Vulcan Value Partners Fund
Elevation Series Trust
Expense ratio
Net assets1
$256.07M
Holdings1
26
Category
US Equity
Return

Investment objective & strategy

As of Sept. 16, 2025 · prospectus

Objective. The Vulcan Value Partners Fund (the Fund) seeks to achieve long-term capital appreciation.

Strategy. The Fund seeks to achieve long-term capital appreciation by purchasing securities primarily in publicly traded small-cap and large-cap companies that Vulcan Value Partners, LLC (Vulcan or the Adviser), the Funds investment adviser, believes to be both undervalued and possessing a quality that gives a company a non-temporary advantage over their peers (or a Sustainable Competitive Advantage). An example of a Sustainable Competitive Advantage includes, among others, companies with strong operational scale, pricing power, and brand loyalty operating in an industry with high switching costs. The Adviser seeks to purchase publicly traded companies at significant discounts to intrinsic worth. The portfolio managers typically use a discounted cash flow analysis to determine intrinsic worth. The Adviser seeks to invest for the long … The Fund seeks to achieve long-term capital appreciation by purchasing securities primarily in publicly traded small-cap and large-cap companies that Vulcan Value Partners, LLC (Vulcan or the Adviser), the Funds investment adviser, believes to be both undervalued and possessing a quality that gives a company a non-temporary advantage over their peers (or a Sustainable Competitive Advantage). An example of a Sustainable Competitive Advantage includes, among others, companies with strong operational scale, pricing power, and brand loyalty operating in an industry with high switching costs. The Adviser seeks to purchase publicly traded companies at significant discounts to intrinsic worth. The portfolio managers typically use a discounted cash flow analysis to determine intrinsic worth. The Adviser seeks to invest for the long term, limiting the selection of qualifying investments to good businesses with identifiable, Sustainable Competitive Advantages that allow a company to outcompete peers to maximize returns and to minimize risk. Identifiable, sustainable competitive advantages may include factors such as switching costs, brand recognition, and scalability, among others. The Adviser generally defines risk as the probability of permanently losing capital over a five-year period. Permanent loss of capital could occur if the Adviser has to sell a company at a loss because its estimated intrinsic value falls below the market price resulting in the loss of a margin of safety. The Adviser generally sells stocks when they approach or exceed their intrinsic worth as determined by the portfolio managers. The Adviser seeks to determine business or intrinsic value through disciplined financial analysis. Typically, the intrinsic value analysis includes a discounted cash flow analysis based on individual company financial statements and guidance, internal estimates of future growth in earnings and profitability, and qualitative research. The amount a company utilizes leverage is an important consideration in the stock selection analysis because leverage increases a companys risk and potential for return. The Adviser believes that good businesses can enhance their returns to equity investors with an efficient capital structure and prudent leverage, but the it generally views leveraged businesses with skepticism. The Adviser believes that equities purchased at prices substantially less than their intrinsic worth generally afford capital protection from significant permanent loss and also create the possibility of substantial appreciation if the market recognizes the companys economic value. To minimize business ownership risk, the Adviser evaluates business risks, assesses key management employees business impact and scrutinizes competitive market strengths and weaknesses in the assessment of long-term investment qualifications. The Adviser seeks to limit Fund investments to businesses that are run by ethical, capable, stockholder-oriented management teams that also are good operators and, very importantly, understand the importance of capital allocation. Generally, subject to price, any publicly traded company with profitable economics would be a potential investment for this Fund. A core position in the Fund is generally approximately 5% of the Funds portfolio, so that theoretically the Fund would hold about 20 companies, spread across various industries. Because it is rare that the Adviser would find exactly 20 companies meeting the Funds investment guidelines, allocations will vary with the price to value ratio of specific companies. The Adviser may invest in positions as small as 1% when price to value ratios are higher. The Adviser generally will not invest in any business that is trading above the its estimate of a businesss fair value. The Adviser will typically sell a position when the positions market price exceeds its calculated estimate of intrinsic value. The Adviser may invest up to 30% of the Funds net assets in publicly traded foreign securities, which may consist in whole or in part of securities of issuers in emerging markets. The Fund may be subject to currency risk when the Adviser invests in securities denominated in, or which receive revenues in, non-U.S. currencies. The Adviser will ensure that no issuers securities will constitute more than 10% of the Funds assets at the time of purchase. In addition, the Adviser will be allowed to invest up to, but no more than, an aggregate of 40% of the Funds assets in positions where the investment in the securities of an issuer exceeds 5% of the Funds assets. If the investments meeting the Funds criteria are not available, the Adviser may invest the Funds assets temporarily in obligations of the U.S. government and its agencies, or in other money market instruments. Under the 1940 Act, to qualify as a diversified fund, a fund, with respect to 75% of its total assets, may not invest greater than 5% of its total assets in any one issuer and may not hold greater than 10% of the securities of one issuer, other than investments in cash and cash items (including receivables), U.S. government securities, and securities of other investment companies. The remaining 25% of a funds total assets does not need to be diversified and may be invested in securities of a single issuer, subject to other applicable laws. The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it is not subject to the 75-5-10 diversification requirements and the Adviser can invest a larger percentage of the Funds assets in a smaller number of issuers, meaning it is not constrained by the 5%/10% asset allocation rule for diversified funds.

Top holdings

As of April 30, 2026 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
ELEVANCE HEALTH INC $16.14M 6.30%
MICROSOFT CORP $16.03M 6.26%
SAP SE $15.58M 6.08%
EVEREST RE GROUP $15.34M 5.99%
ARES MANAGEMENT CORP CL A $14.98M 5.85%
TPG INC $14.30M 5.59%
UNITEDHEALTH GRP $12.18M 4.76%
AMAZON.COM INC $11.85M 4.63%
ALPHABET INC CL C $11.82M 4.61%
FISERV INC $11.18M 4.37%
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Allocation by sector

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

Jan 31, 2026 → Apr 30, 2026
Opened
2
Exited
5
Increased
5
Decreased
19
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.

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Footnotes

  1. Net assets and holdings count as of April 30, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.

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