GQHIX
GQG Partners US Quality Value Fund
ADVISORS' INNER CIRCLE III
Expense ratio1
0.49%
Net assets2
$263.41M
Holdings2
37
Category
US Equity
2025 return3
8.45%

Investment objective & strategy

As of July 29, 2025 · prospectus

Objective. The GQG Partners US Quality Value Fund (the US Quality Value Fund or the Fund) seeks long-term capital appreciation and dividend income.

Strategy. Under normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets, plus any borrowings for investment purposes, in instruments that are tied economically to the U.S. This investment policy may be changed by the Fund upon 60 days prior written notice to shareholders. The Fund will generally hold securities of between 25 to 70 issuers. The Fund will invest primarily in securities of U.S. companies but may also invest in the securities of foreign companies in developed markets, which the Adviser believes to be undervalued but have good prospects for capital appreciation. In addition, the Adviser considers a companys historical dividend records and current prospects to pay a dividend going forward. Securities are selected based on a variety … Under normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets, plus any borrowings for investment purposes, in instruments that are tied economically to the U.S. This investment policy may be changed by the Fund upon 60 days prior written notice to shareholders. The Fund will generally hold securities of between 25 to 70 issuers. The Fund will invest primarily in securities of U.S. companies but may also invest in the securities of foreign companies in developed markets, which the Adviser believes to be undervalued but have good prospects for capital appreciation. In addition, the Adviser considers a companys historical dividend records and current prospects to pay a dividend going forward. Securities are selected based on a variety of factors, such as a companys consistent effort to maintain or increase dividends over time while maintaining sufficient profitability. The securities in which the Fund invests are primarily publicly traded common stocks, but the Fund may also invest in warrants and preferred stocks. The Fund may invest in initial public offerings (IPOs) and securities of companies with any market capitalization. IPOs are considered for purchase by the Fund if the Adviser believes that the company meets the same criteria as any other Fund investment in terms of appreciation and income opportunities. The Fund considers a company to be a U.S. company if: (i) at least 50% of the companys assets are located in the U.S.; (ii) at least 50% of the companys revenue is generated in the U.S.; (iii) the company is organized, conducts its principal operations, or maintains its principal place of business or principal manufacturing facilities in the U.S.; (iv) the companys securities are traded principally in the U.S.; or (v) the Adviser otherwise believes that the companys assets are exposed to the economic fortunes and risks of the U.S. (because, for example, the Adviser believes that the companys growth is dependent on the U.S.). Although the Fund will invest primarily in securities of U.S. issuers, the Fund may also invest in securities of non-U.S. issuers, and is expected to typically do so by purchasing depositary receipts (including unsponsored depositary receipts and American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), European Depositary Receipts (EDRs) and Global Depositary Receipts (GDRs)), which are certificates typically issued by a bank or trust company that represent ownership interests in securities of non-U.S. companies. The Fund may also invest in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and U.S. Treasury securities. Treasuries are considered as alternatives to holding cash if at a given time the Adviser believes that treasuries offer better yields. The Adviser would typically invest in an ETF rather than directly in underlying investments when the Adviser believes that doing so would provide more efficient exposure, liquidity or market access. The Adviser would also typically invest in depositary receipts when local trading in certain non-US. companies is restricted, for added liquidity or if there is a significant discount to the locally traded shares. In managing the Funds investments, the Adviser seeks to buy companies that it believes are attractively priced with strong fundamental business characteristics and sustainable free cash flow and/or earnings. The Adviser focuses on equity securities that appear to be undervalued by various measures, but which the Adviser believes have good prospects for future earnings growth and capital appreciation. Such valuation measures and analyses include, without limitation, ratios such as price to earnings, price to book value, and price to cash flow which may be incorporated into an analysis of earnings, cash flows and/or discounted dividends to assess the merits of a potential investment. The relevance and application of any of these measures or analyses can vary based on a companys particular characteristics. The Adviser typically pursues a value style of investing as it seeks to capture market inefficiencies which the Adviser believes are driven by investors propensity to be short-sighted and overly focused on quarter-to-quarter price movements rather than on a companys fundamentals over a longer time horizon (5 years or more). The Adviser believes that this market inefficiency tends to lead investors to underappreciate the compounding potential of undervalued, quality, mature growing companies. The Adviser relies on individual stock selection driven by a bottom-up research process rather than seeking to add value based on top-down, macro based criteria. To identify this subset of companies, the Adviser generates investment ideas from a variety of sources, ranging from institutional knowledge and industry contacts, to the Advisers proprietary screening process that seeks to identify suitable companies based on several quality factors such as rates of return on equity and total capital, margin stability and profitability. Ideas are then subject to rigorous fundamental analysis as the Adviser seeks to identify and invest in companies that it believes reflect higher quality opportunities on a forward-looking basis. When making purchase and sale decisions between similarly priced investment opportunities with comparable fundamentals, the Adviser seeks to identify relatively higher quality companies with strong financial positions, capable management, higher barriers to entry, more opportunity for growth and more durable earnings growth, relative to peers, comparable businesses, or its own history, based on the Advisers analyses of a companys financial statements, economic health, competitors and the markets that it serves. The Adviser seeks to outperform the MSCI USA Value Index (Index) over a full market cycle by seeking to capture market upside while limiting downside risk through the Advisers focus on securities it believes are higher quality than the overall market and the Advisers willingness to react proactively to perceived changes in risk. For these purposes, a full market cycle can be measured from a point in the market cycle (e.g., a peak or trough) to the corresponding point in the next market cycle. The Adviser may sell a company if the Adviser believes that the companys long-term competitive advantage or relative earnings growth prospects have deteriorated, or the Adviser has otherwise lost conviction that the company reflects a higher quality opportunity than other available investments on a forward looking basis. The Adviser also may sell a company if the company has met its price target or is involved in a business combination, if the Adviser identifies a more attractive investment opportunity, if the Adviser wishes to reduce the Funds exposure to the company or a particular country or geographic region. In constructing the Funds portfolio of securities, the Adviser is not constrained by sector or industry weights in the Index. The Fund may invest in any economic sector and, at times, emphasize one or more particular industries or sectors in the portfolio construction process. The Fund is classified as non-diversified, which means that it may invest a larger percentage of its assets in a smaller number of issuers than a diversified fund.

Top holdings

As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS INC $16.78M 6.37%
AT&T INC $16.29M 6.19%
PHILIP MORRIS INTL INC $13.09M 4.97%
ALTRIA GROUP INC $12.86M 4.88%
ENBRIDGE INC $12.81M 4.86%
AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER COMMON STOCK $10.69M 4.06%
EXXON MOBIL CORP $10.59M 4.02%
CME GROUP INC CL A $10.50M 3.99%
CHEVRON CORP $9.09M 3.45%
JOHNSON&JOHNSON $7.97M 3.03%
View all holdings →

Allocation by sector

As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT
View portfolio breakdown →

Portfolio moves

Dec 31, 2025 → Mar 31, 2026
Opened
4
Exited
4
Increased
4
Decreased
5
Unchanged
24

How 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.

View portfolio moves →

Similar funds

Funds whose portfolios most overlap this one, by weight
FundOverlapNet exp.
GQG PARTNERS US SELECT QUALITY EQUITY FUND · GQERX, GQEIX, GQEPX 71% 0.49%
GQG US Equity ETF · GQGU 70% 0.49%
GQG PARTNERS GLOBAL QUALITY EQUITY FUND · GQRRX, GQRIX, GQRPX 59% 0.70%
View all similar funds →

Advisers

As of March 31, 2025 · N-CEN
FirmRole
GQG Partners LLC Adviser

Footnotes

  1. Expense ratio as of July 29, 2025, from the fund's prospectus.
  2. Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
  3. Total return for calendar year 2025, before tax and after fund expenses. Computed by compounding the twelve monthly total returns the fund reported in its SEC N-PORT filings for 2025 (the latest prospectus does not yet chart this year).

Machine-readable: JSON · Markdown. Programmatic access via the agent surface.