OAKG
Oakmark Global Large Cap ETF
Harris Oakmark ETF Trust
Expense ratio1
0.62%
Net assets2
$34.43M
Holdings2
54
Category
International Equity
Return

Investment objective & strategy

As of Nov. 7, 2025 · prospectus

Objective. Oakmark Global Large Cap ETF seeks long-term capital appreciation.

Strategy. The Fund invests primarily in a diversified portfolio of equity securities of U.S. and non-U.S. large capitalization companies. Under normal circumstances, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets (plus borrowings made for investment purposes) in securities of large capitalization companies. A large capitalization company is one whose market capitalization is not smaller than the smallest market capitalization of a company in the MSCI World Large Cap Index. As of September 30, 2025, the smallest market capitalization in the MSCI World Large Cap Index was $1.743 billion. Under normal market conditions, the Fund will not invest more than 30% of its total assets (measured at time of investment) in companies located in a single country (other than … The Fund invests primarily in a diversified portfolio of equity securities of U.S. and non-U.S. large capitalization companies. Under normal circumstances, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets (plus borrowings made for investment purposes) in securities of large capitalization companies. A large capitalization company is one whose market capitalization is not smaller than the smallest market capitalization of a company in the MSCI World Large Cap Index. As of September 30, 2025, the smallest market capitalization in the MSCI World Large Cap Index was $1.743 billion. Under normal market conditions, the Fund will not invest more than 30% of its total assets (measured at time of investment) in companies located in a single country (other than the U.S.) and will not invest more than 25% of its assets in one industry. Typically, the Fund invests between 25-65% of its total assets in securities of U.S. companies and between 25-65% of its total assets in securities of non-U.S. companies. In determining whether an issuer is a U.S. or non-U.S. company, the Fund considers various factors including its country of domicile, the primary stock exchange on which it trades, the location from which the majority of its revenue comes, and its reporting currency. There are no geographic limits on the Fund's non-U.S. investments, and the Fund may invest in securities of companies located in developed or emerging markets. The Fund considers emerging markets to be markets located in countries classified as emerging or frontier markets by MSCI, and are generally located in the AsiaPacific region, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Central and South America, and Africa. The Fund uses a value investment philosophy in selecting equity securities. This value investment philosophy is based upon the belief that, over time, a company's stock price converges with the Adviser's estimate of the company's intrinsic value. By "intrinsic value," the Adviser means its estimate of the price a knowledgeable buyer would pay to acquire the entire business. The Adviser believes that investing in securities priced significantly below what it believes is a company's intrinsic value presents the best opportunity to achieve the Fund's investment objective. A company trading below its estimated intrinsic value is sometimes referred to as trading at a discount. The Adviser uses this value investment philosophy to identify companies that have discounted stock prices compared to what the Adviser believes are the companies' intrinsic values. In assessing such companies, the Adviser looks for a number of attractive attributes which could include: (1) free cash flows; (2) earnings that are growing and are reasonably predictable; and (3) high level of company management alignment with shareholders. Key Tenets of the Oakmark Value Investment Philosophy: 1. Buy businesses that are trading at a significant discount to the Adviser's estimate of the company's intrinsic value. At the time the Adviser buys a company, the Adviser wants the company's stock to be inexpensive relative to what it believes the entire business is worth. 2. Invest with companies expected to grow shareholder value over time. Value investors can sometimes fall into the trap of buying a stock that is inexpensive for a reasonbecause the company just does not grow. The Adviser looks for businesses that are expected to achieve a combination of dividend yield and per-share growth in business value that is above-average. 3. Invest with management teams that think and act as owners. The Adviser seeks out companies with management teams that understand the dynamics of per share value growth and are focused on achieving such growth. Stock ownership and incentives that align managements' interests with those of shareholders are key components of this analysis. In making its investment decisions, the Adviser uses a "bottom-up" approach focused on individual companies, rather than focusing on specific economic factors or specific industries. To facilitate its selection of investments that meet the criteria described above, the Adviser uses independent, in-house research to analyze each company. As part of this selection process, the Adviser's analysts typically visit companies and conduct other research on the companies and their industries. Once the Adviser identifies a stock that it believes is selling at a significant discount to the Adviser's estimated intrinsic value and that the company possesses the other key tenets of the investment philosophy, the Adviser may consider buying that stock for the Fund. The Adviser usually sells a stock when the price approaches its estimated intrinsic value. This means the Adviser sets specific "buy" and "sell" targets for each stock the Fund holds. The Adviser monitors each portfolio holding and adjusts these price targets as warranted to reflect changes in a company's fundamentals. The Adviser believes that holding a relatively small number of issuers allows its "best ideas" to have a meaningful impact on the Fund's performance. Therefore, the Fund's portfolio typically holds 30-60 issuers rather than hundreds, and as a result, a higher percentage of the Fund's total assets may at times be invested in a particular region, sector or industry. The Fund will not change its policy to invest at least 80% of its net assets (plus borrowings made for investment purposes) in securities of large capitalization companies without providing shareholders at least 60 days' advance notice.

Top holdings

As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
BNP PARIBAS $1.11M 3.22%
AIRBNB INC CLASS A $1.02M 2.96%
IQVIA HOLDINGS INC $1.01M 2.94%
SALESFORCE INC $1.01M 2.93%
ADIDAS AG $984.09K 2.86%
SUNBELT RENTALS $941.85K 2.74%
GLENCORE PLC $897.69K 2.61%
DAIMLER TRUCK HO $838.46K 2.44%
Bayer Aktiengesellschaft BAYN $825.60K 2.40%
MONDELEZ INTL INC $824.89K 2.40%
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
8
Exited
5
Increased
45
Decreased
1
Unchanged
0

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.
Oakmark Global Fund · OAKGX, OAYGX, OANGX, OAZGX 69% 0.85%
Oakmark International Large Cap ETF · OAKI 48% 0.65%
Oakmark Global Select Fund · OAKWX, OAYWX, OANWX, OAZWX 47% 0.82%
View all similar funds →

Footnotes

  1. Expense ratio as of November 7, 2025, from the fund's prospectus.
  2. Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.

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