PFRNX
Penn Capital Floating Rate Income Fund
RBB Fund Trust
Expense ratio1
0.64%
Net assets2
$28.92M
Holdings2
113
Category
Other
2021 return3
3.11%

Investment objective & strategy

As of Jan. 5, 2023 · prospectus

Objective. The Penn Capital Floating Rate Income Fund (the Fund) seeks to provide current income.

Strategy. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of its net assets in floating rate senior secured loans, floating rate senior corporate debt and other floating rate senior instruments. The loans and instruments in which the Fund invests include bank loans (including covenant lite loans), bonds, and debt securities issued by various domestic and foreign entities. The Fund also invests in private placements in these types of securities. The Fund intends to invest in instruments that are U.S. dollar denominated. The Fund may invest up to 25% of its net assets in foreign debt instruments. The Fund intends to invest primarily in below-investment grade loans and instruments, including debt obligations issued by … The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of its net assets in floating rate senior secured loans, floating rate senior corporate debt and other floating rate senior instruments. The loans and instruments in which the Fund invests include bank loans (including covenant lite loans), bonds, and debt securities issued by various domestic and foreign entities. The Fund also invests in private placements in these types of securities. The Fund intends to invest in instruments that are U.S. dollar denominated. The Fund may invest up to 25% of its net assets in foreign debt instruments. The Fund intends to invest primarily in below-investment grade loans and instruments, including debt obligations issued by real estate investment trusts (REITs), bonds, notes and debentures, but may also invest in investment grade loans and instruments. Below-investment grade debt instruments (commonly called high yield or junk bonds) are those instruments rated BB+ or lower by S&P Global Ratings (S&P) or Fitch Ratings, Inc. (Fitch), or Ba1 or lower by Moodys Investors Service, Inc. (Moodys), or comparably rated by another nationally recognized statistical rating organization, or, if unrated, determined by the Advisor to be of comparable quality. The Advisor seeks to pursue a conservative (defensive) investment strategy within the high yield debt market by generally avoiding the lowest rated ( i.e. , riskiest) debt instruments in the high yield market. The Fund is permitted to invest in instruments of any maturity. The Fund may invest up to 10% of its net assets in subordinated loans. In addition, the Fund may have increased exposure to investments in the financials sector. The Fund also is permitted to invest in the securities of leveraged companies ( i.e. , companies that issue debt). The Fund also invests in other investment companies, including exchange traded funds (ETFs), that have investment objectives similar to the Funds or that otherwise are permitted investments with the Funds investment policies described herein. In selecting investments for the Fund, the Advisor incorporates environmental, social, and governance-related (ESG) issues into its research and analysis, including, but not limited to, an assessment of the following factors: evaluation of a company's management team, board and leadership structure, share structure and overall business practices. Each investment decision incorporates ESG and sustainability to the extent that any of these ESG factors impact the financial health or reputational risk of the company within the capital markets. The Funds investments in senior floating rate loans will be through syndicated loans. Syndicated loans are an extension of credit provided by a group of lenders and are structured, arranged, syndicated and administered by one or more banks. A syndicated bank loan is purchased either via assignment or participation. When a loan is purchased via assignment, the buyer is approved by the borrower and becomes the legal lender of record. When a loan is purchased via participation, the buyer receives the right to repayment but is not the legal lender of record. Most loans acquired by the Fund will be via assignment. Loan coupons are typically floating rate. Floating rate securities generally pay interest at rates that adjust whenever a specified interest rate changes and/or is reset on predetermined dates (such as the last day of a month or calendar quarter). Floating rate coupons have historically been set using the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (LIBOR) plus the spread (i.e., the rate for such coupons will typically be a spread or margin over LIBOR). The coupon determines the periodic interest payment that the loan holder will receive. Some loans contain a LIBOR Floor, which sets a minimum level on which to base the calculation of the coupon. Other loans do not contain a LIBOR Floor, and those coupons typically will be the sum of the 3-month market rate of LIBOR plus the spread. Coupons usually reset quarterly based upon the prevailing LIBOR rate. At the end of 2021, certain LIBOR rates were discontinued and an increasing number of floating rate coupons are being set using the Secured Overnight Financing Rate ("SOFR") plus a spread (i.e., the rate for such coupons will typically be a spread or margin over SOFR). Coupons are expected to be consistent with respect to the rate used (e.g., LIBOR or SOFR). Refer to "Principal Investment Risks - LIBOR Transition Risk." The Fund may invest in covenant lite loans. Certain financial institutions may define covenant lite loans differently. Covenant lite loans may have tranches that contain fewer or no restrictive covenants. The tranche of the covenant lite loan that has fewer restrictions typically does not include the legal clauses which allow an investor to proactively enforce financial tests or prevent or restrict undesired actions taken by the company or sponsor. Covenant lite loans also generally give the borrower/issuer more flexibility if they have met certain loan terms and provide fewer investor protections if certain criteria are breached. The Advisor could choose to sell a particular security if, for example, it no longer satisfies specific criteria based on the quantitative and qualitative factors outlined above, or to take advantage of what the Advisor has determined to be a better investment opportunity.

Top holdings

As of Nov. 30, 2022 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
US BANK MMDA - USBFS 2 $2.00M 6.93%
Carnival Corp $389.66K 1.35%
Cincinnati Bell, Inc., Term Loan B2 CBB $340.25K 1.18%
Navicure, Inc. - Senior $339.55K 1.17%
Calceus Acquisition, Inc. Term Loan B $337.37K 1.17%
BDF Acquisition Corp $337.02K 1.17%
NTHBNC TL 1L USD BL377066 $336.95K 1.16%
Canada Goose Inc. $335.44K 1.16%
BANK LOAN NOTE $333.88K 1.15%
White Cap Term Loan B 375 2027-10-01 WHTCAP $331.30K 1.15%
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Allocation by sector

As of November 30, 2022 · N-PORT
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Portfolio moves

Aug 31, 2022 → Nov 30, 2022
Opened
19
Exited
39
Increased
3
Decreased
64
Unchanged
27

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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Footnotes

  1. Expense ratio as of January 5, 2023, from the fund's prospectus.
  2. Net assets and holdings count as of November 30, 2022, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
  3. Total return for calendar year 2021, before tax and after fund expenses. Computed by compounding the twelve monthly total returns the fund reported in its SEC N-PORT filings for 2021 (the latest prospectus does not yet chart this year).

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