IGIEX
Ashmore Emerging Markets Debt Fund
Ashmore Funds
Expense ratio1
0.74%
Net assets2
$11.56M
Holdings2
105
Category
Taxable Bond
2025 return3
16.01%

Investment objective & strategy

As of Feb. 26, 2026 · prospectus

Objective. The Fund seeks to maximize income,

Strategy. The Fund seeks to achieve its objective by investing principally in debt instruments of Sovereigns and Quasi- Sovereigns of Emerging Market Countries and EM Supra-Nationals denominated principally in Hard Currencies (i.e., the U.S. dollar or any currency of a nation in the G-7). The Fund has no restrictions on individual security duration. The Fund observes a policy to normally invest at least 80% of its net assets (plus borrowings made for investment purposes) in bonds and other debt instruments of Sovereign or Quasi-Sovereign issuers of Emerging Market Countries and EM Supra-Nationals. Sovereigns are governments of Emerging Market Countries. Quasi-Sovereigns are entities (including a local or regional governmental body) that are 100% guaranteed by a Sovereign or 100% directly or indirectly … The Fund seeks to achieve its objective by investing principally in debt instruments of Sovereigns and Quasi- Sovereigns of Emerging Market Countries and EM Supra-Nationals denominated principally in Hard Currencies (i.e., the U.S. dollar or any currency of a nation in the G-7). The Fund has no restrictions on individual security duration. The Fund observes a policy to normally invest at least 80% of its net assets (plus borrowings made for investment purposes) in bonds and other debt instruments of Sovereign or Quasi-Sovereign issuers of Emerging Market Countries and EM Supra-Nationals. Sovereigns are governments of Emerging Market Countries. Quasi-Sovereigns are entities (including a local or regional governmental body) that are 100% guaranteed by a Sovereign or 100% directly or indirectly owned or controlled by a Sovereign. For the avoidance of doubt, a province and a city are classified as Quasi-Sovereigns. EM Supra-Nationals are Supra-National entities issuing debt instruments in a local currency of an Emerging Market Country or providing exposure to an Emerging Market sovereign credit risk. Emerging Market Country means any country included by the International Monetary Fund in its list of Emerging and Developing Economies, any country which is considered a low-income, lower-middle-income, or upper- middle-income economy by the World Bank, and any country that is included in an Emerging Market Index. The Fund may invest in debt instruments of all types, whether subordinated or unsubordinated, secured or unsecured, quoted or unquoted, rated or unrated, or floating rate or fixed rate. These may include, without limitation, bonds, debentures, notes, convertible securities, commercial paper, loans and related assignments and participations, bank certificates of deposit, fixed time deposits, bankers acceptances, and money market instruments, including money market funds denominated in U.S. dollars or other currencies. The Fund may invest in companies of any market capitalization, and its allocations among small-, mid- and large-capitalization issuers may vary significantly over time. The Fund may invest in obligations of any credit quality, including obligations that are in default or that are subject to insolvency proceedings. The Fund may invest without limitation in debt securities that are rated below investment grade or that are unrated but judged by the Investment Manager to be of comparable quality (i.e., junk bonds). The Fund may utilize various derivative instruments and related strategies, including to gain exposure to one or more of the issuers referred to above or other assets. In addition, the Funds investments in derivatives and other synthetic instruments that have economic characteristics similar to such investments will be counted toward satisfaction of the Funds 80% investment policy. The Fund may utilize derivatives of all types and may invest in, without limitation, call and put options (including options on futures contracts), futures and forward contracts and swap agreements (including total return, interest rate, and credit default swaps), credit-linked notes, structured notes and other related instruments with respect to individual currencies, bonds, and securities of any kind, indices and baskets of securities, interest rates and currencies. The Fund may use derivatives for hedging or efficient portfolio management purposes, but may also use them to increase the Funds investment exposure beyond that which it could achieve by investing directly in more conventional securities. The Fund may invest in currency-related transactions such as currency forward transactions (including deliverable and non-deliverable forwards), currency futures transactions and currency options transactions, and may also invest directly in foreign currencies, in each case for hedging or other investment purposes. The Fund may invest in convertible debt instruments and equity securities related to convertible securities or warrants the Fund holds or has held, as well as acquire and hold equity securities, including warrants, resulting from debt conversion or restructuring. The Fund may invest in the securities of other investment companies, including exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and other pooled vehicles, if the investment companies invest principally in the types of investments in which the Fund may invest directly. The Fund may also lend its portfolio securities, borrow money for investment and other purposes, and enter into repurchase and reverse repurchase agreement transactions. In managing the Fund, the Investment Managers fixed income and asset allocation investment committee (the Investment Committee), together with the relevant portfolio managers (together with the Investment Committee, the Investment Team), employs a largely top-down, active and value-driven investment approach in analyzing emerging markets and currencies. The Funds investment approach includes an emphasis on the influence of politics (both local and international). The Investment Team combines this top-down approach with an analytically-driven, bottom-up approach to making purchase and sale decisions with respect to individual corporate credits. The Investment Team seeks to invest in a portfolio of fixed-income securities in an effort to limit the Funds exposure to interest rate risk. The Investment Team seeks opportunities in selected emerging markets that it believes may benefit from significant positive changes, such as political and economic reforms, increases in capital inflows and investor confidence, and seeks to invest in issuers in government and Corporate sectors it expects will benefit from such developments and associated economic development and growth. The Investment Teams investment process focuses on global and emerging markets fundamentals and considers factors such as liquidity and risk management at the macro level. This approach utilizes the Investment Managers broad and current knowledge of important investment areas in various Emerging Market Countries gained, in part, through research, experience, long-standing relationships with reliable local firms and, where appropriate, visits by its investment personnel to countries in their respective regions of responsibility. In response to adverse market, economic, political or other conditions, the Fund may deviate from its principal strategies by making temporary investments of some or all of its assets in various instruments, including short-term, high-quality fixed income securities denominated in any currency, cash, cash equivalents, money market funds, and other similar funds. The Fund may not achieve its investment objective when it does so. The Fund may also invest a portion of its assets in such investments and instruments on a short term or temporary basis to manage its cash positions or otherwise manage the Fund efficiently. The Investment Manager may engage in active and frequent trading of the Funds portfolio securities to achieve the Funds investment objective. The Fund may pay transaction costs, such as the bid/asked spread on purchases and sales of securities, when it buys and sells securities (or turns over its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs and may result in higher taxes for you if your Fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in Annual Fund Operating Expenses or in the Examples, may adversely affect the Funds investment performance.

Top holdings

As of Jan. 30, 2026 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
PETROLEOS DE VENEZUELA S REGD REG S 8.50000000 PDVSA $423.19K 3.66%
WIB 0 03/19/26 B $328.21K 2.84%
ADGB 3.125 09/30/49 REGS ADGB $280.00K 2.42%
DOMREP 5.875 01/30/60 REGS DOMREP $250.94K 2.17%
TURKIYE REP OF TURKEY $221.65K 1.92%
UZBEK 5.375 02/20/29 REGS UZBEK $221.13K 1.91%
ENAPCL 5.25 11/06/29 REGS ENAPCL $217.14K 1.88%
MOROC 6.5 09/08/33 REGS MOROC $215.31K 1.86%
IVYCST 8.25 01/30/37 REGS IVYCST $214.95K 1.86%
REPUBLIC OF GUATEMALA REGD REG S 6.60000000 GUATEM $214.00K 1.85%
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Allocation by sector

As of January 30, 2026 · N-PORT
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Portfolio moves

Oct 31, 2025 → Jan 30, 2026
Opened
4
Exited
43
Increased
3
Decreased
53
Unchanged
45

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.

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Advisers

As of October 31, 2025 · N-CEN
FirmRole
Ashmore Investment Advisors Limited Adviser

Footnotes

  1. Expense ratio as of February 26, 2026, from the fund's prospectus.
  2. Net assets and holdings count as of January 30, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
  3. Total return for calendar year 2025, before tax and after fund expenses. As reported in the fund's prospectus performance bar chart.

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