2020_gips_standards_firms
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GIPS 2020 Standards Overview
- Contains the 2020 Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS) for firms as established by the CFA Institute.
- Includes legal notices regarding copyright, trademark ownership, and professional liability disclaimers.
- Outlines core compliance requirements including input data, calculation methodologies, and fund maintenance.
- Details reporting standards for both time-weighted and money-weighted returns across composites and pooled funds.
- Provides supplemental resources such as advertising guidelines, a glossary, and sample reports for practical application.
GLOBAL INVESTMENT
PERFORMANCE
STANDARDS (GIPSĀ®)
FOR FIRMS
2020
GLOBAL INVESTMENT
PERFORMANCE
STANDARDS (GIPSĀ®)
FOR FIRMS
2020
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark owned by CFA Institute.
Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any
form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the
prior written permission of the copyright holder.
This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to
the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged
in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional service. If legal advice or other expert
assistanceĀ is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought.
ISBN 978-1-942713-71-5
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | iii
CONTENTS
Preface v
Introduction vii
Effective Date xv
1. Fundamentals of Compliance 1
2. Input Data and Calculation Methodology 8
3. Composite and Pooled Fund Maintenance 18
4. Composite Time-Weighted Return Report 21
5. Composite Money-Weighted Return Report 33
6. Pooled Fund Time-Weighted Return Report 44
7. Pooled Fund Money-Weighted Return Report 53
8. GIPS Advertising Guidelines 63
Glossary 72
Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports 85
Appendix B: Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports 98
Appendix C: Sample GIPS Advertisements 106
Appendix D: Sample Lists 113
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | v
PREFACE
Evolution of GIPS Standards
- The CFA Institute established the GIPS standards to ensure ethical investment performance reporting through fair representation and full disclosure.
- Compliance with these standards serves as a global passport for firms to market investment management services across international borders.
- The standards evolved from the 1995 AIMR-PPS to a unified global framework that eliminated the need for local or country-specific variations.
- Governance of the standards transitioned from the Investment Performance Council to the GIPS Executive Committee to facilitate broader international involvement.
- The scope of the standards has expanded over time to include diverse asset classes such as real estate and private equity, as well as advertising and fee disclosures.
Compliance with the GIPS standards has become a firmās āpassportā to market investment management services globally.
CFA Institute is a global not-for-profit association of investment professionals with the mission of
leading the investment profession globally by setting the highest standards of ethics, education,
and professional excellence. CFA Institute has a longstanding history of commitment to establish-
ing and supporting the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®). The GIPS standards
are ethical standards for calculating and presenting investment performance based on the princi-
ples of fair representation and full disclosure.
The GIPS standards are the recognized standard for calculating and presenting investment per -
formance around the world. Compliance with the GIPS standards has become a firmās āpassportā
to market investment management services globally. Asset owners that comply demonstrate a
commitment to adhering to global best practices. As of June 2019, CFA Institute has partnered
with organizations in more than 40 countries and regions that contribute to the development and
promotion of the GIPS standards.
History
ā¢In 1995, CFA Institute, formerly known as the Association for Investment Management and
Research (AIMR), sponsored and funded the Global Investment Performance Standards
Committee to develop global standards for calculating and presenting investment perfor -
mance, based on the existing AIMR Performance Presentation Standards (AIMR-PPSĀ®).
ā¢The first Global Investment Performance Standards were published in April 1999. That year,
the Global Investment Performance Standards Committee was replaced by the Investment
Performance Council (IPC) to further develop and promote the GIPS standards. The develop-
ment of the GIPS standards was a global industry initiative with participation from individuals
and organizations from more than 15 countries.
ā¢The IPC was charged with developing provisions for other asset classes (e.g., real estate and
private equity) and addressing other performance-related issues (e.g., fees and advertising)
to broaden the scope and applicability of the GIPS standards. The second edition of the GIPS
standards, published in February 2005, accomplished this goal.
ā¢With the 2005 edition release and the growing adoption and expansion of the GIPS standards,
the IPC decided to move to a single global investment performance standard that would elim-
inate the need for local variations of the GIPS standards. All country-specific performance
standards converged with the GIPS standards, resulting in 25 countries adopting a single,
global standard for the calculation and presentation of investment performance.
vi | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
ā¢In 2005, with the convergence of country-specific versions to the GIPS standards and the
need to reorganize the governance structure to facilitate involvement from GIPS Standards
Sponsors, CFA Institute dissolved the IPC and created the GIPS Executive Committee and the
GIPS Council. The GIPS Executive Committee served as the decision-making authority for
the GIPS standards, and the GIPS CouncilĀ facilitated the involvement of all GIPS Standards
Sponsors in the ongoing development and promotion of the GIPS standards.
ā¢In 2008, the GIPS Executive Committee began a review of the GIPS standards in an effort to
further refine the provisions. The GIPS Executive Committee collaborated closely with its
Evolution of GIPS Standards
- The CFA Institute restructured its governance by creating the GIPS Executive Committee and Council to oversee the development and promotion of global performance standards.
- The 2020 edition of the GIPS standards was developed to better accommodate pooled funds, alternative investments, and high-net-worth client managers.
- New distinctions were established in the 2020 update to provide separate, tailored provisions for investment firms and non-marketing asset owners.
- The standards serve as a 'global passport,' allowing firms in countries with minimal regulations to compete on an equal footing with those in highly developed markets.
- Standardization of performance calculation is essential to address the increasing globalization of financial markets and the diversity of international reporting practices.
By adhering to a global standard, firms in countries with minimal or no investment performance standards can compete for business on an equal footing with firms from countries with more-developed standards.
Sponsors, CFA Institute dissolved the IPC and created the GIPS Executive Committee and the
GIPS Council. The GIPS Executive Committee served as the decision-making authority for
the GIPS standards, and the GIPS CouncilĀ facilitated the involvement of all GIPS Standards
Sponsors in the ongoing development and promotion of the GIPS standards.
ā¢In 2008, the GIPS Executive Committee began a review of the GIPS standards in an effort to
further refine the provisions. The GIPS Executive Committee collaborated closely with its
technical subcommittees, specially formed working groups, and GIPS Standards Sponsors.
These groups reviewed the existing provisions and guidance and conducted surveys and other
research in the effort to produce the 2010 edition of the GIPS standards.
ā¢In 2017, the GIPS Executive Committee concluded that the GIPS standards should better
accommodate the needs of managers of pooled funds and alternative investments, as well as
firms focusing on high-net-worth clients. In 2017, a Consultation Paper, which described the
proposed key concepts of the GIPS standards and requested feedback on specific issues, was
issued for public comment. The public comments received generally supported the proposed
concepts. Subsequently, the 2020 GIPS Standards Exposure Draft was released on 31 August
2018. The final version of the 2020 edition of the GIPS standards was issued on 30 June 2019.
ā¢The GIPS standards were originally created for investment firms managing composite strat -
egies, with a focus on how firms present performance of composites to prospective clients.
Asset owners, who were always able to claim compliance if they had discretion over their
assets, struggled to understand how the GIPS standards applied to them. To address asset
ownersā needs, in 2014 the Guidance Statement on the Application of the GIPS Standards to
Asset Owners was issued. This Guidance Statement explained how the requirements of the
GIPS standards did or did not apply to asset owners. In the 2020 edition, separate provisions
were created so that firms and asset owners each have provisions designed for them. Firms
and those asset owners that market their services must follow the GIPS Standards for Firms.
Asset owners that do not market their services will follow the GIPS Standards for Asset
Owners. The GIPS Standards for Verifiers explain the procedures a verifier must follow when
conducting a verification or performance examination.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | vii
INTRODUCTION
PreambleāWhy Is a Global Investment Performance
Standard Needed?
Standardize Investment Performance: Financial markets and the investment management
industry have become increasingly global in nature. The growth in the types and number of finan-
cial entities, the globalization of the investment process, and the increased competition among
investment management firms all demonstrate the need to standardize the calculation and presen-
tation of investment performance.
Global Passport: Asset managers and both existing and prospective clients benefit from an
established global standard for calculating and presenting investment performance. Investment
practices, regulation, performance measurement, and reporting of performance vary considerably
from country to country. By adhering to a global standard, firms in countries with minimal or no
investment performance standards can compete for business on an equal footing with firms from
countries with more-developed standards. Firms from countries with established practices can
have more confidence in being fairly compared with local firms when competing for business in
countries that have not previously adopted performance standards. Performance standards that
are accepted globally enable investment firms to measure and present their investment perfor -
mance so that investors can readily compare investment performance among firms.
Global Investment Performance Standards
- The GIPS standards establish a global benchmark that allows investment firms in developing markets to compete on an equal footing with those in established financial hubs.
- Adherence to these ethical standards is designed to instill investor confidence by ensuring that performance data is complete, consistent, and fairly presented.
- The mission of the standards is to promote industry self-regulation and universal integrity for the ultimate benefit of the global investment community.
- A core requirement is the creation of composites for all strategies, which prevents firms from 'cherry-picking' their best-performing accounts to mislead prospective clients.
- Beyond mere compliance with minimum requirements, firms are encouraged to adopt best-practice recommendations to achieve full disclosure and fair representation.
These requirements prevent firms from cherry-picking their best performance.
from country to country. By adhering to a global standard, firms in countries with minimal or no
investment performance standards can compete for business on an equal footing with firms from
countries with more-developed standards. Firms from countries with established practices can
have more confidence in being fairly compared with local firms when competing for business in
countries that have not previously adopted performance standards. Performance standards that
are accepted globally enable investment firms to measure and present their investment perfor -
mance so that investors can readily compare investment performance among firms.
Investor Confidence: Organizations that adhere to investment performance standards help
assure investors and beneficiaries that the firmās and the asset ownerās investment performance is
complete and fairly presented. Both prospective and existing clients of investment firms as well as
asset owner oversight bodies benefit from a global investment performance standard by having a
greater degree of confidence in the performance information presented to them.
Mission and Objectives
The mission of the GIPS standards is to promote ethics and integrity and instill trust through the
use of the GIPS standards by achieving universal demand for compliance by asset owners, adop-
tion by asset managers, and support from regulators for the ultimate benefit of the global invest -
ment community.
The objectives of the GIPS standards are as follows:
ā¢Promote investor interests and instill investor confidence.
ā¢Ensure accurate and consistent data.
viii | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
ā¢Obtain worldwide acceptance of a single standard for calculating and presenting performance.
ā¢Promote fair, global competition among investment firms.
ā¢Promote industry self-regulation on a global basis.
Overview
Key concepts of the GIPS standards that apply to firms include the following:
ā¢The GIPS standards are ethical standards for investment performance presentation to ensure
fair representation and full disclosure of investment performance.
ā¢Meeting the objectives of fair representation and full disclosure is likely to require more than
simply adhering to the minimum requirements of the GIPS standards. Firms should also
adhere to the recommendations to achieve best practice in the calculation and presentation of
performance.
ā¢Firms must comply with all applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, including any
Guidance Statements, interpretations, and Questions & Answers (Q&As) published by
CFAĀ Institute and the GIPS standards governing bodies.
ā¢The GIPS standards do not address every aspect of performance measurement and will
continue to evolve over time to address additional areas of investment performance.
ā¢The GIPS standards require firms to create and maintain composites for all strategies for
which the firm manages segregated accounts or markets to segregated accounts. Firms must
include all actual, fee-paying, discretionary segregated accounts in at least one composite
defined by investment mandate, objective, or strategy. Pooled funds must also be included
in any composite for which the pooled fund meets the composite definition. Firms must
maintain and make available information about all of the strategies they manage using com-
posites or pooled funds. These requirements prevent firms from cherry-picking their best
performance.
ā¢The GIPS standards rely on the integrity of input data, the quality of which is critical to cre-
ating accurate performance presentations. The underlying valuations of portfolio holdings
drive performance. It is essential for these and other inputs to be accurate. The GIPS standards
require firms to adhere to certain calculation methodologies to allow for comparability across
firms.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | ixIntroduction
GIPS Compliance and Verification
- The GIPS standards mandate the use of composites or pooled funds to prevent firms from cherry-picking their best-performing accounts.
- Firms must initially present five years of compliant performance, eventually building up to a minimum ten-year historical record.
- While firms can self-claim compliance, independent third-party verification is considered a best practice to provide assurance on firm-wide policies.
- The ultimate goal of the standards is to establish a globally accepted format for fair, comparable, and fully disclosed investment performance.
- Accurate performance presentations rely heavily on the integrity of input data and the underlying valuations of portfolio holdings.
These requirements prevent firms from cherry-picking their best performance.
posites or pooled funds. These requirements prevent firms from cherry-picking their best
performance.
ā¢The GIPS standards rely on the integrity of input data, the quality of which is critical to cre-
ating accurate performance presentations. The underlying valuations of portfolio holdings
drive performance. It is essential for these and other inputs to be accurate. The GIPS standards
require firms to adhere to certain calculation methodologies to allow for comparability across
firms.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | ixIntroduction
Historical Performance Record
A firm is required to initially present, at a minimum, five years of annual investment performance
that is compliant with the GIPS standards. If the composite or pooled fund has been in existence
less than five years, the firm must present performance since the composite or pooled fund incep-
tion date. Prospectively, the firm must present an additional year of performance each year, build-
ing up to a minimum of 10 years of GIPS-compliant performance.
Firms may link non-GIPS-compliant performance to their GIPS-compliant performance provided
that only GIPS-compliant performance is presented for periods after the minimum effective com-
pliance date, which differs depending on the asset type:
ā¢1 January 2006 for real estate and private equity composites and pooled funds, as well as wrap
fee composites.
ā¢1 January 2000 for all other composites and pooled funds.
Claiming Compliance and Verification
Firms must take all steps necessary to ensure that they have satisfied all the applicable require-
ments of the GIPS standards before claiming compliance. Firms are strongly encouraged to per -
form periodic internal compliance checks. Implementing adequate internal controls during all
stages of the investment performance processāfrom data input to preparing GIPS Composite
Reports and GIPS Pooled Fund Reportsāinstills confidence in the validity of performance pre-
sented as well as in the claim of compliance.
Firms may choose to have an independent third-party verification. Verification is a process by
which a verification firm (verifier) conducts testing of a firm on a firm-wide basis in accordance
with the required verification procedures of the GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance
on whether the firmās policies and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance,
as well as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed
in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis. The
value of verification is widely recognized, and being verified is considered to be best practice. It is
strongly recommended that firms be verified. In addition to verification, firms may also choose to
have specifically focused testing of a composite or pooled fund (performance examination) per -
formed by an independent third-party verifier to provide additional assurance regarding the per -
formance of a particular composite or pooled fund.
x | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Implementing a Global Standard
One objective of the GIPS standards is to obtain worldwide acceptance of a single standard for
the calculation and presentation of investment performance in a fair and comparable format that
provides full disclosure. To facilitate the implementation of the GIPS standards, CFA Institute,
together with the GIPS standards governing bodies, creates and administers the GIPS standards
while local GIPS Standards Sponsors help to promote them.
Countries without an investment performance standard are strongly encouraged to promote the
Global GIPS Standards Implementation
- The primary objective of GIPS is to establish a single worldwide standard for fair and comparable investment performance disclosure.
- The standards rely on a self-regulatory framework that requires a strong commitment to ethical integrity from participating firms.
- In instances where local laws conflict with GIPS standards, firms must prioritize legal compliance while disclosing the conflict in their reports.
- Local GIPS Standards Sponsors serve as essential links between regional markets and governing bodies to promote and protect approved translations.
- Regulators are encouraged to support the standards by taking enforcement action against firms that falsely claim compliance.
Compliance with applicable laws and regulations does not necessarily lead to compliance with the GIPS standards.
One objective of the GIPS standards is to obtain worldwide acceptance of a single standard for
the calculation and presentation of investment performance in a fair and comparable format that
provides full disclosure. To facilitate the implementation of the GIPS standards, CFA Institute,
together with the GIPS standards governing bodies, creates and administers the GIPS standards
while local GIPS Standards Sponsors help to promote them.
Countries without an investment performance standard are strongly encouraged to promote the
GIPS standards as the local standard and translate them into the local language when necessary.
Although the GIPS standards may be translated into many languages, if a discrepancy arises, the
English version of the GIPS standards is the official governing version.
The self-regulatory nature of the GIPS standards necessitates a strong commitment to ethical integ-
rity. Self-regulation also assists regulators in exercising their responsibility for ensuring the fair dis -
closure of information within financial markets. Regulators are encouraged to do the following:
ā¢Recognize the benefit of voluntary compliance with standards that represent global best
practices;
ā¢Consider taking enforcement action against firms that falsely claim compliance with the GIPS
standards; and
ā¢Recognize the value of and encourage independent third-party verification.
Where existing laws, regulations, or industry standards already impose requirements related to
the calculation and presentation of investment performance, firms are strongly encouraged to
comply with the GIPS standards in addition to applicable regulatory requirements. Compliance
with applicable laws and regulations does not necessarily lead to compliance with the GIPS
standards. In cases in which laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards, firms are
required to comply with the laws and regulations and make full disclosure of the conflict in the
GIPS Report.
GIPS Standards Sponsors
The presence of a local GIPS Standards Sponsor is essential for effective implementation of the
GIPS standards and ongoing support within a country or region. Working in partnership with
CFA Institute, GIPS Standards Sponsors play a key role in promoting the GIPS standards globally.
GIPS Standards Sponsors, composed of one or more industry organizations, provide an import -
ant link between their local markets and theĀ GIPS standards governing bodies. In addition to
delivering educational programs and promoting the GIPS standards across the local investment
profession, the GIPS Standards Sponsors own any CFA Institute-approved translation of the
GIPSĀ standards materials and are responsible for protecting it.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | xiIntroduction
Endorsed GIPS Standards Sponsors (as of 30 June 2019)
Australia
Financial Services Council (FSC)
Canada
Canadian Investment Performance Council
(CIPC)
China
CFA Society Beijing
Cyprus
CFA Society Cyprus
Czech Republic
CFA Society Czech Republic and Czech
Capital Market Association (AKAT)
Denmark
CFA Society Denmark and The Danish Finance
Society
France
CFA Society France and Association FranƧaise
de la Gestion FinanciĆØre (AFG)
Germany
German Asset Management Standards
Committee (GAMSC):
Bundesverband Investment und Asset
Manager e.V. (BVI); Deutsche Vereinigung fur
Finanzanalyse und Assetment Management
(DVFA); and CFA Society Germany
Ghana
Ghana Securities Industry Association (GSIA)
Greece
CFA Society Greece
India
CFA Society IndiaIndonesia
CFA Society Indonesia and Indonesia
Association of Mutual Fund Managers
(Asosiasi Pengelola Reksa Dana Indonesia,
orĀ APRDI)
Ireland
Irish Association of Investment Managers
(IAIM)
Italy
Italian Investment Performance Committee
(IIPC):
Associazione Bancaria Italiana (ABI);
Associazione Italiana degli Analisti
eĀ Consulenti Finanziari (AIAF); Assogestioni;
SocietĆ per lo sviluppo del Mercato dei
Global GIPS Compliance Network
- The text lists a vast network of international financial organizations and CFA societies that support the Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS).
- Participating countries range from emerging markets like Ghana and Kazakhstan to established financial hubs like the United Kingdom and the United States.
- The 2020 Edition of the GIPS Standards is structured into three distinct chapters tailored for firms, asset owners, and verifiers.
- Compliance for firms is built upon fundamental principles such as legal adherence and the requirement to provide reports to all prospective investors.
Organizations that compete for business must comply with the GIPS Standards for Firms.
(DVFA); and CFA Society Germany
Ghana
Ghana Securities Industry Association (GSIA)
Greece
CFA Society Greece
India
CFA Society IndiaIndonesia
CFA Society Indonesia and Indonesia
Association of Mutual Fund Managers
(Asosiasi Pengelola Reksa Dana Indonesia,
orĀ APRDI)
Ireland
Irish Association of Investment Managers
(IAIM)
Italy
Italian Investment Performance Committee
(IIPC):
Associazione Bancaria Italiana (ABI);
Associazione Italiana degli Analisti
eĀ Consulenti Finanziari (AIAF); Assogestioni;
SocietĆ per lo sviluppo del Mercato dei
FondiĀ Pensione (Mefop); Associazione
ItalianaĀ Revisori Contabili (Assirevi); and
CFAĀ Society Italy
Japan
The Securities Analysts Association of Japan
(SAAJ)
Kazakhstan
Association of Financial and Investment
Analysts (AFIA)
Korea
Korea Investment Performance Committee
(KIPC)
Liechtenstein
Liechtenstein Bankers Association (LBA)
Mexico
CFA Society Mexico
Micronesia
Asia Pacific Association for Fiduciary Studies
(APAFS)
xii | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
The Netherlands
VBA-Beleggingsprofessionals
New Zealand
CFA Society New Zealand
Nigeria
Nigeria Investment Performance Committee:
CFA Society Nigeria; Pensions Operators
Association of Nigeria (PENOP); and Fund
Managers Association of Nigeria (FMAN)
Norway
The Norwegian Society of Financial Analysts
(NFF)
Pakistan
CFA Society Pakistan
Peru
Procapitales
Philippines
CFA Society Philippines; Fund Managers
Association of the Philippines (FMAP); and
Trust Officers Association of the Philippines
(TOAP)
Poland
CFA Society Poland
Portugal
Associação Portuguesa de Analista Financeiros
(APAF)
Russia
CFA Association Russia
Saudi Arabia
CFA Society Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Investment Management Association
ofĀ Singapore (IMAS)South Africa
Association for Savings and Investment
SouthĀ Africa (ASISA)
Spain
Asociación Española de Presentación de
Resultados de Gestión
Sri Lanka
CFAĀ Society Sri Lanka
Sweden
CFA Society Sweden and The Swedish
Society of Financial Analysts (Sveriges
Finansanalytikers Forening, or SFF)
Switzerland
Swiss Funds & Asset Management Association
(SFAMA)
Thailand
The Association of Provident Fund (AOP)
Ukraine
The Ukrainian Association of Investment
Business (UAIB)
United Kingdom
United Kingdom Investment Performance
Committee (UKIPC):
The Investment Association (TIA);
TheĀ Association of British Insurers (ABI);
Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association
(PLSA); The Association of Consulting
Actuaries (ACA); The Society of Pension
Consultants (SPC); The Investment Property
Forum (IPF); The Alternative Investment
Management Association (AIMA); and
TheĀ Wealth Management Association (WMA)
United States
United States Investment Performance
Committee (USIPC) of CFA Institute
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | xiiiIntroduction
Provisions of the Global Investment Performance Standards
The 2020 Edition of the GIPS Standards has three chapters:
1) GIPS Standards for Firms
2) GIPS Standards for Asset Owners
3) GIPS Standards for Verifiers
Organizations that compete for business must comply with the GIPS Standards for Firms.
The GIPS Standards for Firms are divided into the following eight sections:
1) Fundamentals of Compliance: Several core principles create the foundation for the GIPS
standards, including properly defining the firm, providing GIPS Reports to all prospective
clients and prospective pooled fund investors, adhering to applicable laws and regulations,
GIPS Standards for Firms
- The GIPS Standards for Firms are categorized into eight distinct sections designed to ensure ethical performance reporting.
- Fundamentals of compliance require firms to establish clear boundaries for total assets and define the criteria for discretionary portfolios.
- Uniformity in input data and calculation methodologies is mandated to allow for fair comparability between different investment management firms.
- Composites are formed by aggregating portfolios with similar mandates, using asset-weighted averages to represent collective performance.
- Specific reporting sections provide self-contained requirements for both time-weighted and money-weighted returns for composites and pooled funds.
The firmās definition of discretion establishes criteria to judge which portfolios must be included in a composite and is based on the firmās ability to implement its investment strategies.
1) GIPS Standards for Firms
2) GIPS Standards for Asset Owners
3) GIPS Standards for Verifiers
Organizations that compete for business must comply with the GIPS Standards for Firms.
The GIPS Standards for Firms are divided into the following eight sections:
1) Fundamentals of Compliance: Several core principles create the foundation for the GIPS
standards, including properly defining the firm, providing GIPS Reports to all prospective
clients and prospective pooled fund investors, adhering to applicable laws and regulations,
and ensuring that information presented is not false or misleading. Two important issues that
a firm must consider when becoming compliant with the GIPS standards are the definition
of the firm and the firmās definition of discretion. The definition of the firm is the foundation
for firm-wide compliance and creates defined boundaries whereby total firm assets can be
determined. The firmās definition of discretion establishes criteria to judge which portfolios
must be included in a composite and is based on the firmās ability to implement its investment
strategies.
2) Input Data and Calculation Methodology: Consistency of input data used to calculate
performance is critical to effective compliance with the GIPS standards and establishes the
foundation for full, fair, and comparable investment performance presentations. Achieving
comparability among investment management firmsā performance presentations requires uni-
formity in methods used to calculate returns. The GIPS standards mandate the use of certain
calculation methodologies to facilitate comparability.
3) Composite and Pooled Fund Maintenance: A composite is an aggregation of one or more
portfolios managed according to a similar investment mandate, objective, or strategy. The
composite return is the asset-weighted average of the performance of all portfolios in the com-
posite. Creating meaningful composites is essential to the fair presentation, consistency, and
comparability of performance over time and among firms. Pooled funds must be included in
composites if they meet a composite definition.
Reporting Sections: These four sections detail the requirements and recommendations for
reporting the following types of returns:
4) Composite Time-Weighted Return Report
5) Composite Money-Weighted Return Report
6) Pooled Fund Time-Weighted Return Report
7) Pooled Fund Money-Weighted Return Report.
xiv | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Each of the four reporting sections is self-contained and includes requirements and recom-
mendations relevant to that particular report. Firms must include the information from the
respective section depending on whether they are preparing a composite or a pooled fund
report, as well as on whether time-weighted returns or money-weighted returns are included.
After constructing the composites, gathering the input data, and calculating returns, the firm
must incorporate this information in GIPS Reports based on the requirements in the GIPS
standards for presenting investment performance. No finite set of requirements can cover all
potential situations or anticipate future developments in investment industry structure, tech-
GIPS Compliance Fundamentals
- Firms must apply GIPS standards on a firm-wide basis rather than for individual composites, pooled funds, or portfolios.
- To claim compliance, a firm must meet all requirements for at least five years or since its inception if it has existed for a shorter period.
- Firms are responsible for including additional information not addressed by the standards if it is necessary to provide proper context for performance.
- A GIPS Compliance Notification Form must be submitted to the CFA Institute upon the initial claim of compliance and annually thereafter.
- While negative assurance disclosures are not required, firms must adhere to specific advertising guidelines if they wish to claim compliance in promotional materials.
No finite set of requirements can cover all potential situations or anticipate future developments in investment industry structure, technology, products, or practices.
xiv | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Each of the four reporting sections is self-contained and includes requirements and recom-
mendations relevant to that particular report. Firms must include the information from the
respective section depending on whether they are preparing a composite or a pooled fund
report, as well as on whether time-weighted returns or money-weighted returns are included.
After constructing the composites, gathering the input data, and calculating returns, the firm
must incorporate this information in GIPS Reports based on the requirements in the GIPS
standards for presenting investment performance. No finite set of requirements can cover all
potential situations or anticipate future developments in investment industry structure, tech-
nology, products, or practices. When appropriate, firms have the responsibility to include in
GIPS Reports information not addressed by the GIPS standards.
Disclosures allow firms to elaborate on the data provided in the presentation and give the
reader the proper context in which to understand the performance. To comply with the GIPS
standards, firms must disclose certain information in all GIPS Reports regarding their perfor -
mance and the policies adopted by the firm. Although some disclosures are required for all
firms, others are specific to certain circumstances and may not be applicable in all situations.
Firms are not required to make negative assurance disclosures (e.g., if the firm does not use
leverage in a particular composite strategy, no disclosure of the use of leverage is required).
One of the essential disclosures for every firm is the claim of compliance. Once a firm meets
all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, it must appropriately use the claim of
compliance to indicate compliance with the GIPS standards. Firms are also required to submit
a GIPS Compliance Notification Form to CFA Institute when they initially claim compliance
and on an annual basis thereafter.
8) GIPS Advertising Guidelines: Firms are not required to follow the GIPS Advertising
Guidelines when creating an advertisement, but if they would like to claim compliance with
the GIPS standards in an advertisement, they must adhere to the GIPS Advertising Guidelines
or include a GIPS Report.
Glossary: Words appearing in small capital letters in Sections 1ā8 are defined terms.
TheĀ Glossary includes a description of each defined term.
Appendices: The appendices include samples of GIPS Reports, lists of composites and pooled
fund descriptions, and GIPS Advertisements.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | xv
EFFECTIVE DATE
The effective date for the 2020 edition of the GIPS standards is 1 January 2020. GIPS Reports that
include performance for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020 must be prepared in accor -
dance with the 2020 edition of the GIPS standards. Prior editions of the GIPS standards may be
found on the CFA Institute website (www.cfainstitute.org).
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 1
1. FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPLIANCE
1.A. Fundamentals of ComplianceāRequirements
1.A.1 The GIPS standards must be applied on a firm -wide basis. Compliance must be met on a
firm -wide basis and cannot be met on a composite, pooled fund , or portfolio basis.
1.A.2 The firm must be defined as an investment firm, subsidiary, or division held out to the
public as a distinct business entity .
1.A.3 To initially claim compliance with the GIPS standards, the firm must attain compliance
for a minimum of five years or for the period since the firm inception if the firm has been
in existence for less than five years.
1.A.4 The firm must comply with all applicable requirements of the GIPS standards,
including any Guidance Statements, interpretations, and Questions & Answers (Q&As)
GIPS Compliance Fundamentals
- Compliance with GIPS standards must be established on a firm-wide basis rather than for individual portfolios or funds.
- Firms are required to maintain at least five years of compliant performance history to initially claim compliance.
- The standards strictly prohibit claims of partial compliance or statements suggesting a methodology is merely 'consistent' with GIPS.
- Firms must document all policies and procedures and apply them consistently to ensure the integrity of performance reporting.
- There is a mandatory obligation to provide GIPS reports to all prospective clients and investors at the initial point of contact.
- The prohibition against false or misleading performance information applies to all firm data, even if it does not specifically reference GIPS.
The firm must not represent or state that it is āin compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards except for... ā or make any other statements that may indicate compliance or partial compliance with the GIPS standards.
1.A.1 The GIPS standards must be applied on a firm -wide basis. Compliance must be met on a
firm -wide basis and cannot be met on a composite, pooled fund , or portfolio basis.
1.A.2 The firm must be defined as an investment firm, subsidiary, or division held out to the
public as a distinct business entity .
1.A.3 To initially claim compliance with the GIPS standards, the firm must attain compliance
for a minimum of five years or for the period since the firm inception if the firm has been
in existence for less than five years.
1.A.4 The firm must comply with all applicable requirements of the GIPS standards,
including any Guidance Statements, interpretations, and Questions & Answers (Q&As)
published by CFA Institute and the GIPS standards governing bodies.
1.A.5 The firm must:
a. Document its policies and procedures used in establishing and maintain-
ing compliance with the requirements of the GIPS standards, as well as any
recommendations it has chosen to adopt, and apply them consistently.
b. Create policies and procedures to monitor and identify changes and additions to all of
the Guidance Statements, interpretations, and Q&As published by CFA Institute and
the GIPS standards governing bodies.
1.A.6 The firm must:
a. Comply with all applicable laws and regulations regarding the calculation and presen-
tation of performance.
b. Create policies and procedures to monitor and identify changes and additions to laws
and regulations regarding the calculation and presentation of performance.
1.A.7 The firm must not present performance or performance-related information
that is false or misleading. This requirement applies to all performance or perfor-
mance-related information on a firm -wide basis and is not limited to those mate-
rials that reference the GIPS standards. The firm may provide any performance or
performance-related information that is specifically requested by a prospective
client or prospective investor for use in a one-on-one presentation.
1.A.8 If the firm does not meet all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, the
firm must not represent or state that it is āin compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards except for... ā or make any other statements that may indicate com-
pliance or partial compliance with the GIPS standards.
2 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
1.A.9 Statements referring to the calculation methodology as being āin accordance, ā āin compli-
ance, ā or āconsistentā with the Global Investment Performance Standards, or similar state-
ments, are prohibited.
1.A.10 The firm must not make statements referring to the performance of a current client
or pooled fund investor as being ācalculated in accordance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards, ā except for when a GIPS-compliant firm reports the performance
of a segregated account to current clients or a pooled fund to current investors.
1.A.11 The firm must make every reasonable effort to provide a gips composite report to all
prospective clients when they initially become prospective clients. The firm must
not choose to which prospective clients it presents a gips composite report .
1.A.12 Once the firm has provided a gips composite report to a prospective client , the
firm must provide an updated gips composite report at least once every 12 months if
the prospective client is still a prospective client .
1.A.13 The firm must make every reasonable effort to provide a gips report to all limited
distribution pooled fund prospective investors when they initially become
prospective investors. The gips report may be either:
a. A gips pooled fund report , or
b. A gips composite report . A gips composite report may be provided only if the
limited distribution pooled fund is included in the respective composite.
The firm must not choose to which limited distribution pooled fund
GIPS Reporting and Compliance Standards
- Firms must provide updated GIPS composite or pooled fund reports to prospective clients at least once every 12 months.
- The standards prohibit firms from selectively choosing which prospective investors receive a GIPS report to ensure fair representation.
- Benchmarks used in reports must accurately reflect the investment mandate and cannot be limited to price-only indices.
- Material errors in reports require mandatory correction and distribution to current verifiers, clients, and prospective investors.
- Firms are required to demonstrate that they made every reasonable effort to provide the necessary reports to all eligible prospective investors.
The firm must not choose to which limited distribution pooled fund prospective investors it presents a gips report.
not choose to which prospective clients it presents a gips composite report .
1.A.12 Once the firm has provided a gips composite report to a prospective client , the
firm must provide an updated gips composite report at least once every 12 months if
the prospective client is still a prospective client .
1.A.13 The firm must make every reasonable effort to provide a gips report to all limited
distribution pooled fund prospective investors when they initially become
prospective investors. The gips report may be either:
a. A gips pooled fund report , or
b. A gips composite report . A gips composite report may be provided only if the
limited distribution pooled fund is included in the respective composite.
The firm must not choose to which limited distribution pooled fund
prospective investors it presents a gips report .
1.A.14 Once the firm has provided a gips pooled fund report or a gips composite report
to a limited distribution pooled fund prospective investor , the firm must
provide an updated gips pooled fund report or gips composite report at least once
every 12 months if the limited distribution pooled fund prospective investor is
still a limited distribution pooled fund prospective investor .
1.A.15 The firm may provide a gips pooled fund report or a gips composite report that
includes the broad distribution pooled fund to broad distribution pooled
fund prospective investors but is not required toĀ do so.
1.A.16 When providing gips reports to prospective clients and prospective investors,
the firm must update these reports to include information through the most recent
annual period end within 12 months of that annual period end.
1.A.17 The firm must be able to demonstrate how it made every reasonable effort to provide:
a. A gips composite report to those prospective clients required to receive a
gips composite report .
b. A gips pooled fund report or gips composite report to those limited
distribution pooled fund prospective investors required to receive a
gipsĀ pooled fund report or gips composite report .
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1.A.18 A composite benchmark used in a gips composite report must reflect the invest -
ment mandate, objective, or strategy of the composite. The firm must not use a price-
only benchmark in a gips composite report .
1.A.19 A pooled fund benchmark used in a gips pooled fund report must reflect the
investment mandate, objective, or strategy of the pooled fund . The firm must not use
a price-only benchmark in a gips pooled fund report .
1.A.20 The firm must correct material errors in gips composite reports and must :
a. Provide the corrected gips composite report to the current verifier.
b. Provide the corrected gips composite report to current clients and any former ver -
ifiers that received the gips composite report that had the materialĀ error .
c. Make every reasonable effort to provide the corrected gips composite report to all
current prospective clients and prospective investors that received the gips
composite report that had the material error . The firm is not required to
provide the corrected gips composite report to former clients, former investors,
former prospective clients, or former prospective investors.
1.A.21 The firm must correct material errors in gips pooled fund reports andĀ must :
a. Provide the corrected gips pooled fund report to the current verifier.
b. Provide the corrected gips pooled fund report to current investors and any former
verifiers that received the gips pooled fund report that had the material error .
c. Make every reasonable effort to provide the corrected gips pooled fund report to
all current prospective investors that received the gips pooled fund report
that had the material error . The firm is not required to provide the corrected
gips composite report to former investors or former prospective investors.
1.A.22 The firm must maintain:
GIPS Reporting and Compliance
- Firms must correct material errors in GIPS pooled fund reports and notify current verifiers, current investors, and prospective investors who received the erroneous data.
- A comprehensive list of composite and pooled fund descriptions must be maintained and provided to prospective clients or investors upon request.
- Firms are strictly prohibited from linking actual performance results to historical theoretical performance within their reporting.
- Organizational changes within a firm are not permitted to result in the alteration of historical performance records.
- The firm bears ultimate responsibility for its claim of compliance, including the accuracy of data provided by third-party sources.
The firm must not link actual performance to historical theoretical performance.
former prospective clients, or former prospective investors.
1.A.21 The firm must correct material errors in gips pooled fund reports andĀ must :
a. Provide the corrected gips pooled fund report to the current verifier.
b. Provide the corrected gips pooled fund report to current investors and any former
verifiers that received the gips pooled fund report that had the material error .
c. Make every reasonable effort to provide the corrected gips pooled fund report to
all current prospective investors that received the gips pooled fund report
that had the material error . The firm is not required to provide the corrected
gips composite report to former investors or former prospective investors.
1.A.22 The firm must maintain:
a. A complete list of composite descriptions. The firm must include terminated
composites on this list for at least five years after the composite termination
date .
b. A complete list of pooled fund descriptions for limited distribution pooled
funds. The firm is not required to include terminated limited distribution
pooled funds on this list.
c. A complete list of broad distribution pooled funds. The firm is not required
to include terminated broad distribution pooled funds on this list.
1.A.23 The firm must provide:
a. The complete list of composite descriptions to any prospective client that
makes such a request.
b. The complete list of pooled fund descriptions for limited distribution
pooled funds to any limited distribution pooled fund prospective
4 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
investor that makes such a request. This list may include only the limited
distribution pooled funds for which the prospective investor is eligible.
c. The complete list of broad distribution pooled funds to any broad
distribution pooled fund prospective investor that makes such a request.
This list may include only the broad distribution pooled funds for which the
prospective investor is eligible. If the firm maintains a complete list of broad
distribution pooled funds on its website, the firm may instead direct the
prospective investor to the firmās website.
d. The pooled fund description for any broad distribution pooled fund to
any broad distribution pooled fund prospective investor that makes such
aĀ request.
1.A.24 The firm must provide:
a. A gips composite report for any composite listed on the firmās list of composite
descriptions to any prospective client that makes such a request.
b. A gips pooled fund report or gips composite report , provided the limited
distribution pooled fund is included in the respective composite, for
any limited distribution pooled fund on the firmās list of pooled fund
descriptions to any limited distribution pooled fund prospective investor
that makes such a request.
1.A.25 All data and information necessary to support all items included in gips composite
reports, gips pooled fund reports, and gips advertisements must be captured,
maintained, and available within a reasonable time frame, for all periods presented in
these reports and advertisements.
1.A.26 The firm is responsible for its claim of compliance with the GIPS standards and must
ensure that the records and information provided by any third party on which the firm
relies meet the requirements of the GIPS standards.
1.A.27 The firm must not link actual performance to historical theoretical performance.
1.A.28 Changes in the firmās organization must not lead to alteration of historical performance.
1.A.29 For time-weighted returns presented in gips reports, the firm must not link
non-GIPS-compliant performance for periods beginning on or after the minimum
effective compliance date to GIPS-compliant performance. The firm may link
non-GIPS-compliant performance to GIPS-compliant performance in gips reports
provided that only GIPS-compliant performance is presented for periods beginning on or
GIPS Performance and Portability
- Firms are strictly prohibited from linking actual performance results to historical theoretical performance in their reports.
- Organizational changes within a firm must not result in the alteration of historical performance records.
- Non-GIPS-compliant performance may only be linked to compliant performance if it occurred prior to the minimum effective compliance date.
- Past performance from an acquired firm can only be linked if the decision-making team and process remain substantially intact and independent.
- Acquiring firms are granted a one-year grace period to bring non-compliant assets into full compliance with GIPS standards.
The firm must not link actual performance to historical theoretical performance.
maintained, and available within a reasonable time frame, for all periods presented in
these reports and advertisements.
1.A.26 The firm is responsible for its claim of compliance with the GIPS standards and must
ensure that the records and information provided by any third party on which the firm
relies meet the requirements of the GIPS standards.
1.A.27 The firm must not link actual performance to historical theoretical performance.
1.A.28 Changes in the firmās organization must not lead to alteration of historical performance.
1.A.29 For time-weighted returns presented in gips reports, the firm must not link
non-GIPS-compliant performance for periods beginning on or after the minimum
effective compliance date to GIPS-compliant performance. The firm may link
non-GIPS-compliant performance to GIPS-compliant performance in gips reports
provided that only GIPS-compliant performance is presented for periods beginning on or
after the minimum effective compliance date.
1.A.30 For money-weighted returns presented in gips reports, the firm must not present
non-GIPS-compliant performance for periods ending on or after the minimum effective
compliance date. The firm may present non-GIPS-compliant performance in gips
reports for periods ending prior to the minimum effective complianceĀ date.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 51. Fundamentals of Compliance
1.A.31 When the firm jointly markets with other firms, the firm claiming compliance with the
GIPS standards must ensure that the firm is clearly defined and separate relative to other
firms being marketed and also that it is clear which firm is claiming compliance.
1.A.32 Performance from a past firm or affiliation may be used to represent the historical
performance of the new or acquiring firm and linked to the performance of the new
or acquiring firm if the new or acquiring firm meets the following requirements on
aĀ composite-specific or pooled fundāspecific basis:
a. Substantially all of the investment decision makers must be employed by the new
or acquiring firm (e.g., research department staff, portfolio managers, and other
relevantĀ staff);
b. The decision-making process must remain substantially intact and independent
within the new or acquiring firm ;
c. The new or acquiring firm must have records to support the performance; and
d. There must be no break in the track record between the past firm or affiliation and
the new or acquiring firm .
If any of the above requirements are not met, the performance from a past firm or affil-
iation must not be linked to the ongoing performance record of the new or acquiring
firm .
1.A.33 Performance from a past firm or affiliation may be used to represent the historical perfor -
mance of the new or acquiring firm when there is a break in the track record between the
past firm or affiliation and the new or acquiring firm if the new or acquiring firm meets
the following requirements on a composite-specific or pooled fundāspecific basis:
a. Substantially all of the investment decision makers must be employed by the new or
acquiring firm (e.g., research department staff, portfolio managers, and other relevant
staff);
b. The decision-making process must remain substantially intact and independent
within the new or acquiring firm ;
c. The new or acquiring firm must have records to support the performance;
d. The new or acquiring firm must separately present the performance before the break
and after the break; and
e. The new or acquiring firm must not link performance prior to the break in the
track record to the performance after the break in the track record.
1.A.34 If the firm acquires another firm or affiliation, the firm has one year to bring any
non-compliant assets into compliance. Assets of the acquired non-compliant firm or
GIPS Compliance and Reporting Standards
- Acquiring firms are granted a one-year grace period to bring non-compliant assets into alignment with GIPS standards.
- Firms must strictly separate and refrain from linking performance records that occurred before and after a break in track record.
- Money-weighted returns are only permitted if the firm maintains control over external cash flows and the fund meets specific illiquidity or structural criteria.
- Firms claiming compliance must submit an initial notification to the CFA Institute and provide annual updates by June 30th.
- The standards recommend adopting the broadest possible definition of a firm, encompassing all geographical offices under a single brand name.
- Firms are encouraged to undergo independent verification and provide annual composite reports to all current clients and investors.
The firm must not link performance prior to the break in the track record to the performance after the break in the track record.
c. The new or acquiring firm must have records to support the performance;
d. The new or acquiring firm must separately present the performance before the break
and after the break; and
e. The new or acquiring firm must not link performance prior to the break in the
track record to the performance after the break in the track record.
1.A.34 If the firm acquires another firm or affiliation, the firm has one year to bring any
non-compliant assets into compliance. Assets of the acquired non-compliant firm or
affiliation must meet all the requirements of the GIPS standards within one year of the
acquisition date, on a going forward basis.
1.A.35 The firm must present time-weighted returns unless certain criteria are met, in
which case the firm may present money-weighted returns. The firm may present
6 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
money-weighted returns only if the firm has control over the external cash
flows into the portfolios in the composite or pooled fund and the portfolios in
the composite have or the pooled fund has at least one of the following characteristics:
a. Closed-end
b. Fixed life
c. Fixed commitment
d. Illiquid investments as a significant part of the investment strategy.
1.A.36 The firm must choose if it will present time-weighted returns, money-weighted
returns, or both for each composite or pooled fund , and it must consistently present
the selected returns for each composite or pooled fund .
1.A.37 If the firm chooses to include a gips composite report or gips pooled fund report
in marketing materials, the firm must indicate this fact in the marketing materials.
1.A.38 The firm must notify CFA Institute of its claim of compliance by submitting the gips
compliance notification form. This form:
a. Must be filed when the firm initially claims compliance with the GIPS standards.
b. Must be updated annually with information as of the most recent 31 December, with
the exception of firm contact information, which must be current as of the form
submission date.
c. Must be filed annually thereafter by 30 June.
1.A.39 If the firm chooses to be verified, it must gain an understanding of the verifierās pol-
icies for maintaining independence and must consider the verifierās assessment of
independence.
1.B. Fundamentals of ComplianceāRecommendations
1.B.1 The firm should comply with the recommendations of the GIPS standards, including
recommendations in any Guidance Statements, interpretations, and Q&As published
by CFA Institute and the GIPS standards governing bodies.
1.B.2 The firm should update gips composite reports and gips pooled fund reports
quarterly.
1.B.3 The firm should be verified.
1.B.4 The firm should adopt the broadest, most meaningful definition of the firm . The scope
of this definition should include all geographical (country, regional, etc.) offices operating
under the same brand name, regardless of the actual name of the individual investment
management company.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 71. Fundamentals of Compliance
1.B.5 The firm should provide to each current client, on an annual basis, a gips composite
report of the composite in which the clientās portfolio is included.
1.B.6 The firm should provide to each limited distribution pooled fund current inves -
tor, on an annual basis, a gips pooled fund report of the limited distribution
pooled fund in which the investor is invested.
1.B.7 If the firm is selling participation in a new limited distribution pooled fund that
does not yet have a track record, the firm should present the most appropriate track
record for the new limited distribution pooled fund , if available. The most appro-
priate track record is a gips report for a composite or another pooled fund that is
managed according to the same or similar strategy as the new limited distribution
pooled fund .
GIPS Compliance and Asset Calculation
- Firms are required to provide current clients and limited distribution pooled fund investors with annual GIPS reports specific to their investment strategy.
- Total firm assets must represent the aggregate fair value of all discretionary and non-discretionary portfolios, including those assigned to sub-advisors.
- Calculation methodologies strictly prohibit the double counting of assets and the inclusion of advisory-only assets or uncalled committed capital.
- Performance and asset totals must be calculated based on actual assets managed and must be reported net of discretionary leverage.
- Overlay strategy portfolios require specific calculation methods using notional exposure or target exposure to ensure consistency across composites.
- Standardized accounting practices, including the use of total returns and trade date accounting, are mandatory for GIPS compliance.
Total firm assets, composite assets, and pooled fund assets must be calculated net of discretionary leverage and not grossed up as if the leverage did not exist.
under the same brand name, regardless of the actual name of the individual investment
management company.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 71. Fundamentals of Compliance
1.B.5 The firm should provide to each current client, on an annual basis, a gips composite
report of the composite in which the clientās portfolio is included.
1.B.6 The firm should provide to each limited distribution pooled fund current inves -
tor, on an annual basis, a gips pooled fund report of the limited distribution
pooled fund in which the investor is invested.
1.B.7 If the firm is selling participation in a new limited distribution pooled fund that
does not yet have a track record, the firm should present the most appropriate track
record for the new limited distribution pooled fund , if available. The most appro-
priate track record is a gips report for a composite or another pooled fund that is
managed according to the same or similar strategy as the new limited distribution
pooled fund .
8 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.org
2. INPUT DATA AND CALCULATION
METHODOLOGY
2.A. Input Data and Calculation MethodologyāRequirements
Firm Assets, Composite Assets, and Pooled Fund Assets
2.A.1 Total firm assets:
a. Must be the aggregate fair value of all discretionary and non-discretionary
assets managed by the firm . This includes both fee-paying and non-fee-paying
portfolios.1
b. Must include assets assigned to a sub-advisor provided the firm has discretion
over the selection of the sub-advisor .
c. Must not include advisory-only assets.
d. Must not include uncalled committed capital .2
2.A.2 Total firm assets, composite assets, and pooled fund assets must :
a. Include only actual assets managed by the firm .
b. Be calculated net of discretionary leverage and not grossed up as if the leverage did
not exist.
2.A.3 The firm must not double count assets when calculating total firm assets,
composite assets, or pooled fund assets.
2.A.4 Composite and pooled fund performance must be calculated using only actual assets
managed by the firm .
Overlay Exposure
2.A.5 Total firm overlay exposure must include all discretionary and non-discretionary
overlay strategy portfolios for which the firm has investment management
responsibility.3
1 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011. For periods prior to 1 January 2011, total firm assets must be the
aggregate of either the fair value or the market value of all discretionary and non-discretionary assets under management within
the defined firm .
2 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020.
3 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 92. Input Data and Calculation Methodology
2.A.6 When calculating overlay exposure, the firm must:4
a. Use the notional exposure of the overlay strategy portfolios, the value of the
underlying portfolios being overlaid, or a specified target exposure.
b. Use the same method for all portfolios within a composite.
2.A.7 When calculating overlay strategy portfolio returns, the firm must:5
a. Use as the denominator the notional exposure of the overlay strategy portfolio ,
the value of the underlying portfolio being overlaid, or a specified target exposure.
b. Use the same method for all portfolios within a composite.
General/Accounting
2.A.8 Total returns must be used.
2.A.9 Trade date accounting must be used.6
GIPS Performance Calculation Standards
- Firms must use total returns and trade date accounting to ensure consistency and accuracy in performance reporting.
- Accrual accounting is mandatory for fixed-income securities, requiring that earned interest be included in portfolio valuations.
- Returns for periods shorter than one year must not be annualized to prevent misleading performance projections.
- Transaction costs must be deducted from all returns, with specific rules for handling bundled fees when costs cannot be segregated.
- Valuations must adhere to fair value principles, requiring firms to reconcile any differences between estimated and final values.
Returns for periods of less than one year must not be annualized.
a. Use the notional exposure of the overlay strategy portfolios, the value of the
underlying portfolios being overlaid, or a specified target exposure.
b. Use the same method for all portfolios within a composite.
2.A.7 When calculating overlay strategy portfolio returns, the firm must:5
a. Use as the denominator the notional exposure of the overlay strategy portfolio ,
the value of the underlying portfolio being overlaid, or a specified target exposure.
b. Use the same method for all portfolios within a composite.
General/Accounting
2.A.8 Total returns must be used.
2.A.9 Trade date accounting must be used.6
2.A.10 Accrual accounting must be used for fixed-income securities and all other invest -
ments that earn interest income, except that interest income on cash and cash equiva-
lents may be recognized on a cash basis. Any accrued income must be included in the
beginning and ending portfolio values when performance is calculated.
2.A.11 Returns from cash and cash equivalents must be included in all return calculations, even
if the firm does not control the specific cash investment(s).
2.A.12 Returns for periods of less than one year must not be annualized.
2.A.13 All returns must be calculated after the deduction of transaction costs incurred
during the period. The firm may use estimated transaction costs only for those
portfolios for which actual transaction costs are not known.
2.A.14 For portfolios with bundled fees, if the firm cannot estimate transaction costs
or if actual transaction costs cannot be segregated from a bundled fee:
a. When calculating gross-of-fees returns, returns must be reduced by the entire
bundled fee or the portion of the bundled fee that includes the transaction
costs .
b. When calculating net-of-fees returns, returns must be reduced by the entire
bundled fee or the portion of the bundled fee that includes the transaction
costs and the investment management fee.
2.A.15 All required returns must be calculated net of discretionary leverage, unless otherwise
specified.
4 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020.
5 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020.
6 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2005.
10 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
2.A.16 The firm must calculate performance in accordance with its composite-specific or
pooled fundāspecific calculation policies.
2.A.17 For portfolios invested in underlying pooled funds, all returns must reflect the
deduction of all fees and expenses charged at the underlying pooled fund level, unless
the firm controls the investment management fees of the underlying pooled funds.
When the firm controls the investment management fees of the underlying pooled
funds, the firm may calculate gross-of-fees returns that do not reflect the deduction
of the underlying pooled fund investment management fees.
2.A.18 When calculating additional risk measures:
a. The periodicity of the composite or pooled fund returns and the benchmark
returns must be the same.
b. The risk measure calculation methodology of the composite or pooled fund and
the benchmark must be the same.
Valuation
2.A.19 Portfolios must be valued in accordance with the definition of fair value.7
2.A.20 The firm must value portfolios in accordance with the composite-specific or pooled
fund āspecific valuation policy.
2.A.21 If the firm uses the last available historical price or preliminary, estimated value as fair
value , the firm must:
a. Consider it to be the best approximation of the current fair value.
b. Assess the difference between the approximation and final value and the effect on
composite or pooled fund assets, total firm assets, and performance, and also
make any adjustments when the final value is received.
2.A.22 Composites and pooled funds must have consistent beginning and ending annual
Portfolio Valuation and Return Standards
- Firms must value portfolios based on fair value and adhere to specific composite or pooled fund valuation policies.
- If historical or estimated prices are used, firms must assess the difference against final values and adjust performance records accordingly.
- Composites and pooled funds are required to maintain consistent annual valuation dates, typically aligned with the calendar year end.
- Time-weighted returns for most portfolios must be calculated at least monthly and specifically on the date of any 'large cash flow' as defined by the firm.
- External cash flows must be handled through geometric linking of sub-period returns or daily weighting to ensure calculation consistency.
The firm must define large cash flow for each composite to determine when portfolios in that composite must be valued.
2.A.19 Portfolios must be valued in accordance with the definition of fair value.7
2.A.20 The firm must value portfolios in accordance with the composite-specific or pooled
fund āspecific valuation policy.
2.A.21 If the firm uses the last available historical price or preliminary, estimated value as fair
value , the firm must:
a. Consider it to be the best approximation of the current fair value.
b. Assess the difference between the approximation and final value and the effect on
composite or pooled fund assets, total firm assets, and performance, and also
make any adjustments when the final value is received.
2.A.22 Composites and pooled funds must have consistent beginning and ending annual
valuation dates. Unless the composite or pooled fund is reported on a non-calendar
fiscal year, the beginning and ending valuation dates must be at calendar year end or on
the last business day of the year.8
7 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011. For periods prior to 1 January 2011, portfolio valuations (excluding
real estate and private equity) must be based on fair values or market values. For periods prior to 1 January 2011, real
estate investments must be valued at fair value or market value (as previously defined for real estate in the 2005 edition of
the GIPS standards). For periods ending prior to 1 January 2011, private equity investments must be valued at fair value, accord-
ing to the GIPS Private Equity Valuation Principles in Appendix D of the 2005 edition of the GIPS standards, or the GIPS Valuation
Principles in Chapter II of the 2010 edition of the GIPS standards.
8 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006.
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PortfoliosāTime-Weighted Returns
2.A.23 When calculating time-weighted returns for portfolios that are included in
composites, all portfolios except private market investment portfolios
(seeĀ 2.A.40) must be valued:
a. At least monthly.9
b. As of the calendar month end or the last business day of the month.10
c. On the date of all large cash flows. The firm must define large cash flow for
each composite to determine when portfolios in that composite must beĀ valued.11
2.A.24 When calculating time-weighted returns for all portfolios except private market
investment portfolios (see 2.A.41) included in composites, the firm must:
a. Calculate returns at least monthly.12
b. Calculate monthly returns through the calendar month end or the last business day of
the month.13
c. Calculate sub-period returns at the time of all large cash flows, if daily returns are
not calculated.14
d. For external cash flows that are not large cash flows, calculate portfolio
returns that adjust for daily-weighted external cash flows, if daily returns are not
calculated.15
e. Treat external cash flows according to the firmās composite-specific policy.
f. Geometrically link periodic and sub-period returns.
g. Consistently apply the calculation methodology used for an individual portfolio .
Pooled Funds
2.A.25 When calculating time-weighted returns for pooled funds that are not included
inĀ a composite, pooled funds must be valued:
GIPS Performance Calculation Standards
- Firms must adjust for daily-weighted external cash flows when calculating portfolio returns if daily returns are not already utilized.
- Pooled funds not included in a composite require valuation at least annually and specifically at the time of any subscriptions or redemptions.
- Money-weighted return calculations must use daily external cash flows and include stock distributions valued at the time of distribution.
- Composite net-of-fees returns must be calculated using either actual investment management fees or a model fee appropriate for prospective clients.
- The standards mandate the geometric linking of periodic and sub-period returns to ensure accurate time-weighted performance tracking.
The firm must establish a pooled fund inception date for each pooled fund to determine when the pooled fundās track record begins.
d. For external cash flows that are not large cash flows, calculate portfolio
returns that adjust for daily-weighted external cash flows, if daily returns are not
calculated.15
e. Treat external cash flows according to the firmās composite-specific policy.
f. Geometrically link periodic and sub-period returns.
g. Consistently apply the calculation methodology used for an individual portfolio .
Pooled Funds
2.A.25 When calculating time-weighted returns for pooled funds that are not included
inĀ a composite, pooled funds must be valued:
a. At least annually.
b. As of the calendar or fiscal year end.
c. Whenever there are subscriptions to or redemptions from the pooled fund .
d. As of the period end for any period for which performance is calculated.
9 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2001. For periods prior to 1 January 2001, portfolios must be valued at least
quarterly.
10 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.
11 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.
12 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2001.
13 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.
14 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.
15 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2005.
12 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
2.A.26 When calculating time-weighted returns for pooled funds that are not included in
a composite, the firm must:
a. Calculate returns at least annually.
b. Calculate annual returns through the calendar or fiscal year end or the last business
day of the year.
c. Calculate sub-period returns at the time of all subscriptions and redemptions.
d. Geometrically link periodic and sub-period returns.
e. When calculating pooled fund net returns, calculate pooled fund net
returns that are net of total pooled fund fees.
2.A.27 The firm must establish a pooled fund inception date for each pooled fund to
determine when the pooled fundās track record begins.16
Money-Weighted Returns
2.A.28 When calculating money-weighted returns, the firm must value portfolios at least
annually and as of the period end for any period for which performance is calculated.
2.A.29 When calculating money-weighted returns, the firm must:
a. Calculate annualized since-inception money-weighted returns.
b. Calculate money-weighted returns using daily external cash flows.17
c. Include stock distributions as external cash flows and value stock distribu-
tions at the time of distribution.
d. When calculating pooled fund net returns, calculate pooled fund net
returns that are net of total pooled fund fees.
Net Returns
2.A.30 When calculating composite net-of-fees returns, investment management fees
used in the calculation must be either:
a. Actual investment management fees incurred by each portfolio in the
composite, or
b. A model investment management fee appropriate to prospective clients.
16 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020. For periods prior to 1 January 2020, private equity primary funds
must be included in at least one composite defined by vintage year and investment mandate, objective, or strategy. For periods
prior to 1 January 2020, private equity pooled funds of funds must be included in at least one composite defined by vintage
year of the pooled fund of funds and/or investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
17 Daily external cash flows are required beginning 1 January 2020. Prior to 1 January 2020, quarterly or more frequent
external cash flows must be used.
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2.A.31 If the firm uses model investment management fees to calculate composite
GIPS Performance Calculation Standards
- Firms using model investment management fees must ensure the resulting net returns are equal to or lower than those calculated with actual fees.
- Composite time-weighted returns must generally be calculated at least monthly, while private market investment portfolios require at least quarterly valuation.
- Specific asset-weighting methods, such as using beginning-of-period values or the aggregate method, are mandated for calculating composite returns.
- Performance-based fee clawbacks must be reflected in the specific period in which the funds are repaid to ensure accurate reporting.
- Private market investment returns must adjust for daily-weighted external cash flows and geometrically link periodic returns.
If the firm uses model investment management fees to calculate composite net-of-fees returns, the returns calculated must be equal to or lower than those that would have been calculated using actual investment management fees.
b. A model investment management fee appropriate to prospective clients.
16 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020. For periods prior to 1 January 2020, private equity primary funds
must be included in at least one composite defined by vintage year and investment mandate, objective, or strategy. For periods
prior to 1 January 2020, private equity pooled funds of funds must be included in at least one composite defined by vintage
year of the pooled fund of funds and/or investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
17 Daily external cash flows are required beginning 1 January 2020. Prior to 1 January 2020, quarterly or more frequent
external cash flows must be used.
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2.A.31 If the firm uses model investment management fees to calculate composite
net-of-fees returns, the returns calculated must be equal to or lower than those that
would have been calculated using actual investment management fees.
2.A.32 When calculating pooled fund net returns, total pooled fund fees used in the
calculation must be either:
a. Actual total pooled fund fees, or
b. A model total pooled fund fee appropriate to prospective investors.
2.A.33 If the firm uses model total pooled fund fees to calculate pooled fund net
returns, the returns calculated must be equal to or lower than those that would have
been calculated using actual total pooled fund fees.
2.A.34 When calculating composite net-of-fees returns and pooled fund net returns,
theĀ firm must reflect any performance-based fee clawback in the period in which
itĀ is repaid.18
Composite Returns
2.A.35 Composite time-weighted returns except private market investment
composites (see 2.A.42) must be calculated at least monthly.19
2.A.36 Composite time-weighted returns must be calculated by using one of the following
approaches:
a. Asset-weighting the individual portfolio returns using beginning-of-period values;
b. Asset-weighting the individual portfolio returns using a method that reflects both
beginning-of-period values and external cash flows; or
c. Using the aggregate method.
2.A.37 Composite gross-of-fees returns must reflect the deduction of transaction costs.
2.A.38 Composite net-of-fees returns must reflect the deduction of transaction costs
and investment management fees.
2.A.39 When calculating composite money-weighted returns, the firm must calcu-
late composite returns by aggregating the portfolio-level information for those
portfolios included in the composite.
18 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020.
19 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010. For periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006 and ending prior to
1Ā January 2010, composite returns must be calculated at least quarterly.
14 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Private Market Investments
2.A.40 When calculating time-weighted returns for private market investment
portfolios that are included in composites, private market investment
portfolios must be valued:
a. At least quarterly.20
b. As of each quarter end or the last business day of the quarter.21
2.A.41 When calculating time-weighted returns for private market investment
portfolios that are included in composites, the firm must:
a. Calculate returns at least quarterly.22
b. Calculate quarterly returns through the calendar quarter end or the last business day
of the quarter.23
c. Calculate portfolio returns that adjust for daily-weighted external cash flows.24
d. Treat external cash flows according to the firmās composite-specific policy.
e. Geometrically link periodic and sub-period returns.
f. Consistently apply the calculation methodology used for an individual portfolio .
2.A.42 Composite time-weighted returns for private market investment composites
Investment Performance Calculation Standards
- Firms must calculate portfolio returns at least quarterly, ensuring they align with calendar quarter ends or the final business day.
- Calculations are required to adjust for daily-weighted external cash flows and maintain consistency in methodology across individual portfolios.
- Real estate investments generally require an external valuation every 12 months, though certain client agreements may extend this to 36 months.
- External valuations for real estate must be conducted by independent, certified professionals whose fees are not contingent on the property's appraised value.
- When reporting on carve-outs, investment management fees must accurately reflect what would be charged to a prospective client for a standalone portfolio.
The firm must not use external valuations for real estate investments when the valuerās or appraiserās fee is contingent upon the investmentās appraised value.
a. Calculate returns at least quarterly.22
b. Calculate quarterly returns through the calendar quarter end or the last business day
of the quarter.23
c. Calculate portfolio returns that adjust for daily-weighted external cash flows.24
d. Treat external cash flows according to the firmās composite-specific policy.
e. Geometrically link periodic and sub-period returns.
f. Consistently apply the calculation methodology used for an individual portfolio .
2.A.42 Composite time-weighted returns for private market investment composites
must be calculated at least quarterly.
Real Estate
2.A.43 Real estate investments in a real estate open-end fund must have an external
valuation at least once every 12 months.25
2.A.44 Real estate investments that are not in a real estate open-end fund must:26
a. Have an external valuation at least once every 12 months unless client agree-
ments stipulate otherwise, in which case real estate investments must have an
external valuation at least once every 36 months or per the client agreement if
20 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2008.
21 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.
22 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2008.
23 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.
24 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.
25 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020. For periods beginning on or after 1 January 2012 and ending prior to
1Ā January 2020, real estate investments must have an external valuation at least once every 12 months unless client agreements
stipulate otherwise, in which case real estate investments must have an external valuation at least once every 36 months or
per the client agreement if the client agreement requires external valuations more frequently than every 36 months. For peri-
ods beginning on or after 1 January 2006 and ending prior to 1 January 2012, real estate investments must have an external
valuation at least once every 36 months.
26 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2012. For periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006 and ending prior to
1Ā January 2012, real estate investments must have an external valuation at least once every 36 months or be subject to an
annual financial statement audit performed by an independent public accounting firm.
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the client agreement requires external valuations more frequently than every
36Ā months; or
b. Be subject to an annual financial statement audit performed by an independent public
accounting firm. The real estate investments must be accounted for at fair value,
and the most recent audited financial statements available must contain an unmodi-
fied opinion issued by an independent public accounting firm.
2.A.45 External valuations for real estate investments must be performed by an indepen-
dent third party who is a professionally designated or certified commercial property valuer
or appraiser. In markets where these professionals are not available, the firm must take
necessary steps to ensure that only qualified independent property valuers or appraisers
are used.
2.A.46 The firm must not use external valuations for real estate investments when the
valuerās or appraiserās fee is contingent upon the investmentās appraised value.
Carve-Outs
2.A.47 When calculating net-of-fees returns of composites containing carve-outs, the
investment management fees for the carve-outs must be representative of the
investment management fees charged or that would be charged to the prospective
client:
a. When presenting performance to a prospective client for a standalone portfolio ,
the investment management fee must be representative of the investment
management fees for a standalone portfolio managed according to that strategy.
GIPS Calculation and Valuation Standards
- Firms are prohibited from using external real estate valuations if the appraiser's fee is contingent upon the resulting investment value.
- Performance reporting for carve-outs and wrap fee portfolios must reflect representative or total fees to ensure transparency for prospective clients.
- Composite and pooled fund returns must incorporate the financial effects of discretionary side pockets and subscription lines of credit.
- The standards establish a strict valuation hierarchy, prioritizing objective, observable market prices over subjective, unobservable inputs.
- Firms are encouraged to adopt accrual accounting for dividends and investment management fees to maintain consistency in reporting.
The firm must not use external valuations for real estate investments when the valuerās or appraiserās fee is contingent upon the investmentās appraised value.
are used.
2.A.46 The firm must not use external valuations for real estate investments when the
valuerās or appraiserās fee is contingent upon the investmentās appraised value.
Carve-Outs
2.A.47 When calculating net-of-fees returns of composites containing carve-outs, the
investment management fees for the carve-outs must be representative of the
investment management fees charged or that would be charged to the prospective
client:
a. When presenting performance to a prospective client for a standalone portfolio ,
the investment management fee must be representative of the investment
management fees for a standalone portfolio managed according to that strategy.
b. When presenting performance to a prospective client for a multi-asset strategy
portfolio , the investment management fee must be representative of the
investment management fees for a multi-asset strategy portfolio managed
according to that strategy.
Wrap Fee
2.A.48 When calculating returns to be presented to a wrap fee prospective client ,
returns must be calculated net of the entire wrap fee. This is applicable to all wrap
fee portfolios in the composite as well as any nonāwrap fee portfolios in the
composite.
16 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Side Pockets and Subscription Lines of Credit
2.A.49 All composite and pooled fund returns must include the effect of any discretionary
side pockets held by portfolios in the composite or the pooled fund .27
2.A.50 When calculating money-weighted returns for composites and pooled funds
without the subscription lines of credit , the firm must include the cash flows from
the subscription lines of credit .28
2.B. Input Data and Calculation MethodologyāRecommendations
2.B.1 The firm should value portfolios on the date of all external cash flows.
2.B.2 Valuations should be obtained from a qualified independent third party.
2.B.3 Accrual accounting should be used for dividends (as of the ex-dividend date).
2.B.4 The firm should accrue investment management fees.
2.B.5 Returns should be calculated net of non-reclaimable withholding taxes on dividends,
interest, and capital gains. Reclaimable withholding taxes should be accrued.
2.B.6 The firm should incorporate the following hierarchy into its policies and procedures for
determining fair value for portfolio investments on a composite-specific or pooled
fund āspecific basis.
a. Investments must be valued using objective, observable, unadjusted quoted market
prices for identical investments in active markets on the measurement date, if avail-
able. If such prices are not available, then investments should be valued using;
b. Objective, observable quoted market prices for similar investments in active mar -
kets. If such prices are not available or appropriate, then investments should be
valuedĀ using;
c. Quoted prices for identical or similar investments in markets that are not active (mar -
kets in which there are few transactions for the investment, the prices are not current,
or price quotations vary substantially over time and/or between market makers).
If such prices are not available or appropriate, then investments should be valued
based on;
d. Market-based inputs, other than quoted prices, that are observable for the investment.
If such inputs are not available or appropriate, then investments should be valued
based on;
27 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 October 2012.
28 Required for money-weighted returns for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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e. Subjective, unobservable inputs for the investment where markets are not active at
the measurement date. Unobservable inputs should be used to measure fair value
only when observable inputs and prices are not available or appropriate. Unobservable
Composite and Fund Maintenance Standards
- Firms must use subjective, unobservable inputs for fair value measurements only when observable market data is unavailable.
- All actual, fee-paying, discretionary segregated accounts must be included in at least one composite to ensure performance transparency.
- Composite definitions must be based on investment mandate or strategy and cannot be changed retroactively to manipulate historical data.
- Terminated portfolios must remain in historical composite performance records up to the last full period they were under management.
- Portfolios cannot be moved between composites due to tactical changes, only through documented shifts in client mandates or strategy redefinitions.
Portfolios must not be moved into or out of composites as a result of the firmās tactical changes.
27 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 October 2012.
28 Required for money-weighted returns for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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e. Subjective, unobservable inputs for the investment where markets are not active at
the measurement date. Unobservable inputs should be used to measure fair value
only when observable inputs and prices are not available or appropriate. Unobservable
inputs reflect the firmās own assumptions about the assumptions that market partic -
ipants would use in pricing the investment and should be developed based on the
best information available under the circumstances.
2.B.7 The firm should use gross-of-fees returns when calculating risk measures.
2.B.8 Private market investments should have an external valuation at least once
every 12 months.
18 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.org
3. COMPOSITE AND POOLED FUND
MAINTENANCE
3.A. Composite and Pooled Fund MaintenanceāRequirements
3.A.1 The firm must create composites for the firmās strategies that are managed for or
offered as a segregated account .
3.A.2 All actual, fee-paying, discretionary segregated accounts must be included in at least
one composite. Non-discretionary portfolios must not be included in composites.
3.A.3 All actual, fee-paying, discretionary pooled funds must be included in at least one
composite if they meet a composite definition. The firm is not required to cre -
ate a composite that only includes one or more pooled funds unless the firm offers
the strategy as a segregated account . The firm may terminate any composite
that was created solely to include one or more pooled funds if the composite is not
representative of the firmās strategy offered as a segregated account .
3.A.4 Non-fee-paying discretionary portfolios may be included in a composite. If the firm
includes non-fee-paying discretionary portfolios in a composite, those portfolios
must be subject to the same policies and procedures as fee-paying portfolios.
3.A.5 Composites must be defined according to investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
Composites must include all portfolios, including segregated accounts and
pooled funds, that meet the composite definition. The firm must not exclude
portfolios from composites based solely on legal structure differences.
3.A.6 Any change to a composite definition must not be applied retroactively.
3.A.7 Composites must include new portfolios on a timely and consistent
composite-specific basis after each portfolio comes under management.
3.A.8 Composites must include only those portfolios that are managed for the full perfor -
mance measurement period for which the composite return is calculated. Portfolios
that are not managed for the full performance measurement period must not be
included in the composite.
3.A.9 Terminated portfolios must be included in the historical performance of the
composite up to the last full measurement period that each portfolio was under
management and for which the firm has discretion.
3.A.10 Portfolios must not be moved from one composite to another unless documented
client-directed changes to a portfolioās investment mandate, objective, or strategy or
the redefinition of the composite make it appropriate. The historical performance of
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the portfolio must remain with the original composite. Portfolios must not be
moved into or out of composites as a result of the firmās tactical changes.
3.A.11 If the firm sets a minimum asset level for portfolios to be included in a composite,
the firm :
a. Must not include portfolios below the composite-specific minimum asset level
in that composite.
b. Must not apply retroactively any changes to that composite-specific minimum
asset level.
GIPS Composite Maintenance Standards
- Firms must strictly adhere to ex ante policies regarding minimum asset levels and significant cash flow definitions to prevent performance manipulation.
- Wrap fee portfolios must be included in appropriate composites and used specifically when presenting to prospective wrap fee clients.
- Carve-outs included in composites must include cash, either accounted for separately or allocated synthetically on a consistent basis.
- The standards prohibit the creation of simulated strategies by combining different composites, pooled funds, or carve-outs.
- Firms are required to present at least five years of GIPS-compliant performance, eventually building up to a minimum ten-year history.
The firm must not combine different composites, pooled funds, or carve-outs to create a simulated strategy and present it as a composite.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 193. Composite and Pooled Fund Maintenance
the portfolio must remain with the original composite. Portfolios must not be
moved into or out of composites as a result of the firmās tactical changes.
3.A.11 If the firm sets a minimum asset level for portfolios to be included in a composite,
the firm :
a. Must not include portfolios below the composite-specific minimum asset level
in that composite.
b. Must not apply retroactively any changes to that composite-specific minimum
asset level.
3.A.12 A firm that removes portfolios from composites because of significant cash
flows must define āsignificantā on an ex ante, composite-specific basis and must
consistently follow the composite-specific policy.
3.A.13 A firm that uses temporary new accounts to remove the effect of a significant
cash flow must establish policies on an ex ante, composite-specific basis.
Temporary new accounts must not be included in composite performance.
Wrap Fee
3.A.14 The firm must include the performance record of actual wrap fee portfolios in
appropriate composites in accordance with the firmās established portfolio inclusion
policies. Once established, these composites (containing actual wrap fee portfolios )
must be used when presenting gips composite reports to wrap fee prospective
clients.
Carve-Outs
3.A.15 Any carve-out included in a composite must include cash and any related income.
Cash may be:
a. Accounted for separately, or
b. Allocated synthetically to the carve-out on a timely and consistent basis.
3.A.16 Any carve-out included in a composite must be representative of a standalone
portfolio managed or intended to be managed according to that strategy.
3.A.17 When the firm creates a carve-out of a particular strategy, allocates cash to the
carve-out , and includes the carve-out in a composite, the firm must create
carve-outs with allocated cash from all portfolios and portfolio segments within
the firm managed to that strategy and must include those carve-outs with allocated
cash in the composite.
20 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
3.A.18 When the firm has or obtains standalone portfolios managed in the same strategy as
the carve-outs with allocated cash, the firm must create a separate composite for the
standalone portfolios.
3.A.19 The firm must not combine different composites, pooled funds, or carve-outs to
create a simulated strategy and present it as a composite.
3.B. Composite and Pooled Fund MaintenanceāRecommendations
3.B.1 If the firm sets a minimum asset level for portfolios to be included in a composite,
the firm should not present a gips composite report to a prospective client
known not to meet the compositeās minimum asset level.
3.B.2 To remove the effect of a significant cash flow , the firm should use a temporary
new account .
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 21
4. COMPOSITE TIME-WEIGHTED RETURN REPORT
The following provisions apply to composites that include time-weighted returns in a
gips composite report .
4.A. Presentation and ReportingāRequirements
4.A.1 The firm must present in each gips composite report:
a. At least five years of performance (or for the period since the composite incep-
tion date if the composite has been in existence less than five years) that meets
the requirements of the GIPS standards. After the firm presents a minimum of
five years of GIPS-compliant performance (or for the period since the composite
inception date if the composite has been in existence less than five years), the
firm must present an additional year of performance each year, building up to a
minimum of 10 years of GIPS-compliant performance.
b. Composite returns for each annual period.
c. When the initial period is less than a full year, the return from the composite
GIPS Presentation and Reporting Requirements
- Firms must initially present five years of GIPS-compliant performance, eventually building up to a minimum ten-year track record.
- Annual reports must include composite returns, benchmark returns, the number of portfolios, and total firm assets for each period.
- Internal dispersion and three-year annualized ex post standard deviation are required to measure the volatility and consistency of returns.
- Specific disclosures are mandated for subjective valuations, non-fee-paying portfolios, and the use of carve-outs with allocated cash.
- If a composite loses all member portfolios, the track record must end and cannot be linked to future performance if the composite restarts.
The firm must not link performance prior to the break in track record to the performance after the break in track record.
a. At least five years of performance (or for the period since the composite incep-
tion date if the composite has been in existence less than five years) that meets
the requirements of the GIPS standards. After the firm presents a minimum of
five years of GIPS-compliant performance (or for the period since the composite
inception date if the composite has been in existence less than five years), the
firm must present an additional year of performance each year, building up to a
minimum of 10 years of GIPS-compliant performance.
b. Composite returns for each annual period.
c. When the initial period is less than a full year, the return from the composite
inception date through the initial annual period end.29
d. When the composite terminates, the return from the last annual period end through
the composite termination date.30
e. The total return for the benchmark for each annual period and for all other
periods for which composite returns are presented, unless the firm determines
thereĀ is no appropriate benchmark .
f. The number of portfolios in the composite as of each annual period end. If
the composite contains five or fewer portfolios at period end, the number of
portfolios is not required .
g. Composite assets as of each annual period end.
h. Total firm assets as of each annual period end.31
i. A measure of internal dispersion of individual portfolio annual returns for each
annualĀ period. If the composite contains five or fewer portfolios for the full year,
aĀ measure of internal dispersion is not required .
29 Required for composites with a composite inception date of 1 January 2011 or later.
30 Required for composites with a composite termination date of 1 January 2011 or later.
31 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020. For periods ending prior to 31 December 2020, the firm may present
either total firm assets or composite assets as a percentage of total firm assets.
22 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
j. For composites for which monthly composite returns are available, the three-year
annualized ex post standard deviation (using monthly returns) of the composite
and the benchmark as of each annual period end.32
4.A.2 The firm must present the percentage of the total fair value of composite assets that
were valued using subjective unobservable inputs (as described in provision 2.B.6.e) as of
the most recent annual period end, if such investments represent a material amount of
composite assets.
4.A.3 The firm must clearly label or identify:
a. The periods that are presented.
b. If composite returns are gross-of-fees or net-of-fees.
4.A.4 If the firm includes more than one benchmark in the gips composite report ,
the firm must present and disclose all required information for all benchmarks
presented.
4.A.5 If the composite loses all of its member portfolios, the composite track record must
end. If portfolios are later added to the composite, the composite track record must
restart. The periods both before and after the break in track record must be presented,
with the break in performance clearly shown. The firm must not link performance
prior to the break in track record to the performance after the break in track record.
4.A.6 If the composite includes carve-outs with allocated cash, the firm must present the
percentage of composite assets represented by carve-outs with allocated cash as of
each annual period end.
4.A.7 If the composite includes non-fee-paying portfolios, the firm must present the
percentage of composite assets represented by non-fee-paying portfolios as of each
annual period end when net-of-fees returns are presented and are calculated using
actual investment management fees.
4.A.8 If the firm chooses to present composite uncalled committed capital or a
combination of composite assets and composite uncalled committed capital ,
theĀ firm must:
GIPS Composite Reporting Standards
- Firms must disclose the percentage of composite assets represented by non-fee-paying portfolios when net-of-fees returns are calculated using actual fees.
- Specific labeling and period-matching requirements apply when firms choose to present uncalled committed capital alongside total assets.
- Advisory-only assets reflecting a composite's mandate must be clearly labeled and presented for the same periods as the combined asset totals.
- All financial information within a GIPS Composite Report must be presented in a single, consistent currency to ensure comparability.
- Firms using carve-outs with allocated cash must also present the performance and assets of any existing standalone portfolio composite using the same strategy.
All required and recommended information in the gips composite report must be presented in the same currency.
percentage of composite assets represented by carve-outs with allocated cash as of
each annual period end.
4.A.7 If the composite includes non-fee-paying portfolios, the firm must present the
percentage of composite assets represented by non-fee-paying portfolios as of each
annual period end when net-of-fees returns are presented and are calculated using
actual investment management fees.
4.A.8 If the firm chooses to present composite uncalled committed capital or a
combination of composite assets and composite uncalled committed capital ,
theĀ firm must:
a. Present composite uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of composite assets and composite uncalled committed capital is
presented.
b. Clearly label composite uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of composite assets and composite uncalled
committed capital as such.
32 Required for periods ending on or after 1 January 2011.
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4.A.9 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide uncalled committed capital or a combination
of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital , theĀ firm must:
a. Present firm -wide uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital is
presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as such.
4.A.10 If the firm chooses to present advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās
investment mandate, objective, or strategy, or a combination of composite assets and
advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment mandate, objective, or
strategy, the firm must:
a. Present advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment mandate,
objective, or strategy for the same periods for which the combination of composite
assets and advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment mandate,
objective, or strategy is presented.
b. Clearly label advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment
mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of composite assets and advisory-only assets that
reflect the compositeās investment mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
4.A.11 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide advisory-only assets or a combination of
total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets, the firm must:
a. Present firm -wide advisory-only assets for the same periods for which the combi-
nation of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets is presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide advisory-only assets as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only
assets as such.
4.A.12 All required and recommended information in the gips composite report must be
presented in the same currency.
4.A.13 When the firm presents the performance of a composite that includes carve-outs
with allocated cash and also has a composite of standalone portfolios managed
according to the same strategy, the firm must present for the composite of standalone
portfolios:
a. The composite returns for each annual period for which the composite of
standalone portfolios exists, and
b. The composite assets as of each annual period end for which the composite of
standalone portfolios exists.
24 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
This information must be included in the gips composite report of the composite
that includes carve-outs with allocated cash.
4.A.14 For overlay strategy composites, the firm must present composite overlay expo-
sure as of each annual period end. For those periods for which the firm presents compos -
GIPS Composite Reporting Standards
- The standards establish specific reporting requirements for overlay strategy composites, allowing firms to present overlay exposure instead of total assets.
- Wrap fee composites must present performance net of the entire wrap fee and clearly label any pure gross-of-fees returns as supplemental information.
- Supplemental information included in reports must relate directly to the composite and cannot contradict any required or recommended data.
- The guidelines recommend presenting both gross and net returns, along with cumulative, equal-weighted, and annualized performance metrics.
- Firms are encouraged to provide more than 10 years of annual performance and disclose the use of preliminary estimated values in fair value calculations.
Any supplemental information included in the gips composite report: Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information in the gips composite report.
b. The composite assets as of each annual period end for which the composite of
standalone portfolios exists.
24 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
This information must be included in the gips composite report of the composite
that includes carve-outs with allocated cash.
4.A.14 For overlay strategy composites, the firm must present composite overlay expo-
sure as of each annual period end. For those periods for which the firm presents compos -
ite overlay exposure, the firm may choose not to present composite assets.33
4.A.15 For overlay strategy composites, the firm is not required to present total firm
assets and may instead choose to present total firm overlay exposure as of each
annual period end.
4.A.16 For wrap fee composites, when the firm presents performance to a wrap fee
prospective client , the firm must present:
a. The composite that includes the performance of all actual wrap fee portfolios,
ifĀ any, managed according to the composite investment mandate, objective, or
strategy, regardless of the wrap fee sponsor.
b. Composite performance that is net of the entire wrap fee.
c. The percentage of composite assets represented by wrap fee portfolios as of each
annual period end.
4.A.17 For wrap fee composites, when the firm presents pure gross-of-fees returns, the
firm must:
a. Clearly label returns as pure gross-of-fees.
b. Identify pure gross-of-fees returns as supplemental information.
4.A.18 Any supplemental information included in the gips composite report:
a. Must relate directly to the composite.
b. Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information
in the gips composite report .
c. Must be clearly labeled as supplemental information.
4.B. Presentation and ReportingāRecommendations
4.B.1 The firm should present both gross-of-fees and net-of-fees composite returns.
4.B.2 The firm should present the following items:
a. Cumulative returns of the composite and the benchmark for all periods.
b. Equal-weighted composite returns.
c. Quarterly and/or monthly returns.
d. Annualized composite and benchmark returns for periods longer than 12Ā months.
33 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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4.B.3 For all periods for which an annualized ex post standard deviation of the composite
and the benchmark are presented, the firm should present the corresponding annual-
ized return of the composite and the benchmark .
4.B.4 For all periods greater than three years for which an annualized return of the composite
and the benchmark are presented, the firm should present the corresponding
annualized ex post standard deviation (using monthly returns) of the composite
and the benchmark .
4.B.5 The firm should present relevant ex post additional risk measures for the
composite and the benchmark .
4.B.6 The firm should present more than 10 years of annual performance in the gips
composite report .
4.B.7 The firm should present proprietary assets as a percentage of composite assets as
of each annual period end.
4.B.8 If the firm uses preliminary, estimated values as fair value, the firm should present
the percentage of assets in the composite that were valued using preliminary, estimated
values as of each annual period end.
4.B.9 For real estate composites, the firm should present composite and benchmark
component returns for all periods presented.
4.B.10 If the firm has committed capital , the firm should present firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as of each annual period end.
4.C. DisclosureāRequirements
4.C.1 Once the firm has met all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, the
firm must disclose its compliance with the GIPS standards using one of the following
GIPS Reporting and Compliance
- Firms are encouraged to present more than 10 years of annual performance and additional ex post risk measures for composites.
- Specific reporting requirements apply to real estate composites and the disclosure of uncalled committed capital.
- Firms must use standardized compliance statements to claim adherence to the Global Investment Performance Standards.
- Verification provides assurance on firm-wide policies and procedures but does not guarantee the accuracy of specific performance reports.
- A complete compliance statement for a verified firm must include two specific paragraphs presented together.
Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
and the benchmark .
4.B.5 The firm should present relevant ex post additional risk measures for the
composite and the benchmark .
4.B.6 The firm should present more than 10 years of annual performance in the gips
composite report .
4.B.7 The firm should present proprietary assets as a percentage of composite assets as
of each annual period end.
4.B.8 If the firm uses preliminary, estimated values as fair value, the firm should present
the percentage of assets in the composite that were valued using preliminary, estimated
values as of each annual period end.
4.B.9 For real estate composites, the firm should present composite and benchmark
component returns for all periods presented.
4.B.10 If the firm has committed capital , the firm should present firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as of each annual period end.
4.C. DisclosureāRequirements
4.C.1 Once the firm has met all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, the
firm must disclose its compliance with the GIPS standards using one of the following
compliance statements. The compliance statement for a composite must only be used
inĀ a gips composite report .
a. For a firm that is verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been
independently verified for the periods [insert dates]. The verification report(s)
is/are available upon request.
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies
and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the
GIPSĀ standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies
and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
26 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy
of any specific performance report. ā
b. For composites of a verified firm that have also had a performance
examination:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been inde-
pendently verified for the periods [insert dates].
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish poli-
cies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the
GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies
and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. The [insert name of composite] has had a performance
examination for the periods [insert dates]. The verification and performance
examination reports are available upon request. ā
The compliance statement for a firm that is verified or for composites of a verified
firm that have also had a performance examination is complete only when both
paragraphs are shown together, one after the other.
c. For a firm that has not been verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in
compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has not been inde-
pendently verified. ā
GIPS Compliance and Disclosure Requirements
- Firms must use specific, verbatim compliance statements depending on whether they have undergone independent verification.
- The CFA Institute requires a mandatory trademark disclosure stating they do not endorse the organization or warrant the quality of the content.
- Detailed disclosures are required for fee structures, including the distinction between gross-of-fees and net-of-fees returns and the use of model versus actual fees.
- Firms must clearly define the reporting currency, internal dispersion measures, and the specific fee schedules applicable to different investment strategies.
- Specific rules apply to the presentation of performance for pooled funds, wrap fee composites, and multi-asset strategy portfolios.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
examination reports are available upon request. ā
The compliance statement for a firm that is verified or for composites of a verified
firm that have also had a performance examination is complete only when both
paragraphs are shown together, one after the other.
c. For a firm that has not been verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in
compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has not been inde-
pendently verified. ā
The firm must not exclude any portion of the respective compliance statement. Any
modifications to the compliance statement must be additive.
4.C.2 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
4.C.3 The firm must disclose the definition of the firm used to determine total firm assets
and firm -wide compliance.
4.C.4 The firm must disclose the composite description.
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4.C.5 The firm must disclose:
a. The benchmark description, which must include the key features of the
benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized index or
otherĀ point of reference.
b. The periodicity of the benchmark if benchmark returns are calculated less
frequently than monthly.
4.C.6 When presenting gross-of-fees returns, the firm must disclose if any other fees are
deducted in addition to transaction costs.
4.C.7 When presenting net-of-fees returns, the firm must disclose:
a. If any other fees are deducted in addition to investment management fees and
transaction costs.
b. If net-of-fees returns are net of any performance-based fees or carried interest .
c. If model or actual investment management fees are used.
d. If model investment management fees are used, and composite gross-of-
fees returns are not presented, the model investment management fee used to
calculate net-of-fees returns.34
e. If model investment management fees are used, the methodology used to
calculate net-of-fees returns.
4.C.8 The firm must disclose which fees and expenses other than investment management
fees (e.g., research costs) are separately charged by the firm to clients, if material.
4.C.9 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
4.C.10 The firm must disclose which measure of internal dispersion is presented.
4.C.11 The firm must disclose the current fee schedule appropriate to prospective clients
or prospective investors.
a. When presenting performance to a prospective client for a standalone portfolio ,
the fee schedule must reflect the fee schedule for a standalone portfolio
managed according to that strategy.
b. When presenting performance of a composite that includes carve-outs to a
prospective client for a multi-asset strategy portfolio , the fee schedule must
reflect the fee schedule for a multi-asset strategy portfolio managed according to
that strategy.
c. When presenting a wrap fee composite to a wrap fee prospective client , the
fee schedule must reflect the total wrap fee.
d. When presenting a gips composite report to a prospective investor for a
pooled fund included in the composite, the firm must disclose the pooled
fundās current fee schedule and expense ratio .
34 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
28 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
4.C.12 If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest , the
firm must disclose the performance-based fee description or carried interest
GIPS Disclosure Requirements
- Firms must provide comprehensive transparency regarding fee structures, including total wrap fees, pooled fund expense ratios, and performance-based fee descriptions.
- The standards mandate the disclosure of historical use of leverage, derivatives, and short positions to ensure prospective clients understand the risk profile of the strategy.
- Firms are required to disclose significant events and organizational redefinitions that could impact a client's interpretation of the historical track record.
- Specific protocols are established for disclosing non-compliance periods, changes in composite names, and conflicts between GIPS standards and local laws.
- Detailed reporting is required for carve-outs with allocated cash, including the specific policy used for cash allocation and the availability of standalone portfolio reports.
If the gips composite report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
that strategy.
c. When presenting a wrap fee composite to a wrap fee prospective client , the
fee schedule must reflect the total wrap fee.
d. When presenting a gips composite report to a prospective investor for a
pooled fund included in the composite, the firm must disclose the pooled
fundās current fee schedule and expense ratio .
34 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
28 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
4.C.12 If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest , the
firm must disclose the performance-based fee description or carried interest
description.
4.C.13 The firm must disclose the composite inception date.
4.C.14 The firm must disclose the composite creation date.
4.C.15 The firm must disclose that the following lists are available upon request, if applicable:
a. List of composite descriptions.
b. List of pooled fund descriptions for limited distribution pooled funds.
c. List of broad distribution pooled funds.
4.C.16 The firm must disclose that policies for valuing investments, calculating performance,
and preparing gips reports are available upon request.
4.C.17 The firm must disclose how leverage, derivatives, and short positions have been used his -
torically, if material.
4.C.18 If estimated transaction costs are used, the firm must disclose:
a. That estimated transaction costs were used.
b. The estimated transaction costs used and how they were determined.
4.C.19 The firm must disclose all significant events that would help a prospective client
interpret the gips composite report . This disclosure must be included for a minimum
of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
4.C.20 For any performance presented for periods prior to the minimum effective
compliance date that does not comply with the GIPS standards, the firm must
disclose the periods of non-compliance.
4.C.21 If the firm is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
4.C.22 If the composite is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
4.C.23 The firm must disclose changes to the name of the composite. This disclosure must
be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the
track record.
4.C.24 The firm must disclose:
a. The minimum asset level, if any, below which portfolios are not included in the
composite.
b. Any changes to the minimum asset level.
4.C.25 The firm must disclose if composite returns are gross or net of withholding taxes,
ifĀ material.
4.C.26 The firm must disclose if benchmark returns are net of withholding taxes if this
information is available.
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4.C.27 If the gips composite report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with
the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose
the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
4.C.28 If carve-outs with allocated cash are included in the composite, the firm must:
a. Indicate carve-out in the composite name.
b. Disclose that the composite includes carve-outs with allocated cash.
c. Disclose the policy used to allocate cash to carve-outs.
d. Disclose that the gips composite report for the composite of standalone
portfolios is available upon request, if the composite of standalone
portfoliosĀ exists.
4.C.29 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor was
used.35
4.C.30 The firm must disclose if the compositeās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy. (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended
valuation hierarchy.)36
GIPS Composite Disclosure Requirements
- Firms must disclose the minimum asset levels for composite inclusion and any subsequent changes to those thresholds.
- Specific transparency is required regarding withholding taxes on both composite and benchmark returns to ensure material accuracy.
- In cases of regulatory conflict, firms must explicitly disclose where local laws deviate from GIPS standards.
- Strict protocols govern the use of carve-outs, sub-advisors, and custom benchmarks to prevent the misrepresentation of performance data.
- Firms are required to explain the absence of a benchmark or provide detailed histories for any benchmark changes made over time.
If the gips composite report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
a. The minimum asset level, if any, below which portfolios are not included in the
composite.
b. Any changes to the minimum asset level.
4.C.25 The firm must disclose if composite returns are gross or net of withholding taxes,
ifĀ material.
4.C.26 The firm must disclose if benchmark returns are net of withholding taxes if this
information is available.
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4.C.27 If the gips composite report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with
the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose
the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
4.C.28 If carve-outs with allocated cash are included in the composite, the firm must:
a. Indicate carve-out in the composite name.
b. Disclose that the composite includes carve-outs with allocated cash.
c. Disclose the policy used to allocate cash to carve-outs.
d. Disclose that the gips composite report for the composite of standalone
portfolios is available upon request, if the composite of standalone
portfoliosĀ exists.
4.C.29 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor was
used.35
4.C.30 The firm must disclose if the compositeās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy. (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended
valuation hierarchy.)36
4.C.31 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the composite exists, the firm
must disclose why no benchmark is presented.
4.C.32 If the firm changes the benchmark , the firm must disclose:
a. For a prospective benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for as long as returns for the prior benchmark are
included in the gips composite report .
b. For a retroactive benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for a minimum of one year and for as long as they are
relevant to interpreting the track record.
4.C.33 If a custom benchmark or combination of multiple benchmarks is used, the firm
must :
a. Disclose the benchmark components, weights, and rebalancing process, if applicable.
b. Disclose the calculation methodology.
c. Clearly label the benchmark to indicate that it is a custom benchmark .
4.C.34 If a portfolio-weighted custom benchmark is used, the firm must disclose:
a. That the benchmark is rebalanced using the weighted average returns of the
benchmarks of all of the portfolios included in the composite.
b. The frequency of the rebalancing.
35 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006.
36 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011.
30 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
c. The components that constitute the portfolio-weighted custom benchmark ,
including the weights that each component represents, as of the most recent annual
period end.
d. That the components that constitute the portfolio-weighted custom benchmark ,
including the weights that each component represents, are available forĀ prior periods
upon request.
4.C.35 If the firm has adopted a significant cash flow policy for the composite, the firm
must disclose how the firm defines a significant cash flow for the composite and
for which periods.
4.C.36 For composites with at least three annual periods of performance, the firm must
disclose if the three-year annualized ex post standard deviation of the composite
GIPS Composite Disclosure Requirements
- Firms must disclose specific methodologies for significant cash flows, error corrections, and changes in return types to ensure transparency.
- Strict rules govern the reporting of internal dispersion and portfolio counts when a composite contains five or fewer portfolios.
- The standards mandate clear labeling of theoretical performance, including the methodology and assumptions used to derive non-actual results.
- Specific asset classes like real estate and overlay strategies require specialized disclosures regarding valuations and collateral income.
- Material errors in past reports must be disclosed for at least one year to assist investors in interpreting the historical track record.
Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or prospective application of a model.
d. That the components that constitute the portfolio-weighted custom benchmark ,
including the weights that each component represents, are available forĀ prior periods
upon request.
4.C.35 If the firm has adopted a significant cash flow policy for the composite, the firm
must disclose how the firm defines a significant cash flow for the composite and
for which periods.
4.C.36 For composites with at least three annual periods of performance, the firm must
disclose if the three-year annualized ex post standard deviation of the composite
and/or benchmark is not presented because 36 monthly returns are not available.
4.C.37 The firm must disclose if performance from a past firm or affiliation is presented, and for
which periods.
4.C.38 The firm must disclose any change to the gips composite report resulting from
the correction of a material error . Following the correction of the gips composite
report , this disclosure must be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it
is relevant to interpreting the track record. This disclosure is not required to be included
in a gips composite report that is provided to a prospective client or prospective
investor that did not receive the gips composite report containing the material
error .
4.C.39 If the firm chooses to not present the number of portfolios in the composite because
there are five or fewer portfolios in the composite, the firm must disclose that the
composite contains five or fewer portfolios or use similar language.
4.C.40 If the firm chooses to not present the internal dispersion of individual portfolio
returns because there are five or fewer portfolios in the composite for the full year,
the firm must disclose that the internal dispersion measure is not applicable or use
similar language.
4.C.41 The firm must disclose if preliminary, estimated values are used to determine fair
value .
4.C.42 If the firm changes the type of return(s) presented for the composite (e.g., changes from
money-weighted returns to time-weighted returns ), the firm must disclose the
change and the date of the change. This disclosure must be included for a minimum of
one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
4.C.43 If the firm presents additional risk measures, the firm must:
a. Describe any additional risk measure.
b. Disclose the name of the risk-free rate if a risk-free rate is used in the calculation of the
additional risk measure.
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4.C.44 The firm must disclose if gross-of-fees or net-of-fees returns are used to calculate
presented risk measures.
4.C.45 For overlay strategy composites, the firm must disclose:
a. The methodology used to calculate composite overlay exposure.
b. If collateral and collateral income are reflected in the composite returns.
4.C.46 For real estate investments that are not in a real estate open-end fund , the firm
must disclose that:37
a. External valuations are obtained, and the frequency with which they are
obtained, or
b. The firm relies on valuations from financial statement audits.
4.C.47 For wrap fee composites, when the firm presents pure gross-of-fees returns, the
firm must disclose that pure gross-of-fees returns do not reflect the deduction of
transaction costs.
4.C.48 When the gips composite report includes theoretical performance as
supplemental information, the firm must:
a. Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual
assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or
prospective application of a model.
b. Disclose a basic description of the methodology and assumptions used to calculate the
theoretical performance sufficient for the prospective client or prospective
investor to interpret the theoretical performance, including if it is based on
GIPS Reporting and Disclosure Standards
- Firms must explicitly label and disclose the methodology behind theoretical performance to ensure it is not confused with actual asset results.
- Comprehensive disclosures are required for material changes in valuation or calculation policies to maintain transparency with prospective investors.
- Firms presenting money-weighted returns must provide annualized since-inception data for both the composite and its benchmark.
- Specific reporting mandates apply to the use of subscription lines of credit, requiring returns to be shown both with and without their impact.
- Disclosure requirements extend to the structure of the firm, including lists of other firms within a parent company and the nature of bundled fees.
If a subscription line of credit is used, the firm must present the composite since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription line of credit through the most recent annual period end.
4.C.48 When the gips composite report includes theoretical performance as
supplemental information, the firm must:
a. Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual
assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or
prospective application of a model.
b. Disclose a basic description of the methodology and assumptions used to calculate the
theoretical performance sufficient for the prospective client or prospective
investor to interpret the theoretical performance, including if it is based on
model performance, backtested performance, or hypothetical performance.
c. Disclose whether the theoretical performance reflects the deduction of actual or
estimated investment management fees, transaction costs, or other fees and
charges that an actual client portfolio would have paid or will pay.
d. Clearly label the theoretical performance as supplemental information.
4.D. DisclosureāRecommendations
4.D.1 The firm should disclose material changes to valuation policies and/or methodologies.
4.D.2 The firm should disclose material changes to calculation policies and/or methodologies.
4.D.3 The firm should disclose material differences between the benchmark and the
compositeās investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
4.D.4 The firm should disclose the key assumptions used to value investments.
37 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
32 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
4.D.5 If a parent company contains multiple firms, each firm within the parent company
should disclose a list of the other firms contained within the parent company.
4.D.6 If the composite contains portfolios with bundled fees, the firm should disclose
the types of fees included in the bundled fee.
4.D.7 If the firm adheres to any industry valuation guidelines in addition to the GIPS valuation
requirements, the firm should disclose which guidelines have been applied.
4.D.8 When using benchmarks that have limitations, such as peer group benchmarks, the
firm should disclose these limitations.
4.D.9 The firm should disclose how research costs are reflected in returns.
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5. COMPOSITE MONEY-WEIGHTED
RETURN REPORT
The following provisions apply to composites that include money-weighted returns in
a gips composite report when the firm meets the requirements specified in provision
1.A.35 and chooses to present money-weighted returns.
5.A. Presentation and ReportingāRequirements
5.A.1 The firm must present in each gips composite report:
a. The annualized composite since-inception money-weighted return through
the most recent annual period end.
b. When the composite has a track record that is less than a full year, the non-annualized
composite since-inception money-weighted return through the initial annual
period end.
c. When the composite terminates, the annualized composite since-inception
money-weighted return through the composite termination date.
d. The since-inception money-weighted return for the benchmark for the same
periods as presented for the composite, unless the firm determines there is no
appropriate benchmark .
e. The number of portfolios in the composite as of the most recent annual period
end. If the composite contains five or fewer portfolios at period end, the number
of portfolios is not required .
f. Composite assets as of the most recent annual period end.
g. Total firm assets as of the most recent annual period end.38
5.A.2 If a subscription line of credit is used, the firm must present the composite
since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription
line of credit through the most recent annual period end. The firm is not required to
present returns without the subscription line of credit when the subscription line
GIPS Composite Reporting Requirements
- Firms must disclose the number of portfolios, composite assets, and total firm assets for the most recent annual period end.
- Specific reporting rules apply to money-weighted returns when subscription lines of credit are used, requiring dual presentation unless strict repayment criteria are met.
- The standards mandate the disclosure of the percentage of assets valued using subjective, unobservable inputs if they are material.
- For composites with committed capital, firms must present a comprehensive suite of multiples including TVPI, DPI, PIC, and RVPI.
- Firms are required to clearly label fee structures, benchmark information, and the presence of non-fee-paying portfolios or carve-outs.
The firm must present the composite since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription line of credit through the most recent annual period end.
periods as presented for the composite, unless the firm determines there is no
appropriate benchmark .
e. The number of portfolios in the composite as of the most recent annual period
end. If the composite contains five or fewer portfolios at period end, the number
of portfolios is not required .
f. Composite assets as of the most recent annual period end.
g. Total firm assets as of the most recent annual period end.38
5.A.2 If a subscription line of credit is used, the firm must present the composite
since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription
line of credit through the most recent annual period end. The firm is not required to
present returns without the subscription line of credit when the subscription line
of credit has all of the following characteristics:39
a. The principal was repaid within 120 days using committed capital drawn down
through a capital call.
b. No principal was used to fund distributions.
38 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020. For periods ending prior to 31 December 2020, firms may present
either total firm assets or composite assets as a percentage of total firm assets.
39 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
34 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
5.A.3 The firm must present the percentage of the total fair value of composite assets that
were valued using subjective, unobservable inputs (as described in provision 2.B.6.e) as
of the most recent annual period end, if such investments represent a material amount of
composite assets.
5.A.4 If portfolios in the composite have committed capital , the firm must present the
following items as of the most recent annual period end:
a. Composite since-inception paid-in capital .
b. Composite since-inception distributions.
c. Composite cumulative committed capital .
d. Total value to since-inception paid-in capital (investment multiple orĀ tvpi) .
e. Since-inception distributions to since-inception paid-in capital
(realization multiple or dpi ).
f. Since-inception paid-in capital to cumulative committed capital
(picĀ multiple).
g. Residual value to since-inception paid-in capital (unrealized multiple
orĀ rvpi) .
5.A.5 The firm must clearly label or identify:
a. The periods that are presented.
b. If composite returns are gross-of-fees or net-of-fees.
c. If composite returns do or do not reflect the subscription line of credit .
ThisĀ information is required only if the firm presents returns both with and
withoutĀ the subscription line of credit .
5.A.6 If the firm includes more than one benchmark in the gips composite report , the firm
must present and disclose all required information for all benchmarks presented.
5.A.7 If the composite includes carve-outs with allocated cash, the firm must present the
percentage of composite assets represented by carve-outs with allocated cash as of the
most recent annual period end.
5.A.8 If the composite includes non-fee-paying portfolios, the firm must present the
percentage of composite assets represented by non-fee-paying portfolios as of
the most recent annual period end when net-of-fees returns are presented and are
calculated using actual investment management fees.
5.A.9 If the firm chooses to present composite uncalled committed capital or a
combination of composite assets and composite uncalled committed capital ,
theĀ firm must:
a. Present composite uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of composite assets and composite uncalled committed capital is
presented.
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b. Clearly label composite uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of composite assets and composite uncalled
GIPS Reporting and Asset Labeling
- Firms must strictly label and present uncalled committed capital alongside composite assets to ensure transparency in reporting.
- Specific requirements apply to the presentation of advisory-only assets, requiring they be clearly distinguished from firm-wide or composite assets.
- All financial data within a GIPS composite report must be presented using a single, consistent currency to prevent confusion.
- Supplemental information is permitted only if it relates directly to the composite and does not contradict any required disclosures.
- Recommendations for composites with committed capital include presenting cumulative distributions and investment multiples like TVPI.
Any supplemental information included in the gips composite report: Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information in the gips composite report.
combination of composite assets and composite uncalled committed capital ,
theĀ firm must:
a. Present composite uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of composite assets and composite uncalled committed capital is
presented.
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b. Clearly label composite uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of composite assets and composite uncalled
committed capital as such.
5.A.10 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide uncalled committed capital or a
combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital ,
theĀ firm must:
a. Present firm -wide uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital
isĀ presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as such.
5.A.11 If the firm chooses to present advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās
investment mandate, objective, or strategy or a combination of composite assets and
advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment mandate, objective, or
strategy, the firm must:
a. Present advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment mandate,
objective, or strategy for the same periods for which the combination of composite
assets and advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment mandate,
objective, or strategy is presented.
b. Clearly label advisory-only assets that reflect the compositeās investment
mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of composite assets and advisory-only assets that
reflect the compositeās investment mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
5.A.12 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide advisory-only assets or a combination of
total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets, the firm must:
a. Present firm -wide advisory-only assets for the same periods for which the combi-
nation of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets is presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide advisory-only assets as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only
assets as such.
5.A.13 All required and recommended information in the gips composite report must be
presented in the same currency.
5.A.14 When the firm presents the performance of a composite that includes carve-outs
with allocated cash and also has a composite of standalone portfolios managed
according to the same strategy, the firm must present the composite since-inception
money-weighted return through the most recent annual period end and the
composite assets of the composite of standalone portfolios as of the most recent
36 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
annual period end in the gips composite report of the composite that includes
carve-outs with allocated cash.
5.A.15 Any supplemental information included in the gips composite report:
a. Must relate directly to the composite.
b. Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information
in the gips composite report .
c. Must be clearly labeled as supplemental information.
5.B. Presentation and ReportingāRecommendations
5.B.1 The firm should present annualized since-inception money-weighted returns as
of each annual period end.
5.B.2 If portfolios in the composite have committed capital , the firm should present
the following items as of each annual period end:
a. Composite since-inception paid-in capital .
b. Composite since-inception distributions.
c. Composite cumulative committed capital .
d. Total value to since-inception paid-in capital (investment multiple
orĀ tvpi) .
GIPS Reporting and Compliance
- Firms are recommended to present annualized since-inception money-weighted returns for each annual period end.
- For portfolios with committed capital, specific multiples such as TVPI, DPI, PIC, and RVPI must be reported to show capital flow and valuation.
- Reporting standards require the disclosure of proprietary assets and the use of preliminary estimated values within the composite.
- Firms must use standardized compliance statements to claim adherence to GIPS, distinguishing between general verification and specific performance examinations.
- Verification provides assurance on firm-wide policies and procedures but does not guarantee the accuracy of any specific performance report.
Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
5.B. Presentation and ReportingāRecommendations
5.B.1 The firm should present annualized since-inception money-weighted returns as
of each annual period end.
5.B.2 If portfolios in the composite have committed capital , the firm should present
the following items as of each annual period end:
a. Composite since-inception paid-in capital .
b. Composite since-inception distributions.
c. Composite cumulative committed capital .
d. Total value to since-inception paid-in capital (investment multiple
orĀ tvpi) .
e. Since-inception distributions to since-inception paid-in capital
(realization multiple or dpi) .
f. Since-inception paid-in capital to cumulative committed capital
(picĀ multiple).
g. Residual value to since-inception paid-in capital (unrealized multiple
orĀ rvpi) .
5.B.3 The firm should present both annualized gross-of-fees and net-of-fees composite
since-inception money-weighted returns.
5.B.4 The firm should present proprietary assets as a percentage of composite assets as
of the most recent annual period end.
5.B.5 The firm should present an appropriate ex post risk measure for the composite
and the benchmark . The same ex post risk measure should be presented for the
composite and the benchmark .
5.B.6 If the firm uses preliminary, estimated values as fair value, the firm should present
the percentage of assets in the composite that were valued using preliminary, estimated
values as of the most recent annual period end.
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5.B.7 If the firm has committed capital , the firm should present firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as of the most recent annual period end.
5.C. DisclosureāRequirements
5.C.1 Once the firm has met all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, the
firm must disclose its compliance with the GIPS standards using one of the following
compliance statements. The compliance statement for a composite must only be used
inĀ a gips composite report .
a. For a firm that is verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been inde-
pendently verified for the periods [insert dates]. The verification report(s)
is/are available upon request.
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish poli-
cies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the
GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies
and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy
of any specific performance report. ā
b. For composites of a verified firm that have also had a performance
examination:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been inde-
pendently verified for the periods [insert dates].
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish poli-
cies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the
GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies
and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. The [insert name of composite] has had a performance
examination for the periods [insert dates]. The verification and performance
GIPS Compliance and Disclosure Requirements
- Firms must use specific, standardized language when claiming compliance with GIPS standards, depending on whether they have undergone independent verification.
- Verification provides external assurance that a firm's policies for performance calculation and presentation are implemented on a firm-wide basis.
- Mandatory disclosures include the definition of the firm, composite and benchmark descriptions, and the reporting currency used.
- Detailed transparency is required regarding fee structures, specifically distinguishing between gross-of-fees and net-of-fees returns and the use of model versus actual fees.
- Firms are prohibited from modifying the compliance statement except for additive changes, ensuring the integrity of the CFA Institute's trademarked standards.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
cies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the
GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies
and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. The [insert name of composite] has had a performance
examination for the periods [insert dates]. The verification and performance
examination reports are available upon request. ā
38 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
The compliance statement for a firm that is verified or for composites of a verified
firm that have also had a performance examination is complete only when both
paragraphs are shown together, one after the other.
c. For a firm that has not been verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in
compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has not been inde-
pendently verified. ā
The firm must not exclude any portion of the respective compliance statement. Any
modifications to the compliance statement must be additive.
5.C.2 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
5.C.3 The firm must disclose the definition of the firm used to determine total firm assets
and firm -wide compliance.
5.C.4 The firm must disclose the composite description.
5.C.5 The firm must disclose the benchmark description, which must include the key fea-
tures of the benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized index or
other point of reference.
5.C.6 When presenting gross-of-fees returns, the firm must disclose if any other fees are
deducted in addition to transaction costs.
5.C.7 When presenting net-of-fees returns, the firm must disclose:
a. If any other fees are deducted in addition to investment management fees and
transaction costs.
b. If net-of-fees returns are net of any performance-based fees or carried
interest .
c. If model or actual investment management fees are used.
d. If model investment management fees are used and composite gross-of-fees
returns are not presented, the model investment management fee used to calcu-
late net-of-fees returns.40
e. If model investment management fees are used, the methodology used to calcu-
late net-of-fees returns.
5.C.8 The firm must disclose which fees and expenses other than investment management
fees (e.g., research costs) are separately charged by the firm to clients, if material.
5.C.9 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
40 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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5.C.10 The firm must disclose the current fee schedule appropriate to prospective clients
or prospective investors.
a. When presenting performance to a prospective client for a standalone portfolio ,
the fee schedule must reflect the fee schedule for a standalone portfolio
managed according to that strategy.
b. When presenting performance of a composite that includes carve-outs to a
prospective client for a multi-asset strategy portfolio , the fee schedule must
reflect the fee schedule for a multi-asset strategy portfolio managed according to
that strategy.
c. When presenting a gips composite report to a prospective investor for a
pooled fund included in the composite, the firm must disclose the pooled
fundās current fee schedule and expense ratio .
5.C.11 If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest , the
GIPS Disclosure Requirements
- Firms must disclose specific fee structures, including performance-based fees, carried interest, and expense ratios for pooled funds.
- The standards mandate the disclosure of composite inception and creation dates, as well as the availability of valuation and calculation policies upon request.
- Firms are required to explain the historical use of leverage, derivatives, and short positions if they are material to the performance results.
- Significant events, name changes, or redefinitions of the firm or composite must be disclosed for at least one year to ensure transparency.
- If a firm follows local laws that conflict with GIPS standards, it must explicitly disclose the nature of the conflict and the specific regulations involved.
- The use of sub-advisors and the methodology for allocating cash to carve-outs must be clearly documented in the composite report.
If the gips composite report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
b. When presenting performance of a composite that includes carve-outs to a
prospective client for a multi-asset strategy portfolio , the fee schedule must
reflect the fee schedule for a multi-asset strategy portfolio managed according to
that strategy.
c. When presenting a gips composite report to a prospective investor for a
pooled fund included in the composite, the firm must disclose the pooled
fundās current fee schedule and expense ratio .
5.C.11 If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest , the
firm must disclose the performance-based fee description or carried interest
description.
5.C.12 The firm must disclose the composite inception date.
5.C.13 The firm must disclose the composite creation date.
5.C.14 The firm must disclose that the following lists are available upon request, if applicable:
a. List of composite descriptions.
b. List of pooled fund descriptions for limited distribution pooled funds.
c. List of broad distribution pooled funds.
5.C.15 The firm must disclose that policies for valuing investments, calculating performance,
and preparing gips reports are available upon request.
5.C.16 The firm must disclose how leverage, derivatives, and short positions have been used
historically, if material.
5.C.17 If estimated transaction costs are used, the firm must disclose:
a. That estimated transaction costs were used.
b. The estimated transaction costs used and how they were determined.
5.C.18 The firm must disclose all significant events that would help a prospective client
interpret the gips composite report . This disclosure must be included for a minimum
of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
5.C.19 For any performance presented for periods prior to the minimum effective
compliance date that does not comply with the GIPS standards, the firm must
disclose the periods of non-compliance.
5.C.20 If the firm is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
40 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
5.C.21 If the composite is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
5.C.22 The firm must disclose changes to the name of the composite. This disclosure must
be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the
track record.
5.C.23 The firm must disclose:
a. The minimum asset level, if any, below which portfolios are not included in the
composite.
b. Any changes to the minimum asset level.
5.C.24 The firm must disclose if composite returns are gross or net of withholding taxes, if
material.
5.C.25 The firm must disclose if benchmark returns are net of withholding taxes if this infor -
mation is available.
5.C.26 If the gips composite report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with
the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose
the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
5.C.27 If carve-outs with allocated cash are included in the composite, the firm must:
a. Indicate carve-out in the composite name.
b. Disclose that the composite includes carve-outs with allocated cash.
c. Disclose the policy used to allocate cash to carve-outs.
d. Disclose that the gips composite report for the composite of standalone
portfolios is available upon request, if the composite of standalone
portfoliosĀ exists.
5.C.28 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor was
used.41
5.C.29 The firm must disclose if the compositeās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy. (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended
valuation hierarchy.)42
5.C.30 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the composite exists, the firm
must disclose why no benchmark is presented.
GIPS Composite Disclosure Requirements
- Firms must provide detailed disclosures regarding the use of sub-advisors and any material deviations from recommended valuation hierarchies.
- Strict protocols are established for benchmark changes, requiring descriptions of both prospective and retroactive adjustments to ensure track record transparency.
- Specific reporting mandates apply to the use of subscription lines of credit, including their purpose and the total amount outstanding at year-end.
- Material errors in reports must be disclosed for at least one year, though this disclosure is not required for new prospects who never saw the erroneous data.
- The standards require transparency regarding the frequency of cash flows and the use of preliminary or estimated values in determining fair value.
Following the correction of the gips composite report, this disclosure must be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
portfolios is available upon request, if the composite of standalone
portfoliosĀ exists.
5.C.28 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor was
used.41
5.C.29 The firm must disclose if the compositeās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy. (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended
valuation hierarchy.)42
5.C.30 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the composite exists, the firm
must disclose why no benchmark is presented.
5.C.31 If the firm changes the benchmark , the firm must disclose:
a. For a prospective benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for as long as returns for the prior benchmark are
included in the gips composite report .
41 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006.
42 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011.
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b. For a retroactive benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for a minimum of one year and for as long as they are
relevant to interpreting the track record.
5.C.32 If a custom benchmark or combination of multiple benchmarks is used, the firm
must :
a. Disclose the benchmark components, weights, and rebalancing process, if applicable.
b. Disclose the calculation methodology.
c. Clearly label the benchmark to indicate that it is a custom benchmark .
5.C.33 The firm must disclose the calculation methodology used for the benchmark . If the
firm presents the public market equivalent of the composite as a benchmark , the
firm must also disclose the index used to calculate the public market equivalent .
5.C.34 The firm must disclose if performance from a past firm or affiliation is presented, and for
which periods.
5.C.35 The firm must disclose the frequency of external cash flows used in the
money-weighted return calculation if daily frequency was not used.
5.C.36 If a subscription line of credit is used, and the firm is required to present returns
both with and without the subscription line of credit , the firm must disclose:
a. The purpose for using the subscription line of credit .
b. The size of the subscription line of credit as of the most recent annual period
end.
c. The subscription line of credit amount outstanding as of the most recent annual
period end.
5.C.37 The firm must disclose any change to the gips composite report resulting from
the correction of a material error . Following the correction of the gips composite
report , this disclosure must be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it
is relevant to interpreting the track record. This disclosure is not required to be included
in a gips composite report that is provided to a prospective client or prospective
investor that did not receive the gips composite report containing the material
error .
5.C.38 If the firm chooses to not present the number of portfolios in the composite because
there are five or fewer portfolios in the composite, the firm must disclose that the
composite contains five or fewer portfolios or use similar language.
5.C.39 The firm must disclose if preliminary, estimated values are used to determine fair value.
5.C.40 If the firm changes the type of return(s) presented for the composite (e.g., changes from
time-weighted returns to money-weighted returns ), the firm must disclose the
change and the date of the change. This disclosure must be included for a minimum of
one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
42 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
5.C.41 If the firm presents additional risk measures, the firm must:
GIPS Disclosure and Reporting Standards
- Firms must disclose the use of preliminary or estimated values in fair value determinations to ensure transparency in asset valuation.
- Any change in return calculation methodology, such as switching from time-weighted to money-weighted returns, must be disclosed for at least one year.
- Theoretical performance included as supplemental information requires rigorous disclosure regarding its non-actual nature and the assumptions used in its modeling.
- For real estate investments, firms are required to disclose whether they rely on external valuations or financial statement audits for asset pricing.
- The standards recommend disclosing material changes to valuation and calculation policies, as well as any limitations inherent in chosen benchmarks.
Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or prospective application of a model.
error .
5.C.38 If the firm chooses to not present the number of portfolios in the composite because
there are five or fewer portfolios in the composite, the firm must disclose that the
composite contains five or fewer portfolios or use similar language.
5.C.39 The firm must disclose if preliminary, estimated values are used to determine fair value.
5.C.40 If the firm changes the type of return(s) presented for the composite (e.g., changes from
time-weighted returns to money-weighted returns ), the firm must disclose the
change and the date of the change. This disclosure must be included for a minimum of
one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
42 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
5.C.41 If the firm presents additional risk measures, the firm must:
a. Describe any additional risk measure.
b. Disclose the name of the risk-free rate if a risk-free rate is used in the calculation of the
additional risk measure.
5.C.42 The firm must disclose if gross-of-fees or net-of-fees returns are used to calculate
presented risk measures.
5.C.43 For real estate investments that are not in a real estate open-end fund , the firm
must disclose that:43
a. External valuations are obtained, and the frequency with which they are
obtained, or
b. The firm relies on valuations from financial statement audits.
5.C.44 When the gips composite report includes theoretical performance as
supplemental information, the firm must:
a. Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual
assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or
prospective application of a model.
b. Disclose a basic description of the methodology and assumptions used to calculate the
theoretical performance sufficient for the prospective client or prospective
investor to interpret the theoretical performance, including if it is based on
model performance, backtested performance, or hypothetical performance.
c. Disclose whether the theoretical performance reflects the deduction of actual or
estimated investment management fees, transaction costs, or other fees and
charges that an actual client portfolio would have paid or will pay.
d. Clearly label the theoretical performance as supplemental information.
5.D. DisclosureāRecommendations
5.D.1 The firm should disclose material changes to valuation policies and/or methodologies.
5.D.2 The firm should disclose material changes to calculation policies and/or methodologies.
5.D.3 The firm should disclose material differences between the benchmark and the
compositeās investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
5.D.4 The firm should disclose the key assumptions used to value investments.
5.D.5 If a parent company contains multiple firms, each firm within the parent company
should disclose a list of the other firms contained within the parent company.
43 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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5.D.6 If the composite contains portfolios with bundled fees, the firm should disclose
the types of fees included in the bundled fee.
5.D.7 If the firm adheres to any industry valuation guidelines in addition to the GIPS valuation
requirements, the firm should disclose which guidelines have been applied.
5.D.8 When using benchmarks that have limitations, such as peer group benchmarks,
theĀ firm should disclose these limitations.
5.D.9 The firm should disclose how research costs are reflected in returns.
44 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.org
6. POOLED FUND TIME-WEIGHTED
RETURN REPORT
The following provisions apply to pooled funds that include time-weighted returns in
a gips pooled fund report .
6.A. Presentation and ReportingāRequirements
GIPS Reporting and Disclosure Standards
- Firms must disclose key valuation assumptions and the specific types of fees included in bundled fee structures.
- The standards require a minimum of five years of GIPS-compliant performance history, eventually building up to a ten-year record.
- Firms are obligated to report the percentage of assets valued using subjective unobservable inputs if they represent a material amount.
- Annual reporting must include total firm assets, pooled fund assets, and three-year annualized ex post standard deviation for both the fund and its benchmark.
- Specific disclosures are required for research costs, benchmark limitations, and the relationship between firms under a single parent company.
The firm must present the percentage of the total fair value of pooled fund assets that were valued using subjective unobservable inputs.
compositeās investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
5.D.4 The firm should disclose the key assumptions used to value investments.
5.D.5 If a parent company contains multiple firms, each firm within the parent company
should disclose a list of the other firms contained within the parent company.
43 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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5.D.6 If the composite contains portfolios with bundled fees, the firm should disclose
the types of fees included in the bundled fee.
5.D.7 If the firm adheres to any industry valuation guidelines in addition to the GIPS valuation
requirements, the firm should disclose which guidelines have been applied.
5.D.8 When using benchmarks that have limitations, such as peer group benchmarks,
theĀ firm should disclose these limitations.
5.D.9 The firm should disclose how research costs are reflected in returns.
44 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.org
6. POOLED FUND TIME-WEIGHTED
RETURN REPORT
The following provisions apply to pooled funds that include time-weighted returns in
a gips pooled fund report .
6.A. Presentation and ReportingāRequirements
6.A.1 The firm must present in each gips pooled fund report:
a. At least five years of performance (or for the period since the pooled fund
inception date if the pooled fund has been in existence less than five years) that
meets the requirements of the GIPS standards. After the firm presents a minimum
of five years of GIPS-compliant performance (or for the period since the pooled
fund inception date if the pooled fund has been in existence less than five years),
the firm must present an additional year of performance each year, building up to a
minimum of 10 years of GIPS-compliant performance.
b. Pooled fund returns for each annual period.
c. When the initial period is less than a full year, the return from the pooled fund
inception date through the initial annual period end.44
d. When the pooled fund terminates, the return from the last annual period end
through the pooled fund termination date.45
e. The total return for the benchmark for each annual period and for all other
periods for which pooled fund returns are presented, unless the firm determines
there is no appropriate benchmark .
f. Pooled fund assets as of each annual period end.
g. Total firm assets as of each annual period end.46
h. For pooled funds for which monthly pooled fund returns are available, the
three-year annualized ex post standard deviation (using monthly returns) of the
pooled fund and the benchmark as of each annual period end.47
44 Required for pooled funds with a pooled fund inception date of 1 January 2011 or later.
45 Required for pooled funds with a pooled fund termination date of 1 January 2011 or later.
46 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020. For periods ending prior to 31 December 2020, firms may present
either total firm assets or pooled fund assets as a percentage of total firm assets.
47 Required for periods ending on or after 1 January 2011.
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6.A.2 The firm must present the percentage of the total fair value of pooled fund assets
that were valued using subjective unobservable inputs (as described in provision 2.B.6.e)
as of the most recent annual period end, if such investments represent a material amount
of pooled fund assets.
6.A.3 The firm must clearly label or identify:
a. The periods that are presented.
b. If pooled fund returns are pooled fund gross returns or pooled fund net
returns.
6.A.4 If the firm includes more than one benchmark in the gips pooled fund report ,
the firm must present and disclose all required information for all benchmarks
GIPS Pooled Fund Reporting
- Firms must strictly label the periods presented and specify whether returns are gross or net to ensure transparency.
- Specific disclosure requirements apply to uncalled committed capital and advisory-only assets to prevent the inflation of fund size perceptions.
- All financial data within a GIPS pooled fund report must be presented in a single, consistent currency.
- Supplemental information is permitted only if it relates directly to the fund and does not contradict required disclosures.
- The standards recommend presenting both gross and net returns alongside cumulative and annualized data for comprehensive performance tracking.
Any supplemental information included in the gips pooled fund report: Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information in the gips pooled fund report.
that were valued using subjective unobservable inputs (as described in provision 2.B.6.e)
as of the most recent annual period end, if such investments represent a material amount
of pooled fund assets.
6.A.3 The firm must clearly label or identify:
a. The periods that are presented.
b. If pooled fund returns are pooled fund gross returns or pooled fund net
returns.
6.A.4 If the firm includes more than one benchmark in the gips pooled fund report ,
the firm must present and disclose all required information for all benchmarks
presented.
6.A.5 The firm must present the pooled fund expense ratio appropriate to prospective
investors.
6.A.6 If the firm chooses to present pooled fund uncalled committed capital or a com-
bination of pooled fund assets and pooled fund uncalled committed capital , the
firm must:
a. Present pooled fund uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which
the combination of pooled fund assets and pooled fund uncalled committed
capital is presented.
b. Clearly label pooled fund uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of pooled fund assets and pooled fund uncalled
committed capital as such.
6.A.7 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide uncalled committed capital or a combination
of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital , the firm must:
a. Present firm -wide uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital is
presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as such.
6.A.8 If the firm chooses to present advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās
investment mandate, objective, or strategy or a combination of pooled fund assets and
advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective,
or strategy, the firm must:
a. Present advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment man-
date, objective, or strategy for the same periods for which the combination of pooled
fund assets and advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment
mandate, objective, or strategy is presented.
46 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
b. Clearly label advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment
mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of pooled fund assets and advisory-only assets
that reflect the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
6.A.9 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide advisory-only assets or a combination of
total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets, the firm must:
a. Present firm -wide advisory-only assets for the same periods for which the combi-
nation of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets is presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide advisory-only assets as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only
assets as such.
6.A.10 All required and recommended information in the gips pooled fund report must
be presented in the same currency.
6.A.11 Any supplemental information included in the gips pooled fund report:
a. Must relate directly to the pooled fund .
b. Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information
in the gips pooled fund report .
c. Must be clearly labeled as supplemental information.
6.B. Presentation and ReportingāRecommendations
6.B.1 The firm should present both pooled fund gross returns and pooled fund net
returns.
6.B.2 The firm should present the following items:
a. Cumulative returns of the pooled fund and the benchmark for all periods.
b. Quarterly and/or monthly returns.
c. Annualized pooled fund and benchmark returns for periods longer than
GIPS Pooled Fund Reporting
- Firms are encouraged to present both gross and net returns for pooled funds to ensure transparency in performance reporting.
- The standards recommend providing cumulative, annualized, and periodic returns alongside relevant ex post risk measures like standard deviation.
- Specific disclosures are required for specialized assets, including real estate component returns and the percentage of assets valued using preliminary estimates.
- A formal compliance statement is mandatory, distinguishing between firms that have undergone general verification and those that have had specific performance examinations.
Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
b. Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information
in the gips pooled fund report .
c. Must be clearly labeled as supplemental information.
6.B. Presentation and ReportingāRecommendations
6.B.1 The firm should present both pooled fund gross returns and pooled fund net
returns.
6.B.2 The firm should present the following items:
a. Cumulative returns of the pooled fund and the benchmark for all periods.
b. Quarterly and/or monthly returns.
c. Annualized pooled fund and benchmark returns for periods longer than
12Ā months.
6.B.3 For all periods for which an annualized ex post standard deviation of the pooled
fund and the benchmark are presented, the firm should present the corresponding
annualized return of the pooled fund and the benchmark .
6.B.4 For all periods greater than three years for which an annualized return of the pooled
fund and the benchmark are presented, the firm should present the corresponding
annualized ex post standard deviation (using monthly returns) of the pooled fund
and the benchmark .
6.B.5 The firm should present relevant ex post additional risk measures for the pooled
fund and the benchmark .
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6.B.6 The firm should present more than 10 years of annual performance in the gips pooled
fund report .
6.B.7 The firm should present proprietary assets as a percentage of pooled fund assets
as of each annual period end.
6.B.8 If the firm uses preliminary, estimated values as fair value, the firm should pre-
sent the percentage of assets in the pooled fund that were valued using preliminary,
estimated values as of each annual period end.
6.B.9 For real estate pooled funds, the firm should present pooled fund and
benchmark component returns for all periods presented.
6.B.10 For pooled funds of funds, the firm should present the percentage, if any, of
pooled fund assets that is invested in direct investments (rather than in fund
investment vehicles) as of each annual period end.
6.B.11 If the firm has committed capital , the firm should present firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as of each annual period end.
6.B.12 The firm should present the total fair value of the firmās co-investments related to
the pooled fund as of each annual period end.
6.C. DisclosureāRequirements
6.C.1 Once the firm has met all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm
must disclose its compliance with the GIPS standards using one of the following compli-
ance statements. The compliance statement for a pooled fund must only be used in a
gips pooled fund report .
a. For a firm that is verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been inde-
pendently verified for the periods [insert dates]. The verification report(s)
is/are available upon request.
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish poli-
cies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the
GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies
and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy
of any specific performance report. ā
48 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
b. For pooled funds of a verified firm that have also had a performance
examination:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
GIPS Compliance and Disclosure Standards
- Firms must use specific, standardized language when claiming compliance with GIPS, depending on whether they have undergone independent verification.
- Verification provides assurance on firm-wide policies and procedures but does not guarantee the accuracy of any specific performance report.
- The CFA Institute requires a mandatory disclaimer stating they do not endorse the organization or warrant the quality of the content provided.
- Detailed disclosures are required for pooled funds, including benchmark descriptions, fee structures, and the methodology for calculating net returns.
- Firms must explicitly define the 'firm' used for asset determination and disclose if model fees were used in place of actual costs.
Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy
of any specific performance report. ā
48 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
b. For pooled funds of a verified firm that have also had a performance
examination:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been inde-
pendently verified for the periods [insert dates].
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies
and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS
standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and
procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the
calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed
in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a
firm-wide basis. The [insert name of pooled fund ] has had a performance
examination for the periods [insert dates]. The verification and performance
examination reports are available upon request. ā
The compliance statement for a firm that is verified or for pooled funds of a verified
firm that have also had a performance examination is complete only when both
paragraphs are shown together, one after the other.
c. For a firm that has not been verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in
compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has not been inde-
pendently verified. ā
The firm must not exclude any portion of the respective compliance statement. Any
modifications to the compliance statement must be additive.
6.C.2 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
6.C.3 The firm must disclose the definition of the firm used to determine total firm assets
and firm -wide compliance.
6.C.4 The firm must disclose the pooled fund description.
6.C.5 The firm must disclose:
a. The benchmark description, which must include the key features of the
benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized index or other
point of reference.
b. The periodicity of the benchmark if benchmark returns are calculated less
frequently than monthly.
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6.C.6 When presenting pooled fund gross returns, the firm must disclose if any other
fees are deducted in addition to transaction costs.
6.C.7 When presenting pooled fund net returns, the firm must disclose:
a. If pooled fund net returns are calculated using model or actual total pooled
fund fees.
b. If pooled fund net returns are net of any performance-based fees or carried
interest .
c. If model investment management fees or model total pooled fund fees are
used and pooled fund gross returns are not presented, the model investment
management fee or model total pooled fund fee used to calculate pooled
fund net returns.48
d. If model investment management fees or model total pooled fund fees are
used, the methodology used to calculate pooled fund net returns.
e. If the pooled fund has a partnership structure, on which assets the pooled fund
net returns are calculated.
f. If the pooled fund has multiple share classes, and one share class is used to
calculateĀ pooled fund net returns, the share class used to calculate pooled
GIPS Pooled Fund Disclosures
- Firms must provide detailed transparency regarding the calculation of net returns, including the specific methodologies for model fees and share classes.
- The standards mandate the disclosure of historical use of leverage, derivatives, and short positions to ensure investors understand the fund's risk profile.
- Firms are required to disclose significant events, name changes, or strategy shifts for at least one year to help investors interpret the track record accurately.
- In cases of regulatory conflict, firms must explicitly disclose where local laws deviate from GIPS requirements to maintain reporting integrity.
- The disclosure of sub-advisor usage and the absence of appropriate benchmarks are required to prevent misleading performance comparisons.
If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
used and pooled fund gross returns are not presented, the model investment
management fee or model total pooled fund fee used to calculate pooled
fund net returns.48
d. If model investment management fees or model total pooled fund fees are
used, the methodology used to calculate pooled fund net returns.
e. If the pooled fund has a partnership structure, on which assets the pooled fund
net returns are calculated.
f. If the pooled fund has multiple share classes, and one share class is used to
calculateĀ pooled fund net returns, the share class used to calculate pooled
fundĀ netĀ returns.
6.C.8 The firm must disclose which fees and expenses other than investment management
fees (e.g., research costs) are separately charged by the firm to investors, if material.
6.C.9 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
6.C.10 The firm must disclose the current fee schedule appropriate to prospective investors.
6.C.11 If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest , the
firm must disclose the performance-based fee description or carried interest
description.
6.C.12 The firm must disclose the pooled fund inception date and what the pooled fund
inception date represents.
6.C.13 The firm must disclose that the following lists are available upon request, if applicable:
a. List of composite descriptions.
b. List of pooled fund descriptions for limited distribution pooled funds.
c. List of broad distribution pooled funds.
6.C.14 The firm must disclose that policies for valuing investments, calculating performance,
and preparing gips reports are available upon request.
6.C.15 The firm must disclose how leverage, derivatives, and short positions have been used
historically, if material.
48 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
50 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
6.C.16 The firm must disclose all significant events that would help a prospective investor
interpret the gips pooled fund report . This disclosure must be included for a
minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
6.C.17 For any performance presented for periods prior to the minimum effective
compliance date that does not comply with the GIPS standards, the firm must
disclose the periods of non-compliance.
6.C.18 If the firm is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
6.C.19 If the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy is changed, the firm
must disclose the date and description of the change.
6.C.20 The firm must disclose changes to the name of the pooled fund . This disclosure must
be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the
track record.
6.C.21 The firm must disclose if pooled fund returns are gross or net of withholding taxes,
ifĀ material.
6.C.22 The firm must disclose if benchmark returns are net of withholding taxes if this infor -
mation is available.
6.C.23 If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict
with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and dis -
close the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
6.C.24 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor was
used.49
6.C.25 The firm must disclose if the pooled fundās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy. (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended valu-
ation hierarchy.)50
6.C.26 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the pooled fund exists, the firm
must disclose why no benchmark is presented.
6.C.27 If the firm changes the benchmark , the firm must disclose:
GIPS Pooled Fund Disclosures
- Firms must disclose any redefinitions of the firm or changes to a pooled fund's investment mandate, strategy, or name to ensure historical transparency.
- Specific tax treatments, including whether returns are gross or net of withholding taxes for both funds and benchmarks, must be clearly stated if material.
- The standards require explicit disclosure when local laws or regulations conflict with GIPS requirements, including an explanation of the nature of the conflict.
- Detailed reporting is mandated for benchmark changes, custom benchmark compositions, and the reasons why a benchmark might be omitted entirely.
- Firms are obligated to disclose the correction of material errors in past reports for at least one year to maintain the integrity of the track record.
If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
compliance date that does not comply with the GIPS standards, the firm must
disclose the periods of non-compliance.
6.C.18 If the firm is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
6.C.19 If the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy is changed, the firm
must disclose the date and description of the change.
6.C.20 The firm must disclose changes to the name of the pooled fund . This disclosure must
be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the
track record.
6.C.21 The firm must disclose if pooled fund returns are gross or net of withholding taxes,
ifĀ material.
6.C.22 The firm must disclose if benchmark returns are net of withholding taxes if this infor -
mation is available.
6.C.23 If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict
with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and dis -
close the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
6.C.24 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor was
used.49
6.C.25 The firm must disclose if the pooled fundās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy. (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended valu-
ation hierarchy.)50
6.C.26 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the pooled fund exists, the firm
must disclose why no benchmark is presented.
6.C.27 If the firm changes the benchmark , the firm must disclose:
a. For a prospective benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for as long as returns for the prior benchmark are
included in the gips pooled fund report .
b. For a retroactive benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for a minimum of one year and for as long as they are
relevant to interpreting the track record.
49 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006.
50 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011.
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6.C.28 If a custom benchmark or combination of multiple benchmarks is used, the firm must:
a. Disclose the benchmark components, weights, and rebalancing process, if applicable.
b. Disclose the calculation methodology.
c. Clearly label the benchmark to indicate that it is a custom benchmark .
6.C.29 For pooled funds with at least three annual periods of performance, the firm must
disclose if the three-year annualized ex post standard deviation of the pooled fund
and/or benchmark is not presented because 36 monthly returns are not available.
6.C.30 The firm must disclose if performance from a past firm or affiliation is presented and for
which periods.
6.C.31 The firm must disclose any change to the gips pooled fund report resulting from
the correction of a material error . Following the correction of the gips pooled fund
report , this disclosure must be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it
is relevant to interpreting the track record. This disclosure is not required to be included
in a gips pooled fund report that is provided to a prospective investor that did not
receive the gips pooled fund report containing the material error .
6.C.32 The firm must disclose if preliminary, estimated values are used to determine fair value.
6.C.33 If the firm changes the type of return(s) presented for the pooled fund (e.g., changes
from money-weighted returns to time-weighted returns ), the firm must dis -
close the change and the date of the change. This disclosure must be included for a
minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
6.C.34 If the firm presents additional risk measures, the firm must:
GIPS Pooled Fund Disclosures
- Firms must provide detailed disclosures for any benchmark changes, including descriptions and dates for both prospective and retroactive adjustments.
- Custom benchmarks require explicit labeling and disclosure of components, weights, rebalancing processes, and calculation methodologies.
- Material errors must be corrected and disclosed for at least one year, though this notice is not required for new investors who never saw the original error.
- Theoretical performance presented as supplemental information must be clearly labeled as such and include a description of the underlying model or backtesting assumptions.
- Specific reporting requirements apply to real estate investments, including the frequency of external valuations or reliance on financial statement audits.
The firm must disclose any change to the gips pooled fund report resulting from the correction of a material error.
a. For a prospective benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for as long as returns for the prior benchmark are
included in the gips pooled fund report .
b. For a retroactive benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for a minimum of one year and for as long as they are
relevant to interpreting the track record.
49 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006.
50 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011.
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6.C.28 If a custom benchmark or combination of multiple benchmarks is used, the firm must:
a. Disclose the benchmark components, weights, and rebalancing process, if applicable.
b. Disclose the calculation methodology.
c. Clearly label the benchmark to indicate that it is a custom benchmark .
6.C.29 For pooled funds with at least three annual periods of performance, the firm must
disclose if the three-year annualized ex post standard deviation of the pooled fund
and/or benchmark is not presented because 36 monthly returns are not available.
6.C.30 The firm must disclose if performance from a past firm or affiliation is presented and for
which periods.
6.C.31 The firm must disclose any change to the gips pooled fund report resulting from
the correction of a material error . Following the correction of the gips pooled fund
report , this disclosure must be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it
is relevant to interpreting the track record. This disclosure is not required to be included
in a gips pooled fund report that is provided to a prospective investor that did not
receive the gips pooled fund report containing the material error .
6.C.32 The firm must disclose if preliminary, estimated values are used to determine fair value.
6.C.33 If the firm changes the type of return(s) presented for the pooled fund (e.g., changes
from money-weighted returns to time-weighted returns ), the firm must dis -
close the change and the date of the change. This disclosure must be included for a
minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
6.C.34 If the firm presents additional risk measures, the firm must:
a. Describe any additional risk measure.
b. Disclose the name of the risk-free rate if a risk-free rate is used in the calculation of the
additional risk measure.
6.C.35 The firm must disclose if pooled fund gross returns or pooled fund net
returns are used to calculate presented risk measures.
6.C.36 For real estate investments that are not in a real estate open-end fund , the firm
must disclose that:51
a. External valuations are obtained, and the frequency with which they are
obtained, or
b. The firm relies on valuations from financial statement audits.
6.C.37 When the gips pooled fund report includes theoretical performance as
supplemental information, the firm must:
a. Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual
assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or
prospective application of a model.
51 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
52 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
b. Disclose a basic description of the methodology and assumptions used to calculate
the theoretical performance sufficient for the prospective investor to inter -
pret the theoretical performance, including if it is based on model performance,
backtested performance, or hypothetical performance.
c. Disclose whether the theoretical performance reflects the deduction of actual or
estimated investment management fees, transaction costs , or other fees and
GIPS Disclosure and Reporting
- Firms must provide a basic description of methodologies and assumptions used for theoretical performance to ensure prospective investors can interpret model or backtested data.
- The standards recommend disclosing material changes to valuation and calculation policies, as well as any significant differences between a fund's strategy and its benchmark.
- Pooled fund reports must include annualized since-inception money-weighted returns and total firm assets as of the most recent annual period end.
- If a subscription line of credit is utilized, firms are generally required to present returns both with and without the impact of that credit line.
- Firms should disclose how research costs are reflected in returns and identify other firms within the same parent company.
If a subscription line of credit is used, the firm must present the pooled fund since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription line of credit through the most recent annual period end.
prospective application of a model.
51 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
52 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
b. Disclose a basic description of the methodology and assumptions used to calculate
the theoretical performance sufficient for the prospective investor to inter -
pret the theoretical performance, including if it is based on model performance,
backtested performance, or hypothetical performance.
c. Disclose whether the theoretical performance reflects the deduction of actual or
estimated investment management fees, transaction costs , or other fees and
charges that an actual pooled fund investor would have paid or will pay.
d. Clearly label the theoretical performance as supplemental information.
6.D. DisclosureāRecommendations
6.D.1 The firm should disclose material changes to valuation policies and/or methodologies.
6.D.2 The firm should disclose material changes to calculation policies and/or methodologies.
6.D.3 The firm should disclose material differences between the benchmark and the pooled
fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
6.D.4 The firm should disclose the key assumptions used to value investments.
6.D.5 If a parent company contains multiple firms, each firm within the parent company
should disclose a list of the other firms contained within the parent company.
6.D.6 If the firm adheres to any industry valuation guidelines in addition to the GIPS valuation
requirements, the firm should disclose which guidelines have been applied.
6.D.7 When using benchmarks that have limitations, such as peer group benchmarks, the
firm should disclose these limitations.
6.D.8 The firm should disclose how research costs are reflected in returns.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 53
7. POOLED FUND MONEY-WEIGHTED
RETURN REPORT
The following provisions apply to pooled funds that include money-weighted returns
in a gips pooled fund report when the firm meets the requirements specified in
provision 1.A.35 and chooses to present money-weighted returns.
7.A. Presentation and ReportingāRequirements
7.A.1 The firm must present in each gips pooled fund report:
a. The annualized pooled fund since-inception money-weighted return through
the most recent annual period end.
b. When the pooled fund has a track record that is less than a full year, the
non-annualized pooled fund since-inception money-weighted return
through the initial annual period end.
c. When the pooled fund terminates, the annualized pooled fund since-inception
money-weighted return through the pooled fund termination date.
d. The since-inception money-weighted return for the benchmark for the same
periods as presented for the pooled fund , unless the firm determines there is no
appropriate benchmark .
e. Pooled fund assets as of the most recent annual period end.
f. Total firm assets as of the most recent annual period end.52
7.A.2 If a subscription line of credit is used, the firm must present the pooled fund
since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription
line of credit through the most recent annual period end. The firm is not required to
present returns without the subscription line of credit when the subscription line
of credit has all of the following characteristics.53
GIPS Pooled Fund Reporting
- Firms must present pooled fund money-weighted returns both with and without the impact of subscription lines of credit unless specific short-term repayment criteria are met.
- Reporting requirements mandate the disclosure of the percentage of assets valued using subjective unobservable inputs if they represent a material portion of the fund.
- For funds with committed capital, firms must provide a comprehensive suite of multiples including TVPI, DPI, PIC, and RVPI to show investment performance and realization.
- The standards require clear labeling of gross versus net returns and the explicit identification of uncalled committed capital when combined with total assets.
- Firms are obligated to present a pooled fund expense ratio that is appropriate and transparent for prospective investors.
The firm must present the pooled fund since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription line of credit through the most recent annual period end.
periods as presented for the pooled fund , unless the firm determines there is no
appropriate benchmark .
e. Pooled fund assets as of the most recent annual period end.
f. Total firm assets as of the most recent annual period end.52
7.A.2 If a subscription line of credit is used, the firm must present the pooled fund
since-inception money-weighted return both with and without the subscription
line of credit through the most recent annual period end. The firm is not required to
present returns without the subscription line of credit when the subscription line
of credit has all of the following characteristics.53
a. The principal was repaid within 120 days using committed capital drawn down
through a capital call.
b. No principal was used to fund distributions.
52 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020. For periods ending prior to 31 December 2020, firms may present
either total firm assets or pooled fund assets as a percentage of total firm assets.
53 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
54 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
7.A.3 The firm must present the percentage of the total fair value of pooled fund assets
that were valued using subjective unobservable inputs (as described in provision 2.B.6.e)
as of the most recent annual period end, if such investments represent a material amount
of pooled fund assets.
7.A.4 If the pooled fund has committed capital , the firm must present the following
items as of the most recent annual period end:
a. Pooled fund since-inception paid-in capital .
b. Pooled fund since-inception distributions.
c. Pooled fund cumulative committed capital .
d. Total value to since-inception paid-in capital (investment multiple
orĀ tvpi ).
e. Since-inception distributions to since-inception paid-in capital
(realization multiple or dpi ).
f. Since-inception paid-in capital to cumulative committed capital
(picĀ multiple).
g. Residual value to since-inception paid-in capital (unrealized multiple
orĀ rvpi ).
7.A.5 The firm must clearly label or identify:
a. The periods that are presented.
b. If pooled fund returns are pooled fund gross returns or pooled fund net
returns.
c. If pooled fund returns do or do not reflect the subscription line of credit .
ThisĀ information is required only if the firm presents returns both with and
withoutĀ the subscription line of credit .
7.A.6 If the firm includes more than one benchmark in the gips pooled fund report ,
the firm must present and disclose all required information for all benchmarks
presented.
7.A.7 The firm must present the pooled fund expense ratio appropriate to prospective
investors.
7.A.8 If the firm chooses to present pooled fund uncalled committed capital or a
combination of pooled fund assets and pooled fund uncalled committed capital ,
the firm must:
a. Present pooled fund uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which
the combination of pooled fund assets and pooled fund uncalled committed
capital is presented.
b. Clearly label pooled fund uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of pooled fund assets and pooled fund uncalled
committed capital as such.
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7.A.9 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide uncalled committed capital or a combi-
nation of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital , the firm
must :
a. Present firm -wide uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital is
GIPS Pooled Fund Reporting
- Firms must strictly label and separate uncalled committed capital from actual pooled fund assets to ensure transparency in financial reporting.
- Advisory-only assets must be clearly distinguished from pooled fund assets and must align with the specific investment mandate or strategy.
- All financial data within a GIPS pooled fund report must be presented in a single, consistent currency to prevent misleading comparisons.
- Supplemental information is permitted only if it directly relates to the fund and does not contradict any required or recommended disclosures.
- For funds with committed capital, firms are encouraged to report specific performance multiples including TVPI, DPI, and PIC.
Any supplemental information included in the gips pooled fund report: Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information.
capital is presented.
b. Clearly label pooled fund uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of pooled fund assets and pooled fund uncalled
committed capital as such.
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7.A.9 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide uncalled committed capital or a combi-
nation of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital , the firm
must :
a. Present firm -wide uncalled committed capital for the same periods for which the
combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled committed capital is
presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide uncalled committed capital as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as such.
7.A.10 If the firm chooses to present advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās
investment mandate, objective, or strategy or a combination of pooled fund assets and
advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective,
or strategy, the firm must:
a. Present advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment mandate,
objective, or strategy for the same periods for which the combination of pooled fund
assets and advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment man-
date, objective, or strategy is presented.
b. Clearly label advisory-only assets that reflect the pooled fundās investment
mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of pooled fund assets and advisory-only assets
that reflect the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy as such.
7.A.11 If the firm chooses to present firm -wide advisory-only assets or a combination of
total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets, the firm must:
a. Present firm -wide advisory-only assets for the same periods for which the combi-
nation of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only assets is presented.
b. Clearly label firm -wide advisory-only assets as such.
c. Clearly label the combination of total firm assets and firm -wide advisory-only
assets as such.
7.A.12 All required and recommended information in the gips pooled fund report must
be presented in the same currency.
7.A.13 Any supplemental information included in the gips pooled fund report:
a. Must relate directly to the pooled fund .
b. Must not contradict or conflict with the required or recommended information
in the gips pooled fund report .
c. Must be clearly labeled as supplemental information.
56 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
7.B. Presentation and ReportingāRecommendations
7.B.1 The firm should present annualized since-inception money-weighted pooled
fund gross returns and since-inception money-weighted pooled fund net
returns as of each annual period end.
7.B.2 If the pooled fund has committed capital , the firm should present the following
items as of each annual period end:
a. Pooled fund since-inception paid-in capital .
b. Pooled fund since-inception distributions.
c. Pooled fund cumulative committed capital .
d. Total value to since-inception paid-in capital (investment multiple
orĀ tvpi ).
e. Since-inception distributions to since-inception paid-in capital
(realization multiple or dpi ).
f. Since-inception paid-in capital to cumulative committed capital
(picĀ multiple).
g. Residual value to since-inception paid-in capital (unrealized multiple
GIPS Pooled Fund Reporting
- Firms must report specific capital metrics including paid-in capital, distributions, and committed capital multiples like TVPI and DPI.
- The standards require disclosure of proprietary assets, uncalled committed capital, and the use of preliminary estimated values in fair value calculations.
- Firms must present an ex post risk measure for both the pooled fund and its benchmark to ensure comparative transparency.
- Specific compliance statements are mandated to clarify whether a firm has undergone independent verification or a performance examination.
- Verification provides assurance on firm-wide policies and procedures but does not guarantee the accuracy of any specific performance report.
Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
items as of each annual period end:
a. Pooled fund since-inception paid-in capital .
b. Pooled fund since-inception distributions.
c. Pooled fund cumulative committed capital .
d. Total value to since-inception paid-in capital (investment multiple
orĀ tvpi ).
e. Since-inception distributions to since-inception paid-in capital
(realization multiple or dpi ).
f. Since-inception paid-in capital to cumulative committed capital
(picĀ multiple).
g. Residual value to since-inception paid-in capital (unrealized multiple
orĀ rvpi ).
7.B.3 The firm should present proprietary assets as a percentage of pooled fund assets
as of the most recent annual period end.
7.B.4 The firm should present an appropriate ex post risk measure for the pooled fund and
the benchmark . The same ex post risk measure should be presented for the pooled
fund and the benchmark .
7.B.5 If the firm uses preliminary, estimated values as fair value, the firm should present
the percentage of assets in the pooled fund that were valued using preliminary, esti-
mated values as of the most recent annual period end.
7.B.6 For pooled funds of funds, the firm should present the percentage, if any, of
pooled fund assets that is invested in direct investments (rather than in fund invest -
ment vehicles) as of the most recent annual period end.
7.B.7 If the firm has committed capital , the firm should present firm -wide uncalled
committed capital as of the most recent annual period end.
7.B.8 The firm should present the total fair value of the firmās co-investments related to
the pooled fund as of the most recent annual period end.
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7.C. DisclosureāRequirements
7.C.1 Once the firm has met all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm
must disclose its compliance with the GIPS standards using one of the following compli-
ance statements. The compliance statement for a pooled fund must only be used in a
gips pooled fund report .
a. For a firm that is verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been inde-
pendently verified for the periods [insert dates]. The verification report(s)
is/are available upon request.
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish poli-
cies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the
GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies
and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented
on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy
of any specific performance report. ā
b. For pooled funds of a verified firm that have also had a performance
examination:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report
in compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has been inde-
pendently verified for the periods [insert dates].
ā A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies
and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS
standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and
procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the
calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed
in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a
firm-wide basis. The [insert name of pooled fund ] has had a performance
examination for the periods [insert dates]. The verification and performance
GIPS Compliance and Disclosure
- Firms must use specific, standardized language when claiming compliance with GIPS, including explicit statements regarding whether they have undergone independent verification.
- Verification ensures that a firm's policies for performance calculation and distribution are implemented on a firm-wide basis rather than just for specific funds.
- The CFA Institute requires a mandatory disclaimer stating they do not endorse the organization or warrant the accuracy of the reported performance data.
- Detailed disclosures are required for pooled funds, including the methodology for calculating net returns and the specific fees or carried interest deducted.
- Firms must provide clear definitions of what constitutes 'total firm assets' and disclose the benchmark descriptions used for performance comparison.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS
standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and
procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the
calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed
in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a
firm-wide basis. The [insert name of pooled fund ] has had a performance
examination for the periods [insert dates]. The verification and performance
examination reports are available upon request. ā
The compliance statement for a firm that is verified or for pooled funds of a verified
firm that have also had a performance examination is complete only when both
paragraphs are shown together, one after the other.
58 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
c. For a firm that has not been verified:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in
compliance with the GIPS standards. [Insert name of firm ] has not been inde-
pendently verified. ā
The firm must not exclude any portion of the respective compliance statement. Any
modifications to the compliance statement must be additive.
7.C.2 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
7.C.3 The firm must disclose the definition of the firm used to determine total firm assets
and firm -wide compliance.
7.C.4 The firm must disclose the pooled fund description.
7.C.5 The firm must disclose the benchmark description, which must include the key fea-
tures of the benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized index or
other point of reference.
7.C.6 When presenting pooled fund gross returns, the firm must disclose if any other
fees are deducted in addition to transaction costs.
7.C.7 When presenting pooled fund net returns, the firm must disclose:
a. If pooled fund net returns are calculated using model or actual total pooled
fund fees.
b. If pooled fund net returns are net of any performance-based fees or carried
interest .
c. If model investment management fees or model total pooled fund fees are
used and pooled fund gross returns are not presented, the model investment
management fee or model total pooled fund fee used to calculate pooled
fund net returns.54
d. If model investment management fees or model total pooled fund fees are
used, the methodology used to calculate pooled fund net returns.
e. If the pooled fund has a partnership structure, on which assets the pooled fund
net returns are calculated.
f. If the pooled fund has multiple share classes, and one share class is used to calcu-
late pooled fund net returns, the share class used to calculate pooled fund net
returns.
7.C.8 The firm must disclose which fees and expenses other than investment management
fees (e.g., research costs) are separately charged by the firm to investors, if material.
54 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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7.C.9 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
7.C.10 The firm must disclose the current fee schedule appropriate to prospective
investors.
7.C.11 If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest , the
firm must disclose the performance-based fee description or carried interest
GIPS Pooled Fund Disclosures
- Firms must provide comprehensive transparency regarding fee structures, including model fees, performance-based fees, and carried interest descriptions.
- The standards mandate the disclosure of historical use of leverage, derivatives, and short positions to help investors assess risk.
- Significant events, fund redefinitions, and changes to investment mandates must be disclosed for at least one year to ensure track record integrity.
- Firms are required to disclose any conflicts between GIPS standards and local laws or regulations that impact performance reporting.
- The reporting must specify the methodology for calculating net returns, including the treatment of withholding taxes and specific share classes used.
If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
d. If model investment management fees or model total pooled fund fees are
used, the methodology used to calculate pooled fund net returns.
e. If the pooled fund has a partnership structure, on which assets the pooled fund
net returns are calculated.
f. If the pooled fund has multiple share classes, and one share class is used to calcu-
late pooled fund net returns, the share class used to calculate pooled fund net
returns.
7.C.8 The firm must disclose which fees and expenses other than investment management
fees (e.g., research costs) are separately charged by the firm to investors, if material.
54 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
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7.C.9 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
7.C.10 The firm must disclose the current fee schedule appropriate to prospective
investors.
7.C.11 If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest , the
firm must disclose the performance-based fee description or carried interest
description.
7.C.12 The firm must disclose the pooled fund inception date and what the pooled fund
inception date represents.
7.C.13 The firm must disclose that the following lists are available upon request, if applicable:
a. List of composite descriptions.
b. List of pooled fund descriptions for limited distribution pooled funds.
c. List of broad distribution pooled funds.
7.C.14 The firm must disclose that policies for valuing investments, calculating performance,
and preparing gips reports are available upon request.
7.C.15 The firm must disclose how leverage, derivatives, and short positions have been used
historically, if material.
7.C.16 The firm must disclose all significant events that would help a prospective investor
interpret the gips pooled fund report . This disclosure must be included for a
minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
7.C.17 For any performance presented for periods prior to the minimum effective
compliance date that does not comply with the GIPS standards, the firm must
disclose the periods of non-compliance.
7.C.18 If the firm is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
7.C.19 If the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy is changed, the firm
must disclose the date and description of the change.
7.C.20 The firm must disclose changes to the name of the pooled fund . This disclosure must
be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the
track record.
7.C.21 The firm must disclose if pooled fund returns are gross or net of withholding taxes,
ifĀ material.
7.C.22 The firm must disclose if benchmark returns are net of withholding taxes if this infor -
mation is available.
7.C.23 If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict
with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact
and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS
standards.
60 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
7.C.24 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor
wasĀ used.55
7.C.25 The firm must disclose if the pooled fundās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy.56 (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended
valuation hierarchy.)
7.C.26 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the pooled fund exists, the firm
must disclose why no benchmark is presented.
7.C.27 If the firm changes the benchmark , the firm must disclose:
GIPS Pooled Fund Disclosures
- Firms must disclose any periods of non-compliance with GIPS standards and any redefinitions of the firm's structure.
- Significant changes to a pooled fund's investment mandate, strategy, or name must be documented and disclosed for at least one year.
- The standards require transparency regarding whether fund and benchmark returns are reported gross or net of withholding taxes.
- Firms must explicitly disclose conflicts between GIPS requirements and local laws or regulations.
- Specific disclosures are required for the use of sub-advisors, valuation hierarchy deviations, and the absence or change of benchmarks.
If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS standards.
compliance date that does not comply with the GIPS standards, the firm must
disclose the periods of non-compliance.
7.C.18 If the firm is redefined, the firm must disclose the date and description of the
redefinition.
7.C.19 If the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy is changed, the firm
must disclose the date and description of the change.
7.C.20 The firm must disclose changes to the name of the pooled fund . This disclosure must
be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the
track record.
7.C.21 The firm must disclose if pooled fund returns are gross or net of withholding taxes,
ifĀ material.
7.C.22 The firm must disclose if benchmark returns are net of withholding taxes if this infor -
mation is available.
7.C.23 If the gips pooled fund report conforms with laws and/or regulations that conflict
with the requirements of the GIPS standards, the firm must disclose this fact
and disclose the manner in which the laws and/or regulations conflict with the GIPS
standards.
60 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
7.C.24 The firm must disclose the use of a sub-advisor and the periods a sub-advisor
wasĀ used.55
7.C.25 The firm must disclose if the pooled fundās valuation hierarchy materially differs from
the recommended valuation hierarchy.56 (See provision 2.B.6 for the recommended
valuation hierarchy.)
7.C.26 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the pooled fund exists, the firm
must disclose why no benchmark is presented.
7.C.27 If the firm changes the benchmark , the firm must disclose:
a. For a prospective benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for as long as returns for the prior benchmark are
included in the gips pooled fund report .
b. For a retroactive benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant
to interpreting the track record.
7.C.28 If a custom benchmark or combination of multiple benchmarks is used, the firm
must :
GIPS Pooled Fund Disclosures
- Firms must provide detailed disclosures for any benchmark changes, including descriptions of the change and the specific dates for both prospective and retroactive adjustments.
- Specific transparency requirements are mandated for custom benchmarks, including the disclosure of components, weights, rebalancing processes, and calculation methodologies.
- The use of subscription lines of credit requires disclosure of their purpose, the total size of the credit line, and the outstanding balance as of the most recent annual period.
- Firms are required to disclose the correction of material errors for at least one year to ensure investors can accurately interpret the fund's track record.
- Theoretical performance included as supplemental information must be clearly labeled as such and accompanied by a description of the underlying methodology and assumptions.
The firm must disclose any change to the gips pooled fund report resulting from the correction of a material error.
7.C.27 If the firm changes the benchmark , the firm must disclose:
a. For a prospective benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for as long as returns for the prior benchmark are
included in the gips pooled fund report .
b. For a retroactive benchmark change, the date and description of the change.
Changes must be disclosed for a minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant
to interpreting the track record.
7.C.28 If a custom benchmark or combination of multiple benchmarks is used, the firm
must :
a. Disclose the benchmark components, weights, and rebalancing process, if applicable.
b. Disclose the calculation methodology.
c. Clearly label the benchmark to indicate that it is a custom benchmark .
7.C.29 The firm must disclose the calculation methodology used for the benchmark . If the
firm presents the public market equivalent of a pooled fund as a benchmark , the
firm must also disclose the index used to calculate the public market equivalent .
7.C.30 The firm must disclose if performance from a past firm or affiliation is presented and for
which periods.
7.C.31 The firm must disclose the frequency of external cash flows used in the money-
weighted return calculation if daily frequency was not used.
7.C.32 If a subscription line of credit is used, and the firm is required to present returns
both with and without the subscription line of credit , the firm must disclose:
a. The purpose for using the subscription line of credit .
b. The size of the subscription line of credit as of the most recent annual period
end.
c. The subscription line of credit amount outstanding as of the most recent annual
period end.
55 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2006.
56 Required for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011.
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7.C.33 The firm must disclose any change to the gips pooled fund report resulting from
the correction of a material error . Following the correction of the gips pooled fund
report , this disclosure must be included for a minimum of one year and for as long as it
is relevant to interpreting the track record. This disclosure is not required to be included
in a gips pooled fund report that is provided to a prospective investor that did not
receive the gips pooled fund report containing the material error .
7.C.34 The firm must disclose if preliminary, estimated values are used to determine
fairĀ value.
7.C.35 If the firm changes the type of return(s) presented for the pooled fund (e.g., changes
from time-weighted returns to money-weighted returns ), the firm must
disclose the change and the date of the change. This disclosure must be included for a
minimum of one year and for as long as it is relevant to interpreting the track record.
7.C.36 If the firm presents additional risk measures, the firm must:
a. Describe any additional risk measure.
b. Disclose the name of the risk-free rate if a risk-free rate is used in the calculation of the
additional risk measure.
7.C.37 The firm must disclose if pooled fund gross returns or pooled fund net
returns are used to calculate presented risk measures.
7.C.38 For real estate investments that are not in a real estate open-end fund , the firm
must disclose that:57
a. External valuations are obtained, and the frequency with which they are
obtained, or
b. The firm relies on valuations from financial statement audits.
7.C.39 When the gips pooled fund report includes theoretical performance as
supplemental information, the firm must:
a. Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual
assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or
prospective application of a model.
b. Disclose a basic description of the methodology and assumptions used to calculate
GIPS Reporting and Advertising Guidelines
- Firms must explicitly disclose if pooled fund performance results are theoretical and provide a description of the underlying methodology and assumptions.
- Theoretical performance disclosures must clarify whether investment management fees and transaction costs have been deducted from the results.
- The standards recommend disclosing material changes to valuation and calculation policies to maintain transparency with prospective investors.
- The GIPS Advertising Guidelines apply to firms that already satisfy compliance on a firm-wide basis and are distributing materials to more than one party.
- Advertisements are defined as materials where there is no direct contact between the firm and the reader, excluding one-on-one presentations.
The GIPS Advertising Guidelines do not replace the GIPS standards, nor do they absolve firms from presenting gips composite reports and gips pooled fund reports as required by the GIPS standards.
a. External valuations are obtained, and the frequency with which they are
obtained, or
b. The firm relies on valuations from financial statement audits.
7.C.39 When the gips pooled fund report includes theoretical performance as
supplemental information, the firm must:
a. Disclose that the results are theoretical, are not based on the performance of actual
assets, and if the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or
prospective application of a model.
b. Disclose a basic description of the methodology and assumptions used to calculate
the theoretical performance sufficient for the prospective investor to inter -
pret the theoretical performance, including if it is based on model performance,
backtested performance, or hypothetical performance.
c. Disclose whether the theoretical performance reflects the deduction of actual or
estimated investment management fees, transaction costs, or other fees and
charges that an actual pooled fund investor would have paid or will pay.
d. Clearly label the theoretical performance as supplemental information.
57 Required for periods ending on or after 31 December 2020.
62 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
7.D. DisclosureāRecommendations
7.D.1 The firm should disclose material changes to valuation policies and/or methodologies.
7.D.2 The firm should disclose material changes to calculation policies and/or methodologies.
7.D.3 The firm should disclose material differences between the benchmark and the pooled
fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
7.D.4 The firm should disclose the key assumptions used to value investments.
7.D.5 If a parent company contains multiple firms, each firm within the parent company
should disclose a list of the other firms contained within the parent company.
7.D.6 If the firm adheres to any industry valuation guidelines in addition to the GIPS valuation
requirements, the firm should disclose which guidelines have been applied.
7.D.7 When using benchmarks that have limitations, such as peer group benchmarks,
theĀ firm should disclose these limitations.
7.D.8 The firm should disclose how research costs are reflected in returns.
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8. GIPS ADVERTISING GUIDELINES
Purpose of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines
The GIPS Advertising Guidelines provide firms with options for advertising when mentioning
the firmās claim of compliance. The GIPS Advertising Guidelines do not replace the GIPS stan-
dards, nor do they absolve firms from presenting gips composite reports and gips pooled
fund reports as required by the GIPS standards. These guidelines apply only to firms that
already satisfy all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards on a firm -wide basis and
prepare an advertisement that adheres to the requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines
(a āgipsĀ advertisementā). Firms may also choose to include a gips composite report or gips
pooled fund report in the advertisement.
Definitions
Advertisement
For the GIPS Advertising Guidelines, an advertisement includes any materials that are distributed
to or designed for use in newspapers, magazines, firm brochures, pooled fund fact sheets,
pooled fund offering documents, letters, media, websites, or any other written or electronic
material distributed to more than one party, and there is no contact between the firm and the
reader of the advertisement. One-on-one presentations and individual client reporting are not
considered advertisements.
GIPS Advertisement
A gips advertisement is an advertisement by a GIPS-compliant firm that adheres to the
requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
Relationship of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines
to Regulatory Requirements
When preparing gips advertisements, firms must also adhere to all applicable laws and reg-
GIPS Advertising Guidelines
- The GIPS Advertising Guidelines apply to materials distributed to multiple parties where no direct contact exists between the firm and the reader.
- Firms must prioritize local laws and regulations if they conflict with GIPS requirements, though they are encouraged to seek legal counsel for additional disclosures.
- Supplemental information is permitted in advertisements as long as it does not conflict with GIPS standards and is presented with equal or lesser prominence.
- Specific technical restrictions apply to performance data, such as the prohibition of annualizing returns for periods of less than one year.
- Firms are strictly prohibited from linking non-compliant performance to GIPS-compliant performance for periods occurring after the minimum effective compliance date.
In cases where applicable laws or regulations conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines, firms are required to comply with the laws or regulations.
For the GIPS Advertising Guidelines, an advertisement includes any materials that are distributed
to or designed for use in newspapers, magazines, firm brochures, pooled fund fact sheets,
pooled fund offering documents, letters, media, websites, or any other written or electronic
material distributed to more than one party, and there is no contact between the firm and the
reader of the advertisement. One-on-one presentations and individual client reporting are not
considered advertisements.
GIPS Advertisement
A gips advertisement is an advertisement by a GIPS-compliant firm that adheres to the
requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
Relationship of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines
to Regulatory Requirements
When preparing gips advertisements, firms must also adhere to all applicable laws and reg-
ulations governing advertisements. Firms are encouraged to seek legal or regulatory counsel
because additional disclosures may be required . In cases where applicable laws or regulations
conflict with the requirements of the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines,
firms are required to comply with the laws or regulations.
64 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Other Information
The gips advertisement may include other information beyond what is required or
recommended under the GIPS Advertising Guidelines provided the information is shown
with equal or lesser prominence relative to the information required or recommended by the
GIPS Advertising Guidelines and the information does not conflict with the requirements or
recommendations of the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines. Firms must
adhere to the principles of fair representation and full disclosure when advertising and must not
present performance or performance-related information that is false or misleading.
8.A. Fundamental Requirements of the GIPS Advertising
Guidelines
8.A.1 The GIPS Advertising Guidelines apply only to firms that already claim compliance with
the GIPS standards.
8.A.2 A firm that chooses to claim compliance in a gips advertisement must comply with all
applicable requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
8.A.3 The firm must maintain all data and information necessary to support all items included
in a gips advertisement .
8.A.4 Returns for periods of less than one year included in a gips advertisement must not
be annualized.
8.A.5 When time-weighted returns are presented in a gips advertisement , the firm
must not link non-GIPS-compliant performance for periods beginning on or after the
minimum effective compliance date to GIPS-compliant performance. The firm
may link non-GIPS-compliant performance to GIPS-compliant performance in a gips
advertisement provided that only GIPS-compliant performance is presented for peri-
ods beginning on or after the minimum effective compliance date.
8.A.6 When money-weighted returns are presented in a gips advertisement , the firm
must not link non-GIPS-compliant performance for periods ending on or after the
minimum effective compliance date to GIPS-compliant performance. The firm
may link non-GIPS-compliant performance to GIPS-compliant performance in a gips
advertisement provided that only GIPS-compliant performance is presented for peri-
GIPS Advertising Compliance Standards
- Firms must strictly separate GIPS-compliant performance from non-compliant data for periods after the minimum effective compliance date.
- Composite and pooled fund returns in advertisements must be derived directly from their corresponding official GIPS reports to ensure data integrity.
- Advertisements are required to include specific trademark disclosures and instructions on how to obtain full GIPS-compliant performance information.
- Supplemental information beyond GIPS requirements must be presented with equal or lesser prominence to avoid overshadowing mandated disclosures.
- Performance reporting for composites must follow specific timeframes, such as one-, three-, and five-year annualized returns through the most recent period.
Other information beyond what is required or recommended under the GIPS Advertising Guidelines... must be presented with equal or lesser prominence relative to the information required or recommended by the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
advertisement provided that only GIPS-compliant performance is presented for peri-
ods beginning on or after the minimum effective compliance date.
8.A.6 When money-weighted returns are presented in a gips advertisement , the firm
must not link non-GIPS-compliant performance for periods ending on or after the
minimum effective compliance date to GIPS-compliant performance. The firm
may link non-GIPS-compliant performance to GIPS-compliant performance in a gips
advertisement provided that only GIPS-compliant performance is presented for peri-
ods ending on or after the minimum effective compliance date.
8.A.7 Composite returns included in a gips advertisement must be derived from the
returns included in or that will be included in the corresponding gips composite
report .
8.A.8 Disclosures included in a gips advertisement for a composite must be consistent
with the related disclosure included in the corresponding gips composite report , unless
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the disclosure included in the gips advertisement is more current and has not yet been
reflected in the corresponding gips composite report .
8.A.9 Limited distribution pooled fund returns included in a gips advertisement must
be derived from the returns included in or that will be included in the corresponding gips
pooled fund report .
8.A.10 Disclosures included in a gips advertisement for a limited distribution pooled
fund must be consistent with the related disclosure included in the corresponding
gipsĀ pooled fund report , unless the disclosure included in the gips advertisement
is more current and has not yet been reflected in the corresponding gips pooled
fundĀ report .
8.A.11 Benchmark returns included in a gips advertisement must be total returns.
8.A.12 The firm must clearly label or identify:
a. The name of the composite or pooled fund for which the gips advertisement
isĀ prepared.
b. The name of any benchmark included in the gips advertisement .
c. The periods that are presented in the gips advertisement .
8.A.13 Other information beyond what is required or recommended under the GIPS
Advertising Guidelines (e.g., composite or pooled fund returns for additional periods)
must be presented with equal or lesser prominence relative to the information required
or recommended by the GIPS Advertising Guidelines. This information must not
conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards or the
GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
8.A.14 All required and recommended information in a gips advertisement must be
presented in the same currency.
8.B. GIPS Advertisements That Do Not Include Performance
8.B.1 The firm must disclose the GIPS Advertising Guidelines compliance statement:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®). ā
8.B.2 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
8.B.3 The firm must disclose how to obtain GIPS-compliant performance information for the
firmās strategies and products.
66 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
COMPOSITES
8.C. GIPS Advertisements for a Composite That Include
PerformanceāRequirements
8.C.1 If time-weighted returns are presented in the corresponding gips composite
report , the firm must present composite total returns according to one of the
following:
a. One-, three-, and five-year annualized composite returns through the most recent
period. If the composite has been in existence for less than five years, the firm must
also present the annualized return since the composite inception date.
b. The period-to-date composite return in addition to one-, three-, and five-year annu-
GIPS Advertising Performance Requirements
- Firms must present composite total returns using specific time-weighted or money-weighted return formats depending on the corresponding GIPS report.
- Mandatory disclosures include the reporting currency, a specific GIPS compliance statement, and instructions on how to obtain the full composite report.
- Benchmark returns must be presented for the same periods and return types as the composite returns to ensure direct comparability.
- Firms are required to disclose any conflicts between GIPS standards and local laws or regulations that affect the advertisement's content.
- Recommendations for advertisements include providing descriptions of the composite, the benchmark, and the historical use of leverage or derivatives.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
PerformanceāRequirements
8.C.1 If time-weighted returns are presented in the corresponding gips composite
report , the firm must present composite total returns according to one of the
following:
a. One-, three-, and five-year annualized composite returns through the most recent
period. If the composite has been in existence for less than five years, the firm must
also present the annualized return since the composite inception date.
b. The period-to-date composite return in addition to one-, three-, and five-year annu-
alized composite returns through the same period as presented in the correspond-
ing gips composite report . If the composite has been in existence for less than
five years, the firm must also present the annualized return since the composite
inception date.
c. The period-to-date composite return in addition to five years of annual composite
returns (or for each annual period since the composite inception date if the
composite has been in existence for less than five years). The annual returns must
be calculated through the same period as presented in the corresponding gips
composite report .
d. The annualized composite return for the total period that includes all periods pre-
sented in the corresponding gips composite report , through either:
i. The most recent period end, or
ii. The most recent annual period end.
8.C.2 If money-weighted returns are presented in the corresponding gips composite
report , the firm must present the annualized (for periods longer than one year)
or non-annualized (for periods less than one year) composite since-inception
money-weighted return through either:
a. The most recent period end, or
b. The most recent annual period end.
8.C.3 The firm must clearly label composite returns as gross-of-fees or net-of-fees.
8.C.4 The firm must present benchmark returns for the same benchmark as presented
in the corresponding gips composite report , if the corresponding gips composite
report includes benchmark returns. Benchmark returns must be of the same return
type ( time-weighted returns or money-weighted returns ), in the same currency,
and for the same periods for which the composite returns are presented.
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8.C.5 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
8.C.6 The firm must disclose the GIPS Advertising Guidelines compliance statement:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®). ā
8.C.7 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
8.C.8 The firm must disclose how to obtain a gips composite report .
8.C.9 The firm must disclose if the gips advertisement conforms with laws or regulations
that conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards or the
GIPS Advertising Guidelines, as well as the manner in which the laws or regulations con-
flict with the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
8.D. GIPS Advertisements for a Composite That Include
PerformanceāRecommendations
8.D.1 The firm should disclose the composite description.
8.D.2 The firm should disclose how leverage, derivatives, and short positions have been used
historically, if material.
8.D.3 The firm should disclose the benchmark description, which must include the key
features of the benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized
index or other point of reference.
8.D.4 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the composite exists, the firm
should disclose why no benchmark is presented.
8.D.5 The firm should disclose the definition of the firm .
LIMITED DISTRIBUTION POOLED FUNDS
8.E. GIPS Advertisements for a Limited Distribution Pooled Fund
GIPS Advertising Standards
- Firms must provide clear composite and benchmark descriptions, including the historical use of leverage and derivatives if they are material to performance.
- Advertisements for limited distribution pooled funds must present specific time-weighted or money-weighted return periods to ensure consistency with official GIPS reports.
- All performance data in advertisements must be clearly labeled as gross or net of fees and presented in the same currency as the benchmark.
- Firms are required to include a specific compliance statement and a disclaimer noting that the CFA Institute does not warrant the accuracy of the content.
- If local laws or regulations conflict with GIPS standards, the firm must disclose the nature of this conflict within the advertisement.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
8.D.1 The firm should disclose the composite description.
8.D.2 The firm should disclose how leverage, derivatives, and short positions have been used
historically, if material.
8.D.3 The firm should disclose the benchmark description, which must include the key
features of the benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized
index or other point of reference.
8.D.4 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the composite exists, the firm
should disclose why no benchmark is presented.
8.D.5 The firm should disclose the definition of the firm .
LIMITED DISTRIBUTION POOLED FUNDS
8.E. GIPS Advertisements for a Limited Distribution Pooled Fund
That Include PerformanceāRequirements
8.E.1 If time-weighted returns are presented in the corresponding gips report , the firm
must present time-weighted returns for the pooled fund according to one of the
following:
68 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
a. One-, three-, and five-year annualized returns through the most recent period. If the
pooled fund has been in existence for less than five years, the firm must also pre-
sent the annualized return since the pooled fund inception date.
b. The period-to-date return in addition to one-, three-, and five-year annualized returns
through the same period as presented in the corresponding gips report . If the
pooled fund has been in existence for less than five years, the firm must also pre-
sent the annualized return since the pooled fund inception date.
c. The period-to-date return in addition to five years of annual returns (or for each
annual period since the pooled fund inception date if the pooled fund has been
in existence for less than five years). The annual returns must be calculated through
the same period as presented in the corresponding gips report .
d. The annualized pooled fund return for the total period that includes all periods
presented in the corresponding gips report , through either:
i. The most recent period end, or
ii. The most recent annual period end.
8.E.2 If money-weighted returns are presented in the corresponding gips report , the firm
must present the annualized (for periods longer than one year) or non-annualized (for
periods less than one year) since-inception money-weighted return for the pooled
fund through either:
a. The most recent period end, or
b. The most recent annual period end.
8.E.3 The firm must clearly label pooled fund returns as gross or net of total pooled
fund fees.
8.E.4 The firm must present benchmark returns for the same benchmark as presented in
the corresponding gips report , if the corresponding gips report includes benchmark
returns. Benchmark returns must be of the same return type ( time-weighted
returns or money-weighted returns ), in the same currency, andĀ for the same
periods for which the pooled fund returns are presented.
8.E.5 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
8.E.6 The firm must disclose the GIPS Advertising Guidelines compliance statement:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®). ā
8.E.7 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
8.E.8 The firm must disclose how to obtain a gips report .
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8.E.9 The firm must disclose if the gips advertisement conforms with laws or regulations
that conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards or
the GIPS Advertising Guidelines, as well as the manner in which the laws or regulations
conflict with the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
GIPS Advertising Compliance Standards
- Firms must provide clear instructions on how to obtain a full GIPS report and disclose any conflicts between GIPS standards and local laws.
- For limited distribution pooled funds, firms are encouraged to disclose the use of leverage, derivatives, and short positions if they are material to performance.
- Broad distribution pooled funds must adhere to specific return calculation methodologies, prioritizing legally mandated periods or standardized one-, three-, and five-year intervals.
- Advertisements targeting specific share classes must ensure that net returns accurately reflect the unique fees and expenses associated with that specific class.
- If no appropriate benchmark exists for a pooled fund, the firm is required to provide a formal explanation for its absence in the advertisement.
The firm must disclose if the gips advertisement conforms with laws or regulations that conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards.
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
8.E.8 The firm must disclose how to obtain a gips report .
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8.E.9 The firm must disclose if the gips advertisement conforms with laws or regulations
that conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards or
the GIPS Advertising Guidelines, as well as the manner in which the laws or regulations
conflict with the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
8.F. GIPS Advertisements for a Limited Distribution Pooled Fund
That Include PerformanceāRecommendations
8.F.1 The firm should disclose the pooled fund description.
8.F.2 The firm should disclose how leverage, derivatives, and short positions have been used
historically, if material.
8.F.3 The firm should disclose the benchmark description, which must include the key
features of the benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized
index or other point of reference.
8.F.4 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the pooled fund exists, the firm
should disclose why no benchmark is presented.
8.F.5 The firm should disclose the definition of the firm .
BROAD DISTRIBUTION POOLED FUNDS
8.G. GIPS Advertisements for a Broad Distribution Pooled Fund
That Include PerformanceāRequirements
8.G.1 If laws or regulations mandate specific pooled fund returns, the firm must present
pooled fund returns according to the methodology and for the periods required by
laws or regulations.
8.G.2 If specific periods are not mandated by laws or regulations, pooled fund returns must
be presented consistent with one of the following options:
a. One-, three-, and five-year annualized returns through the most recent period. If the
pooled fund has been in existence for less than five years, the firm must also pre-
sent the annualized return since the pooled fund inception date.
b. The period-to-date return in addition to one-, three-, and five-year annualized returns
through the most recent period. If the pooled fund has been in existence for less
than five years, the firm must also present the annualized return since the pooled
fund inception date.
70 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
c. The period-to-date return in addition to five years of annual returns (or for each
annual period since the pooled fund inception date if the pooled fund has been
in existence for less than five years).
d. The annualized pooled fund return since the pooled fund inception date
through the most recent period.
8.G.3 If the gips advertisement is created for a specific pooled fund share class, and
pooled fund net returns are presented, pooled fund net returns must reflect the
fees and expenses of that specific share class.
8.G.4 If the gips advertisement is not created for a specific share class, and pooled fund
net returns are presented, pooled fund net returns must reflect the fees and
expenses of:
GIPS Pooled Fund Advertising
- Firms must present annualized returns for one-, three-, and five-year periods, or since inception if the fund is newer.
- Net returns must reflect the specific fees of the advertised share class or the maximum fee available for general distribution.
- Advertisements are required to disclose the current expense ratio, reporting currency, and a clear description of the pooled fund.
- Firms must include a standardized compliance statement and a disclaimer noting that the CFA Institute does not warrant the accuracy of the content.
- In cases of regulatory conflict, firms must disclose the specific manner in which local laws differ from GIPS requirements.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
a. One-, three-, and five-year annualized returns through the most recent period. If the
pooled fund has been in existence for less than five years, the firm must also pre-
sent the annualized return since the pooled fund inception date.
b. The period-to-date return in addition to one-, three-, and five-year annualized returns
through the most recent period. If the pooled fund has been in existence for less
than five years, the firm must also present the annualized return since the pooled
fund inception date.
70 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
c. The period-to-date return in addition to five years of annual returns (or for each
annual period since the pooled fund inception date if the pooled fund has been
in existence for less than five years).
d. The annualized pooled fund return since the pooled fund inception date
through the most recent period.
8.G.3 If the gips advertisement is created for a specific pooled fund share class, and
pooled fund net returns are presented, pooled fund net returns must reflect the
fees and expenses of that specific share class.
8.G.4 If the gips advertisement is not created for a specific share class, and pooled fund
net returns are presented, pooled fund net returns must reflect the fees and
expenses of:
a. The share class with the maximum fee that is available for general distribution, or
b. All share classes.
8.G.5 The firm must clearly label pooled fund returns as gross or net of total pooled
fund fees.
8.G.6 The firm must present benchmark total returns for the same periods for which
the pooled fund is presented, unless the firm determines there is no appropriate
benchmark .
8.G.7 The firm must disclose the current expense ratio and which fees and expenses are
included in the expense ratio . The firm must disclose if performance-based fees
are not reflected in the expense ratio , if applicable.
8.G.8 The firm must disclose or otherwise indicate the reporting currency.
8.G.9 The firm must disclose the pooled fund description.
8.G.10 If laws or regulations mandate specific information about the pooled fundās risk,
as either a qualitative narrative or a quantitative metric, the firm must disclose this
information.
8.G.11 If laws or regulations do not mandate specific information about the pooled fundās risk,
the firm must choose and present an appropriate risk measure or qualitative disclosure
that a prospective investor is likely to understand.
8.G.12 The firm must disclose the benchmark description, which must include the key
features of the benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily recognized
index or other point of reference.
8.G.13 The firm must disclose the GIPS Advertising Guidelines compliance statement:
ā[Insert name of firm ] claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®). ā
8.G.14 The firm must disclose the following: āGIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the
accuracy or quality of the content contained herein. ā
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 718. GIPS Advertising Guidelines
8.G.15 The firm must disclose if the gips advertisement conforms with laws or regulations
that conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards or the
GIPS Advertising Guidelines, as well as the manner in which the laws or regulations con-
flict with the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
8.H. GIPS Advertisements for a Broad Distribution Pooled Fund
That Include PerformanceāRecommendations
GIPS Advertising and Glossary
- Firms must explicitly disclose any conflicts between GIPS standards and local laws or regulations in their advertisements.
- Broad distribution pooled fund advertisements are encouraged to disclose sales charges, loads, and the specific definition of the firm.
- The glossary defines accrual accounting as recording income when earned and expenses when incurred rather than when cash changes hands.
- Investment fees are categorized into various types, including all-in fees, bundled fees, and administrative fees like custody or auditing.
- Real estate performance is measured through capital return, which tracks value changes adjusted for expenditures and sales proceeds.
The firm must disclose if the gips advertisement conforms with laws or regulations that conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 718. GIPS Advertising Guidelines
8.G.15 The firm must disclose if the gips advertisement conforms with laws or regulations
that conflict with the requirements or recommendations of the GIPS standards or the
GIPS Advertising Guidelines, as well as the manner in which the laws or regulations con-
flict with the GIPS standards or the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
8.H. GIPS Advertisements for a Broad Distribution Pooled Fund
That Include PerformanceāRecommendations
8.H.1 If the firm determines no appropriate benchmark for the pooled fund exists, the firm
should disclose why no benchmark is presented.
8.H.2 The firm should disclose the pooled fundās sales charges and loads.
8.H.3 The firm should disclose how sales charges and loads are reflected in the pooled
fundās returns, if applicable.
8.H.4 The firm should disclose the definition of the firm .
72 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.org
GLOSSARY
accrual accounting The recording of transactions as income is earned or expenses are
incurred, rather than when income is received or expenses are paid
(i.e., cash basis).
additional risk measures Risk measures included in a gips composite report or gips pooled
fund report beyond those required to be presented.
administrative fee All fees other than transaction costs and the investment
management fee. Administrative fees may include custody
fees , accounting fees, auditing fees, consulting fees, legal fees,
performance measurement fees, and other related fees.
advisory-only assets Assets for which the firm provides investment recommendations but
has no control over implementation of investment decisions and no
trading authority.
all-in fee A type of bundled fee that can include any combination of
investment management fees, transaction costs, custody
fees , and administrative fees. All-in fees are typically offered in
certain jurisdictions where asset management, brokerage, and custody
services are offered by the same company.
benchmark A point of reference against which the compositeās or pooled
fundās returns or risk are compared.
benchmark description General information regarding the investments, structure, and charac -
teristics of the benchmark . The description must include the key fea-
tures of the benchmark or the name of the benchmark for a readily
recognized index or other point of reference.
broad distribution
pooledĀ fundA pooled fund that is regulated under a framework that would
permit the general public to purchase or hold the pooled fundās
shares and is not exclusively offered in one-on-one presentations.
bundled fee A fee that combines multiple fees into one total or ābundledā fee.
Bundled fees can include any combination of investment
management fees, transaction costs, custody fees, and/or
administrative fees. Two examples of bundled fees are wrap
fees and all-in fees.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 73Glossary
capital employed The denominator of the component return calculation, defined
as the āweighted-average equityā (weighted-average capital) during
the measurement period. Capital employed does not include any
income return or capital return earned during the measurement
period. Beginning capital is adjusted by weighting the external cash
flows that occurred during the period.
capital return The change in value of the real estate investments and cash and/
or cash equivalent assets held throughout the measurement period,
adjusted for all capital expenditures (subtracted) and net proceeds
from sales (added). The capital return is computed as a percentage
of the capital employed . Also known as ācapital appreciation returnā
or āappreciation return. ā
carried interest The profits that the general partner is allocated from the profits on
the investments made by the investment vehicle. Also known as ācarryā
or āpromote. ā
carried interest
GIPS Investment Performance Glossary
- The text defines critical financial terms for real estate and private equity, including capital return and carried interest.
- It outlines the structural requirements for composites, which aggregate portfolios with similar investment mandates or strategies.
- Specific disclosure rules are established for composite descriptions, requiring firms to include material risks and the use of leverage or derivatives.
- Operational milestones such as the crystallization schedule and composite inception date are defined to ensure standardized performance reporting.
- The concept of a clawback is introduced as a mechanism for investors to reclaim performance fees if subsequent underperformance occurs.
The repayment of previously earned performance-based fees resulting from subsequent underperformance.
flows that occurred during the period.
capital return The change in value of the real estate investments and cash and/
or cash equivalent assets held throughout the measurement period,
adjusted for all capital expenditures (subtracted) and net proceeds
from sales (added). The capital return is computed as a percentage
of the capital employed . Also known as ācapital appreciation returnā
or āappreciation return. ā
carried interest The profits that the general partner is allocated from the profits on
the investments made by the investment vehicle. Also known as ācarryā
or āpromote. ā
carried interest
descriptionInformation about the features of the carried interest calculation,
such as the hurdle rate, crystallization schedule, and high
watermark .
carve-out A portion of a portfolio that is by itself representative of a distinct
investment strategy. It may be used to create a track record for a nar -
rower mandate from a multiple-strategy portfolio managed to a
broader mandate.
clawback The repayment of previously earned performance-based fees
resulting from subsequent underperformance.
closed-end A pooled fund that is not open for subscriptions and/or
redemptions.
committed capital Pledges of capital to an investment vehicle by investors (limited
partners and the general partner ) or the firm . Committed
capital is typically drawn down over a period of time. Also known as
ācommitments. ā
component returns The capital returns and income returns of a real estate
composite, real estate pooled fund , or a benchmark .
composite An aggregation of one or more portfolios that are managed accord-
ing to a similar investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
(continued)
74 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
composite creation date The date when the firm first groups one or more portfolios
to create a composite. The composite creation date is not
necessarily the same as the composite inception date.
composite definition Detailed criteria that determine the assignment of portfolios to
composites. Criteria may include, but are not limited to, investment
mandate, style or strategy, asset class, the use of derivatives, lever -
age and/or hedging, targeted risk metrics, investment constraints or
restrictions, and/or portfolio type (e.g., segregated account or
pooled fund; taxable versus tax exempt).
composite description General information regarding the investment mandate, objective,
or strategy of the composite. The composite description may be
more abbreviated than the composite definition but must include
all key features of the composite and must include enough informa-
tion to allow a prospective client to understand the key character -
istics of the compositeās investment mandate, objective, or strategy,
including:
ā¢The material risks of the compositeās strategy.
ā¢How leverage, derivatives, and short positions may be used, if they
are a material part of the strategy.
ā¢If illiquid investments are a material part of the strategy.
composite inception date The initial date of the compositeās track record.
composite termination date The date that the last portfolio exits a composite, or the date that
the firm no longer manages the strategy for segregated accounts
or offers the strategy to prospective clients.
crystallization schedule The point in time when the firm is entitled to receive the performance-
based fee and the fee is effectively earned.
custody fee The fee payable to the custodian for the safekeeping of portfolio
assets. Custody fees are considered to be administrative fees
and typically contain an asset-based portion and a transaction-based
portion. The custody fee may also include charges for additional
services, including accounting, securities lending, and/or perfor -
mance measurement. Custodial fees that are charged per transaction
Investment Performance Glossary
- The text defines critical financial milestones such as the crystallization schedule, which marks when a firm is officially entitled to performance-based fees.
- Custody fees are categorized as administrative costs and must include transaction-based charges rather than grouping them with general transaction costs.
- A distinct business entity is defined by its organizational segregation and its autonomy over the investment decision-making process.
- Fair value is established as the price in an arm's-length transaction, prioritizing objective market prices over internal estimates whenever possible.
- The distinction between ex ante and ex post perspectives highlights the difference between theoretical projections and historical performance results.
Fair value must represent the firmās best estimate of the fair value.
or offers the strategy to prospective clients.
crystallization schedule The point in time when the firm is entitled to receive the performance-
based fee and the fee is effectively earned.
custody fee The fee payable to the custodian for the safekeeping of portfolio
assets. Custody fees are considered to be administrative fees
and typically contain an asset-based portion and a transaction-based
portion. The custody fee may also include charges for additional
services, including accounting, securities lending, and/or perfor -
mance measurement. Custodial fees that are charged per transaction
should be included in the custody fee and not included as part of
transaction costs.
direct investments Investments made directly in companies rather than investments made
in fund investment vehicles or cash and/or cash equivalents.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 75Glossary
distinct business entity A unit, division, department, or office that is organizationally and
functionally segregated from other units, divisions, departments, or
offices and that retains discretion over the assets it manages and that
should have autonomy over the investment decision-making process.
Possible criteria for determining this status include:
ā¢Being a legal entity.
ā¢Having a distinct market or client type (e.g., institutional, retail, or
private client).
ā¢Using a separate and distinct investment process.
distribution Cash or stock distributed to limited partners (or investors) from
an investment vehicle. Distributions are typically at the discretion
of the general partner (or the firm ). Distributions include both
recallable and non-recallable distributions.
dpi (realization multiple) Since-inception distributions divided by since-inception
paid-in capital .
ex ante Before the fact.
ex post After the fact.
expense ratio The ratio of total pooled fund expenses to average net assets.
TheĀ expense ratio should not reflect transaction costs.
external cash flow Capital (cash or investments) that enters or exits a portfolio .
Dividend and interest income payments are not considered external
cash flows .
external valuation An assessment of value performed by an independent third party.
fair value The amount at which an investment could be sold in an armās-length
transaction between willing parties in an orderly transaction. The valu-
ation must be determined using the objective, observable, unadjusted
quoted market price for an identical investment in an active market
on the measurement date, if available. In the absence of an objective,
observable, unadjusted quoted market price for an identical investment
in an active market on the measurement date, the valuation must rep-
resent the firmās best estimate of the fair value. Fair value must
include any accrued income.
fee schedule The firmās current schedule of investment management fees or
bundled fees appropriate to prospective clients or prospective
investors.
(continued)
76 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
firm The entity defined for compliance with the GIPS standards.
fixed commitment Having a predetermined amount of committed capital .
fixed life Having a predetermined, finite investment time horizon.
general partner Typically, the manager of a limited partnership in which the
limited partners are the other investors. The general partner
earns an investment management fee that may include a percent -
age of the limited partnershipās profits. (SeeĀ ā carried interest .ā )
gips advertisement An advertisement by a GIPS-compliant firm that adheres to the
requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
gips compliance
GIPS Standards Glossary
- The glossary defines the roles of general and limited partners within the legal structure of limited partnerships.
- Specific reporting requirements are outlined for GIPS composite and pooled fund reports to ensure standardized transparency.
- Performance metrics such as high watermarks and hurdle rates are established to determine when firms can earn performance-based fees.
- The text details technical calculation methods for internal dispersion and the handling of large cash flows to prevent return distortion.
The high watermark is the return or value that a pooled fund or segregated account must exceed for the firm to be entitled to earn a performance-based fee.
76 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
firm The entity defined for compliance with the GIPS standards.
fixed commitment Having a predetermined amount of committed capital .
fixed life Having a predetermined, finite investment time horizon.
general partner Typically, the manager of a limited partnership in which the
limited partners are the other investors. The general partner
earns an investment management fee that may include a percent -
age of the limited partnershipās profits. (SeeĀ ā carried interest .ā )
gips advertisement An advertisement by a GIPS-compliant firm that adheres to the
requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines.
gips compliance
notification formThe form required to be filed with CFA Institute to notify CFA
Institute that the firm claims compliance with the GIPS standards.
gips composite report A presentation for a composite that contains all the information
required by the GIPS standards and may also include recommended
information or supplemental information.
gips pooled fund report A presentation for a pooled fund that contains all the information
required by the GIPS standards and may also include recommended
information or supplemental information.
gips report Either a gips composite report or a gips pooled fund report .
gross-of-fees The return on investments reduced by any transaction costs.
high watermark The return or value that a pooled fund or segregated
account must exceed for the firm to be entitled to earn a
performance-based fee.
hurdle rate Minimum rate of return that a pooled fund or segregated
account must exceed in order for the investment manager to be able
to accrue a performance-based fee.
illiquid investments Investments that may be difficult to sell without a price reduction or
that cannot be sold quickly because of a lack of market or ready/willing
investors.
income return The investment income earned on all investments (including cash
and cash equivalents) during the measurement period, net of all
non-recoverable expenditures, interest expense on debt, and property
taxes. The income return is computed as a percentage of the capi -
tal employed .
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 77Glossary
internal dispersion A measure of the spread of the annual returns of individual portfo-
lios within a composite. Measures may include, but are not limited
to, high/low, range, and standard deviation (asset weighted or
equal weighted) of portfolio returns.
investment management fee The fee payable to the firm for management of a portfolio .
Investment management fees are typically asset based (percentage
of assets), performance based (see ā performance-based feeā),
or a combination of the two but may take different forms as well.
Investment management fees also include carried interest .
investment multiple (tvpi) Total value divided by since-inception paid-in capital .
large cash flow The level at which the firm determines that an external cash flow
may distort the return if the portfolio is not valued and a sub-period
return is not calculated. The firm must define the amount in terms
of the value of cash/asset flow or in terms of a percentage of the port -
folio assets or composite assets. The firm must also determine if a
large cash flow is a single external cash flow or an aggregate
of a number of external cash flows within a stated period.
limited distribution
pooledĀ fundAny pooled fund that is not a broad distribution pooled fund .
limited partner An investor in a limited partnership .
limited partnership The legal structure used by many private market investment
closed-end pooled funds. Limited partnerships are usually
fixed life investment vehicles. The general partner manages the
limited partnership pursuant to the partnership agreement.
link The method by which sub-period returns are geometrically combined
GIPS Glossary and Standards
- The text defines the legal and operational structures of investment vehicles, specifically distinguishing between limited partnerships and open-end funds.
- It provides the geometric formula for linking sub-period returns to calculate total period performance accurately.
- Specific compliance dates are established for different asset classes, with real estate and private equity requiring GIPS compliance from 2006 onwards.
- The standards mandate rigorous disclosure for performance-based fees, including details on hurdle rates, clawbacks, and high watermarks.
- Overlay strategies are defined as specialized management techniques used to adjust risk exposure or execute tactical market views separately from the underlying portfolio.
It must include enough information to allow a prospective client or prospective investor to understand the key characteristics of the performance-based fee.
of a number of external cash flows within a stated period.
limited distribution
pooledĀ fundAny pooled fund that is not a broad distribution pooled fund .
limited partner An investor in a limited partnership .
limited partnership The legal structure used by many private market investment
closed-end pooled funds. Limited partnerships are usually
fixed life investment vehicles. The general partner manages the
limited partnership pursuant to the partnership agreement.
link The method by which sub-period returns are geometrically combined
to calculate the period return, or by which periodic returns are
geometrically combined to calculate longer-period returns, using the
following formula:
Period return = [(1 + R1) Ć (1 + R2) ⦠(1 + Rn)] ā 1
where R1, R2 ⦠Rn are the sub-period or periodic returns for
sub-periods or periods 1 through n, respectively.
market value The price at which investors can buy or sell an investment at a given
time multiplied by the quantity held, plus any accrued income.
material error An error in a gips composite report or gips pooled fund report
that must be corrected and disclosed in a corrected gips composite
report or gips pooled fund report .
(continued)
78 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
minimum effective
compliance dateThe date after which a firm may present only GIPS-compliant perfor -
mance. Real estate and private equity composites and pooled
funds and wrap fee composites have a minimum effective
compliance date of 1 January 2006. All other composites and
pooled funds have a minimumĀ effective compliance date of
1Ā January 2000.
money-weighted return
(mwr)The return for a period that reflects the change in value and the timing
and size of external cash flows.
must A provision, task, or action that is mandatory or required to be
followed or performed. (See ā require/requirement .ā )
must not A task or action that is forbidden or prohibited.
net-of-fees The gross-of-fees return reduced by investment management
fees .
open-end fund A pooled fund in which the number of investors is not fixed and the
fund is open for subscriptions and/or redemptions.
overlay exposure The economic value for which a firm has investment management
responsibility. Overlay exposure is the notional value of the
overlay strategy being managed, the value of the underlying
portfolios being overlaid, or a specified target exposure.
overlay strategy A strategy in which the management of a certain aspect of an
investment strategy is carried out separately from the underlying
portfolio . Overlay strategies are typically designed either
to limit or maintain a specified risk exposure that is present in the
underlying portfolio or to profit from a tactical view on the market
by changing a portfolioās specified risk exposure.
paid-in capital Capital inflows to a pooled fund or composite. It includes
committed capital drawn down through capital calls and
distributions that are subsequently recalled and reinvested.
performance-based fee A type of investment management fee that is typically based on
the portfolioās performance on an absolute basis or relative to a
benchmark or other reference point.
performance-based fee
descriptionGeneral information regarding the performance-based fee.
ItĀ must Ā include enough information to allow a prospective client
or prospective investor to understand the key characteristics of the
performance-based fee. It must include relevant information (e.g.,
performance-based fee rate, hurdle rate, clawback , high
watermark , reset frequency, accrual frequency, crystallization
schedule) and on what basis fees are charged.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 79Glossary
performance examination A process by which an independent verifier conducts testing of a spe-
cific composite or pooled fund in accordance with the required
GIPS Performance Standards Glossary
- The text defines essential components of performance-based fees, including hurdle rates, clawbacks, and high watermarks.
- A performance examination is an independent verification process used to test specific composites or pooled funds against GIPS standards.
- Pooled fund descriptions must disclose material risks, including the use of leverage, derivatives, and illiquid investments.
- The inception date for a limited distribution pooled fund can be triggered by fee charges, capital calls, or the first investment-related cash flow.
- Private market investments are categorized as illiquid assets that are not publicly traded, such as real estate, infrastructure, and private equity.
The pooled fund description must include enough information to allow a prospective investor to understand the key characteristics of the pooled fundās investment mandate, objective, or strategy.
or prospective investor to understand the key characteristics of the
performance-based fee. It must include relevant information (e.g.,
performance-based fee rate, hurdle rate, clawback , high
watermark , reset frequency, accrual frequency, crystallization
schedule) and on what basis fees are charged.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 79Glossary
performance examination A process by which an independent verifier conducts testing of a spe-
cific composite or pooled fund in accordance with the required
performance examination procedures of the GIPS standards.
performance examination
reportA report issued by an independent verifier after a performance
examination has been performed.
performance-related
informationIncludes:
ā¢Information expressed in terms of investment return and risk.
ā¢Other information and input data that directly relate to the calcu-
lation of investment return and risk (e.g., portfolio holdings), as
well as information derived from investment return and risk input
data (e.g., performance contribution or attribution).
periodicity The length of the period over which a variable is measured (e.g., a
variable measured at a monthly periodicity consists of observations
for each month).
pic multiple Since-inception paid-in capital divided by cumulative
committed capital .
pooled fund A fund whose ownership interests may be held by more than one
investor.
pooled fund description General information regarding the investment mandate, objective, or
strategy of the pooled fund . The pooled fund description must
include enough information to allow a prospective investor to
understand the key characteristics of the pooled fundās investment
mandate, objective, or strategy, including:
ā¢The material risks of the pooled fundās strategy.
ā¢How leverage, derivatives, and short positions may be used, if they
are a material part of the strategy.
ā¢If illiquid investments are a material part of the strategy.
pooled fund gross return The return on investments reduced by any transaction costs.
pooled fund inception date The date when the pooled fundās track record starts.
For a limited distribution pooled fund , the pooled fund
inception date may be based on the following dates:
ā¢When investment management fees are first charged.
ā¢When the first investment-related cash flow takes place.
ā¢When the first capital call is made.
ā¢When the first committed capital is closed and legally binding.
(continued)
80 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
pooled fund net return The pooled fund gross return reduced by all fees and expenses,
including investment management fees, administrative fees,
and other costs.
pooled fund of funds An investment vehicle that invests in underlying investment vehicles.
pooled fund termination
dateThe date when the pooled fundās assets have all been distributed, or
when investment discretion ends.
portfolio An individually managed group of investments. A portfolio may be a
segregated account or a pooled fund , including assets managed
by a sub-advisor for which the firm has discretion over the selection
of the sub-advisor .
portfolio-weighted custom
benchmarkA benchmark created using the benchmarks of the individual
portfolios in the composite.
primary fund An investment vehicle that makes direct investments rather than
investing in other investment vehicles.
private equity Investment strategies include, but are not limited to, venture capital,
leveraged buyouts, consolidations, mezzanine and distressed debt
investments, and a variety of hybrids, such as venture leasing and
venture factoring.
private market investments Includes real assets (e.g., real estate and infrastructure), private
equity , and similar investments that are illiquid, not publicly traded,
and not traded on an exchange.
Investment Glossary and Standards
- The text defines various investment vehicles, distinguishing between primary funds that invest directly and private market investments which remain illiquid and non-public.
- Prospective clients and investors are broadly defined to include current clients exploring new strategies as well as third-party consultants representing qualified entities.
- Performance metrics for private equity and pooled funds are established through terms like realization multiples (DPI) and residual value multiples (RVPI).
- The Public Market Equivalent (PME) provides a specialized benchmark by applying public index performance to the specific cash flow timing of a private fund.
- A critical distinction is made between 'requirements,' which are mandatory actions, and 'recommendations' or 'shoulds,' which represent non-obligatory best practices.
A PME can be used as a benchmark by comparing the MWR of a composite or pooled fund with the PME of a public market index.
primary fund An investment vehicle that makes direct investments rather than
investing in other investment vehicles.
private equity Investment strategies include, but are not limited to, venture capital,
leveraged buyouts, consolidations, mezzanine and distressed debt
investments, and a variety of hybrids, such as venture leasing and
venture factoring.
private market investments Includes real assets (e.g., real estate and infrastructure), private
equity , and similar investments that are illiquid, not publicly traded,
and not traded on an exchange.
proprietary assets Investments owned by the firm , the firmās management, and/or
the firmās parent company that are managed by the firm . General
partner assets in a pooled fund are considered proprietary assets.
prospective client Any person or entity that has expressed interest in one of the firmās
composite strategies and qualifies to invest in the composite.
Current clients may also qualify as prospective clients for any
composite strategy that differs from their current investment strat -
egy. Investment consultants and other third parties are included as
prospective clients if they represent individuals or entities that
qualify as prospective clients.
prospective investor Any person or entity that has expressed interest in one of the firmās
pooled funds and qualifies to invest in the pooled fund . Current
pooled fund investors may also qualify as prospective investors
for any pooled fund that differs from their current pooled fund .
Investment consultants and other third parties are included as
prospective investors if they represent individuals or entities that
qualify as prospective investors.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 81Glossary
public market equivalent
(pme)The performance of a public market index expressed in terms of a
money-weighted return (MWR), using the same cash flows and
timing as those of the composite or pooled fund over the same
period. A PME can be used as a benchmark by comparing the
MWRĀ of a composite or pooled fund with the PME of a public
market index.
pure gross-of-fees The return on investments that is not reduced by any transaction
costs incurred during the period.
real estate Real estate includes wholly owned or partially owned:
ā¢Investments in land, including products grown from the land
(e.g.,Ā timber or crops).
ā¢Buildings under development, completed buildings, and other
structures or improvements.
ā¢Equity-oriented debt (e.g., participating mortgage loans).
ā¢Private interest in a property for which some portion of the return
to the investor at the time of investment relates to the performance
of the underlying real estate.
realization multiple (dpi) Since-inception distributions divided by since-inception
paid-in capital .
recommend/
recommendationA suggested provision, task, or action that should be followed or
performed. A recommendation is considered to be best practice
butĀ is not a requirement . (See āshould .ā )
require/requirement A provision, task, or action that must be followed or performed.
residual value The remaining equity that limited partners or investors have in an
investment vehicle at the end of the performance reporting period.
rvpi (unrealized multiple) Residual value divided by since-inception paid-in capital .
sales charges and loads The costs associated with buying or selling shares of a pooled fund .
These costs may also be known as subscription and redemption costs
or as entry and exit fees.
segregated account A portfolio owned by a single client.
should A provision, task, or action that is recommended to be followed or
performed and is considered to be best practice but is not required .
should not A task or action that is recommended not to be followed or
performed and is considered best practice not to do so.
(continued)
GIPS Glossary and Definitions
- The text defines the distinction between 'require' and 'should,' where the latter indicates recommended best practices rather than mandatory actions.
- Side pockets are explained as specialized accounts used in alternative investments to isolate illiquid or distressed assets from the main liquid portfolio.
- Significant cash flows are defined by specific monetary or percentage thresholds that allow firms to temporarily adjust for external impacts on strategy implementation.
- Standard deviation is utilized as a dual-purpose metric, measuring both internal dispersion within a composite and historical risk over time.
- The glossary introduces the concept of temporary new accounts as a mechanism to mitigate the performance distortion caused by large client-directed cash flows.
Side pockets are typically not available for investing for new pooled fund investors that invest after the side pocket was created.
require/requirement A provision, task, or action that must be followed or performed.
residual value The remaining equity that limited partners or investors have in an
investment vehicle at the end of the performance reporting period.
rvpi (unrealized multiple) Residual value divided by since-inception paid-in capital .
sales charges and loads The costs associated with buying or selling shares of a pooled fund .
These costs may also be known as subscription and redemption costs
or as entry and exit fees.
segregated account A portfolio owned by a single client.
should A provision, task, or action that is recommended to be followed or
performed and is considered to be best practice but is not required .
should not A task or action that is recommended not to be followed or
performed and is considered best practice not to do so.
(continued)
82 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
side pocket A type of account used mainly in alternative investment pooled
funds to separate illiquid investments or distressed assets from
other, more liquid investments or to segregate investments held for a
special purpose from other investments. Side pockets are typically
not available for investing for new pooled fund investors that invest
after the side pocket was created.
significant cash flow The level at which the firm determines that one or more client-directed
external cash flows may temporarily prevent the firm from imple-
menting the composite strategy. The cash flow may be defined by
the firm as a single flow or an aggregate of a number of flows within
a stated period. The measure of significance must be determined as
either a specific monetary amount (e.g., ā¬50,000,000) or a percentage of
portfolio assets (based on the most recent valuation), and no other
criteria, such as the effect of the cash flow or the number of portfo-
lios in the composite, may be considered. Transfers of assets between
asset classes within a portfolio or firm -initiated cash flows must
not be considered significant cashĀ flows.
since-inception For composites, from the composite inception date.
For pooled funds, from the pooled fund inception date.
standard deviation A measure of the variability of returns. As a measure of internal
dispersion, standard deviation quantifies the distribution of the
individual portfoliosā returns within the composite. As a measure
of historical risk, standard deviation quantifies the variability of
the composite, pooled fund , or benchmark returns over time.
Also referred to as āexternal standard deviation.ā
sub-advisor A third-party investment manager hired by the firm to manage some
or all of the assets for which a firm has investment management
responsibility. May also be referred to as a sub-manager or third-party
investment manager.
subscription line of credit A loan facility that is put in place to facilitate administration when the
firm is calling for funds from investors. Alternatively, it can be used in
lieu of calling funds from investors.
supplemental information Any performance-related information included as part of a gips
composite report or gips pooled fund report that supplements
or enhances the requirements and/or recommendations of the
GIPS standards.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 83Glossary
temporary new account An account for temporarily holding client-directed external cash
flows until they are invested according to the composite strategy or
disbursed. A firm can use a temporary new account to remove
the effect of a significant cash flow on a portfolio . When a
significant cash flow occurs in a portfolio , the firm may direct
the external cash flow to a temporary new account according
to the compositeās significant cash flow policy.
theoretical performance Performance that is not derived from a portfolio or composite
GIPS Investment Performance Definitions
- Temporary new accounts are utilized to isolate the impact of significant external cash flows from a portfolio's core strategy performance.
- Theoretical performance encompasses any data not derived from actual assets, including backtested, simulated, and forward-looking models.
- Trade date accounting requires recognizing assets within three business days of a transaction to satisfy GIPS standards.
- Transaction costs for private market investments include legal and advisory fees but specifically exclude costs associated with dead deals.
- Wrap fees represent bundled charges for investment management that often include inseparable transaction and administrative costs.
Theoretical performance includes model, backtested, hypothetical, simulated, indicative, ex ante, and forward-looking performance.
temporary new account An account for temporarily holding client-directed external cash
flows until they are invested according to the composite strategy or
disbursed. A firm can use a temporary new account to remove
the effect of a significant cash flow on a portfolio . When a
significant cash flow occurs in a portfolio , the firm may direct
the external cash flow to a temporary new account according
to the compositeās significant cash flow policy.
theoretical performance Performance that is not derived from a portfolio or composite
with actual assets invested in the strategy presented. Theoretical
performance includes model, backtested, hypothetical, simulated,
indicative, ex ante, and forward-looking performance.
time-weighted return (twr) A method of calculating period-by-period returns that reflects the
change in value and negates the effects of external cash flows.
total firm assets All discretionary and non-discretionary assets for which a firm has
investment management responsibility. Total firm assets include
assets assigned to a sub-advisor provided the firm has discretion
over the selection of the sub-advisor .
total pooled fund fees All fees and expenses charged to the pooled fund , including but not
limited to investment management fees and administrative
fees .
total return The rate of return that includes the realized and unrealized gains and
losses plus income for the measurement period.
total value Residual value plus distributions.
trade date accounting Recognizing the asset or liability on the date of the purchase or sale
and not on the settlement date. Recognizing the asset or liability
within three business days of the date upon which the transaction is
entered (trade date, T + 1, T + 2, or T + 3) satisfies the trade date
accounting requirement for purposes of the GIPS standards.
transaction costs The costs of buying or selling investments. These costs typically take
the form of brokerage commissions, exchange fees and/or taxes, and/
or bidāoffer spreads from either internal or external brokers. Custodial
fees charged per transaction should be considered custody fees
and not transaction costs. For real estate, private equity , and
other private market investments, transaction costs include
all legal, financial, advisory, and investment banking fees related to
buying, selling, restructuring, and/or recapitalizing investments but do
not include dead deal costs.
(continued)
84 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
tvpi (investment multiple) Total value divided by since-inception paid-in capital .
unrealized multiple (rvpi) Residual value divided by since-inception paid-in capital .
verification A process by which an independent verifier conducts testing of a firm
on a firm -wide basis, in accordance with the required verification
procedures of the GIPS standards.
verification report A report issued by an independent verifier after a verification has
been performed.
vintage year Two methods used to determine vintage year are:
1. The year of the investment vehicleās first drawdown or capital call
from its investors.
2. The year when the first committed capital from outside
investors is closed and legally binding.
wrap fee A type of bundled fee specific to a particular investment product.
The wrap fee is charged by a wrap fee sponsor for investment man-
agement services and typically includes associated transaction
costs that cannot be separately identified. Wrap fees can be
all-inclusive, asset-based fees and may include a combination of
investment management fees, transaction costs, custody
fees , and/or administrative fees. A wrap fee portfolio is
sometimes referred to as a āseparately managed accountā (SMA) or
āmanaged account. ā
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 85
APPENDIX A: SAMPLE GIPS COMPOSITE
REPORTS
GIPS Performance Reporting Standards
- A wrap fee is defined as a bundled, asset-based fee that covers investment management, transaction costs, and administrative services.
- The Large Cap Growth Composite report provides a decade of performance data, including gross and net returns compared against a benchmark.
- Independent verification of GIPS compliance ensures a firm's policies for composite maintenance and performance distribution are properly implemented.
- The report highlights historical changes to the composite, such as an acquisition in 2014 and shifts in account minimum requirements over time.
Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis.
investors is closed and legally binding.
wrap fee A type of bundled fee specific to a particular investment product.
The wrap fee is charged by a wrap fee sponsor for investment man-
agement services and typically includes associated transaction
costs that cannot be separately identified. Wrap fees can be
all-inclusive, asset-based fees and may include a combination of
investment management fees, transaction costs, custody
fees , and/or administrative fees. A wrap fee portfolio is
sometimes referred to as a āseparately managed accountā (SMA) or
āmanaged account. ā
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 85
APPENDIX A: SAMPLE GIPS COMPOSITE
REPORTS
SAMPLE 1 COMPOSITE WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Spinning Top Investments
Large Cap Growth Composite
1 February 2011 to 31 December 2020
YearComposite
Gross
Return
TWR
(%)Composite
Net Return
TWR
(%)Benchmark
Return
(%)3-Year Std Deviation
Number of
PortfoliosInternal
Dispersion
(%)Composite
Assets
($ M)Firm
Assets(b)
($ M)Composite
Gross
(%)Benchmark
(%)
2011(a) 2.18 1.25 1.17 31 n/a 165 n/a
2012 18.66 17.49 15.48 34 2.0 235 n/a
2013 41.16 39.80 33.36 38 5.7 344 n/a
2014 14.50 13.37 13.03 11.30 9.59 45 2.8 445 1,032
2015 6.52 5.47 5.67 12.51 10.68 48 3.1 520 1,056
2016 8.22 7.15 7.09 12.95 11.15 49 2.8 505 1,185
2017 33.78 32.48 30.18 12.29 10.53 44 2.9 475 1,269
2018 ā0.84 ā1.83 ā0.65 13.26 11.91 47 3.1 493 1,091
2019 33.08 31.78 29.76 12.81 11.71 51 3.5 549 1,252
2020 7.51 6.44 6.30 13.74 12.37 54 2.5 575 1,414
(a) Returns are for the period 1 February 2011 to 31 December 2011.
(b) Spinning Top Investments acquired the composite through an acquisition of ABC Capital in May 2014. Firm assets prior to 2014 are not presented
because the composite was not part of the firm.
Disclosures
1. Spinning Top Investments claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance
Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the
GIPS standards. Spinning Top Investments has been independently verified for the periods
1Ā January 2011 to 31 December 2020. The verification report is available upon request.
A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies and
procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards.
Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and procedures related to
composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the calculation, presentation, and
distribution of performance, have been designed in compliance with the GIPS standards
86 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assur -
ance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
2. Spinning Top Investments is an equity investment manager that invests solely in
US-based securities. Spinning Top Investments is defined as an independent invest -
ment management firm that is not affiliated with any parent organization. Spinning Top
Investments acquired ABC Capital in May 2014.
3. The Large Cap Growth Composite includes all institutional portfolios that invest in
large-cap US stocks that are considered to have growth in earnings prospects that are
superior to that of the average company within the XYZ Large Cap Growth Index. Key
material risks include the risks that stock prices will decline and that the composite will
underperform its benchmark. The account minimum for the composite is $5 million.
Prior to July 2016, the account minimum was $2 million. Prior to March 2020, the name
of the composite was the Growth Composite.
4. Performance prior to May 2014 occurred while the investment management team was
affiliated with another firm. The investment management team has managed the com-
GIPS Composite Reporting Standards
- The report details the performance of a Large Cap Growth composite, including historical links to performance earned at a previous firm.
- Fee structures are meticulously outlined, distinguishing between gross-of-fees returns and net-of-fees returns calculated using a model management fee.
- Specific criteria for composite inclusion are defined, such as a $5 million account minimum and the removal of portfolios experiencing significant cash flows over 25%.
- The document transitions into a second sample showing money-weighted returns for a Global Absolute Return Composite reported in Euros.
Effective November 1, 2011, portfolios are removed from the composite if they have a significant cash flow.
large-cap US stocks that are considered to have growth in earnings prospects that are
superior to that of the average company within the XYZ Large Cap Growth Index. Key
material risks include the risks that stock prices will decline and that the composite will
underperform its benchmark. The account minimum for the composite is $5 million.
Prior to July 2016, the account minimum was $2 million. Prior to March 2020, the name
of the composite was the Growth Composite.
4. Performance prior to May 2014 occurred while the investment management team was
affiliated with another firm. The investment management team has managed the com-
posite since its inception, and the investment process has not changed. The historical
performance has been linked to performance earned at Spinning Top Investments.
5. The benchmark is the XYZ Large Cap Growth Index, a market-capitalization-weighted
equity index of all US stocks with a market cap greater than $10 billion and a growth tilt.
6. Returns presented are time-weighted returns. Valuations are computed and performance
is reported in US dollars.
7. Gross-of-fees returns are presented before management and custodial fees but after all trad-
ing expenses. Composite and benchmark returns are presented gross of non-reclaimable
withholding taxes. Net-of-fees returns are calculated by deducting a model management fee
of 0.083%, 1/12th of the highest management fee of 1.00%, from the monthly gross compos -
ite return. The management fee schedule for separate accounts is as follows: 1.00% on the
first $25 million; 0.60% thereafter. The management fee schedule and total expense ratio for
the Large Cap Collective Fund, which is included in the composite, are 0.65% on all assets
and 0.93%, respectively.
8. Policies for valuing investments, calculating performance, and preparing GIPS reports
are available upon request.
9. A list of composite descriptions and a list of broad distribution pooled funds are available
upon request.
10. The composite was created in November 2011, and the inception date is 1 February 2011.
11. As of 1 January 2014, internal dispersion is calculated using the equal-weighted standard
deviation of annual gross returns of those portfolios that were included in the composite
for the entire year. Prior to 2014, internal dispersion was calculated using asset-weighted
standard deviation.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 87Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
12. The three-year annualized standard deviation measures the variability of the composite
gross returns and the benchmark returns over the preceding 36-month period.
13. Effective November 1, 2011, portfolios are removed from the composite if they have a
significant cash flow. A significant cash flow is defined as a contribution or withdrawal
greater than 25% of the beginning market value of a portfolio. The portfolio is removed
from the composite for the month in which the significant cash flow occurred.
14. GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
SAMPLE 2 COMPOSITE WITH MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Able Management Company
Global Absolute Return Composite
Reporting Currency: EUR
Period EndAnnualized Since-Inception MWR (%)
Number of
PortfoliosComposite
Assets
(⬠M)Total Firm
Assets
(⬠M)Composite
GrossComposite
NetCustom
Benchmark
31 Dec 2020* 7.4 6.9 5.9 8 252 11,203
*Money-weighted returns are for the period from 1 July 2012 (composite inception date) to 31 December 2020.
Able Management Company claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance
Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS
standards. Able Management Company has not been independently verified.
Disclosures
1. Definition of the Firm
GIPS Composite Performance Report
- Able Management Company claims compliance with GIPS standards for its Global Absolute Return Composite, though it has not been independently verified.
- The strategy employs a global macro approach targeting deep-value equity and fixed-income securities, including non-investment-grade bonds.
- A custom benchmark is utilized based on a modified public market equivalent (PME) of the XYZ Global Macro Index to avoid negative NAV limitations.
- The composite utilizes a sub-advisor for all equity investments and incorporates currency forwards for both hedging and alpha generation.
- Performance reporting transitioned from quarterly to daily cash flow recording for money-weighted return calculations as of January 2020.
We look for value among beaten-down equity and fixed-income securities, including both investment-grade and non-investment-grade bonds, and may use currency forwards to add value or for hedging purposes.
PortfoliosComposite
Assets
(⬠M)Total Firm
Assets
(⬠M)Composite
GrossComposite
NetCustom
Benchmark
31 Dec 2020* 7.4 6.9 5.9 8 252 11,203
*Money-weighted returns are for the period from 1 July 2012 (composite inception date) to 31 December 2020.
Able Management Company claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance
Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS
standards. Able Management Company has not been independently verified.
Disclosures
1. Definition of the Firm
Able Management Company is an independent investment management firm established
in 2007. Able Management Company manages a variety of equity, fixed-income, and bal-
anced assets, primarily for European clients.
2. Composite Description
Able Management Companyās Global Absolute Return Composite is a fixed life strategy
that uses a global macro approach to find what we believe are deep valueābased
equity and fixed-income securities. We look for value among beaten-down equity and
fixed-income securities, including both investment-grade and non-investment-grade
88 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
bonds, and may use currency forwards to add value or for hedging purposes. Key risks:
The burden of national debt, high political risks, and a possible change in monetary pol-
icy by central banks may derail the economy. Because investments include both invest -
ment- and non-investment-grade debt, there is also the risk that credit events may affect
the valuation and repayment of principal and interest. Fixed-income securities are also
subject to interest rate risk, sector and/or country risk, and industry risk. Equity secu-
rities are subject to several risks including market risk, company-specific event risk, or
becoming worthless in the case of bankruptcy. The strategy invests in currency forwards
not only for hedging purposes but also for alpha generation. There is risk that currency
bets may not work in our favor as a result of political events, central bank intervention,
or other factors not foreseen. The investments are expected to be liquidated in December
2022, and all proceeds will be distributed at that time. The composite was created in
January 2013.
3. Custom Benchmark
The benchmark is calculated using a modified public market equivalent (PME) of the
XYZ Global Macro Index, where capital calls are treated as cash flows to buy the index.
Rather than treat distributions as cash flows to sell the index, we compute the weight of
the distribution and remove the same weight. This modification tackles the negative net
asset value (NAV) limitation that can occur with the traditional LongāNickels PME cal-
culation. The XYZ Global Macro Index consists of the median returns of global macro
hedge funds that typically invest in long and short positions in international stocks and
bonds, commodities, and currencies.
4. Fees
Gross returns are gross of management fees, custodial fees, and withholding taxes but
net of all transaction costs. Net returns are net of actual management fees and transac -
tion costs but gross of custodial fees and withholding taxes.
5. Sub-Advisor
A sub-advisor was used since the compositeās inception to manage all equity investments.
6. Fee Schedule
The standard fixed annual management fee is 0.55% up to ā¬50 million and 0.35%
thereafter.
7. External Cash Flows
Effective 1 January 2020, money-weighted return (MWR) calculations use daily cash
flows. Prior to this date, external cash flows were recorded quarterly.
8. Policies
Able Management Companyās policies for valuing investments, calculating performance,
and preparing GIPS reports are available upon request.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 89Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
9. List of Composites and Pooled Funds
GIPS Compliance and Reporting
- Able Management Company transitioned from time-weighted returns to money-weighted returns in 2020 to better reflect the firm's control over cash flow timing.
- A significant error correction was disclosed where a miscalculated cash distribution led to a 1% reduction in reported annualized returns.
- ABC Investments redefined its firm structure in 2016 to integrate wrap accounts with institutional accounts for performance reporting.
- The provided Small Cap Value Wrap Composite data illustrates a decade of performance, including gross and net returns alongside internal dispersion metrics.
- Compliance with GIPS standards requires specific disclosures regarding valuation policies, fee structures, and independent verification status.
The since-inception annualized gross and net composite returns have been restated from 8.4% and 7.9% to 7.4% and 6.9%, respectively.
The standard fixed annual management fee is 0.55% up to ā¬50 million and 0.35%
thereafter.
7. External Cash Flows
Effective 1 January 2020, money-weighted return (MWR) calculations use daily cash
flows. Prior to this date, external cash flows were recorded quarterly.
8. Policies
Able Management Companyās policies for valuing investments, calculating performance,
and preparing GIPS reports are available upon request.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 89Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
9. List of Composites and Pooled Funds
A list including composite descriptions, pooled fund descriptions for limited distribution
pooled funds, and broad distribution funds is available upon request.
10. Change in Composite Returns
Given the fixed life nature of the strategy and the fact that we control the timing of cash
flows to and from portfolios, we changed the type of composite returns that are pre-
sented. Effective 1 January 2020, we changed from presenting time-weighted returns
(TWRs) to MWR because the firm believes it is the most appropriate composite return.
11. Error Correction
An incorrect amount was previously used for a cash distribution that occurred in 2020.
The since-inception annualized gross and net composite returns have been restated from
8.4% and 7.9% to 7.4% and 6.9%, respectively.
12. Trademark
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or pro-
mote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content con-
tained herein.
SAMPLE 3 WRAP FEE COMPOSITE WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
ABC Investments
Small Cap Value Wrap Composite
January 1, 2011 to December 31, 2020
YearPure Gross
Return(a)
(%)Gross
Return
(%)Net
Return
(%)Benchmark
Return
(%)Internal
Dispersion
(%)Number of
PortfoliosComposite
Assets
($ M)Firm
Assets
($ M)
2020 28.84 28.72 25.10 23.75 0.7 2,368 1,015 18,222
2019 12.30 12.20 9.01 9.79 1.1 1,730 687 17,635
2018 17.57 17.47 14.14 14.56 1.0 1,462 432 19,246
2017 10.55 10.45 7.30 7.84 1.2 928 321 14,819
2016 39.05 38.93 35.04 31.74 0.9 649 163 12,362
2015 ā6.75 ā6.75 ā9.53 ā7.47 0.8 68 1,115 7,051
2014 6.64 6.64 3.50 4.22 1.0 52 1,110 6,419
2013 45.86 45.86 41.68 34.50 1.1 46 990 5,612
2012 24.41 24.41 20.79 18.05 0.9 38 975 4,422
2011 ā4.90 ā4.90 ā7.73 ā5.50 0.8 41 870 3,632
90 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
YearComposite Pure
Gross 3-Yr Annualized
Ex Post Std Dev
(%)Benchmark
3-Yr Annualized
Ex Post Std Dev
(%)Percentage
of Wrap-Fee
Portfolios
(%)Strategy
Advisory-
Only Assets(b)
($ M)Firm
Advisory-
Only Assets(b)
($ M)
2020 13.44 12.58 100 349 1,822
2019 11.52 10.98 100 232 1,764
2018 13.99 12.62 100 102 1,925
2017 15.75 13.97 100 68 1,482
2016 17.49 15.50 100 32 1,236
2015 15.52 13.46 0 0 0
2014 14.91 12.79 0 0 0
2013 18.82 15.82 0 0 0
2012 22.65 19.89 0 0 0
2011 29.31 26.05 0 0 0
(a) Effective January 1, 2016, pure gross returns do not reflect the deduction of any expenses, including transaction costs, and
are supplemental information. See Note 6.
(b) Strategy and firm advisory-only assets are supplemental information. See Note 9.
1. ABC Investments is an independent investment adviser registered under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 and was founded in March 1996. The firm was redefined in January
2016 to include institutional and wrap accounts. Prior to January 2016, the firm included
only institutional accounts.
2. ABC Investments claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS stan-
dards. ABC Investments has been independently verified for the period from April 1,
1996 through December 31, 2020. A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS stan-
GIPS Compliance and Composite Reporting
- ABC Investments claims strict compliance with Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS) and has undergone independent verification for over two decades.
- The Small Cap Value Wrap Composite was redefined in 2016 to transition from institutional accounts to exclusively wrap fee accounts.
- The composite targets US equities with market capitalizations between $500 million and $2 billion, noting that these stocks historically exhibit higher volatility.
- Performance reporting utilizes the XYZ Small Cap Value Index as a benchmark, which tracks 800 low price-to-book ratio companies.
- Return calculations shifted in 2016 from using actual trading costs to a model transaction cost of $0.05 per share based on institutional averages.
Historically, small-cap stocks have been more volatile than large-cap stocks.
Advisers Act of 1940 and was founded in March 1996. The firm was redefined in January
2016 to include institutional and wrap accounts. Prior to January 2016, the firm included
only institutional accounts.
2. ABC Investments claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS stan-
dards. ABC Investments has been independently verified for the period from April 1,
1996 through December 31, 2020. A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS stan-
dards must establish policies and procedures for complying with all the applicable
requirements of the GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the
firmās policies and procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well
as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed in
compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis.
The Small Cap Value Wrap Composite has had a performance examination for the period
from 1 January 2016 through 31 December 2020. The verification and performance
examination reports are available upon request.
3. The Small Cap Value Wrap Composite is composed of portfolios invested in US equities
that have a market capitalization of between $500 million and $2 billion at purchase.
Historically, small-cap stocks have been more volatile than large-cap stocks. Effective
January 1, 2016, the composite was redefined to include only wrap fee accounts. Prior to
the redefinition, the composite included only institutional accounts. Performance results
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 91Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
prior to 2016 are those of the Small Cap Value Institutional Composite. Wrap accounts
are charged a wrap fee that is based not on transactions in a clientās account but is based
on a percentage of account assets. The composite inception date is February 1, 2006. The
composite was created in March 2016.
4. All returns are calculated and presented in US dollars. Policies for valuing investments,
calculating performance, and preparing GIPS reports are available upon request. A list of
composite descriptions is available upon request.
5. The benchmark is the XYZ Small Cap Value Index and is provided to represent the
investment environment existing during the periods shown. The XYZ Small Cap Value
Index is a float-adjusted, market-cap-weighted index that measures the performance of
the smallest 800 companies traded on US exchanges with low price-to-book ratios that
are included in the XYZ 3000 Value Index. The XYZ 3000 Value Index is a float-adjusted,
market-cap-weighted index that includes 3,000 of the largest companies traded on US
exchanges with low price-to-book ratios. The index is fully invested and includes the
reinvestment of income. The returns for the index do not include any trading costs, man-
agement fees, or other costs. Index returns have been taken from published sources.
6. Pure gross returns, presented as supplemental information from 2016 through 2020,
do not reflect the deduction of any trading costs, fees, or expenses. Pure gross returns
prior to 2016 reflect the deduction of transaction costs because performance is from
the Small Cap Value Institutional Composite. Effective January 1, 2016, the gross return
is calculated by applying a model transaction cost of $0.05 per share to each trade. The
firm determined the estimated transaction cost for this composite by calculating the
actual average transaction costs for accounts in the firmās Small Cap Value Institutional
Composite. Prior to January 2016, gross returns are net of actual trading costs.
7. Net returns are calculated by subtracting the highest applicable wrap fee (3.00% on an annual
GIPS Reporting and Overlay Composites
- The text details the transition from using actual trading costs to a model transaction cost of $0.05 per share for gross return calculations.
- Net returns are derived by deducting a standard 3.00% annual wrap fee, which encompasses management, custody, and administrative costs.
- Advisory-only assets are categorized as supplemental information because the firm lacks direct control over the implementation of investment decisions.
- The Passive Currency Overlay Composite performance data illustrates a strategy designed to hedge underlying portfolios to the Swiss franc.
- Internal dispersion and three-year annualized standard deviation are utilized to measure the variability and risk of the composite returns.
Effective January 1, 2016, the gross return is calculated by applying a model transaction cost of $0.05 per share to each trade.
do not reflect the deduction of any trading costs, fees, or expenses. Pure gross returns
prior to 2016 reflect the deduction of transaction costs because performance is from
the Small Cap Value Institutional Composite. Effective January 1, 2016, the gross return
is calculated by applying a model transaction cost of $0.05 per share to each trade. The
firm determined the estimated transaction cost for this composite by calculating the
actual average transaction costs for accounts in the firmās Small Cap Value Institutional
Composite. Prior to January 2016, gross returns are net of actual trading costs.
7. Net returns are calculated by subtracting the highest applicable wrap fee (3.00% on an annual
basis, or 0.25% monthly) on a monthly basis from the pure gross composite monthly return.
The standard wrap fee schedule in effect is 3.00% of total assets. Wrap fees include all charges,
transaction costs, portfolio management fees, custody fees, and other administrative fees.
8. The internal dispersion is measured by the equal-weighted standard deviation of annual
pure gross returns of those portfolios included in the composite for the full year. The
three-year annualized standard deviation measures the variability of the composite and
the benchmark returns over the preceding 36-month period.
9. Strategy advisory-only assets are assets for which ABC Investments provides investment
recommendations to another firm for portfolios managed to the composite strategy but
has no control over the implementation of investment decisions or trading authority for
the assets. Firm advisory-only assets are assets for all strategies within the firm for which
ABC Investments provides investment recommendations but has no control over the
implementation of investment decisions or trading authority for the assets. Strategy and
firm advisory-only assets are presented as supplemental information.
92 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
10. Past performance is not an indicator of future results.
11. GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
SAMPLE 4 OVERLAY COMPOSITE WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Tumble Management Limited
Passive Currency Overlay Composite
Composite Characteristics
Reporting Currency: CHF
Benchmark: Custom ā 100% Hedged
Description: The composite includes all institutional and retail passive currency overlay port -
folios that aim to hedge the underlying portfolio to the Swiss franc with a tracking
error target of 25 bps per annum. Currency forwards traded over the counter have
counterparty default risk.
Composite Inception Date: 1 July 2011
Composite Creation Date: December 2011
Calendar
YearComposite
Gross
Return
(%)Custom
Benchmark
Return
(%)Composite
Standard
Deviation
3-Yr
Annualized
(%)Benchmark
Standard
Deviation
3-Yr
Annualized
(%)Number of
PortfoliosInternal
Composite
Dispersion
(%)Year-End
Composite
Overlay
Exposure
(CHF
millions)Year-End
Firm
Overlay
Exposure
(CHF
millions)
2011* 3.88 4.03 n/a n/a 2 n/a 357 3,068
2012 10.94 11.05 n/a n/a 3 n/a 370 2,385
2013 7.02 6.97 n/a n/a 3 n/a 357 2,070
2014 3.35 3.37 1.87 1.91 5 n/a 429 1,789
2015 (13.14) (13.13) 3.56 3.59 6 n/a 611 2,451
2016 7.98 8.16 4.01 3.99 6 0.09 602 3,385
2017 6.70 6.75 4.26 4.25 7 0.15 867 5,206
2018 (13.89) (14.06) 4.17 4.17 2 n/a 203 4,820
2019 (9.06) (9.05) 3.86 3.90 2 n/a 231 3,863
2020 (7.45) (7.53) 3.08 3.12 2 n/a 275 3,379
*Partial period return for the period 1 July 2011 through 31 December 2011.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 93Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
As of 31 December 2020Composite
Gross Return
(%)Benchmark
Return
(%)
1-Year (7.45) (7.53)
3-Year annualized (10.18) (10.26)
GIPS Composite Report Sample
- The report details the performance of Tumble Management Limited, a firm specializing in currency overlay portfolios for institutional clients.
- Performance data from 2016 to 2020 shows a significant downturn, with negative annualized returns since the composite's inception.
- The firm utilizes a 'contribution from hedges' methodology, calculating performance based on marked-to-market changes relative to underlying portfolio values.
- The strategy relies heavily on forward currency contracts for leverage, making it highly sensitive to liquidity and currency correlations during volatile periods.
- Compliance with GIPS standards is verified independently, though the report notes that verification does not guarantee the accuracy of specific performance figures.
In volatile periods, liquidity and correlations between currencies may influence returns significantly.
2016 7.98 8.16 4.01 3.99 6 0.09 602 3,385
2017 6.70 6.75 4.26 4.25 7 0.15 867 5,206
2018 (13.89) (14.06) 4.17 4.17 2 n/a 203 4,820
2019 (9.06) (9.05) 3.86 3.90 2 n/a 231 3,863
2020 (7.45) (7.53) 3.08 3.12 2 n/a 275 3,379
*Partial period return for the period 1 July 2011 through 31 December 2011.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 93Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
As of 31 December 2020Composite
Gross Return
(%)Benchmark
Return
(%)
1-Year (7.45) (7.53)
3-Year annualized (10.18) (10.26)
5-Year annualized (3.45) (3.55)
Since-inception annualized (0.82) (0.81)
Since-inception cumulative (7.55) (7.39)
1. Compliance Statement
Tumble Management Limited claims compliance with the Global Investment
Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compli-
ance with the GIPS standards. Tumble Management Limited has been independently
verified for the periods 1 January 2014 to 31 December 2020. The verification report is
available upon request. A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must
establish policies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of
the GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and
procedures related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the calculation,
presentation, and distribution of performance, have been designed in compliance with
the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis. Verification does
not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
2. Definition of the Firm
Tumble Management Limited is an independent investment management firm that man-
ages currency overlay portfolios for institutional clients and is a regulated company.
3. Methodology Used to Calculate Overlay Exposure
Tumble Management Limited does not manage any of the underlying assets for its over -
lay portfolio clients. Firm overlay exposure represents the total value of all underlying
assets for which Tumble Management Limited has a mandate to manage the currency
overlay. Composite overlay exposure represents the total value of all underlying portfo-
lios being overlaid in this composite.
4. Performance Calculation for Portfolios
Portfolio performance is calculated on a contribution from hedges basis, whereby the
change in the portfolioās cumulative marked-to-market value is divided by the underlying
portfolio value being overlaid at the beginning of the period.
5. Treatment of Collateral
Management of the collateral is not part of the overlay strategy. Therefore, the value of the
collateral and any collateral income are not included in the overlay performance calculation.
94 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
6. Leverage
This strategy uses forward currency contracts extensively to sell one currency to invest
in another currency, in order to adjust the underlying portfolioās currency exposure.
InĀ volatile periods, liquidity and correlations between currencies may influence returns
significantly.
7. Custom Benchmark
The benchmark is 100% hedged. The benchmark is based on a zero-cost one-month roll-
ing hedge, whereby mid spot rates and one-month bidāoffer forward points are applied.
The composite custom benchmark is calculated using the benchmarks of the portfolios
in the composite and is rebalanced monthly based on the beginning values of the portfo-
lios. As of 31 December 2020, the custom benchmark was composed of 68% XYZ World
Index and 32% XYZ World ex-Switzerland Index. The components of the custom bench-
mark and their underlying weightings for all monthly time periods are available upon
request.
8. Fees
Performance results are presented gross of investment management fees and net of
transaction costs. The performance will be reduced by the fees associated with portfolio
GIPS Composite Reporting Standards
- The report outlines specific methodologies for custom benchmarks, including monthly rebalancing and detailed component weightings available upon request.
- Investment management fees are tiered based on notional value, with a standard rate of 0.10% up to CHF 300 million and 0.05% for larger amounts.
- Internal composite dispersion is calculated using equal-weighted standard deviation, but is omitted when a composite contains five or fewer portfolios.
- The sample data illustrates the performance of carve-outs with allocated cash, comparing gross and net returns against a high-yield bond benchmark over a ten-year period.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
in the composite and is rebalanced monthly based on the beginning values of the portfo-
lios. As of 31 December 2020, the custom benchmark was composed of 68% XYZ World
Index and 32% XYZ World ex-Switzerland Index. The components of the custom bench-
mark and their underlying weightings for all monthly time periods are available upon
request.
8. Fees
Performance results are presented gross of investment management fees and net of
transaction costs. The performance will be reduced by the fees associated with portfolio
management. The standard investment management fee schedule is 0.10% of notional
value up to CHF 300 million and 0.05% thereafter.
9. Ex Post Standard Deviation
The three-year annualized standard deviation measures the variability of the compos -
ite gross returns and the benchmark returns over the preceding 36-month period. The
three-year annualized ex post standard deviation for the composite and benchmark is
not presented for 2011 through 2013 because the composite had fewer than 36 monthly
returns.
10. Internal Composite Dispersion
The composite dispersion is measured by the equal-weighted standard deviation of the
returns for each portfolio in the composite. The measure of dispersion considers only
portfolios included in the composite for the full year. When the composite consists of
five or fewer portfolios for the full year, no dispersion measure is presented.
11. Availability of Information
A list of composite descriptions is available upon request. Policies for valuing portfolios,
calculating performance, and preparing GIPS reports are also available upon request.
12. Trademark
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or pro-
mote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content con-
tained herein.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 95Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
SAMPLE 5 COMPOSITE WITH CARVE-OUTS WITH ALLOCATED CASH AND TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Crater Capital
High Yield Bond Carve-Out Composite
1 January 2011 to 31 December 2020
YearCarve-Out
Composite
Gross
of Fees
Return
(%)Carve-Out
Composite
Net of
Fees
Return
(%)Benchmark
Return
(%)Internal
DispersionNumber of
AccountsComposite
Assets
($ M)Carve-Outs
As a % of
Composite
Assets(a)Firm
Assets
($ M)
2020 18.33 17.82 16.57 0.46 14 839 82 54,382
2019 7.54 7.07 7.24 0.53 11 680 86 53,954
2018 4.23 3.77 4.04 0.42 12 605 91 50,310
2017 7.73 7.26 7.21 n/a 7 553 95 48,357
2016 18.79 18.28 16.50 n/a ā¤5 491 100 45,107
2015 ā4.59 ā5.01 ā3.98 n/a ā¤5 485 100 38,719
2014 2.54 2.09 2.29 n/a ā¤5 384 100 40,323
2013 7.80 7.33 6.43 n/a ā¤5 389 100 39,420
2012 18.32 17.81 15.08 n/a ā¤5 309 100 37,039
2011 6.34 5.88 5.40 n/a ā¤5 213 100 32,185
(a) Represents the percentage of the composite that is composed of carve-outs with allocated cash.
The creation and inception dates of the High Yield Bond Carve-Out Composite are January 2020 and March 2009, respectively.
Carve-Out
Composite
Gross Return
3-Yr Annualized
Ex Post St Dev Benchmark
Return
3-Yr Annualized
Ex Post St Dev
2020 6.43 6.02
2019 5.11 4.88
2018 5.93 5.46
2017 6.20 5.45
2016 6.66 5.87
2015 5.99 5.17
2014 5.09 4.32
2013 6.72 5.64
2012 7.02 6.09
96 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
High Yield Bond Composite
(Composite of Standalone Portfolios)
1 January 2017 to 31 December 2020
Standalone Composite
Gross of Fees Return
(%)Standalone Composite
Net of Fees Return
(%)Standalone Composite
Assets
($ M)
2020 18.25 17.71 155
2019 6.92 6.42 93
2018 4.44 3.96 57
2017 7.11 6.62 27
The inception date of the High Yield Bond Composite is 1 January 2017.
1. Crater Capital claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
GIPS High Yield Bond Reporting
- Crater Capital presents a performance report for its High Yield Bond Composite covering the period from 2017 to 2020, claiming compliance with GIPS standards.
- The firm underwent independent verification from 2008 to 2019 to ensure its policies for composite maintenance and performance distribution meet global standards.
- The strategy focuses on high-risk fixed-income securities rated BB or lower, with a primary objective of generating high current income for investors.
- The composite includes carve-outs where cash is allocated monthly based on the relative value of the high-yield segment to the total portfolio.
- Performance is benchmarked against the XYZ US High Yield Corporate Bond Index, which tracks dollar-denominated bonds from specific geographic regions.
High-yield bonds carry increased levels of credit and default risk and are less liquid than government and investment-grade corporate bonds.
96 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
High Yield Bond Composite
(Composite of Standalone Portfolios)
1 January 2017 to 31 December 2020
Standalone Composite
Gross of Fees Return
(%)Standalone Composite
Net of Fees Return
(%)Standalone Composite
Assets
($ M)
2020 18.25 17.71 155
2019 6.92 6.42 93
2018 4.44 3.96 57
2017 7.11 6.62 27
The inception date of the High Yield Bond Composite is 1 January 2017.
1. Crater Capital claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS stan-
dards. Crater Capital has been independently verified for the periods 1 January 2008 to
31 December 2019. The verification report is available upon request.
A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies and
procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards.
Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and procedures related to
composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the calculation, presentation, and
distribution of performance, have been designed in compliance with the GIPS standards
and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assur -
ance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
2. For the purpose of complying with the GIPS standards, the firm is defined as Crater Capital,
an independent investment advisor registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
3. The High Yield Bond Carve-Out Composite includes all segregated accounts and
high yield bond carve-outs invested in this strategy. The investment objective of the
High Yield Bond strategy is to provide investors with a high level of current income.
Accounts managed to the strategy will be primarily invested in US high-yield/high-risk
fixed-income securities rated BB or lower by a nationally recognized statistical rating
organization (NRSRO). Up to 5% of account assets may be invested in investment-grade
bonds. High-yield bonds carry increased levels of credit and default risk and are less
liquid than government and investment-grade corporate bonds. Some accounts in the
composite are carve-outs that have allocated cash. Cash and cash returns are allocated
to each account monthly, based on the high-yield segmentās beginning value relative to
the total portfolioās beginning value, excluding cash. The GIPS Composite Report for the
High Yield Bond Composite, which includes only standalone segregated accounts man-
aged to the strategy, is available upon request.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 97Appendix A: Sample GIPS Composite Reports
4. The composite benchmark is the XYZ US High Yield Corporate Bond Index. The XYZ
US High Yield Corporate Bond Index is designed to track the performance of US dollarā
denominated, high-yield corporate bonds issued by companies whose country of risk
use official G-10 currencies and excludes those countries that are members of the
UnitedĀ Nations Eastern European Group. Qualifying securities must have a below-
investment-grade rating and maturities of one or more months at purchase. The index
isĀ fully invested, which includes the reinvestment of dividends/interest and capital gains.
The returns for the index do not include any transaction costs, management fees, or
other costs.
5. Composite returns are presented both gross and net of management fees. All composite
returns are net of transaction costs and gross of withholding taxes, if any, and reflect the
reinvestment of income and other earnings. The composite net-of-fees returns are cal-
GIPS Compliance and Reporting
- The text details the methodology for calculating composite returns, including the deduction of management fees and the reinvestment of earnings.
- A tiered fee schedule is outlined, showing decreasing percentage costs as the total value of assets under management increases.
- Internal dispersion and three-year annualized ex post standard deviation are used to measure the variability and risk of the composite returns.
- A sample GIPS report for the Japan Large Cap Equity Fund illustrates a decade of performance data, including gross and net returns compared to a benchmark.
- Verification of GIPS compliance ensures that a firm has established rigorous policies and procedures for performance presentation.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
investment-grade rating and maturities of one or more months at purchase. The index
isĀ fully invested, which includes the reinvestment of dividends/interest and capital gains.
The returns for the index do not include any transaction costs, management fees, or
other costs.
5. Composite returns are presented both gross and net of management fees. All composite
returns are net of transaction costs and gross of withholding taxes, if any, and reflect the
reinvestment of income and other earnings. The composite net-of-fees returns are cal-
culated by deducting 1/12th of the top tier of the management fee schedule (0.50%) from
the monthly gross composite return. Actual fees may vary depending on the applicable
fee schedule and the size of the account. All returns are calculated and presented in US
dollars.
6. The current standard management fee schedule for a segregated account managed to the
composite strategy is as follows:
Ī0.50% on the first $50 million.
Ī0.40% on the next $200 million.
Ī0.30% on all assets above $250 million.
7. The internal dispersion is calculated using the asset-weighted standard deviation of
account gross returns included in the composite for the full year. For those periods with
five or fewer accounts included for the entire year, ān/aā is noted because the dispersion
is not considered meaningful.
8. The three-year annualized ex post standard deviation measures the variability of the
composite and the benchmark returns over the preceding 36-month period.
9. Policies for valuing investments, calculating performance, and preparing GIPS reports
are available upon request. Also available are the List of Composite Descriptions, the
List of Pooled Fund Descriptions for Limited Distribution Pooled Funds, and the List of
Broad Distribution Pooled Funds.
10. GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
98 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.org
APPENDIX B: SAMPLE GIPS POOLED
FUND REPORTS
SAMPLE 1 POOLED FUND WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Pudoru Investments
Japan Large Cap Equity Fund
1 April 2011 to 31 March 2021
31 MarchFund
Gross
Return
(%)Fund
Net
Return
(%)Benchmark
Return
(%)3-Year Annualized
Return3-Year Annualized
Standard Deviation
Fund
Assets
(Ā„ B)Firm
Assets
(Ā„ B)Fund
Gross
(%)Benchmark
(%)Fund
Gross
(%)Benchmark
(%)
2012 2.25 1.49 2.11 n/a n/a n/a n/a 18.4 35.1
2013 19.33 18.45 16.00 n/a n/a n/a n/a 29.8 51.5
2014 40.20 39.18 32.39 19.60 16.18 14.22 11.94 49.7 78.6
2015 15.25 14.40 13.69 24.46 20.41 10.62 8.97 55.3 103.3
2016 1.45 0.69 1.38 17.91 15.13 12.16 10.47 57.6 124.7
2017 13.53 12.69 11.96 9.90 8.87 12.04 10.60 61.8 150.8
2018 23.51 22.60 21.83 12.46 11.41 11.28 9.93 63.3 143.3
2019 ā8.02 ā8.72 ā7.58 8.85 8.02 12.65 11.80 49.9 146.2
2020 ā3.86 ā4.58 ā3.67 2.98 2.74 14.20 13.56 61.6 165.6
2021 16.46 15.60 15.06 0.99 0.80 18.16 17.00 68.9 185.8
Pudoru Investments claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS standards.
Pudoru Investments has been independently verified for the periods from 1 April 2011
to 31Ā March 2021. A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish
policies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS
standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and procedures
Pudoru Investments GIPS Report
- Pudoru Investments claims compliance with Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS) for its Japan-based equity management services.
- The Japan Large Cap Equity Fund focuses on long-term capital appreciation, maintaining at least 80% of assets in Japanese common and preferred stocks.
- The report highlights specific demographic risks, noting that Japan's aging population and potential tax increases for healthcare could stifle economic growth.
- Performance data is reported in Japanese yen, with gross returns calculated before management fees but after trading and administrative expenses.
- The fund underwent a leadership transition in January 2019 when portfolio manager Koh Yuwabara retired and was succeeded by Yuna Tanaka.
Japanās population is aging, and the government may have to increase taxes as it spends more on healthcare, which could slow economic growth at a time when Japan has been in a prolonged economic downturn.
Pudoru Investments claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS standards.
Pudoru Investments has been independently verified for the periods from 1 April 2011
to 31Ā March 2021. A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish
policies and procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS
standards. Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and procedures
related to composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the calculation, presentation,
and distribution of performance, have been designed in compliance with the GIPS standards
and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis. The Japan Large Cap Equity Fund has had
a performance examination for the periods from 1 April 2015 to 31 March 2021. The verifica-
tion and performance examination reports are available upon request.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 99Appendix B: Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
Pudoru Investments is an equity investment manager that invests solely in Japan-based
securities.
The Japan Large Cap Equity Fund (the āFundā) seeks to achieve long-term capital appre-
ciation by investing primarily in large-cap equity securities of Japanese issuers. Under
normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets (including the
amount of any borrowings for investment purposes) in common and preferred stocks of
large-capitalization companies. The Fund may from time to time emphasize one or more
sectors in selecting its investments, including the financial services sector. The value of
the Fundās assets may be adversely affected by economic and social demographics. Japanās
population is aging, and the government may have to increase taxes as it spends more on
healthcare, which could slow economic growth at a time when Japan has been in a prolonged
economic downturn. The Fund may borrow up to 30% of its net asset value. Historically, the
Fundās borrowing level has averaged less than 1% of net assets and has never exceeded 10%.
Leverage may also magnify losses as well as gains to the extent that leverage is used.
The benchmark is the XYZ Japan Large Cap Index, which is designed to measure the per -
formance of the large-cap segment of the Japanese market. The index is fully invested and
includes the reinvestment of dividends.
Valuations are computed and performance is reported in Japanese yen. Policies for valu-
ing investments, calculating performance, and preparing GIPS reports are available upon
request.
Gross returns are presented before the deduction of management fees but reflect the deduc -
tion of all trading and administrative expenses. Share Class A is used to calculate Fund gross
returns. Net returns are calculated by deducting 1/12th of the management fee (0.75% annu-
ally, for all share classes) from the monthly gross Fund return. The total expense ratios for
Class A and Class I as of the Fundās most recent fiscal year end (31 March 2021) were 1.50%
and 1.35%, respectively.
A list of composite and pooled fund descriptions is available upon request.
The inception date of the Fund is 1 April 2011, which is the first day assets were invested in
the strategy.
The three-year annualized standard deviation measures the variability of the Fund and the
benchmark returns over the preceding 36-month period.
In January 2019, Koh Yuwabara, the Fundās portfolio manager, retired. Yuna Tanaka became
the portfolio manager.
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or promote
this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
100 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
SAMPLE 2 POOLED FUND WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Linker Advisors
Juneau Private Placements Bond Fund
GIPS Pooled Fund Performance Reporting
- Linker Advisors presents a performance report for the Juneau Private Placements Bond Fund in compliance with Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS).
- The fund focuses on illiquid, investment-grade, long-term private placement bonds that are highly sensitive to interest rate fluctuations.
- Financial data from 2014 to 2020 shows fund assets growing from C$250 million to C$404 million while consistently tracking or exceeding the XYZ Canadian Long Duration Fixed Income Index.
- The fee structure includes a 0.40% annual management fee plus a 20% performance fee on returns exceeding the benchmark, crystallizing annually.
- The report notes a significant leadership transition in January 2019 when portfolio manager Koh Yuwabara retired and was succeeded by Yuna Tanaka.
Private placement bonds are illiquid investments and have restrictions on transferability.
request.
Gross returns are presented before the deduction of management fees but reflect the deduc -
tion of all trading and administrative expenses. Share Class A is used to calculate Fund gross
returns. Net returns are calculated by deducting 1/12th of the management fee (0.75% annu-
ally, for all share classes) from the monthly gross Fund return. The total expense ratios for
Class A and Class I as of the Fundās most recent fiscal year end (31 March 2021) were 1.50%
and 1.35%, respectively.
A list of composite and pooled fund descriptions is available upon request.
The inception date of the Fund is 1 April 2011, which is the first day assets were invested in
the strategy.
The three-year annualized standard deviation measures the variability of the Fund and the
benchmark returns over the preceding 36-month period.
In January 2019, Koh Yuwabara, the Fundās portfolio manager, retired. Yuna Tanaka became
the portfolio manager.
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or promote
this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content contained herein.
100 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
SAMPLE 2 POOLED FUND WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Linker Advisors
Juneau Private Placements Bond Fund
1 January 2014 to 31 December 2020
YearFund Gross
Return
(%)Benchmark
Return
(%)Fund Gross
3-Yr Std Dev
(%)Benchmark
3-Yr Std Dev
(%)Fund
Assets
(C$ M)Firm
Assets
(C$ M)
2014 2.15 2.20 250 1,050
2015 7.01 6.83 265 1,202
2016 6.12 6.07 2.82 2.80 310 1,225
2017 ā2.83 ā3.84 3.90 4.11 301 1,227
2018 9.31 9.23 3.74 3.96 336 1,306
2019 8.52 9.74 3.47 3.76 362 1,350
2020 4.59 2.62 2.64 2.74 404 1,411
1. Linker Advisors claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS stan-
dards. Linker Advisors has not been independently verified.
2. Linker Advisors is a privately owned investment manager registered in all provinces in
Canada as a Portfolio Manager and as an Investment Fund Manager in Ontario. The firm
primarily provides services to insurance companies, corporations, investment compa-
nies, pension and profit-sharing plans, endowments, and state or municipal government
entities. Linker Advisors invests in the public equity, private placement, alternative invest -
ment, and fixed-income markets both domestically in Canada and throughout the world.
3. The Juneau Private Placement Bond Fund invests in investment-grade, long-term, fixed
rate private placement bonds denominated in Canadian dollars, in a variety of industries.
Private placement bonds are illiquid investments and have restrictions on transferabil-
ity. The fund primarily invests in private placement bonds with maturities greater than
10Ā years that are, therefore, sensitive to changes in interest rates. Investments in the fund
are subject to credit risk.
4. The benchmark is the XYZ Canadian Long Duration Fixed Income Index, which consists
of Canadian investment-grade corporate bonds with a maturity of 10 years or longer. The
fund is valued monthly.
5. Gross fund returns are net of transaction costs and do not reflect the deduction of any pooled
fund fees or costs. The management fee is 0.40% per annum. In addition, there is a perfor -
mance fee of 20% of the excess return over the benchmark return. Performance fees crystalize
each 31 December, and the performance fee calculation resets. The total expense ratio was
0.78% as of 31 December 2020. All returns and assets are presented in Canadian dollars.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 101Appendix B: Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
6. The fund inception date is 1 January 2014, which is the date of the first investment.
7. Lists of composite descriptions, limited distribution pooled fund descriptions, and broad
GIPS Real Estate Fund Reporting
- The CMCA Core Commercial Real Estate Fund utilizes a fee structure consisting of a 0.40% management fee and a 20% performance fee on excess returns.
- A detailed performance table tracks gross and net returns alongside benchmark data for the fund from 2012 through 2020.
- Independent verification of GIPS compliance confirms that firm-wide policies for performance calculation and presentation meet global standards.
- Verification provides assurance on the design and implementation of firm policies but does not guarantee the accuracy of specific performance reports.
- The fund focuses on Class A commercial properties in the US and Canada, including office, retail, industrial, and multi-family sectors.
Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
fund fees or costs. The management fee is 0.40% per annum. In addition, there is a perfor -
mance fee of 20% of the excess return over the benchmark return. Performance fees crystalize
each 31 December, and the performance fee calculation resets. The total expense ratio was
0.78% as of 31 December 2020. All returns and assets are presented in Canadian dollars.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 101Appendix B: Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
6. The fund inception date is 1 January 2014, which is the date of the first investment.
7. Lists of composite descriptions, limited distribution pooled fund descriptions, and broad
distribution pooled funds are available upon request.
8. Policies for valuing investments, calculating performance, and preparing GIPS reports
are available upon request.
9. The three-year annualized ex post standard deviation measures the variability of monthly
net returns of the fund and benchmark over the preceding 36 months.
10. GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
SAMPLE 3 REAL ESTATE POOLED FUND WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
CMCA Core Commercial Real Estate Fund
1 March 2012 to 31 December 2020
Calendar
YearFund
Capital
Returns
Gross
(%)Fund
Income
Returns
Gross
(%)Fund
Total
Returns
Gross
(%)Fund
Total
Returns
Net
(%)Benchmark
Returns
(%)Fund
Assets
($ M)Firm
Assets
($ M)
3/12ā12/12 7.33 5.25 12.59 10.94 12.05 1,370 2,385
2013 3.51 5.18 8.71 7.02 5.97 1,357 2,070
2014 0.07 4.99 5.07 3.35 2.37 1,429 1,789
2015 (16.36) 4.78 (11.54) (13.14) (13.13) 1,611 2,451
2016 4.61 4.97 9.63 7.98 8.16 1,602 3,385
2017 3.69 4.68 8.40 6.70 7.75 1,867 5,206
2018 3.34 4.50 7.85 6.13 4.99 1,203 4,820
2019 0.71 4.51 5.25 3.65 4.33 1,231 3,863
2020 3.59 4.43 8.02 6.37 5.21 1,275 3,379
1. Compliance Statement
Commercial Mortgage Corporation of America (CMCA) claims compliance with the
Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this
report in compliance with the GIPS standards. CMCA has been independently verified
for the periods 1 January 2014 to 31 December 2020. The verification report is available
upon request.
102 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
A firm that claims compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies and
procedures for complying with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards.
Verification provides assurance on whether the firmās policies and procedures related to
composite and pooled fund maintenance, as well as the calculation, presentation, and
distribution of performance, have been designed in compliance with the GIPS standards
and have been implemented on a firm-wide basis. Verification does not provide assur -
ance on the accuracy of any specific performance report.
2. Definition of the Firm
CMCA is an independent investment management firm established in 2011. CMCA
invests in and manages commercial properties for our clients with a focus on the United
States and Canada.
3. Fund Description
The Core Commercial Real Estate Fund, an open-end fund, invests in Class A commer -
cial properties across the US, including office buildings, retail space, industrial proper -
ties, and luxury multi-family dwellings. Key risks of investing in commercial real estate
include the following: interest rate riskāan increasing interest rate environment may
negatively affect valuations and drive up borrowing costs; liquidity riskācommercial
Core Commercial Real Estate Fund
- The Core Commercial Real Estate Fund focuses on Class A properties in the US and Canada, including office, retail, industrial, and luxury multi-family sectors.
- Key investment risks identified include interest rate fluctuations, liquidity constraints in selling physical assets, and sensitivity to economic downturns.
- The fund utilizes a moderate leverage strategy of 15% to 30%, which serves to magnify both potential gains and losses for investors.
- Valuations are conducted quarterly using internal projections of cash flows and market discount rates, with external valuations performed annually.
- Performance is measured against the XYZ National Core Commercial Property Index, which maintains an equal 25% weighting across four major property types.
Therefore, it may take longer to sell a property, and property values could move down before we have the chance to realize any unrealized gains.
invests in and manages commercial properties for our clients with a focus on the United
States and Canada.
3. Fund Description
The Core Commercial Real Estate Fund, an open-end fund, invests in Class A commer -
cial properties across the US, including office buildings, retail space, industrial proper -
ties, and luxury multi-family dwellings. Key risks of investing in commercial real estate
include the following: interest rate riskāan increasing interest rate environment may
negatively affect valuations and drive up borrowing costs; liquidity riskācommercial
real estate properties are less liquid than many other asset classes, including stocks
and bonds. Therefore, it may take longer to sell a property, and property values could
move down before we have the chance to realize any unrealized gains; economic riskā
commercial property tends to do better when the economy is expanding. During eco-
nomic downturns, commercial real estate prices may take longer to recover than other
asset classes. A moderate level of leverage, typically ranging between 15 and 30%, is used.
Leverage magnifies gains and losses. Performance is compared to the XYZ National Core
Commercial Property Index.
4. Inception Date
The performance inception date of the fund is 1 March 2012, which is the first day an
investment took place.
5. Benchmark
The XYZ National Core Commercial Property Index is an index of geographically diverse
commercial properties across the United States. Benchmark returns are a monthly time
series of unlevered US commercial properties weighted 25% office, 25% retail, 25% indus -
trial, and 25% multi-family housing. Benchmark returns are calculated quarterly.
6. Returns and Fees
Capital expenditures, tenant improvements, and lease commissions are capitalized,
included in the cost of property, and reflected in the capital returns. Gross returns are
net of actual transaction costs, custodial, and administrative fees. Net returns are net
of actual transaction costs, custodial and administrative fees, and management fees.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 103Appendix B: Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
Net returns are from the institutional (I share) class. All returns and asset values are
expressed in US dollars. The management fee schedule for the I share class is 0.80% per
annum. The total expense ratio of the I share class was 1.65% as of 31 December 2020.
7. Ex Post Standard Deviation
The three-year annualized ex post standard deviation for the fund and benchmark are
not presented because fund returns are calculated quarterly and monthly returns are not
available.
8. Valuations
Investments are valued and returns are calculated quarterly. Internal valuations are deter -
mined by applying market discount rates to future projections of gross cash flows and
capitalized terminal values over the expected holding period for each asset. To the extent
debt is used, the debt is valued separately from the real estate. Properties are externally
valued annually. All investments are valued using subjective, unobservable inputs.
9. Availability
A list of composite and limited distribution pooled fund descriptions, as well as a list
of broad distribution pooled funds, are available on request. Policies for valuing invest -
ments, calculating performance, and preparing GIPS Reports are available upon request.
10. Trademark
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
SAMPLE 4 POOLED FUND WITH MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURNS AND SUBSCRIPTION LINE OF CREDIT
Armor Management
Armor Distressed Debt Fund
1 July 2012 to 31 December 2020
YearSince-inception Money-Weighted Returns
Fund
Assets
(⬠M)Fund
Uncalled
Committed
Capital
(⬠M)Total
Firm
Assets
(⬠M)Firm
Uncalled
Committed
Capital
(⬠M)Combined
Firm Uncalled
Committed
Capital and
Total Firm
GIPS Pooled Fund Reporting
- The report provides a standardized performance presentation for the Armor Distressed Debt Fund, utilizing money-weighted returns to account for capital calls and distributions.
- A significant portion of the fund's assets, specifically 25%, is valued internally using proprietary pricing models due to a lack of market activity for those specific distressed bonds.
- The presentation distinguishes between returns with and without the use of a subscription line of credit, showing how leverage impacts the fund's net performance figures.
- Armor Management claims compliance with GIPS standards and has undergone independent verification to ensure their policies for performance calculation and distribution are properly implemented.
- The fund's strategy involves high-risk investments in euro-denominated bonds rated CCC or lower, making it sensitive to European Central Bank policy and corporate defaults.
There is no market activity to support valuation for these investments; therefore, valuations are based on the firmās proprietary pricing model using the Euro XYZ Index Swaps yield curve and credit spreads.
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
SAMPLE 4 POOLED FUND WITH MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURNS AND SUBSCRIPTION LINE OF CREDIT
Armor Management
Armor Distressed Debt Fund
1 July 2012 to 31 December 2020
YearSince-inception Money-Weighted Returns
Fund
Assets
(⬠M)Fund
Uncalled
Committed
Capital
(⬠M)Total
Firm
Assets
(⬠M)Firm
Uncalled
Committed
Capital
(⬠M)Combined
Firm Uncalled
Committed
Capital and
Total Firm
Assets
(⬠M)Fund
with
Line of
Credit
(net)
(%)(1)Custom
Benchmark
(%)(1)Fund
without
Line of
Credit
(net)
(%)(2)Custom
Benchmark
(%)(2)
2020 3.50 2.90 2.50 2.32 252 100 11,203 1,497 12,700
(1) Return is for the period from 1 July 2012 (date of the first capital call) through 31 December 2020. See Note 10.
(2) Return is for the period from 16 May 2011 (date of the first fund investment) through 31 December 2020. See Note 10.
104 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
YearSince-Inception
Paid in Capital
(⬠M)Cumulative
Committed Capital
(⬠M)Since-Inception
Distributions
(⬠M)Investment
Multiple
(TVPI)Realization
Multiple
(DPI)Unrealized
Multiple
(RVPI)PIC
Multiple
(PIC)
2020 200 300 20 1.2 0.1 1.1 0.7
Armor Management claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®) and has prepared and presented this report in compliance with the GIPS standards.
Armor Management has been independently verified for the periods 1 October 2007 through
31 December 2020. The verification report is available upon request. A firm that claims
compliance with the GIPS standards must establish policies and procedures for complying
with all the applicable requirements of the GIPS standards. Verification provides assurance
on whether the firmās policies and procedures related to composite and pooled fund main-
tenance, as well as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been
designed in compliance with the GIPS standards and have been implemented on a firm-wide
basis. Verification does not provide assurance on the accuracy of any specific performance
report.
1. Definition of the Firm
Armor Management is an independent investment management firm established in
2007. Armor Management manages a variety of equity, fixed-income, and balanced
assets, primarily for European clients.
2. Currency
Performance is calculated and reported in euros (ā¬).
3. Pooled Fund Description
The Armor Distressed Debt Fundās returns reflect the EUR share class. The fund invests
at least 85% of its assets in distressed euro-denominated bonds that have credit ratings of
CCC or lower by at least one major credit rating agency. Key risks include widening cor -
porate spreads and defaults, high levels of government debt, and elevated political ten-
sions, which could lead to abrupt changes in monetary policy by the European Central
Bank (ECB). A material amount of the fundās investments may be illiquid.
4. Valuation
As of 31 December 2020, 25% of the fundās investments were internally valued. There is
no market activity to support valuation for these investments; therefore, valuations are
based on the firmās proprietary pricing model using the Euro XYZ Index Swaps yield
curve and credit spreads.
5. Custom Benchmark
The custom benchmark return is calculated by applying the investment cash flows of
the Armor Distressed Debt Fund to the XYZ Eurozone Distressed Debt Bond Index.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 105Appendix B: Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
TheĀ index reflects a portfolio of euro-denominated distressed debt bonds issued in
Eurozone countries that generally have credit ratings of CCC or lower from the main
rating agencies and are listed on the XYZ platforms.
6. Returns and Fees
GIPS Reporting and Disclosures
- The Armor Distressed Debt Fund utilizes a custom benchmark based on the XYZ Eurozone Distressed Debt Bond Index for performance comparison.
- Fund returns are reported net of all fees, including transaction costs, administrative fees, and management fees.
- The use of a subscription line of credit (LOC) can significantly magnify money-weighted returns by delaying capital calls from limited partners.
- GIPS compliance requires specific disclosures regarding valuation policies, fee schedules, and the impact of leverage on performance metrics.
- Sample advertisements demonstrate how firms must claim compliance with GIPS standards while providing contact information for full performance data.
This generally will magnify gains or losses in money-weighted returns.
The custom benchmark return is calculated by applying the investment cash flows of
the Armor Distressed Debt Fund to the XYZ Eurozone Distressed Debt Bond Index.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 105Appendix B: Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
TheĀ index reflects a portfolio of euro-denominated distressed debt bonds issued in
Eurozone countries that generally have credit ratings of CCC or lower from the main
rating agencies and are listed on the XYZ platforms.
6. Returns and Fees
Fund returns are net of actual total fund fees and are calculated using the assets of the
limited partners. Total fund fees include transaction costs, custodian and other admin-
istrative fees, and management fees. The return with the subscription line of credit
(LOC) begins at the time of the first capital call from the limited partners which reduces
the performance period. This generally will magnify gains or losses in money-weighted
returns. The return without the subscription LOC begins with the date of the first fund
investment. All returns reflect the deduction of fees and expenses for the subscription
LOC.
7. List of Composite and Pooled Fund Descriptions
A list of composite and limited distribution pooled fund descriptions is available upon
request.
8. Policies
Armor Managementās policies for valuing investments, calculating performance, and
preparing GIPS reports are available upon request.
9. Fee Schedule
The fixed management fee for the fund is 0.55% per annum. The total expense ratio as of
the most recent year end was 0.86%.
10. Subscription Line of Credit
The fund has a subscription line of credit of ā¬50 million, of which ā¬20 million is out -
standing as of 31 December 2020. The subscription line of credit allows the fund to pur -
chase securities without the need to immediately call capital. Interest paid on the line of
credit is LIBOR plus 1.5%. The subscription line of credit does not affect the amount of
capital called or the committed capital amount.
11. Trademark
GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
106 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.org
APPENDIX C: SAMPLE GIPS ADVERTISEMENTS
SAMPLE 1 GIPS ADVERTISEMENT WITHOUT PERFORMANCE
Chippee Asset Management
Chippee Asset Management is a credit-focused alternative asset manager providing a
range of credit services. Chippee Asset Management claims compliance with the Global
Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®). GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute.
CFA Institute does not endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accu-
racy or quality of the content contained herein.
To obtain GIPS-compliant performance information for the firmās strategies and products,
please contact us at info@chippeeassetmanagement.com.
SAMPLE 2 GIPS ADVERTISEMENT FOR A COMPOSITE WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Feppy Investments
Mid Cap Growth Composite
Firm Description
Founded in March 1996, Feppy Investments is an independent investment adviser registered
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The firm manages global equity, fixed-income,
and balanced strategies, and it was redefined in October 2016 to include both institutional
and wrap accounts. Prior to October 2016, the firm included only institutional accounts.
Investment Approach
GIPS Compliance and Performance Reporting
- Feppy Investments provides a sample advertisement for its Mid Cap Growth Composite, showcasing annualized total returns against a benchmark index.
- The firm utilizes a bottom-up security selection approach based on the belief that equity markets are inefficient and alpha can be added through research.
- Bella Management Company presents a different reporting style for its CLO Senior Loan Fund, utilizing money-weighted returns (MWR) instead of time-weighted returns.
- Both advertisements include mandatory GIPS compliance claims and disclaimers stating that CFA Institute does not warrant the accuracy of the content.
- The documents highlight the transition of firm definitions, such as Feppy Investments expanding to include wrap accounts in its 2016 redefinition.
The management team believes that equity markets are inefficient and that a bottom-up security selection approach can add alpha.
SAMPLE 2 GIPS ADVERTISEMENT FOR A COMPOSITE WITH TIME-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Feppy Investments
Mid Cap Growth Composite
Firm Description
Founded in March 1996, Feppy Investments is an independent investment adviser registered
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The firm manages global equity, fixed-income,
and balanced strategies, and it was redefined in October 2016 to include both institutional
and wrap accounts. Prior to October 2016, the firm included only institutional accounts.
Investment Approach
The management team believes that equity markets are inefficient and that a bottom-up
security selection approach can add alpha. The team does extensive research to identify
companies with sustainable growth and high return on invested capital to drive consistent
returns. The management team looks for firms that have good business models and are led
by management teams with a track record of investing capital wisely.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 107Appendix C: Sample GIPS Advertisements
Annualized Total Returns through December 31, 2020
Inception Date: January 1, 2009
Benchmark: XYZ Mid Cap Growth Index
Annualized YTD 1 Year 3 Year 5 Year 10 Year Since Inception
Composite gross returns 12.59% 12.59% 2.22% 8.05% 10.08% 14.26%
Composite net returns 11.98% 11.98% 1.66% 7.46% 9.48% 13.64%
Benchmark returns 12.11% 12.11% 1.80% 7.24% 9.37% 13.42%
ā5.0%0.0%5.0%10.0%15.0%20.0%25.0%30.0%35.0%40.0%
2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011Annual T otal R eturns
Gross Net Benchmark
The Mid Cap Growth Composite includes all fully discretionary, institutional accounts man-
aged to the composite strategy. Accounts are primarily invested in US companies whose
market capitalization, at time of initial purchase, falls within the capitalization range of the
XYZ Mid Cap Growth Index. The stock selection process emphasizes sustainable growth and
high return on invested capital. All performance is reported in US dollars.
Feppy Investments claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®). GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse or
promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content con-
tained herein. To obtain a GIPS Composite Report, please call 952-867-5309 or email us at
Performance@feppyinvestments.com.
Other Information
Performance figures are based on historical information and do not guarantee future results.
Prospective clients should recognize the limitations inherent in the composite strategy and
should consider all information presented by Feppy Investments regarding the firmās invest -
ment management capabilities. Registration with the SEC does not imply a certain level of
skill or training.
108 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
SAMPLE 3 GIPS ADVERTISEMENT FOR A LIMITED DISTRIBUTION POOLED FUND
WITH MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURNS
Bella Management Company
CLO Senior Loan Fund
PeriodAnnualized
Since-Inception
Net MWR
(%)Annualized
Since-Inception
XYZ Leveraged
Loan Bond
Index MWR
(%)
1 Feb 2015 to 30 Sept 2021 3.50 2.90
Bella Management Company claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance
Standards (GIPSĀ®). GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not
endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the con-
tent contained herein.
Definition of the Firm
Bella Management Company is an independent investment management firm established in
2007. Bella Management Company manages a variety of pooled fund and separate account
equity, fixed-income, and balanced assets.
Pooled Fund Description
The CLO Senior Loan Fund invests at least 85% of its assets in floating-rate senior secured
non-investment-grade bank loans. The fundās benchmark is the XYZ Leveraged Loan Bond
Index.
Performance
GIPS Advertisement Sample Reports
- The text provides standardized templates for investment firms to advertise pooled funds while complying with Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS).
- Bella Management Company illustrates a CLO Senior Loan Fund that utilizes money-weighted returns and specific inception dates based on capital calls.
- Ipne Investments presents a Global Bond Fund fact sheet detailing asset allocation, turnover rates, and specific risk measures like the Sharpe ratio.
- The Global Bond Fund strategy emphasizes flexibility, allowing for tactical allocation across sectors and the use of derivatives for long or short exposure.
- Both samples highlight the necessity of disclosing management fees, expense ratios, and benchmark comparisons to ensure transparency for potential investors.
The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it can invest a greater percentage of its assets in the securities of fewer issuers than can a diversified fund.
Standards (GIPSĀ®). GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not
endorse or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the con-
tent contained herein.
Definition of the Firm
Bella Management Company is an independent investment management firm established in
2007. Bella Management Company manages a variety of pooled fund and separate account
equity, fixed-income, and balanced assets.
Pooled Fund Description
The CLO Senior Loan Fund invests at least 85% of its assets in floating-rate senior secured
non-investment-grade bank loans. The fundās benchmark is the XYZ Leveraged Loan Bond
Index.
Performance
Returns are money-weighted returns (MWR) for the period from 1 February 2015 (inception
date) through 30 September 2021. The inception date of 1 February 2015 represents the date
the first capital call was made. Fund returns reflect the deduction of all fund fees and costs,
including asset-based management fees and performance fees. All performance is reported
in British pounds.
To obtain a GIPS Pooled Fund Report, please contact investor relations at +(44) (0) 20
1111-1111 or email us at investorrelations@bellamanagement.com.uk.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 109Appendix C: Sample GIPS Advertisements
SAMPLE 4 GIPS ADVERTISEMENT FOR A BROAD DISTRIBUTION POOLED FUND
Ipne Investments
Global Bond Fund Fact Sheet
Performance as of 12/31/20
A Adviser C Institutional R
Share Class Symbol IBG1Z DBG2Z ABG3Z CBG4Z RGB5Z
Fund Information
Fund inception 1/1/09
Fiscal year end 12/31
Total net assets (all classes, $B) $1.43
Number of holdings 263
Turnover rate (1-year, %) 68
Average effective duration (years) 6.34
Weighted average life (years) 8.73
Management fee (annual, all classes) 0.65%
Total expense ratio (annual, Class A) 1.00%
Investment Objective: The Fund seeks to provide shareholders with high current income
and capital appreciation consistent with a moderate level of risk.
Investment Strategy
ā¢Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest 80% of Fund net assets in debt
obligations of issuers located in at least three different countries, which may include the
United States.
ā¢The Fund may invest up to 20% of assets in non-investment-grade fixed-income
securities.
ā¢The Fund may invest in debt instruments of any maturity and does not seek to maintain a
particular dollar-weighted average maturity.
ā¢The Fund generally invests at least 40% of its net assets in debt obligations of foreign gov -
ernments and companies.
ā¢The Fund may invest in derivatives, including forward contracts, futures contracts, and
swap contracts. The use of derivative instruments allows the Fund to obtain net long or
short exposure to selected currencies, interest rates, credit risks, and duration risks.
ā¢The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it can invest a greater percentage of its
assets in the securities of fewer issuers than can a diversified fund.The Global Bond Fund seeks to provide high current
income and capital appreciation consistent with a
moderate level of risk. The Fund is a core portfolio
that invests across global fixed-income markets. The
Fund has the flexibility to tactically allocate across
sectors, credit qualities, countries, and currencies,
allowing for a broadly diversified strategy focused
on risk-adjusted returns. The portfolio management
team uses both fundamental and quantitative analy -
ses to identify securities with the best relative value.
110 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Benchmark: XYZ Global Bond Index
Base currency of the Fund: USD
Risk Measuresā3 Years
Sharpe ratio 0.20
Annualized ex post standard deviationāNet returns, Class A 2.88
Annualized ex post standard deviationāBenchmark 2.72
Average Annualized Total Returns
Inception Date: 1/1/2009
GIPS Performance and Risk Disclosure
- Ipne Investments presents a decade of performance data for its global bond fund, claiming compliance with Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS).
- The fund utilizes a combination of fundamental and quantitative analyses to select securities with optimal relative value against the XYZ Global Bond Index.
- Risk metrics reveal a Sharpe ratio of 0.20 and an annualized standard deviation of 2.88, indicating the fund's historical risk-return efficiency and volatility.
- The disclosure outlines critical investment risks, including active management failure, credit defaults, currency volatility, and the leverage risks associated with derivatives.
- Performance data shows the fund closely tracks its benchmark over the long term, with a 3.05% return since inception compared to the benchmark's 3.02%.
Derivatives involve costs and can create economic leverage in the Fundās portfolio, which may result in significant volatility and cause the Fund to participate in losses (as well as gains) in an amount that significantly exceeds the Fundās initial investment.
team uses both fundamental and quantitative analy -
ses to identify securities with the best relative value.
110 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Benchmark: XYZ Global Bond Index
Base currency of the Fund: USD
Risk Measuresā3 Years
Sharpe ratio 0.20
Annualized ex post standard deviationāNet returns, Class A 2.88
Annualized ex post standard deviationāBenchmark 2.72
Average Annualized Total Returns
Inception Date: 1/1/2009
Annualized as of 12/31/20 YTD* 1 Year 3 Year 5 Year 10 Year Since Inception
Net returns, Class A 4.73% 4.73% 0.24% 1.35% 2.37% 3.05%
Benchmark 4.63% 4.63% 0.49% 1.53% 2.39% 3.02%
*Year to date returns are not annualized.
Annual Returns 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011
Net returns, Class A 4.73% ā0.91% ā2.94% 3.44% 2.64% 0.30% 6.25% ā2.79% 4.73% 8.95%
Benchmark 4.63% ā0.54% ā2.48% 3.55% 2.66% 0.57% 5.95% ā2.02% 4.23% 7.86%
Ipne Investments claims compliance with the Global Investment Performance Standards
(GIPSĀ®). Founded in 2010, Ipne Investments invests in global equity and fixed-income
securities. GIPSĀ® is a registered trademark of CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not endorse
or promote this organization, nor does it warrant the accuracy or quality of the content
contained herein.
The benchmark is the XYZ Global Bond Index. This index covers the global investment-grade
fixed-rate bond market, including government, credit, and collateralized securities. Indexes
are unmanaged and do not incur fees. It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
The total Fund expense ratio is calculated based on the Fundās average net assets during the
Fundās most recently completed fiscal year and has not been adjusted for current asset levels.
The expense ratio includes operating costs, including administrative, compliance, distribu-
tion, management, marketing, shareholder services, and record-keeping fees. Please see the
Fundās prospectus for additional details.
The Sharpe ratio is a measure of risk-adjusted performance that measures a portfolioās riskā
return efficiency. The risk-free rate used to calculate the Fundās Sharpe ratio is the 90-day
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 111Appendix C: Sample GIPS Advertisements
Treasury bill. The annualized ex post standard deviation measures the variability of the Class
A net returns and the benchmark returns over the preceding 36-month period.
Primary Risks of the Fund
An investment in the Fund involves risks, including those described below. There is no
assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective, and you may lose money.
Active Management Risk: As a result of the investment management teamās investment deci-
sions, the Fund could underperform its benchmark index and/or other funds with similar
investment objective or strategies.
Credit Risk: An issuer of debt securities may fail to make interest payments or repay principal
when due, in whole or in part.
Currency Risk: Currency rates may fluctuate significantly over short or extended periods of
time (i.e., may be extremely volatile), which could result in losses to the Fund if currencies do
not perform as the investment manager expects. Changes in currency exchange rates affect
the value of the investments that the Fund owns and the Fundās share price.
Derivatives Risk: The performance of derivative instruments depends largely on the perfor -
mance of an underlying currency, security, interest rate or index, and such instruments often
have risks similar to the underlying instrument, in addition to other risks. Derivatives involve
costs and can create economic leverage in the Fundās portfolio, which may result in signifi-
cant volatility and cause the Fund to participate in losses (as well as gains) in an amount that
significantly exceeds the Fundās initial investment.
Investment Risks and Composites
- Derivative instruments can create economic leverage that leads to losses significantly exceeding the initial investment.
- Emerging market investments face heightened risks due to a lack of established legal, political, and social frameworks.
- High-yield debt securities, or junk bonds, are more vulnerable to economic recessions and suffer from higher illiquidity.
- Sovereign debt defaults may leave investors with no legal remedies or bankruptcy proceedings to recover unpaid principal.
- Composite descriptions define specific investment strategies, such as US Large Cap Equity Growth and US Balanced Growth.
In the event of default, there may be limited or no legal remedies for collecting sovereign debt and there may be no bankruptcy proceedings through which the Fund may collect all or part of the sovereign debt that a governmental entity has not repaid.
Derivatives Risk: The performance of derivative instruments depends largely on the perfor -
mance of an underlying currency, security, interest rate or index, and such instruments often
have risks similar to the underlying instrument, in addition to other risks. Derivatives involve
costs and can create economic leverage in the Fundās portfolio, which may result in signifi-
cant volatility and cause the Fund to participate in losses (as well as gains) in an amount that
significantly exceeds the Fundās initial investment.
Emerging Market Countries Risk: The Fundās investments in emerging market countries are
subject to all of the risks of foreign investing generally and have additional heightened risks
because of a lack of established legal, political, business, and social frameworks to support
securities and currency markets.
Foreign Securities Risk: Investing in foreign securities typically involves more risks than
investing in US securities, including risks associated with (i) internal and external political
and economic developments, (ii) trading practices, (iii) availability of information, (iv) lim-
ited markets, and (v) currency exchange rate fluctuations and policies.
High-Yield Debt Securities Risk: Issuers of lower-rated or āhigh-yieldā debt securities (also
known as ājunk bondsā) are not as strong financially as those issuing higher-credit-quality
debt securities. High-yield debt securities are more likely to encounter financial difficulties
and are more vulnerable to changes in the relevant economy, such as a recession or a sus -
tained period of rising interest rates, that could affect their ability to make interest and prin-
cipal payments when due. The prices of high-yield debt securities generally fluctuate more
112 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
than those of higher credit quality. High-yield debt securities are generally more illiquid
(harder to sell).
Prepayment Risk: The risk that borrowers will repay a loan more quickly in periods of falling
interest rates.
Sovereign Debt Risk: The Fund may invest in US and non-US government debt securities
(āsovereign debtā). Some investments in sovereign debt, such as US sovereign debt, are con-
sidered low risk. Investments in sovereign debt, especially the debt of less developed coun-
tries, can involve a high degree of risk, however, including the risk that the governmental
entity that controls the repayment of sovereign debt may not be willing or able to repay the
principal and/or to pay the interest on its sovereign debt in a timely manner. In the event
of default, there may be limited or no legal remedies for collecting sovereign debt and there
may be no bankruptcy proceedings through which the Fund may collect all or part of the
sovereign debt that a governmental entity has not repaid.
Performance data shown represents past performance and is no guarantee of, and not neces -
sarily indicative of, future results.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 113
APPENDIX D: SAMPLE LISTS
List of Composite Descriptions
1. US Large Cap Equity Growth Composite
The US Large Cap Equity Growth Composite includes all segregated accounts and pooled
funds that invest in large-capitalization US stocks considered to have earnings growth pros -
pects that are superior to that of the average company within the benchmark, the XYZ Large
Cap Growth Index. The targeted tracking error is less than 4% per annum.
2. US Balanced Growth Composite
The US Balanced Growth Composite includes all balanced segregated accounts and pooled
funds that invest in large-cap US equities and investment-grade bonds, including government,
corporate, mortgage-backed, and asset-backed securities. The strategyās investment goal is to
Investment Composite Strategy Profiles
- The US Large Cap Equity Growth Composite targets companies with superior earnings prospects while maintaining a tracking error under 4%.
- The US Balanced Growth strategy maintains a typical equity allocation of 55% to 65% to provide both capital growth and steady income.
- Unconstrained Activist UK Equity portfolios are highly concentrated with approximately 15 securities, leading to significant stock-specific risk.
- Activist strategies may utilize OTC derivative contracts for portfolio management, introducing potential counterparty default risk.
- The UK Liquidity Plus Composite prioritizes capital preservation and liquidity through short-dated instruments with a duration under one year.
In times of increased market volatility, the composite characteristics may change significantly, and stock liquidity could be reduced.
The US Large Cap Equity Growth Composite includes all segregated accounts and pooled
funds that invest in large-capitalization US stocks considered to have earnings growth pros -
pects that are superior to that of the average company within the benchmark, the XYZ Large
Cap Growth Index. The targeted tracking error is less than 4% per annum.
2. US Balanced Growth Composite
The US Balanced Growth Composite includes all balanced segregated accounts and pooled
funds that invest in large-cap US equities and investment-grade bonds, including government,
corporate, mortgage-backed, and asset-backed securities. The strategyās investment goal is to
provide long-term capital growth and steady income through the creation of a well-diversified
portfolio. Although the strategy allows for equity exposure ranging between 50% and 70%, the
typical allocation is between 55% and 65%.
3. Unconstrained Activist UK Equity Composite
The Unconstrained Activist UK Equity Composite includes all segregated accounts and pooled
funds invested in both listed and unlisted UK equities that pursue an activist investment pol-
icy. There is no restriction on the market capitalization of companies held. Portfolios within
this composite are highly concentrated, holding approximately 15 securities. Returns may
have a lower correlation with the benchmark return than a fully diversified strategy. In times
of increased market volatility, the composite characteristics may change significantly, and
stock liquidity could be reduced. Because of the strategyās concentrated nature, portfolios tend
to have more stock-specific risk than a more diversified strategy. The strategy cannot employ
leverage, but portfolios may use both exchange-traded and OTC derivative contracts for effi-
cient portfolio management, which may expose the strategy to counterparty default risk.
4. Unconstrained Activist UK Equity Carve-Out Composite
The Unconstrained Activist UK Equity Carve-Out Composite includes all accounts, including
carve-out accounts with allocated cash, and pooled funds invested in both listed and unlisted
UK equities that pursue an activist investment policy. There is no restriction on the market
capitalization of companies held. Portfolios within this composite are highly concentrated,
holding approximately 15 securities. Returns may have a lower correlation with the bench-
mark return than a fully diversified strategy. In times of increased market volatility, the com-
posite characteristics may change significantly and stock liquidity could be reduced. Because
of the strategyās concentrated nature, portfolios tend to have more stock-specific risk than a
more diversified strategy. The strategy cannot employ leverage, but portfolios may use both
114 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
exchange-traded and OTC derivative contracts for efficient portfolio management, which may
expose the strategy to counterparty default risk.
5. UK Liquidity Plus Composite
The UK Liquidity Plus Composite includes all segregated accounts and pooled funds invested
in a broad range of short-dated interest-bearing deposits, cash equivalents, short-term com-
mercial paper, and other money market investments issued by major UK clearing banks and
lending institutions. The strategy has a targeted modified duration of less than one year. The
principal investment objectives are preservation of capital, maintenance of liquidity, and pro-
vision of yield greater than that available for the benchmark, the three-month risk-free rate.
The UK Liquidity Plus strategy differs from more-conventional cash strategies in that it addi-
tionally holds short-term commercial paper, which has a greater exposure to credit risk.
6. Emerging Market High Yield Fixed Income Composite
Investment Composite Strategies
- The UK Liquidity Plus strategy prioritizes capital preservation and liquidity while seeking higher yields through short-term commercial paper.
- Emerging Market High Yield funds target total returns from non-OECD debt but face heightened political, economic, and counterparty default risks.
- Socially Responsible Investments (SRI) focus on companies meeting proprietary sustainability thresholds, potentially leading to higher portfolio concentration.
- Leveraged Bond strategies utilize a mix of domestic and international fixed-income securities to maximize total returns despite interest rate volatility.
The SRI process tends to screen out certain companies and sectors, which may result in a more concentrated strategy than a fully diversified strategy.
mercial paper, and other money market investments issued by major UK clearing banks and
lending institutions. The strategy has a targeted modified duration of less than one year. The
principal investment objectives are preservation of capital, maintenance of liquidity, and pro-
vision of yield greater than that available for the benchmark, the three-month risk-free rate.
The UK Liquidity Plus strategy differs from more-conventional cash strategies in that it addi-
tionally holds short-term commercial paper, which has a greater exposure to credit risk.
6. Emerging Market High Yield Fixed Income Composite
The Emerging Market High Yield Fixed Income Composite includes all pooled funds invested
in high-yield debt securities issued by companies outside the OECD. The strategy allows for
investment in foreign currencyādenominated assets over which the manager has full dis -
cretion on hedging. Currency hedging may include instruments such as forward contracts,
futures, or foreign exchange derivatives, which may expose the strategy to counterparty
default risk. The strategy aims to deliver a total return primarily through income but with
some capital growth. High-yield bonds carry increased levels of credit and default risk and
areĀ less liquid than government and investment-grade corporate bonds. Investment in less
regulated markets carries increased political, economic, and issuer risk. Inherent in fixed-
income investing is interest rate and duration risk. Increases to interest rates may nega-
tively affect portfolio valuations. Those risks are magnified when portfolios are invested in
bonds with long-dated maturities. The benchmark is the XYZ Emerging Market Bond Index,
USDĀ Hedged.
7. Socially Responsible Investments (SRI) Global Equity Composite
The Socially Responsible Investments Global Equity Composite includes all segregated
accounts and pooled funds that invest in global equity securities issued by companies that
make a positive contribution to society and the environment through sustainable and socially
responsible practices. Only securities of companies that meet our proprietary SRI score
threshold are allowed. The strategy aims to provide long-term capital appreciation together
with a growing income stream through investment in a portfolio of core equity holdings diver -
sified by economic sector, industry group, and geographic business concentration. All foreign
currency exposures are fully hedged to US dollars using forward contracts, futures, or foreign
exchange derivatives. Foreign exchange forwards and derivatives traded over the counter have
counterparty default risk. The SRI process tends to screen out certain companies and sectors,
which may result in a more concentrated strategy than a fully diversified strategy. The bench-
mark is the XYZ World SRI Index.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 115Appendix D: Sample Lists
8. Leveraged Bond Composite
The Leveraged Bond Composite includes all segregated accounts in a diversified range of high-
yield corporate and government bonds, with the aim of providing investors with a high level
of income while seeking to maximize the total return. The accounts are invested in domestic
and international fixed-income securities of varying maturities. Inherent in fixed-income
investing are interest rate risk and duration risk. Increases to interest rates may negatively
affect portfolio valuations. These risks are magnified when portfolios are invested in bonds
with long-dated maturities. The strategy also allows investment in exchange-traded and OTC
Investment Composite Risk Profiles
- The Leveraged Bond Composite seeks high income through corporate and government bonds while allowing leverage up to twice the portfolio's value.
- The Global Commodity Equity Composite invests primarily in common stocks of energy and materials companies, with limited direct exposure to raw materials.
- Commodity-based strategies face unique volatility risks driven by legislative changes, national policies, and shifting consumer behaviors.
- The Currency Overlay Composite focuses on active alpha generation through exchange rate movements, particularly in volatile emerging markets.
- Derivative instruments across these composites introduce significant counterparty default risk and potential magnification of losses.
Leverage may also magnify losses as well as gains to the extent that leverage is used.
The Leveraged Bond Composite includes all segregated accounts in a diversified range of high-
yield corporate and government bonds, with the aim of providing investors with a high level
of income while seeking to maximize the total return. The accounts are invested in domestic
and international fixed-income securities of varying maturities. Inherent in fixed-income
investing are interest rate risk and duration risk. Increases to interest rates may negatively
affect portfolio valuations. These risks are magnified when portfolios are invested in bonds
with long-dated maturities. The strategy also allows investment in exchange-traded and OTC
derivative contracts (including, but not limited to, options, futures, swaps, and forward cur -
rency contracts) for the purposes of risk, volatility, and currency exposure management. The
strategy allows leverage up to but not exceeding twice the value of a portfolioās investments
through the use of repurchase financing arrangements with counterparties. Inherent in deriv -
ative instrument investments is the risk of counterparty default. Leverage may also magnify
losses as well as gains to the extent that leverage is used. The benchmark is the XYZ Global
Aggregate Bond Index. The strategy is managed with a maximum tracking error of 6% to 8%
per annum.
9. Global Commodity Equity Composite
The Global Commodity Equity Composite includes segregated accounts that globally invest in
a diversified range of companies that provide exposure to commodities, energy, and materials.
Investment is primarily through the common stock of these companies. Investment directly
in raw materials is allowable to a maximum exposure of 10%. Exchange-traded funds and
exchange-traded commodity securities up to a maximum 20% exposure are also allowed. The
base currency is US dollars, and any or all of the currency risk associated with investments
in currencies other than US dollars may be hedged between 0% and 100% using forward con-
tracts, futures, or foreign exchange derivatives. The strategy cannot employ leverage but may
use exchange-traded derivative instruments for efficient portfolio management.
Investments directly or indirectly in commodities may add to portfolio volatility. Global com-
modity prices can be affected by changes in legislation, national and supra-national policies,
and consumer behaviors. In times of commodity price volatility, the liquidity of directly held
commodities and the correlation with the broad market can change quickly. Foreign exchange
forwards and derivatives traded over the counter have counterparty default risk. In those
instances in which currency risk is not hedged, the strategy may be exposed to exchange-rate
risk that may create fluctuating gains and/or losses.
10. Currency Overlay Composite
The Currency Overlay Composite includes all segregated accounts invested in a broad range
of foreign currencyādenominated instruments, such as forward contracts, futures, or foreign
exchange derivatives. The principal investment objective is active alpha generation through
currency appreciation from movements in exchange rates where the original currency expo-
sures stem from a global or international portfolio. Currency-related investing carries inher -
ent risks related to changes in macroeconomic policy, which can be amplified in the case of
116 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
emerging markets, where political regime shifts and changes in the control of capital may
be more prevalent than in developed markets. In volatile periods, liquidity and correlations
between currencies may change expected returns drastically. Foreign exchange forwards and
derivatives traded over the counter have counterparty default risk.
11. Tactical Asset Allocation Overlay Composite
The Tactical Asset Allocation Overlay Composite includes all segregated accounts in which
Investment Composite Risk Profiles
- Global and emerging market portfolios face significant risks from macroeconomic policy shifts, political instability, and currency volatility.
- The Tactical Asset Allocation Overlay strategy utilizes high leverage up to 180% and derivatives to profit from asset class exposure shifts.
- Covered call writing strategies aim to generate monthly income and downside protection but remain susceptible to disproportionate price movements in derivatives.
- The Asian Market Neutral strategy employs a quantitative long/short approach to outperform Treasury Bills while maintaining high exposure in both directions.
- Counterparty default risk is a persistent concern across all strategies involving over-the-counter derivatives and forward contracts.
A leveraged account may result in large fluctuations in value and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
sures stem from a global or international portfolio. Currency-related investing carries inher -
ent risks related to changes in macroeconomic policy, which can be amplified in the case of
116 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
emerging markets, where political regime shifts and changes in the control of capital may
be more prevalent than in developed markets. In volatile periods, liquidity and correlations
between currencies may change expected returns drastically. Foreign exchange forwards and
derivatives traded over the counter have counterparty default risk.
11. Tactical Asset Allocation Overlay Composite
The Tactical Asset Allocation Overlay Composite includes all segregated accounts in which
the investment approach is designed to profit from the increase/decrease in exposure to one
or more asset classes. Managing the collateral is part of the strategy. The accounts in this com-
posite are hedged to euros using forward contracts, futures, or foreign exchange derivatives.
Allocation shifts are typically implemented via long and short futures, options, and swaptions.
This strategy allows leverage up to but not exceeding 180% of each accountās value. Accounts
are expected to have an investment exposure above 100%. Inherent in derivative instruments
is the risk of counterparty default. A leveraged account may result in large fluctuations in
value and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
12. Covered Call Writing Overlay Composite
The Covered Call Writing Overlay Composite is composed of all segregated accounts for
which covered call writing is conducted to generate additional income for an underlying large-
cap US equity portfolio. The strategy seeks to generate monthly option premium income while
protecting against downward moves in the underlying portfolio through selling covered calls
with a monthly duration on US equities held in the underlying portfolio, either at the money
or slightly out of or in the money. The use of derivatives, such as equity options, can involve a
high degree of financial risk because a relatively small movement in the price of the underlying
security or benchmark may result in an unexpected or disproportionately large movement,
unfavorable or favorable, in the price of the derivative instrument. The strategy does not use
leverage.
13. Asian Market Neutral Composite
The Asian Market Neutral Composite includes all segregated accounts with a market-neutral
strategy that invests in publicly traded companies with market capitalizations greater than
$500 million in developed and emerging Asian markets. The strategyās principal objective is to
outperform the return of the three-month US Treasury Bill by at least 1 percentage point per
annum. The strategy uses a risk-controlled quantitative screening and optimization process
that invests at least 85% of the net asset value in long equity positions and at least 85% of the
net asset value in short equity positions. The strategyās long portion overweights those securi-
ties that have been quantitatively identified as potentially exhibiting superior and sustainable
earnings growth compared with the market. The strategyās short portion consists of securities
that have been identified as having inferior growth prospects or that may also be adversely
affected by either specific events or momentum considerations. The strategy may engage in
currency hedging using instruments such as forward contracts, futures, or foreign exchange
Asian and US Investment Strategies
- The Asian Market Neutral strategy utilizes a high-conviction approach by investing at least 85% of net asset value in both long and short equity positions.
- The Value-Added Asian Real Estate strategy focuses on income and capital appreciation by targeting properties requiring operational or financial correction.
- Leveraged US Direct Lending targets middle-market companies with high EBITDA, utilizing significant leverage up to 150% to enhance returns.
- These active strategies carry inherent risks including counterparty default on derivatives, illiquidity in real estate, and magnified losses from leverage.
- The US Core Equity Composite represents a terminated strategy that focused on large-capitalization stocks using a growth at a reasonable price (GARP) approach.
Leverage may magnify losses as well as gains to the extent that it is used.
that invests at least 85% of the net asset value in long equity positions and at least 85% of the
net asset value in short equity positions. The strategyās long portion overweights those securi-
ties that have been quantitatively identified as potentially exhibiting superior and sustainable
earnings growth compared with the market. The strategyās short portion consists of securities
that have been identified as having inferior growth prospects or that may also be adversely
affected by either specific events or momentum considerations. The strategy may engage in
currency hedging using instruments such as forward contracts, futures, or foreign exchange
derivatives.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 117Appendix D: Sample Lists
The Asian Market Neutral strategy seeks to balance exposures between long and short posi-
tions so that broad market movements are neutralized. In certain market conditions, the
investment process behind the strategy can give rise to unmatched country, sector, industry,
market capitalization, and/or style bias exposures in the portfolio. Investment in less regulated
markets carries increased political, economic, and issuer risk. Foreign exchange forwards and
derivatives traded over the counter have counterparty default risk. This active trading strategy
involves significantly greater stock turnover when compared to passive strategies.
14. Value-Added Asian Real Estate Composite
The Value-Added Asian Real Estate Composite consists of all portfolios managed within the
value-added investment strategy. The strategy has an equal focus on income and capital appre-
ciation. The strategy invests in multi-family, office, industrial, and retail property types within
developed Asian markets that require correction or mitigation of the investmentsā operating,
financial, redevelopment, and/or management risk(s). A level of leverage ranging between
60% and 80% is used. Leverage may magnify losses as well as gains to the extent that it is used.
All foreign currency exposures are fully hedged to Singapore dollars using forward contracts,
futures, or foreign exchange derivatives. Foreign exchange forwards and derivatives traded
over the counter have counterparty default risk. Real estate investments are generally illiquid.
15. Leveraged US Direct Lending Senior Composite
The Leveraged US Direct Lending Senior Composite includes all pooled funds that primar -
ily invest in directly originated, US dollarādenominated first lien and unitranche loans to
high-quality US middle market companies. Middle market companies are generally defined
as having $10 million to $150 million of EBITDA and are primarily backed by private equity
sponsors. The strategy seeks to generate higher levels of income and total return than the
broadly syndicated leveraged loan market, with less volatility. The strategy uses leverage to
increase returns. The target level of leverage is 100% with a maximum allowable level of 150%.
Directly originated loans are generally illiquid and carry increased liquidity risk. Leverage may
magnify gains as well as losses to the extent that it is used. Funds in the composite are struc -
tured as drawdown funds, whereby the firm has control over capital calls and distributions.
Terminated Composites
1. US Core Equity Composite
The US Core Equity Composite includes all segregated accounts and pooled funds managed to
a growth at a reasonable price (GARP) strategy through investment in a high-quality, focused
portfolio of domestic, large-capitalization stocks expected to generate returns above the XYZ
Investment Strategy and Fund Descriptions
- Directly originated loan strategies target private equity-backed companies with $10 million to $150 million of EBITDA to generate higher income than syndicated markets.
- The US Core Equity Composite utilized a quantitative and fundamental GARP strategy for large-cap stocks before its termination in March 2018.
- The Stable Growth 2022 Fund is a medium-to-low risk product focused on Chinese domestic debt instruments with a strict lock-up period until year-end 2022.
- Investment vehicles like the Stable Growth 2022 Fund may engage in related-party transactions by investing in asset management plans managed by the parent company.
- Leverage in direct lending strategies is used to magnify returns but also increases liquidity risk and potential losses.
The Fund may invest in other SAMPs under management by our firm or by our parent company, ABC Fund House, with possible related-party transactions involved.
as having $10 million to $150 million of EBITDA and are primarily backed by private equity
sponsors. The strategy seeks to generate higher levels of income and total return than the
broadly syndicated leveraged loan market, with less volatility. The strategy uses leverage to
increase returns. The target level of leverage is 100% with a maximum allowable level of 150%.
Directly originated loans are generally illiquid and carry increased liquidity risk. Leverage may
magnify gains as well as losses to the extent that it is used. Funds in the composite are struc -
tured as drawdown funds, whereby the firm has control over capital calls and distributions.
Terminated Composites
1. US Core Equity Composite
The US Core Equity Composite includes all segregated accounts and pooled funds managed to
a growth at a reasonable price (GARP) strategy through investment in a high-quality, focused
portfolio of domestic, large-capitalization stocks expected to generate returns above the XYZ
Large Cap Index over a market cycle. A quantitative screening process is used together with
fundamental research to construct portfolios. The strategy is managed with a maximum track -
ing error of 4% per annum. Quantitative-driven investment screening relies on historical stock
correlations, which can be adversely affected during periods of severe market volatility. The
composite terminated in March 2018.
118 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
Limited Distribution Pooled Fund Descriptions
Stable Growth 2022 Fund
The investment objective of the Stable Growth 2022 Fund is to realize stable capital growth con-
sistent with strict risk control, while ensuring sufficient liquidity is available for investment. This
is a medium/low-level risk product with an expected moderate level of income. Client-invested
assets will be locked up until 31 December 2022; no redemption is allowed during this period.
The Fund aims to invest in treasury bonds, municipal bonds, central bank bills, medium and small
enterprise private bonds, commercial paper, medium-term notes, and asset-backed securities, as
well as other money market funds, bond funds, or bank deposit products, all of which are issued
in Chinaās domestic market. This Fund may also invest in products such as bank-issued wealth
management products and specific asset management plans (SAMPs) issued by another fund
management house or securities house. The Fund may invest in other SAMPs under management
by our firm or by our parent company, ABC Fund House, with possible related-party transactions
involved. Asset allocation among the investment instruments can vary from 0% to 100% of total
fund assets. The Fund is benchmarked against the three-month Financial Institution Deposit Rate
+ Net Interest Income (NII). The NII is greater than 1% and less than 10%, as stated in the sub-
scription legal document. Interest rate risk is a primary risk of the fund. When interest rates rise,
debt security prices generally fall.
Contrarian Core Trust Fund
Investment Fund Strategies
- The SAMP fund utilizes flexible asset allocation ranging from 0% to 100% and benchmarks against a specific deposit rate plus net interest income.
- The Contrarian Core Trust Fund focuses on undervalued, out-of-favor stocks to achieve long-term capital appreciation and current income.
- At least 80% of the Contrarian Core Trust Fund's assets are dedicated to large-cap US companies, with a secondary allowance for foreign securities.
- Foreign investments within these funds carry unique risks including currency fluctuations, political instability, and limited market information.
- The primary risks identified for these investment vehicles include interest rate volatility, sector concentration, and active management risk.
To achieve this objective, the investment team strives to capitalize on out-of-favor stocks that the market has undervalued.
management house or securities house. The Fund may invest in other SAMPs under management
by our firm or by our parent company, ABC Fund House, with possible related-party transactions
involved. Asset allocation among the investment instruments can vary from 0% to 100% of total
fund assets. The Fund is benchmarked against the three-month Financial Institution Deposit Rate
+ Net Interest Income (NII). The NII is greater than 1% and less than 10%, as stated in the sub-
scription legal document. Interest rate risk is a primary risk of the fund. When interest rates rise,
debt security prices generally fall.
Contrarian Core Trust Fund
The Contrarian Core Trust Fund seeks to provide total returns that are composed of current
income and long-term capital appreciation. To achieve this objective, the investment team strives
to capitalize on out-of-favor stocks that the market has undervalued. The team uses both quanti-
tative and fundamental research to select investments from the large universe of equity securities.
Under normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets in equity securities
of US companies that have large market capitalizations that the investment management team
believes are undervalued and have the potential for long-term growth and current income. The
Fund may also invest up to 20% of its net assets in foreign securities. The Fund may invest directly
in foreign securities or indirectly through American depositary receipts. Investing in foreign secu-
rities typically involves more risks than investing in US securities, including risks associated with
(i) internal and external political and economic developments, (ii) trading practices, (iii) availabil-
ity of information, (iv) limited markets, and (v) currency exchange rate fluctuations and policies.
The Fund may from time to time emphasize one or more sectors in selecting its investments,
including the financial services sector and the information technology and technology-related
sectors. The Fundās benchmark is the XYZ Large Cap Index. The Fundās principal risks are
active management risk, depositary receipt risk, issuer risk, market risk, sector risk, and value
securitiesĀ risk.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 119Appendix D: Sample Lists
Global Liquidity Relative Value Fund
Investment Fund Strategies
- The Contrarian Core Trust Fund focuses on undervalued large-cap US stocks using a blend of quantitative and fundamental research.
- The Global Liquidity Relative Value Fund employs long and short positions in government and mortgage-backed securities across developed and emerging markets.
- Derivatives are utilized by the Global Liquidity Fund to time market moves, manage interest rate exposure, and create asymmetrical risk-return profiles.
- The Global Liquidity Fund operates with significant leverage, typically ranging from 10 to 12 times its net asset value.
- Both funds face distinct risks, ranging from currency fluctuations and political instability to the potential for substantial losses from high leverage.
The Fund is generally levered in the range of 10 to 12 times.
The Contrarian Core Trust Fund seeks to provide total returns that are composed of current
income and long-term capital appreciation. To achieve this objective, the investment team strives
to capitalize on out-of-favor stocks that the market has undervalued. The team uses both quanti-
tative and fundamental research to select investments from the large universe of equity securities.
Under normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets in equity securities
of US companies that have large market capitalizations that the investment management team
believes are undervalued and have the potential for long-term growth and current income. The
Fund may also invest up to 20% of its net assets in foreign securities. The Fund may invest directly
in foreign securities or indirectly through American depositary receipts. Investing in foreign secu-
rities typically involves more risks than investing in US securities, including risks associated with
(i) internal and external political and economic developments, (ii) trading practices, (iii) availabil-
ity of information, (iv) limited markets, and (v) currency exchange rate fluctuations and policies.
The Fund may from time to time emphasize one or more sectors in selecting its investments,
including the financial services sector and the information technology and technology-related
sectors. The Fundās benchmark is the XYZ Large Cap Index. The Fundās principal risks are
active management risk, depositary receipt risk, issuer risk, market risk, sector risk, and value
securitiesĀ risk.
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 119Appendix D: Sample Lists
Global Liquidity Relative Value Fund
The Global Liquidity Relative Value Fund invests in long and short positions in government secu-
rities of the United States and other developed markets, US agency securities, mortgage-backed
securities issued or guaranteed by US government-sponsored enterprises or agencies, and deriv -
atives. The Fund may also invest in long and short positions in government securities of select
emerging market countries. It seeks to maximize total return on a risk-adjusted basis. Investment
risks include currency fluctuation, political and economic changes, and emergent financial mar -
kets. Fixed-income derivatives may be used, including bond futures, swaps, and options. These
investments are both exchange-traded and traded over the counter with approved counterpar -
ties, which minimizes liquidity risk. They are used for three purposes: timing to catch immediate
market moves, providing the cheapest means of gaining or reducing interest rate and currency
exposure, and creating an asymmetrical riskāreturn profile during times of heightened volatility.
Derivatives usage exposes the Fund to risks different from, and potentially greater than, the risks
associated with investing directly in securities and may result in additional loss, which could be
greater than the cost of the derivative. The Fund may use leverage by purchasing securities on
margin or by entering into repurchase agreements and credit agreements. The Fund may pledge
its securities to borrow additional funds or otherwise obtain leverage for investment or other pur -
poses. Leverage reflects the greater of the absolute value of the long or short positions of the Fund
divided by the Fundās net asset value. The Fund is generally levered in the range of 10 to 12 times.
The use of leverage may result in large fluctuations in the Fundās value and entails a high degree of
risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
European Real Estate Fund
Investment Fund Strategies
- The Global Liquidity Relative Value Fund employs a high-leverage strategy, typically ranging from 10 to 12 times its net asset value.
- Derivatives are utilized by the Liquidity Fund to manage interest rate exposure and create asymmetrical risk-return profiles during volatile periods.
- The European Real Estate Fund focuses on stable cash-flow properties like industrial and office spaces with a much lower leverage cap of 60%.
- Real estate investments face significant liquidity risks, meaning investor withdrawals may be delayed due to the nature of the underlying assets.
- Both funds acknowledge that the use of leverage and derivatives can lead to substantial losses and heightened value fluctuations.
The Fund is generally levered in the range of 10 to 12 times.
The Global Liquidity Relative Value Fund invests in long and short positions in government secu-
rities of the United States and other developed markets, US agency securities, mortgage-backed
securities issued or guaranteed by US government-sponsored enterprises or agencies, and deriv -
atives. The Fund may also invest in long and short positions in government securities of select
emerging market countries. It seeks to maximize total return on a risk-adjusted basis. Investment
risks include currency fluctuation, political and economic changes, and emergent financial mar -
kets. Fixed-income derivatives may be used, including bond futures, swaps, and options. These
investments are both exchange-traded and traded over the counter with approved counterpar -
ties, which minimizes liquidity risk. They are used for three purposes: timing to catch immediate
market moves, providing the cheapest means of gaining or reducing interest rate and currency
exposure, and creating an asymmetrical riskāreturn profile during times of heightened volatility.
Derivatives usage exposes the Fund to risks different from, and potentially greater than, the risks
associated with investing directly in securities and may result in additional loss, which could be
greater than the cost of the derivative. The Fund may use leverage by purchasing securities on
margin or by entering into repurchase agreements and credit agreements. The Fund may pledge
its securities to borrow additional funds or otherwise obtain leverage for investment or other pur -
poses. Leverage reflects the greater of the absolute value of the long or short positions of the Fund
divided by the Fundās net asset value. The Fund is generally levered in the range of 10 to 12 times.
The use of leverage may result in large fluctuations in the Fundās value and entails a high degree of
risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
European Real Estate Fund
The European Real Estate Fund is a core, diversified real estate fund that invests in European com-
mercial real estate that exhibits strong and stable cash flow and the potential for long-term capital
growth. This Fund is offered only to professional investors. The European Real Estate Fund is a
low-leveraged fund that invests primarily in industrial, retail, and office properties located across
Europe. The focus is on properties that have a steady income and properties that, through devel-
opment or redevelopment, have the potential to achieve future positive returns. The target level of
leverage is 50% with a maximum allowable level of 60%. A leveraged fund may result in large fluctua-
tions in the value of the Fund and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial
losses. Real estate investments are generally illiquid, and the investment outlook may change given
the availability of credit or other financing sources. Because of the illiquidity, withdrawals could take
some time to execute. The Fund is benchmarked to the XYZ Commercial Real Estate Index.
European Private Equity Fund
Specialized Investment Fund Profiles
- The European Real Estate Fund targets stable cash flow and long-term growth through low-leveraged industrial, retail, and office properties.
- The European Private Equity Fund focuses on small- and mid-cap buyouts with a long-term investment horizon of 7 to 10 years.
- Private equity returns are expected to follow a J-curve, where initial fund values typically fall below booking value before generating profit.
- The Insurance-Linked Securities (ILS) Fund offers returns uncorrelated with capital market risks by investing in catastrophe bonds and reinsurance.
- The Short Duration Fund acts as a private placement vehicle aimed at preserving capital through government-guaranteed fixed-income securities.
Because of the nature of ILS investments, they are uncorrelated with the typical capital market risks.
The European Real Estate Fund is a core, diversified real estate fund that invests in European com-
mercial real estate that exhibits strong and stable cash flow and the potential for long-term capital
growth. This Fund is offered only to professional investors. The European Real Estate Fund is a
low-leveraged fund that invests primarily in industrial, retail, and office properties located across
Europe. The focus is on properties that have a steady income and properties that, through devel-
opment or redevelopment, have the potential to achieve future positive returns. The target level of
leverage is 50% with a maximum allowable level of 60%. A leveraged fund may result in large fluctua-
tions in the value of the Fund and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial
losses. Real estate investments are generally illiquid, and the investment outlook may change given
the availability of credit or other financing sources. Because of the illiquidity, withdrawals could take
some time to execute. The Fund is benchmarked to the XYZ Commercial Real Estate Index.
European Private Equity Fund
The European Private Equity Fund is a fund-of-private equity funds that invests in European small-
and mid-cap buyout, growth, and restructuring funds. This Fund requires a minimum commitment
120 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
of ā¬10 million, and is offered only to professional investors who can withstand a total loss of their
initial investment. Capital calls are dependent on investment progress and subscription amount. The
Fund uses leverage. The target level of leverage is 40% with a maximum allowable level of 60%. A
leveraged fund may incur large fluctuations in value and entails a high degree of risk, including the
possibility of substantial losses. Private equity investments are generally illiquid, and the investment
outlook may change given the availability of credit or other financing sources. The Fundās value is
expected to follow a J-curve, so that in the first years the Fund value is expected to be below booking
value. Generally, the Fundās returns are generated after a period of five to seven years, when selling
the investments. Investors should have an investment horizon of at minimum 7 to 10 years.
Insurance-Linked Securities (ILS) Fund
The Insurance-Linked Securities (ILS) Fund invests globally in high-yield insurance-linked bonds
(cat bonds) whose return depends on the occurrence of specific insured events, such as natural
catastrophic events. The investments are broadly diversified across various insured risks (wind,
earthquake, wildfire, and other natural disasters) and geographic locations. Besides investments
in cat bonds, the Fund may also invest up to 30% of assets in illiquid, direct private reinsurance
contracts (collateralized reinsurance, or CRI). CRI investments are illiquid and typically cannot
be disposed of prior to their expiration (minimum investment period of one year). Because of the
nature of ILS investments, they are uncorrelated with the typical capital market risks. The issuer
and counterparty risks are fully hedged by means of risk-free collateral. The Fund is benchmarked
to the XYZ Cat Bond Index.
Short Duration Fund
The Short Duration Fund is a private placement fund whose objective is to provide current
income while preserving capital. The strategy primarily invests in fixed-income securities issued
or guaranteed by the US government or by its respective agencies. The Fund may also invest in
mortgage-backed securities, including collateralized mortgage obligations, corporate debt, and
Alternative Investment Fund Profiles
- The Short Duration Fund focuses on capital preservation through US government-backed securities while allowing for limited exposure to non-investment-grade debt.
- The 2018 Venture Capital Fund targets early-stage technology companies in international markets, specifically mandating a 10% minimum allocation to Chinese high-tech.
- The 2016 Buyout Strategy Fund of Funds emphasizes operational improvements and cost reduction over financial engineering within its underlying partnerships.
- Leveraged buyout funds in the portfolio may utilize 100% to 300% leverage, creating the potential for significant value fluctuations and substantial losses.
- Insurance-Linked Securities (ILS) provide a unique diversification benefit as they remain uncorrelated with typical capital market risks.
Managers of partnerships are expected to focus on reducing costs, preparing companies for downturn, and providing operational improvement rather than financial engineering.
be disposed of prior to their expiration (minimum investment period of one year). Because of the
nature of ILS investments, they are uncorrelated with the typical capital market risks. The issuer
and counterparty risks are fully hedged by means of risk-free collateral. The Fund is benchmarked
to the XYZ Cat Bond Index.
Short Duration Fund
The Short Duration Fund is a private placement fund whose objective is to provide current
income while preserving capital. The strategy primarily invests in fixed-income securities issued
or guaranteed by the US government or by its respective agencies. The Fund may also invest in
mortgage-backed securities, including collateralized mortgage obligations, corporate debt, and
other US dollarādenominated obligations issued in the United States by non-US banks and corpo-
rations. The Fund may invest up to 10% of assets in non-investment-grade securities. A portion of
the Fundās assets may be invested in illiquid securities that do not have a readily available market.
The Fund may invest in certain types of derivatives such as futures and options. .The principal
risks of the Fund are active management risk, market risk, interest rate risk, credit risk, derivative
instruments risk, counterparty risk, extension risk, prepayment risk, and high-yield debt securities
risk. The Fund is benchmarked to the XYZ Short-Term US Government Credit Index.
2018 Venture Capital Fund
The 2018 Venture Capital Fund seeks long-term capital appreciation by acquiring minority inter -
ests in early-stage technology companies. The Fund invests in technology companies in Europe,
www.cfainstitute.org Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. | 121Appendix D: Sample Lists
Asia Pacific, and emerging markets. European venture investments are more concentrated than
in the other regions and are focused on a few high-quality companies. Exit opportunities include
IPOs, trade sales, and secondary sales. Opportunities in China and India will be targeted for
investment, and an allocation to Chinese high-tech will be at least 10% of the invested capital over
the Fundās life. International venture capital investments are generally illiquid and are subject to
currency risk. If investment opportunities and/or exit strategies become limited, the life of the
fund may be extended, and capital calls and distributions may be delayed. The Fund is bench-
marked to the XYZ Venture Capital Index.
2016 Buyout Strategy Fund of Funds
The 2016 Buyout Strategy Fund of Funds includes primary and secondary partnership investments
with strategies focused on leveraged and growth-oriented buyouts, primarily in the United States.
Managers of partnerships are expected to focus on reducing costs, preparing companies for down-
turn, and providing operational improvement rather than financial engineering. Investments may
be in small, medium, and large buyout partnerships, aiming to make selective commitments diver -
sifying across stages, industries, and vintage years. Secondary deals take advantage of distressed
primary partnership sales, providing access to an increased mix of assets. The underlying funds
are leveraged 100% to 300%. A leveraged fund may result in large fluctuations in value and entails
a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses. Private equity investments
are illiquid and, therefore, if investment opportunities and/or exit strategies become limited, the
Fundās life may be extended, and capital calls and distributions may be delayed.
Value-Added Strategy Closed-End Real Estate Commingled Fund
The Value-Added Strategy Closed-End Real Estate Commingled Fund is managed using a
Investment Fund Strategies and Risks
- Private equity partnerships utilize high leverage of 100% to 300% to diversify across industries and vintage years while managing illiquidity risks.
- The Value-Added Real Estate Fund targets properties in major US markets with higher operational risk, aiming for both income and appreciation.
- Real estate and private equity investments face significant liquidity constraints that can lead to extended fund lives and delayed capital distributions.
- The US Fixed Income Fund focuses on investment-grade debt securities but remains vulnerable to interest rate fluctuations and credit defaults.
- Broad distribution pooled funds are categorized into various types including High Yield, Municipal, and Quantitative Core funds to meet different investor needs.
A leveraged fund may result in large fluctuations in value and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
be in small, medium, and large buyout partnerships, aiming to make selective commitments diver -
sifying across stages, industries, and vintage years. Secondary deals take advantage of distressed
primary partnership sales, providing access to an increased mix of assets. The underlying funds
are leveraged 100% to 300%. A leveraged fund may result in large fluctuations in value and entails
a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses. Private equity investments
are illiquid and, therefore, if investment opportunities and/or exit strategies become limited, the
Fundās life may be extended, and capital calls and distributions may be delayed.
Value-Added Strategy Closed-End Real Estate Commingled Fund
The Value-Added Strategy Closed-End Real Estate Commingled Fund is managed using a
value-added investment strategy with a focus on both income and appreciation. Portfolio man-
agement intends to invest in properties located in major markets within the United States with
higher operational risk than traditional property types. The target level of leverage is 60% with a
maximum allowable level of 70%. A leveraged fund may result in large fluctuations in the value of
the fund and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses. Real estate
investments are generally illiquid, and the investment outlook may change given the availability
of credit or other financing sources. If investment opportunities or exit strategies become limited,
the Fundās life may be extended, and capital calls and distributions may be delayed.
122 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
List of Broad Distribution Pooled Funds
1. High Yield Fund
2. New Jersey Municipal Fund
3. Quantitative Core Fund
4. Small Cap Value Fund
5. US Treasury Index Fund
6. World Allocation Fund
Broad Distribution Pooled Fund Descriptions
US Fixed Income Fund
The Fund is designed to maximize total return by investing in a portfolio of investment-grade
intermediate- and long-term debt securities. The Fund will primarily invest in corporate bonds,
US Treasuries, other US government and agency securities, and asset-backed, mortgage-related,
and mortgage-backed securities. The Fund will invest at least 80% of its assets in bonds and up
to 20% in cash and cash equivalents. The Fund is subject to general market risk, interest rate risk,
credit (issuer and counterparty) risk, and liquidity risk. General market risk is the risk that the
value of the securities owned by the Fund may underperform because of factors affecting partic -
ular industries or securities markets generally. Interest rate risk is the risk the values of bonds will
change by changes in interest rates. If rates increase, the value of bonds declines in general. Credit
risk is the risk the value of investments may change because of changes in creditworthiness of
issuers of debt securities and default of counterparties in investment transactions. Liquidity risk is
the risk the Fund may have a loss when it sells securities to raise cash for redemption requests by
other shareholders.
Global Equity Market Neutral Fund
Investment Fund Risk Profiles
- The Bond Fund focuses on mortgage-backed securities and debt, primarily facing interest rate and credit risks.
- The Global Equity Market Neutral Fund utilizes long and short positions to minimize macroeconomic exposure while managing valuation gaps.
- The Global Absolute Return Fund employs active currency strategies and derivatives to maintain low correlation with traditional asset classes.
- Leverage and short selling are highlighted as high-risk techniques that can lead to magnified fluctuations or theoretically unlimited losses.
- Counterparty risk is a critical factor for funds using derivatives, representing the danger of a contract partner failing to meet obligations.
Short selling risk is the risk that securities sold short (borrowed) may rise significantly in price, resulting in unlimited losses when purchased to close the position in the security.
and mortgage-backed securities. The Fund will invest at least 80% of its assets in bonds and up
to 20% in cash and cash equivalents. The Fund is subject to general market risk, interest rate risk,
credit (issuer and counterparty) risk, and liquidity risk. General market risk is the risk that the
value of the securities owned by the Fund may underperform because of factors affecting partic -
ular industries or securities markets generally. Interest rate risk is the risk the values of bonds will
change by changes in interest rates. If rates increase, the value of bonds declines in general. Credit
risk is the risk the value of investments may change because of changes in creditworthiness of
issuers of debt securities and default of counterparties in investment transactions. Liquidity risk is
the risk the Fund may have a loss when it sells securities to raise cash for redemption requests by
other shareholders.
Global Equity Market Neutral Fund
The Fund takes long and short positions in different securities, selecting from a universe of global
stocks with similar characteristics to those in the XYZ World Equity Index. The Fund purchases
securities that it believes are undervalued and sells short securities that it believes are overvalued.
The long and short positions are matched in order to limit exposure to macroeconomic factors.
Derivatives may be used as substitutes for securities in which the Fund can invest. Specific risks
include: leverage risk, which can increase market exposure and magnify losses; derivatives risk,
which is the risk that losses may be greater than investing directly in the underlying securities;
and short selling risk, which is the risk that in selling borrowed securities, the short seller may
be unable to purchase them at a price lower than the price at which they were sold, which could
result in unlimited losses. Leverage is not expected to exceed more than 200% of total net assets.
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Global Absolute Return Fund
The Fund seeks to provide total returns and maintain a relatively low correlation with traditional
asset classes. The Fund may buy or sell stocks and bonds across various countries and industry
sectors and applies an active currency strategy. The Fund makes use of derivatives, including
swaps, futures, and forwards, in implementing its strategies. In addition to market, interest rate,
credit, and currency risks, alternative investing may include complicated investment techniques
that could result in greater volatility and loss. The Fund may use leverage. Leverage is not expected
to exceed more than 200% of total net assets. Leverage may result in large fluctuations in the
Fundās value and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses. The
Fund uses certain derivatives that involve counterparty risk. Counterparty risk is the risk that the
counterparty may fail to fulfill its obligation under the contract, resulting in losses to the Fund.
Short selling risk is the risk that securities sold short (borrowed) may rise significantly in price,
resulting in unlimited losses when purchased to close the position in the security.
US Small Cap Equity Fund
Investment Fund Risk Profiles
- The US Small Cap Equity Fund targets long-term growth by investing at least 80% of its assets in companies with market capitalizations under $2 billion.
- Small-cap investments face heightened volatility and liquidity risks, potentially leading to the suspension of share redemptions during difficult market conditions.
- The Global Credit Income Fund utilizes a bottom-up approach to invest in a mix of investment-grade and high-yield bonds across global markets.
- Leverage in these funds is capped at 200% of total net assets but introduces the risk of substantial losses and large fluctuations in fund value.
- The Diversified Equity Fund seeks absolute returns above the UK inflation rate by investing across a broad spectrum of asset classes including infrastructure and commodities.
Short selling risk is the risk that securities sold short (borrowed) may rise significantly in price, resulting in unlimited losses when purchased to close the position in the security.
that could result in greater volatility and loss. The Fund may use leverage. Leverage is not expected
to exceed more than 200% of total net assets. Leverage may result in large fluctuations in the
Fundās value and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses. The
Fund uses certain derivatives that involve counterparty risk. Counterparty risk is the risk that the
counterparty may fail to fulfill its obligation under the contract, resulting in losses to the Fund.
Short selling risk is the risk that securities sold short (borrowed) may rise significantly in price,
resulting in unlimited losses when purchased to close the position in the security.
US Small Cap Equity Fund
The Fund aims to achieve long-term capital growth by investing in US companies with market
capitalization of less than $2 billion. The Fund aims to outperform the XYZ US Small Cap Equity
Index. The Fund invests at least 80% of its assets in equities of small US companies. These com-
panies are similar in size to those that constitute the bottom 20% by market capitalization of the
North American equity markets. The Fund may also invest in other equities, equivalent securities,
and cash. The Fundās base currency is the euro. Specific risk factors include the following: The
Fund is unhedged, and changes in exchange rates could result in losses relative to the euro. Small-
cap equity prices can be more volatile than larger-cap stocks and carry more risk. In difficult mar -
ket conditions, the Fund may be unable to sell a security for full value or at all. This scenario could
affect performance and could cause the Fund to defer or suspend redemptions of its shares.
Global Credit Income Fund
The Global Credit Income Fundās investment objective is to (i) provide income and capital growth
over the long term by investing in bonds issued by governments and companies globally and (ii)
invest at least two-thirds of its assets in investment-grade bonds and high-yield bonds issued by
governments, government agencies, supra-nationals, and companies globally, including emerging
markets. The Fund allocates across a range of global credit sectors with a bottom-up approach
while managing duration and currency risk. The Fund targets a portfolio-weighted average dura-
tion range of three to five years. The Fund may use derivatives with the aim of achieving invest -
ment gains, portfolio efficiency, and/or reducing risk. Specific risk factors include the following:
Mortgage or asset-backed securities may not receive in full the amounts owed to them by under -
lying borrowers. The counterparty to a derivative or other contractual agreement may be unable
to honor its commitments, potentially creating a loss for the Fund. A derivative may not perform
124 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
as expected and may cause the Fund to lose as much or more than the amount invested. Leverage
is not expected to exceed more than 200% of total net assets. A leveraged fund may result in large
value fluctuations and entails a high degree of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
High-yield bonds generally carry greater market, credit, and liquidity risk. A rise in interest rates
generally causes bond prices to fall.
Diversified Equity Fund
The Fund aims to generate an absolute return above the UK inflation rate over an economic cycle
(typically five years) at a risk level lower than equity markets as represented by the XYZ Global
Broad Market Index (the benchmark). The Fund may invest in a broad range of asset classes
including equities, bonds, infrastructure, property, commodities, and absolute return strate-
gies. Investment in these asset classes may be made through a wide range of investment vehicles
including transferable securities, derivatives, deposits, collective investment schemes, money
Investment Fund Risk Profiles
- The Absolute Return Fund seeks to outperform UK inflation over a five-year cycle while maintaining lower risk than global equity markets.
- Diversification across infrastructure and property introduces specific liquidity risks due to the unlisted nature of these assets and low price discovery.
- The UK Gilt Fund targets long-term capital growth through government securities with a specific portfolio-weighted duration of three to six years.
- Both funds utilize derivatives for hedging and efficiency, which can lead to leverage levels reaching up to 300% of total net assets.
- Specific risks for Asian High Yield investments include political, legal, and counterparty vulnerabilities inherent in emerging market sectors.
Use of derivatives will result in the Fund being leveraged, where the potential for losses exceeds the amount invested.
The Fund aims to generate an absolute return above the UK inflation rate over an economic cycle
(typically five years) at a risk level lower than equity markets as represented by the XYZ Global
Broad Market Index (the benchmark). The Fund may invest in a broad range of asset classes
including equities, bonds, infrastructure, property, commodities, and absolute return strate-
gies. Investment in these asset classes may be made through a wide range of investment vehicles
including transferable securities, derivatives, deposits, collective investment schemes, money
market instruments, and cash. The Fund may take long and short positions in markets via deriv -
atives contracts. Specific risk factors include the following: The Fund may be concentrated in a
limited number of geographical regions, industry sectors, markets, or individual positions. This
may result in large changes in the Fundās value, either up or down. Emerging markets generally
carry greater political, legal, counterparty, and operational risk. As infrastructure and prop-
erty assets are unlisted, the strategy is subject to liquidity risk, specifically the risk of low price
discovery and/or the ability to transact in the market freely. Derivatives carry the risk of reduced
liquidity and increased volatility in adverse market conditions. Use of derivatives will result in the
Fund being leveraged, where the potential for losses exceeds the amount invested. Leverage is not
expected to exceed more than 300% of total net assets.
UK Gilt Fund
The Fund aims to achieve long-term capital growth and income by investing primarily in UK gov -
ernment securities across all maturities. The Fund may also hold exposure to sterling credit bonds
and non-sterling bonds (hedged back to British pounds). The Fund targets a portfolio-weighted
average duration range of between three and six years. The Fund may use derivatives to achieve
the investment objective, reduce risk, or manage the Fund more efficiently. Specific risk factors
include the following: The counterparty to a derivative or other contractual agreement may be
unable to honor its commitments to the Fund, potentially creating a loss for the Fund. Derivatives
usage exposes the Fund to risks different from, and potentially greater than, the risks associated
with investing directly in securities and may result in additional losses, which could be greater
than the cost of the derivative. A decline in an issuerās financial health could cause the value of its
bonds to fall or become worthless. When interest rates rise, bond values generally fall; this risk
increases the longer the investmentās maturity. Leverage is not expected to exceed more than 200%
of total net assets. A leveraged fund may result in large value fluctuations and entails a high degree
of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
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Asian High Yield Fund
The Fund invests in a diversified mix of high-yield fixed-income securities issued by Asian enti-
ties or their subsidiaries. The Fund aims to outperform the XYZ Asian High Yield Index. The
Fund applies both top-down and bottom-up investment approaches, targeting duration, credit,
Investment Fund Profiles
- The UK government securities fund utilizes derivatives and leverage up to 200% of total net assets to achieve long-term capital growth.
- The Asian High Yield Fund targets sub-investment grade securities and may allocate up to 30% of assets to distressed or defaulted debt.
- The European Equity Fund employs a concentrated strategy of 40 to 50 high-quality companies to outperform its benchmark by up to 300 basis points.
- Liquidity risk is a recurring theme, particularly for funds dealing with Asian markets or European securities undergoing corporate actions.
- Investment strategies across these funds combine top-down macroeconomic analysis with bottom-up fundamental security selection.
As a result of liquidity risk, the Fund may have a loss when it sells securities to raise cash for redemption requests by other shareholders.
The Fund aims to achieve long-term capital growth and income by investing primarily in UK gov -
ernment securities across all maturities. The Fund may also hold exposure to sterling credit bonds
and non-sterling bonds (hedged back to British pounds). The Fund targets a portfolio-weighted
average duration range of between three and six years. The Fund may use derivatives to achieve
the investment objective, reduce risk, or manage the Fund more efficiently. Specific risk factors
include the following: The counterparty to a derivative or other contractual agreement may be
unable to honor its commitments to the Fund, potentially creating a loss for the Fund. Derivatives
usage exposes the Fund to risks different from, and potentially greater than, the risks associated
with investing directly in securities and may result in additional losses, which could be greater
than the cost of the derivative. A decline in an issuerās financial health could cause the value of its
bonds to fall or become worthless. When interest rates rise, bond values generally fall; this risk
increases the longer the investmentās maturity. Leverage is not expected to exceed more than 200%
of total net assets. A leveraged fund may result in large value fluctuations and entails a high degree
of risk, including the possibility of substantial losses.
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Asian High Yield Fund
The Fund invests in a diversified mix of high-yield fixed-income securities issued by Asian enti-
ties or their subsidiaries. The Fund aims to outperform the XYZ Asian High Yield Index. The
Fund applies both top-down and bottom-up investment approaches, targeting duration, credit,
and allocation. The Fund targets to be within 0.5 years (+/ā) of the benchmark weighted average
duration. Securities can be denominated in US dollars as well as the various Asian currencies, and
the Fund focuses on securities rated below BBBā. The Fund may invest up to 30% of its assets in
asset-backed, mortgage-backed, distressed, and defaulted securities, and it may invest up to 20%
in derivatives. Specific risk factors include market risks peculiar to Asian bond markets, high-yield
credit risk, structured product risk, and emerging market risk. Currency, interest rate, and credit
risks are general risk factors to consider. As a result of liquidity risk, the Fund may have a loss
when it sells securities to raise cash for redemption requests by other shareholders.
European Equity Fund
The Fund aims to invest in high-quality companies in well-structured, growing industries, focus -
ing on long-term growth. The Fund aims to invest in between 40 and 50 companies, outperform
its benchmark (the XYZ European Equity Index) by 250 bps to 300 bps per year, and achieve a
target tracking error of 3% to 6% per annum. In selecting investments for the Fund, the portfolio
manager considers the results of a top-down country- and sector-specific analysis while using a
fundamental bottom-up approach to stock selection relative to the benchmark. Specific risk fac -
tors include investments in illiquid securities, which include securities yet to list, IPOs, or securi-
ties undergoing corporate actions that limit trading. Especially in times of economic distress, the
Fund may incur greater losses than if the Fund had been invested in liquid securities.
European Bond Fund
The Fund combines a top-down and bottom-up investment process that allocates risk across sec -
tors and maturities, focused on well-diversified investment-grade Eurozone fixed-income securi-
Investment Fund Strategies
- The European Equity Fund targets high-quality growth companies with a goal to outperform its benchmark by 250 to 300 basis points annually.
- The European Bond Fund focuses on investment-grade Eurozone securities, maintaining a portfolio-weighted average duration of three to five years.
- The World Allocation Fund operates as a 'fund of funds,' utilizing a proprietary quantitative model to manage a diversified global asset mix.
- Defensive strategies in the World Allocation Fund may lead to significant deviations from target allocations, potentially impacting the achievement of investment objectives.
- Specific risks across these funds range from illiquidity in equity markets to sovereign and counterparty risks in global allocations.
When market conditions dictate a more defensive strategy, the Fund or an underlying fund may temporarily hold cash or cash equivalents.
The Fund aims to invest in high-quality companies in well-structured, growing industries, focus -
ing on long-term growth. The Fund aims to invest in between 40 and 50 companies, outperform
its benchmark (the XYZ European Equity Index) by 250 bps to 300 bps per year, and achieve a
target tracking error of 3% to 6% per annum. In selecting investments for the Fund, the portfolio
manager considers the results of a top-down country- and sector-specific analysis while using a
fundamental bottom-up approach to stock selection relative to the benchmark. Specific risk fac -
tors include investments in illiquid securities, which include securities yet to list, IPOs, or securi-
ties undergoing corporate actions that limit trading. Especially in times of economic distress, the
Fund may incur greater losses than if the Fund had been invested in liquid securities.
European Bond Fund
The Fund combines a top-down and bottom-up investment process that allocates risk across sec -
tors and maturities, focused on well-diversified investment-grade Eurozone fixed-income securi-
ties. The Fund is benchmarked against the XYZ Euro Aggregate Bond Index. It aims to invest in
100 to 125 issuers to generate income and capital gains through investments predominantly in A+
and above rated corporate bonds. The Fund targets a portfolio-weighted average duration range of
between three and five years. Specific risk factors include concentration risk, sovereign risk, and
risks associated with investment in securitized debt.
World Allocation Fund
The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing in other mutual funds for
which the firm is the investment manager (āunderlying fundsā). The Fund is considered a āfund
of funds. ā These underlying funds represent a variety of asset classes and investment styles.
126 | Ā© 2019 CFA Institute. All rights reserved. www.cfainstitute.orgGlobal Investment Performance Standards (GIPSĀ®) for Firms
ThroughĀ investments in these underlying funds, the Fund invests in issuers from several differ -
ent countries. As a result, the Fund normally will have approximately 35% to 55% of its net assets
allocated to non-US investments, including emerging market countries. The target asset class
allocation of the Fund is 60% to equity investments, 30% to fixed-income securities and money
market instruments, and 10% to alternative investments. The portfolio management team will
rebalance the asset class allocations and Fundās investments based on the results of a proprietary
quantitative model and continuous monitoring of market conditions. When market conditions
dictate a more defensive strategy, the Fund or an underlying fund may temporarily hold cash or
cash equivalents. In that case, the Fundās allocated holdings may be significantly different from
its target allocations. As a result, the Fund may not achieve its investment objective. Given the
scope of the Fund, it is subject to numerous types of risks including, but not limited to, affiliated
fund risk, allocation risk, alternative investment allocation risk, counterparty risk, derivatives risk,
equity security risk, fixed-income security risk, foreign exposure risk, quantitative model risk, and
sovereign debt risk. For more information concerning the underlying funds of this Fund and their
respective risks, please request a current prospectus.
9781942 713715ISBN 978-1-942713-71-5www.cfainstitute.org