Investment objective & strategy
As of Jan. 28, 2026 · prospectusObjective. The investment objective of the Curasset Capital Management Limited Term Income Fund (hereafter referred to as the Limited Term Income Fund or the Fund) is to seek income.
Strategy. The Limited Term Income Fund invests primarily in corporate debt securities and U.S. government securities. Under normal market conditions, the Limited Term Income Fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets, plus borrowings for investment purposes, in debt securities (generally referred to as bonds), and in derivatives and other instruments that have economic characteristics similar to such securities. A debt security is a security representing money borrowed by the issuer that must be repaid. The terms of a debt security specify the amount of principal, the interest rate or discount, and the time or times at which payments are due. Debt securities can include: Domestic and foreign corporate debt obligations; Domestic and foreign government debt obligations, including U.S. … The Limited Term Income Fund invests primarily in corporate debt securities and U.S. government securities. Under normal market conditions, the Limited Term Income Fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets, plus borrowings for investment purposes, in debt securities (generally referred to as bonds), and in derivatives and other instruments that have economic characteristics similar to such securities. A debt security is a security representing money borrowed by the issuer that must be repaid. The terms of a debt security specify the amount of principal, the interest rate or discount, and the time or times at which payments are due. Debt securities can include: Domestic and foreign corporate debt obligations; Domestic and foreign government debt obligations, including U.S. government securities; Mortgage-related securities; Asset-backed securities; and Other debt obligations. The portfolio managers overall strategy is to build a diversified portfolio of corporate and government bonds. The Limited Term Income Funds investments in U.S. government securities may include securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its agencies or federally-chartered entities referred to as instrumentalities. There is no required allocation of the Limited Term Income Funds assets among the above classes of securities, but the Limited Term Income Fund focuses mainly on U.S. government securities and corporate debt securities. The portfolio managers will conduct their own credit analysis on all potential investments. This analysis will include a review of credit ratings where available and, it will typically consider such other factors like prepayment, correlation, and volatility. The portfolio managers tend to favor securities that are considered less risky from a credit risk standpoint over those that are considered riskier. However, when market conditions change, the portfolio managers might change the Limited Term Income Funds sector allocations. Sector allocations are generally determined based on what the portfolio managers insights and judgments about risk, relative value, liquidity, diversification and/or other features of the available sectors that may make them more or less attractive for investment. When the portfolio managers perceive considerable risk in the market, they may decide to increase portfolio diversification and limit sector exposure. However, when the portfolio managers believe, a sector is well positioned based on current market conditions they may decide to overweight exposure to such sector. The Limited Term Income Fund can invest up to 35% of its total assets in lower-grade, high-yield debt securities that are below investment-grade (commonly referred to as junk bonds) and are considered speculative instruments. Investment-grade debt securities are rated in one of the top four rating categories by nationally recognized statistical rating organizations such as Moodys or Standard & Poors. The Limited Term Income Fund may also invest in unrated securities, in which case the Limited Term Income Funds Adviser may internally assign ratings to certain of those securities, after assessing their credit quality, in investment-grade or below-investment-grade categories similar to those of nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. There can be no assurance, nor is it intended, that the Advisers credit analysis is consistent or comparable with the credit analysis process used by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization. When deciding whether to adjust the credit risk exposure of the Limited Term Income Funds debt investments or allocations among various sectors, the portfolio managers weigh factors such as the overall outlook for inflation and the global economy, expected interest rate movements and currency valuations, and the yield advantage that lower-grade securities may offer over investment-grade bonds. The Limited Term Income Fund has no limitations on the range of maturities of the debt securities in which it can invest and may hold securities with short-, medium- or long-term maturities. The maturity of a security differs from its effective duration, which attempts to measure the expected volatility of a securitys price to interest rate changes. For example, if a bond has an effective duration of three years, a 1% increase in general interest rates would be expected to cause the bonds value to decrease about 3%. To try to decrease volatility, the Limited Term Income Fund seeks to maintain a weighted average effective portfolio duration of one to three and a half years, measured on a dollar-weighted basis using the effective duration of the securities included in the portfolio and the amount invested in each of those securities. However, the duration of the portfolio might not meet that target due to market events or interest rate changes that cause debt securities to be repaid more rapidly or more slowly than expected. When deciding whether to adjust the duration of the Limited Term Income Funds debt investments, the portfolio managers weigh factors such as the overall outlook for inflation and the global economy, expected interest rate movements and currency valuations. The Limited Term Income Fund may invest a portion of its assets in foreign debt securities, including securities issued by foreign governments or companies in both developed and emerging markets. The Limited Term Income Fund may not invest more than 20% of its net assets in foreign debt securities. Investments in foreign debt securities will generally be determined based on the Advisers strategic risk/reward models which evaluates, among other things, the economic conditions affecting the U.S. and the developed and emerging markets. The Limited Term Income Fund may also use derivatives including treasury futures, to seek increased returns, to try to manage investment risk or for hedging purposes. Futures, swaps and structured notes are examples of some of the types of derivatives the Limited Term Income Fund can use. The use of these derivatives may provide for risk premium and reduce the Limited Term Income Funds overall volatility when compared to a pure bond. Treasury futures may be used to adjust portfolio duration or to reduce the Limited Term Income Funds overall volatility. The Limited Term Income Fund may also invest in certain restricted securities including securities that are only eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933 (referred to as Rule 144A Securities). In selecting investments for the Limited Term Income Fund, the portfolio managers analyze the overall investment opportunities and risks in different sectors of the debt securities markets by focusing on business cycle analysis, relative values between the corporate and government sectors, diversification, fundamental and technical analysis, liquidity, financing costs and/or other factors they believe will drive the risk or price performance of the securities or sector. The Limited Term Income Fund mainly seeks income earnings on the Limited Term Income Funds investments, consistent with preservation of capital, that may arise from decreases in interest rates, from improving credit fundamentals for a particular sector or security or from other investment techniques. The Limited Term Income Fund may sell securities that the portfolio manager believes no longer meet the above criteria.
Top holdings
As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT| Security | Ticker | Value | % of fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| US TREASURY N/B | — | $61.99M | 16.99% |
| MONEY MARKET FUND | GOIXX | $56.12M | 15.38% |
| US TREASURY N/B | — | $21.04M | 5.77% |
| US TREASURY N/B | — | $10.02M | 2.74% |
| U.S. TREASURY INFLATION-PROTECTED SECURITIES 2.375% 10/15/2028 | TII | $8.79M | 2.41% |
| FNMA Connecticut Avenue Securities Trust, Series 2022-R03, Class 1M2 | CAS | $6.24M | 1.71% |
| US TREASURY N/B | — | $5.62M | 1.54% |
| US TREASURY N/B | — | $5.33M | 1.46% |
| US TREASURY N/B | — | $5.02M | 1.38% |
| US TREASURY N/B | — | $5.00M | 1.37% |
Portfolio moves
Dec 31, 2025 → Mar 31, 2026How many positions this fund opened, exited, grew, trimmed, or left unchanged between its two most recent N-PORT snapshots — net changes between point-in-time reports, not a trade log.
Similar funds
Funds whose portfolios most overlap this one, by weight| Fund | Overlap | Net exp. |
|---|---|---|
| Curasset Capital Management Core Bond Fund · CMBVX, CMBEX, CMBIX, CMBAX | 46% | 0.36% |
| Ultra Short Government Fund · SAFEX | 17% | 0.33% |
| Align Alternative Access Fund | 15% | — |
Advisers
| Firm | Role |
|---|---|
| Curasset Capital Management, LLC | Adviser |
Footnotes
- Expense ratio as of January 28, 2026, from the fund's prospectus.
- Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
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