Investment objective & strategy
As of July 26, 2024 · prospectusObjective. The investment objective of the Centerstone International Fund (the ?International Fund?) is to seek long-term growth of capital.
Strategy. To achieve its objective of long-term capital growth, normally, the International Fund invests at least 60% of its net assets in foreign (non-U.S.) equity securities. Equity securities are selected based on their price versus value, business quality and balance sheet strength, among other factors. The International Fund also may invest up to 40% of its total assets in debt instruments (including those of foreign issuers). The International Fund may also invest in cash and cash equivalents. The International Fund may generally invest in the following fixed income securities: notes, bills and debentures, bank debt obligations, high-yield debt securities rated below investment grade, convertible securities, Rule 144A securities (Rule 144A securities are restricted securities that can be resold to qualified institutional … To achieve its objective of long-term capital growth, normally, the International Fund invests at least 60% of its net assets in foreign (non-U.S.) equity securities. Equity securities are selected based on their price versus value, business quality and balance sheet strength, among other factors. The International Fund also may invest up to 40% of its total assets in debt instruments (including those of foreign issuers). The International Fund may also invest in cash and cash equivalents. The International Fund may generally invest in the following fixed income securities: notes, bills and debentures, bank debt obligations, high-yield debt securities rated below investment grade, convertible securities, Rule 144A securities (Rule 144A securities are restricted securities that can be resold to qualified institutional buyers but not to the general public); and securities issued by international government or quasi-government organizations and sovereign debt securities. The International Fund may invest in debt securities generally without regard to their credit rating or time to maturity. The International Fund may invest up to 20% of its total assets in lower-rated or defaulted debt securities (including so-called ?junk bonds?), corporate debt, comparable unrated debt securities, or other indebtedness (or participations in the indebtedness) of such companies. In selecting debt securities to achieve the International Fund?s investment objective, the Adviser considers the likelihood of default and the potential for capital appreciation. The International Fund may also invest up to 10% of its total assets in precious metals such as gold or silver, or in instruments related to such precious metals such as commodity contracts, options on such contracts, structured notes and ETFs. The International Fund may invest in the foregoing securities or assets directly or gain exposure to such securities or assets indirectly by investing in ETFs or other investment companies. The International Fund particularly seeks companies that have financial strength and stability, strong management and fundamental or intrinsic value. ?Intrinsic value? is based on our judgment of what a prudent and rational business buyer would pay in cash for a company in normal markets. The Adviser follows a bottom-up oriented long-term investment philosophy. The International Fund identifies investment opportunities through intensive research of individual companies and generally does not focus or rely on current stock market conditions and other macro factors when assessing potential investment opportunities. The International Fund focuses its investments in areas where the Adviser finds the most compelling opportunities at any given moment and on situations that, in the Adviser?s opinion, have the potential for capital appreciation. The investment philosophy and strategy of the International Fund seeks a ?margin of safety? in investments, i.e., where the market price of an investment is below its fundamental value, with the goal being to avoid permanent impairment of capital (as opposed to temporary losses in share value relating to shifting investor sentiment or other normal share price volatility). In particular, a discount to ?intrinsic value? is sought even for the best of businesses, with a deeper discount demanded for companies that the Adviser views as under business model, balance sheet, management or other stresses. For these reasons, the International Fund may seek investments in the equity securities of companies in industries that are believed to be temporarily depressed. Investment decisions for the International Fund are made without regard to the capitalization (size) of the companies in which it invests. The International Fund invests primarily in equity securities of companies traded in mature markets (markets that already have a number of established companies, for example, Japan, Germany and France) and may invest in countries whose economies are still developing (sometimes called ?emerging markets?). The International Fund intends to invest its assets in investments that are tied economically to a number of countries throughout the world. Under normal circumstances, the International Fund invests in issuers located in at least three different countries (not including the U.S. although the International Fund may also invest in U.S. issuers). The International Fund may invest a portion of its assets in derivative instruments. These include forward contracts and futures contracts. The International Fund may invest in derivatives primarily to seek to hedge exposure to certain markets and securities and/or for non-hedging speculative that seek to take maximum advantage of market fluctuations. The International Fund may seek to hedge its exposure to foreign currencies, typically through the use of foreign currency derivatives, including currency forward contracts and may engage in currency transactions with counterparties to gain or reduce exposure to certain currencies or to generate income or gains. The International Fund may also engage in securities lending to generate income. The Adviser considers selling a security when it determines that such security no longer offers fundamental value or financial strength and stability.
Top holdings
As of Dec. 31, 2024 · N-PORT| Security | Ticker | Value | % of fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ryanair Holdings PLC ORD EUR0.006 | RYAOF | $317.27K | 5.86% |
| TC ENERGY CORP | — | $311.17K | 5.74% |
| AIR LIQUIDE SA | — | $287.73K | 5.31% |
| SINGAPORE EXCHANGE NPV | SPXCF | $227.61K | 4.20% |
| NESTLE SA-REG | — | $214.56K | 3.96% |
| LOGISTA INTEGRAL SA /EUR/ 0.00000000 | CDNIF | $210.02K | 3.88% |
| Schneider Electric SE EUR4.00 | SU FP | $205.64K | 3.80% |
| SODEXO SA | — | $190.78K | 3.52% |
| CFD_EQS GOLDUS33 5705946 | SAN | $185.00K | 3.41% |
| OVERSEA-CHINESE BANKING CORP /SGD/ 0.00000000 | OVCHF | $169.64K | 3.13% |
Portfolio moves
Sep 30, 2024 → Dec 31, 2024How 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. |
|---|---|---|
| International Carbon Transition Equity Portfolio · HLCTX | 9% | 0.80% |
| Domini International Opportunities Fund | 7% | 1.15% |
| Tortoise North American Pipeline Fund | 6% | 0.40% |
Footnotes
- Net assets and holdings count as of December 31, 2024, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
Machine-readable: JSON · Markdown. Programmatic access via the agent surface.