfolio of Investments
INVESTMENT GRADE FUND
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
CORPORATE BONDS—83.1% | ||||
Aerospace/Defense—.8% | ||||
$ 500M | Rockwell Collins, Inc., 3.5%, 3/15/2027 | $ 520,761 | ||
Automotive—5.3% | ||||
500M | Daimler Finance NA, LLC, 3.3%, 5/19/2025 (a) | 512,066 | ||
Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC: | ||||
600M | 8.125%, 1/15/2020 | 617,068 | ||
400M | 3.81%, 1/9/2024 | 400,134 | ||
General Motors Financial Co., Inc.: | ||||
400M | 5.25%, 3/1/2026 | 429,408 | ||
100M | 5.65%, 1/17/2029 | 110,061 | ||
Lear Corp.: | ||||
400M | 5.25%, 1/15/2025 | 414,456 | ||
300M | 3.8%, 9/15/2027 | 297,240 | ||
400M | O’Reilly Automotive, Inc., 3.55%, 3/15/2026 | 412,767 | ||
300M | Volkswagen Group America, 4%, 11/12/2021 | 309,756 | ||
3,502,956 | ||||
Chemicals—2.9% | ||||
500M | Dow Chemical Co., 3.5%, 10/1/2024 | 520,004 | ||
500M | DowDuPont, Inc., 4.725%, 11/15/2028 | 566,656 | ||
500M | LyondellBasell Industries NV, 6%, 11/15/2021 | 536,284 | ||
300M | Nutrien, Ltd., 3.375%, 3/15/2025 | 307,727 | ||
1,930,671 | ||||
Energy—9.5% | ||||
500M | Andeavor Logistics, LP, 5.25%, 1/15/2025 | 529,260 | ||
399M | Continental Resources, Inc., 5%, 9/15/2022 | 402,687 | ||
400M | Enable Midstream Partners, LP, 4.4%, 3/15/2027 | 403,504 | ||
500M | Enbridge Energy Partners, LP, 4.2%, 9/15/2021 | 515,650 | ||
Enterprise Products Operating: | ||||
300M | 7.55%, 4/15/2038 | 415,980 | ||
200M | 4.8%, 2/1/2049 | 222,265 | ||
200M | 4.2%, 1/31/2050 (b) | 205,386 | ||
500M | Kinder Morgan Energy Partners, LP, 3.45%, 2/15/2023 | 514,004 | ||
450M | Kinder Morgan, Inc., 5.625%, 11/15/2023 (a) | 498,570 | ||
Magellan Midstream Partners, LP: | ||||
500M | 5%, 3/1/2026 | 555,942 | ||
400M | 4.85%, 2/1/2049 | 447,641 | ||
400M | Midwest Connector Capital Co., LLC, 4.625%, 4/1/2029 (a) | 429,064 | ||
400M | Noble Energy, Inc., 3.85%, 1/15/2028 | 408,239 |
45 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
INVESTMENT GRADE FUND
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Energy(continued) | ||||
Valero Energy Corp.: | ||||
$ 300M | 4.35%, 6/1/2028 | $ 320,253 | ||
300M | 6.625%, 6/15/2037 | 380,593 | ||
6,249,038 | ||||
Financial Services—6.6% | ||||
750M | Brookfield Finance, Inc., 4.85%, 3/29/2029 | 820,996 | ||
500M | ERAC USA Finance, LLC, 4.5%, 8/16/2021 (a) | 521,395 | ||
250M | GE Capital International Funding Services, Ltd., 4.418%, 11/15/2035 | 247,853 | ||
700M | General Electric Capital Corp., 4.65%, 10/17/2021 | 729,568 | ||
500M | International Lease Finance Corp., 8.25%, 12/15/2020 | 539,621 | ||
400M | Liberty Mutual Group, Inc., 4.95%, 5/1/2022 (a) | 423,795 | ||
Protective Life Corp.: | ||||
600M | 7.375%, 10/15/2019 | 608,047 | ||
400M | 4.3%, 9/30/2028 (a) | 421,696 | ||
4,312,971 | ||||
Financials—23.1% | ||||
Bank of America Corp.: | ||||
1,000M | 4.2%, 8/26/2024 | 1,063,716 | ||
500M | 4%, 1/22/2025 | 526,270 | ||
300M | 3.559%, 4/23/2027 | 313,420 | ||
475M | 5.875%, 2/7/2042 | 632,118 | ||
600M | Barclays Bank, PLC, 3.75%, 5/15/2024 | 622,058 | ||
300M | Capital One Financial Corp., 3.75%, 4/24/2024 | 315,031 | ||
Citigroup, Inc.: | ||||
200M | 2.9%, 12/8/2021 | 202,150 | ||
450M | 4.5%, 1/14/2022 | 473,211 | ||
450M | 4.3%, 11/20/2026 | 478,301 | ||
300M | 4.075%, 4/23/2029 | 322,529 | ||
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.: | ||||
250M | 3.85%, 7/8/2024 | 262,450 | ||
1,100M | 3.5%, 11/16/2026 | 1,128,038 | ||
700M | 4.223%, 5/1/2029 | 751,367 | ||
250M | HSBC Holdings, PLC, 3.95%, 5/18/2024 | 261,694 | ||
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | ||||
800M | 3.54%, 5/1/2028 † | 833,402 | ||
250M | 4.452%, 12/5/2029 | 278,976 | ||
850M | 6.4%, 5/15/2038 | 1,174,270 |
46 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Financials(continued) | ||||
Morgan Stanley: | ||||
$ 500M | 4.1%, 5/22/2023 | $ 526,692 | ||
300M | 4%, 7/23/2025 | 321,592 | ||
400M | 3.625%, 1/20/2027 | 420,189 | ||
400M | UBS AG, 4.875%, 8/4/2020 | 411,241 | ||
UBS Group Funding (Switzerland) AG: | ||||
500M | 3.491%, 5/23/2023 (a) | 512,856 | ||
300M | 4.253%, 3/23/2028 (a) | 323,614 | ||
Wells Fargo & Co.: | ||||
900M | 3.45%, 2/13/2023 | 925,589 | ||
500M | 3.196%, 6/17/2027 | 510,021 | ||
750M | 4.75%, 12/7/2046 | 856,145 | ||
Wells Fargo Bank, NA: | ||||
250M | 5.85%, 2/1/2037 | 321,434 | ||
250M | 6.6%, 1/15/2038 | 348,091 | ||
15,116,465 | ||||
Food/Beverage/Tobacco—2.0% | ||||
900M | Anheuser-Busch Cos., LLC, 4.7%, 2/1/2036 | 988,804 | ||
300M | Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide, 4.15%, 1/23/2025 | 325,183 | ||
1,313,987 | ||||
Forest Products/Containers—.6% | ||||
400M | Packaging Corp. of America, 3.4%, 12/15/2027 | 404,886 | ||
Health Care—2.0% | ||||
CVS Health Corp.: | ||||
400M | 3.875%, 7/20/2025 | 418,007 | ||
200M | 4.3%, 3/25/2028 | 211,076 | ||
200M | 5.05%, 3/25/2048 | 213,352 | ||
450M | Express Scripts Holding Co., 4.75%, 11/15/2021 | 472,651 | ||
1,315,086 | ||||
Information Technology—3.0% | ||||
400M | Corning, Inc., 7.25%, 8/15/2036 | 484,785 | ||
900M | Diamond 1 Finance Corp., 4.42%, 6/15/2021 (a) | 927,687 | ||
500M | International Business Machines Corp., 4.25%, 5/15/2049 | 539,567 | ||
1,952,039 |
47 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
INVESTMENT GRADE FUND
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Manufacturing—1.8% | ||||
$ 400M | Crane Co., 4.2%, 3/15/2048 | $ 395,787 | ||
250M | CRH America, Inc., 3.4%, 5/9/2027 (a) | 249,716 | ||
500M | Johnson Controls International, PLC, 5%, 3/30/2020 | 509,250 | ||
1,154,753 | ||||
Media-Broadcasting—.3% | ||||
200M | ABC, Inc., 8.75%, 8/15/2021 | 225,950 | ||
Media-Cable TV—2.0% | ||||
Comcast Corp.: | ||||
700M | 4.25%, 1/15/2033 | 785,910 | ||
250M | 4.2%, 8/15/2034 | 277,590 | ||
200M | 4.7%, 10/15/2048 | 234,576 | ||
1,298,076 | ||||
Media-Diversified—1.3% | ||||
Fox Corp.: | ||||
300M | 4.03%, 1/25/2024 (a) | 319,304 | ||
500M | 4.709%, 1/25/2029 (a) | 559,822 | ||
879,126 | ||||
Metals/Mining—2.4% | ||||
500M | Arconic, Inc., 6.15%, 8/15/2020 | 517,629 | ||
500M | Glencore Funding, LLC, 4.625%, 4/29/2024 (a) | 529,010 | ||
500M | Newmont Mining Corp., 5.125%, 10/1/2019 | 502,993 | ||
1,549,632 | ||||
Real Estate—6.6% | ||||
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc.: | ||||
400M | 3.95%, 1/15/2028 | 421,025 | ||
200M | 4.85%, 4/15/2049 | 229,605 | ||
Digital Realty Trust, LP: | ||||
800M | 4.75%, 10/1/2025 | 877,479 | ||
250M | 3.6%, 7/1/2029 | 253,820 | ||
Duke Realty, LP: | ||||
200M | 3.25%, 6/30/2026 | 203,443 | ||
300M | 4%, 9/15/2028 | 321,465 | ||
300M | Essex Portfolio, LP, 3.875%, 5/1/2024 | 314,779 | ||
200M | HCP, Inc., 4.25%, 11/15/2023 | 212,555 |
48 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Real Estate(continued) | ||||
$ 500M | National Retail Properties, Inc., 4%, 11/15/2025 | $ 527,917 | ||
500M | Realty Income Corp., 3.875%, 4/15/2025 | 532,338 | ||
400M | STORE Capital Corp., 4.5%, 3/15/2028 | 421,901 | ||
4,316,327 | ||||
Retail-General Merchandise—1.0% | ||||
500M | Home Depot, Inc., 5.875%, 12/16/2036 | 664,272 | ||
Telecommunications—4.9% | ||||
AT&T, Inc.: | ||||
400M | 3.6%, 7/15/2025 | 415,434 | ||
500M | 4.25%, 3/1/2027 | 536,336 | ||
600M | 4.85%, 3/1/2039 | 645,122 | ||
Verizon Communications, Inc.: | ||||
600M | 4.329%, 9/21/2028 | 665,480 | ||
900M | 4.272%, 1/15/2036 | 976,316 | ||
3,238,688 | ||||
Transportation—2.3% | ||||
400M | Air Lease Corp., 4.25%, 2/1/2024 | 422,262 | ||
300M | Aviation Capital Group, LLC, 3.5%, 11/1/2027 (a) | 300,456 | ||
Burlington Northern Santa Fe, LLC: | ||||
200M | 5.75%, 5/1/2040 | 264,022 | ||
400M | 5.15%, 9/1/2043 | 497,708 | ||
1,484,448 | ||||
Utilities—4.7% | ||||
200M | Energy Transfer Partners, LP, 5.25%, 4/15/2029 | 223,656 | ||
300M | Entergy Arkansas, Inc., 4.95%, 12/15/2044 | 317,797 | ||
400M | Exelon Generation Co., LLC, 3.4%, 3/15/2022 | 410,044 | ||
400M | NRG Energy, Inc., 3.75%, 6/15/2024 (a) | 411,308 | ||
500M | Ohio Power Co., 5.375%, 10/1/2021 | 534,157 | ||
300M | Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co., 4%, 12/15/2044 | 314,017 | ||
500M | ONEOK, Inc., 4.55%, 7/15/2028 | 543,201 | ||
300M | Sempra Energy, 3.0968%, 1/15/2021 † | 299,097 | ||
3,053,277 | ||||
Total Value of Corporate Bonds(cost $51,780,291) | 54,483,409 |
49 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
INVESTMENT GRADE FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares or | |||||
Principal | |||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS—8.0% | |||||
U.S. Treasury Bonds: | |||||
$ 650M | 3%, 2/15/2048 | $ 712,220 | |||
920M | 3%, 8/15/2048 | 1,009,161 | |||
200M | 3%, 2/15/2049 | 219,695 | |||
180M | 3.125%, 5/15/2048 | 202,018 | |||
U.S. Treasury Notes: | |||||
800M | 2.25%, 3/31/2021 | 806,313 | |||
250M | 2.375%, 3/15/2022 | 254,478 | |||
500M | 2.375%, 2/29/2024 | 514,140 | |||
425M | 2.5%, 1/31/2025 | 440,805 | |||
400M | 2.75%, 6/30/2025 | 421,024 | |||
620M | 2.875%, 8/15/2028 | 666,355 | |||
Total Value of U.S. Government Obligations(cost $4,915,157) | 5,246,209 | ||||
EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS—4.6% | |||||
34,370 | iShares iBoxx USD High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (ETF) | ||||
(cost $2,947,627) | 2,996,377 | ||||
PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES—.7% | |||||
Transportation | |||||
$ 473M | American Airlines 17-2 AA PTT, 3.35%, 10/15/2029 | ||||
(cost $472,939) | 478,793 | ||||
Total Value of Investments(cost $60,116,014) | 96.4 | % | 63,204,788 | ||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 3.6 | 2,361,549 | |||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $65,566,337 |
(a) | Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933 (see Note 5). |
(b) | A portion or all of the security purchased on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis (see |
Note 1G). | |
† | Interest rates are determined and reset periodically. The interest rates above are the rates in effect |
at June 30, 2019. |
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ETF | Exchange Traded Fund | |
PTT | Pass Through Trust | |
USD | United States Dollar |
50 |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Corporate Bonds | $ | — | $ | 54,483,409 | $ | — | $ | 54,483,409 | ||||
U.S. Government Obligations | — | 5,246,209 | — | 5,246,209 | ||||||||
Exchange Traded Funds | 2,996,377 | — | — | 2,996,377 | ||||||||
Pass-Through Certificates | — | 478,793 | — | 478,793 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | 2,996,377 | $ | 60,208,411 | $ | — | $ | 63,204,788 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for corporate bonds |
and pass-through certificates. | |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
See notes to financial statements | 51 |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
LIMITED DURATION BOND FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,032.28 | $3.78 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,021.07 | $3.76 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .75%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). Expenses paid | |
during the period are net of expenses waived. |
Portfolio Composition
TOP TEN SECTORS
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
52 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
LIMITED DURATION BOND FUND
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
CORPORATE BONDS—51.2% | ||||
Automotive—7.2% | ||||
General Motors Financial Co., Inc.: | ||||
$ 700M | 3.2%, 7/13/2020 | $ 702,610 | ||
100M | 4.2%, 11/6/2021 | 103,003 | ||
108M | 4.1468%, 1/14/2022 † | 109,061 | ||
200M | 3.55%, 7/8/2022 | 203,657 | ||
Hyundai Capital America: | ||||
550M | 3.45%, 3/12/2021 (a) | 556,290 | ||
150M | 3.5286%, 7/8/2021 (a)† | 150,205 | ||
510M | O’Reilly Automotive, Inc., 4.625%, 9/15/2021 | 532,394 | ||
100M | Volkswagen Group America, 4%, 11/12/2021 | 103,252 | ||
2,460,472 | ||||
Chemicals—1.2% | ||||
400M | DowDuPont, Inc., 3.766%, 11/15/2020 | 407,786 | ||
Energy—4.9% | ||||
580M | Continental Resources, Inc., 5%, 9/15/2022 | 585,360 | ||
750M | Magellan Midstream Partners, LP, 4.25%, 2/1/2021 | 771,014 | ||
300M | Midwest Connector Capital Co., LLC, 3.625%, 4/1/2022 (a) | 307,499 | ||
1,663,873 | ||||
Financial Services—5.7% | ||||
220M | Compass Bank, 5.5%, 4/1/2020 | 224,529 | ||
500M | DNB Boligkreditt AS, 2.5%, 3/28/2022 (a) | 506,325 | ||
900M | PNC Bank, NA, 2.7%, 11/1/2022 | 909,356 | ||
200M | Protective Life Corp., 7.375%, 10/15/2019 | 202,682 | ||
100M | SunTrust Bank, 2.8%, 5/17/2022 | 101,312 | ||
1,944,204 | ||||
Financials—13.4% | ||||
450M | Bank of Montreal, 1.9%, 8/27/2021 | 447,305 | ||
600M | Capital One Financial Corp., 3.05%, 3/9/2022 | 609,565 | ||
750M | Citigroup, Inc., 2.65%, 10/26/2020 | 752,800 | ||
100M | Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., 5.75%, 1/24/2022 | 108,117 | ||
300M | HSBC Holdings, PLC, 3.803%, 3/11/2025 | 312,754 | ||
500M | JPMorgan Chase & Co., 4.5%, 1/24/2022 | 527,059 | ||
820M | Morgan Stanley, 5.5%, 7/28/2021 | 871,494 | ||
450M | Wells Fargo & Co., 3.45%, 2/13/2023 | 462,794 | ||
450M | Wells Fargo Bank, NA, 2.6%, 1/15/2021 | 451,984 | ||
4,543,872 |
53 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)(continued)
LIMITED DURATION BOND FUND
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Food/Beverage/Tobacco—2.4% | ||||
$ 500M | General Mills, Inc., 3.141%, 4/16/2021 † | $ 500,332 | ||
310M | Ingredion, Inc., 4.625%, 11/1/2020 | 318,492 | ||
818,824 | ||||
Health Care—5.0% | ||||
250M | CVS Health Corp., 2.8%, 7/20/2020 | 250,686 | ||
500M | Gilead Sciences, Inc., 2.55%, 9/1/2020 | 501,577 | ||
950M | Halfmoon Parent, Inc., 3.2%, 9/17/2020 (a) | 958,977 | ||
1,711,240 | ||||
Media-Cable TV—.9% | ||||
300M | Comcast Corp., 3.3%, 10/1/2020 | 304,176 | ||
Metals/Mining—.3% | ||||
100M | Viterra, Inc., 5.95%, 8/1/2020 | 103,347 | ||
Real Estate—2.1% | ||||
100M | Digital Realty Trust, LP, 2.75%, 2/1/2023 | 99,971 | ||
610M | Realty Income Corp., 3.25%, 10/15/2022 | 626,060 | ||
726,031 | ||||
Transportation—2.8% | ||||
200M | Aviation Capital Group, LLC, 7.125%, 10/15/2020 (a) | 211,598 | ||
691M | Heathrow Funding, Ltd., 4.875%, 7/15/2021 (a) | 736,081 | ||
947,679 | ||||
Utilities—5.3% | ||||
500M | DTE Energy Co., 3.3%, 6/15/2022 | 510,911 | ||
138M | Entergy Corp., 5.125%, 9/15/2020 | 141,267 | ||
472M | Exelon Generation Co., LLC, 5.2%, 10/1/2019 | 474,892 | ||
100M | Florida Power & Light Co., 2.9651%, 5/6/2022 † | 100,050 | ||
565M | Sempra Energy, 2.8603%, 3/15/2021 † | 562,827 | ||
1,789,947 | ||||
Total Value of Corporate Bonds(cost $17,088,213) | 17,421,451 |
54 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES—16.5% | ||||
Fixed Autos—7.6% | ||||
$ 300M | AmeriCredit Automobile Receivables Trust, 3.13%, 2/18/2025 | $ 305,775 | ||
100M | BMW Vehicle Lease Trust, 3.26%, 7/20/2021 | 101,330 | ||
150M | CarMax Auto Owner Trust, 3.37%, 10/16/2023 | 153,789 | ||
100M | GM Financial Automobile Leasing Trust, 3.31%, 4/20/2022 | 101,058 | ||
Hertz Vehicle Financing Trust: | ||||
200M | 2.27%, 7/25/2020 | 199,923 | ||
300M | 2.96%, 10/25/2021 | 301,888 | ||
300M | 3.29%, 2/25/2024 (a) | 305,510 | ||
360M | Santander Drive Auto Receivables Trust, 3.03%, 9/15/2022 | 361,564 | ||
558M | Tesla Auto Lease Trust, 3.71%, 8/20/2021 (a) | 566,441 | ||
187M | Volkswagen Auto Loan Enhanced Trust, 3.05%, 8/20/2021 | 187,563 | ||
2,584,841 | ||||
Fixed Communication Services—3.8% | ||||
Verizon Owner Trust: | ||||
663M | 1.92%, 12/20/2021 (a) | 661,746 | ||
230M | 3.23%, 4/20/2023 | 234,521 | ||
400M | 2.93%, 9/20/2023 | 407,238 | ||
1,303,505 | ||||
Fixed Credit Cards—3.9% | ||||
14M | American Credit Acceptance Trust, 2.61%, 5/10/2021 (a) | 14,044 | ||
300M | Citibank Credit Card Issuance Trust, 2.49%, 1/20/2023 | 302,139 | ||
700M | Discover Card Execution Note Trust, 2.19%, 4/17/2023 † | 701,207 | ||
300M | Synchrony Credit Card Master Trust, 1.93%, 6/15/2023 | 298,940 | ||
1,316,330 | ||||
Fixed Manufacturing—1.2% | ||||
200M | John Deere Owner Trust, 2.91%, 7/17/2023 | 203,726 | ||
210M | Kubota Credit Owner Trust, 3.1%, 8/15/2022 (a) | 213,005 | ||
416,731 | ||||
Total Value of Asset-Backed Securities(cost $5,544,243) | 5,621,407 | |||
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS—13.0% | ||||
U.S. Treasury Notes: | ||||
200M | 2%, 5/31/2024 | 202,371 | ||
1,150M | 2.375%, 2/29/2024 | 1,182,523 | ||
2,980M | 2.75%, 11/30/2020 | 3,017,715 | ||
Total Value of U.S. Government Obligations(cost $4,345,938) | 4,402,609 |
55 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)(continued)
LIMITED DURATION BOND FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares or | |||||
Principal | |||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY | |||||
OBLIGATIONS—8.4% | |||||
$ 300M | Fannie Mae, 1.5%, 11/30/2020 | $ 298,570 | |||
2,500M | Federal Farm Credit Bank, 2.7%, 8/27/2021 | 2,548,093 | |||
Total Value of U.S. Government Agency Obligations(cost $2,787,797) | 2,846,663 | ||||
EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS—5.0% | |||||
19,500 | iShares iBoxx USD High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (ETF) | ||||
(cost $1,628,955) | 1,700,010 | ||||
COVERED BONDS—1.9% | |||||
Financial Services | |||||
$ 650M | Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, 2.35%, 7/27/2022 | ||||
(cost $650,257) (a) | 657,196 | ||||
COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED | |||||
SECURITIES—1.3% | |||||
Fannie Mae—.8% | |||||
247M | Fannie Mae, 2.995%, 11/1/2022 | 252,073 | |||
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation—. 5% | |||||
181M | Multi-Family Structured Pass-Throughs, 2.768%, 5/25/2024 † | 180,394 | |||
Total Value of Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities(cost $248,778) | 432,467 | ||||
COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE | |||||
OBLIGATIONS—1.1% | |||||
349M | Fannie Mae, 4%, 2/25/2025 (cost $537,846) | 362,530 | |||
Total Value of Investments(cost $32,832,027) | 98.4 | % | 33,444,333 | ||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 1.6 | 547,050 | |||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $33,991,383 |
(a) | Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933 (see Note 5). |
† | Interest rates are determined and reset periodically. The interest rates above are the rates in effect |
at June 30, 2019. |
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ETF | Exchange Traded Fund | |
USD | United States Dollar |
56 |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Corporate Bonds | $ | — | $ | 17,421,451 | $ | — | $ | 17,421,451 | ||||
Asset-Backed Securities | — | 5,621,407 | — | 5,621,407 | ||||||||
U.S. Government Obligations | — | 4,402,609 | — | 4,402,609 | ||||||||
U.S. Government Agency | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 2,846,663 | — | 2,846,663 | ||||||||
Exchange Traded Funds | 1,700,010 | — | — | 1,700,010 | ||||||||
Covered Bonds | — | 657,196 | — | 657,196 | ||||||||
Commercial Mortgage-Backed | ||||||||||||
Securities | — | 432,467 | — | 432,467 | ||||||||
Collateralized Mortgage | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 362,530 | — | 362,530 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | 1,700,010 | $ | 31,744,323 | $ | — | $ | 33,444,333 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization of corporate |
bonds, covered bonds and asset-backed securities. | |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
See notes to financial statements | 57 |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
OPPORTUNITY FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,194.34 | $4.52 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.67 | $4.16 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .83%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
TOP TEN SECTORS
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
58 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
OPPORTUNITY FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—96.7% | ||||
Communication Services—3.2% | ||||
5,200 | * | IAC/InterActive Corp. | $ 1,131,156 | |
7,700 | Meredith Corp. | 423,962 | ||
8,200 | * | Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. | 930,946 | |
2,486,064 | ||||
Consumer Discretionary—10.4% | ||||
24,200 | Acushnet Holdings Corp. | 635,492 | ||
18,900 | Aramark Holdings Corp. | 681,534 | ||
3,300 | * | Burlington Stores, Inc. | 561,495 | |
18,050 | Designer Brands, Inc. – Class “A” | 346,018 | ||
2,650 | Lear Corp. | 369,066 | ||
23,050 | * | LKQ Corp. | 613,361 | |
5,500 | Oxford Industries, Inc. | 416,900 | ||
11,150 | Penske Automotive Group, Inc. | 527,395 | ||
6,750 | Ross Stores, Inc. | 669,060 | ||
24,400 | * | ServiceMaster Global Holdings, Inc. | 1,270,996 | |
20,850 | Tapestry, Inc. | 661,571 | ||
30,150 | * | Taylor Morrison Home Corp. – Class “A” | 631,944 | |
12,900 | Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | 719,046 | ||
8,103,878 | ||||
Consumer Staples—5.5% | ||||
18,400 | Conagra Brands, Inc. | 487,968 | ||
39,050 | Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize NV (ADR) | 877,063 | ||
2,600 | Lancaster Colony Corp. | 386,360 | ||
4,800 | McCormick & Co., Inc. | 744,048 | ||
19,000 | * | Performance Food Group Co. | 760,570 | |
28,300 | * | U.S. Foods Holding Corp. | 1,012,008 | |
4,268,017 | ||||
Energy—4.0% | ||||
21,050 | Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | 483,308 | ||
75,300 | EnCana Corp. | 386,289 | ||
30,550 | Noble Energy, Inc. | 684,320 | ||
14,600 | PBF Energy, Inc. – Class “A” | 456,980 | ||
29,850 | * | ProPetro Holding Corp. | 617,895 | |
5,700 | Valero Energy Corp. | 487,977 | ||
3,116,769 |
59 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)(continued)
OPPORTUNITY FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Financials—15.9% | ||||
5,800 | American Financial Group, Inc. | $ 594,326 | ||
6,150 | Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | 892,734 | ||
27,900 | Brown & Brown, Inc. | 934,650 | ||
41,400 | Citizens Financial Group, Inc. | 1,463,904 | ||
28,200 | Fidelity National Financial, Inc. | 1,136,460 | ||
7,958 | First Republic Bank | 777,099 | ||
8,650 | IBERIABANK Corp. | 656,102 | ||
13,900 | Nasdaq, Inc. | 1,336,763 | ||
16,950 | Popular, Inc. | 919,368 | ||
12,450 | Selective Insurance Group, Inc. | 932,381 | ||
42,050 | Sterling Bancorp | 894,824 | ||
27,300 | Synchrony Financial | 946,491 | ||
10,000 | Torchmark Corp. | 894,600 | ||
12,379,702 | ||||
Health Care—13.0% | ||||
19,450 | * | Centene Corp. | 1,019,958 | |
8,800 | * | Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. | 1,248,720 | |
8,500 | Gilead Sciences, Inc. | 574,260 | ||
8,300 | Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | 868,346 | ||
4,100 | iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology (ETF) | 447,310 | ||
6,300 | * | Jazz Pharmaceuticals, PLC | 898,128 | |
9,400 | PerkinElmer, Inc. | 905,596 | ||
21,400 | Phibro Animal Health Corp. – Class “A” | 679,878 | ||
6,800 | Quest Diagnostics, Inc. | 692,308 | ||
20,200 | Smith & Nephew, PLC (ADR) | 879,508 | ||
3,600 | Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | 1,057,248 | ||
3,900 | * | Waters Corp. | 839,436 | |
10,110,696 | ||||
Industrials—14.4% | ||||
11,300 | ESCO Technologies, Inc. | 933,606 | ||
31,450 | * | Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. | 1,088,170 | |
9,550 | Ingersoll-Rand, PLC | 1,209,699 | ||
13,900 | ITT, Inc. | 910,172 | ||
4,000 | J. B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | 365,640 | ||
13,400 | Jacobs Engineering Group | 1,130,826 | ||
7,200 | Kansas City Southern, Inc. | 877,104 | ||
21,750 | Korn/Ferry International | 871,522 | ||
25,600 | Masco Corp. | 1,004,544 |
60 |
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Industrials(continued) | ||||
13,100 | * | MasTec, Inc. | $ 675,043 | |
11,750 | Owens Corning | 683,850 | ||
2,300 | Roper Technologies, Inc. | 842,398 | ||
2,700 | Snap-On, Inc. | 447,228 | ||
4,300 | Triton International, Ltd. | 140,868 | ||
11,180,670 | ||||
Information Technology—17.1% | ||||
7,300 | * | Aspen Technology, Inc. | 907,244 | |
4,800 | * | Autodesk, Inc. | 781,920 | |
10,000 | * | Cadence Design Systems, Inc. | 708,100 | |
7,000 | * | Cree, Inc. | 393,260 | |
9,600 | * | Fiserv, Inc. | 875,136 | |
3,000 | * | FleetCor Technologies, Inc. | 842,550 | |
5,300 | KLA-Tencor Corp. | 626,460 | ||
6,700 | Leidos Holdings, Inc. | 534,995 | ||
7,900 | LogMeIn, Inc. | 582,072 | ||
14,200 | Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | 849,444 | ||
9,150 | NetApp, Inc. | 564,555 | ||
5,700 | * | Proofpoint, Inc. | 685,425 | |
11,100 | * | Qorvo, Inc. | 739,371 | |
1,900 | * | ServiceNow, Inc. | 521,683 | |
18,800 | SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. | 1,083,068 | ||
11,600 | * | Synopsys, Inc. | 1,492,804 | |
5,300 | * | Zebra Technologies Corp. – Class “A” | 1,110,297 | |
13,298,384 | ||||
Materials—2.1% | ||||
9,700 | FMC Corp. | 804,615 | ||
4,150 | Linde, PLC | 833,320 | ||
1,637,935 | ||||
Real Estate—5.9% | ||||
15,350 | American Campus Communities, Inc. (REIT) | 708,556 | ||
40,500 | Brixmor Property Group, Inc. (REIT) | 724,140 | ||
17,200 | Alexander & Baldwin, Inc. (REIT) | 397,320 | ||
20,500 | Douglas Emmett, Inc. (REIT) | 816,720 | ||
6,700 | Federal Realty Investment Trust (REIT) | 862,692 | ||
7,750 | iShares U.S. Real Estate (ETF) | 676,652 | ||
8,700 | Liberty Property Trust (REIT) | 435,348 | ||
4,621,428 |
61 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)(continued)
OPPORTUNITY FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares or | |||||
Principal | |||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||
Utilities—5.2% | |||||
33,250 | CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | $ 951,947 | |||
17,650 | CMS Energy Corp. | 1,022,111 | |||
12,700 | Portland General Electric Co. | 687,959 | |||
16,400 | WEC Energy Group, Inc. | 1,367,268 | |||
4,029,285 | |||||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $62,821,517) | 75,232,828 | ||||
SHORT-TERM U.S. GOVERNMENT | |||||
OBLIGATIONS—1.3% | |||||
$1,000M | U.S. Treasury Bills, 2.05%, 7/2/2019 (cost $999,943) | 999,946 | |||
Total Value of Investments(cost $63,821,460) | 98.0 | % | 76,232,774 | ||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 2.0 | 1,587,877 | |||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $77,820,651 |
* | Non-income producing | |
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ADR | American Depositary Receipts | |
ETF | Exchange Traded Fund | |
REIT | Real Estate Investment Trust |
62 |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Common Stocks | $ | 75,232,828 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 75,232,828 | ||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 999,946 | — | 999,946 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | 75,232,828 | $ | 999,946 | $ | — | $ | 76,232,774 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for common stocks. |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
See notes to financial statements | 63 |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
SELECT GROWTH FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,138.94 | $4.30 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.77 | $4.06 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .81%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
BY SECTOR
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and |
are based on thetotal value of investments. |
64 |
Portfolio of Investments
SELECT GROWTH FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—97.1% | ||||
Communication Services—12.1% | ||||
2,600 | * | Alphabet, Inc. – Class “A” | $ 2,815,280 | |
37,248 | Cinemark Holdings, Inc. | 1,344,653 | ||
45,100 | Comcast Corp. – Special Shares “A” | 1,906,828 | ||
14,300 | * | Facebook, Inc. | 2,759,900 | |
34,800 | * | TripAdvisor, Inc. | 1,610,892 | |
10,437,553 | ||||
Consumer Discretionary—10.0% | ||||
2,800 | * | AutoZone, Inc. | 3,078,516 | |
14,800 | * | Deckers Outdoor Corp. | 2,604,356 | |
13,500 | PVH Corp. | 1,277,640 | ||
19,871 | Target Corp. | 1,721,027 | ||
8,681,539 | ||||
Consumer Staples—4.2% | ||||
16,226 | Procter & Gamble Co. | 1,779,181 | ||
16,928 | Walmart, Inc. | 1,870,375 | ||
3,649,556 | ||||
Energy—.8% | ||||
5,360 | Chevron Corp. | 666,998 | ||
Financials—7.8% | ||||
59,200 | Bank of America Corp. | 1,716,800 | ||
16,390 | Discover Financial Services | 1,271,700 | ||
29,300 | Progressive Corp. | 2,341,949 | ||
27,800 | U.S. Bancorp | 1,456,720 | ||
6,787,169 | ||||
Health Care—18.0% | ||||
11,800 | Allergan, PLC | 1,975,674 | ||
28,900 | Baxter International, Inc. | 2,366,910 | ||
5,500 | * | Biogen, Inc. | 1,286,285 | |
35,500 | Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | 1,609,925 | ||
47,500 | * | Centene Corp. | 2,490,900 | |
20,286 | Eli Lilly & Co. | 2,247,486 | ||
19,000 | Merck & Co., Inc. | 1,593,150 | ||
15,000 | * | Varian Medical Systems, Inc. | 2,041,950 | |
15,612,280 |
65 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)(continued)
SELECT GROWTH FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | |||
Industrials—10.1% | |||||
22,800 | Dover Corp. | $ 2,284,560 | |||
19,600 | Eaton Corp., PLC | 1,632,288 | |||
9,936 | Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. | 2,233,017 | |||
12,800 | Norfolk Southern Corp. | 2,551,424 | |||
8,701,289 | |||||
Information Technology—34.1% | |||||
12,900 | * | Adobe Systems, Inc. | 3,800,985 | ||
17,881 | Automatic Data Processing, Inc. | 2,956,266 | |||
56,600 | * | Cadence Design Systems, Inc. | 4,007,846 | ||
11,300 | * | EPAM Systems, Inc. | 1,956,030 | ||
34,957 | * | Fortinet, Inc. | 2,685,746 | ||
21,100 | Microsoft Corp. | 2,826,556 | |||
39,400 | NetApp, Inc. | 2,430,980 | |||
28,500 | Oracle Corp. | 1,623,645 | |||
10,700 | * | Palo Alto Networks, Inc. | 2,180,232 | ||
22,100 | * | PayPal Holdings, Inc. | 2,529,566 | ||
12,000 | * | Zebra Technologies Corp. – Class “A” | 2,513,880 | ||
29,511,732 | |||||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $70,010,546) | 97.1 | % | 84,048,116 | ||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 2.9 | 2,500,670 | |||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $86,548,786 |
* | Non-income producing |
66 |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Common Stocks* | $ | 84,048,116 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 84,048,116 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for common stocks. |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
See notes to financial statements | 67 |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
SPECIAL SITUATIONS FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,122.47 | $4.26 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.77 | $4.06 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .81%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
BY SECTOR
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
68 |
Portfolio of Investments
SPECIAL SITUATIONS FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—95.0% | ||||
Consumer Discretionary—10.5% | ||||
96,900 | American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. | $ 1,637,610 | ||
33,000 | Cheesecake Factory, Inc. | 1,442,760 | ||
16,400 | Children’s Place, Inc. | 1,564,232 | ||
125,400 | Dana, Inc. | 2,500,476 | ||
82,400 | Designer Brands, Inc. – Class “A” | 1,579,608 | ||
68,700 | Haverty Furniture Cos., Inc. | 1,169,961 | ||
20,600 | * | Helen of Troy, Ltd. | 2,690,154 | |
74,200 | * | MasterCraft Boat Holdings, Inc. | 1,453,578 | |
21,100 | Oxford Industries, Inc. | 1,599,380 | ||
45,400 | Penske Automotive Group, Inc. | 2,147,420 | ||
60,200 | Ruth’s Hospitality Group, Inc. | 1,367,142 | ||
158,600 | * | TRI Pointe Group, Inc. | 1,898,442 | |
19,200 | * | Visteon Corp. | 1,124,736 | |
82,000 | Wolverine World Wide, Inc. | 2,258,280 | ||
24,433,779 | ||||
Consumer Staples—3.9% | ||||
66,100 | Energizer Holdings, Inc. | 2,554,104 | ||
46,800 | * | Performance Food Group Co. | 1,873,404 | |
79,077 | Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc. | 2,920,314 | ||
51,500 | * | U.S. Foods Holding Corp. | 1,841,640 | |
9,189,462 | ||||
Energy—5.4% | ||||
106,200 | * | Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc. | 1,064,124 | |
73,800 | Delek U.S. Holdings, Inc. | 2,990,376 | ||
129,500 | * | Jagged Peak Energy, Inc. | 1,070,965 | |
172,500 | * | Keane Group, Inc. | 1,159,200 | |
132,400 | Liberty Oilfield Services, Inc. – Class “A” | 2,142,232 | ||
175,800 | * | Oasis Petroleum, Inc. | 998,544 | |
61,400 | PBF Energy, Inc. – Class “A” | 1,921,820 | ||
119,700 | * | WPX Energy, Inc. | 1,377,747 | |
12,725,008 | ||||
Financials—25.5% | ||||
127,800 | * | AllianceBernstein Holding, LP (MLP) | 3,798,216 | |
103,890 | Amalgamated Bank – Class “A” | 1,812,880 | ||
32,100 | American Financial Group, Inc. | 3,289,287 | ||
95,500 | Berkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. | 2,997,745 | ||
73,800 | Brown & Brown, Inc. | 2,472,300 |
69 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
SPECIAL SITUATIONS FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Financials(continued) | ||||
79,800 | Capstar Financial Holdings, Inc. | $ 1,208,970 | ||
225,000 | CNO Financial Group, Inc. | 3,753,000 | ||
103,400 | Great Western Bancorp, Inc. | 3,693,448 | ||
19,700 | IBERIABANK Corp. | 1,494,245 | ||
43,000 | Independent Bank Group, Inc. | 2,363,280 | ||
33,100 | James River Group Holdings, Ltd. | 1,552,390 | ||
22,700 | Kemper Corp. | 1,958,783 | ||
111,800 | OceanFirst Financial Corp. | 2,778,230 | ||
210,300 | Old National Bancorp of Indiana | 3,488,877 | ||
37,700 | Prosperity Bancshares, Inc. | 2,490,085 | ||
42,300 | QCR Holdings, Inc. | 1,475,001 | ||
45,400 | * | Seacoast Banking Corp. | 1,154,976 | |
123,700 | Simmons First National Corp. – Class “A” | 2,877,262 | ||
205,800 | Sterling Bancorp | 4,379,424 | ||
70,200 | Synovus Financial Corp. | 2,457,000 | ||
130,700 | TCF Financial Corp. | 2,717,253 | ||
101,100 | Veritex Holdings, Inc. | 2,623,545 | ||
163,200 | Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. – Class “A” | 2,720,544 | ||
59,556,741 | ||||
Health Care—5.4% | ||||
14,000 | * | Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. | 1,986,600 | |
13,300 | Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | 1,391,446 | ||
9,500 | * | ICON, PLC | 1,462,715 | |
77,900 | Phibro Animal Health Corp. – Class “A” | 2,474,883 | ||
118,000 | * | Prestige Brands, Inc. | 3,738,240 | |
17,300 | SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (ETF) | 1,517,383 | ||
12,571,267 | ||||
Industrials—14.8% | ||||
67,900 | AAR Corp. | 2,498,041 | ||
111,000 | * | Atkore International Group Co. | 2,871,570 | |
75,300 | Columbus McKinnon Corp. | 3,160,341 | ||
38,800 | Comfort Systems USA, Inc. | 1,978,412 | ||
24,100 | ESCO Technologies, Inc. | 1,991,142 | ||
89,700 | * | Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. | 3,103,620 | |
19,100 | ICF International, Inc. | 1,390,480 | ||
44,500 | Kennametal, Inc. | 1,646,055 | ||
50,100 | Korn/Ferry International | 2,007,507 | ||
39,500 | Park-Ohio Holdings Corp. | 1,287,305 | ||
33,000 | Regal Beloit Corp. | 2,696,430 |
70 |
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Industrials(continued) | ||||
26,000 | SPDR S&P Transportation (ETF) | $ 1,591,720 | ||
101,300 | * | SPX Corp. | 3,344,926 | |
69,700 | Timken Co. | 3,578,398 | ||
45,300 | Triton International, Ltd. | 1,484,028 | ||
34,629,975 | ||||
Information Technology—9.4% | ||||
35,500 | * | Alpha & Omega Semiconductor, Ltd. | 331,570 | |
23,100 | * | Cree, Inc. | 1,297,758 | |
55,000 | * | Diodes, Inc. | 2,000,350 | |
72,700 | * | Ichor Holdings, Ltd. | 1,718,628 | |
11,300 | * | MicroStrategy, Inc. – Class “A” | 1,619,403 | |
28,700 | MKS Instruments, Inc. | 2,235,443 | ||
64,900 | * | NETGEAR, Inc. | 1,641,321 | |
202,900 | * | PDF Solutions, Inc. | 2,662,048 | |
100,700 | * | Perficient, Inc. | 3,456,024 | |
60,000 | * | Rambus, Inc. | 722,400 | |
174,700 | * | TTM Technologies, Inc. | 1,781,940 | |
48,000 | * | Verint Systems, Inc. | 2,581,440 | |
22,048,325 | ||||
Materials—7.1% | ||||
13,700 | AptarGroup, Inc. | 1,703,458 | ||
50,100 | * | Berry Global Group, Inc. | 2,634,759 | |
85,100 | * | Ferro Corp. | 1,344,580 | |
83,600 | Louisiana-Pacific Corp. | 2,191,992 | ||
140,000 | * | PQ Group Holdings, Inc. | 2,219,000 | |
47,000 | Schweitzer-Mauduit International., Inc. | 1,559,460 | ||
41,700 | Sensient Technologies Corp. | 3,064,116 | ||
62,200 | SPDR S&P Metals & Mining (ETF) | 1,765,236 | ||
16,482,601 | ||||
Real Estate—6.7% | ||||
117,300 | Americold Realty Trust (REIT) | 3,802,866 | ||
127,000 | Brixmor Property Group, Inc. (REIT) | 2,270,760 | ||
63,500 | Douglas Emmett, Inc. (REIT) | 2,529,840 | ||
10,000 | Federal Realty Investment Trust (REIT) | 1,287,600 | ||
93,998 | Industrial Logistics Properties Trust (REIT) | 1,957,038 | ||
54,100 | JBG SMITH Properties (REIT) | 2,128,294 | ||
130,000 | Sunstone Hotel Investors, Inc. (REIT) | 1,782,300 | ||
15,758,698 |
71 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
SPECIAL SITUATIONS FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares or | |||||
Principal | |||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||
Utilities—6.3% | |||||
59,600 | Black Hills Corp. | $ 4,658,932 | |||
31,900 | IDACORP, Inc. | 3,203,717 | |||
34,000 | Pinnacle West Capital Corp. | 3,199,060 | |||
66,800 | Portland General Electric Co. | 3,618,556 | |||
14,680,265 | |||||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $202,167,043) | 222,076,121 | ||||
SHORT-TERM U.S. GOVERNMENT | |||||
OBLIGATIONS—3.9% | |||||
U.S. Treasury Bills: | |||||
$4,000M | 2.05%, 7/2/2019 | 3,999,784 | |||
5,000M | 1.989%, 7/16/2019 | 4,995,740 | |||
Total Value of U.S. Government Obligations(cost $8,995,627) | 8,995,524 | ||||
Total Value of Investments(cost $211,162,670) | 98.9 | % | 231,071,645 | ||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 1.1 | 2,598,684 | |||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $233,670,329 |
* | Non-income producing | |
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ETF | Exchange Traded Funds | |
MLP | Master Limited Partnership | |
REIT | Real Estate Investment Trust | |
SPDR | Standard & Poor’s Depository Receipts |
72 |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Common Stocks | $ | 222,076,121 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 222,076,121 | ||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 8,995,524 | — | 8,995,524 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | 222,076,121 | $ | 8,995,524 | $ | — | $ | 231,071,645 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for common stocks. |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
See notes to financial statements | 73 |
Fund Expenses(unaudited)
TOTAL RETURN FUND
The examples below show the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your Fund and will help you in comparing these costs with costs of other mutual funds. Please refer to page 1 for a detailed explanation of the information presented in these examples.
Beginning | Ending | ||
Account | Account | Expenses Paid | |
Value | Value | During Period | |
(1/1/19) | (6/30/19) | (1/1/19–6/30/19)* | |
Expense Examples | |||
Actual | $1,000.00 | $1,128.93 | $4.59 |
Hypothetical | |||
(5% annual return before expenses) | $1,000.00 | $1,020.48 | $4.36 |
* | Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio of .87%, multiplied by the average account |
value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). |
Portfolio Composition
TOP TEN SECTORS
Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of June 30, 2019, and are |
based on the total value of investments. |
74 |
Portfolio of Investments
TOTAL RETURN FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
COMMON STOCKS—56.5% | ||||
Communication Services—4.5% | ||||
500 | * | Alphabet, Inc. – Class “A” | $ 541,400 | |
9,000 | AT&T, Inc. | 301,590 | ||
6,960 | CBS Corp. – Class “B” | 347,304 | ||
7,100 | Comcast Corp. – Special Shares “A” | 300,188 | ||
3,150 | * | Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. | 357,620 | |
7,650 | Verizon Communications, Inc. | 437,045 | ||
2,420 | Walt Disney Co. | 337,929 | ||
2,623,076 | ||||
Consumer Discretionary—2.1% | ||||
155 | * | Amazon.com, Inc. | 293,513 | |
6,150 | American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. | 103,935 | ||
750 | * | Burlington Stores, Inc. | 127,612 | |
1,650 | Home Depot, Inc. | 343,150 | ||
2,050 | Lowe’s Cos., Inc. | 206,865 | ||
1,250 | Ross Stores, Inc. | 123,900 | ||
1,198,975 | ||||
Consumer Staples—4.5% | ||||
10,350 | Coca-Cola Co. | 527,022 | ||
5,859 | Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize NV (ADR) | 131,593 | ||
5,700 | Mondelez International, Inc. – Class “A” | 307,230 | ||
4,210 | PepsiCo, Inc. | 552,057 | ||
3,730 | Philip Morris International, Inc. | 292,917 | ||
3,560 | Procter & Gamble Co. | 390,354 | ||
3,960 | Wal-Mart, Inc. | 437,540 | ||
2,638,713 | ||||
Energy—4.3% | ||||
8,045 | BP, PLC (ADR) | 335,476 | ||
4,000 | Chevron Corp. | 497,760 | ||
3,220 | ConocoPhillips | 196,420 | ||
26,450 | EnCana Corp. | 135,688 | ||
4,350 | ExxonMobil Corp. | 333,340 | ||
6,740 | Marathon Petroleum Corp. | 376,631 | ||
3,460 | Schlumberger, Ltd. | 137,500 | ||
4,180 | Suncor Energy, Inc. | 130,249 | ||
4,150 | Valero Energy Corp. | 355,282 | ||
2,498,346 |
75 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
TOTAL RETURN FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Financials—10.9% | ||||
2,750 | American Express Co. | $ 339,460 | ||
1,200 | Aon, PLC | 231,576 | ||
18,610 | Bank of America Corp. | 539,690 | ||
3,410 | Chubb, Ltd. | 502,259 | ||
5,650 | Citigroup, Inc. | 395,669 | ||
1,700 | Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | 347,820 | ||
7,550 | Hamilton Lane, Inc. – Class “A” | 430,803 | ||
6,490 | JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 725,582 | ||
5,350 | MetLife, Inc. | 265,734 | ||
5,250 | Morgan Stanley | 230,002 | ||
2,620 | PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | 359,674 | ||
5,850 | Popular, Inc. | 317,304 | ||
11,250 | Sterling Bancorp | 239,400 | ||
10,100 | Synchrony Financial | 350,167 | ||
2,650 | Travelers Cos., Inc. | 396,228 | ||
7,990 | U.S. Bancorp | 418,676 | ||
6,060 | Wells Fargo & Co. | 286,759 | ||
6,376,803 | ||||
Health Care—9.9% | ||||
4,710 | Abbott Laboratories | 396,111 | ||
1,050 | Anthem, Inc. | 296,320 | ||
6,700 | * | Centene Corp. | 351,348 | |
1,950 | * | Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. | 276,705 | |
1,600 | Eli Lilly & Co. | 177,264 | ||
3,150 | * | Exact Sciences Corp. | 371,826 | |
3,990 | Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | 417,434 | ||
1,420 | Johnson & Johnson | 197,778 | ||
4,300 | Koninklijke Philips NV (ADR) | 187,394 | ||
3,940 | Medtronic, PLC | 383,717 | ||
4,870 | Merck & Co., Inc. | 408,349 | ||
8,700 | Pfizer, Inc. | 376,884 | ||
9,200 | Smith & Nephew, PLC (ADR) | 400,568 | ||
1,490 | Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | 437,583 | ||
1,950 | * | Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. | 357,591 | |
3,700 | Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc. | 435,638 | ||
2,850 | Zoetis, Inc. | 323,447 | ||
5,795,957 |
76 |
Shares | Security | Value | ||
Industrials—7.8% | ||||
6,850 | * | Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. | $ 237,010 | |
3,060 | Honeywell International, Inc. | 534,245 | ||
4,750 | Ingersoll-Rand, PLC | 601,683 | ||
4,800 | Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. | 405,072 | ||
3,050 | Kansas City Southern, Inc. | 371,551 | ||
1,500 | Lockheed Martin Corp. | 545,310 | ||
1,350 | Northrop Grumman Corp. | 436,199 | ||
4,300 | Republic Services, Inc. | 372,552 | ||
1,290 | Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | 186,547 | ||
2,100 | Union Pacific Corp. | 355,131 | ||
3,880 | United Technologies Corp. | 505,176 | ||
4,550,476 | ||||
Information Technology—11.6% | ||||
1,750 | * | Adobe Systems, Inc. | 515,637 | |
7,050 | * | Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. | 214,108 | |
10,003 | Cisco Systems, Inc. | 547,464 | ||
10,450 | Corning, Inc. | 347,253 | ||
7,050 | * | Cree, Inc. | 396,069 | |
4,850 | * | Fiserv, Inc. | 442,126 | |
8,190 | Intel Corp. | 392,055 | ||
3,900 | Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | 233,298 | ||
3,600 | * | Mellanox Technologies, Ltd. | 398,412 | |
3,760 | Microsoft Corp. | 503,690 | ||
8,750 | Nintendo Co., Ltd. (ADR) | 400,488 | ||
1,300 | NVIDIA Corp. | 213,499 | ||
6,200 | Oracle Corp. | 353,214 | ||
4,750 | QUALCOMM, Inc. | 361,333 | ||
600 | * | salesforce.com, Inc. | 91,038 | |
2,800 | * | Synopsys, Inc. | 360,332 | |
2,100 | Texas Instruments, Inc. | 240,996 | ||
2,900 | Visa, Inc. – Class “A” | 503,295 | ||
2,150 | * | Worldpay, Inc. – Class “A” | 263,483 | |
6,777,790 |
77 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
TOTAL RETURN FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares or | ||||
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Materials—.9% | ||||
1,783 | Dow, Inc. | $ 87,920 | ||
1,783 | DuPont de Nemours, Inc. | 133,850 | ||
1,650 | Linde, PLC | 331,320 | ||
553,090 | ||||
Total Value of Common Stocks(cost $27,207,400) | 33,013,226 | |||
CORPORATE BONDS—21.9% | ||||
Aerospace/Defense—.5% | ||||
$ 300M | Rockwell Collins, Inc., 3.5%, 3/15/2027 | 312,456 | ||
Automotive—1.5% | ||||
100M | Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC, 8.125%, 1/15/2020 | 102,845 | ||
308M | General Motors Financial Co., Inc., 5.25%, 3/1/2026 | 330,644 | ||
200M | Lear Corp., 5.25%, 1/15/2025 | 207,228 | ||
200M | O’Reilly Automotive, Inc., 3.55%, 3/15/2026 | 206,384 | ||
847,101 | ||||
Energy—4.1% | ||||
300M | Cimarex Energy Co., 4.375%, 3/15/2029 | 319,234 | ||
300M | Continental Resources, Inc., 5%, 9/15/2022 | 302,772 | ||
300M | Enterprise Products Operating, 7.55%, 4/15/2038 | 415,980 | ||
300M | Kinder Morgan Energy Partners, LP, 3.45%, 2/15/2023 | 308,402 | ||
150M | Kinder Morgan, Inc., 5.625%, 11/15/2023 (a) | 166,190 | ||
400M | Magellan Midstream Partners, LP, 5%, 3/1/2026 | 444,753 | ||
300M | Midwest Connector Capital Co., LLC, 4.625%, 4/1/2029 (a) | 321,798 | ||
100M | Valero Energy Corp., 6.625%, 6/15/2037 | 126,864 | ||
2,405,993 | ||||
Financial Services—1.3% | ||||
400M | Brookfield Finance, Inc., 4%, 4/1/2024 | 420,693 | ||
100M | ERAC USA Finance, LLC, 4.5%, 8/16/2021 (a) | 104,279 | ||
100M | Key Bank NA, 3.4%, 5/20/2026 | 102,677 | ||
100M | Liberty Mutual Group, Inc., 4.95%, 5/1/2022 (a) | 105,949 | ||
733,598 | ||||
Financials—4.2% | ||||
Bank of America Corp.: | ||||
300M | 4%, 1/22/2025 | 315,762 | ||
100M | 5.875%, 2/7/2042 | 133,077 |
78 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Financials(continued) | ||||
Citigroup, Inc.: | ||||
$ 300M | 4.5%, 1/14/2022 | $ 315,474 | ||
100M | 4.3%, 11/20/2026 | 106,289 | ||
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | ||||
100M | 4.452%, 12/5/2029 | 111,591 | ||
200M | 3.702%, 5/6/2030 | 211,050 | ||
100M | 6.4%, 5/15/2038 | 138,149 | ||
Morgan Stanley: | ||||
200M | 5.5%, 7/28/2021 | 212,560 | ||
200M | 4%, 7/23/2025 | 214,394 | ||
200M | UBS Group Funding (Switzerland) AG, 4.253%, 3/23/2028 (a) | 215,742 | ||
500M | Wells Fargo & Co., 3.196%, 6/17/2027 | 510,021 | ||
2,484,109 | ||||
Forest Products/Containers—.4% | ||||
250M | Packaging Corp. of America, 3.4%, 12/15/2027 | 253,054 | ||
Health Care—1.4% | ||||
CVS Health Corp.: | ||||
200M | 3.875%, 7/20/2025 | 209,004 | ||
500M | 5.05%, 3/25/2048 | 533,380 | ||
100M | Express Scripts Holding Co., 4.75%, 11/15/2021 | 105,033 | ||
847,417 | ||||
Information Technology—1.9% | ||||
300M | Corning, Inc., 7.25%, 8/15/2036 | 363,589 | ||
200M | Diamond 1 Finance Corp., 4.42%, 6/15/2021 (a) | 206,153 | ||
500M | International Business Machines Corp., 4.25%, 5/15/2049 | 539,568 | ||
1,109,310 | ||||
Manufacturing—.7% | ||||
300M | Crane Co., 4.2%, 3/15/2048 | 296,840 | ||
100M | Johnson Controls International, PLC, 5%, 3/30/2020 | 101,850 | ||
398,690 | ||||
Media-Cable TV—.8% | ||||
Comcast Corp.: | ||||
100M | 5.15%, 3/1/2020 | 101,802 | ||
300M | 4.25%, 1/15/2033 | 336,819 | ||
438,621 |
79 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
TOTAL RETURN FUND
June 30, 2019
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
Metals/Mining—.6% | ||||
$ 235M | Glencore Funding, LLC, 4.625%, 4/29/2024 (a) | $ 248,635 | ||
100M | Newmont Mining Corp., 5.125%, 10/1/2019 | 100,599 | ||
349,234 | ||||
Real Estate—1.5% | ||||
300M | Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc., 3.95%, 1/15/2028 | 315,769 | ||
Digital Realty Trust, LP: | ||||
200M | 4.75%, 10/1/2025 | 219,370 | ||
250M | 3.6%, 7/1/2029 | 253,820 | ||
100M | HCP, Inc., 4.25%, 11/15/2023 | 106,277 | ||
895,236 | ||||
Retail-General Merchandise—.2% | ||||
100M | Home Depot, Inc., 5.875%, 12/16/2036 | 132,854 | ||
Telecommunications—1.1% | ||||
AT&T, Inc.: | ||||
100M | 3.6%, 7/15/2025 | 103,858 | ||
400M | 4.25%, 3/1/2027 | 429,069 | ||
100M | Verizon Communications, Inc., 4.272%, 1/15/2036 | 108,480 | ||
641,407 | ||||
Transportation—.4% | ||||
250M | Air Lease Corp., 3.875%, 7/3/2023 | 260,738 | ||
Utilities—1.3% | ||||
400M | Duke Energy Corp., 3.75%, 4/15/2024 | 422,252 | ||
100M | Entergy Arkansas, Inc., 4.95%, 12/15/2044 | 105,932 | ||
100M | Ohio Power Co., 5.375%, 10/1/2021 | 106,831 | ||
100M | Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co., 4%, 12/15/2044 | 104,672 | ||
739,687 | ||||
Total Value of Corporate Bonds(cost $12,433,662) | 12,849,505 | |||
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS—5.2% | ||||
U.S. Treasury Bonds: | ||||
300M | 3%, 8/15/2048 | 329,074 | ||
100M | 3.125%, 8/15/2044 | 111,590 | ||
150M | 3.125%, 5/15/2048 | 168,349 | ||
900M | 3.375%, 11/15/2048 | 1,059,627 |
80 |
Principal | ||||
Amount | Security | Value | ||
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS(continued) | ||||
U.S. Treasury Notes: | ||||
$ 150M | 2%, 11/30/2022 | $ 151,374 | ||
100M | 2%, 11/15/2026 | 100,779 | ||
100M | 2.625%, 12/31/2023 | 103,777 | ||
900M | 3.125%, 11/15/2028 | 987,293 | ||
Total Value of U.S. Government Obligations(cost $2,778,828) | 3,011,863 | |||
RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED | ||||
SECURITIES—4.7% | ||||
Fannie Mae—3.9% | ||||
196M | 3%, 5/1/2029 – 11/1/2030 | 200,340 | ||
289M | 3.5%, 11/1/2028 – 12/1/2047 | 299,311 | ||
680M | 4%, 7/1/2041 – 8/1/2047 | 712,110 | ||
939M | 4.5%, 8/1/2041 – 1/1/2049 | 983,019 | ||
62M | 5%, 3/1/2042 | 67,004 | ||
2,261,784 | ||||
Freddie Mac—.8% | ||||
269M | 3.5%, 5/1/2033 – 7/1/2044 | 280,352 | ||
61M | 4%, 7/1/2044 – 4/1/2045 | 63,456 | ||
93M | 4.5%, 12/1/2043 | 99,177 | ||
442,985 | ||||
Total Value of Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities(cost $2,692,322) | 2,704,769 | |||
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES—2.2% | ||||
Fixed Autos—1.7% | ||||
300M | AmeriCredit Automobile Receivables Trust, 3.13%, 2/18/2025 | 305,775 | ||
700M | Hertz Vehicle Financing Trust, 2.96%, 10/25/2021 | 704,406 | ||
1,010,181 | ||||
Fixed Communication Services—.5% | ||||
Verizon Owner Trust: | ||||
200M | 1.92%, 12/20/2021 (a) | 199,622 | ||
100M | 3.23%, 4/20/2023 | 101,966 | ||
301,588 | ||||
Total Value of Asset-Backed Securities(cost $1,292,715) | 1,311,769 |
81 |
Portfolio of Investments(continued)
TOTAL RETURN FUND
June 30, 2019
Shares or | |||||
Principal | |||||
Amount | Security | Value | |||
EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS—1.8% | |||||
11,165 | iShares iBoxx USD High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (ETF) | $ 973,365 | |||
558 | SPDR Bloomberg Barclays High Yield Bond ETF (ETF) | 60,789 | |||
Total Value of Exchange Traded Funds(cost $1,013,852) | 1,034,154 | ||||
COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED | |||||
SECURITIES—1.4% | |||||
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation | |||||
Multi-Family Structured Pass-Throughs: | |||||
$ 541M | 3.725%, 12/25/2027 | 582,514 | |||
200M | 3.422%, 2/25/2052 | 215,731 | |||
Total Value of Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities(cost $757,658) | 798,245 | ||||
COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE | |||||
OBLIGATIONS—1.0% | |||||
Fannie Mae: | |||||
245M | 3.0856%, 12/25/2027 † | 254,822 | |||
300M | 3.273%, 1/25/2029 | 316,782 | |||
Total Value of Collateralized Mortgage Obligations(cost $539,231) | 571,604 | ||||
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS—. 3% | |||||
200M | Federal Farm Credit Bank, 3%, 9/13/2029 (cost $189,196) | 200,000 | |||
PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES—.3% | |||||
Transportation | |||||
189M | American Airlines 17-2 AA PTT, 3.35%, 10/15/2029 (cost $190,550) | 191,517 | |||
SHORT-TERM U.S. GOVERNMENT | |||||
OBLIGATIONS—1.7% | |||||
1,000M | U.S. Treasury Bills, 2.05%, 7/2/2019 (cost $999,943) | 999,946 | |||
Total Value of Investments(cost $50,095,357) | 97.0 | % | 56,686,598 | ||
Other Assets, Less Liabilities | 3.0 | 1,766,829 | |||
Net Assets | 100.0 | % | $58,453,427 |
* | Non-income producing |
(a) | Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933 (see Note 5). |
† | Interest rates are determined and reset periodically. The interest rates above are the rates in effect |
at June 30, 2019. |
82 |
Summary of Abbreviations: | ||
ADR | American Depositary Receipts | |
ETF | Exchange Traded Fund | |
PTT | Pass-Through Trust | |
SPDR | Standard & Poor’s Depository Receipts | |
USD | United States Dollar |
The Fund’s assets and liabilities are classified into the following three levels based on the inputs used to value the assets and liabilities:
Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the Fund has the ability to access. |
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. |
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
The inputs methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For example, U.S. Government securities are reflected as Level 2 because the inputs used to determine fair value may not always be quoted prices in an active market.
83 |
The following is a summary, by category of Level, of inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of June 30, 2019:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||
Common Stocks | $ | 33,013,226 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 33,013,226 | ||||
Corporate Bonds | — | 12,849,505 | — | 12,849,505 | ||||||||
U.S. Government Obligations | — | 3,011,863 | — | 3,011,863 | ||||||||
Residential Mortgage-Backed | ||||||||||||
Securities | — | 2,704,769 | — | 2,704,769 | ||||||||
Asset-Backed Securities | — | 1,311,769 | — | 1,311,769 | ||||||||
Exchange Traded Funds | 1,034,154 | — | — | 1,034,154 | ||||||||
Commercial Mortgaged-Backed | ||||||||||||
Securities | — | 798,245 | — | 798,245 | ||||||||
Collateralized Mortgage | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 571,604 | — | 571,604 | ||||||||
U.S. Government Agency | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 200,000 | — | 200,000 | ||||||||
Pass-Through Certificates | — | 191,517 | — | 191,517 | ||||||||
Short-Term U.S. Government | ||||||||||||
Obligations | — | 999,946 | — | 999,946 | ||||||||
Total Investments in Securities* | $ | 34,047,380 | $ | 22,639,218 | $ | — | $ | 56,686,598 |
* | The Portfolio of Investments provides information on the industry categorization for common |
stocks, corporate bonds, asset-backed securities and pass-through certificates. | |
There were no transfers into or from Level 1 and Level 2 by the Fund for the six months ended | |
June 30, 2019. Transfers, if any, between Levels are recognized at the end of the reporting period. |
84 | See notes to financial statements |
This page left intentionally blank. |
85 |
StatementsofAssetsandLiabilities
FIRSTINVESTORSLIFESERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
COVERED | GOVERNMENT | |||||||||||||||||||||||
CALL | EQUITY | FUND FOR | CASH | GROWTH & | ||||||||||||||||||||
STRATEGY | INCOME | INCOME | MANAGEMENT | INCOME | INTERNATIONAL | |||||||||||||||||||
Assets | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investments in securities: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
At identified cost | $ | 18,804,082 | $ | 93,562,950 | $ | 102,969,174 | $ | 10,018,240 | $ | 363,266,746 | $ | 118,915,616 | ||||||||||||
At value (Note 1A) | $ | 21,799,910 | $ | 123,902,764 | $ | 104,154,261 | $ | 10,018,240 | $ | 500,323,897 | $ | 163,830,197 | ||||||||||||
Cash | 280,656 | 2,418,166 | 4,432,656 | 195,210 | 3,085,018 | 2,307,632 | ||||||||||||||||||
Receivables: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment securities sold | — | 95,893 | 859,944 | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Interest and dividends | 27,530 | 154,938 | 1,584,159 | 7,823 | 350,590 | 601,123 | ||||||||||||||||||
Trust shares sold | 10,872 | 2,291 | 100,297 | 1,449 | 187,242 | 4,567 | ||||||||||||||||||
Other assets | 692 | 6,667 | 5,661 | 607 | 27,060 | 8,135 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total Assets | 22,119,660 | 126,580,719 | 111,136,978 | 10,223,329 | 503,973,807 | 166,751,654 | ||||||||||||||||||
Liabilities | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options written, at value (Note 6) | 442,457 | (a) | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||
Payables: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment securities purchased | — | — | 2,864,202 | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Trust shares redeemed | 23,207 | 86,526 | 107,314 | 189,246 | 160,030 | 119,061 | ||||||||||||||||||
Accrued advisory fees | 13,045 | 76,594 | 65,960 | 6,488 | 299,007 | 100,279 | ||||||||||||||||||
Accrued expenses | 18,398 | 19,957 | 85,840 | 16,355 | 85,037 | 82,605 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total Liabilities | 497,107 | 183,077 | 3,123,316 | 212,089 | 544,074 | 301,945 | ||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets | $ | 21,622,553 | $ | 126,397,642 | $ | 108,013,662 | $ | 10,011,240 | $ | 503,429,733 | $ | 166,449,709 | ||||||||||||
Net Assets Consist of: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Capital paid in | $ | 19,878,698 | $ | 92,511,344 | $ | 110,459,886 | $ | 10,011,240 | $ | 341,450,199 | $ | 123,259,296 | ||||||||||||
Distributable earnings | 1,743,855 | 33,886,298 | (2,446,224) | — | 161,979,534 | 43,190,413 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total | $ | 21,622,553 | $ | 126,397,642 | $ | 108,013,662 | $ | 10,011,240 | $ | 503,429,733 | $ | 166,449,709 | ||||||||||||
Shares of beneficial interest outstanding(Note 2) | 1,851,884 | 6,122,742 | 17,556,156 | 10,011,240 | 12,716,184 | 6,994,455 | ||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, offering and redemption price per share — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Net assets divided by shares outstanding) | $11.68 | $20.64 | $6.15 | $1.00 | $39.59 | $23.80 |
(a)Premiums receivedfrom written options $464,079
86 | See notes to financial statements | 87 |
StatementsofAssetsandLiabilities
FIRSTINVESTORSLIFESERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
LIMITED | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
INVESTMENT | DURATION | SELECT | SPECIAL | TOTAL | ||||||||||||||||||||
GRADE | BOND | OPPORTUNITY | GROWTH | SITUATIONS | RETURN | |||||||||||||||||||
Assets | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investments in securities: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
At identified cost | $ | 60,116,014 | $ | 32,832,027 | $ | 63,821,460 | $ | 70,010,546 | $ | 211,162,670 | $ | 50,095,357 | ||||||||||||
At value (Note 1A) | $ | 63,204,788 | $ | 33,444,333 | $ | 76,232,774 | $ | 84,048,116 | $ | 231,071,645 | $ | 56,686,598 | ||||||||||||
Cash | 1,862,220 | 334,372 | 1,652,055 | 2,443,632 | 2,698,846 | 1,605,331 | ||||||||||||||||||
Receivables: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment securities sold | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Interest and dividends | 668,877 | 245,023 | 53,792 | 30,770 | 198,197 | 209,301 | ||||||||||||||||||
Trust shares sold | 87,566 | 6,830 | 80,216 | 134,022 | 25,653 | 66,742 | ||||||||||||||||||
Other assets | 3,384 | 2,177 | 3,625 | 3,842 | 13,023 | 2,948 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total Assets | 65,826,835 | 34,032,735 | 78,022,462 | 86,660,382 | 234,007,364 | 58,570,920 | ||||||||||||||||||
Liabilities | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Payables: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment securities purchased | 199,584 | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Trust shares redeemed | 9,513 | 6,005 | 139,435 | 48,277 | 147,505 | 64,350 | ||||||||||||||||||
Accrued advisory fees | 31,976 | 16,741 | 46,924 | 52,075 | 140,263 | 35,427 | ||||||||||||||||||
Accrued expenses | 19,425 | 18,606 | 15,452 | 11,244 | 49,267 | 17,716 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total Liabilities | 260,498 | 41,352 | 201,811 | 111,596 | 337,035 | 117,493 | ||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets | $ | 65,566,337 | $ | 33,991,383 | $ | 77,820,651 | $ | 86,548,786 | $ | 233,670,329 | $ | 58,453,427 | ||||||||||||
Net Assets Consist of: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Capital paid in | $ | 64,064,351 | $ | 35,569,046 | $ | 64,241,028 | $ | 66,275,218 | $ | 207,018,866 | $ | 51,266,525 | ||||||||||||
Distributable earnings | 1,501,986 | (1,577,663) | 13,579,623 | 20,273,568 | 26,651,463 | 7,186,902 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total | $ | 65,566,337 | $ | 33,991,383 | $ | 77,820,651 | $ | 86,548,786 | $ | 233,670,329 | $ | 58,453,427 | ||||||||||||
Shares of beneficial interest outstanding(Note 2) | 6,136,837 | 3,548,673 | 4,347,287 | 5,714,762 | 7,779,212 | 4,306,416 | ||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, offering and redemption price per share — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Net assets divided by shares outstanding) | $10.68 | $9.58 | $17.90 | $15.14 | $30.04 | $13.57 |
88 | See notes to financial statements | 89 |
StatementsofOperations
FIRSTINVESTORSLIFESERIES FUNDS
SixMonthsEnded June 30, 2019
COVERED | GOVERNMENT | ||||||||||||||||||
CALL | EQUITY | FUND FOR | CASH | GROWTH & | |||||||||||||||
STRATEGY | INCOME | INCOME | MANAGEMENT | INCOME | INTERNATIONAL | ||||||||||||||
Investment Income | |||||||||||||||||||
Income: | |||||||||||||||||||
Interest | $ | — | $ | 58,732 | $ | 3,153,784 | $ | 127,643 | $ | 255,847 | $ | 30,612 | |||||||
Dividends | 233,831 | 1,668,319 | (a) | — | — | 5,742,969 | (b) | 1,731,745 | (c) | ||||||||||
Total income | 233,831 | 1,727,051 | 3,153,784 | 127,643 | 5,998,816 | 1,762,357 | |||||||||||||
Expenses (Notes 1 and 4): | |||||||||||||||||||
Advisory fees | 74,898 | 456,417 | 391,863 | 39,440 | 1,779,342 | 580,788 | |||||||||||||
Professional fees | 9,631 | 14,174 | 15,772 | 8,356 | 36,551 | 20,278 | |||||||||||||
Custodian fees and expenses | 1,854 | 2,049 | 2,508 | 1,642 | 7,452 | 26,776 | |||||||||||||
Reports and notices to shareholders | 2,600 | 8,450 | 7,701 | 2,828 | 27,500 | 9,107 | |||||||||||||
Registration fees | 755 | 100 | 650 | 198 | 153 | 650 | |||||||||||||
Trustees’ fees | 871 | 5,319 | 4,558 | 452 | 21,141 | 6,757 | |||||||||||||
Other expenses | 2,164 | 5,552 | 7,956 | (6,668 | ) | 17,007 | 22,331 | ||||||||||||
Total expenses | 92,773 | 492,061 | 431,008 | 46,248 | 1,889,146 | 666,687 | |||||||||||||
Less: Expenses waived and/or assumed (Note 4) | — | — | — | (5,824 | ) | — | — | ||||||||||||
Expenses paid indirectly (Note 1G) | (259 | ) | (1,752 | ) | (1,223 | ) | (136 | ) | (7,011 | ) | (348 | ) | |||||||
Net expenses | 92,514 | 490,309 | 429,785 | 40,288 | 1,882,135 | 666,339 | |||||||||||||
Net investment income. | 141,317 | 1,236,742 | 2,723,999 | 87,355 | 4,116,681 | 1,096,018 | |||||||||||||
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments, Foreign | |||||||||||||||||||
Currency Transactions and Options Contracts(Notes 3 and 6): | |||||||||||||||||||
Net realized gain (loss) from: | |||||||||||||||||||
Investments | (383,287 | ) | 2,645,834 | (7,962 | ) | — | 22,848,488 | (2,511,396 | ) | ||||||||||
Foreign currency transactions (Note 1C) | — | — | — | — | — | (68,808 | ) | ||||||||||||
Options contracts | (882,817 | ) | 25,477 | — | — | 75,074 | — | ||||||||||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments, | |||||||||||||||||||
foreign currency transactions and options contracts | (1,266,104 | ) | 2,671,311 | (7,962 | ) | — | 22,923,562 | (2,580,204 | ) | ||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | |||||||||||||||||||
Investments | 3,691,311 | 11,051,707 | 6,262,161 | — | 41,311,764 | 28,174,470 | |||||||||||||
Foreign currency transactions (Note 1C) | — | — | — | — | — | 4,615 | |||||||||||||
Options contracts | (69,269 | ) | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation on investments, foreign currency transactions and | |||||||||||||||||||
options contracts | 3,622,042 | 11,051,707 | 6,262,161 | — | 41,311,764 | 28,179,085 | |||||||||||||
Net gain on investments, foreign currency transactions and | |||||||||||||||||||
options contracts | 2,355,938 | 13,723,018 | 6,254,199 | — | 64,235,326 | 25,598,881 | |||||||||||||
Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations | $ | 2,497,255 | $ | 14,959,760 | $ | 8,978,198 | $ | 87,355 | $ | 68,352,007 | $ | 26,694,899 |
(a) Net of $6,197 foreign taxeswithheld
(b) Net of $39,569 foreign taxeswithheld
(c) Net of $210,866foreign taxeswithheld
90 | See notes to financial statements | 91 |
StatementsofOperations
FIRSTINVESTORSLIFESERIES FUNDS
SixMonthsEnded June 30, 2019
LIMITED | |||||||||||||||||||
INVESTMENT | DURATION | SELECT | SPECIAL | TOTAL | |||||||||||||||
GRADE | BOND | OPPORTUNITY | GROWTH | SITUATIONS | RETURN | ||||||||||||||
Investment Income | |||||||||||||||||||
Income: | |||||||||||||||||||
Interest | $ | 1,224,753 | $ | 535,434 | $ | 2,054 | $ | 5,487 | $ | 41,668 | $ | 384,997 | |||||||
Dividends | — | — | 553,272 | (d) | 591,129 | 1,961,853 | 316,640 | (e) | |||||||||||
Total income | 1,224,753 | 535,434 | 555,326 | 596,616 | 2,003,521 | 701,637 | |||||||||||||
Expenses (Notes 1 and 4): | |||||||||||||||||||
Advisory fees | 235,141 | 125,080 | 274,935 | 310,473 | 859,261 | 207,397 | |||||||||||||
Professional fees. | 11,900 | 13,217 | 9,874 | 10,704 | 21,762 | 13,975 | |||||||||||||
Custodian fees and expenses | 958 | 778 | 8,442 | 3,121 | 9,773 | 1,455 | |||||||||||||
Reports and notices to shareholders | 5,293 | 3,945 | 5,454 | 4,692 | 15,151 | 7,010 | |||||||||||||
Registration fees | 650 | 650 | 126 | 206 | 650 | 599 | |||||||||||||
Trustees’ fees | 2,727 | 1,453 | 3,210 | 3,634 | 10,090 | 2,413 | |||||||||||||
Other expenses | 9,254 | 5,304 | 3,898 | 2,091 | 8,913 | 8,913 | |||||||||||||
Total expenses | 265,923 | 150,427 | 305,939 | 334,921 | 925,600 | 241,762 | |||||||||||||
Less: Expenses waived (Note 4) | (47,028 | ) | (25,016 | ) | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||
Expenses paid indirectly (Note 1G) | (787 | ) | (418 | ) | (1,040 | ) | (1,056 | ) | (3,367 | ) | (769 | ) | |||||||
Net expenses | 218,108 | 124,993 | 304,899 | 333,865 | 922,233 | 240,993 | |||||||||||||
Net investment income | 1,006,645 | 410,441 | 250,427 | 262,751 | 1,081,288 | 460,644 | |||||||||||||
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments | |||||||||||||||||||
and Futures Contracts(Note 3): | |||||||||||||||||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | 107,420 | (5,296 | ) | 1,011,424 | 5,973,247 | 5,973,530 | 562,734 | ||||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation on investments | 4,454,656 | 676,378 | 11,318,147 | 4,098,789 | 18,656,238 | 5,668,517 | |||||||||||||
Net gain on investments | 4,562,076 | 671,082 | 12,329,571 | 10,072,036 | 24,629,768 | 6,231,251 | |||||||||||||
Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations | $ | 5,568,721 | $ | 1,081,523 | $ | 12,579,998 | $ | 10,334,787 | $ | 25,711,056 | $ | 6,691,895 |
(d) Net of $5,316 foreign taxeswithheld
(e) Net of $2,132 foreign taxeswithheld
92 | See notes to financial statements | 93 |
StatementsofChangesin Net Assets
FIRSTINVESTORSLIFE SERIES FUNDS
COVERED CALL | GOVERNMENT | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
STRATEGY | EQUITY INCOME | FUND FOR INCOME | CASH MANAGEMENT | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | ||||||||||||||||||
6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | ||||||||||||||||||
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets From Operations | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income | $ | 141,317 | $ | 214,738 | $ | 1,236,742 | $ | 3,708,762 | $ | 2,723,999 | $ | 5,136,389 | $ | 87,355 | $ | 123,522 | |||||||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments, foreign currency | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
transactions and options contracts | (1,266,104 | ) | 79,161 | 2,671,311 | 10,345,512 | (7,962 | ) | (135,135 | ) | — | — | ||||||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments, | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
foreign currency transactions and options contracts | 3,622,042 | (2,140,100 | ) | 11,051,707 | (24,510,582 | ) | 6,262,161 | (7,547,381 | ) | — | — | ||||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
from operations | 2,497,255 | (1,846,201 | ) | 14,959,760 | (10,456,308 | ) | 8,978,198 | (2,546,127 | ) | 87,355 | 123,522 | ||||||||||||||
Distributions to Shareholders | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distributions | (214,737 | ) | (132,946 | ) | (14,210,932 | ) | (6,132,576 | ) | (5,659,504 | ) | (5,406,594 | ) | (87,355 | ) | (123,522 | ) | |||||||||
Trust Share Transactions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Proceeds from shares sold. | 2,259,903 | 8,617,171 | 1,405,807 | 3,601,599 | 2,504,092 | 4,700,129 | 11,141,359 | 34,404,223 | |||||||||||||||||
Reinvestment of distributions | 214,737 | 132,946 | 14,210,932 | 6,132,576 | 5,659,504 | 5,406,594 | 87,355 | 123,522 | |||||||||||||||||
Cost of shares redeemed | (493,856 | ) | (795,938 | ) | (3,852,652 | ) | (9,254,741 | ) | (3,667,079 | ) | (7,966,143 | ) | (12,871,609 | ) | (31,536,951 | ) | |||||||||
Net increase (decrease) from trust share transactions | 1,980,784 | 7,954,179 | 11,764,087 | 479,434 | 4,496,517 | 2,140,580 | (1,642,895 | ) | 2,990,794 | ||||||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets | 4,263,302 | 5,975,032 | 12,512,915 | (16,109,450 | ) | 7,815,211 | (5,812,141 | ) | (1,642,895 | ) | 2,990,794 | ||||||||||||||
Net Assets | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Beginning of period | 17,359,251 | 11,384,219 | 113,884,727 | 129,994,177 | 100,198,451 | 106,010,592 | 11,654,135 | 8,663,341 | |||||||||||||||||
End of period | $ | 21,622,553 | $ | 17,359,251 | $ | 126,397,642 | $ | 113,884,727 | $ | 108,013,662 | $ | 100,198,451 | $ | 10,011,240 | $ | 11,654,135 | |||||||||
Trust Shares Issued and Redeemed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sold | 202,323 | 753,965 | 68,439 | 159,530 | 410,041 | 760,276 | 11,141,359 | 34,404,223 | |||||||||||||||||
Issued for distributions reinvested. | 19,139 | 11,796 | 716,277 | 276,242 | 947,991 | 887,782 | 87,355 | 123,522 | |||||||||||||||||
Redeemed | (43,661 | ) | (68,955 | ) | (186,823 | ) | (410,580 | ) | (601,513 | ) | (1,294,191 | ) | (12,871,609 | ) | (31,536,951 | ) | |||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in trust shares outstanding | 177,801 | 696,806 | 597,893 | 25,192 | 756,519 | 353,867 | (1,642,895 | ) | 2,990,794 |
94 | See notes to financial statements | 95 |
StatementsofChangesin Net Assets
FIRSTINVESTORSLIFE SERIES FUNDS
LIMITED DURATION | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
GROWTH & INCOME | INTERNATIONAL | INVESTMENT GRADE | BOND | |||||||||||||||||||||
1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | |||||||||||||||||
6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | |||||||||||||||||
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets From Operations | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income | $ | 4,116,681 | $ | 7,887,300 | $ | 1,096,018 | $ | 1,315,927 | $ | 1,006,645 | $ | 1,947,725 | $ | 410,441 | $ | 41,887 | ||||||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments, foreign currency | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
transactions and options contracts | 22,923,562 | 79,189,083 | (2,580,204 | ) | 13,130,271 | 107,420 | (192,933 | ) | (5,296 | ) | (114,370 | ) | ||||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
and foreign currency transactions | 41,311,764 | (137,968,673 | ) | 28,179,085 | (34,079,938 | ) | 4,454,656 | (3,142,639 | ) | 676,378 | 139,774 | |||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
from operations | 68,352,007 | (50,892,290 | ) | 26,694,899 | (19,633,740 | ) | 5,568,721 | (1,387,847 | ) | 1,081,523 | 67,291 | |||||||||||||
Distributions to Shareholders | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distributions | (88,019,342 | ) | (30,287,733 | ) | (14,342,500 | ) | (8,452,691 | ) | (2,419,791 | ) | (2,464,911 | ) | (212,829 | ) | (181,149 | ) | ||||||||
Trust Share Transactions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Proceeds from shares sold. | 2,268,916 | 4,272,429 | 2,177,576 | 8,719,408 | 1,238,871 | 3,265,357 | 1,000,800 | 2,471,009 | ||||||||||||||||
Reinvestment of distributions | 88,019,342 | 30,287,733 | 14,342,500 | 8,452,691 | 2,419,791 | 2,464,911 | 212,829 | 181,149 | ||||||||||||||||
Cost of shares redeemed | (16,166,432 | ) | (36,099,781 | ) | (4,670,915 | ) | (6,965,544 | ) | (2,871,384 | ) | (6,410,479 | ) | (1,612,695 | ) | (1,483,283 | ) | ||||||||
Shares issued in merger (see Note 9) | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 25,246,765 | ||||||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) from trust share transactions | 74,121,826 | (1,539,619 | ) | 11,849,161 | 10,206,555 | 787,278 | (680,211 | ) | (399,066 | ) | 26,415,640 | |||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets | 54,454,491 | (82,719,642 | ) | 24,201,560 | (17,879,876 | ) | 3,936,208 | (4,532,969 | ) | 469,628 | 26,301,782 | |||||||||||||
Net Assets | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Beginning of period | 448,975,242 | 531,694,884 | 142,248,149 | 160,128,025 | 61,630,129 | 66,163,098 | 33,521,755 | 7,219,973 | ||||||||||||||||
End of period | $ | 503,429,733 | $ | 448,975,242 | $ | 166,449,709 | $ | 142,248,149 | $ | 65,566,337 | $ | 61,630,129 | $ | 33,991,383 | $ | 33,521,755 | ||||||||
Trust Shares Issued and Redeemed | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sold | 55,311 | 91,611 | 95,186 | 355,497 | 119,963 | 318,410 | 106,207 | 265,394 | ||||||||||||||||
Issued for distributions reinvested. | 2,334,731 | 656,716 | 662,471 | 342,492 | 241,255 | 242,371 | 22,690 | 19,541 | ||||||||||||||||
Redeemed | (404,032 | ) | (769,522 | ) | (204,534 | ) | (282,708 | ) | (278,195 | ) | (630,374 | ) | (171,199 | ) | (158,651 | ) | ||||||||
Shares issued in merger (see Note 9) | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 2,713,185 | ||||||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in trust shares outstanding | 1,986,010 | (21,195 | ) | 553,123 | 415,281 | 83,023 | (69,593 | ) | (42,302 | ) | 2,839,469 |
96 | See notes to financial statements | 97 |
StatementsofChangesin Net Assets
FIRSTINVESTORSLIFE SERIES FUNDS
OPPORTUNITY | SELECT GROWTH | SPECIAL SITUATIONS | TOTAL RETURN | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | 1/1/19 to | 1/1/18 to | ||||||||||||||||||
6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | 6/30/19 | 12/31/18 | ||||||||||||||||||
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets From Operations | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income | $ | 250,427 | $ | 941,034 | $ | 262,751 | $ | 260,357 | $ | 1,081,288 | $ | 1,626,398 | $ | 460,644 | $ | 871,169 | |||||||||
Net realized gain on investments | 1,011,424 | 1,873,756 | 5,973,247 | 4,817,300 | 5,973,530 | 15,731,287 | 562,734 | 1,088,676 | |||||||||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of investments | 11,318,147 | (14,258,572 | ) | 4,098,789 | (8,481,984 | ) | 18,656,238 | (59,007,907 | ) | 5,668,517 | (5,855,570 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
from operations | 12,579,998 | (11,443,782 | ) | 10,334,787 | (3,404,327 | ) | 25,711,056 | (41,650,222 | ) | 6,691,895 | (3,895,725 | ) | |||||||||||||
Distributions to Shareholders | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distributions | (2,832,760 | ) | (1,264,074) | (5,077,656 | ) | (5,263,578 | ) | (17,270,300 | ) | (33,554,496 | ) | (2,116,836 | ) | (1,009,297 | ) | ||||||||||
Trust Share Transactions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Proceeds from shares sold. | 3,602,333 | 10,438,149 | 4,798,614 | 11,136,982 | 3,483,763 | 8,412,913 | 2,113,953 | 5,027,378 | |||||||||||||||||
Reinvestment of distributions | 2,832,760 | 1,264,074 | 5,077,656 | 5,263,578 | 17,270,300 | 33,554,496 | 2,116,836 | 1,009,297 | |||||||||||||||||
Cost of shares redeemed | (2,556,846 | ) | (4,776,699 | ) | (2,213,309 | ) | (3,933,445 | ) | (5,350,466 | ) | (12,935,929 | ) | (1,982,011 | ) | (3,358,122 | ) | |||||||||
Shares issued in merger (see Note 9) | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 5,946,557 | |||||||||||||||||
Net increase from trust share transactions | 3,878,247 | 6,925,524 | 7,662,961 | 12,467,115 | 15,403,597 | 29,031,480 | 2,248,778 | 8,625,110 | |||||||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets | 13,625,485 | (5,782,332 | ) | 12,920,092 | 3,799,210 | 23,844,353 | (46,173,238 | ) | 6,823,837 | 3,720,088 | |||||||||||||||
Net Assets | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Beginning of period | 64,195,166 | 69,977,498 | 73,628,694 | 69,829,484 | 209,825,976 | 255,999,214 | 51,629,590 | 47,909,502 | |||||||||||||||||
End of period | $ | 77,820,651 | $ | 64,195,166 | $ | 86,548,786 | $ | 73,628,694 | $ | 233,670,329 | $ | 209,825,976 | $ | 58,453,427 | $ | 51,629,590 | |||||||||
Trust Shares Issued and Redeemed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sold | 208,179 | 580,446 | 317,255 | 707,116 | 115,313 | 244,269 | 161,545 | 376,074 | |||||||||||||||||
Issued for distributions reinvested. | 164,983 | 70,383 | 336,715 | 347,890 | 569,038 | 1,006,132 | 165,120 | 75,659 | |||||||||||||||||
Redeemed | (147,141 | ) | (260,692 | ) | (145,959 | ) | (247,891 | ) | (176,195 | ) | (366,438 | ) | (151,009 | ) | (253,482 | ) | |||||||||
Shares issued in merger (see Note 9) | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 469,477 | |||||||||||||||||
Net increase in trust shares outstanding | 226,021 | 390,137 | 508,011 | 807,115 | 508,156 | 883,963 | 175,656 | 667,728 |
98 | See notes to financial statements | 99 |
Notes to Financial Statements
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
1. Significant Accounting Policies—First Investors Life Series Funds, a Delaware statutory trust (“the Trust”), is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”) as an open-end management investment company. The Trust operates as a series fund, issuing shares of beneficial interest in the Covered Call Strategy Fund, Equity Income Fund, Fund For Income, Government Cash Management Fund, Growth & Income Fund, International Fund, Investment Grade Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund, Opportunity Fund, Select Growth Fund, Special Situations Fund and Total Return Fund (each a “Fund”, collectively, “the Funds”), and accounts separately for the assets, liabilities and operations of each Fund. Each Fund is an investment company and accordingly follows the investment company accounting and reporting guidance of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Accounting Standard Codification Topic 946 “Financial Services—Investment Companies” including FASB Accounting Standard Update ASU 2013-08. Each Fund is diversified. The objective of each Fund as of June 30, 2019 is as follows:
Covered Call Strategy Fundseeks long-term capital appreciation.
Equity Income Fundseeks total return.
Fund For Incomeseeks high current income.
Government Cash Management Fundseeks to earn a high rate of current income consistent with the preservation of capital and maintenance of liquidity.
Growth & Income Fundseeks long-term growth of capital and current income.
International Fundprimarily seeks long-term capital growth.
Investment Grade Fundseeks to generate a maximum level of income consistent with investment primarily in investment grade debt securities.
Limited Duration Bond Fundseeks current income consistent with low volatility of principal.
Opportunity Fundseeks long-term capital growth.
Select Growth Fundseeks long-term growth of capital.
Special Situations Fund seeks long-term growth of capital.
Total Return Fundseeks high, long-term total investment return consistent with moderate investment risk.
A. Security Valuation—Except as provided below, a security listed or traded on an exchange or the Nasdaq Stock Market is valued at its last sale price on the exchange
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or market where the security is principally traded, and lacking any sales, the security is valued at the mean between the closing bid and asked prices. Securities traded in the over-the-counter (“OTC”) market (including securities listed on exchanges whose primary market is believed to be OTC) and call and put options are valued at the mean between the last bid and asked prices based on quotes furnished by a market maker for such securities or an authorized pricing service. Fixed income securities, other than short-term debt securities held by the Government Cash Management Fund, are priced based upon evaluated prices that are provided by a pricing service approved by the Trust’s Board of Trustees (“the Board”). Other securities may also be priced based upon valuations that are provided by pricing services approved by the Board. The pricing services consider security type, rating, market condition and yield data as well as market quotations, prices provided by market makers and other available information in determining evaluated prices.
The Funds monitor for significant events occurring prior to the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange that could have a material impact on the value of any securities that are held by the Funds. Examples of such events include trading halts, natural disasters, political events and issuer-specific developments. If the Valuation Committee of Foresters Investment Management Company, Inc. (“FIMCO”) decides that such events warrant using fair value estimates, it will take such events into consideration in determining the fair values of such securities. If market quotations or prices are not readily available or are deemed to be unreliable, or do not appear to reflect significant events that have occurred prior to the time as of which the net asset value is calculated, the securities may be valued at fair value as determined in good faith pursuant to procedures adopted by the Board. The Funds also use evaluated prices from a pricing service to fair value certain foreign equity securities in the event that fluctuations in U.S. securities markets exceed a predetermined level or if a foreign market is closed. For valuation purposes, where applicable, quotations of foreign securities in foreign currencies are translated to U.S. dollar equivalents using the foreign exchange quotation in effect.
The Government Cash Management Fund values its portfolio securities in accordance with the amortized cost method of valuation under Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act. Amortized cost is an approximation of market value of an instrument, whereby the difference between its acquisition cost and market value at maturity is amortized on a straight-line basis over the remaining life of the instrument. The effect of changes in the market value of a security as a result of fluctuating interest rates is not taken into account and thus the amortized cost method of valuation may result in the value of a security being higher or lower than its actual market value.
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Notes to Financial Statements(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
In accordance with Accounting Standards Codification 820 “Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures” (“ASC 820”), investments held by the Funds are carried at “fair value”. As defined by ASC 820, fair value is the price that a fund would receive upon selling an investment in an orderly transaction to an independent buyer in the principal or most advantageous market for the investment under current market conditions. Various inputs are used in determining the value of the Funds’ investments.
In addition to defining fair value, ASC 820 established a three-tier hierarchy of inputs to establish a classification of fair value measurements for disclosure purposes. The three-tier hierarchy of inputs is summarized in the three broad Levels listed below:
Level 1— | Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical securities that the | |
Fund has the ability to access. | ||
Level 2— | Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are | |
observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These | ||
inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive | ||
market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, | ||
credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data. | ||
Level 3— | Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, to the extent relevant observ- | |
able inputs are not available, representing the Fund’s own assumption about | ||
the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or | ||
liability, and would be based on the best information available. |
Equity securities and futures contracts traded on an exchange or the Nasdaq Stock Market are categorized in Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy to the extent that they are actively traded and valuation adjustments are not applied. Foreign securities that are fair valued in the event that fluctuations in U.S. securities markets exceed a predetermined level or if a foreign market is closed are categorized in Level 2. Corporate, covered and municipal bonds, asset backed, U.S. Government and U.S. Government Agency securities, pass-through certificates and loan participations are categorized in Level 2 to the extent that the inputs are observable and timely, otherwise they would be categorized in Level 3. Short-term notes that are valued at amortized cost by the Government Cash Management Fund are categorized in Level 2. Options contracts are categorized in Level 2 to the extent that the inputs are observable and timely. Foreign exchange contracts that are considered derivative instruments and are valued at the net unrealized appreciation or depreciation on the instruments are categorized in Level 2. Securities that are fair valued by the Valuation Committee may be categorized in either Level 2 or Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy depending on the relative significance of the unobservable valuation inputs.
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The aggregate value by input level, as of June 30, 2019, for each Fund’s investments is included following each Fund’s portfolio of investments.
B. Federal Income Tax—No provision has been made for federal income taxes on net income or capital gains since it is the policy of each Fund to continue to comply with the special provisions of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to investment companies, and to make sufficient distributions of income and capital gains (in excess of any available capital loss carryovers), to relieve each Fund from all, or substantially all, federal income taxes. At December 31, 2018, capital loss carryovers were as follows:
Not Subject | |||||||
to Expiration | |||||||
Fund | Total | Long-Term | Short-Term | Utilized | |||
Covered Call Strategy | $ 109,497 | $ — | $ 109,497 | $116,891 | |||
Fund For Income | 5,709,301 | 4,446,962 | 1,262,339 | 125,024 | |||
Investment Grade | 1,526,639 | 1,457,013 | 69,626 | — | |||
Limited Duration Bond | 426,747 | 322,689 | 104,058 | — |
The Funds recognize the tax benefits of uncertain tax positions only where the position is “more likely than not” to be sustained assuming examination by tax authorities. Management has analyzed the Funds’ tax positions, and has concluded that no liability for unrecognized tax benefits should be recorded related to uncertain tax positions taken on returns filed for open tax years 2016–2018, or are expected to be taken in the Funds’ 2019 tax returns. The Funds identify their major tax jurisdictions as U.S. Federal, New York State, New York City and foreign jurisdictions where the Funds make significant investments; however, the Funds are not aware of any tax position for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will change materially in the next twelve months.
C. Foreign Currency Translations and Transactions—The accounting records of the International Fund are maintained in U.S. dollars. Portfolio securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the date of valuation. Purchases and sales of investment securities, dividend income and certain expenses are translated to U.S. dollars at the prevailing rates of exchange on the respective dates of such transactions.
The International Fund does not isolate that portion of gains and losses on investments which is due to changes in foreign exchange rates from that which is due to changes in market prices of the investments. These changes are included with the net realized and unrealized gains and losses from investments.
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Notes to Financial Statements(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
Net realized and unrealized gains and losses on foreign currency transactions include gains and losses from the sales of spot currency transactions and gains and losses on accrued foreign dividends and related withholding taxes.
D. Distributions to Shareholders—The Separate Accounts, which own the shares of the Funds, will receive all dividends and other distributions by the Funds. All dividends and distributions are reinvested by the Separate Accounts in additional shares of the distributing Funds. Distributions from net investment income and net realized capital gains are generally declared and paid annually on all Funds, except for the Government Cash Management Fund which declares dividends, if any, from the total of net investment income (plus or minus all realized short-term gains and losses on investments) daily and pays monthly. Dividends from net investment income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations which may differ from accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These differences are primarily due to differing treatments for capital loss carryforwards, deferral of wash sale losses, late loss deferrals, post-October capital losses, net operating losses and foreign currency transactions.
E. Expense Allocation—Expenses directly charged or attributable to a Fund are paid from the assets of that Fund. General expenses of the Trust are allocated among and charged to the assets of each Fund on a fair and equitable basis, which may be based on the relative assets of each Fund or the nature of the services performed and relative applicability to each Fund.
F. Use of Estimates—The preparation of the financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expense during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
G. Other—Security transactions are generally accounted for on the first business day following the date the securities are purchased or sold, except for financial reporting purposes which is trade date. Investments in securities issued on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis are generally reflected in the assets of the Funds on the first business day following the date the securities are purchased and the Funds segregate assets for these transactions. Cost of securities is determined and gains and losses are based on the identified cost basis for securities for both financial statement and federal income tax purposes. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date or
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for certain foreign dividends, as soon as the Fund becomes aware of the dividends. Interest income and estimated expenses are accrued daily. Bond discounts and premiums are accreted or amortized using the interest method. Interest income on zero coupon bonds and step bonds is accrued daily at the effective interest rate. Withholding taxes on foreign dividends have been provided in accordance with the Funds’ understanding of the applicable country’s tax rules and rates. The Bank of New York Mellon serves as custodian for the Funds and may provide credits against custodian charges based on uninvested cash balances of the Funds. For the six months ended June 30, 2019, the Funds received credits in the amount of $16,470. Some of the Funds reduced expenses through brokerage service arrangements. For the six months ended June 30, 2019, the Equity Income, Growth & Income, Opportunity, Special Situations and Total Return Funds’ expenses were reduced by a total of $1,696 under these arrangements.
2. Trust Shares—The Trust is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares of beneficial interest without par value. The Trust consists of the Funds listed on the cover page, each of which is a separate and distinct series of the Trust. Shares in the Funds are acquired through the purchase of variable annuity or variable life insurance contracts for which a Fund is an investment option.
3. Security Transactions—For the six months ended June 30, 2019, purchases and sales of securities and long-term U.S. Government obligations (excluding U.S. Treasury bills, short-term securities and foreign currencies) were as follows:
Long-Term U.S. | |||||||||||||||||
Securities | Government Obligations | ||||||||||||||||
Cost of | Proceeds | Cost of | Proceeds | ||||||||||||||
Fund | Purchases | of Sales | Purchases | of Sales | |||||||||||||
Covered Call Strategy | $ | 7,041,024 | $ | 5,983,731 | $ | — | $ | — | |||||||||
Equity Income | 29,397,714 | 39,168,461 | — | — | |||||||||||||
Fund For Income | 40,528,470 | 36,539,864 | — | — | |||||||||||||
Growth & Income | 136,697,224 | 162,288,962 | — | — | |||||||||||||
International | 54,418,739 | 54,330,548 | — | — | |||||||||||||
Investment Grade | 14,576,708 | 18,963,036 | 3,593,602 | 1,010,090 | |||||||||||||
Limited Duration Bond | 2,938,788 | 4,313,197 | 1,366,977 | 607,500 | |||||||||||||
Opportunity | 16,230,576 | 14,929,113 | — | — | |||||||||||||
Select Growth | 28,982,515 | 26,871,452 | — | — | |||||||||||||
Special Situations | 59,964,311 | 63,457,926 | — | — | |||||||||||||
Total Return | 19,822,051 | 22,549,204 | 2,481,027 | 953,121 |
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Notes to Financial Statements(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
At June 30, 2019, aggregate cost and net unrealized appreciation of securities for federal income tax purposes were as follows:
Gross | Gross | Net | ||||||||||||||||
Aggregate | Unrealized | Unrealized | Unrealized | |||||||||||||||
Fund | Cost | Appreciation | Depreciation | Appreciation | ||||||||||||||
Covered Call Strategy | $ | 18,360,212 | $ | 3,448,425 | $ | 451,184 | $ | 2,997,241 | ||||||||||
Equity Income | 93,648,590 | 31,904,264 | 1,650,090 | 30,254,174 | ||||||||||||||
Fund For Income | 103,506,824 | 2,191,260 | 1,543,823 | 647,437 | ||||||||||||||
Growth & Income | 364,517,592 | 138,937,237 | 3,130,932 | 135,806,305 | ||||||||||||||
International | 119,156,902 | 45,296,764 | 623,469 | 44,673,295 | ||||||||||||||
Investment Grade | 60,941,558 | 2,898,144 | 634,914 | 2,263,230 | ||||||||||||||
Limited Duration Bond | 32,948,699 | 562,289 | 66,655 | 495,634 | ||||||||||||||
Opportunity | 63,878,954 | 14,336,501 | 1,982,681 | 12,353,820 | ||||||||||||||
Select Growth | 70,010,546 | 16,427,420 | 2,389,850 | 14,037,570 | ||||||||||||||
Special Situations | 211,216,878 | 34,885,021 | 15,030,254 | 19,854,767 | ||||||||||||||
Total Return | 50,305,441 | 6,975,050 | 593,893 | 6,381,157 |
4. Advisory Fee and Other Transactions With Affiliates—Certain officers of the Trust are officers of the Trust’s investment adviser, FIMCO, and its transfer agent, Foresters Investor Services, Inc. (“FIS”). Trustees of the Trust who are not officers or directors of FIMCO or its affiliates are remunerated by the Funds. For the six months ended June 30, 2019, total trustee fees accrued by the Funds amounted to $62,625.
The Investment Advisory Agreement provides as compensation to FIMCO for each Fund, an annual fee, payable monthly, at the rate of .75% on the first $250 million of each Fund’s average daily net assets, .72% on the next $250 million, .69% on the next $250 million, .66% on the next $500 million, declining by .02% on each $500 million thereafter, down to .60% on average daily net assets over $2.25 billion. For the six months ended June 30, 2019, FIMCO has voluntarily waived advisory fees in the amount of $47,028 on Investment Grade Fund and $25,016 on Limited Duration Bond Fund in order to limit the advisory fees on these Funds to .60% of their average daily net assets. FIMCO has entered into an expense limitation agreement with the Government Cash Management Fund (“GCM”) on June 1, 2018, to limit GCM’s total annual fund operating expenses (exclusive of interest expenses, taxes, brokerage commissions, acquired fund fees and expenses, dividend costs related to short sales, and extraordinary expenses, such as litigation expenses, if any) to .70% of GCM’s average daily net assets. The agreement expired on May 1, 2019. During the period January 1, 2019 through May 1, 2019, FIMCO assumed $2,341 under the terms of the agreement. FIMCO and GCM have agreed that any expenses of GCM assumed by FIMCO and/or FIS pursuant to this agreement be repaid to FIMCO by GCM within three years after the date the fee limitation and/or expense
106 |
reimbursement has been made by FIMCO, provided that such repayment does not cause the expenses of GCM’s shares to exceed the applicable expense ratio in place at the time the expenses are waived or assumed or the current limits established under the expense limitation agreement. For the period June 1, 2018 (commencement of the expense limitation agreement) through May 1, 2019 (expiration of expense limitation agreement), FIMCO assumed $20,484 under the terms of the agreement of which $18,143 expires December 31, 2021 and $2,341 expires December 31, 2022. For the six months ended June 30, 2019, FIMCO also voluntarily waived an additional $3,483 in advisory fees to further limit GCM’s total annual fund operating expenses to .60% of its average daily net assets. For the six months ended June 30, 2019, total advisory fees accrued to FIMCO were $5,335,035 of which $77,868 was waived by FIMCO as noted above.
Ziegler Capital Management, LLC serves as investment subadviser to Covered Call Strategy Fund, Muzinich & Co., Inc. serves as investment subadviser to Fund For Income, Investment Grade Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund and Total Return Fund, Vontobel Asset Management, Inc. serves as investment subadviser to International Fund and Smith Asset Management Group, L.P. serves as investment subadviser to Select Growth Fund. The subadvisers are paid by FIMCO and not by the Funds.
5. Restricted Securities—Certain restricted securities are exempt from the registration requirements under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933 and may only be sold to qualified institutional investors. Unless otherwise noted, 144A securities are deemed to be liquid. These securities are valued as set forth in Note 1A. At June 30, 2019, the Fund For Income held one hundred ninety-nine 144A securities with an aggregate value of $57,309,131 representing 53.1% of the Fund’s net assets, the Investment Grade Fund held fifteen 144A securities with an aggregate value of $6,940,359 representing 10.6% of the Fund’s net assets, the Limited Duration Bond Fund held thirteen 144A securities with an aggregate value of $5,844,917 representing 17.2% of the Fund’s net assets and the Total Return Fund held eight 144A securities with an aggregate value of $1,568,368 representing 2.7% of the Fund’s net assets.
6. Derivatives—Some of the Funds may invest in various derivatives. A derivative is a financial instrument which has a value that is based on—or “derived from”—the values of other assets, reference rates, or indices. The Funds may invest in derivatives for hedging purposes.
Derivatives may relate to a wide variety of underlying references, such as commodities, stocks, bonds, interest rates, currency exchange rates, and related indices. Derivatives include futures contracts and options on futures contracts, forward- commitment transactions, options on securities, caps, floors, collars, swap contracts, and other financial instruments. Some derivatives, such as futures contracts and certain
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Notes to Financial Statements(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
options, are traded on U.S. commodity and securities exchanges, while other derivatives, such as swap contracts, are privately negotiated and entered into in the over-the-counter market (“OTC”). The risks associated with the use of derivatives are different from, and possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing directly in securities and other traditional investments.
The use of a derivative involves the risk that a loss may be sustained as a result of the insolvency or bankruptcy of the other party to the contract (usually referred to as a “counterparty”) or the failure of the counterparty to make required payments or otherwise comply with the terms of the contract. Additionally, the use of credit derivatives can result in losses if FIMCO, or a Fund’s subadviser, as applicable, does not correctly evaluate the creditworthiness of the issuer on which the credit derivative is based.
Derivatives may be subject to liquidity risk, which exists when a particular derivative is difficult to purchase or sell. If a derivative transaction is particularly large or if the relevant market is relatively illiquid (as is the case with many OTC derivatives), it may not be possible to initiate a transaction or liquidate a position at an advantageous time or price.
Derivatives may be subject to pricing or “basis” risk, which exists when a particular derivative becomes extraordinarily expensive relative to historical prices or the prices of corresponding cash market instruments. Under certain market conditions, it may not be economically feasible to initiate a transaction or liquidate a position in time to avoid a loss or take advantage of an opportunity.
Because many derivatives have leverage or borrowing components, adverse changes in the value or level of the underlying asset, reference rate, or index can result in a loss substantially greater than the amount invested in the derivative itself. Certain derivatives have the potential for unlimited loss, regardless of the size of the initial investment.
Like most other investments, derivative instruments are subject to the risk that the market value of the instrument will change in a way detrimental to the Funds’ interest. The Funds bear the risk that FIMCO will incorrectly forecast future market trends or the values of assets, reference rates, indices, or other financial or economic factors in establishing derivative positions for the Funds. If FIMCO attempts to use a derivative as a hedge against, or as a substitute for, a portfolio investment, the Funds will be exposed to the risk that the derivative will have or will develop an imperfect or no correlation with the portfolio investment. This could cause substantial losses for the Funds. While hedging strategies involving derivative instruments can reduce the risk of loss, they can also reduce the opportunity for gain or even result in losses by offsetting favorable price movements in other investments. Many derivatives, in
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particular OTC derivatives, are complex and often valued subjectively. Improper valuations can result in increased cash payment requirements to counterparties or a loss of value to a Fund.
The following provides more information on specific types of derivatives and activity in the Funds. The use of derivative instruments by certain of the Funds for the six months ended June 30, 2019 was related to the use of written options and futures contracts, as discussed further below.
Options Contracts—Some of the Funds may write covered call options on securities, derivative instruments, or currencies the Fund owns or in which it may invest. Writing call options tends to decrease a Fund’s exposure to the underlying instrument. When a Fund writes a call, an amount equal to the premium received is recorded as a liability and subsequently marked to market to reflect the current value of the option written. These liabilities are reflected as written options outstanding in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Payments received or made, if any, from writing options with premiums to be determined on a future date are reflected as such on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Premiums received from writing options which expire are treated as realized gains. Premiums received from writing options which are exercised or closed are added to the proceeds or offset against amounts paid on the underlying future, swap, security or currency transaction to determine the realized gain or loss. A Fund, as a writer of an option, has no control over whether the underlying future, swap, security or currency may be sold (call) or purchased (put) and, as a result, bears the market risk of an unfavorable change in the price of the future, swap, security or currency underlying the written option. The risk exists that a Fund may not be able to enter into a closing transaction because of an illiquid market. A premium paid by a Fund is included in its Statement of Assets and Liabilities as an investment and subsequently marked to market to reflect the current value of the option. Premiums paid for purchasing options which expire are treated as realized losses. The risk associated with purchasing put and call options is limited to the premium paid. Premiums paid for purchasing options which are exercised or closed are added to the amounts paid or offset against the proceeds on the underlying future, swap, security or currency transaction to determine the realized gain or loss.
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Notes to Financial Statements(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
The premium amount and the number of option contracts written by the Funds during the six months ended June 30, 2019, were as follows:
Covered Call Strategy | Equity Income | Growth & Income | ||||||||||||||
Call Options | Call Options | Call Options | ||||||||||||||
Number of | Premium | Number of | Premium | Number of | Premium | |||||||||||
Contracts | Amount | Contracts | Amount | Contracts | Amount | |||||||||||
Options outstanding at | ||||||||||||||||
December 31, 2018 | (2,207 | ) | $ (500,520 | ) | — | $ — | — | $ — | ||||||||
Call options written | (7,342 | ) | (1,252,510 | ) | (294 | ) | (40,864 | ) | (1,116 | ) | (151,636 | ) | ||||
Call options exercised | 189 | 40,332 | 114 | 15,387 | 489 | 76,562 | ||||||||||
Call options purchased | ||||||||||||||||
to cover | 6,128 | 1,090,994 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
Call options expirations | 1,040 | 157,625 | 180 | 25,477 | 627 | 75,074 | ||||||||||
Balance at | ||||||||||||||||
June 30, 2019 | (2,192 | ) | $ (464,079 | ) | — | $ — | — | $ — |
Derivative Investment Holdings Categorized by Risk Exposure—The following table sets forth the fair value and the location in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities of the Funds’ derivative contracts by primary risk exposure as of June 30, 2019:
Asset Derivatives | Liability Derivatives | ||||||||||
Statement of Assets and | Statement of Assets and | ||||||||||
Risk exposure category | Liabilities location | Value | Liabilities location | Value | |||||||
Options Contracts: | |||||||||||
Covered Call Strategy | N/A | N/A | Written options, at value | $ | 442,457 |
The following table sets forth the Funds’ realized gain (loss), as reflected in the Statement of Operations, by primary risk exposure and by type of derivative contract for the six months ended June 30, 2019:
Risk exposure category | Written options | ||||
Option contracts: | |||||
Covered Call Strategy | $ (882,817 | ) | |||
Equity Income | $ 25,477 | ||||
Growth & Income | $ 75,074 |
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The following table sets forth the Funds’ change in unrealized appreciation/(depreciation) by primary risk exposure and by type of derivative contract for the six months ended June 30, 2019:
Risk exposure category | Written options | ||||||
Option contracts: | |||||||
Covered Call Strategy | $(69,269) |
Futures Contracts—The Funds may enter into futures contracts including interest rate futures contracts and index futures, including futures on equity market indices and debt market indices. A futures contract is an agreement between two parties to buy or sell a specified underlying instrument for a fixed price at a specified future date. The Funds may use futures contracts to manage exposure to the stock market. Upon entering into a futures contract, a fund is required to deposit either cash or securities (initial margin) with a clearing broker in an amount equal to a certain percentage of the face value of the contract. Futures contracts are marked-to-market daily and subsequent daily payments (variation margin) are made or received by a fund depending on the daily fluctuations in the value of the futures contracts and are recorded as unrealized appreciation or (depreciation). This receivable and/or payable, if any, is included in daily variation margin on futures contracts in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Realized gain or (loss) is recorded upon the expiration or closing of a futures contract. The net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts during the period is presented in the Statement of Operations. Any open futures contracts at period end are presented in the Schedule of Investments under the caption “Futures Contracts”. The notional amount at value reflects each contract’s exposure to the underlying instrument or index at period end.
The Funds may enter into interest rate futures contracts on U.S. Treasury obligations and options thereon that are traded on a U.S. exchange. An interest rate futures contract provides for the future sale by one party and the purchase by another party of a specified amount of a particular financial instrument (debt security) at a speci-fied price, date, time and place. Such investments may be used for, among other purposes, the purpose of hedging against changes in the value of a Fund’s portfolio securities due to anticipated changes in interest rates and market conditions. A public market exists for interest rate futures contracts covering a number of debt securities, including long-term U.S. Treasury Bonds, 10-year U.S. Treasury Notes and three-month U.S. Treasury Bills. No price is paid upon entering into futures contracts. Instead, upon entering into a futures contract, a Fund is required to deposit with its custodian in a segregated account in the name of the futures broker through
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Notes to Financial Statements(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
which the transaction is effected an amount of cash or U.S. Government securities generally equal to 3%-5% or less of the contract value. This amount is known as “initial margin.”
An option on an interest rate futures contract generally gives the purchaser the right, in return for the premium paid, to assume a position in a futures contract at a speci-fied exercise price at any time prior to the expiration date of the option. The Funds may purchase put and call options on interest rate futures contracts on U.S. Treasury obligations which are traded on a U.S. exchange as a hedge against changes in interest rates, and may enter into closing transactions with respect to such options to terminate existing positions. There is no guarantee such closing transactions can be effected. When writing a call or put option on a futures contract, margin also must be deposited in accordance with applicable exchange rules. Initial margin on futures contracts is in the nature of a performance bond or good-faith deposit that is returned to a Fund upon termination of the transaction, assuming all obligations have been satisfied. Under certain circumstances, such as periods of high volatility, a Fund may be required by an exchange to increase the level of its initial margin payment. Subsequent payments, called “variation margin,” to and from the broker, are made on a daily basis as the value of the futures position varies, a process known as “marking to market.” Variation margin does not involve borrowing to finance the futures transactions, but rather represents a daily settlement of a Fund’s obligation to or from a clearing organization. A Fund is also obligated to make initial and variation margin payments when it writes options on futures contracts.
To the extent that a Fund participates in the futures or options markets, it will incur investment risks and transaction costs to which it would not be subject absent the use of these strategies. The use of these strategies involves certain special risks, including: (1) dependence on the ability of the Funds’ investment adviser, FIMCO, or a Fund’s subadviser, as applicable, to predict correctly movements in the direction of interest rates and securities prices; (2) imperfect correlation between the price of futures contracts and options thereon and movements in the prices of the securities or currencies being hedged; (3) the fact that skills needed to use these strategies are different from those needed to select portfolio securities; (4) the leverage (if any) that is created by investing in the option or futures contract; and (5) the possible absence of a liquid secondary market for any particular instrument at any time. If FIMCO’s, or a Fund’s subadviser, as applicable, prediction of movements in the direction of the securities and interest rate markets is inaccurate, the adverse consequences to that Fund may leave it in a worse position than if such strategies were not used. Derivatives may be difficult to sell, unwind or value.
The Funds held no interest rate futures contracts at June 30, 2019.
112 |
7. High Yield Credit Risk—The investments of Fund For Income, Investment Grade Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund and Total Return Fund in high yield securities, whether rated or unrated, may be considered speculative and subject to greater market fluctuations and risks of loss of income and principal than lower-yielding, higher-rated, fixed-income securities. The risk of loss due to default by the issuer may be significantly greater for the holders of high-yielding securities, because such securities are generally unsecured and are often subordinated to other creditors of the issuer.
8. Litigation—The Blue Chip and Equity Income Funds have been named, and have received notice that they may be putative members of the proposed defendant class of shareholders, in a lawsuit filed in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware on November 1, 2010, by the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Tribune Company (the “Committee”). The Committee is seeking to recover all payments made to beneficial owners of common stock in connection with a leveraged buyout of the Tribune Company (“LBO”), including payments made in connection with a 2007 tender offer into which the Blue Chip and Equity Income Funds tendered their shares of common stock of the Tribune Company. On December 9, 2011, the Blue Chip Fund was reorganized into the Growth & Income Fund pursuant to a Plan of Reorganization and Termination, whereby all of the assets of the Blue Chip Fund were transferred to the Growth & Income Fund, the Growth & Income Fund assumed all of the liabilities of the Blue Chip Fund, including any contingent liabilities with respect to pending or threatened litigation or actions, and shareholders of Blue Chip Fund became shareholders of Growth & Income Fund. The adversary proceeding brought by the Committee has been transferred to the Southern District of New York and administratively consolidated with other similar suits as discussed below. In addition, on June 2, 2011, the Blue Chip and Equity Income Funds were named as defendants in a lawsuit brought in connection with the Tribune Company’s LBO by Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas, in its capacity as successor indenture trustee for a certain series of Senior Notes, Law Debenture Trust Company of New York, in its capacity as successor indenture trustee for a certain series of Senior Notes, and Wilmington Trust Company, in its capacity as successor indenture trustee for the PHONES Notes (together, the “Bondholder Plaintiffs”) in the Supreme Court of the State of New York. The Blue Chip and Equity Income Funds have also been named in a similar suit filed on behalf of participants in Tribune defined-compensation plans (the “Retiree Plaintiffs”). As with the Bondholder Plaintiffs and the Committee, the Retiree Plaintiffs seek to recover payments of the proceeds of the LBO. (All of these suits have been removed to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York and administratively consolidated with other substantially similar suits against other former Tribune shareholders (the “MDL Proceeding”)). On September 23, 2013, the Judge in the MDL Proceeding dismissed various state
113 |
Notes to Financial Statements(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
June 30, 2019
law constructive fraudulent transfer suits, resulting in the Funds being dismissed from the Bondholder and Retiree Plaintiffs’ actions. On March 24, 2016, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the MDL Judge’s dismissal of the various state law constructive fraudulent transfer suits. In September 2016, the Bondholder and Retiree Plaintiffs petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Second Circuit’s decision. The Supreme Court has not yet ruled on that request. On January 9, 2017, the Tribune MDL judge granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the Committee lawsuit alleging a single claim for intentional fraudulent transfer. Settlement offers were made in January 2018 and April 2018, both of which were rejected. The extent of the Funds’ potential liability in any such actions has not been determined. The Funds have been advised by counsel that the Funds could be held liable to return all or part of the proceeds received in any of these actions, as well as interest and court costs, even though the Funds had no knowledge of, or participation in, any misconduct. The Equity Income Fund received proceeds of $376,754 in connection with the LBO, representing 0.30% of its net assets as of June 30, 2019. The Blue Chip Fund received proceeds of $288,456 in connection with the LBO, representing 0.06% of the net assets of Growth & Income Fund as of June 30, 2019. The Equity Income and Growth & Income Funds cannot predict the outcomes of these proceedings, and thus have not accrued any of the amounts sought in the various actions in the accompanying financial statements.
9. Reorganization of Government Fund into Limited Duration Bond Fund—On December 14, 2018, the Limited Duration Bond Fund acquired all of the net assets of the Government Fund in connection with a tax-free reorganization that was approved by the Life Series Funds’ Board of Trustees. The Limited Duration Bond Fund issued 2,713,185 shares to the Government Fund in connection with the reorganization.
In return, it received net assets of $25,246,765 from the Government Fund (which included $163,690 of unrealized depreciation and $2,168,077 of accumulated net realized losses). The Limited Duration Bond Fund’s shares were issued at their current net asset values as of the date of the reorganization. The aggregate net assets of the Limited Duration Bond Fund and Government Fund immediately before the acquisition were $33,754,482 consisting of, with respect to Limited Duration Bond Fund, $8,507,717 and, with respect to Government Fund, $25,246,765.
Reorganization of Balanced Income Fund into Total Return Fund—On December 14, 2018, the Total Return Fund acquired all of the net assets of the Balanced Income Fund in connection with a tax-free reorganization that was approved by the Life Series Funds’ Board of Trustees. The Total Return Fund issued 469,477 shares to the Balanced Income Fund in connection with the reorganization. In return, it received net assets of $5,946,557 from the Balanced Income Fund (which included $134,488 of unrealized appreciation and $23,828 of accumulated net realized losses).
114 |
The Total Return Fund’s shares were issued at their current net asset values as of the date of the reorganization. The aggregate net assets of the Total Return Fund and Balanced Income Fund immediately before the acquisition were $52,445,432 consisting of, with respect to Total Return Fund, $46,498,875 and, with respect to Balanced Income Fund, $5,946,557.
10. Matters Submitted to a Vote by Shareholders—On April 9, 2019, The Independent Order of Foresters, the ultimate parent company of Foresters Investment Management Company, Inc. (“FIMCO”), which is the investment adviser to the separate series of the trusts listed above (the “Funds”), Foresters Financial Services, Inc. (“FFS”), which is the Funds’ distributor, and Foresters Investors Services, Inc. (“FIS”), which is the Funds’ transfer agent, announced that it has entered into the two definitive purchase agreements described below that, once completed, will result in the sale of its U.S. North American Asset Management businesses.
First, FIMCO has entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement with Macquarie Management Holdings, Inc. (“Macquarie”) whereby Macquarie, a global investment management firm headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, will purchase FIMCO’s assets related to the mutual fund management business, including the Funds (the “Transaction”). The Transaction is not expected to result in any material changes to the Funds’ investment objectives and principal investment strategies. However, upon the completion of the Transaction, Macquarie expects that each Fund will be reorganized into a substantially similar fund that is managed by Delaware Management Company, a subsidiary of Macquarie (the “Reorganizations”). The Transaction is expected to be completed during the fourth calendar quarter of 2019, pending the satisfaction of certain closing conditions. The Funds’ Board of Trustees approved the Reorganizations on June 10, 2019. Fund shareholders have been mailed a proxy statement and will be asked to provide voting instructions on shares held by the insurance company through its separate accounts under variable annuity contracts or variable life insurance policies at a special shareholder meeting on October 1, 2019.
Second, FFS and Foresters Advisory Services, LLC (“FAS”) entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement with Cetera Financial Group, Inc. (“Cetera”), a U.S.-based wealth management firm headquartered in Denver, Colorado. On June 20, 2019, Cetera completed the purchase of FFS’ retail brokerage business and FAS’ retail advisory business.
11. Subsequent Events—Subsequent events occurring after June 30, 2019 have been evaluated for potential impact to this report through the date the financial statements were issued. There were no subsequent events to report that would have a material impact on the Funds’ financial statements.
115 |
Financial Highlights
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
The following table sets forth the per share operating performance data for a trust share outstanding,
total return, ratios to average net assets and other supplemental data for each year ended December 31
except as otherwise indicated.
P E R S H A R E D A T A | R A T I O S / S U P P L E M E N T A L D A T A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Less Distributions | Ratio to Average Net | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment Operations | from | Ratio to Average | Assets Before Expenses | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets** | Waived or Assumed | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Asset | Net Realized | Net Asset | Net Assets | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Value, | Net | and Unrealized | Total from | Net | Net | Value, | End of | Expenses | Net | Net | Portfolio | ||||||||||||||||||||
Beginning of | Investment | Gain (Loss) on | Investment | Investment | Realized | Total | End of | Total | Period/Year | Before Fee | Investment | Investment | Turnover | ||||||||||||||||||
Period/Year | Income | Investments | Operations | Income | Gains | Distributions | Period/Year | Return | * | (in millions) | Credits | *** | Income | Expenses | *** | Income (Loss) | Rate | ||||||||||||||
COVERED CALL STRATEGY FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2016(d) | $10.00 | $ .07 | (a) | $ .46 | $ .53 | $ — | — | $ — | $10.53 | 5.30 | %†† | $ 10 | 1.73 | %† | .97 | %† | N/A | N/A | 96 | %†† | |||||||||||
2017 | 10.53 | .14 | (a) | 1.02 | ) | 1.16 | .04 | — | .04 | 11.65 | 11.07 | 11 | 1.06 | 1.26 | N/A | N/A | 143 | ||||||||||||||
2018 | 11.65 | .16 | (a) | (1.31 | ) | (1.15 | ) | .13 | — | .13 | 10.37 | (9.99 | ) | 17 | .98 | 1.44 | N/A | N/A | 87 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 10.37 | .08 | (a) | 1.35 | 1.43 | .12 | — | .12 | 11.68 | 13.86 | †† | 22 | .93 | † | 1.41 | † | N/A | N/A | 30 | †† | |||||||||||
EQUITY INCOME FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $20.89 | $ .35 | $ 1.28 | $1.63 | $.36 | $ .87 | $1.23 | $21.29 | 8.26 | % | $110 | .81 | % | 1.76 | % | N/A | N/A | 25 | % | ||||||||||||
2015 | 21.29 | .40 | (a) | (.58 | ) | (.18 | ) | .35 | .75 | 1.10 | 20.01 | (1.03 | ) | 107 | .81 | 1.97 | N/A | N/A | 24 | ||||||||||||
2016 | 20.01 | .42 | (a) | 2.03 | 2.45 | .40 | .70 | 1.10 | 21.36 | 13.28 | 117 | .81 | 2.09 | N/A | N/A | 20 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 21.36 | .40 | (a) | 2.81 | 3.21 | .42 | .51 | .93 | 23.64 | 15.52 | 130 | .80 | 1.81 | N/A | N/A | 18 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 23.64 | .66 | (a) | (2.57 | ) | (1.91 | ) | .43 | .69 | 1.12 | 20.61 | (8.42 | ) | 114 | .81 | 2.92 | N/A | N/A | 50 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 20.61 | .21 | (a) | 2.41 | 2.62 | .68 | 1.91 | 2.59 | 20.64 | 13.22 | †† | 126 | .81 | † | 2.03 | † | N/A | N/A | 26 | †† | |||||||||||
FUND FOR INCOME | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $ 6.84 | $ .34 | $ (.28 | ) | $ .06 | $.37 | — | $ .37 | $ 6.53 | .79 | % | $ 99 | .85 | % | 4.88 | % | N/A | N/A | 41 | % | |||||||||||
2015 | 6.53 | .30 | (a) | (.40 | ) | (.10 | ) | .36 | — | .36 | 6.07 | (1.85 | ) | 95 | .86 | 4.86 | N/A | N/A | 45 | ||||||||||||
2016 | 6.07 | .30 | (a) | .34 | .64 | .35 | — | .35 | 6.36 | 11.12 | 101 | .89 | 4.85 | N/A | N/A | 56 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 6.36 | .30 | (a) | .12 | .42 | .33 | — | .33 | 6.45 | 6.82 | 106 | .89 | 4.70 | N/A | N/A | 66 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 6.45 | .30 | (a) | (.46 | ) | (.16 | ) | .33 | — | .33 | 5.96 | (2.58 | ) | 100 | .91 | 4.93 | N/A | N/A | 73 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 5.96 | .16 | (a) | .37 | .53 | .34 | — | .34 | 6.15 | 9.05 | †† | 108 | .82 | † | 5.21 | † | N/A | N/A | 36 | †† | |||||||||||
GOVERNMENT CASH MANAGEMENT FUND(e) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $ 1.00 | $ — | — | $ — | $ — | — | $ — | $ 1.00 | .00 | % | $ 10 | .08 | %(b) | .00 | % | .99 | % | (.91 | )% | N/A | |||||||||||
2015 | 1.00 | — | (a) | — | — | — | — | — | 1.00 | .00 | 14 | .13 | (b) | .00 | 1.09 | (.96 | ) | N/A | |||||||||||||
2016 | 1.00 | — | (a) | — | — | — | — | — | 1.00 | .00 | 10 | .38 | (b) | .00 | 1.15 | (.78 | ) | N/A | |||||||||||||
2017 | 1.00 | — | (a) | — | — | .00 | (c) | — | .00 | (c) | 1.00 | .26 | 9 | .60 | (b) | .25 | 1.19 | (.34 | ) | N/A | |||||||||||
2018 | 1.00 | .01 | (a) | — | .01 | .01 | — | .01 | 1.00 | 1.24 | 12 | .60 | (b) | 1.26 | 1.06 | .80 | N/A | ||||||||||||||
2019(h) | 1.00 | .01 | (a) | — | .01 | .01 | — | .01 | 1.00 | .83 | †† | 10 | .77 | (b)† | 1.66 | † | .88 | † | 1.55 | † | N/A | ||||||||||
GROWTH & INCOME FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $44.89 | $ .54 | $ 2.82 | $3.36 | $.53 | $ .29 | $ .82 | $47.43 | 7.65 | % | $493 | .78 | % | 1.18 | % | N/A | N/A | 21 | % | ||||||||||||
2015 | 47.43 | .60 | (a) | (1.87 | ) | (1.27 | ) | .55 | 2.50 | 3.05 | 43.11 | (3.12 | ) | 457 | .78 | 1.33 | N/A | N/A | 23 | ||||||||||||
2016 | 43.11 | .69 | (a) | 3.08 | 3.77 | .61 | 2.09 | 2.70 | 44.18 | 9.88 | 475 | .79 | 1.67 | N/A | N/A | 21 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 44.18 | .66 | (a) | 7.09 | 7.75 | .71 | 1.77 | 2.48 | 49.45 | 18.28 | 532 | .78 | 1.45 | N/A | N/A | 17 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 49.45 | .72 | (a) | (5.48 | ) | (4.76 | ) | .68 | 2.17 | 2.85 | 41.84 | (10.17 | ) | 449 | .77 | 1.54 | N/A | N/A | 58 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 41.84 | .34 | (a) | 5.68 | 6.02 | .74 | 7.53 | 8.27 | 39.59 | 15.37 | †† | 503 | .78 | † | 1.70 | † | N/A | N/A | 30 | †† |
116 | 117 |
Financial Highlights(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
P E R S H A R E D A T A | R A T I O S / S U P P L E M E N T A L D A T A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Less Distributions | Ratio to Average Net | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment Operations | from | Ratio to Average | Assets Before Expenses | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets** | Waived or Assumed | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Asset | Net | Net Realized | Net Asset | Net Assets | Net | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Value, | Investment | and Unrealized | Total from | Net | Net | Value, | End of | Expenses | Net | Investment | Portfolio | ||||||||||||||||||||
Beginning of | Income | Gain (Loss) on | Investment | Investment | Realized | Total | End of | Total | Period/Year | Before Fee | Investment | Income | Turnover | ||||||||||||||||||
Period/Year | (Loss) | Investments | Operations | Income | Gains | Distributions | Period/Year | Return | * | (in millions) | Credits | *** | Income (Loss) | Expenses | *** | (Loss) | Rate | ||||||||||||||
INTERNATIONAL FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $20.62 | $ .23 | $ .26 | $ .49 | $.23 | $ — | $ .23 | $20.88 | 2.39 | % | $131 | .92 | % | 1.10 | % | N/A | N/A | 28 | % | ||||||||||||
2015 | 20.88 | .26 | (a) | .47 | .73 | .23 | — | .23 | 21.38 | 3.49 | 134 | .87 | 1.22 | N/A | N/A | 27 | |||||||||||||||
2016 | 21.38 | .27 | (a) | (1.17 | ) | (.90 | ) | .26 | — | .26 | 20.22 | (4.20 | ) | 124 | .87 | 1.28 | N/A | N/A | 37 | ||||||||||||
2017 | 20.22 | .22 | (a) | 6.38 | 6.60 | .25 | — | .25 | 26.57 | 32.96 | 160 | .84 | .90 | N/A | N/A | 29 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 26.57 | .21 | (a) | (3.29 | ) | (3.08 | ) | .21 | 1.20 | 1.41 | 22.08 | (12.16 | ) | 142 | .86 | .84 | N/A | N/A | 50 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 22.08 | .16 | (a) | 3.79 | 3.95 | .19 | 2.04 | 2.23 | 23.80 | 18.91 | †† | 166 | .86 | † | 1.41 | † | N/A | N/A | 36 | †† | |||||||||||
INVESTMENT GRADE FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $11.03 | $ .42 | $ .21 | $ .63 | $.46 | — | $ .46 | $11.20 | 5.86 | % | $ 63 | .69 | % | 2.78 | % | .84 | % | 2.63 | 45 | % | |||||||||||
2015 | 11.20 | .34 | (a) | (.37 | ) | (.03 | ) | .47 | — | .47 | 10.70 | (.35 | ) | 62 | .68 | 3.12 | .83 | 2.97 | 37 | ||||||||||||
2016 | 10.70 | .33 | (a) | .15 | .48 | .45 | — | .45 | 10.73 | 4.65 | 64 | .68 | 3.02 | .83 | 2.87 | 40 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 10.73 | .31 | (a) | .18 | .49 | .42 | — | .42 | 10.80 | 4.72 | 66 | .68 | 2.93 | .83 | 2.78 | 60 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 10.80 | .31 | (a) | (.53 | ) | (.22 | ) | .40 | — | .40 | 10.18 | (2.03 | ) | 62 | .70 | 3.05 | .85 | 2.90 | 53 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 10.18 | .17 | (a) | .73 | .90 | .40 | — | .40 | 10.68 | 9.15 | †† | 66 | .70 | † | 3.21 | † | .85 | † | 3.06 | † | 29 | †† | |||||||||
LIMITED DURATION BOND FUND(g) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014(f) | $10.00 | $(.13 | ) | $ (.13 | ) | $ (.26 | ) | $ — | — | $ — | $ 9.74 | (2.60 | )%†† | $ 3 | 5.82 | %† | (4.25 | )%† | 5.97 | %† | (4.40 | )%† | 11 | %†† | |||||||
2015 | 9.74 | .01 | (a) | (.06 | ) | (.05 | ) | — | — | — | 9.69 | (.51 | ) | 6 | 1.44 | .11 | 1.59 | (.04 | ) | 94 | |||||||||||
2016 | 9.69 | (.03 | )(a) | .09 | .06 | .09 | — | .09 | 9.66 | .64 | 8 | 1.06 | (.34 | ) | 1.21 | (.49 | ) | 78 | |||||||||||||
2017 | 9.66 | .10 | (a) | .02 | .12 | .17 | — | .17 | 9.61 | 1.26 | 7 | 1.01 | 1.09 | 1.16 | .94 | 82 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 9.61 | .05 | (a) | (.07 | ) | (.02 | ) | .25 | — | .25 | 9.34 | (.22 | ) | 34 | 1.15 | .49 | 1.30 | .34 | 268 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 9.34 | .12 | (a) | .18 | .30 | .06 | — | .06 | 9.58 | 3.23 | †† | 34 | .75 | † | 2.46 | † | .90 | † | 2.31 | † | 13 | †† | |||||||||
OPPORTUNITY FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $14.08 | $ .03 | $ .78 | $ .81 | $ — | $ .01 | $ .01 | $14.88 | 5.73 | % | $ 27 | 1.01 | % | .31 | % | N/A | N/A | 31 | % | ||||||||||||
2015 | 14.88 | .08 | (a) | (.20 | ) | (.12 | ) | .03 | — | .03 | 14.73 | (.81 | ) | 40 | .89 | .53 | N/A | N/A | 45 | ||||||||||||
2016 | 14.73 | .12 | (a) | 1.09 | 1.21 | .07 | — | .07 | 15.87 | 8.26 | 53 | .87 | .83 | N/A | N/A | 31 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 15.87 | .10 | (a) | 2.90 | 3.00 | .11 | — | .11 | 18.76 | 19.00 | 70 | .84 | .59 | N/A | N/A | 30 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 18.76 | .24 | (a) | (3.08 | ) | (2.84 | ) | .10 | .24 | .34 | 15.58 | (15.38 | ) | 64 | .83 | 1.34 | N/A | N/A | 59 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 15.58 | .06 | (a) | 2.94 | 3.00 | .23 | .45 | .68 | 17.90 | 19.43 | †† | 78 | .83 | † | .68 | † | N/A | N/A | 21 | †† | |||||||||||
SELECT GROWTH FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $12.69 | $ .05 | $ 1.66 | $ 1.71 | $.05 | $ .01 | $ .06 | $14.34 | 13.53 | % | $ 44 | .83 | % | .43 | % | N/A | N/A | 37 | % | ||||||||||||
2015 | 14.34 | .09 | (a) | .38 | .47 | .05 | .78 | .83 | 13.98 | 3.21 | 48 | .83 | .65 | N/A | N/A | 43 | |||||||||||||||
2016 | 13.98 | .08 | (a) | .36 | .44 | .09 | .96 | 1.05 | 13.37 | 4.04 | 52 | .83 | .61 | N/A | N/A | 64 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 13.37 | .06 | (a) | 3.97 | 4.03 | .08 | 1.45 | 1.53 | 15.87 | 32.80 | 70 | .81 | .40 | N/A | N/A | 52 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 15.87 | .05 | (a) | (.57 | ) | (.52 | ) | .06 | 1.15 | 1.21 | 14.14 | (3.79 | ) | 74 | .81 | .34 | N/A | N/A | 31 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 14.14 | .05 | (a) | 1.91 | 1.96 | .05 | .91 | .96 | 15.14 | 13.89 | †† | 87 | .81 | † | .63 | † | N/A | N/A | 23 | †† |
118 | 119 |
Financial Highlights(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
P E R S H A R E D A T A | R A T I O S / S U P P L E M E N T A L D A T A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Less Distributions | Ratio to Average Net | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment Operations | from | Ratio to Average | Assets Before Expenses | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets** | Waived or Assumed | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Asset | Net Realized | Net Asset | Net Assets | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Value, | Net | and Unrealized | Total from | Net | Net | Value, | End of | Expenses | Net | Net Portfolio | |||||||||||||||||||||
Beginning | Investment | Gain (Loss) on | Investment | Investment | Realized | Total | End of | Total | Period/Year | Before Fee | Investment | Investment | Turnover | ||||||||||||||||||
of Year | Income | Investments | Operations | Income | Gains | Distributions | Period/Year | Return | * | (in millions) | Credits | *** | Income | Expenses | *** | Income | Rate | ||||||||||||||
SPECIAL SITUATIONS FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $38.97 | $ .22 | $ 1.82 | $ 2.04 | $.18 | $6.61 | $6.79 | $34.22 | 6.30 | % | $209 | .80 | % | .66 | % | N/A | N/A | 41 | % | ||||||||||||
2015 | 34.22 | .18 | (a) | (.27 | ) | (.09 | ) | .22 | 1.51 | 1.73 | 32.40 | (.52 | ) | 202 | .80 | .52 | N/A | N/A | 46 | ||||||||||||
2016 | 32.40 | .33 | (a) | 4.28 | 4.61 | .18 | 2.19 | 2.37 | 34.64 | 16.10 | 224 | .81 | 1.06 | N/A | N/A | 31 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 34.64 | .15 | (a) | 6.06 | 6.21 | .33 | .44 | .77 | 40.08 | 18.26 | 256 | .80 | .40 | N/A | N/A | 38 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 40.08 | .23 | (a) | (6.17 | ) | (5.94 | ) | .18 | 5.10 | 5.28 | 28.86 | (16.60 | ) | 210 | .80 | .65 | N/A | N/A | 54 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 28.86 | .14 | (a) | 3.41 | 3.55 | .22 | 2.15 | 2.37 | 30.04 | 12.25 | †† | 234 | .81 | † | .94 | † | N/A | N/A | 27 | †† | |||||||||||
TOTAL RETURN FUND | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | $11.62 | $.09 | $ .60 | $ .69 | $.01 | $ — | $.01 | $12.30 | 5.97 | % | $29 | .96 | % | .96 | % | N/A | N/A | 53 | % | ||||||||||||
2015 | 12.30 | .15 | (a) | (.34 | ) | (.19 | ) | .13 | — | .13 | 11.98 | (1.61 | ) | 37 | .89 | 1.20 | N/A | N/A | 39 | ||||||||||||
2016 | 11.98 | .18 | (a) | .59 | .77 | .17 | — | .17 | 12.58 | 6.62 | 40 | .89 | 1.45 | N/A | N/A | 67 | |||||||||||||||
2017 | 12.58 | .18 | (a) | 1.28 | 1.46 | .21 | — | .21 | 13.83 | 11.75 | 48 | .86 | 1.39 | N/A | N/A | 48 | |||||||||||||||
2018 | 13.83 | .24 | (a) | (1.28 | ) | (1.04 | ) | .22 | .07 | .29 | 12.50 | (7.65 | ) | 52 | .90 | 1.80 | N/A | N/A | 68 | ||||||||||||
2019(h) | 12.50 | .11 | (a) | 1.47 | 1.58 | .26 | .25 | .51 | 13.57 | 12.89 | †† | 58 | .87 | † | 1.66 | † | N/A | N/A | 42 | †† |
* | The effect of fees and charges incurred at the separate account level are not reflected in these |
performance figures. | |
** | Net of expenses waived or assumed by the investment adviser (Note 4). |
*** | The ratios do not include a reduction of expenses from cash balances maintained with the Bank of |
New York Mellon or from brokerage service arrangements (Note 1G). | |
† | Annualized |
†† | Not annualized |
(a) | Based on average shares during the period. |
(b) | For each of the periods shown, FIMCO voluntarily waived advisory fees to limit the Fund’s overall |
expense ratio to .60% and waived additional advisory fees and assumed other expenses to prevent a | |
negative yield on the Funds’ shares (Note 4). The expense limitation agreement expired May 1, 2019. | |
(c) | Due to rounding, amount is less than .005 per share. |
(d) | For the period May 2, 2016 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 2016. |
(e) | Prior to October 3, 2016, known as Cash Management Fund. |
(f) | For the period July 1, 2014 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 2014. |
(g) | Prior to January 31, 2018, known as Limited Duration High Quality Bond Fund. |
(h) | For the period January 1, 2019 to June 30, 2019. |
See notes to financial statements | ||
120 | 121 |
Report of Independent Registered Public
Accounting Firm
To the Shareholders and Board of Trustees of
First Investors Life Series Funds
Opinion on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Covered Call Strategy Fund, Equity Income Fund, Fund For Income, Government Cash Management Fund, Growth & Income Fund, International Fund, Investment Grade Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund, Opportunity Fund, Select Growth Fund, Special Situations Fund and Total Return Fund (the “Funds”), each a series of First Investors Life Series Fund (the “Trust”), including the portfolio of investments, as of June 30, 2019, the related statement of operations, the statements of changes in net assets and financial highlights for each of the periods indicated thereon, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “financial statements”). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Funds as of June 30, 2019, the results of their operations, the changes in their net assets and their financial highlights for each of the periods indicated thereon, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
Basis for Opinion
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Funds’ management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Funds’ financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”) and are required to be independent with respect to the Funds in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB. We have served as the auditor of one or more of the funds in the First Investors Family of Funds since 1978.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Funds are not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of the Funds’ internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control over finan-cial reporting, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Funds’ internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.
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Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of June 30, 2019 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
Tait, Weller & Baker LLP |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
August 29, 2019 |
123 |
Board Considerations of Advisory Contracts and Fees
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
Annual Consideration of the Investment Advisory Agreements and the Sub-Advisory Agreements with Muzinich & Co., Inc., Smith Group Asset Management, LP, Vontobel Asset Management, Inc. and Ziegler Capital Management, LLC
The First Investors Life Series Funds’ (the “Trust”) investment advisory agreements with the Trust’s investment adviser and, as applicable, sub-advisers, on behalf of each of the Trust’s funds, can remain in effect after an initial term of no greater than two years only if they are renewed at least annually thereafter (i) by the vote of the Trustees or by a vote of the shareholders of each fund and (ii) by the vote of a majority of the Trustees who are not parties to the advisory agreement (and sub-advisory agreements, as applicable) or “interested persons” of any party thereto (the “Independent Trustees”), cast in person at a meeting called specifically for the purpose of voting on such approval.
The Board of Trustees (the “Board”) has six regularly scheduled meetings each year and takes into account throughout the year matters bearing on the approval of the advisory agreement (and sub-advisory agreements, as applicable). In particular, the Board and its standing committees also consider at each meeting at least certain of the factors that are relevant to the annual renewal of each fund’s advisory agreement (and sub-advisory agreements, as applicable), including investment performance, sub-adviser updates and reviews, reports with respect to brokerage and portfolio transactions, use of soft dollars for research products and services, portfolio turnover rates, risk management (including as it relates to cybersecurity risk), compliance monitoring, and the services and support provided to each fund and its shareholders. In addition, the Board meets with representatives of each sub-adviser in person at least once per year.
On April 18, 2019 (the “April Meeting”), the Independent Trustees met telephonically with senior management personnel of Foresters Investment Management Company, Inc. (“FIMCO”), which is the Trust’s investment adviser, Trust counsel, independent legal counsel to the Independent Trustees (“Independent Legal Counsel”) and others to give preliminary consideration to information bearing on the continuation of the advisory agreement (and sub-advisory agreement, as applicable) with respect to each fund. The primary purpose of the April Meeting was to ensure that the Independent Trustees had ample opportunity to consider matters they deemed relevant in determining whether to continue the advisory agreement (or sub-advisory agreements, as applicable), and to request any additional information they considered reasonably necessary to their deliberations. The Independent Trustees also met telephonically in executive session with Independent Legal Counsel on April 15, 2019, prior to the April Meeting, to consider the continuation of the advisory agreement (or
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sub-advisory agreements, as applicable) outside the presence of management. As part of the April Meeting, the Independent Trustees asked FIMCO to respond to certain additional questions prior to the contract approval meeting of the Board to be held on May 16, 2019 (the “May Meeting”). In addition, Independent Legal Counsel, in conjunction with the Board, and personnel from FIMCO reviewed each sub-adviser’s response in connection with the request for information with respect to the applicable sub-advisory agreements and requested follow-up information or clarifications from each sub-adviser, as applicable, which was provided prior to the May Meeting.
At the May Meeting, the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, approved the renewal of the investment advisory agreement (the “Advisory Agreement”) between FIMCO and each of the following funds (each a “Fund” and collectively the “Funds”): Covered Call Strategy Fund, Equity Income Fund, Fund For Income, Government Cash Management Fund, Growth & Income Fund, International Fund, Investment Grade Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund, Opportunity Fund, Select Growth Fund, Special Situations Fund and Total Return Fund. In addition, at the May Meeting, the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, approved the renewal of the sub-advisory agreements (each a “Sub-Advisory Agreement” and collectively the “Sub-Advisory Agreements”) with: (1) Muzinich & Co., Inc. (“Muzinich”) with respect to the Fund For Income, Investment Grade Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund and Total Return Fund; (2) Smith Group Asset Management, LP (“Smith Group”) with respect to the Select Growth Fund; (3) Vontobel Asset Management, Inc. (“Vontobel”) with respect to the International Fund; and (4) Ziegler Capital Management, LLC (“Ziegler”) with respect to the Covered Call Strategy Fund. The Fund For Income, Investment Grade Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund, Total Return Fund, Select Growth Fund, International Fund and Covered Call Strategy Fund are collectively referred to as the “Sub-Advised Funds.”
In reaching its decisions to approve the continuation of the Advisory Agreement for each Fund and the Sub-Advisory Agreements for the Sub-Advised Funds, the Board considered information furnished and discussed throughout the year at regularly scheduled Board and Committee meetings as well as a wide range of information provided specifically in relation to the renewal of the Advisory Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreements for the April Meeting and May Meeting. Information furnished at Board and/or Committee meetings throughout the year included FIMCO’s analysis of each Fund’s investment performance and the performance of the sub-advisers to the respective Sub-Advised Funds, presentations given by representatives of FIMCO, Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler and various reports on compliance and other services provided by FIMCO.
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Board Considerations of Advisory Contracts and Fees(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
In preparation for the April Meeting and/or May Meeting, the Independent Trustees requested and received information compiled by Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”), an independent provider of investment company data, that included, among other things, the investment performance over various time periods and the fees and expenses of each Fund as compared to a comparable group of funds as determined by Broadridge (“Peer Group”). The Board also considered that FIMCO charges different fee rates to various mutual funds that have similar investment mandates and FIMCO’s explanation for these differences.
Additionally, in response to specific requests from the Independent Trustees in connection with the April Meeting and/or May Meeting, FIMCO furnished, and the Board considered, information concerning various aspects of its operations, including: (1) the nature, extent and quality of services provided by FIMCO to the Funds, including investment advisory and administrative services to the Funds and, as applicable, services in connection with selecting, overseeing and evaluating the sub-advisers; (2) the actual management fees paid by each Fund to FIMCO; (3) the costs of providing services to each Fund and the profitability of FIMCO from the relationship with each Fund; and (4) any “fall out” or ancillary benefits accruing to FIMCO as a result of the relationship with each Fund. FIMCO also provided, and the Board considered, an analysis of the overall profitability of the First Investors mutual fund business that included various entities affiliated with FIMCO as well as comparative profitability information based on analysis performed by FIMCO of the financial statements of certain publicly-traded mutual fund asset managers. The Board also considered FIMCO’s and each sub-adviser’s personnel and methods, including the education, experience of key personnel, and the number of their advisory and analytical personnel; general information regarding the compensation of FIMCO’s and each sub-adviser’s advisory personnel; FIMCO’s and each sub-adviser’s investment management process; FIMCO’s and each sub-adviser’s compliance program; the time and attention of FIMCO’s and each sub-adviser’s personnel devoted to the management of the Funds; FIMCO’s and each sub-adviser’s cybersecurity practices and related controls and business continuity plans; and material pending, threatened or settled litigation involving FIMCO and each sub-adviser, and any ongoing or completed audits, investigations or examinations by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Board also considered information provided by FIMCO related to the decision by The Independent Order of Foresters, the parent company of FIMCO, to sell its U.S. North American Asset Management businesses including FIMCO and that part of FIMCO’s business relating to the operation of the Funds to Macquarie Management Holdings, Inc., which would result in the reorganization of each of the Funds into corresponding series of the Delaware Funds by Macquarie (the “Reorganizations”), and that such Reorganizations were expected to be completed during the last quarter
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of the year, if approved by the Board at a meeting to be held on June 10, 2019, and by shareholders of the Funds. In addition to evaluating, among other considerations, the written information provided by FIMCO, the Board also evaluated the answers to questions posed by the Board to representatives of FIMCO.
In addition, in response to specific requests from the Independent Trustees in connection with the April Meeting and/or May Meeting, Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler furnished, and the Board reviewed, information concerning various aspects of their respective operations, including: (1) the nature, extent and quality of services provided by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler to the applicable Sub-Advised Funds; (2) the sub-advisory fee rates charged by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler and a comparison of those fee rates to the fee rates of Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler for providing advisory services to other investment companies or accounts or compared to their standard fee schedule, as applicable, with an investment mandate similar to the applicable Sub-Advised Funds; (3) profitability and/or financial information provided by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler; and (4) any “fall out” or ancillary benefits accruing to Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler as a result of the relationship with each applicable Sub-Advised Fund. The Board also considered FIMCO’s representations that it found the sub-adviser responses to the information requests in connection with the renewal of the Sub-Advisory Agreements to be satisfactory and to raise no issues of general concern.
In considering the information and materials described above, the Independent Trustees took into account management style, investment strategies and prevailing market conditions. Moreover, the Independent Trustees received assistance from and met separately with Independent Legal Counsel prior to the April Meeting and prior to and during the May Meeting and were provided with a written description of their statutory responsibilities and the legal standards that are applicable to approvals of advisory agreements (and sub-advisory agreements, as applicable). Although the Advisory Agreement for all of the Funds and the Sub-Advisory Agreements for the Sub-Advised Funds were considered at the same Board meeting, the Independent Trustees addressed each Fund separately during the April Meeting and May Meeting.
Based on all of the information presented, the Board, including a majority of its Independent Trustees, determined on a Fund-by-Fund basis that the fees charged under the Advisory Agreement and each Sub-Advisory Agreement are reasonable in relation to the services that are provided under each Agreement. The Board did not identify any single factor as being of paramount importance in reaching its conclusions and determinations with respect to the continuance of the Advisory Agreement for each Fund and Sub-Advisory Agreements and different Trustees may have given
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Board Considerations of Advisory Contracts and Fees(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
different weight to different factors. Although not meant to be all-inclusive, the following describes some of the factors that were considered by the Board in deciding to approve the continuance of the Advisory Agreement for each Fund and Sub-Advisory Agreements with Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler.
Nature, Extent and Quality of Services
In examining the nature, extent and quality of the services provided by FIMCO, the Board recognized that FIMCO is dedicated to providing investment management services exclusively to the Funds and the other funds in the First Investors fund complex and that, unlike many other mutual fund managers, FIMCO is not in the business of providing management services to hedge funds, pension funds or private accounts. In this connection, the Board was advised that certain key FIMCO personnel provide separately managed account services to a FIMCO-affiliated investment adviser, but that these personnel spend most of their time serving their FIMCO clients. As a result, the Board considered that FIMCO’s personnel devote substantially all of their time to serving the funds in the First Investors fund complex.
The Board noted that FIMCO has undertaken extensive responsibilities as manager of the Funds, including: (1) the provision of investment advice to the Funds; (2) implementing policies and procedures designed to ensure compliance with each Fund’s investment objectives and policies as well as new laws and regulatory initiatives; (3) the review of brokerage arrangements; (4) oversight of general portfolio compliance with applicable laws; (5) the provision of certain administrative services to the Funds, including fund accounting; (6) the implementation of Board directives as they relate to the Funds; and (7) evaluating and monitoring any sub-advisers on an ongoing basis, including, but not limited to, monitoring each sub-adviser’s investment performance, evaluating each sub-adviser’s compliance program on an annual basis and monitoring investments for compliance purposes, including monitoring each sub-adviser’s soft dollar practices (as applicable), portfolio allocation and best execution. The Board also noted that FIMCO provided the same sorts of administrative and other services, except for direct management of the portfolio, for the Sub-Advised Funds as it does for the other funds that do not employ a sub-adviser. The Board noted that FIMCO provides not only advisory services, but historically also has provided certain administrative personnel and services that many other advisers do not provide without imposition of separate fees. The Board also noted the steps that FIMCO has taken to encourage strong performance, including the manner in which portfolio managers and analysts are provided significant incentive compensation for good performance. In addition, the Board considered information regarding the overall financial strength of FIMCO and its affiliates and the resources and staffing in place with respect to the services provided to the Funds.
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The Board also considered the nature, extent and quality of the investment management services provided by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler to the applicable Sub-Advised Funds. The Board considered Muzinich’s, Smith Group’s, Vontobel’s and Ziegler’s investment management process in managing the applicable Sub-Advised Funds and the experience and capability of their respective personnel responsible for the portfolio management of the applicable Sub-Advised Funds. The Board also considered information regarding the resources and staffing in place with respect to the services provided by each sub-adviser. Additionally, with respect to the Sub-Advised Funds, the Board considered the differences in fees paid by each Sub-Advised Fund to FIMCO and the fees paid by FIMCO to each sub-adviser, as well as representations by FIMCO that these fee differentials are warranted by its ongoing services and assumption of risks.
Based on the information considered, the Board concluded that the nature, extent and quality of the services provided to each Fund by FIMCO and the applicable Sub-Advised Funds by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler were appropriate and consistent with the terms of the Advisory Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreements, as applicable, and supported approval of the Advisory Agreement and each Sub-Advisory Agreement.
Investment Performance
The Board placed significant emphasis on the investment performance of each of the Funds. While consideration was given to performance reports and discussions held at prior Board or Committee meetings, as applicable, particular attention was given to the performance information compiled by Broadridge. In particular, the Board reviewed the performance of each Fund, as applicable, over the most recent calendar year (“1-year period”) and the annualized performance over the most recent three calendar year period (“3-year period”) and five calendar year period (“5-year period”). In addition, the Board considered the performance information provided by FIMCO for each Fund through April 30, 2019. The Board also reviewed the annual yield of the Fund For Income, Government Cash Management Fund, Investment Grade Fund and Limited Duration Bond Fund over the past five years (or shorter period as applicable). With regard to the performance and yield information, the Board considered the performance and yield of each Fund on a percentile and quintile basis as compared to its Peer Group. For purposes of the performance data provided, the first quintile is defined as 20% of the funds in the applicable Peer Group with the highest performance or yield and the fifth quintile is defined as 20% of the funds in the applicable Peer Group with the lowest performance or yield. The Board also considered FIMCO’s representations that it monitors to ensure portfolio managers invest in a manner consistent with the mandate for the Fund or Funds they manage.
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Board Considerations of Advisory Contracts and Fees(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
The Board also considered a special performance report prepared by FIMCO analyzing the performance of the Limited Duration Bond Fund, Opportunity Fund and Total Return Fund.
On a Fund-by-Fund basis, the performance reports indicated, and the Board noted, that each Fund, except for the Covered Call Strategy Fund, Government Cash Management Fund, Growth & Income Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund, Opportunity Fund and Total Return Fund fell within one of the top three quintiles for at least one of the performance periods provided by Broadridge. In particular, the Board noted that: (i) the Covered Call Strategy Fund fell within the fifth quintile for the 1-year period (the only period for which information was provided due to the short operating history of the Fund); (ii) the Equity Income Fund fell within second quintile for the 1-year period and third quintile for the 3-year period and 5-year period; (iii) the Fund For Income fell within second quintile, fifth quintile and fourth quintile for the 1-year period, 3-year period and 5-year period, respectively; (iv) the Government Cash Management Fund fell within the fifth quintile for the 1-year period and fourth quin-tile for the 3-year period and 5-year period; (v) Growth & Income Fund fell within fourth quintile for the 1-year period and fifth quintile for the 3-year period and 5-year period; (vi) the International Fund fell within second quintile, third quintile and first quintile for the 1-year period, 3-year period and 5-year period, respectively; (vii) the Investment Grade Fund fell within second quintile for the 1-year period and fourth quintile for the 3-year period and 5-year period; (viii) the Limited Duration Bond Fund fell within fifth quintile for the 1-year period and 3-year period (the only periods for which information was provided due to the relatively short operating history of the Fund); (ix) the Opportunity Fund fell within fifth quintile for the 1-year period, 3-year period and 5-year period; (x) the Select Growth Fund fell within fourth quintile for the 1-year period and third quintile for the 3-year period and 5-year period; (xi) the Special Situations Fund fell within third quintile, fourth quintile and second quintile for the 1-year period, 3-year period and 5-year period, respectively; and (xii) the Total Return Fund fell within fifth quintile for the 1-year period, 3-year period and 5-year period. With respect to the Limited Duration Bond Fund, Opportunity Fund and Total Return Fund, the Board considered FIMCO’s explanations regarding the Fund’s underperformance and strategy going forward.
The Board also reviewed the yields of the Fund For Income, Government Cash Management Fund, Investment Grade Fund and Limited Duration Bond Fund and noted that the yield for: (i) the Fund For Income fell within one of top three quin-tiles for one of the past five calendar years; (ii) the Government Cash Management Fund fell within one of the top three quintiles for two of the past five calendar years; (iii) the Investment Grade Fund fell within one of the top two quintiles for each of
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the past five calendar years; and (iv) Limited Duration Bond Fund fell within one of the top three quintiles for two out of the past four calendar years (which was the only information available due to the relatively short operating history of the Fund). Additionally, the Board considered FIMCO’s representation that it believes that the Funds generally use a more conservative investment style than many of their peers.
Based on the information considered, the Board concluded that the investment performance of each Fund was either (a) acceptable or better, or (b) subject to reasonable steps to monitor or address certain periods of underperformance.
Fund Expenses, Costs of Services, Economies of Scale and Related Benefits
Management Fees and Expenses.The Board also gave substantial consideration to the fees payable under each Fund’s Advisory Agreement as well as under the Sub-Advisory Agreements for the Sub-Advised Funds.
The Board reviewed the information compiled by Broadridge comparing each Fund’s contractual management fee rate (at common asset levels) and actual management fee rate (which included the effect of any fee waivers) as a percentage of average net assets to other funds in its Peer Group. In this regard, the Board considered the contractual and actual management fees of each Fund on a quintile basis as compared to its Peer Group and noted the relative position of each Fund within the Peer Group. The Board also considered that FIMCO provides not only advisory services but also certain administrative personnel to the Funds under each Fund’s Advisory Agreement and that many other advisers do not provide such administrative personnel under their advisory agreements and that FIMCO also provides certain administrative services without the imposition of a separate fee. The Board also considered that, with respect to the Government Cash Management Fund, FIMCO has historically waived a sig-nificant portion of its management fees and reimbursed a portion of other expenses to avoid a negative return for shareholders during periods of historically low interest rates during recent prior years.
In particular, the Board noted that: (i) the Covered Call Strategy Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the first quintile of its Peer Group; (ii) the Equity Income Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the third and fifth quintiles, respectively, of its Peer Group; (iii) the Fund For Income’s contractual and actual management fees were in the fifth quintile of its Peer Group; (iv) the Government Cash Management Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the fifth and second quintiles, respectively, of its Peer Group; (v) the Growth & Income Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the fourth and fifth quintiles, respectively, of its Peer Group; (vi) the International Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the second and third quintiles, respectively, of its
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Board Considerations of Advisory Contracts and Fees(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
Peer Group; (vii) the Investment Grade Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the fifth quintile of its Peer Group; (viii) the Limited Duration Bond Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the fifth quintile of its Peer Group; (ix) the Opportunity Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the second quintile of its Peer Group; (x) the Select Growth Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the fourth quintile of its Peer Group; (xi) the Special Situations Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the first and second quintiles, respectively, of its Peer Group; and (xii) the Total Return Fund’s contractual and actual management fees were in the third and fourth quintiles, respectively, of its Peer Group.
The Board also reviewed the information compiled by Broadridge comparing each Fund’s total expense ratio, taking into account FIMCO’s expense waivers (as applicable), and the ratio of the sum of actual management and other non-management fees (i.e., fees other than management fees) to other funds in its Peer Group, including on a quintile basis. In particular, the Board noted that: (i) the total expense ratio for each Fund except the Covered Call Strategy Fund, International Fund, Opportunity Fund, Select Growth Fund and Special Situations Fund was not in the top three quintiles of their respective Peer Groups; and (ii) the ratio of the sum of actual management and other non-management fees for each Fund except the Covered Call Strategy Fund, International Fund, Opportunity Fund, Select Growth Fund and Special Situations Fund was not in the top three quintiles of their respective Peer Groups. In considering the level of the total expense ratio and the ratio of the sum of actual management and other non-management fees, the Board took into account management’s explanation that Broadridge expense comparisons do not take into account the size of a fund complex, and as a result, in certain cases the First Investors funds are compared to funds in complexes that are much larger than First Investors. The Board also noted that Broadridge’s customized expense groups tend to be fairly small in number and the funds included in the Peer Group generally change from year to year, thereby introducing an element of randomness that affects comparative results each year. While recognizing the limitations inherent in Broadridge’s methodology, the Board believed that the data provided by Broadridge was a generally appropriate measure of comparative expenses.
In considering the sub-advisory fee rates charged by and costs and profitability of Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler with regard to the respective Sub-Advised Funds, the Board noted that FIMCO pays Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel or Ziegler, as the case may be, a sub-advisory fee from its own advisory fee rather than each Fund paying Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel or Ziegler a fee directly. The Board also considered arrangements pursuant to which Muzinich, Smith
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Group and Vontobel (but not the Sub-Advised Funds) each pays a portion of its sub-advisory fee to a solicitor that introduced each such subadviser to FIMCO. Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler provided, and the Board reviewed, information comparing the fees charged by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler for services to the respective Sub-Advised Funds versus the fee rates of Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler for providing advisory services to other comparable investment companies or accounts or compared to their standard fee schedule, as applicable. Based on a review of this information, the Board noted that the fees charged by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler for services to each applicable Sub-Advised Fund appeared competitive to the fees Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler charge to their other comparable investment companies or accounts or compared to their standard fee schedule, as applicable.
The foregoing comparisons assisted the Trustees by providing them with a basis for evaluating each Fund’s management fee and expense ratio on a relative basis and the Board concluded that each Fund’s management fees appeared reasonable in relation to the services and benefits provided to each Fund.
Profitability.The Board reviewed the materials it received from FIMCO regarding its revenues and costs in providing investment management and certain administrative services to the Funds. In particular, the Board considered the analysis of FIMCO’s profitability with respect to each Fund, calculated for the year ended December 31, 2018, as well as overall profitability information relating to the past five calendar years. The Board also considered the information provided by FIMCO comparing the profitability of certain publicly-traded mutual fund asset managers as analyzed by FIMCO based on publicly available financial statements and noted FIMCO’s analysis that its profit margin is substantially lower than the average of such publicly-traded managers. In reviewing the profitability information, the Board also considered the “fall-out” or ancillary benefits that may accrue to FIMCO as a result of its relationship with the Funds, which are discussed below. Based on the information provided, the Board also noted that FIMCO operates the Government Cash Management Fund and Limited Duration Bond Fund at a loss. The Board acknowledged that, as a business matter, FIMCO was entitled to earn reasonable profits for its services to the Funds and concluded that the level of profitability to FIMCO of its contractual arrangements with each Fund did not appear so high as to call into question the appropriateness of the fees paid to FIMCO by any Fund or otherwise to preclude the proposed continuation of the Advisory Agreement for any of the Funds. The Board also considered the profitability and/or financial information provided by Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler.
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Board Considerations of Advisory Contracts and Fees(continued)
FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
Economies of Scale.With respect to whether economies of scale are realized by FIMCO and the extent to which any economies of scale are reflected in the level of management fee rates charged, the Board considered that the Advisory Agreement fee schedule for each Fund includes breakpoints to account for management economies of scale as each Fund’s assets increase.
“Fall Out” or Ancillary Benefits.The Board considered the “fall-out” or ancillary benefits that may accrue to FIMCO, Muzinich, Smith Group, Vontobel and Ziegler as a result of their relationship with the Funds. In that regard, the Board considered the fact that FIMCO and each sub-adviser (except Muzinich and Ziegler) may receive research from broker-dealers that execute brokerage transactions for the funds in the First Investors fund complex. However, the Board noted that FIMCO and the sub-advisers must select brokers based on each Fund’s requirements for seeking best execution.
* * * |
In summary, based on all relevant information and factors, none of which was individually determinative of the outcome, the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees, approved the renewal of the Advisory Agreement and each Sub-Advisory Agreement.
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FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
Trustees and Officers
Trustees | |
Susan E. Artmann | |
Mary J. Barneby | |
Charles R. Barton, III | |
Arthur M. Scutro, Jr. | |
Mark R. Ward | |
Officers | |
E. Blake Moore Jr. | |
President | |
Marc S. Milgram | |
Chief Compliance Officer | |
Joseph I. Benedek | |
Treasurer | |
Mark S. Spencer | |
Assistant Treasurer | |
Scott K. Richardson | |
Secretary |
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FIRST INVESTORS LIFE SERIES FUNDS
Shareholder Information | ||
Investment Adviser | Custodian | |
Foresters Investment Management | The Bank of New York Mellon | |
Company, Inc. | 240 Greenwich Street | |
40 Wall Street | New York, NY 10286 | |
New York, NY 10005 | ||
Subadviser | Transfer Agent | |
(Covered Call Strategy Fund) | Foresters Investor Services, Inc. | |
Ziegler Capital Management, LLC | Raritan Plaza I – 8th Floor | |
70 W. Madison Street | Edison, NJ 08837-3620 | |
Chicago, IL 60602 | ||
Subadviser | Independent Registered | |
(Fund For Income, Investment Grade | Public Accounting Firm | |
Fund, Limited Duration Bond Fund and | Tait, Weller & Baker LLP | |
Total Return Fund) | Two Liberty Place | |
Muzinich & Co., Inc. | 50 South 16th Street | |
450 Park Avenue | Philadelphia, PA 19102 | |
New York, NY 10022 | ||
Subadviser | Legal Counsel | |
(International Fund) | K&L Gates LLP | |
Vontobel Asset Management, Inc. | 1601 K Street, N.W. | |
1540 Broadway | Washington, D.C. 20006 | |
New York, NY 10036 | ||
Subadviser | ||
(Select Growth Fund) | ||
Smith Asset Management Group, L.P. | ||
100 Crescent Court | ||
Dallas, TX 75201 |
136 |
A description of the policies and procedures that the Funds use to vote proxies relating to a portfolio’s securities is available, without charge, upon request by calling toll free 1-800-423-4026 or can be viewed online or downloaded from the EDGAR database on the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s (“SEC”) internet web-site athttp://www.sec. gov. In addition, information regarding how the Funds voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended December 31, is available, without charge, upon request in writing or by calling 1-800-423-4026 and on the SEC’s internet website athttp://www.sec.gov.
The Funds file their complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC on Form N-PORT for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year. The Funds’ Form N-PORT is available on the SEC’s website athttp://www.sec.gov; and may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington D.C. Information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. The schedule of portfolio holdings is available, without charge, upon request in writing or by calling 1-800-423-4026.
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Item 2. Code of Ethics
Not applicable for semi-annual report |
Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert
Not applicable for semi-annual report |
Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services
Not applicable for semi-annual report |
Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants
Not applicable |
Item 6. Schedule of Investments
(a) Schedule is included as part of the report to shareholders filed under Item 1 of | |
this Form. | |
(b) Not applicable |
Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End Management Investment Companies
Not applicable to open-end investment companies |
Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies
Not applicable to open-end investment companies |
Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Companies and Affiliated Purchasers
Not applicable to open-end investment companies |
Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
There were no material changes to the procedure by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the Registrant's Board of Trustees.
Item 11. Controls and Procedures
(a) The Registrant's Principal Executive Officer and Principal Financial Officer have concluded that the Registrant's disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended) are effective, based on their evaluation of these disclosure controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report.
(b) There were no changes in the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as amended) that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting.
Item 12. Disclosure of Securities Lending Activities for Closed-End Management Investment Companies
Not applicable to open-end investment companies |
Item 13. Exhibits
(a)(1) Code of Ethics - Not applicable for semi-annual report
(a)(2) Certifications pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 - Filed herewith
(a)(3) Not applicable
(a)(4) Not applicable
(b) Certifications pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 - Filed herewith
SIGNATURES |
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
First Investors Life Series Funds | ||
By | /s/ | E. Blake Moore Jr. |
E. Blake Moore Jr. | ||
President and Principal Executive Officer | ||
Date: | August 29, 2019 |
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
By | /s/ | E. Blake Moore Jr. |
E. Blake Moore Jr. | ||
President and Principal Executive Officer | ||
By | /s/ | Joseph I. Benedek |
Joseph I. Benedek | ||
Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer | ||
Date: | August 29, 2019 |