As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 28, 2021
Registration No. 333-148723
Registration No. 811-22172

 

 

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
 

 

FORM N-1A
 
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
   
Pre-Effective Amendment No.
Post-Effective Amendment No.  (374) ☒ 
   
and/or  
 
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
   
Amendment No.  (375)
 
WORLD FUNDS TRUST
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
 
8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, VA 23235
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)
 
(804) 267-7400
(Registrant’s Telephone Number)
 
 The Corporation Trust Co.
Corporation Trust Center, 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
 
With Copy to:
John H. Lively
 Practus, LLP
11300 Tomahawk Creek Parkway, Suite 310
Leawood, KS 66211
 

Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering:
It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):

 

immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b);
On __________ pursuant to paragraph (b);
60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1);
on ____________ pursuant to paragraph (a)(1);
75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2); or
on _____________ (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485.

 

If appropriate, check the following box:

☐ This post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed post-effective amendment.
Title of Securities Being Registered: shares of beneficial interest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund

 

Investor Class (CLFFX)

Institutional Class (CLIFX)

Super Institutional Class (CLIQX)

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund

 

Investor Class (FSVRX)

Institutional Class (FSVVX)

Super Institutional Class (FSVQX)

 

PROSPECTUS

 

January 31, 2021

 

This prospectus describes the Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund (the “Funds”), each a series of shares offered by World Funds Trust. A series fund offers you a choice of investments, with each series having its own investment objective and a separate portfolio. The Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund are each authorized to offer three classes of shares through this prospectus.

 

IMPORTANT NOTE: Beginning on January 1, 2021, as permitted by regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of the Funds’ shareholder reports will no longer be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports from the Funds or from your financial intermediary, such as a broker-dealer or bank. Instead, the reports will be made available on a website, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.

 

If you already elected to receive shareholder reports electronically, you will not be affected by this change and you need not take any action. You may elect to receive shareholder reports and other communications from the Funds or your financial intermediary electronically by calling or sending an email request. You may elect to receive all future reports in paper free of charge. You can inform the Funds or your financial intermediary that you wish to receive paper copies of your shareholder reports by calling or sending an email request. Your election to receive reports in paper will apply to all funds held with the fund complex/your financial intermediary.

 

As with all mutual funds, the Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved of these securities, nor has the Commission determined that this prospectus is complete or accurate. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

 

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund Summary 1
Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund Summary 6
Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies, Related Risks, and Disclosure of Portfolio Holdings 12
General Information 17
Shareholder Information 18
How to Buy and Sell Shares 20
Other Important Investment Information 25
Financial Highlights 29
Adviser’s Prior Performance – Partners Fund 36
Adviser’s Prior Performance – Focused SCV Fund 39
How to Get More Information 42

 

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund Summary

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund

 

Investment Objective

 

 

The investment objective of the Clifford Capital Partners Fund (the “Partners Fund”) is long-term capital appreciation.

 

Fees and Expenses of the Fund

 

 

The following table describes the expenses and fees that you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the Partners Fund.

 

Shareholder Fees (fees paid directly from your investment) Investor Class   Institutional Class   Super Institutional Class

Redemption Fee (as a percentage of the amount redeemed on shares after holding them for 60 days or less)

2.00%

 

None

 

None

           

Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)

   
     
Management Fees(1) 0.75%   0.75%   0.75%
Distribution and Service 12b-1 Fees    0.25%(1)   None   None
Shareholder Servicing Plan 0.02%   0.07%   None
Other Expenses 0.55%   0.63%   0.68%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.00%   0.00%   0.00%
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses(1) 1.57%   1.45%   1.43%
Less Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements(2) (0.42%)   (0.55%)   (0.61%)
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements(1) 1.15%   0.90%   0.82%
           
(1) Management Fees for all Classes and Distribution and Service 12b-1 Fees for the Investor Class have been restated to reflect current fees. As a result, Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses and Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements will not correlate to the expense ratios in the Partners Fund’s Financial Highlights included in this prospectus.

 

(2) Clifford Capital Partners, LLC (the “Adviser”) has contractually agreed to reduce fees and/or reimburse certain Partners Fund expenses until January 31, 2022 to keep Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses (excluding interest, distribution and service fees pursuant to Rule 12b-1 Plans, taxes, brokerage commissions, acquired fund fees and expenses, dividend expense on short sales, other expenditures capitalized in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of business) from exceeding 0.90%, 0.90% and 0.82%, respectively, of the average daily net assets of the Fund’s Investor Class, Institutional Class and Super Institutional Class. Each waiver and/or reimbursement of an expense by the Adviser is subject to repayment by the Partners Fund within three years following the date such waiver and/or reimbursement was made, provided that the Partners Fund is able to make the repayment without exceeding the expense limitation in place at the time of the waiver or reimbursement and at the time the waiver or reimbursement is recouped. This expense limitation agreement may be terminated prior to January 31, 2022 by the Adviser or the Board of Trustees of the Trust only by mutual written consent and at any time after January 31, 2022.

 

1 

 

 

Expense Example

 

The following example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the Partners Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the Partners Fund for the time periods indicated and then redeem all of your shares at the end of those periods. The example also assumes that your investment has a 5% annual return each year and that the Fund’s operating expenses remain the same each year. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions your costs would be:

 

  One Year Three Years Five Years Ten Years
Investor Class $117 $455 $815 $1,832
         
Institutional Class $92 $405 $740 $1,688
         
Super Institutional Class $84 $392 $724 $1,660

 

Portfolio Turnover

 

The Partners Fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or “turns over” its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover may indicate higher transaction costs and may result in higher taxes when Fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the Partners Fund’s performance. For the most recent fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Partners Fund’s portfolio turnover rate was 59.61% of the average value of its portfolio.

 

Principal Investment Strategies of the Fund

 

To achieve its investment objective, the Partners Fund invests primarily in equity securities of U.S. companies of any size that the Fund’s investment adviser, Clifford Capital Partners, LLC (the “Adviser”), believes are trading at a discount to what they are worth at the time of purchase and have the potential for capital appreciation with acceptable downside risks.

 

The Adviser uses a disciplined “bottom-up” selection process to identify equity securities of companies that appear to be selling at a discount to the Adviser’s assessment of their potential value. To evaluate a company’s potential value, the Adviser uses analysis techniques such as normalized price multiples (including price to earnings, price to book value, and price to cash flow); estimated private market value; liquidation analysis; discounted cash flow analysis; and dividend discount models.

 

The Adviser strives to buy stocks at a discount to intrinsic value, taking advantage of price dislocations caused by short-term investor orientation, herd influences and other irrational investor behavior. The Adviser also buys stocks at a discount resulting from the increasing market clout of passive investors and investors who rely on non-company-specific analysis, such as investors who trade funds and ETFs of entire sectors or industries rather than individual stocks. These investment opportunities arise when, in the opinion of the Adviser, the expectations implied in a company’s stock price are too low relative to the firm’s long-term earnings power or to its current assets.

 

The overall portfolio construction is guided by a dynamic mix of two types of stocks:

 

Core Value stocks – investments in companies the Adviser believes are high-quality companies that earn high returns on capital. These stocks will represent 50-75% of the Partners Fund’s holdings.

 

2 

 

Deep Value stocks – opportunistic investments in companies the Adviser believes are deeply-undervalued. These stocks, plus the Fund’s cash holdings, will represent the remaining 25-50% of the Partners Fund.

 

The Partners Fund will normally hold between 25 and 35 securities. The Adviser believes that maintaining a relatively small number of portfolio holdings allows each security to have a meaningful impact on the portfolio’s results. The number of securities held by the Partners Fund may occasionally differ from this range at times such as when the portfolio manager is accumulating new positions, phasing out and exiting positions, or responding to exceptional market conditions.

 

The Principal Risks of Investing in the Partners Fund

 

Risks of Investing in Equity Securities. Overall equity market risks may affect the value of the Fund. Factors such as domestic economic growth and market conditions, interest rate levels, and political events affect the securities markets. When the value of the Fund’s investments goes down, your investment in the Fund decreases in value and you could lose money.

 

Risks of Small-Cap and Mid-Cap Securities. Investing in the securities of small-cap and mid-cap companies generally involves substantially greater risk than investing in larger, more established companies.

 

Risks of Large-Cap Securities. Prices of securities of larger companies tend to be less volatile than companies with smaller market capitalizations. In exchange for this potentially lower risk, the Fund’s value may not rise as much as the value of funds that emphasize companies with smaller capitalizations.

 

Focused Investment Risk. The Fund is a focused fund and generally holds stocks of between only 25 and 35 companies. Focused funds may invest a larger portion of their assets in the securities of a single issuer compared to other funds. Focusing investments in a small number of companies may subject the Fund to greater share price volatility and therefore a greater risk of loss because a single security’s increase or decrease in value may have a greater impact on the Fund’s value and total return. Economic, political or regulatory developments may have a greater impact on the value of the Fund’s portfolio than would be the case if the portfolio held more positions, and events affecting a small number of companies may have a significant and potentially adverse impact on the performance of the Fund. In addition, investors may buy or sell substantial amounts of Fund shares in response to factors affecting or expected to affect a small number of companies, resulting in extreme inflows and outflows of cash into or out of the Fund. To the extent such inflows or outflows of cash cause the Fund’s cash position or cash requirements to exceed normal levels, management of the Fund’s portfolio may be negatively affected.

 

Sector Risk. The Fund may emphasize investment in one or more particular business sectors at times, which may cause the value of its share price to be more susceptible to the financial, market, or economic events affecting issuers and industries within those sectors than a fund that does not emphasize investment in particular sectors. Economic or market factors, regulation or deregulation, and technological or other developments may negatively impact all companies in a particular sector and may increase the risk of loss of an investment in the Fund. This may increase the risk of loss associated with an investment in the Fund and increase the volatility of the Fund’s net asset value per share.

 

Management Style Risk. Because the Fund invests primarily in value stocks (stocks that the Adviser believes are undervalued), the Fund’s performance may at times be better or worse than the performance of stock funds that focus on other types of stock strategies (e.g., growth stocks), or that have a broader investment style.

 

3 

 

Performance History

 

On February 8, 2016, the Partners Fund was reorganized from a series of Cottonwood Mutual Funds, a Delaware statutory trust (the “Predecessor Fund”), to a series of the World Funds Trust (the “Trust”), a Delaware statutory trust (the “Reorganization”).

 

The bar chart and table on the following page provide some indication of the risks of investing in the Partners Fund by showing changes in the Partners Fund’s and the Predecessor Fund’s performance from year to year and by showing how the Partners Fund’s average annual returns for the periods indicated compare with those of a broad measure of market performance. The Partners Fund’s and the Predecessor Fund’s past performance (before and after taxes) is not necessarily an indication of how the Partners Fund will perform in the future. Updated performance information is available at www.cliffordcapfunds.com or by calling toll-free 800-673-0550.

 

The bar chart below shows the annual returns for the Partners Fund’s Investor Class shares for each full calendar year of the Partners Fund and the Predecessor Fund. The performance of the Partners Fund’s Institutional Class shares and Super Institutional Class shares will differ from the Investor Class shares returns shown in the bar chart because the expenses of the Classes differ.

 

 

During the period shown, the highest quarterly return was 24.83% (quarter ended 6/30/2020) and the lowest quarterly return was -31.76% (quarter ended 3/31/2020).

 

4 

 

Average Annual Returns for Periods Ended December 31, 2020

 

The table below shows how the average annual total returns of the Partners Fund’s and the Predecessor Fund’s classes compared to those of the Partners Fund’s benchmark. The table also presents the impact of taxes on the Partners Fund’s Investor Class shares. After-tax returns are calculated using the historical highest individual federal marginal income tax rates and do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Actual after-tax returns depend on an investor’s tax situation and may differ from those shown. After-tax returns shown are not relevant to investors who hold their Partners Fund shares through tax-deferred arrangements, such as 401(k) plans or individual retirement accounts. The after-tax returns for the Institutional Class shares will differ from those of the Investor Class shares as the expenses of the Classes differ.

 

Return Before Taxes One Year

Five Years

Since Inception*

   
Investor Class Shares 10.50% 13.17%

10.60%

(1/30/2014)

Institutional Class Shares 10.76% 13.42%

10.82%

(1/30/2014)

Super Institutional Class Shares 10.86% N/A

15.32%

(10/17/2019)

Return After Taxes – Investor Class One Year

Five Years

Since Inception*
(1/30/2014)
   
Return After Taxes on Distributions 9.58% 12.13% 9.60%
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 6.21% 10.17% 8.12%
Russell 3000® Value Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes) 2.87% 9.74% 8.59%
       

* The Predecessor Fund commenced operations on January 31, 2014. The Partners Fund has the same investment objective, strategies and policies as the Predecessor Fund.

 

Management

 

Investment Adviser.

Clifford Capital Partners, LLC.

 

Portfolio Manager.

Ryan P. Batchelor, CFA, CPA, has managed the Fund since January 2014.

 

5 

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund Summary

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund

 

Investment Objective

 

 

The investment objective of the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund (the “Focused SCV Fund”) is long-term capital appreciation.

 

Fees and Expenses of the Fund

 

The following table describes the expenses and fees that you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the Focused SCV Fund.

 

Shareholder Fees (fees paid directly from your investment)

 

Investor Class

 

Institutional Class

  Super Institutional Class
             

Redemption Fee (as a percentage of the amount redeemed on shares after holding them for 60 days or less)

 

2.00%

 

None

 

None

             

Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)

   
     
Management Fees   0.90%   0.90%   0.90%
Distribution and Service 12b-1 Fees   0.25%   None   None
Shareholder Servicing Plan   None   0.19%   None
Other Expenses   4.28%   5.38%   4.29%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses   0.00%   0.00%   0.00%
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses   5.43%   6.47%   5.19%
Less Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements(1)  

(4.13%)

 

(5.42%)

 

(4.22%)

Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements(1)   1.30%   1.05%  

0.97%

             
(1) Clifford Capital Partners, LLC (the “Adviser”) has contractually agreed to reduce fees and/or reimburse certain Focused SCV Fund expenses to keep Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waivers and/or Expense Reimbursements (excluding interest, distribution and service fees pursuant to Rule 12b-1 Plans, taxes, brokerage commissions, acquired fund fees and expenses, dividend expense on short sales, other expenditures capitalized in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of business) from exceeding 1.05%, 1.05% and 0.97%, respectively, of the average daily net assets of the Fund’s Investor Class, Institutional Class and Super Institutional Class. Each waiver and/or reimbursement of an expense by the Adviser is subject to repayment by the Focused SCV Fund within three years following the date such waiver and/or reimbursement was made, provided that the Fund is able to make the repayment without exceeding the expense limitation in place at the time of the waiver or reimbursement and at the time the waiver or reimbursement is recouped. This expense limitation agreement may be terminated prior to January 31, 2022 by the Adviser or the Board of Trustees of the Trust only by mutual written consent and at any time after January 31, 2022.

 

6 

 

Expense Example

 

The following example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the Focused SCV Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the Focused SCV Fund for the time periods indicated and then redeem all of your shares at the end of those periods. The example also assumes that your investment has a 5% annual return each year and that the Focused SCV Fund’s operating expenses remain the same each year. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions your costs would be:

 

  One Year Three Years Five Years 10 Years
Investor Class $132 $1,254 $2,365 $5,103
         
Institutional Class $107 $1,432 $2,719 $5,774
         
Super Institutional Class $99 $1,177 $2,250 $4,917
         

Portfolio Turnover

 

The Focused SCV Fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or “turns over” its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover may indicate higher transaction costs and may result in higher taxes when Focused SCV Fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the Focused SCV Fund’s performance. For the most recent fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Focused SCV Fund’s portfolio turnover rate was 102.07% of the average value of its portfolio.

 

Principal Investment Strategies of the Fund 

 

Under normal market conditions, the Focused SCV Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets in the equity securities of U.S. companies with small market capitalizations (“small cap companies”) that the Fund’s investment adviser, Clifford Capital Partners, LLC (the “Adviser”), believes are trading at a discount to what they are worth at the time of purchase and have the potential for capital appreciation with acceptable downside risks. The Adviser considers a company to be a small cap company if its market capitalization is no larger than that of the largest company in the Russell 2000® Index at the time a new position is established, based on the index data as of the end of the previous calendar quarter. The market capitalization of the largest company in the index is subject to change. As of December 31, 2020, the market capitalization of the largest company in the Russell 2000® Index was $15.47 billion. This investment policy may be changed by the Focused SCV Fund upon 60 days’ prior notice to shareholders.

 

The Adviser uses a disciplined “bottom-up” selection process to identify equity securities of companies that appear to be selling at a discount to the Adviser’s assessment of their potential value. To evaluate a company’s potential value, the Adviser uses analysis techniques such as normalized price multiples (including price to earnings, price to book value, and price to cash flow); estimated private market value; liquidation analysis; discounted cash flow analysis; and dividend discount models.

 

The Adviser strives to buy stocks at a discount to intrinsic value, taking advantage of price dislocations caused by short-term investor orientation, herd influences, and other irrational investor behavior. The Adviser also buys stocks at a discount resulting from the increasing market clout of passive investors and investors who rely on non-company-specific analysis, such as investors who trade funds and ETFs of entire sectors or industries rather than individual stocks. These investment opportunities arise when, in the opinion of the Adviser, the expectations implied in a company’s stock price are too low relative to the firm’s long-term earnings power or to its current assets.

 

7 

 

 

The overall portfolio construction methodology is guided by a dynamic mix of two types of stocks:

 

Core Value stocks – investments in companies the Adviser believes are high-quality companies that earn high returns on capital. These stocks will represent 50-75% of the Focused SCV Fund’s holdings.

 

Deep Value stocks – opportunistic investments in companies the Adviser believes are deeply-undervalued. These stocks, plus the Fund’s cash holdings, will represent the remaining 25-50% of the Focused SCV Fund.

 

The Focused SCV Fund will normally hold between 25 and 35 securities. The Adviser believes that maintaining a relatively small number of portfolio holdings allows each security to have a meaningful impact on the portfolio’s results. The number of securities held by the Focused SCV Fund may occasionally differ from this range at times such as when the portfolio manager is accumulating new positions, phasing out and exiting positions, or responding to exceptional market conditions.

 

The Principal Risks of Investing in the Focused SCV Fund

 

Risks of Investing in Equity Securities. Overall equity market risks may affect the value of the Fund. Factors such as domestic economic growth and market conditions, interest rate levels, and political events affect the securities markets. When the value of the Fund’s investments goes down, your investment in the Fund decreases in value and you could lose money.

 

Risks of Small-Cap and Mid-Cap Securities. Investing in the securities of small-cap and mid-cap companies generally involves substantially greater risk than investing in larger, more established companies. Although investing in securities of smaller companies offers potential above-average returns if the companies are successful, the risk exists that the companies will not succeed and the prices of the companies’ shares could significantly decline in value. The earnings and prospects of smaller companies are generally more volatile than larger companies, and smaller companies may experience higher failure rates than do larger companies. The trading volume of securities of smaller companies is normally less than that of larger companies and, therefore, may disproportionately affect their market price, tending to make prices fall more in response to selling pressure than is the case with larger companies. Smaller companies may also have limited markets, product lines, or financial resources, and may lack management experience.

 

Focused Investment Risk. The Fund is a focused fund and generally holds stocks of between only 25 and 35 companies. Focused funds may invest a larger portion of their assets in the securities of a single issuer compared to other funds. Focusing investments in a small number of companies may subject the Fund to greater share price volatility and therefore a greater risk of loss because a single security’s increase or decrease in value may have a greater impact on the Fund’s value and total return. Economic, political or regulatory developments may have a greater impact on the value of the Fund’s portfolio than would be the case if the portfolio held more positions, and events affecting a small number of companies may have a significant and potentially adverse impact on the performance of the Fund. In addition, investors may buy or sell substantial amounts of Fund shares in response to factors affecting or expected to affect a small number of companies, resulting in extreme inflows and outflows of cash into or out of the Fund. To the extent such inflows or outflows of cash cause the Fund’s cash position or cash requirements to exceed normal levels, management of the Fund’s portfolio may be negatively affected.

 

Sector Risk. The Fund may emphasize investment in one or more particular business sectors at times, which may cause the value of its share price to be more susceptible to the financial, market, or economic events affecting issuers and industries within those sectors than a fund that does not emphasize investment in particular sectors. Economic or market factors, regulation or deregulation, and technological or other developments may negatively impact all companies in a particular sector and may increase the risk of loss of an investment in the Fund. This may increase the risk of loss associated with an investment in the Fund and increase the volatility of the Fund’s net asset value per share.

 

8 

 

 

Management Style Risk. Because the Fund invests primarily in value stocks (stocks that the Adviser believes are undervalued), the Fund’s performance may at times be better or worse than the performance of stock funds that focus on other types of stock strategies (e.g., growth stocks), or that have a broader investment style.

 

New Fund Risk. The Fund is recently formed. Accordingly, investors in the Fund bear the risk that the Fund may not be successful in implementing its investment strategy, may not employ a successful investment strategy, or may fail to attract sufficient assets to realize economies of scale, any of which could result in the Fund being liquidated at any time without shareholder approval and at a time that may not be favorable for all shareholders. Such liquidation could have negative tax consequences.

 

Performance History

The bar chart and table on the following page provide some indication of the risks of investing in the Focused SCV Fund by showing changes in the Focused SCV Fund’s performance from year to year and by showing how the Focused SCV Fund’s average annual returns for the periods indicated compare with those of a broad measure of market performance. The Focused SCV Fund’s past performance (before and after taxes) is not necessarily an indication of how the Focused SCV Fund will perform in the future. Updated performance information is available at www.cliffordcapfunds.com or by calling toll-free 800-673-0550.

 

The bar chart below shows the annual returns for the Focused SCV Fund’s Institutional Class shares for each full calendar year of the Focused SCV Fund. The performance of the Focused SCV Fund’s Investor Class shares and Super Institutional Class shares will differ from the Investor Class shares returns shown in the bar chart because the expenses of the Classes differ.

 

 

During the period shown, the highest quarterly return was 29.99% (quarter ended 12/31/2020) and the lowest quarterly return was -36.62% (quarter ended 3/31/2020).

 

9 

 

 

Average Annual Returns for Periods Ended December 31, 2020

 

The table below shows how the average annual total returns of the Focused SCV Fund’s classes compared to those of the Focused SCV Fund’s benchmark. The table also presents the impact of taxes on the Focused SCV Fund’s Institutional Class shares. After-tax returns are calculated using the historical highest individual federal marginal income tax rates and do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Actual after-tax returns depend on an investor’s tax situation and may differ from those shown. After-tax returns shown are not relevant to investors who hold their Focused SCV Fund shares through tax-deferred arrangements, such as 401(k) plans or individual retirement accounts. The after-tax returns for the Investor Class and Super Institutional Class shares will differ from those of the Institutional Class shares as the expenses of the Classes differ.

 

Return Before Taxes   One Year  

Since Inception

   
Investor Class Shares   None  

17.67%

(1/31/2020)

Institutional Class Shares   10.34%  

13.86%

(10/01/2019)

Super Institutional Class Shares   None  

17.97%

(1/31/2020)

Return After Taxes – Institutional Class   One Year   Since Inception
(1/31/2020)
   
Return After Taxes on Distributions   9.69%   13.29%
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares   6.12%   10.36%
Russell 2000® Total Return Value Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes)   4.63%   12.31%
         

Management

 

Investment Adviser.

Clifford Capital Partners, LLC.

 

Portfolio Manager.

Ryan P. Batchelor, CFA, CPA, has managed the Fund since its inception in October 2019.

 

10 

 

 

General Summary Information

 

Purchase and Sale of Fund Shares

 

 

The minimum initial and subsequent investment amounts for various types of accounts offered by the Partners Fund and the Focused SCV Fund (collectively the “Funds” or “Clifford Capital Funds”) are shown below. The Funds may waive minimums for purchases or exchanges through employer-sponsored retirement plans.

 

  Investor Class
   
  Initial Additional
Regular Account $2,500 $100
Automatic Investment Plan $2,500 $100
IRA Account $2,500

$100

 

  Institutional Class
   
  Initial Additional
Regular Account $100,000 $1,000
Automatic Investment Plan $100,000 $100
IRA Account  $100,000

$100

 

  Super Institutional Class
   
  Initial Additional
Regular Account $1,000,000 $10,000
Automatic Investment Plan $1,000,000 $1,000
IRA Account  $1,000,000 $1,000

 

Investors may purchase or redeem Fund shares on any business day through a financial intermediary, by mail (Clifford Capital Funds, c/o Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235), by wire, or by telephone by calling toll free 1-800-673-0550. Purchases and redemptions by telephone are only permitted if you previously established this option on your account.

 

Tax Information

 

Each Fund’s distributions may be subject to federal income tax and may be taxed as ordinary income or capital gain, unless you are investing through a tax-deferred account, such as a 401(k) plan, individual retirement account (IRA) or 529 college savings plan. In such a tax-deferred account, your tax liability is generally not incurred until you withdraw assets from such an account.

 

Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other Financial Intermediaries

 

If you purchase the Funds through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the Funds and their related companies may pay the intermediary for the sale of Fund shares and related services. These payments may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other intermediary and your salesperson to recommend the Funds over another investment. Ask your salesperson or visit your financial intermediary’s web site for more information.

 

11 

 

Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies, Related Risks, and Disclosure of Portfolio Holdings

 

Investment Objective

 

The Partners Fund’s investment objective is long-term capital appreciation. The Partners Fund’s investment objective is not fundamental and may be changed without shareholder approval, although the Fund will provide 60 days’ advance notice of any such change.

 

The Focused SCV Fund’s investment objective is long-term capital appreciation. The Focused SCV Fund’s investment objective is not fundamental and may be changed without shareholder approval, although the Fund will provide 60 days’ notice of any such change.

 

The Investment Selection Process Used by the Funds

 

Partners Fund

 

To achieve its investment objective, the Partners Fund invests primarily in the equity securities of U.S. companies of any size that the Adviser believes are trading at a discount to what they are worth at the time of purchase and have the potential for capital appreciation with acceptable downside risks. The Adviser believes investing in securities trading at a discount may enhance the investment’s potential upside when the Adviser’s investment thesis is proven correct and may dampen the potential loss when the investment thesis is disproven.

 

Focused SCV Fund

 

Under normal market conditions, the Focused SCV Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets in small cap companies that the Adviser, believes are trading at a discount to what they are worth at the time of purchase and have the potential for capital appreciation with acceptable downside risks. The Adviser considers a company to be a small cap company if its market capitalization is no larger than that of the largest company in the Russell 2000® Index at the time a new position is established, based on the index data as of the end of the previous calendar quarter. The market capitalization of the largest company in the index is subject to change. As of December 31, 2020, the market capitalization of the largest company in the Russell 2000® Index was $15.47 billion. This investment policy may be changed by the Focused SCV Fund upon 60 days’ prior notice to shareholders.

 

Investment Philosophy Guiding the Funds

 

The Adviser seeks to buy stocks at a discount to intrinsic value, taking advantage of opportunities—usually because of short-term investor orientation, herd influences, and other irrational investor behavior—which are uncovered by its bottom-up research. The Adviser also buys stocks at a discount resulting from the increasing market clout of passive investors and investors who rely on non-company-specific analysis, such as investors who trade funds and ETFs of entire sectors or industries rather than individual stocks. The Adviser seeks opportunities where it believes the expectations implied in a company’s stock price are too low relative to the firm's long-term earnings power or to its current assets.

 

The Adviser believes most of its investment opportunities arise because of short-term oriented trader and investor behavior, which differs from the Adviser’s research conclusions and its long-term investment philosophy. Common behaviors leading to these opportunities include but are not limited to: overreactions to short-term results; economic worries leading to low expectations or panic selling; fear of increased competition; focus on one underperforming business line overshadowing other solid segments; frustration with slower growth rates as a business or its industry matures; worries that meaningful changes being undertaken by a company will be ineffective or take too long; fear that cyclical issues affecting a firm or its industry have become permanent.

 

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In identifying securities to be held by the Funds, the Adviser will utilize an overall portfolio construction methodology guided by a dynamic mix of Core Value stocks and Deep Value stocks.

 

Core Value. 50-75% of the Funds are invested in Core Value firms, which we define as high-quality companies, evidenced by high returns on capital. The Adviser has identified a universe of a Core Value firms (the “Core List”) based on its proprietary quantitative and qualitative “10 Indicators of a Core Business” review process, summarized below. Prior to adding a security to the Core List, a company must pass the review. The Adviser selects its Core Value investments from this Core List universe. The Adviser believes Core Value firms are ideal long-term holdings because of the expectation for long-term growth in cash flows, combined with the potential for downside protection because of their high-quality business models, as well as the Adviser’s insistence on only buying these companies at a discount to estimated fair value.

 

Summary of the “10 Indicators of a Core Business”

 

1. Consistently high returns on equity

2. Consistently high returns on assets

3. Upward-trending net income

4. Debt load that the Adviser believes is prudent for the individual business (i.e., Net Debt/EBITDA ratios below 3X for most non-financial companies)

5. Necessary and valuable products or services

6. Good employee relations (subjective determination based on Adviser’s research of management/employee relations)

7. Pricing power

8. Low capital intensity (i.e., low capital expenditures relative to revenues)

9. History of share repurchases and a declining share count

10. History of upward-trending book value and share price

 

The Adviser regularly reviews the Core List, searching for stocks that may potentially be trading at a discount to the Adviser’s estimates of fair value. The Adviser intends to hold its Core Value positions for the long-term.

 

Deep Value. Deep Value stocks plus cash make up the remaining 25-50% of the Funds’ portfolios. Deep Value stocks are opportunistic, non-Core Value investments uncovered by our fundamental research. These are often companies that have fallen out of favor to what the Adviser believes are very compelling valuation levels. The Adviser intends to hold a Deep Value position until it reaches its estimated fair value. These opportunistic investments tend to have higher return potential than Core Value positions, but are subject to more uncertainty. In screening for Deep Value positions, the Adviser uses a variety of methods to identify potential investment opportunities, including:

 

1. Quantitative stock screens

2. Researching firms with weak recent or longer-term stock-price performance

3. Searching for companies and industries that are out of favor with investment analysts

4. Researching new firms to expand the Adviser’s knowledge base

5. The Adviser’s personal network of investment professionals

6. Publications from like-minded contrarian investors

 

The Adviser uses a disciplined “bottom-up” selection process to attempt to identify equity securities of companies that appear to be selling at a discount relative to the Adviser’s assessment of their potential value. Such a bottom-up security selection process may include an evaluation of a company’s potential value using analysis techniques such as: normalized price multiples (including price to earnings, price to book value, and price to cash flow); estimated private market value; liquidation analysis; discounted cash flow analysis; and dividend discount models.

 

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For each stock investment, the Adviser identifies, through its customized and focused individual stock research, several investment success factors (“Key Thesis PointsTM”). These 3-4 Key Thesis PointsTM reflect differentiated viewpoints from market consensus opinion. The Key Thesis PointsTM process assists the Adviser in: 1) identifying the most important long-term catalysts for each stock’s success; 2) allowing for efficient ongoing portfolio monitoring – focusing on a manageable list of what the Adviser believes matters the most; 3) maintaining investment conviction when short-term noise overwhelms sentiment and stock prices; and 4) allowing for quick identification of mistakes when facts arise that refute a Key Thesis PointTM.

 

The Funds will normally hold between 25 and 35 securities. The Adviser believes that maintaining a relatively small number of portfolio holdings allows each security to have a meaningful impact on the portfolio’s results. The number of securities held by the Funds may occasionally differ from this range at times such as when the portfolio manager is accumulating new positions, phasing out and existing positions, or responding to exceptional market conditions.

 

The Adviser typically performs an additional review for any stock that declines 20% from its original purchase, or a stock that has declined by 20% over any 30-day period. The Adviser may reduce or sell a Fund’s investments in a particular security if, in the opinion of the Adviser, a security’s fundamentals change substantially, its price appreciation leads to overvaluation in relation to the Adviser’s estimates of future earnings and cash flow growth, there are better opportunities with another security, or for other reasons.

 

TEMPORARY DEFENSIVE POSITIONS. When the Adviser believes market, economic or political conditions are unfavorable for investors, the Funds may hold, as a temporary, defensive strategy, all or a portion of its assets in cash or cash-equivalents like money market funds, certificates of deposit, short-term debt obligations, and repurchase agreements. Under these circumstances, the Funds may not participate in stock market advances or declines to the same extent it would have had it remained more fully invested in common stocks. To the extent a Fund engages in a temporary, defensive strategy, the Fund may not achieve its investment objective. If a Fund invests in shares of a money market fund, shareholders of the Fund generally will be subject to duplicative management and other fees and expenses.

 

The Principal Risks of Investing in the Funds

 

Risks of Investing in Equity Securities. The Funds invest in equity securities, such as common stocks, which subjects a Fund and its shareholders to the risks associated with these types of securities. These risks include the financial risk of selecting individual companies that do not perform as anticipated, the risk that the stock markets in which a Fund invests may experience periods of turbulence and instability, and the general risk that domestic and global economies may go through periods of decline and cyclical change. Many factors affect the performance of each company that a Fund invests in, including the strength of the company’s management or the demand for its products or services. You should be aware that a company’s share price may decline as a result of poor decisions made by management or lower demand for the company’s products or services. In addition, a company’s share price may also decline if its earnings or revenues fall short of expectations.

 

There are overall stock market risks that may also affect the value of a Fund. Over time, the stock markets tend to move in cycles, with periods when stock prices rise generally and periods when stock prices decline generally. The value of a Fund’s investments may increase or decrease more than the stock markets in general.

 

Risks of Small Cap and Mid Cap Securities. Investing in the securities of small cap and mid cap companies generally involves substantially greater risk than investing in larger, more established companies. This greater risk is, in part, attributable to the fact that the securities of these companies usually have more limited marketability and, therefore, may be more volatile than securities of larger, more established companies or the market averages in general. Because these companies normally have fewer shares outstanding than larger companies, it may be more difficult to buy or sell significant amounts of such shares without an unfavorable impact on prevailing prices. Another risk factor is that these companies often have limited product lines, markets, or financial resources and may lack management depth. Additionally, these companies are typically subject to greater changes in earnings and business prospects than are larger, more established companies. These companies may not be well-known to the investing public, may not be followed by the financial press or industry analysts, and may not have institutional ownership. These factors affect the Adviser’s access to information about the companies and the stability of the markets for the companies’ securities. These companies may be more vulnerable than larger companies to adverse business or economic developments; the risk exists that the companies will not succeed; and the prices of the companies’ shares could dramatically decline in value. Therefore, an investment in a Fund may involve a substantially greater degree of risk than an investment in other mutual funds that seek capital growth by investing in more established, larger companies.

 

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Risks of Large Cap Securities (Partners Fund only). Companies with large market capitalizations go in and out of favor based on various market and economic conditions. Prices of securities of larger companies tend to be less volatile than companies with smaller market capitalizations. In exchange for this potentially lower risk, the Partners Fund’s value may not rise as much as the value of funds that emphasize companies with smaller market capitalizations.

 

Focused Investment Risk. The Funds are focused funds and generally hold stocks of between only 25 and 35 companies. Focused funds may invest a larger portion of their assets in the securities of a single issuer compared to other funds. Focusing investments in a small number of companies may subject a Fund to greater share price volatility and therefore a greater risk of loss because a single security’s increase or decrease in value may have a greater impact on the Fund’s value and total return. Economic, political or regulatory developments may have a greater impact on the value of a Fund’s portfolio than would be the case if the portfolio held more positions, and events affecting a small number of companies may have a significant and potentially adverse impact on the performance of the Fund. In addition, investors may buy or sell substantial amounts of Fund shares in response to factors affecting or expected to affect a small number of companies, resulting in extreme inflows and outflows of cash into or out of a Fund. To the extent such inflows or outflows of cash cause a Fund’s cash position or cash requirements to exceed normal levels, management of the Fund’s portfolio may be negatively affected.

 

Sector Risk. Each Fund may emphasize investment in one or more particular business sectors at times, which may cause the value of its share price to be more susceptible to the financial, market, or economic events affecting issuers and industries within those sectors than a fund that does not emphasize investment in particular sectors. Economic or market factors, regulation or deregulation, and technological or other developments may negatively impact all companies in a particular sector and may increase the risk of loss of an investment in the Funds. This may increase the risk of loss associated with an investment in the Funds and increase the volatility of the Funds' net asset value per share.

 

Management Style Risk. Different types of securities tend to shift into and out of favor with stock market investors depending on market and economic conditions. Because the Funds invest primarily in value stocks (stocks that the Adviser believes are undervalued), the Funds’ performance may at times be better or worse than the performance of stock funds that focus on other types of stock strategies (e.g., growth stocks), or that have a broader investment style.

 

Health Crisis Risk. A widespread health crisis, such as a global pandemic, could cause substantial market volatility, exchange trading suspensions or restrictions and closures of securities exchanges and businesses, impact the ability to complete redemptions, and adversely impact Fund performance. An outbreak of an infectious respiratory illness, COVID-19, caused by a novel coronavirus, was first detected in China in December 2019 and spread globally. As of the date of this prospectus, this outbreak has resulted in travel restrictions, closed international borders, enhanced health screenings at ports of entry and elsewhere, disruption of and delays in healthcare service preparation and delivery, prolonged quarantines, cancellations, supply chain disruptions, disruptions in markets, lower consumer demand, layoffs, defaults and other significant economic impacts, as well as general concern and uncertainty. These types of market disruptions may adversely impact the Funds’ investments, including impairing hedging activity to the extent the Funds engage in such activity, as expected correlations between related markets or instruments may no longer apply. In addition, to the extent the Funds invest in short-term instruments that have negative yields, the Fund’s value may be impaired as a result. Any suspension of trading in markets in which the Funds invest will have an impact on each Fund and its investments and will impact the Funds’ ability to purchase or sell securities in those markets. The impact of this outbreak has adversely affected the economies of many nations and the entire global economy and may impact individual issuers and capital markets in ways that cannot be foreseen. The duration of the outbreak and its effects cannot be determined with any certainty.

 

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In the past, governmental and quasigovernmental authorities and regulators throughout the world have responded to major economic disruptions with a variety of fiscal and monetary policy changes, including direct capital infusions into companies and other issuers, new monetary policy tools, and lower interest rates. An unexpected or sudden reversal of these policies, or the ineffectiveness of such policies, is likely to increase market volatility, which could adversely affect the Funds’ investments.

 

The outbreak could also impair the information technology and other operational systems upon which the Funds’ service providers rely and could otherwise disrupt the ability of employees of the Funds’ service providers to perform critical tasks relating to the Funds. Other infectious illness outbreaks that may arise in the future could have similar or other unforeseen effects. Public health crises may exacerbate other pre-existing political, social, and economic risks in certain countries or globally.

 

Portfolio Holdings Disclosure

 

 

A description of the Funds’ policies and procedures with respect to the disclosure of the Funds’ portfolio securities is available in the Funds’ Statement of Additional Information (“SAI”). Complete holdings (as of the dates of such reports) are available in reports on Form N-PORT and Form N-CSR, and were previously available in reports on Form N-Q, filed with the SEC.

 

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General Information

 

Management

 

The Investment Adviser

 

Clifford Capital Partners, LLC (the “Adviser”) is the investment adviser of the Funds and has responsibility for the management of the Funds’ affairs, under the supervision of the Trust’s Board of Trustees. The Adviser is a registered investment adviser. The Adviser was organized in 2010 as an Illinois limited liability company and its address is 363 S. Main Street, Suite 101, Alpine, Utah 84004. The Adviser is primarily owned and controlled by Ryan P. Batchelor, CFA, CPA and Wayne G. Pierson, CFA, CPA. As of December 31, 2020, the Adviser had approximately $269 million in assets under management. Additional information about the Adviser is available in the SAI.

 

The Adviser manages the investment portfolio of the Funds, subject to policies adopted by the Trust’s Board of Trustees.

 

Management Fee and Expense Limitation Agreement

 

Partners Fund. Under the Investment Advisory Agreement for the Partners Fund, the Adviser, at its own expense and without reimbursement from the Trust, furnishes office space and all necessary office facilities, equipment and executive personnel necessary for managing the assets of the Partners Fund. For its services, effective January 31, 2020, the Adviser receives an investment management fee equal to 0.75% of the average daily net assets of the Partners Fund. The Adviser has contractually agreed to reduce fees and reimburse expenses of the Partners Fund until January 31, 2022 in order to keep net operating expenses (exclusive of interest, distribution and service fees pursuant to Rule 12b-1 Plans, taxes, brokerage commissions, acquired fund fees and expenses, dividend expense on short sales, other expenditures capitalized in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of business) from exceeding 0.26%, 0.90% and 0.90%, respectively, of the average daily net assets of the Super Institutional Class, Institutional Class, and Investor Class. This waiver or reimbursement of an expense by the Adviser is subject to repayment by the Partners Fund within three years following the date such waiver and/or reimbursement was made, provided that the Partners Fund is able to make the repayment without exceeding the expense limitation in place at the time of the waiver or reimbursement and at the time the waiver or reimbursement is recouped. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, following fee reductions, the Adviser received an aggregate fee of 0.26% for investment advisory services performed, expressed as a percentage of average net assets of the Fund. Under the Investment Advisory Agreement for the Partners Fund in effect prior to January 31, 2020, the Adviser paid the operating expenses of the Partners Fund excluding management fees, brokerage fees and commissions, taxes, borrowing costs such as interest expense and dividend expenses on securities sold short, acquired fund fees and expenses, 12b-1 fees and shareholder service fees, and extraordinary expenses.

 

Focused SCV Fund. Under the Investment Advisory Agreement for the Focused SCV Fund, the Adviser, at its own expense and without reimbursement from the Trust, furnishes office space and all necessary office facilities, equipment and executive personnel necessary for managing the assets of the Focused SCV Fund. For its services the Adviser receives an investment management fee equal to 0.90% of the average daily net assets of the Focused SCV Fund. The Adviser has contractually agreed to reduce fees and reimburse expenses of the Focused SCV Fund until January 31, 2022 in order to keep net operating expenses (exclusive of interest, distribution and service fees pursuant to Rule 12b-1 Plans, taxes, brokerage commissions, acquired fund fees and expenses, dividend expense on short sales, other expenditures capitalized in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of business) from exceeding 0.97%, 1.05% and 1.05%, respectively, of the average daily net assets of the Super Institutional Class, Institutional Class, and Investor Class. This waiver or reimbursement of an expense by the Adviser is subject to repayment by the Focused SCV Fund within three years following the date such waiver and/or reimbursement was made, provided that the Focused SCV Fund is able to make the repayment without exceeding the expense limitation in place at the time of the waiver or reimbursement and at the time the waiver or reimbursement is recouped. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, following fee reductions and expense reimbursements to the Focused SCV Fund, the Adviser received an aggregate fee of 0.00% for investment advisory services performed, expressed as a percentage of average net assets of the Focused SCV Fund.

 

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A discussion regarding the basis of the Board of Trustees’ approval of the Investment Advisory Agreement between the Trust and the Adviser is available in the Partners Fund’s annual report to shareholders for the year ended September 30, 2019. A discussion regarding the Board of Trustees’ approval of the Investment Advisory Agreement between the Trust and the Adviser on behalf of the Focused SCV Fund is available in the Focused SCV Fund’s semi-annual report to shareholders for the period ending March 31, 2020.

 

Portfolio Manager’s Bio:

 

Ryan P. Batchelor, CFA, CPA

 

The Funds are managed by Ryan P. Batchelor, CFA, CPA. Mr. Batchelor has managed each Fund since its inception. Ryan Batchelor is principal, co-founder and portfolio manager at the Adviser. Prior to founding the Adviser in April 2010, he served as a senior equity analyst at Wells Capital Management from March 2007 until March 2010 where he was a generalist, scouring all sectors of the market but also had specific responsibility for the financial services sector.

 

Before joining Wells Capital Management, Mr. Batchelor was an equity strategist and analyst with Morningstar, Inc. where he served as specialty finance analyst and team leader. He initiated the five-page InternationalInvestor section in the firm’s flagship StockInvestor monthly stock investment newsletter and implemented department-wide improvements to Morningstar’s foreign coverage universe. Ryan was quoted in local and national media, including The Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, The Economist, Financial Times, USA Today, and US News & World Report. He also made live television appearances on CNBC and Bloomberg TV, as well as radio spots on NPR, Bloomberg Radio and local stations. Mr. Batchelor graduated summa cum laude from Brigham Young University - Hawaii in 1999 with a B.S. in Accounting and received his MBA in Finance from the Marriott School of Management at Brigham Young University in 2004. He holds the Chartered Financial Analyst and Certified Public Accountant professional designations.

 

The Funds’ SAI provides information about the portfolio manager’s compensation, other accounts managed by the portfolio manager, and the portfolio manager’s ownership of Fund shares.

 

Shareholder Information

 

Pricing of Fund Shares

 

Each Fund’s share price, called the net asset value (“NAV”) per share, is determined as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) (generally, 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on each business day that the NYSE is open (the “Valuation Time”). As of the date of this prospectus, the Funds have been informed that the NYSE observes the following holidays: New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Presidents’ Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. NAV per share is computed by adding the total value of a Fund’s investments and other assets attributable to the Fund’s Investor Class, Institutional Class and Super Institutional Class shares, subtracting any liabilities attributable to the applicable class and then dividing by the total number of the applicable classes’ shares outstanding. Since different expenses may be charged against shares of different classes of the Funds, the NAV of the different classes may vary. Because a Fund may hold securities that are primarily listed on foreign exchanges that trade on weekends or days when a Fund does not price its shares, the value of the securities held in a Fund may change on days when you will not be able to purchase or redeem Fund shares.

 

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Shares of the Funds are bought or exchanged at the public offering price per share next determined after a request has been received in proper form. The public offering price of each Fund’s shares is equal to the NAV plus the applicable front-end sales charge, if any. Shares of a Fund held by you are sold or exchanged at the NAV per share next determined after a request has been received in proper form, less any applicable deferred sales charge. Any request received in proper form before the Valuation Time, will be processed the same business day. Any request received in proper form after the Valuation Time, will be processed the next business day.

 

The Funds’ securities are valued at current market prices. Investments in securities traded on national securities exchanges are valued at the last reported sale price. For securities traded on NASDAQ, the NASDAQ Official Closing Price will be used. Other securities traded in the over-the-counter market and listed securities for which no sales are reported on a given date are valued at the last reported bid price. Debt securities are valued by appraising them at prices supplied by a pricing agent approved by the Trust, which prices may reflect broker-dealer supplied valuations and electronic data processing techniques. Short-term debt securities (less than 60 days to maturity) are valued at their fair market value using amortized cost. Other assets for which market prices are not readily available are valued at their fair value as determined in good faith by the administrator, in consultation with the Adviser, under procedures set by the Board. Generally, trading in corporate bonds, U.S. government securities and money market instruments is substantially completed each day at various times before the scheduled close of the NYSE. The value of these securities used in computing the NAV is determined as of such times.

 

The Trust has a policy that contemplates the use of fair value pricing to determine the NAV per share of a Fund when market prices are unavailable as well as under special circumstances, such as: (i) if the primary market for a portfolio security suspends or limits trading or price movements of the security; and (ii) when an event occurs after the close of the exchange on which a portfolio security is principally traded that is likely to have changed the value of the security. Since most of each Fund’s investments are traded on U.S. securities exchanges, it is anticipated that the use of fair value pricing will be limited.

 

When the Trust uses fair value pricing to determine the NAV per share of a Fund, securities will not be priced on the basis of quotations from the primary market in which they are traded, but rather may be priced by another method that the Board believes accurately reflects fair value. Any method used will be approved by the Board and results will be monitored to evaluate accuracy. The Trust’s policy is intended to result in a calculation of the Fund’s NAV that fairly reflects security values as of the time of pricing.

 

Share Class Alternatives. Each Fund offers investors three different classes of shares through this prospectus. The different classes of shares represent investments in the same portfolio of securities, but the classes are subject to different expenses and fees and may have different share prices and minimum investment requirements. When you buy shares, be sure to specify the class of shares in which you choose to invest. Because each share class has a different combination of sales charges, expenses and other features, you should consult your financial adviser to determine which class best meets your financial objectives.

 

Customer Identification Program

 

Federal regulations require that the Trust obtain certain personal information about you when opening a new account. As a result, the Trust must obtain the following information for each person that opens a new account:

 

Ø Name;

Ø Date of birth (for individuals);

 

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Ø Residential or business street address (although post office boxes are still permitted for mailing); and

Ø Social security number, taxpayer identification number, or other identifying number.

 

You may also be asked for a copy of your driver’s license, passport, or other identifying document in order to verify your identity. In addition, it may be necessary to verify your identity by cross referencing your identification information with a consumer report or other electronic database. Additional information may be required to open accounts for corporations and other entities.

 

After an account is opened, the Trust may restrict your ability to purchase additional shares until your identity is verified. The Trust also may close your account or take other appropriate action if it is unable to verify your identity within a reasonable time.

 

If your account is closed for this reason, your shares will be redeemed at the NAV next calculated after the account is closed.

 

How to Buy and Sell Shares

 

The price you pay for a share of a Fund is the NAV next determined upon receipt by such Fund (or its appropriately designated agent) or your financial intermediary (such as fund supermarkets or through brokers or dealers who are authorized by the Distributor to sell shares of the Funds (collectively, “Financial Intermediaries”). A Fund will be deemed to have received your purchase or redemption order when it (i.e., the Fund) or the Financial Intermediary receives the order. Such Financial Intermediaries are authorized to designate other intermediaries to receive purchase and redemption orders on a Fund’s behalf.

 

You may purchase shares of the Funds through Financial Intermediaries and directly from the Funds (or their agent). Financial Intermediaries may charge transaction fees or set different minimum investment amounts. Financial Intermediaries may also have policies and procedures that are different from those contained in this prospectus. Investors should consult their Financial Intermediary regarding its procedures for purchasing and selling shares of the Funds as the policies and procedures may be different. Certain Financial Intermediaries may have agreements with the Funds that allow them to enter confirmed purchase and redemption orders on behalf of clients and customers. Under this arrangement, the Financial Intermediary must send your payment to the Funds by the time a Fund prices its shares on the following business day. The Funds are not responsible for ensuring that a Financial Intermediary carries out its obligations. You should look to the Financial Intermediary through whom you wish to invest for specific instructions on how to purchase or redeem shares of the Funds.

 

Minimum Investments

 

The Trust may waive the minimum initial investment requirement for purchases made by Trustees, officers and employees of the Trust. The Trust may also waive the minimum investment requirement for purchases by its affiliated entities and certain related advisory accounts and retirement accounts (such as IRAs). The Trust may also change or waive policies concerning minimum investment amounts at any time. The Trust retains the right to refuse to accept an order.

 

  Investor Class
   
  Initial Additional
Regular Account $2,500 $100
Automatic Investment Plan $2,500   $100*
IRA Account $2,500

$100

 

 

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  Institutional Class
   
  Initial Additional
Regular Account $100,000 $1,000
Automatic Investment Plan $100,000 $100*
IRA Account  $100,000 $100
     
  Super Institutional Class
   
  Initial Additional
Regular Account $1,000,000 $10,000
Automatic Investment Plan $1,000,000 $1,000*
IRA Account  $1,000,000 $1,000

 

* An Automatic Investment Plan requires the minimum automatic monthly or quarterly investment.

 

Types of Account Ownership

 

You can establish the following types of accounts by completing a Shareholder Account Application:

 

Individual or Joint Ownership. Individual accounts are owned by one person. Joint accounts have two or more owners.

 

A Gift or Transfer to Minor (UGMA or UTMA). A UGMA/UTMA account is a custodial account managed for the benefit of a minor. To open an UGMA or UTMA account, you must include the minor’s social security number on the application.

 

Trust. An established trust can open an account. The names of each trustee, the name of the trust and the date of the trust agreement must be included on the application.

 

Business Accounts. Corporation and partnerships may also open an account. The application must be signed by an authorized officer of the corporation or a general partner of a partnership.

 

IRA Accounts. See “Types of Tax-Deferred Accounts”.

 

Types of Tax-Deferred Accounts

     
Traditional IRA. An individual retirement account. Your contribution may or may not be deductible depending on your circumstances. Assets can grow tax-deferred and distributions are taxable as income.

 

Roth IRA. An IRA with non-deductible contributions, tax-free growth of assets, and tax-free distributions for qualified distributions.

 

Spousal IRA. An IRA funded by a working spouse in the name of a non-earning spouse.

 

SEP-IRA. An individual retirement account funded by employer contributions. Your assets grow tax-deferred and distributions are taxable as income.

 

Keogh or Profit-Sharing Plans. These plans allow corporations, partnerships and individuals who are self-employed to make tax-deductible contributions of up to $35,000 for each person covered by the plans.

 

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403(b) Plans. An arrangement that allows employers of charitable or educational organizations to make voluntary salary reduction contributions to a tax-deferred account.

 

401(k) Plans. Allows employees of corporations of all sizes to contribute a percentage of their wages on a tax-deferred basis. These accounts need to be established by the trustee of the plan.

 

Purchases by Mail. For initial purchases, the account application, which accompanies this prospectus, should be completed, signed and mailed to Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. (the “Transfer Agent”), the Funds’ transfer and dividend disbursing agent, at 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235, together with your check payable to a Fund. When you buy shares, be sure to specify the class of shares in which you choose to invest. For subsequent purchases, include with your check the tear-off stub from a prior purchase confirmation or otherwise identify the name(s) of the registered owner(s) and social security number(s).

 

Purchases by Wire. You may purchase shares by requesting your bank to transmit payment by wire directly to the Transfer Agent. To invest by wire, please call the Funds toll-free (800) 673-0550 or the Transfer Agent toll-free (800) 628-4077 to advise the Funds of your investment and to receive further instructions. Your bank may charge you a fee for this service. Once you have arranged to purchase shares by wire, please complete and mail the account application promptly to the Transfer Agent. This account application is required to complete the Funds’ records. You will not have access to your shares until the purchase order is completed in proper form, which includes the receipt of completed account information by the Transfer Agent. Once your account is opened, you may make additional investments using the wire procedure described above. Be sure to include your name and account number in the wire instructions you provide your bank.

 

Purchases by Telephone. You may also purchase shares by telephone, by contacting the Funds toll-free (800) 673-0550 or the Transfer Agent toll-free (800) 628-4077.

 

How to Sell Shares. You may redeem your shares of the Funds at any time and in any amount by contacting your Financial Intermediary or by contacting the Funds by mail or telephone. For your protection, the Transfer Agent will not redeem your shares until it has received all information and documents necessary for your request to be considered in “proper form.” The Transfer Agent will promptly notify you if your redemption request is not in proper form. The Transfer Agent cannot accept redemption requests which specify a particular date for redemption or which specify any special conditions.

 

The Funds typically expect to meet redemption requests through cash holdings or cash equivalents and anticipates using these types of holdings on a regular basis. The Funds typically expect to pay redemption proceeds for shares redeemed within the following days after receipt by the transfer agent of a redemption request in proper form: (i) for payment by check, the Funds typically expect to mail the check within two business days; and (ii) for payment by wire or ACH, the Funds typically expect to process the payment within two business days. Payment of redemption proceeds may take up to 7 calendar days as permitted under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“the 1940 Act”). Under unusual circumstances as permitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Funds may suspend the right of redemption or delay payment of redemption proceeds for more than 7 days. When shares are purchased by check or through ACH, the proceeds from the redemption of those shares will not be paid until the purchase check or ACH transfer has been converted to federal funds, which could take up to 15 calendar days.

 

To the extent cash holdings or cash equivalents are not available to meet redemption requests, the Funds will meet redemption requests by either (i) rebalancing their overweight securities or (ii) selling portfolio assets. In addition, if the Funds determine that it would be detrimental to the best interest of a Fund’s remaining shareholders to make payment in cash, a Fund may pay redemption proceeds in whole or in part by a distribution-in-kind of readily marketable securities.

 

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If you sell your shares through a securities dealer or investment professional, it is such person’s responsibility to transmit the order to the Funds in a timely fashion. Any loss to you resulting from failure to do so must be settled between you and such person.

 

Delivery of the proceeds of a redemption of shares purchased and paid for by check shortly before the receipt of the redemption request may be delayed until the Funds determine that the Transfer Agent has completed collection of the purchase check, which may take up to 15 calendar days. Also, payment of the proceeds of a redemption request for an account for which purchases were made by wire may be delayed until the Funds receive a completed account application for the account to permit the Funds to verify the identity of the person redeeming the shares and to eliminate the need for backup withholding.

 

Note that the Funds will assess a 2.00% redemption fee on Investor Class shares of the Funds redeemed within 60 days of purchase as a percentage of the amount redeemed. See “Frequent Purchases and Redemptions” below.

 

Redemption by Mail. To redeem shares by mail, send a written request for redemption, signed by the registered owner(s) exactly as the account is registered, to the Clifford Capital Funds, Attn: Redemptions, 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, VA 23235. Certain written requests to redeem shares may require signature guarantees. For example, signature guarantees may be required if you sell a large number of shares, if your address of record on the account application has been changed within the last 30 days, or if you ask that the proceeds be sent to a different person or address. Signature guarantees are used to help protect you and the Funds. You can obtain a signature guarantee from most banks or securities dealers, but not from a Notary Public. Please call the Transfer Agent toll-free (800) 628-4077 to learn if a signature guarantee is needed or to make sure that it is completed appropriately in order to avoid any processing delays. There is no charge to shareholders for redemptions by mail.

 

Redemption by Telephone. You may redeem your shares by telephone provided that you requested this service on your initial account application. If you request this service at a later date, you must send a written request along with a signature guarantee to the Transfer Agent. Once your telephone authorization is in effect, you may redeem shares by calling the Transfer Agent toll-free (800) 628-4077. There is no charge to shareholders for redemptions by telephone. If it should become difficult to reach the Transfer Agent by telephone during periods when market or economic conditions lead to an unusually large volume of telephone requests, a shareholder may send a redemption request by overnight mail to the Transfer Agent, c/o Clifford Capital Funds, at 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235.

 

Redemption by Wire. If you request that your redemption proceeds be wired to you, please call your bank for instructions prior to writing or calling the Transfer Agent. Be sure to include your name, Fund name, Fund account number, your account number at your bank and wire information from your bank in your request to redeem by wire. There is no charge to shareholders for redemptions by wire.

 

Redemption in Kind. The Funds typically expect to satisfy requests by using holdings of cash or cash equivalents or selling portfolio assets. On a less regular basis, and if the Adviser believes it is in the best interest of a Fund and its shareholders not to sell portfolio assets, a Fund may satisfy redemption requests by using short-term borrowing from the Fund’s custodian to the extent such arrangements are in place with the custodian. In addition to paying redemption proceeds in cash, the Funds reserve the right to make payment for a redemption in securities rather than cash, which is known as a “redemption in kind.” While the Funds do not intend, under normal circumstances, to redeem shares by payment in kind, it is possible that conditions may arise in the future which would, in the opinion of the Trustees, make it undesirable for a Fund to pay for all redemptions in cash. In such a case, the Trustees may authorize payment to be made in readily marketable portfolio securities of a Fund, either through the distribution of selected individual portfolio securities or a pro-rata distribution of all portfolio securities held by the Fund. Securities delivered in payment of redemptions would be valued at the same value assigned to them in computing a Fund’s NAV per share. Shareholders receiving them may incur brokerage costs when these securities are sold and will be subject to market risk until such securities are sold. An irrevocable election has been filed under Rule 18f-1 of the 1940 Act, wherein the Funds must pay redemptions in cash, rather than in kind, to any shareholder of record of a Fund who redeems during any 90-day period, the lesser of (a) $250,000 or (b) 1% of a Fund’s net assets at the beginning of such period. Redemption requests in excess of this limit may be satisfied in cash or in kind at a Fund’s election. The Funds’ methods of satisfying shareholder redemption requests will normally be used during both regular and stressed market conditions.

 

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Signature Guarantees. To help protect you and the Funds from fraud, signature guarantees are required for: (1) all redemptions ordered by mail if you require that the check be made payable to another person or that the check be mailed to an address other than the one indicated on the account registration; (2) all requests to transfer the registration of shares to another owner; and (3) all authorizations to establish or change telephone redemption service, other than through your initial account application. Signature guarantees may be required for certain other reasons. For example, a signature guarantee may be required if you sell a large number of shares or if your address of record on the account has been changed within the last thirty (30) days.

 

In the case of redemption by mail, signature guarantees must appear on either: (1) the written request for redemption; or (2) a separate instrument of assignment (usually referred to as a “stock power”) specifying the total number of shares being redeemed. The Trust may waive these requirements in certain instances.

 

An original signature guarantee assures that a signature is genuine so that you are protected from unauthorized account transactions. Notarization is not an acceptable substitute. Acceptable guarantors only include participants in the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program (STAMP2000). Participants in STAMP2000 may include financial institutions such as banks, savings and loan associations, trust companies, credit unions, broker-dealers and member firms of a national securities exchange.

 

Proper Form. Your order to buy shares is in proper form when your completed and signed account application and check or wire payment is received by the Transfer Agent. Your written request to sell or exchange shares is in proper form when written instructions signed by all registered owners, with a signature guarantee if necessary, is received by the Funds.

 

Automatic Investment Plan. Existing shareholders, who wish to make regular monthly investments in amounts of $100 or more, may do so through the Automatic Investment Plan. Under the Automatic Investment Plan, your designated bank or other financial institution debits a pre-authorized amount from your account on or about the 15th day of each month and applies the amount to the purchase of Fund shares. To use this service, you must authorize the transfer of funds by completing the Automatic Investment Plan section of the account application and sending a blank voided check.

 

Exchange Privilege. To the extent that the Adviser manages other funds in the Trust, you may exchange all or a portion of your shares in a Fund for shares of the same class of certain other funds of the Trust managed by the Adviser having different investment objectives, provided that the shares of the fund you are exchanging into are registered for sale in your state of residence. An exchange is treated as a redemption and purchase and will generally result in realization of a taxable gain or loss on the transaction. You will not pay a deferred sales charge on an exchange from a Fund. However, if you exchange shares of another mutual fund that is not advised by the Adviser for shares of a Fund, you may pay a deferred sales charge on the sale of those fund shares, as applicable. As of the date of this prospectus, the Adviser manages two funds in the Trust.

 

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Frequent purchases and redemptions (“Frequent Trading”) (as discussed below) can adversely impact Fund performance and shareholders. Therefore, the Trust reserves the right to temporarily or permanently modify or terminate the Exchange Privilege. The Trust also reserves the right to refuse exchange requests by any person or group if, in the Trust’s judgment, a Fund would be unable to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment objective and policies or would otherwise potentially be adversely affected. The Trust further reserves the right to restrict or refuse an exchange request if the Trust has received or anticipates simultaneous orders affecting significant portions of a Fund’s assets or detects a pattern of exchange requests that coincides with a “market timing” strategy. Although the Trust will attempt to give you prior notice when reasonable to do so, the Trust may modify or terminate the Exchange Privilege at any time.

 

Transferring Shares. If you wish to transfer shares to another owner, send a written request to the Transfer Agent, c/o Clifford Capital Funds, at 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, VA 23235. Your request should include: (i) the name of the Fund and existing account registration; (ii) signature(s) of the registered owner(s); (iii) the new account registration, address, taxpayer identification number and how dividends and capital gains are to be distributed; (iv) any stock certificates which have been issued for the shares being transferred; (v) signature guarantees (See “Signature Guarantees”); and (vi) any additional documents which are required for transfer by corporations, administrators, executors, trustees, guardians, etc. If you have any questions about transferring shares, call the Transfer Agent toll-free (800) 628-4077.

 

Account Statements and Shareholder Reports. Each time you purchase, redeem or transfer shares of a Fund, you will receive a written confirmation. You will also receive a year-end statement of your account if any dividends or capital gains have been distributed, and an annual and a semi-annual report.

 

Shareholder Communications. The Funds may eliminate duplicate mailings of portfolio materials to shareholders who reside at the same address, unless instructed to the contrary. Investors may request that the Funds send these documents to each shareholder individually by calling the Funds toll-free (800) 673-0550.

 

General. The Funds will not be responsible for any losses from unauthorized transactions (such as purchases, sales or exchanges) if it follows reasonable security procedures designed to verify the identity of the investor. You should verify the accuracy of your confirmation statements immediately after you receive them.

 

Other Important Investment Information

 

Dividends, Distributions and Taxes

 

Dividends and Capital Gains Distributions. All income dividends and capital gains distributions will be automatically reinvested in shares of the Funds unless you indicate otherwise on the account application or in writing.

 

Dividends from net investment income, if any, are declared and paid annually for the Funds. The Funds intend to distribute annually any net capital gains.

 

There are no sales charges or transaction fees for reinvested dividends and all shares will be purchased at NAV. Shareholders will be subject to tax on all dividends and distributions whether paid to them in cash or reinvested in shares. If the investment in shares is made within an IRA, all dividends and capital gain distributions must be reinvested.

 

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Unless you are investing through a tax deferred retirement account, such as an IRA, it is disadvantageous for you to buy shares of the Funds shortly before the next distribution, because doing so can cost you money in taxes. This is known as “buying a dividend”. To avoid buying a dividend, check the Funds’ distribution schedule before you invest.

 

Taxes. In general, Fund distributions are taxable to you as ordinary income, qualified dividend income or capital gain. This is true whether you reinvest your distributions in additional shares of a Fund or receive them in cash. Any long-term capital gains a Fund distributes are taxable to you as long-term capital gains, no matter how long you have owned your shares. Other Fund distributions (including distributions attributable to short-term capital gain of a Fund) will generally be taxable to you as ordinary income, except that distributions that are designated as “qualified dividend income” will be taxable at the rates applicable to long-term capital gain. Every January, you will receive a Form 1099 that shows the tax status of distributions you received for the previous year. Distributions declared in December but paid in January are taxable as if they were paid in December. The one major exception to these tax principles is that distributions on, and sales, exchanges and redemptions of, shares held in an IRA (or other tax-deferred retirement account) will not be currently taxable.

 

When you sell shares of a Fund, you will generally have a capital gain or loss. For tax purposes, an exchange of your shares of a Fund for shares of a different fund of the Trust is the same as a sale. The individual tax rate on any gain from the sale or exchange of your shares depends on how long you have held your shares.

 

Fund distributions and gains from the sale or exchange of your shares will generally be subject to state and local income tax. Non-U.S. investors may be subject to U.S. withholding and estate tax. You should consult with your tax adviser about the federal, state, local or foreign tax consequences of your investment in a Fund.

 

By law, the Funds must withhold 24% of your taxable distributions and proceeds if you do not provide your correct taxpayer identification number (TIN) or fail to certify that your TIN is correct and that you are a U.S. person, or if the Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) has notified you that you are subject to backup withholding and instructs the Funds to do so.

 

Cost Basis Reporting. Federal law requires that mutual fund companies report their shareholders’ cost basis, gain/loss, and holding period to the Internal Revenue Service on the Fund’s shareholders’ Consolidated Form 1099s when “covered” securities are sold. Covered securities are any regulated investment company and/or dividend reinvestment plan shares acquired on or after January 1, 2012.

 

The Funds have chosen average cost as the standing (default) tax lot identification method for all shareholders. A tax lot identification method is the way the Funds will determine which specific shares are deemed to be sold when there are multiple purchases on different dates at differing net asset values, and the entire position is not sold at one time. The Funds have chosen average cost as its standing (default) tax lot identification method for all shareholders. The Funds’ standing tax lot identification method is the method covered shares will be reported on your Consolidated Form 1099 if you do not select a specific tax lot identification method. You may choose a method different than the Funds’ standing method and will be able to do so at the time of your purchase or upon the sale of covered shares. Please refer to the appropriate Internal Revenue Service regulations or consult your tax advisor with regard to your personal circumstances.

 

For those securities defined as “covered” under current Internal Revenue Service cost basis tax reporting regulations, the Funds are responsible for maintaining accurate cost basis and tax lot information for tax reporting purposes. The Funds are not responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information for those securities that are not “covered.” The Funds and their service providers do not provide tax advice. You should consult independent sources, which may include a tax professional, with respect to any decisions you may make with respect to choosing a tax lot identification method.

 

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Possible Tax Law Changes. At the time that this prospectus is being prepared, the coronavirus (COVID-19) is affecting the United States. Various administrative and legislative changes to the federal tax laws are under consideration, but it is not possible at this time to determine whether any of these changes will take place or what the changes might entail.

 

The Trust

 

The Funds are series of the Trust, an open-end management investment company organized as a Delaware statutory trust on April 9, 2007. The Trustees supervise the operations of the Funds according to applicable state and federal law, and the Trustees are responsible for the overall management of the Funds’ business affairs.

 

Rule 12b-1 Shareholder Service Fees

 

The Funds have adopted a Shareholder Services Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1 (the “Plan”) for the Investor Class shares. Pursuant to the Plan, the Funds may compensate Financial Intermediaries that provide services for shareholders of the Funds. The Plan provides that for activities relating to these services, each Fund will pay the annual rate of 0.25% of the average daily net assets of its Investor Class. Such activities may include the provision of sub-accounting, recordkeeping and/or administrative services, responding to customer inquiries, and providing information on customer investments. Because the shareholder service fees are paid out of a Fund’s assets on an on-going basis, these fees, over time, will increase the cost of your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges. The Plan, while primarily intended to compensate for shareholder service expenses, was adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, and it therefore may be used to pay for certain expenditures related to financing distribution- related activities of the Funds.

 

Frequent Purchases and Redemptions

 

Frequent purchases and redemptions (“Frequent Trading”) of shares of the Funds may present a number of risks to other shareholders of the Funds. These risks may include, among other things, dilution in the value of shares of the Funds held by long-term shareholders, interference with the efficient management by the Adviser of a Fund’s portfolio holdings, and increased brokerage and administration costs. Due to the potential of an overall adverse market, economic, political, or other conditions affecting the sale price of portfolio securities, a Fund could face untimely losses as a result of having to sell portfolio securities prematurely to meet redemptions. Current shareholders of the Funds may face unfavorable impacts as portfolio securities concentrated in certain sectors may be more volatile than investments across broader ranges of industries as sector-specific market or economic developments may make it more difficult to sell a significant amount of shares at favorable prices to meet redemptions. Frequent Trading may also increase portfolio turnover, which may result in increased capital gains taxes for shareholders of the Funds. These capital gains could include short-term capital gains taxed at ordinary income tax rates.

 

The Funds will assess a 2.00% redemption fee on Investor Class shares of a Fund redeemed within 60 days of purchase as a percentage of the amount redeemed. The redemption fee is deducted from your proceeds and is retained by the Funds for the benefit of long-term shareholders. The “first in-first out” (“FIFO”) method is used to determine the holding period; this means that if you purchase shares on different days, the shares you held longest will be redeemed first for purposes of determining whether the redemption fee applies. The fee does not apply to Fund shares acquired through the reinvestment of dividends and the Automatic Investment Plan or shares redeemed through the Systematic Withdrawal Program. The Funds reserve the right to change the terms and amount of this fee upon at least a 60-day notice to shareholders.

 

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The Trustees have adopted a policy that is intended to identify and discourage Frequent Trading by shareholders of a Fund under which the Trust’s Chief Compliance Officer and Transfer Agent will monitor Frequent Trading through the use of various surveillance techniques. Under these policies and procedures, shareholders may not engage in more than four “round-trips” (a purchase and sale or an exchange in and then out of a Fund) within a rolling twelve-month period. Shareholders exceeding four round-trips will be investigated by a Fund and possibly restricted from making additional investments in the Fund. The intent of the policies and procedures is not to inhibit legitimate strategies, such as asset allocation, dollar cost averaging or similar activities that may nonetheless result in Frequent Trading of Fund shares. The Funds reserve the right to reject any exchange or purchase of Fund shares with or without prior notice to the account holder. In the event the foregoing purchase and redemption patterns occur, it shall be the policy of the Trust that the shareholder’s account and any other account with a Fund under the same taxpayer identification number shall be precluded from investing in a Fund (including investment that are part of an exchange transaction) for such time period as the Trust deems appropriate based on the facts and circumstances (including, without limitation, the dollar amount involved and whether the Investor has been precluded from investing in the Fund before); provided that such time period shall be at least 30 calendar days after the last redemption transaction. The above policies shall not apply if the Trust determines that a purchase and redemption pattern is not a Frequent Trading pattern or is the result of inadvertent trading errors.

 

These policies and procedures will be applied uniformly to all shareholders and the Funds will not accommodate market timers.

 

The policies also apply to any account, whether an individual account or accounts with Financial Intermediaries such as investment advisers, broker dealers or retirement plan administrators, commonly called omnibus accounts, where the intermediary holds Fund shares for a number of its customers in one account. Omnibus account arrangements permit multiple investors to aggregate their respective share ownership positions and purchase, redeem and exchange Fund shares without the identity of the particular shareholder(s) being known to the Funds. Accordingly, the ability of the Funds to monitor and detect Frequent Trading activity through omnibus accounts may be more limited and there is no guarantee that the Funds will be able to identify shareholders who may be engaging in Frequent Trading through omnibus accounts or to curtail such trading. However, the Funds will establish information sharing agreements with intermediaries as required by Rule 22c-2 under the 1940 Act, and otherwise use reasonable efforts to work with intermediaries to identify excessive short-term trading in underlying accounts.

 

If a Fund identifies that excessive short-term trading is taking place in a participant-directed employee benefit plan accounts, the Funds or their Adviser or Transfer Agent will contact the plan administrator, sponsor or trustee to request that action be taken to restrict such activity. However, the ability to do so may be constrained by regulatory restrictions or plan policies. In such circumstances, it is generally not the policy of the Funds to close the account of an entire plan due to the activity of a limited number of participants. However, the Funds will take such actions as deemed appropriate in light of all the facts and circumstances.

 

The Funds’ policies provide for ongoing assessment of the effectiveness of current policies and surveillance tools, and the Trustees reserves the right to modify these or adopt additional policies and restrictions in the future. Shareholders should be aware, however, that any surveillance techniques currently employed by the Funds or other techniques that may be adopted in the future, may not be effective, particularly where the trading takes place through certain types of omnibus accounts. As noted above, if the Funds are unable to detect and deter trading abuses, the Funds’ performance, and their long-term shareholders, may be harmed. In addition, shareholders may be harmed by the extra costs and portfolio management inefficiencies that result from Frequent Trading, even when the trading is not for abusive purposes.

 

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Distribution Arrangements

 

The Funds are offered through financial supermarkets, investment advisers and consultants, financial planners, brokers, dealers and other investment professionals, and directly through the Distributor. Investment professionals who offer shares may request fees from their individual clients. If you invest through a third party, the policies and fees may be different than those described in this prospectus. For example, third parties may charge transaction fees or set different minimum investment amounts. If you purchase your shares through a broker-dealer, the broker-dealer firm is entitled to receive a percentage of the sales charge you pay in order to purchase Fund shares.

 

Financial Highlights

 

The following tables are intended to help you better understand the financial performance of each Fund since its inception. Certain information reflects financial results for a single Fund share. The total returns in the tables represent the rate you would have earned (or lost) on an investment in the Fund, assuming reinvestment of all dividends and distributions. The information has been audited by Cohen & Company, Ltd., the Funds’ independent registered public accounting firm, whose report, along with the Funds’ financial statements, is included in the Funds’ annual report to shareholders. The annual report is available from the Funds upon request without charge.

 

The Partners Fund is a continuation of the Predecessor Fund and, therefore, the financial information presented below is for both the Partners Fund and the Predecessor Fund. The Predecessor Fund’s shareholders approved the Reorganization into the Partners Fund on January 13, 2016. The Reorganization subsequently took place on February 8, 2016.

 

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Clifford Capital Partners Fund - Institutional Class
Financial Highlights

Selected data for a share outstanding throughout the period.

 

CLIFFORD CAPITAL PARTNERS FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD

 

    Institutional Class  
                                     
    Years ended September 30,              
    2020 (3)     2019     2018     2017     Period
January 1, 2016 to
September 30, 2016(2)
    Year ended
December 31, 2015
 
                                     
Net asset value, beginning of period   $ 14.65     $ 15.83     $ 14.69     $ 13.11     $ 10.40     $ 11.83  
                                                 
Investment activities                                                
   Net investment income (loss) (1)     0.31       0.23       0.16       0.12       0.07       0.14  
   Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     (0.68 )     (0.65 )     1.75       1.53       2.64       (1.33 )
   Total from investment activities     (0.37 )     (0.42 )     1.91       1.65       2.71       (1.19 )
Distributions                                                
   Net investment income     (0.25 )     (0.15 )     (0.12 )     (0.07 )           (0.12 )
   Net realized gain           (0.61 )     (0.65 )                 (0.12 )
   Total distributions     (0.25 )     (0.76 )     (0.77 )     (0.07 )           (0.24 )
                                                 
Net asset value, end of period   $ 14.03     $ 14.65     $ 15.83     $ 14.69     $ 13.11     $ 10.40  
                                                 
Total Return *     (2.68 %)     (1.87 %)     13.43 %     12.62 %     26.06 %     (10.04 %)
Ratios/Supplemental Data                                                
Ratio to average net assets **                                                
   Expenses, gross     1.45 %     0.90 %     0.90 %     0.90 %     0.90 %     0.90 %
   Expenses, net of fee waivers and reimbursements     0.90 %                              
   Net investment income (loss)     2.28 %     1.60 %     1.06 %     0.86 %     0.81 %     1.20 %
Portfolio turnover rate*     59.61 %     22.99 %     19.80 %     34.07 %     24.41 %     54.61 %
Net assets, end of period (000's)   $ 24,549     $ 23,553     $ 16,814     $ 12,889     $ 4,477     $ 3,033  

 

* Total return and portfolio turnover rate are for the period indicated and have not been annualized for periods less than one year.
** Ratio to average net assets are annualized for periods less than one year.
(1) Per share amounts calculated using the average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.
(2) On February 18, 2016, the Board of Trustees approved a change to the Fund's fiscal year end to September 30.
(3) Prior to February 1, 2020 the Advisor paid all operating expenses except for management fees and 12b-1 expenses.

 

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Clifford Capital Partners Fund - Investor Class

Financial Highlights

Selected data for a share outstanding throughout the period.

  

CLIFFORD CAPITAL PARTNERS FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD

 

 

    Investor Class  
                   
    Years ended September 30,          
    2020 (3)     2019     2018     2017     Period
January 1, 2016 to
September 30, 2016(2)
    Year ended
December 31, 2015
 
Net asset value, beginning of period   $ 14.61     $ 15.77     $ 14.63     $ 13.08     $ 10.40     $ 11.86  
                                                 
Investment activities                                                
   Net investment income (loss) (1)     0.27       0.20       0.13       0.09       0.05       0.11  
   Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     (0.67 )     (0.64 )     1.76       1.52       2.63       (1.32 )
   Total from investment activities     (0.40 )     (0.44 )     1.89       1.61       2.68       (1.21 )
Distributions                                                
   Net investment income     (0.24 )     (0.11 )     (0.10 )     (0.06 )           (0.13 )
   Net realized gain           (0.61 )     (0.65 )                 (0.12 )
   Total distributions     (0.24 )     (0.72 )     (0.75 )     (0.06 )           (0.25 )
                                                 
Net asset value, end of period   $ 13.97     $ 14.61     $ 15.77     $ 14.63     $ 13.08     $ 10.40  
                                                 
Total Return *     (2.86 %)     (2.07 %)     13.29 %     12.30 %     25.77 %     (10.22 %)
Ratios/Supplemental Data                                                
Ratio to average net assets **                                                
   Expenses, gross     1.57 %     1.10 %     1.10 %     1.10 %     1.10 %     1.10 %
   Expenses, net of fee waivers and reimbursements     1.13 %                              
   Net investment income (loss)     1.93 %     1.39 %     0.86 %     0.66 %     0.61 %     0.98 %
Portfolio turnover rate*     59.61 %     22.99 %     19.80 %     34.07 %     24.41 %     54.61 %
Net assets, end of period (000's)   $ 397     $ 785     $ 649     $ 352     $ 264     $ 123  

 

* Total return and portfolio turnover rate are for the period indicated and have not been annualized for periods less than one year.
** Ratio to average net assets are annualized for periods less than one year.
(1) Per share amounts calculated using the average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.
(2) On February 18, 2016, the Board of Trustees approved a change to the Fund's fiscal year end to September 30.
(3) Prior to February 1, 2020 the Advisor paid all operating expenses except for management fees and 12b-1 expenses.

31 

 


 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund – Super Institutional Class

Financial Highlights

Selected data for a share outstanding throughout the period.


CLIFFORD CAPITAL PARTNERS FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD

 

    Super Institutional Class  
    Period October 17,
2019** to September 30, 2020 (2)
 
         
Net asset value, beginning of period   $ 14.67  
         
Investment activities        
   Net investment income (loss) (1)     0.30  
   Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     (0.70 )
   Total from investment activities     (0.40 )
Distributions        
   Net investment income     (0.06 )
   Net realized gain      
   Total distributions     (0.06 )
         
Net asset value, end of period   $ 14.21  
         
Total Return *     (2.74 %)
Ratios/Supplemental Data        
Ratio to average net assets ***        
   Expenses, gross     1.43 %
   Expenses, net of fee waivers and reimbursements     0.85 %
   Net investment income (loss)     2.29 %
Portfolio turnover rate*     59.61 %
Net assets, end of period (000's)   $ 13  


 

* Total return and portfolio turnover rate are for the period indicated and have not been annualized for periods less than one year.
** Commencement of operations.
*** Ratio to average net assets are annualized for periods less than one year.
(1) Per share amounts calculated using the average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.
(2) Prior to February 1, 2020 the Advisor paid all operating expenses except for management fees and 12b-1 expenses.

 

32 

 


 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund – Institutional Class

Financial Highlights

Selected data for a share outstanding throughout the period.

 

CLIFFORD CAPITAL FOCUSED SMALL CAP VALUE FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD

 

    Institutional Class  
       
    Year ended September 30, 2020  
         
Net asset value, beginning of period   $ 10.00  
         
Investment activities        
   Net investment income (loss) (1)     0.19  
   Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     (1.14 )
   Total from investment activities     (0.95 )
Distributions        
   Net investment income     (0.01 )
   Net realized gains     (2)
   Total distributions     (0.01 )
         
Net asset value, end of period   $ 9.04  
         
Total Return *     (9.53 %)
Ratios/Supplemental Data        
Ratio to average net assets **        
   Expenses, gross     6.47 %
   Expenses, net of fee waivers and reimbursements     1.05 %
   Net investment income (loss)     2.32 %
Portfolio turnover rate*     102.07 %
Net assets, end of period (000's)   $ 4,532  

 

* Total return and portfolio turnover rate are for the period indicated and have not been annualized for periods less than one year.
** Ratio to average net assets are annualized for periods less than one year.
(1) Per share amounts calculated using the average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.
(2) Less than $0.01.

 

33 

 

 

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund - Investor Class

Financial Highlights

Selected data for a share outstanding throughout the period.

 

CLIFFORD CAPITAL FOCUSED SMALL CAP VALUE FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD

    Investor Class  
       
    Period January 31,
2020** to September 30, 2020
 
         
Net asset value, beginning of period   $ 9.96  
         
Investment activities        
   Net investment income (loss) (1)     0.12  
   Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     (1.06 )
   Total from investment activities     (0.94 )
         
Net asset value, end of period   $ 9.02  
         
Total Return *     (9.44 %)
Ratios/Supplemental Data        
Ratio to average net assets ***        
   Expenses, gross     5.43 %
   Expenses, net of fee waivers and reimbursements     1.30 %
   Net investment income (loss)     2.15 %
Portfolio turnover rate*     102.07 %
Net assets, end of period (000's)   $ 2  

 

* Total return and portfolio turnover rate are for the period indicated and have not been annualized for periods less than one year.
** Commencement of operations
*** Ratio to average net assets are annualized for periods less than one year.
(1) Per share amounts calculated using the average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.

 

 

34 

 

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Fund – Super Institutional Class

Financial Highlights

Selected data for a share outstanding throughout the period.

 

CLIFFORD CAPITAL FOCUSED SMALL CAP VALUE FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
SELECTED PER SHARE DATA THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD

 

    Super Institutional Class  
       
    Period January 31,
2020** to September 30, 2020
 
         
Net asset value, beginning of period   $ 9.96  
         
Investment activities        
   Net investment income (loss) (1)     0.14  
   Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     (1.06 )
   Total from investment activities     (0.92 )
         
Net asset value, end of period   $ 9.04  
         
Total Return *     (9.24 %)
Ratios/Supplemental Data        
Ratio to average net assets ***        
   Expenses, gross     5.19 %
   Expenses, net of fee waivers and reimbursements     0.97 %
   Net investment income (loss)     2.48 %
Portfolio turnover rate*     102.07 %
Net assets, end of period (000's)   $ 2  

 

* Total return and portfolio turnover rate are for the period indicated and have not been annualized for periods less than one year.
** Commencement of operations
*** Ratio to average net assets are annualized for periods less than one year.
(1) Per share amounts calculated using the average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.

 

35 

 

 

APPENDIX

 

Adviser’s Prior Performance – Partners Fund

 

The data below is provided to illustrate the past performance of Clifford Capital Partners, LLC, the Partners Fund’s adviser, in managing fully discretionary private advisory accounts that are managed in accordance with the Clifford Capital All Cap Value investment strategy (formerly named the Clifford Capital Institutional Portfolio) as measured against market indices, and does not represent the performance of the Partners Fund, nor should it be considered a substitute for the Partners Fund’s performance. You should not consider this performance data as a prediction or an indication of future performance of the Partners Fund or the performance that one might achieve by investing in the Partners Fund.

 

The Clifford Capital All Cap Value strategy (the “Composite”) represents all fully discretionary private advisory accounts that are managed in accordance with the Clifford Capital All Cap Value investment strategy (formerly named the Clifford Capital Institutional Portfolio). The Partners Fund is also managed in a manner that is substantially similar to the manner in which these discretionary private advisory accounts are managed. The investment objectives, strategies, and policies of the Partners Fund are substantially similar to the discretionary private advisory accounts included in the Composite. The Composite began on August 1, 2010, the first full month the Adviser began managing accounts.

 

The manner in which the performance was calculated for the Composite differs from that of registered mutual funds like the Partners Fund. The SEC standard method for calculation of performance information for mutual funds was not utilized to calculate the performance of the Composite. The performance information shown below is not representative of the performance information that typically would be shown for a registered mutual fund. The discretionary private advisory accounts that are included in the Composite are not subject to the same type of expenses to which the Partners Fund is subject and are not subject to the diversification requirements, specific tax restrictions, and investment limitations imposed on the Partners Fund by the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, or the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Consequently, the performance results for the Composite could have been adversely affected if the discretionary private advisory accounts in the Composite were subject to the same federal securities tax laws as the Partners Fund. In addition, the discretionary private advisory accounts are not subject to the same adverse effects of cash inflows and outflows of investor money that a public mutual fund such as the Partners Fund may be subject to, and accordingly the performance of these accounts may be higher than for a public mutual fund managed under the same investment strategy. “Composite Net-of-Fees” performance results are net of all fees, expenses, and, if applicable, sales loads or placement fees. Because of variation in fee levels, the “net of fees” Composite returns may not be reflective of performance in any one particular account. The use of a methodology different than that used below to calculate performance could result in different performance data.

 

The operating expenses incurred by the discretionary private advisory accounts in the Composite differ from the anticipated operating expenses of the Partners Fund, with some higher and some lower. The Adviser believes that the net effect of these differences would not have been material to its prior performance results.

 

36 

 

The Adviser’s Clifford Capital All Cap Value Composite
(August 1, 2010 through December 31, 2020)

 

 

The following data illustrates the past performance of the Adviser in managing all substantially similar discretionary private advisory accounts and does not represent the performance of the Partners Fund.

 

Year Total Return
(net of investment management fees)
Total Return
(gross of investment
management fees)
Russell 3000® Value
Total Return Index
Aug. 1 – Dec. 31, 2010 14.32% 14.57% 14.35%
2011 4.20% 5.18% -0.10%
2012 20.15% 21.29% 17.55%
2013 33.22% 34.46% 32.69%
2014 17.49% 18.63% 12.70%
2015 -10.53% -10.08% -4.13%
2016 37.02% 37.92% 18.40%
2017 12.45% 13.10% 13.19%
2018 -8.37% -8.01% -8.58%
2019 25.02% 25.32% 26.26%
2020 12.89% 13.17% 2.87%

 

Composite Average Annual Returns (as of December 31, 2020)

 

Time Period Total Return
(net of investment
management fees)
Total Return
(gross of investment management fees)
Russell 3000® Value
Total Return Index
One year 12.89% 13.17% 2.87%
Three years 8.96% 9.28% 5.89%
Five years 14.79% 15.28% 9.73%
Ten years 13.33% 14.06% 10.36%

Since Inception

(8/1/2010 – 12/31/2020)

14.22% 14.95% 11.34%

37 

 

 

 

 

38 

 

Adviser’s Prior Performance – Focused SCV Fund

 

The data below is provided to illustrate the past performance of Clifford Capital Partners, LLC, the Focused SCV Fund’s adviser, in managing fully discretionary private advisory accounts that are managed in accordance with the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value investment strategy as measured against market indices, and does not represent the performance of the Focused SCV Fund, nor should it be considered a substitute for the Focused SCV Fund’s performance. You should not consider this performance data as a prediction or an indication of future performance of the Focused SCV Fund or the performance that one might achieve by investing in the Focused SCV Fund.

 

The Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value strategy (the “Composite”) represents all fully discretionary private advisory accounts that are managed in accordance with the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value investment strategy. The Focused SCV Fund is also managed in a manner that is substantially similar to the manner in which these discretionary private advisory accounts are managed. The investment objectives, strategies, and policies of the Focused SCV Fund are substantially similar to the discretionary private advisory accounts included in the Composite. The Composite began on April 1, 2016.

 

The way the performance was calculated for the Composite differs from that of registered mutual funds like the Focused SCV Fund. The SEC standard method for calculation of performance information for mutual funds was not utilized to calculate the performance of the Composite. The performance information shown below is not representative of the performance information that typically would be shown for a registered mutual fund. The discretionary private advisory accounts that are included in the Composite are not subject to the same type of expenses to which the Focused SCV Fund is subject and are not subject to the diversification requirements, specific tax restrictions, and investment limitations imposed on the Focused SCV Fund by the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, or the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Consequently, the performance results for the Composite could have been adversely affected if the discretionary private advisory accounts in the Composite were subject to the same federal securities tax laws as the Focused SCV Fund. In addition, the discretionary private advisory accounts are not subject to the same adverse effects of cash inflows and outflows of investor money that a public mutual fund such as the Focused SCV Fund may be subject to, and accordingly the performance of these accounts may be higher than for a public mutual fund managed under the same investment strategy. “Composite Net-of-Fees” performance results are net of all fees, expenses, and, if applicable, sales loads or placement fees. Because of variation in fee levels, the “net of fees” Composite returns may not be reflective of performance in any one particular account. The use of a methodology different than that used below to calculate performance could result in different performance data.

 

The operating expenses incurred by the discretionary private advisory accounts in the Composite differ from the anticipated operating expenses of the Focused SCV Fund, with some higher and some lower. The Adviser believes that the net effect of these differences would not have been material to its prior performance results.

 

39 

 

The Adviser’s Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Composite
(April 1, 2016 through December 31, 2020)

 

 

The following data illustrates the past performance of the Adviser in managing all substantially similar discretionary private advisory accounts and does not represent the performance of the Focused SCV Fund.

 

Year Total Return
(net of investment
management fees)
Total Return
(gross of investment management fees)
Russell 2000® Value
Total Return Index
Apr. 1 – Dec. 31, 2016 32.62% 33.62% 29.54%
2017 11.25% 12.22% 7.84%
2018 -13.75% -12.95% -12.86%
2019 14.00% 15.06% 22.39%
2020 9.60% 10.63% 4.63%

 

Composite Average Annual Returns (as of December 31, 2020)

 

Time Period Total Return
(net of investment
management fees)
Total Return
(gross of investment management fees)
Russell 2000® Value
Total Return Index
One year 9.60% 10.63% 4.63%
Three Years 2.52% 3.48% 3.72%

Since Inception

(4/1/2016 – 12/31/2020)

10.25% 11.27% 9.79%

 

 

 

40 

 

 

Fund Service Providers

 

 

Investment Adviser

Clifford Capital Partners, LLC, located at 363 S. Main Street, Suite 101, Alpine, Utah, 84004

 

Administrator, Transfer Agent and Fund Accountant

Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., located at 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235

 

Distributor

First Dominion Capital Corp., located at 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235

 

Custodian
Fifth Third Bank, located at 38 Fountain Square Plaza, Cincinnati, Ohio 45263

 

Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

Cohen & Company, Ltd., located at 1350 Euclid Ave., Suite 800, Cleveland, Ohio 44115

 

Legal Counsel

Practus, LLP, located at 11300 Tomahawk Creek Parkway, Suite 310, Leawood, Kansas 66211

 

41 

 

How to Get More Information

 

Where to Go for Information

 

For shareholder inquiries, please call toll-free (800) 628-4077.

 

The Statement of Additional Information is on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), contains additional and more detailed information about the Fund, and is incorporated into this Prospectus by reference. Additional information about the Funds’ investments is available in the Funds’ annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders. In the Funds’ annual report, you will find a discussion of the market conditions and investment strategies that significantly affected a Fund’s performance during its last fiscal year. There are three ways to get a copy of these documents.

 

1. Call or write for one, and a copy will be sent without charge.

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund and/or Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund

c/o Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc.

8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205

Richmond, Virginia 23235

(800) 628-4077

 

2. Reports and other information regarding the Funds are available on the EDGAR Database on the SEC’s Internet site free of charge at http://www.sec.gov, and copies of this information may be obtained, after paying a duplicating fee, by electronic request at the following e-mail address: publicinfo@sec.gov.

 

3. Copies of these documents may also be obtained free of charge by visiting the Funds’ website at www.cliffordcapfunds.com. You may also e-mail the Funds at mail@ccofva.com.

 

No dealer, salesman, or other person has been authorized to give any information or to make any representations, other than those contained in this Prospectus, and, if given or made, such other information or representations must not be relied upon as having been authorized by the Funds or the Adviser. This Prospectus does not constitute an offering in any state in which such offering may not lawfully be made.

 

The Adviser’s Contact Information is:

 

Clifford Capital Partners, LLC

363 S. Main Street, Suite 101

Alpine, Utah 84004

(312) 554-5005 

SEC file number 811-22172

 

42 

 

 

8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205

Richmond, Virginia 23235

(800) 673-0550

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund

 

Investor Class (CLFFX)

Institutional Class (CLIFX)

Super Institutional Class (CLIQX)

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund

 

Investor Class (FSVRX)

Institutional Class (FSVVX)

Super Institutional Class (FSVQX)

 

STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

 

January 31, 2021

 

This Statement of Additional Information (“SAI”) is not a prospectus. It should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus of the Clifford Capital Partners Fund (the “Partners Fund”) and the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund (the “Focused SCV Fund”, and together with the Partners Fund, the “Funds”) dated January 31, 2021. The SAI is incorporated by reference into the Funds’ prospectus. This SAI incorporates by reference the Partners Fund’s Annual Report for the year ended September 30, 2020. A free copy of the Prospectus and Annual Report can be obtained by writing to World Funds Trust (the “Trust”), 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235, or by calling toll-free (800) 673-0550.

 

Pursuant to a reorganization that took place on February 8, 2016, the Partners Fund is a successor by merger from a series of the Cottonwood Mutual Funds (the “Predecessor Fund”).

 

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST AND THE FUNDS 1
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT FUND INVESTMENTS AND RISK CONSIDERATIONS 1
INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS 4
MANAGEMENT 5
SHAREHOLDER INFORMATION 11
ADDITIONAL TAX INFORMATION 16
PRICING AND PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES 25
REDEMPTIONS IN KIND 26
ADDITIONAL SERVICE PROVIDERS 26
DISCLOSURE OF PORTFOLIO SECURITY HOLDINGS 31
PROXY VOTING POLICIES 34
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 35
EXHIBIT A 36
EXHIBIT B 38
EXHIBIT C 43

 

 

DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST AND THE FUNDS

 

General. World Funds Trust (the “Trust”) was organized as a Delaware statutory trust on April 9, 2007. The Trust is an open-end management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”) and commonly known as a “mutual fund”. The Declaration of Trust permits the Trust to offer separate series (“funds”) of shares of beneficial interest (“shares”). The Trust reserves the right to create and issue shares of additional funds. Each fund is a separate mutual fund, and each share of each fund represents an equal proportionate interest in that fund. All consideration received by the Trust for shares of any fund and all assets of such fund belong solely to that fund and would be subject to liabilities related thereto. Each fund of the Trust pays its (i) operating expenses, including fees of its service providers, expenses of preparing prospectuses, proxy solicitation material and reports to shareholders, costs of custodial services and registering its shares under federal and state securities laws, pricing, insurance expenses, brokerage costs, interest charges, taxes and organization expenses; and (ii) pro rata share of the fund’s other expenses, including audit and legal expenses. Expenses attributable to a specific fund shall be payable solely out of the assets of that fund. Expenses not attributable to a specific fund are allocated across all of the funds on the basis of relative net assets. The other mutual funds of the Trust, other than the Funds, are described in separate prospectuses and statements of additional information.

 

The Funds. This SAI relates to the prospectus for the Partners Fund and the Focused SCV Fund and should be read in conjunction with the prospectus. This SAI is incorporated by reference into the Funds’ prospectus. No investment in shares should be made without reading the prospectus. The Funds are separate investment portfolios or series of the Trust.

 

Description of Multiple Classes of Shares. The Funds are authorized to issue three classes of shares: Investor Class shares charging a 0.25% 12b-1 fee and Institutional Class and Super Institutional Class shares imposing no 12b-1 fee.

 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT FUND INVESTMENTS AND RISK CONSIDERATIONS

 

The Funds’ investment objectives and principal investment strategies are described in the prospectus. This section contains a discussion of some of the investments the Funds may make and some of the techniques they may use.

 

Portfolio Turnover. Average annual portfolio turnover rate is the ratio of the lesser of sales or purchases to the monthly average value of the portfolio securities owned during the year, excluding from both the numerator and the denominator all securities with maturities at the time of acquisition of one year or less. A higher portfolio turnover rate involves greater transaction expenses to a Fund and may result in the realization of net capital gains, which would be taxable to shareholders when distributed. The Funds’ investment adviser, Clifford Capital Partners, LLC (the “Adviser”), makes purchases and sales for each Fund’s portfolio whenever necessary, in the Adviser’s opinion, to meet a Fund’s objective. For the fiscal years ended September 30, 2018, 2019, and 2020, the Partner Fund’s portfolio turnover rate was 19.80%, 22.99% and 59.61%, respectively. The increase in portfolio turnover for the Partners Fund from the 2019 fiscal year to the 2020 fiscal year was due to asset growth and increased trading volume during early 2020 market volatility. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Focused SCV Fund’s portfolio turnover rate was 102.07%.

 

Equity Securities. The Funds may invest in equity securities such as common stock, preferred stock, convertible securities, rights and warrants. Common stocks, the most familiar type, represent an equity (ownership) interest in a corporation. Warrants are options to purchase equity securities at a specified price for a specific time period. Rights are similar to warrants, but normally have a short duration and are distributed by the issuer to its shareholders. Although equity securities have a history of long-term growth in value, their prices fluctuate based on changes in a company’s financial condition and on overall market and economic conditions.

 

1 

 

 

Risks of Other Investment Companies / Exchange Traded Funds (“ETFs”). The Funds will incur higher and duplicative expenses when it invests in mutual funds, ETFs, and other investment companies. There is also the risk that the Funds may suffer losses due to the investment practices of the underlying funds. When the Funds invest in an underlying mutual fund or ETF, the Fund will be subject to substantially the same risks as those associated with the direct ownership of securities comprising the underlying fund or index on which the ETF or index mutual fund is based and the value of the Fund’s investments will fluctuate in response to the performance and risks of the underlying investments or index. In addition to the brokerage costs associated with a Fund’s purchase and sale of the underlying funds, ETFs and mutual funds incur fees that are separate from those of the Fund. As a result, a Fund’s shareholders will indirectly bear a proportionate share of the operating expenses of the ETFs and mutual funds, in addition to Fund expenses. Because a Fund is not required to hold shares of underlying funds for any minimum period, it may be subject to, and may have to pay, short-term redemption fees imposed by the underlying funds. In addition to risks generally associated with investments in investment company securities, ETFs are subject to the following risks that do not apply to traditional mutual funds: (i) the market price of an ETF’s shares may be above or below its net asset value; (ii) an active trading market for an ETF’s shares may not develop or be maintained; (iii) the ETF may employ an investment strategy that utilizes high leverage ratios; (iv) trading of an ETF’s shares may be halted if the listing exchange’s officials deem such action appropriate; and (v) underlying ETF shares may be de-listed from the exchange or the activation of market-wide “circuit breakers” (which are tied to large decreases in stock prices) temporarily stops stock trading.

 

Risks of Foreign Securities. There may be less information about foreign companies in the form of reports and ratings than about U.S. issuers. Foreign issuers may not be subject to uniform accounting, auditing and financial reporting requirements comparable to those applicable to U.S. issuers. Foreign markets may not be as developed or efficient as those in the United States, and there is generally less government supervision and regulation of securities exchanges, brokers and listed issuers than in the United States. Investments in foreign securities also subject the Fund to risks associated with fluctuations in currency values.

 

Risks of Emerging Markets Securities. To the extent that the Funds invest in issuers located in emerging markets, the foreign securities risk may be heightened.

 

Restricted and Illiquid Securities. The portfolios of the Funds may contain illiquid securities. Illiquid securities generally include securities that the holder reasonably expects cannot be sold or disposed of in current market conditions in seven calendar days or less without the sale or disposition significantly changing the market value of the security.  . Securities may be illiquid due to contractual or legal restrictions on resale or lack of a ready market. The following securities are considered to be illiquid: repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven days, nonpublicly offered securities and restricted securities. Restricted securities are securities where the resale of which is subject to legal or contractual restrictions. Restricted securities may be sold only in privately negotiated transactions, in a public offering with respect to which a registration statement is in effect under the Securities Act of 1933 or pursuant to Rule 144 or Rule 144A promulgated under such Act. Where registration is required, the Funds may be obligated to pay all or part of the registration expense, and a considerable period may elapse between the time of the decision to sell and the time such security may be sold under an effective registration statement. If during such a period adverse market conditions were to develop, a Fund might obtain a less favorable price than the price it could have obtained when it decided to sell. Each Fund will not invest more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities.

 

With respect to Rule 144A securities, these restricted securities are treated as exempt from the 15% limit on illiquid securities, provided that a dealer or institutional trading market in such securities exists. Under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, the Adviser determines the liquidity of restricted securities and, through reports from the Adviser, the Board of Trustees will monitor trading activity in restricted securities. If institutional trading in restricted securities were to decline, the liquidity of a Fund could be adversely affected.

 

2 

 

 

U.S. Government Securities. U.S. government securities are high-quality debt securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury or by an agency or instrumentality of the U.S. government. Not all U.S. government securities are backed by the full faith and credit of, or guaranteed by the United States Treasury. For example, securities issued by the Farm Credit Banks or by the Federal National Mortgage Association are supported by the instrumentality’s right to borrow money from the U.S. Treasury under certain circumstances. Moreover, securities issued by other agencies or instrumentalities are supported only by the credit of the entity that issued them.

 

Borrowing. At this time, the Funds do not expect to engage in borrowing. The Funds may engage in borrowing in the future and, to the extent a Fund does so, such Fund will be permitted to borrow money up to one-third of the value of its total assets. Borrowing is a speculative technique that increases both investment opportunity and a Fund’s ability to achieve greater diversification. However, it also increases investment risk. Because a Fund’s investments will fluctuate in value, whereas the interest obligations on borrowed funds may be fixed, during times of borrowing, the Fund’s net asset value may tend to increase more when its investments increase in value, and decrease more when its investments decrease in value. In addition, interest costs on borrowings may fluctuate with changing market interest rates and may partially offset or exceed the return earned on the borrowed funds. Also, during times of borrowing under adverse market conditions, a Fund might have to sell portfolio securities to meet interest or principal payments at a time when fundamental investment considerations would not favor such sales.

 

Currently, subject to modification to conform to the 1940 Act as interpreted or modified from time to time, each Fund is permitted, consistent with the 1940 Act, to borrow, and pledge its shares to secure such borrowing, provided, that immediately thereafter there is asset coverage of at least 300% for all borrowings by the Fund from a bank. If borrowings exceed this 300% asset coverage requirement by reason of a decline in net assets of a Fund, the Fund will reduce its borrowings within three days (not including weekends and holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 300% asset coverage requirement. The 1940 Act also permits a Fund to borrow for temporary purposes only in an amount not exceeding 5% of the value of its total assets at the time when the loan is made. A loan shall be presumed to be for temporary purposes if it is repaid within 60 days and is not extended or renewed. To the extent outstanding borrowings of a Fund exceed 5% of the value of the total assets of the Fund, the Fund will not make additional purchases of securities – the foregoing shall not be construed to prevent the Fund from settling portfolio transactions or satisfying shareholder redemptions orders. The Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) has indicated, however, that certain types of transactions, which could be deemed “borrowings” (such as firm commitment agreements and reverse repurchase agreements), are permissible if a Fund “covers” the agreements by establishing and maintaining segregated accounts.

 

Financial Services Industry Obligations. The Funds may invest in each of the following obligations of the financial services industry:

 

(1) Certificate of Deposit. Certificates of deposit are negotiable certificates evidencing the indebtedness of a commercial bank or a savings and loan association to repay funds deposited with it for a definite period of time (usually from fourteen days to one year) at a stated or variable interest rate.

 

(2) Time Deposits. Time deposits are non-negotiable deposits maintained in a banking institution or a savings and loan association for a specified period of time at a stated interest rate.

 

(3) Bankers’ Acceptances. Bankers’ acceptances are credit instruments evidencing the obligation of a bank to pay a draft which has been drawn on it by a customer, which instruments reflect the obligation both of the bank and of the drawer to pay the face amount of the instrument upon maturity.

 

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Repurchase Agreements. The Funds may invest in repurchase agreements fully collateralized by obligations issued by the U.S. government or agencies of the U.S. government (“U.S. Government Obligations”). A repurchase agreement is a short-term investment in which the purchaser (i.e., a Fund) acquires ownership of a U.S. Government Obligation (which may be of any maturity) and the seller agrees to repurchase the obligation at a future time at a set price, thereby determining the yield during the purchaser’s holding period (usually not more than 7 days from the date of purchase). Any repurchase transaction in which a Fund engages will require full collateralization of the seller’s obligation during the entire term of the repurchase agreement. In the event of a bankruptcy or other default of the seller, a Fund could experience both delays in liquidating the underlying security and losses in value. However, the Funds intend to enter into repurchase agreements only with the custodian, other banks with assets of $1 billion or more and registered securities dealers determined by the Adviser to be creditworthy. The Adviser monitors the creditworthiness of the banks and securities dealers with which the Funds engage in repurchase transactions. The Funds may engage in repurchase agreement transactions to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law.

 

Cash Investments. Under normal market conditions, the Focused SCV Fund may invest up to 10% of its net assets in cash. The Partners Fund may invest more than 10% of its assets in cash or cash-like securities under normal market conditions so long as it remains primarily invested in equity securities. When the Adviser believes market, economic or political conditions are unfavorable for investors, the Adviser may invest up to 100% of a Fund’s net assets in cash, cash equivalents or other short-term investments. Unfavorable market or economic conditions may include excessive volatility or a prolonged general decline in the securities markets, or the U.S. economy. The Adviser also may invest in these types of securities or hold cash while looking for suitable investment opportunities or to maintain liquidity.

 

INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS

 

Fundamental. The investment limitations described below have been adopted by the Trust with respect to the Funds and are fundamental (“Fundamental”), i.e., they may not be changed without the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding shares of a Fund. As used in the Prospectus and SAI, the term “majority” of the outstanding shares of a Fund means the lesser of: (1) 67% or more of the outstanding shares of the Fund present at a meeting, if the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund are present or represented at such meeting; or (2) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund. Other investment practices which may be changed by the Board of Trustees without the approval of shareholders to the extent permitted by applicable law, regulation or regulatory policy are considered non-fundamental (“Non-Fundamental”).

 

1. Borrowing Money. The Funds may not borrow money except as permitted under the 1940 Act, and as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.

 

2. Senior Securities. The Funds may not issue any senior security to others, except as permitted under the 1940 Act, and as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.

 

3. Underwriting. The Funds may not underwrite securities issued by others except to the extent a Fund may be deemed to be an underwriter under the federal securities laws, in connection with the disposition of portfolio securities.

 

4. Real Estate. The Funds may not purchase or sell real estate except as permitted under the 1940 Act, and as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.

 

5. Commodities. The Funds may not purchase or sell physical commodities or commodity futures contracts, except as permitted by the 1940 Act, and as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.

 

6. Loans. The Funds may not make loans to others, except as permitted under the 1940 Act, and as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.

 

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7. Concentration. Each Fund may not invest more than 25% of the value of its net assets in any one industry or group of industries (except that securities of the U.S. government, its agencies and instrumentalities are not subject to these limitations).

 

Additionally, as a matter of fundamental policy, each Fund shall be a “diversified company” as that term is defined in the 1940 Act, as interpreted or modified by regulatory authorities from time to time.

 

With respect to the percentages adopted by the Trust as maximum limitations on its investment policies and limitations, an excess above the fixed percentage will not be a violation of the policy or limitation unless the excess results immediately and directly from the acquisition of any security or the action taken. This paragraph does not apply to the borrowing policy set forth in paragraph 1 above. With respect to each Fund’s policy on concentration, a Fund will use the Standard Industrial Classification Codes list that is maintained by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) to classify the Fund’s holdings by industry.

 

MANAGEMENT

 

THE INVESTMENT ADVISER

 

The Adviser is Clifford Capital Partners, LLC, located at 363 S. Main Street, Suite 101, Alpine, Utah 84004. The Adviser was organized in 2010 as an Illinois limited liability company.

 

For its services with respect to the Partners Fund, the Adviser is entitled to receive an annual management fee calculated daily and payable monthly (and deducted proportionately from each class of shares) of 0.75% of the Fund’s average daily net assets. Prior to January 31, 2020, the Adviser received a fee of 0.90% of the Fund’s average daily net assets and paid the operating expenses of the Partners Fund excluding fees payable to the Adviser, brokerage fees and commissions, taxes, interest expense, interest and dividend expenses on securities sold short, the costs of acquired fund fees and expenses, 12b-1 fees, shareholder service fees, and extraordinary expenses. The following table describes the advisory fees earned and waived and the Fund expenses reimbursed by the Adviser with respect to the Partners Fund for the last three fiscal years of the Partners Fund.

 

Partners Fund 2020 2019 2018
Gross Advisory Fees $190,074 $205,958 $129,472
Waivers and/or Reimbursements* $129,235 $0 $0
Net Advisory Fees $60,839 $205,958 $129,472

 

For its services with respect to the Focused SCV Fund, the Adviser is entitled to receive an annual management fee calculated daily and payable monthly (and deducted proportionately from each class of shares) of 0.90% of the Fund’s average daily net assets The following table describes the advisory fees earned and waived and the Fund expenses reimbursed by the Adviser with respect to the Focused SCV Fund for the Fund’s initial fiscal year.

 

Focused SCV Fund 2020
Gross Advisory Fees $24,109
Waivers and/or Reimbursements* $145,095
Net Advisory Fees $0

 

* These amounts are recoverable until 2023.

 

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The Advisor has contractually agreed to waive or reduce its fees and to assume other expenses of the Funds, if necessary, in amounts that limit “Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses” (exclusive of interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, acquired fund fees and expenses, other expenditures which are capitalized in accordance with GAAP, other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of the Funds’ business, dividend expense on short sales and expenses incurred under a plan of distribution adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, each as applicable) to not more than 0.90% for the Partners Fund’s Investor and Institutional Class, 0.82% for the Partners Fund’s Super Institutional Class, 1.05% for the Focused SCV Fund’s Investor and Institutional Class and 0.97% for the Focused SCV Fund’s Super Institutional Class. The Expense Limitation is set to expire on January 31, 2022 for each Fund, and the Board of Trustees or the Advisor may terminate this Expense Limitation Agreement by mutual written consent. Each waiver and/or reimbursement of an expense by the Advisor is subject to repayment by the Fund within three years following the date such waiver and/or reimbursement was made, provided that the Fund is able to make the repayment without exceeding the expense limitation in place at the time of the waiver or reimbursement and at the time the waiver or reimbursement is recouped.

 

The Adviser retains the right to use the name “Clifford” or any derivative thereof in connection with another investment company or business enterprise with which the Adviser is or may become associated. The Trust’s right to use the name “Clifford” or any derivative thereof automatically ceases ninety days after termination of the Investment Advisory Agreement and may be withdrawn by the Adviser on ninety days written notice.

 

The Adviser may make payments to banks or other financial institutions that provide shareholder services and administer shareholder accounts. If a bank or other financial institution were prohibited from continuing to perform all or a part of such services, management of the Funds believes that there would be no material impact on the Funds or their shareholders. Financial institutions may charge their customers fees for offering these services to the extent permitted by applicable regulatory authorities, and the overall return to those shareholders availing themselves of the financial institution’s services will be lower than to those shareholders who do not. The Funds may from time to time purchase securities issued by financial institutions that provide such services; however, in selecting investments for the Funds, no preference will be shown for such securities.

 

THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER

 

The table below provides information regarding other accounts managed by the Portfolio Manager of the Funds as of September 30, 2020.

 

Ryan P. Batchelor

 

Account Type Number of Accounts by Account Type Total Assets by Account Type Number of Accounts by Type Subject to a Performance Fee Total Assets by Account Type Subject to a Performance Fee
Registered Investment Companies 2 $29,405,000 0 0
Other Pooled Investment Companies 0 0 0 0
Other Accounts 99 $186,985,000 0 0

 

Mr. Batchelor is compensated through his equity ownership in the Adviser. He does not receive separate compensation for his service as portfolio manager. As an equity member of the Adviser, the portfolio manager receives compensation in the form of distributions and profits from the Adviser.

 

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The following table shows the dollar range of equity securities beneficially owned by the Portfolio Manager in the Funds as of September 30, 2020 stated as one of the following ranges: A = None; B = $1-$10,000; C = $10,001-$50,000; D = $50,001-$100,000; E = $100,001-$500,000; F = $500,001-$1,000,000; and G = over $1,000,000.

 

Name of Portfolio Manager Dollar Range of Equity Securities in the Funds
Ryan P. Batchelor

Partners Fund - C

Focused SCV Fund - C

 

Potential conflicts of interest may arise because the Portfolio Manager uses the same proprietary investment methodology for the Funds as for other clients. This means that the Portfolio Manager will make the investment strategies used to manage the Funds available to other clients. As a result, there may be circumstances under which the Funds and other clients of the Adviser may compete in purchasing available investments and, to the extent that the demand exceeds the supply, may result in driving the prices of such investments up, resulting in higher costs to the Funds. There also may be circumstances under which the Portfolio Manager recommends the purchase or sale of various investments to other clients and does not purchase or sell the same investments for the Funds, or purchases or sells an investment for the Funds and does not include such investment in recommendations provided to other clients. This is because the Adviser’s portfolio recommendations among clients differ based on each client’s investment policy guidelines and/or prevailing market conditions at the time such recommendation is made. The Portfolio Manager is charged with preventing positions in portfolios from being both long and short at the same time. The Portfolio Manager uses a combination of proprietary software and third-party risk management software to monitor and ensure that positions are consistent across all portfolios.

 

TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

 

The Trust is governed by the Board, which is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced businesspersons who meet throughout the year to oversee the Trust’s activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the Funds and review performance. The names, addresses and ages of the trustees and officers of the Trust, together with information as to their principal occupations during the past five years, are listed below.

 

Each Trustee was nominated to serve on the Board of Trustees based on their particular experiences, qualifications, attributes and skills. Generally, the Trust believes that each Trustee is competent to serve because of their individual overall merits including: (i) experience; (ii) qualifications; (iii) attributes; and (iv) skills. Mr. David J. Urban has been a Professor of Education since 1989. His strategic planning, organizational and leadership skills help the Board set long-term goals. Ms. Mary Lou H. Ivey has business experience as a practicing tax accountant since 1996 and, as such, brings tax, budgeting and financial reporting skills to the Board. Mr. Theo H. Pitt has experience as an investor, including his role as trustee of several other investment companies and business experience as Senior Partner of a financial consulting company, as a partner of a real estate partnership and as an Account Administrator for a money management firm. The Trust does not believe any one factor is determinative in assessing a Trustee’s qualifications, but that the collective experience of each Trustee makes them each highly qualified.

 

The Chairman of the Board of Trustees is Ms. Ivey, who is not an “interested person” of the Trust, within the meaning of the 1940 Act. The Trust also has an independent Audit Committee that allows the Board to access the expertise necessary to oversee the Trust, identify risks, recognize shareholder concerns and needs and highlight opportunities. The Audit Committee is able to focus Board time and attention to matters of interest to shareholders and, through its private sessions with the Trust’s auditor, Chief Compliance Officer and legal counsel, stay fully informed regarding management decisions.

 

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Mutual funds face a number of risks, including investment risk, compliance risk and valuation risk. The Board oversees management of the Fund’s risks directly and through its officers. While day-to-day risk management responsibilities rest with the Fund’s Chief Compliance Officer, investment advisers and other service providers, the Board monitors and tracks risk by: (1) receiving and reviewing quarterly reports related to the performance and operations of the Fund; (2) reviewing and approving, as applicable, the compliance policies and procedures of the Trust, including the Trust’s valuation policies and transaction procedures; (3) periodically meeting with the portfolio manager to review investment strategies, techniques and related risks; (4) meeting with representatives of key service providers, including the Fund’s investment advisers, administrator, distributor, transfer agent and the independent registered public accounting firm, to discuss the activities of the Fund; (5) engaging the services of the Chief Compliance Officer of the Fund to monitor and test the compliance procedures of the Trust and its service providers; (6) receiving and reviewing reports from the Trust’s independent registered public accounting firm regarding the Fund’s financial condition and the Trust’s internal controls; and (7) receiving and reviewing an annual written report prepared by the Chief Compliance Officer reviewing the adequacy of the Trust’s compliance policies and procedures and the effectiveness of their implementation. The Board has concluded that its general oversight of the investment advisers and other service providers as implemented through the reporting and monitoring process outlined above allows the Board to effectively administer its risk oversight function.

 

Following is a list of the Trustees and executive officers of the Trust and their principal occupation over the last five years. The mailing address of each Trustee and officer is 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond VA, 23235, unless otherwise indicated.

 

NON-INTERESTED TRUSTEES

 

NAME, AGE AND POSITION WITH THE TRUST TERM OF OFFICE AND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED

PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) DURING THE PAST FIVE

YEARS

NUMBER OF FUNDS IN FUND COMPLEX OVERSEEN BY TRUSTEE

OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS

HELD BY TRUSTEE

David J. Urban

 

(65)

 

Trustee

 

Indefinite, Since June 2010 Dean, Jones College of Business, Middle Tennessee State University since July 2013. 26 Independent Trustee for the six series of the ETF Opportunities Trust (registered investment company)

Mary Lou H. Ivey

 

(62)

 

Trustee

 

Indefinite, Since June 2010 Accountant, Harris, Hardy & Johnstone, P.C. (accounting firm), since 2008. 26 Independent Trustee for the six series of the ETF Opportunities Trust (registered investment company)

Theo H. Pitt, Jr.

 

(84)

 

Trustee

 

Indefinite; Since August 2013 Senior Partner, Community Financial Institutions Consulting (bank consulting) since 1997 to present. 26 Independent Trustee of Chesapeake Investment Trust for the one series of that trust; Leeward Investment Trust for the one series of that trust; Hillman Capital Management Investment Trust for the one series of that trust; and Starboard Investment Trust for the 12 series of that trust; and ETF Opportunities Trust for the six series of that Trust (all registered investment companies).

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OFFICERS WHO ARE NOT TRUSTEES

 

NAME, AGE AND POSITION(S) WITH THE TRUST TERM OF OFFICE AND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) DURING THE PAST FIVEYEARS

David A. Bogaert

 

(57)

 

President

 

Indefinite, Since August 2017 Managing Director of Business Development, Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., October 2013 – present; Senior Vice President of Business Development and other positions for Huntington Asset Services, Inc. (fund administration and transfer agency) from 1986 to 2013.

Karen M. Shupe

 

(56)

 

Treasurer and Principal Executive Officer

 

Indefinite, Since June 2008 Managing Director, Fund Operations, Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., 2003 to present.

Ann T. MacDonald

 

(66)

 

Assistant Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer

 

Indefinite, Since November 2015 Managing Director, Fund Administration and Fund Accounting, Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., 2003 to present.

John H. Lively

 

(52)

 

Secretary

 

Indefinite, Since November 2013 Attorney, PractusTM, LLP (law firm), May 2018 to present; Attorney, The Law Offices of John H. Lively & Associates, Inc. (law firm), March 2010 to May 2018.

Holly B. Giangiulio

 

(59) Assistant Secretary

 

Indefinite, Since November 2015 Managing Director, Corporate Operations, Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., January 2015 to present, Corporate Accounting and HR Manager from 2010 to 2015.  

Julian G. Winters

 

(52)

 

Chief Compliance Officer

 

Indefinite, Since August 2013. Managing Member of Watermark Solutions, LLC (investment management compliance and consulting) since March 2007.

Tina H. Bloom

 

(52)

 

Assistant Secretary

 

Indefinite, Since November 2018 Attorney, PractusTM, LLP, May 2018 to present; Attorney, The Law Offices of John H. Lively & Associates, Inc., November 2017 to May 2018; Director of Fund Administration of Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC (fund administration and transfer agency) from 2011-2017.

 

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Trustee Committees. The Board oversees the Trust and certain aspects of the services provided by the Adviser and the Fund’s other service providers. The Trustees will hold office until their successors have been duly elected and qualified or until their earlier resignation or removal. The officers of the Trust serve at the pleasure of the Board and for a term of one year or until their successors have been duly elected and qualified.

 

The Trust has a standing Audit Committee of the Board composed of Mr. Urban, Ms. Ivey and Mr. Pitt. The functions of the Audit Committee are to meet with the Trust’s independent auditors to review the scope and findings of the annual audit, discuss the Trust’s accounting policies, discuss any recommendations of the independent auditors with respect to the Trust’s management practices, review the impact of changes in accounting standards on the Trust’s financial statements, recommend to the Board the selection of independent registered public accounting firm, and perform such other duties as may be assigned to the Audit Committee by the Board. For the Funds’ most recent fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Audit Committee met seven times.

 

The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee is comprised of Mr. Urban, Ms. Ivey and Mr. Pitt. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee’s purposes, duties and powers are set forth in its written charter, which is described in Exhibit C – the charter also describes the process by which shareholders of the Trust may make nominations. For the Funds’ most recent fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Committee met once.

 

The Valuation Committee is comprised of Mr. Urban, Ms. Ivey and Mr. Pitt. The Valuation Committee meets as needed in the event that the Funds hold any securities that are subject to valuation and it reviews the fair valuation of such securities on an as needed basis. For the Funds’ most recent fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Committee did not meet.

 

The Qualified Legal Compliance Committee is comprised of Mr. Urban, Ms. Ivey and Mr. Pitt. The Qualified Legal Compliance Committee receives, investigates, and makes recommendations as to the appropriate remedial action in connection with any report of evidence of a material violation of the securities laws or breach of fiduciary duty or similar violation by the Trust, its officers, Trustees, or agents. For the Funds’ fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Committee did not meet.

 

Trustee Compensation. Each Trustee who is not an “interested person” of the Trust may receive compensation for their services to the Trust. All Trustees are reimbursed for any out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with attendance at meetings. Each Trustee receives an annual retainer fee of $60,000, paid quarterly. Additionally, each Trustee receives a fee of $2,500 per special meeting attended. Compensation received from the Trust for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020 is as follows:

 

Name of Person / Position Fund Name Aggregate Compensation from Funds Pension or Retirement Benefits Accrued as Part of Funds’ Expenses Estimated Annual Benefits upon Retirement Total Compensation from Funds and Fund Complex Paid to Trustees (*)(1)
David J. Urban, Trustee Partners Fund $1,627 $0 $0 $3,700
Focused SCV Fund $2,073
Mary Lou H. Ivey, Trustee Partners Fund $1,627 $0 $0 $3,700
Focused SCV Fund $2,073
Theo H. Pitt, Jr., Trustee Partners Fund $1,627 $0 $0 $3,700
Focused SCV Fund $2,073
* Trust does not pay deferred compensation.

 

(1) The “Fund Complex” consists of the Funds.

 

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Trustee Ownership of Fund Shares. The table below shows for each Trustee, the amount of Fund equity securities beneficially owned by each Trustee, and the aggregate value of all investments in equity securities of the Funds of the Trust, as of December 31, 2020, and stated as one of the following ranges: A = None; B = $1-$10,000; C = $10,001-$50,000; D = $50,001-$100,000; and E = over $100,000.

 

Name of Trustee Dollar Range of Equity Securities in the Funds Aggregate Dollar Range of Equity Securities in all Registered Investment Companies Overseen by the Trustees in Family of Investment Companies
Non-Interested Trustees    
David J. Urban A A
Mary Lou H. Ivey A A
Theo H. Pitt, Jr. A A

 

Sales Loads. No front-end or deferred sales charges are applied to purchase of Fund shares by current or former trustees, officers, employees or agents of the Trust, the Adviser or the Funds’ principal underwriter (the “Distributor”) and by the members of their immediate families.

 

Policies Concerning Personal Investment Activities. The Funds, the Adviser, and the Distributor have each adopted a Code of Ethics, pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act that permit investment personnel, subject to their particular code of ethics, to invest in securities, including securities that may be purchased or held by the Funds, for their own account.

 

The Codes of Ethics are available on the EDGAR Database on the SEC’s Internet website at http://www.sec.gov.

 

SHAREHOLDER INFORMATION

 

CONTROL PERSONS AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF SECURITIES

 

A principal shareholder is any person who owns (either of record or beneficially) 5% or more of the outstanding shares of the Funds. A control person is one who owns, either directly or indirectly, more than 25% of the voting securities of a Fund or acknowledges the existence of such control. As a controlling shareholder, each of these persons could control the outcome of any proposal submitted to the shareholders for approval, including changes to a Fund’s fundamental policies or the terms of the investment advisory agreement with the Adviser.

 

As of December 31, 2020, the Trustees and officers own less than 1% of the Funds’ shares, and the following persons are considered to be either a control person or principal shareholder of the Funds.

 

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Clifford Capital Partners Fund Investor Class

 

Name and Address % of Class Type of Ownership

Pershing LLC

1 Pershing Plaza

Jersey City, NJ 07399

27.99% Record
     

S.F. & J.K. Greenhaus JTWROS

15 Hallock Place

Armonk, NY 10504

39.85% Record
     
UMB C/F M. Ranovic IRA
2823 Fairgrove Ln
Salt Lake City, UT 84120
5.63% Record

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund Institutional Class

 

Name and Address % of Class Type of Ownership

Charles Schwab & Co Inc

Attn: Mutual Funds

211 Main Street

San Francisco, CA 94105

59.99% Record

Equitable Trust Company

4400 Harding Pike, Suite 310

Nashville, TN 37205

5.67% Record

TD Ameritrade, Inc. 

FBO Our Customers 

PO Box 2226 

Omaha, NE 68103-2226

14.45% Record

 

Clifford Capital Partners Fund Super Institutional Class

 

Name and Address % of Class Type of Ownership

UMB C/F D. Passey 

Roth IRA 

1279 E. Cedar Mountain Circle 

Alpine, UT 84004 

100.00% Record

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund Institutional Class

 

Name and Address % of Class Type of Ownership

Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. 

Attn: Mutual Funds 

211 Main Street 

San Francisco, CA 94105 

37.63% Record

J.P. Morgan Securities LLC 

4 Chase Metrotech Center 

Brooklyn, NY 11245 

51.70% Record

J.P. Morgan Securities LLC 

4 Chase Metrotech Center 

Brooklyn, NY 11245 

6.71% Record

 

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Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund Investor Class

 

Name and Address % of Class Type of Ownership

UMB C/F R. P. Batchelor 

Roth IRA 

1279 E. Cedar Mountain Circle 

Alpine, UT 84004 

100% Record

 

Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund Super Institutional Class

 

Name and Address % of Class Type of Ownership

UMB C/F R. P. Batchelor 

Roth IRA 

1279 E. Cedar Mountain Circle 

Alpine, UT 84004 

100% Record

 

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE

 

Subject to policies established by the Board, the Adviser is responsible for the Funds’ portfolio decisions and the placing of the Funds’ portfolio transactions. In placing portfolio transactions, the Adviser seeks the best qualitative execution for the Funds, taking into account such factors as price (including the applicable brokerage commission or dealer spread), the execution capability, financial responsibility and responsiveness of the broker or dealer and the brokerage and research services provided by the broker or dealer. The Adviser generally seeks favorable prices and commission rates that are reasonable in relation to the benefits received. The Adviser may not give consideration to sales of shares of the Trust as a factor in the selection of brokers and dealers to execute portfolio transactions. However, the Adviser may place portfolio transactions with brokers or dealers that promote or sell a Fund’s shares so long as such placements are made pursuant to policies approved by the Funds’ Board of Trustees that are designed to ensure that the selection is based on the quality of the broker’s execution and not on its sales efforts.

 

The Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser is specifically authorized to select brokers or dealers who also provide brokerage and research services to the Funds and/or the other accounts over which the Adviser exercises investment discretion and to pay such brokers or dealers a commission in excess of the commission another broker or dealer would charge if the Adviser determines in good faith that the commission is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided. The determination may be viewed in terms of a particular transaction or the Adviser’s overall responsibilities with respect to the Trust and to other accounts over which it exercises investment discretion.

 

Research services include supplemental research, securities and economic analyses, statistical services and information with respect to the availability of securities or purchasers or sellers of securities and analyses of reports concerning performance of accounts. The research services and other information furnished by brokers through whom the Funds effect securities transactions may also be used by the Adviser in servicing all of its accounts. Similarly, research and information provided by brokers or dealers serving other clients may be useful to the Adviser in connection with its services to the Funds. Although research services and other information are useful to the Funds and the Adviser, it is not possible to place a dollar value on the research and other information received. It is the opinion of the Board of Trustees and the Adviser that the review and study of the research and other information will not reduce the overall cost to the Adviser of performing its duties to the Funds under the Investment Advisory Agreement. Due to research services provided by brokers, the Funds may direct trades to certain brokers.

 

There were no directed trades in exchange for research services during the most recent fiscal year ended September 30, 2020.

 

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Over-the-counter transactions will be placed either directly with principal market makers or with broker-dealers, if the same or a better price, including commissions and executions, is available. Fixed income securities are normally purchased directly from the issuer, an underwriter or a market maker. Purchases include a concession paid by the issuer to the underwriter and the purchase price paid to a market maker may include the spread between the bid and asked prices.

 

When a Fund and another of the Adviser’s clients seek to purchase or sell the same security at or about the same time, the Adviser may execute the transaction on a combined (“blocked”) basis. Blocked transactions can produce better execution for the Funds because of the increased volume of the transaction. If the entire blocked order is not filled, a Fund may not be able to acquire as large a position in such security as it desires, or it may have to pay a higher price for the security. Similarly, a Fund may not be able to obtain as large an execution of an order to sell or as high a price for any particular portfolio security if the other client desires to sell the same portfolio security at the same time. In the event that the entire blocked order is not filled, the purchase or sale will normally be allocated on a pro rata basis. The allocation may be adjusted by the Adviser, taking into account such factors as the size of the individual orders and transaction costs, when the Adviser believes an adjustment is reasonable.

 

The following table sets forth the brokerage commissions paid by the Partners Fund and the Predecessor Fund on its portfolio brokerage transactions during the periods shown:

 

Partners Fund
Fiscal Year End Brokerage Commissions
September 30, 2018 $1,974
September 30, 2019 $6,501
September 30, 2020 $16,182
Focused SCV Fund
Fiscal Year End Brokerage Commissions
September 30, 2020 $7,605

 

The increase in brokerage commissions for the Partners Fund from the 2019 fiscal year to the 2020 fiscal year was due to asset growth and increased trading volume during early 2020 market volatility.

 

The Funds are required to identify any securities of their "regular brokers and dealers" (as such term is defined in the 1940 Act) which the Funds may hold at the close of their most recent fiscal years. As of September 30, 2020, the Funds did not hold any securities of their regular brokers and dealers. 

 

DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST

 

The Trust was organized as a Delaware statutory trust on April 9, 2007. The Trust’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust authorizes the Board to issue an unlimited number of full and fractional shares of beneficial interest in the Trust and to classify or reclassify any unissued shares into one or more series of shares. The Agreement and Declaration of Trust further authorizes the trustees to classify or reclassify any series of shares into one or more classes. The Trust’s shares of beneficial interest have no par value.

 

The Trust is authorized to issue three classes of shares: Investor Class shares imposing no front-end or deferred sales charges and imposing a 0.25% 12b-1 fee and 2.00% redemption fee; Institutional Class and Super Institutional Class shares imposing no front-end, deferred sales charges, 12b-1 fees or redemption fees.

 

Shares have no preemptive rights and only such conversion or exchange rights as the Board may grant in its discretion. When issued for payment as described in the applicable prospectus, shares will be fully paid and non-assessable. In the event of a liquidation or dissolution of the Trust or an individual fund, shareholders of a fund are entitled to receive the assets available for distribution belonging to the particular fund, and a proportionate distribution, based upon the relative asset values of the respective fund, of any general assets of the Trust not belonging to any particular fund which are available for distribution.

 

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Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each full share held, and a proportionate fractional vote for each fractional share held and will vote in the aggregate and not by class, except as otherwise expressly required by law or when the Board determines that the matter to be voted on affects only the interests of shareholders of a particular class. Voting rights are not cumulative and, accordingly, the holders of more than 50% of the aggregate of the Trust’s outstanding shares may elect all of the trustees, irrespective of the votes of other shareholders.

 

Rule 18f-2 under the 1940 Act provides that any matter required to be submitted to the holders of the outstanding voting securities of an investment company such as the Trust shall not be deemed to have been effectively acted upon unless approved by the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of each fund affected by the matter. A particular fund is deemed to be affected by a matter unless it is clear that the interests of each fund in the matter are substantially identical or that the matter does not affect any interest of the fund. Under the Rule, the approval of an investment management agreement or any change in an investment objective, if fundamental, or in a fundamental investment policy would be effectively acted upon with respect to a fund only if approved by a majority of the outstanding shares of such fund. However, the Rule also provides that the ratification of the appointment of independent public accountants, the approval of principal underwriting contracts and the election of trustees may be effectively acted upon by shareholders of the Trust voting without regard to series or class.

 

The Trust does not presently intend to hold annual meetings of shareholders except as required by the 1940 Act or other applicable law. Upon the written request of shareholders owning at least 25% of the Trust’s shares, the Trust will call for a meeting of shareholders to consider the removal of one or more trustees and other certain matters. To the extent required by law, the Trust will assist in shareholder communication in such matters.

 

The Board has full power and authority, in its sole discretion, and without obtaining shareholder approval, to divide or combine the shares of any class or series thereof into a greater or lesser number, to classify or reclassify any issued shares or any class or series thereof into one or more classes or series of shares, and to take such other action with respect to the Trust’s shares as the Board may deem desirable. The Agreement and Declaration of Trust authorizes the trustees, without shareholder approval, to cause the Trust to merge or to consolidate with any corporation, association, trust or other organization in order to change the form of organization and/or domicile of the Trust or to sell or exchange all or substantially all of the assets of the Trust, or any series or class thereof, in dissolution of the Trust, or any series or class thereof. The Agreement and Declaration of Trust permits the termination of the Trust or of any series or class of the Trust by the trustees without shareholder approval. However, the exercise of such authority by the Board without shareholder approval may be subject to certain restrictions or limitations under the 1940 Act.

 

CODES OF ETHICS

 

The Board, on behalf of the Trust, has adopted a Code of Ethics pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act. In addition, the Adviser, Distributor and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. (the “Administrator”), the Trust’s administrator, have each adopted Codes of Ethics pursuant to Rule 17j-1. These Codes of Ethics apply to the personal investing activities of trustees, officers and certain employees (“access persons”). Rule 17j-1 and the Codes of Ethics are designed to prevent unlawful practices in connection with the purchase or sale of securities by access persons. Under each Code of Ethics, access persons are permitted to engage in personal securities transactions, but are required to report their personal securities transactions for monitoring purposes. The personnel subject to the Codes are permitted to invest in securities, including securities that may be purchased or held by the Fund. In addition, certain access persons are required to obtain approval before investing in initial public offerings or private placements, or are prohibited from making such investments. Copies of these Codes of Ethics are on file with the SEC, and are available to the public.

 

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ADDITIONAL TAX INFORMATION 

 

The following discussion is a summary of certain U.S. federal income tax considerations affecting the Funds and their shareholders. The discussion reflects applicable federal income tax laws of the U.S. as of the date of this SAI, which tax laws may be changed or subject to new interpretations by the courts or the Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”), possibly with retroactive effect. No attempt is made to present a detailed explanation of all U.S. income, estate or gift tax, or foreign, state or local tax concerns affecting the Funds and their shareholders (including shareholders owning large positions in a Fund). The discussion set forth herein does not constitute tax advice. Investors are urged to consult their own tax advisers to determine the tax consequences to them of investing in the Funds.

 

In addition, no attempt is made to address tax concerns applicable to an investor with a special tax status such as a financial institution, real estate investment trust, insurance company, regulated investment company (“RIC”), individual retirement account, other tax-exempt entity, dealer in securities or non-U.S. investor. Furthermore, this discussion does not reflect possible application of the alternative minimum tax (“AMT”). Unless otherwise noted, this discussion assumes shares of the Funds are held by U.S. shareholders and that such shares are held as capital assets.

 

A U.S. shareholder is a beneficial owner of shares of the Funds that is for U.S. federal income tax purposes:

 

a citizen or individual resident of the United States (including certain former citizens and former long-term residents);

a corporation or other entity treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, created or organized in or under the laws of the United States or any state thereof or the District of Columbia;

an estate, the income of which is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source; or

a trust with respect to which a court within the United States is able to exercise primary supervision over its administration and one or more U.S. shareholders have the authority to control all of its substantial decisions or the trust has made a valid election in effect under applicable Treasury regulations to be treated as a U.S. person.

 

A “Non-U.S. shareholder” is a beneficial owner of shares of the Funds that is an individual, corporation, trust or estate and is not a U.S. shareholder. If a partnership (including any entity treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes) holds shares of a Fund, the tax treatment of a partner in the partnership generally depends upon the status of the partner and the activities of the partnership. A prospective shareholder who is a partner of a partnership holding Fund shares should consult its tax advisors with respect to the purchase, ownership and disposition of its Fund shares.

 

If a Fund qualifies as a regulated investment company (“RIC”) and distributes to its shareholders, for each taxable year, at least 90% of the sum of (i) its “investment company taxable income” as that term is defined in the Internal Revenue Code (which includes, among other things, dividends, taxable interest, the excess of any net short-term capital gains over net long-term capital losses and certain net foreign exchange gains as reduced by certain deductible expenses) without regard to the deduction for dividends paid, and (ii) the excess of its gross tax-exempt interest, if any, over certain deductions attributable to such interest that are otherwise disallowed, a Fund will be relieved of U.S. federal income tax on any income of the Fund, including long-term capital gains, distributed to shareholders. However, any ordinary income or capital gain retained by a Fund will be subject to U.S. federal income tax at regular corporate federal income tax rates (currently at a maximum rate of 21%). Each Fund intends to distribute at least annually substantially all of its investment company taxable income, net tax-exempt interest, and net capital gain.

 

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A Fund will generally be subject to a nondeductible 4% federal excise tax on the portion of its undistributed ordinary income with respect to each calendar year and undistributed capital gains if it fails to meet certain distribution requirements with respect to the one-year period ending on October 31 in that calendar year. To avoid the 4% federal excise tax, the required minimum distribution is generally equal to the sum of (i) 98.2% of a Fund’s ordinary income (computed on a calendar year basis), (ii) 98% of a Fund’s capital gain net income (generally computed for the one-year period ending on October 31) and (iii) any income realized, but not distributed, and on which it paid no federal income tax in preceding years. The Funds generally intend to make distributions in a timely manner in an amount at least equal to the required minimum distribution and therefore, under normal market conditions, do not expect to be subject to this excise tax.

 

A Fund may be required to recognize taxable income in circumstances in which it does not receive cash. For example, if a Fund holds debt obligations that are treated under applicable tax rules as having original issue discount (such as debt instruments with payment in kind interest or, in certain cases, with increasing interest rates or that are issued with warrants), the Fund must include in income each year a portion of the original issue discount that accrues over the life of the obligation regardless of whether cash representing such income is received by the Fund in the same taxable year. Because any original issue discount accrued will be included in a Fund’s “investment company taxable income” (discussed above) for the year of accrual, the Fund may be required to make a distribution to its shareholders to satisfy the distribution requirement, even though it will not have received an amount of cash that corresponds with the income earned.

 

To the extent that a Fund has capital loss carryforwards from prior tax years, those carryforwards will reduce the net capital gains that can support the Fund’s distribution of Capital Gain Dividends. Beginning in 2011, a RIC is permitted to carry forward net capital losses indefinitely and may allow losses to retain their original character (as short or as long-term). For net capital losses recognized prior to such date, such losses are permitted to be carried forward up to 8 years and are characterized as short-term. These capital loss carryforwards may be utilized in future years to offset net realized capital gains of a Fund, if any, prior to distributing such gains to shareholders. As of September 30, 2020, the Partners Fund had a capital loss carryforward of $956,989. This carryforward may be carried forward indefinitely of which $329,676 is considered long-term and $627,313 is considered short-term. As of September 30, 2020, the Focused SCV Fund had a capital loss carryforward of $195,301. This carryforward may be carried forward indefinitely of which $195,301 is considered short-term.

 

Except as set forth in “Failure to Qualify as a RIC,” the remainder of this discussion assumes that each Fund will qualify as a RIC for each taxable year.

 

Failure to Qualify as a RIC. If a Fund is unable to satisfy the 90% distribution requirement or otherwise fails to qualify as a RIC in any year, it will be subject to corporate level income tax on all of its income and gain, regardless of whether or not such income was distributed. Distributions to a Fund’s shareholders of such income and gain will not be deductible by the Fund in computing its taxable income. In such event, a Fund’s distributions, to the extent derived from the Fund’s current or accumulated earnings and profits, would constitute ordinary dividends, which would generally be eligible for the dividends received deduction available to corporate shareholders, and non-corporate shareholders would generally be able to treat such distributions as “qualified dividend income” eligible for reduced rates of U.S. federal income taxation, provided in each case that certain holding period and other requirements are satisfied.

 

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Distributions in excess of a Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits would be treated first as a return of capital to the extent of the shareholders’ tax basis in their Fund shares, and any remaining distributions would be treated as a capital gain. To qualify as a RIC in a subsequent taxable year, a Fund would be required to satisfy the source-of-income, the asset diversification, and the annual distribution requirements for that year and dispose of any earnings and profits from any year in which the Fund failed to qualify for tax treatment as a RIC. Subject to a limited exception applicable to RICs that qualified as such under the Internal Revenue Code for at least one year prior to disqualification and that requalify as a RIC no later than the second year following the nonqualifying year, a Fund would be subject to tax on any unrealized built-in gains in the assets held by it during the period in which the Fund failed to qualify for tax treatment as a RIC that are recognized within the subsequent 10 years, unless the Fund made a special election to pay corporate-level tax on such built-in gain at the time of its requalification as a RIC.

 

Taxation for U.S. Shareholders. Distributions paid to U.S. shareholders by a Fund from its investment company taxable income (which is, generally, the Fund’s ordinary income plus net realized short-term capital gains in excess of net realized long-term capital losses) are generally taxable to U.S. shareholders as ordinary income to the extent of the Fund’s earnings and profits, whether paid in cash or reinvested in additional shares. Such distributions (if designated by a Fund) may qualify (i) for the dividends received deduction in the case of corporate shareholders under Section 243 of the Internal Revenue Code to the extent that a Fund’s income consists of dividend income from U.S. corporations, excluding distributions from tax-exempt organizations, exempt farmers’ cooperatives or real estate investment trusts or (ii) in the case of individual shareholders, as qualified dividend income eligible to be taxed at reduced rates under Section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code (which provides for a maximum 20% rate) to the extent that the Fund receives qualified dividend income, and provided in each case certain holding period and other requirements are met. Qualified dividend income is, in general, dividend income from taxable domestic corporations and qualified foreign corporations (e.g., generally, foreign corporations incorporated in a possession of the United States or in certain countries with a qualified comprehensive income tax treaty with the United States, or the stock with respect to which such dividend is paid is readily tradable on an established securities market in the United States). A qualified foreign corporation generally excludes any foreign corporation, which for the taxable year of the corporation in which the dividend was paid, or the preceding taxable year, is a passive foreign investment company. Distributions made to a U.S. shareholder from an excess of net long-term capital gains over net short-term capital losses (“capital gain dividends”), including capital gain dividends credited to such shareholder but retained by a Fund, are taxable to such shareholder as long-term capital gain if they have been properly designated by the Fund, regardless of the length of time such shareholder owned the shares of the Fund. Distributions in excess of a Fund’s earnings and profits will be treated by the U.S. shareholder, first, as a tax-free return of capital, which is applied against and will reduce the adjusted tax basis of the U.S. shareholder’s shares and, after such adjusted tax basis is reduced to zero, will constitute capital gain to the U.S. shareholder (assuming the shares are held as a capital asset).

 

A Fund is not required to provide written notice designating the amount of any qualified dividend income or capital gain dividends and other distributions. The Forms 1099 will instead serve this notice purpose.

 

As a RIC, each Fund will be subject to the AMT, but any items that are treated differently for AMT purposes must be apportioned between a Fund and the shareholders and this may affect the shareholders’ AMT liabilities. The Funds intend in general to apportion these items in the same proportion that dividends paid to each shareholder bear to the Funds’ taxable income (determined without regard to the dividends paid deduction).

 

For purpose of determining (i) whether the annual distribution requirement is satisfied for any year and (ii) the amount of capital gain dividends paid for that year, a Fund may, under certain circumstances, elect to treat a dividend that is paid during the following taxable year as if it had been paid during the taxable year in question. If a Fund makes such an election, the U.S. shareholder will still be treated as receiving the dividend in the taxable year in which the distribution is made. However, any dividend declared by a Fund in October, November or December of any calendar year, payable to shareholders of record on a specified date in such a month and actually paid during January of the following year, will be treated as if it had been received by the U.S. shareholders on December 31 of the year in which the dividend was declared.

 

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The Funds intend to distribute all realized capital gains, if any, at least annually. If, however, a Fund were to retain any net capital gain, the Fund may designate the retained amount as undistributed capital gains in a notice to shareholders who, if subject to U.S. federal income tax on long-term capital gains, (i) will be required to include in income as long-term capital gain, their proportionate shares of such undistributed amount, and (ii) will be entitled to credit their proportionate shares of the federal income tax paid by the Fund on the undistributed amount against their U.S. federal income tax liabilities, if any, and to claim refunds to the extent the credit exceeds such liabilities. If such an event occurs, the tax basis of shares owned by a shareholder of a Fund will, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, generally be increased by the difference between the amount of undistributed net capital gain included in the shareholder’s gross income and the tax deemed paid by the shareholders.

 

Sales and other dispositions of the shares, such as exchanges, of the Funds generally are taxable events. U.S. shareholders should consult their own tax advisor with reference to their individual circumstances to determine whether any particular transaction in the shares of a Fund is properly treated as a sale or exchange for federal income tax purposes, as the following discussion assumes, and the tax treatment of any gains or losses recognized in such transactions. The sale or other disposition of shares of a Fund will generally result in capital gain or loss to the shareholder equal to the difference between the amount realized and the shareholder’s adjusted tax basis in the shares sold or exchanged, and will be long-term capital gain or loss if the shares have been held for more than one year at the time of sale. Any loss upon the sale or exchange of shares held for six months or less will be treated as long-term capital loss to the extent of any capital gain dividends received (including amounts credited as an undistributed capital gain dividend) by such shareholder with respect to such shares. A loss realized on a sale or exchange of shares of a Fund generally will be disallowed if other substantially identical shares are acquired within a 61-day period beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after the date that the shares are disposed. In such case, the basis of the shares acquired will be adjusted to reflect the disallowed loss. Present law taxes both long-term and short-term capital gain of corporations at the rates applicable to ordinary income of corporations. For non-corporate taxpayers, short-term capital gain will currently be taxed at the rate applicable to ordinary income, while long-term capital gain generally will be taxed at a maximum rate of 20%. Capital losses are subject to certain limitations.

 

Federal law requires that mutual fund companies report their shareholders’ cost basis, gain/loss, and holding period to the Internal Revenue Service on a Fund’s shareholders’ Consolidated Form 1099s when “covered” securities are sold. Covered securities are any regulated investment company and/or dividend reinvestment plan shares acquired on or after January 1, 2012.

 

The Funds have chosen average cost as their standing (default) tax lot identification method for all shareholders. A tax lot identification method is the way the Funds will determine which specific shares are deemed to be sold when there are multiple purchases on different dates at differing net asset values, and the entire position is not sold at one time. The Funds’ standing tax lot identification method is the method covered shares will be reported on your Consolidated Form 1099 if you do not select a specific tax lot identification method. You may choose a method different than the Funds’ standing method and will be able to do so at the time of your purchase or upon the sale of covered shares. Please refer to the appropriate Internal Revenue Service regulations or consult your tax advisor with regard to your personal circumstances.

 

For those securities defined as “covered” under current Internal Revenue Service cost basis tax reporting regulations, the Funds are responsible for maintaining accurate cost basis and tax lot information for tax reporting purposes. The Funds are not responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information for those securities that are not “covered.” The Funds and their service providers do not provide tax advice. You should consult independent sources, which may include a tax professional, with respect to any decisions you may make with respect to choosing a tax lot identification method.

 

Certain U.S. shareholders, including individuals and estates and trusts, will be subject to an additional 3.8% Medicare tax on all or a portion of their “net investment income,” which should include dividends from the Funds and net gains from the disposition of shares of the Funds. U.S. shareholders are urged to consult their own tax advisors regarding the implications of the additional Medicare tax resulting from an investment in the Funds.

 

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Higher-Risk Securities. To the extent such investments are permissible for a Fund, a Fund may invest in debt obligations that are in the lowest rating categories or are unrated, including debt obligations of issuers not currently paying interest or who are in default. Investments in debt obligations that are at risk of or in default present special tax issues for the Fund. Tax rules are not entirely clear about issues such as when a Fund may cease to accrue interest, the original issue discount (“OID”) or market discount, when and to what extent deductions may be taken for bad debts or worthless securities and how payments received on obligations in default should be allocated between principal and income. In limited circumstances, it may also not be clear whether a Fund should recognize market discount on a debt obligation, and if so, what amount of market discount the Fund should recognize. These and other related issues will be addressed by a Fund when, as and if it invests in such securities, in order to seek to ensure that it distributes sufficient income to preserve its status as a regulated investment company and does not become subject to U.S. federal income or excise tax.

 

Issuer Deductibility of Interest. A portion of the interest paid or accrued on certain high yield discount obligations owned by a Fund may not be deductible to (and thus, may affect the cash flow of) the issuer. If a portion of the interest paid or accrued on certain high yield discount obligations is not deductible, that portion will be treated as a dividend for purposes of the corporate dividends-received deduction. In such cases, if the issuer of the high yield discount obligations is a domestic corporation, dividend payments by a Fund may be eligible for the dividends-received deduction to the extent of the deemed dividend portion of such accrued interest.

 

Interest paid on debt obligations owned by a Fund, if any, that are considered for U.S. tax purposes to be payable in the equity of the issuer or a related party will not be deductible to the issuer, possibly affecting the cash flow of the issuer.

 

Tax-Exempt Shareholders. A tax-exempt shareholder could recognize unrelated business taxable income (“UBTI”) by virtue of its investment in a Fund if shares in the Fund constitute debt-financed property in the hands of the tax-exempt shareholder within the meaning of Internal Revenue Code Section 514(b). Furthermore, a tax-exempt shareholder may recognize UBTI if a Fund recognizes “excess inclusion income” derived from direct or indirect investments in residual interests in real estate mortgage investment conduits (“REMICs”) or equity interests in a taxable mortgage pool (“TMPs”) if the amount of such income recognized by the Fund exceeds the Fund’s investment company taxable income (after taking into account deductions for dividends paid by the Fund).

 

In addition, special tax consequences apply to charitable remainder trusts (“CRTs”) that invest in regulated investment companies that invest directly or indirectly in residual interests in REMICs or equity interests in TMPs. Under legislation enacted in December 2006, a CRT (as defined in section 664 of the Internal Revenue Code) that realizes any UBTI for a taxable year, must pay an excise tax annually of an amount equal to such UBTI. Under IRS guidance issued in October 2006, a CRT will not recognize UBTI solely as a result of investing in a Fund that recognizes “excess inclusion income.” Rather, if at any time during any taxable year a CRT (or one of certain other tax-exempt shareholders, such as the United States, a state or political subdivision, or an agency or instrumentality thereof, and certain energy cooperatives) is a record holder of a share in a Fund that recognizes “excess inclusion income,” then the regulated investment company will be subject to a tax on that portion of its “excess inclusion income” for the taxable year that is allocable to such shareholders, at the highest federal corporate income tax rate. The extent to which this IRS guidance remains applicable in light of the December 2006 legislation is unclear. To the extent permitted under the 1940 Act, a Fund may elect to specially allocate any such tax to the applicable CRT, or other shareholder, and thus reduce such shareholder’s distributions for the year by the amount of the tax that relates to such shareholder’s interest in the Fund. The Funds have not yet determined whether such an election will be made. CRTs and other tax-exempt investors are urged to consult their tax advisers concerning the consequences of investing in the Funds.

 

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Passive Foreign Investment Companies. A passive foreign investment company (“PFIC”) is any foreign corporation: (i) 75% or more of the gross income of which for the taxable year is passive income, or (ii) the average percentage of the assets of which (generally by value, but by adjusted tax basis in certain cases) that produce or are held for the production of passive income is at least 50%. Generally, passive income for this purpose means dividends, interest (including income equivalent to interest), royalties, rents, annuities, the excess of gains over losses from certain property transactions and commodities transactions, and foreign currency gains. Passive income for this purpose does not include rents and royalties received by the foreign corporation from active business and certain income received from related persons.

 

Equity investments by the Funds in certain PFICs could potentially subject the Funds to a U.S. federal income tax or other charge (including interest charges) on the distributions received from the PFIC or on proceeds received from the disposition of shares in the PFIC. This tax cannot be eliminated by making distributions to Fund shareholders. However, the Funds may elect to avoid the imposition of that tax. For example, if a Fund is in a position to and elects to treat a PFIC as a “qualified electing fund” (i.e., make a “QEF election”), the Fund will be required to include its share of the PFIC s income and net capital gains annually, regardless of whether it receives any distribution from the PFIC. Alternatively, a Fund may make an election to mark the gains (and to a limited extent losses) in its PFIC holdings “to the market” as though it had sold and repurchased its holdings in those PFICs on the last day of the Fund’s taxable year. Such gains and losses are treated as ordinary income and loss. The QEF and mark-to-market elections may accelerate the recognition of income (without the receipt of cash) and increase the amount required to be distributed by a Fund to avoid taxation. Making either of these elections therefore may require a Fund to liquidate other investments (including when it is not advantageous to do so) to meet its distribution requirement, which also may accelerate the recognition of gain and affect the Fund’s total return. Dividends paid by PFICs will not be eligible to be treated as “qualified dividend income.”

 

Because it is not always possible to identify a foreign corporation as a PFIC, the Funds may incur the tax and interest charges described above in some instances.

 

Foreign Taxation. Income received by a Fund from sources within foreign countries may be subject to withholding and other taxes imposed by such countries. Tax conventions between certain countries and the U.S. may reduce or eliminate such taxes. The Funds do not expect to be eligible to pass through to shareholders a credit or deduction for such taxes.

 

Foreign Shareholders. Capital Gain Dividends are generally not subject to withholding of U.S. federal income tax. Absent a specific statutory exemption, dividends other than Capital Gain Dividends paid by the Fund to a shareholder that is not a “U.S. person” within the meaning of the Internal Revenue Code (such shareholder, a “foreign shareholder”) are subject to withholding of U.S. federal income tax at a rate of 30% (or lower applicable treaty rate) even if they are funded by income or gains (such as portfolio interest, short-term capital gains, or foreign-source dividend and interest income) that, if paid to a foreign person directly, would not be subject to withholding.

 

Effective for taxable years of a regulated investment company beginning before January 1, 2012, a regulated investment company is not required to withhold any amounts (i) with respect to distributions (other than distributions to a foreign person (a) that does not provide a satisfactory statement that the beneficial owner is not a U.S. person, (b) to the extent that the dividend is attributable to certain interest on an obligation if the foreign person is the issuer or is a 10% shareholder of the issuer, (c) that is within a foreign country that has inadequate information exchange with the United States, or (d) to the extent the dividend is attributable to interest paid by a person that is a related person of the foreign person and the foreign person is a controlled foreign corporation) from U.S.-source interest income of types similar to those not subject to U.S. federal income tax if earned directly by an individual foreign person, to the extent such distributions are properly reported as such by a Fund in a written notice to shareholders (“interest-related dividends”), and (ii) with respect to distributions (other than (a) distributions to an individual foreign person who is present in the United States for a period or periods aggregating 183 days or more during the year of the distribution and (b) distributions subject to special rules regarding the disposition of U.S. real property interests as described below) of net short-term capital gains in excess of net long-term capital losses to the extent such distributions are properly reported by the regulated investment company (“short-term capital gain dividends”). If a Fund invests in an underlying fund that pays such distributions to the Fund, such distributions retain their character as not subject to withholding if properly reported when paid by the Fund to foreign persons.

 

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The Funds are permitted to report such part of their dividends as interest-related or short-term capital gain dividends as are eligible but are not required to do so. These exemptions from withholding will not be available to foreign shareholders of Funds that do not currently report their dividends as interest-related or short-term capital gain dividends.

 

In the case of shares held through an intermediary, the intermediary may withhold even if a Fund reports all or a portion of a payment as an interest-related or short-term capital gain dividend to shareholders. Foreign persons should contact their intermediaries regarding the application of these rules to their accounts.

 

Under U.S. federal tax law, a beneficial holder of shares who is a foreign shareholder generally is not subject to U.S. federal income tax on gains (and is not allowed a deduction for losses) realized on the sale of shares of a Fund or on Capital Gain Dividends unless (i) such gain or dividend is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business carried on by such holder within the United States, (ii) in the case of an individual holder, the holder is present in the United States for a period or periods aggregating 183 days or more during the year of the sale or the receipt of the Capital Gain Dividend and certain other conditions are met, or (iii) the special rules relating to gain attributable to the sale or exchange of “U.S. real property interests” (“USRPIs”) apply to the foreign shareholder’s sale of shares of the Fund or to the Capital Gain Dividend the foreign shareholder received (as described below).

 

Special rules would apply if a Fund were either a “U.S. real property holding corporation” (“USRPHC”) or would be a USRPHC but for the operation of certain exceptions to the definition thereof. Very generally, a USRPHC is a domestic corporation that holds USRPIs the fair market value of which equals or exceeds 50% of the sum of the fair market values of the corporation’s USPRIs, interests in real property located outside the United States, and other assets. USRPIs are generally defined as any interest in U.S. real property and any interest (other than solely as a creditor) in a USRPHC or former USRPHC.

 

If a Fund were a USRPHC or would be a USRPHC but for the exceptions referred to above, any distributions by the Fund to a foreign shareholder (including, in certain cases, distributions made by the Fund in redemption of its shares) attributable to gains realized by the Fund on the disposition of USRPIs or to distributions received by the Fund from a lower-tier regulated investment company or REIT that the Fund is required to treat as USRPI gain in its hands generally would be subject to U.S. tax withholding. In addition, such distributions could result in the foreign shareholder being required to file a U.S. tax return and pay tax on the distributions at regular U.S. federal income tax rates. The consequences to a foreign shareholder, including the rate of such withholding and character of such distributions (e.g., as ordinary income or USRPI gain), would vary depending upon the extent of the foreign shareholder’s current and past ownership of a Fund. On and after January 1, 2012, this “look-through” USRPI treatment for distributions by a Fund, if it were either a USRPHC or would be a USRPHC but for the operation of the exceptions referred to above, to foreign shareholders applies only to those distributions that, in turn, are attributable to distributions received by the Fund from a lower-tier REIT, unless Congress enacts legislation providing otherwise.

 

In addition, if a Fund were a USRPHC or former USRPHC, it could be required to withhold U.S. tax on the proceeds of a share redemption by a greater-than-5% foreign shareholder, in which case such foreign shareholder generally would also be required to file U.S. tax returns and pay any additional taxes due in connection with the redemption.

 

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Whether or not a Fund is characterized as a USRPHC will depend upon the nature and mix of the Fund’s assets. The Funds do not expect to be USRPHCs. Foreign shareholders should consult their tax advisors concerning the application of these rules to their investment in the Funds.

 

If a beneficial holder of Fund shares who is a foreign shareholder has a trade or business in the United States, and the dividends are effectively connected with the beneficial holder’s conduct of that trade or business, the dividend will be subject to U.S. federal net income taxation at regular income tax rates.

 

If a beneficial holder of Fund shares who is a foreign shareholder is eligible for the benefits of a tax treaty, any effectively connected income or gain will generally be subject to U.S. federal income tax on a net basis only if it is also attributable to a permanent establishment maintained by that beneficial holder in the United States.

 

To qualify for any exemptions from withholding described above or for lower withholding tax rates under income tax treaties, or to establish an exemption from backup withholding, a foreign shareholder must comply with special certification and filing requirements relating to its non-US status (including, in general, furnishing an IRS Form W-8BEN or substitute form). Foreign shareholders in the Funds should consult their tax advisers in this regard.

 

A beneficial holder of Fund shares who is a foreign shareholder may be subject to state and local tax and to the U.S. federal estate tax in addition to the federal tax on income referred to above.

 

Backup Withholding. The Funds generally are required to withhold and remit to the U.S. Treasury a percentage of the taxable distributions and redemption proceeds paid to any individual shareholder who fails to properly furnish the Funds with a correct taxpayer identification number, who has under-reported dividend or interest income, or who fails to certify to the Funds that he or she is not subject to such withholding.

 

Backup withholding is not an additional tax. Any amounts withheld may be credited against the shareholder’s U.S. federal income tax liability, provided the appropriate information is furnished to the IRS.

 

Tax Shelter Reporting Regulations. Under U.S. Treasury regulations, if a shareholder recognizes a loss with respect to a Fund’s shares of $2 million or more for an individual shareholder or $10 million or more for a corporate shareholder, the shareholder must file with the IRS a disclosure statement on Form 8886. Direct shareholders of portfolio securities are in many cases excepted from this reporting requirement, but under current guidance, shareholders of a regulated investment company are not excepted. Future guidance may extend the current exception from this reporting requirement to shareholders of most or all regulated investment companies. The fact that a loss is reportable under these regulations does not affect the legal determination of whether the taxpayer’s treatment of the loss is proper. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers to determine the applicability of these regulations in light of their individual circumstances.

 

Shareholder Reporting Obligations with Respect to Foreign Financial Assets. Certain individuals (and, if provided in future guidance, certain domestic entities) must disclose annually their interests in “specified foreign financial assets” on IRS Form 8938, which must be attached to their U.S. federal income tax returns for taxable years beginning after March 18, 2010. The IRS has not yet released a copy of the Form 8938 and has suspended the requirement to attach Form 8938 for any taxable year for which an income tax return is filed before the release of Form 8938. Following Form 8938’s release, individuals will be required to attach to their next income tax return required to be filed with the IRS a Form 8938 for each taxable year for which the filing of Form 8938 was suspended. Until the IRS provides more details regarding this reporting requirement, including in Form 8938 itself and related Treasury regulations, it remains unclear under what circumstances, if any, a shareholder’s (indirect) interest in the Funds’ “specified foreign financial assets,” if any, will be required to be reported on this Form 8938.

 

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Other Reporting and Withholding Requirements. Rules enacted in March 2010 require the reporting to the IRS of direct and indirect ownership of foreign financial accounts and foreign entities by U.S. persons. Failure to provide this required information can result in a 30% withholding tax on certain payments (“withholdable payments”) made after December 31, 2012. Specifically, withholdable payments subject to this 30% withholding tax include payments of U.S.-source dividends and interest made on or after January 1, 2014, and payments of gross proceeds from the sale or other disposal of property that can produce U.S.-source dividends or interest made on or after January 1, 2015.

 

The IRS has issued only very preliminary guidance with respect to these new rules; their scope remains unclear and potentially subject to material change. Very generally, it is possible that distributions made by a Fund after the dates noted above (or such later dates as may be provided in future guidance) to a shareholder, including a distribution in redemption of shares and a distribution of income or gains otherwise exempt from withholding under the rules applicable to non-U.S. shareholders described above (e.g., Capital Gain Dividends, Short-Term Capital Gain Dividends and interest-related dividends, as described above) will be subject to the new 30% withholding requirement. Payments to a foreign shareholder that is a “foreign financial institution” will generally be subject to withholding, unless such shareholder enters into a timely agreement with the IRS. Payments to shareholders that are U.S. persons or foreign individuals will generally not be subject to withholding, so long as such shareholders provide the Funds with such certifications or other documentation, including, to the extent required, with regard to such shareholders’ direct and indirect owners, as the Funds require to comply with the new rules. Persons investing in the Funds through an intermediary should contact their intermediary regarding the application of the new reporting and withholding regime to their investments in the Funds.

 

Shareholders are urged to consult a tax advisor regarding this new reporting and withholding regime, in light of their particular circumstances.

 

Shares Purchased through Tax-Qualified Plans. Special tax rules apply to investments through defined contribution plans and other tax-qualified plans. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers to determine the suitability of shares of the Funds as an investment through such plans, and the precise effect of an investment on their particular tax situation.

 

FATCA. Payments to a shareholder that is either a foreign financial institution (“FFI”) or a non-financial foreign entity (“NFFE”) within the meaning of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (“FATCA”) may be subject to a generally nonrefundable 30% withholding tax on: (a) income dividends paid by a Fund after June 30, 2014 and (b) certain capital gain distributions and the proceeds arising from the sale of Fund shares paid by a Fund after December 31, 2016. FATCA withholding tax generally can be avoided: (a) by an FFI, subject to any applicable intergovernmental agreement or other exemption, if it enters into a valid agreement with the IRS to, among other requirements, report required information about certain direct and indirect ownership of foreign financial accounts held by U.S. persons with the FFI and (b) by an NFFE, if it: (i) certifies that it has no substantial U.S. persons as owners or (ii) if it does have such owners, reports information relating to them. A Fund may disclose the information that it receives from its shareholders to the IRS, non-U.S. taxing authorities or other parties as necessary to comply with FATCA. Withholding also may be required if a foreign entity that is a shareholder of a Fund fails to provide the Fund with appropriate certifications or other documentation concerning its status under FATCA.

 

Possible Tax Law Changes. At the time that this SAI is being prepared, the coronavirus (COVID-19) is affecting the United States. Various administrative and legislative changes to the federal tax laws are under consideration, but it is not possible at this time to determine whether any of these changes will take place or what the changes might entail.

The foregoing is a general and abbreviated summary of the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and the Treasury regulations in effect as they directly govern the taxation of the Funds and their shareholders. These provisions are subject to change by legislative and administrative action, and any such change may be retroactive. Shareholders are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding specific questions as to U.S. federal income, estate or gift taxes, or foreign, state, local taxes or other taxes.

 

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PRICING AND PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES

 

PRICING OF FUND SHARES

 

General Policy. The Funds adhere to Section 2(a)(41), and Rule 2a-4 thereunder, of the 1940 Act with respect to the valuation of portfolio securities. In general, securities for which market quotations are readily available are valued at current market value, and all other securities are valued at fair value as determined in good faith by the Board. In complying with the 1940 Act, the Trust relies on guidance provided by the SEC and by the SEC staff in various interpretive letters and other guidance.

 

Equity Securities. Securities listed on a securities exchange, market or automated quotation system for which quotations are readily available (except for securities traded on NASDAQ), including securities traded over the counter, are valued at the last quoted sale price on the primary exchange or market (foreign or domestic) on which they are traded on valuation date (or at approximately 4:00 p.m. ET if a security’s primary exchange is normally open at that time), or, if there is no such reported sale on the valuation date, at the most recent quoted bid price. For securities traded on NASDAQ, the NASDAQ Official Closing Price will be used. If such prices are not available or determined to not represent the fair value of the security as of the Funds’ pricing time, the security will be valued at fair value as determined in good faith using methods approved by the Trust’s Board of Trustees.

 

Money Market Securities and other Debt Securities. If available, money market securities and other debt securities are priced based upon valuations provided by recognized independent, third-party pricing agents. Such values generally reflect the last reported sales price if the security is actively traded. The third-party pricing agents may also value debt securities by employing methodologies that utilize actual market transactions, broker-supplied valuations, or other methodologies designed to identify the market value for such securities. Such methodologies generally consider such factors as security prices, yields, maturities, call features, ratings and developments relating to specific securities in arriving at valuations. Money market securities and other debt securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less may be valued at their amortized cost, which approximates market value. If such prices are not available or determined to not represent the fair value of the security as of the Funds’ pricing time, the security will be valued at fair value as determined in good faith using methods approved by the Trust’s Board of Trustees.

 

Use of Third-Party Independent Pricing Agents. Pursuant to contracts with the Administrator, market prices for most securities held by the Funds are provided daily by third-party independent pricing agents that are approved by the Board of Trustees of the Trust. The valuations provided by third-party independent pricing agents are reviewed daily by the Administrator.

 

PURCHASES AND SALES THROUGH BROKER DEALERS

 

The Funds may be purchased through broker dealers and other intermediaries. The Funds have authorized one or more brokers to receive on its behalf purchase and redemption orders. Such brokers are authorized to designate other intermediaries to receive purchase and redemption orders on the Funds’ behalf. A Fund will be deemed to have received a purchase or redemption order when an authorized broker or, if applicable, a broker’s authorized designee, received the order. Customer orders will be priced at a Fund’s net asset value next computed after they are received by an authorized broker or the broker’s authorized designee.

 

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REDEMPTIONS IN KIND

 

The Funds do not intend to redeem shares in any form except cash. However, if the redemption amount is over the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of a Fund’s net assets, pursuant to an election under Rule 18f-1 under the 1940 Act by the Trust on behalf of the Fund, the Fund has the right to redeem your shares by giving you the amount that exceeds the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the Fund’s net assets in securities instead of cash. In the event that an in-kind distribution is made, a shareholder may incur additional expenses such as the payment of brokerage commissions on the sale or other disposition of the securities received from the Funds.

 

ADDITIONAL SERVICE PROVIDERS

 

CUSTODIAN

 

Fifth Third Bank. (the “Custodian”), 38 Fountain Square Plaza, Cincinnati, Ohio 45263, serves as the custodian of the Funds’ assets. The Custodian has entered into a foreign sub-custody arrangement with The Bank of New York, as the approved foreign custody manager (the Delegate) to perform certain functions with respect to the custody of the Funds’ assets outside of the United States of America. The Delegate shall place and maintain the Funds’ assets with an eligible foreign custodian; provided that, the Delegate shall be required to determine that the Funds’ assets will be subject to reasonable care based on the standards applicable to custodians in the relevant market.

 

ADMINISTRATOR, FUND ACCOUNTANT AND TRANSFER AGENT

 

Pursuant to a Fund Services Agreement, Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. (“CFS”, the “Administrator” or the “Transfer Agent”) 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235, serves as the Funds’ administrator, transfer agent and accounting agent.

 

In its capacity as administrator, CFS supervises all aspects of the operations of the Funds except those performed by the Adviser. CFS will provide certain administrative services and facilities for the Funds, including preparing and maintaining certain books, records, and monitoring compliance with state and federal regulatory requirements. CFS, as administrative agent for the Funds, will provide shareholder, recordkeeping, administrative and blue-sky filing services.

 

As transfer agent, CFS provides certain shareholder and other services to the Funds, including furnishing account and transaction information and maintaining shareholder account records. CFS will be responsible for processing orders and payments for share purchases. CFS will mail proxy materials (and receive and tabulate proxies), shareholder reports, confirmation forms for purchases and redemptions and prospectuses to shareholders. CFS will disburse income dividends and capital distributions and prepare and file appropriate tax-related information concerning dividends and distributions to shareholders.

 

CFS also provides accounting services to the Funds. CFS will be responsible for accounting relating to the Funds and their investment transactions; maintaining certain books and records of the Funds; determining daily the net asset value per share of the Funds; and preparing security position, transaction and cash position reports. CFS also monitors periodic distributions of gains or losses on portfolio sales and maintains a daily listing of portfolio holdings. CFS is responsible for providing expenses accrued and payment reporting services, tax-related financial information to the Trust, and for monitoring compliance with the regulatory requirements relating to maintaining accounting records.

 

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CFS receives, for administrative services, an asset-based fee based computed daily and paid monthly on the average daily net assets of the Funds, subject to a minimum fee plus out-of-pocket expenses. CFS receives, for transfer agency services, per account fees computed daily and paid monthly, subject to a minimum fee plus out-of-pocket expenses. CFS receives, for fund accounting services, an asset-based fee, computed daily and paid monthly on the average daily net assets of the Funds, subject to a minimum fee plus out-of-pocket expenses.

 

For the fiscal years ended September 30, 2018, 2019, and 2020, the Adviser paid CFS $30,000, $30,000, and $10,000, respectively, for administrative services and $43,000, $49,000, and $15,333, respectively, for transfer agent and accounting services on behalf of the Partners Fund. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Partners Fund paid CFS $25,347 for administration services and $37,662 for transfer agent and accounting services.

 

For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Focused SCV Fund paid CFS $29,584 for administration services and $46,125 for transfer agent and accounting services.

 

INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

 

The Funds’ independent registered public accounting firm, Cohen & Company, Ltd., audits the Funds’ annual financial statements and prepares the Funds’ tax returns. Cohen & Company, Ltd. is located at 1350 Euclid Avenue, Suite 800, Cleveland, OH 44115.

 

LEGAL COUNSEL

 

Practus, LLP, 11300 Tomahawk Creek Parkway, Suite 310, Leawood, KS 66211, serves as legal counsel for the Trust and Funds.

 

DISTRIBUTOR

 

First Dominion Capital Corp. (“FDCC” or the “Distributor”), located at 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235, serves as the principal underwriter and national distributor for the shares of the Funds pursuant to a Distribution Agreement (the “Distribution Agreement”). The continuance of the Distribution Agreement must be specifically approved at least annually (i) by the vote of the Trustees or by a vote of the shareholders of the Funds and (ii) by the vote of a majority of the Trustees who are not “interested persons” of the Trust and have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operations of the Distribution Agreement or any related agreement, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval.

 

Under the Distribution Agreement, the Distributor serves as the Funds’ principal underwriter and acts as exclusive agent for the Funds in selling their shares to the public on a “best efforts” basis and then only in respect to orders placed – that is, the Distributor is under no obligations to sell any specific number of shares.

 

FDCC is registered as a broker-dealer and is a member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The offering of the Funds’ shares is continuous. The Distributor may receive Distribution 12b-1 and Service Fees from the Funds, as described in the applicable prospectus and this SAI. The Distributor received no compensation as a result of the sale of the Funds’ shares. For its underwriting services, the Distributor may receive compensation from the Funds’ Rule 12b-1 plans to the extent that such plans generate sufficient fees to compensate for these services; otherwise, the Adviser is responsible for payment of such underwriting services.

 

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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT PURCHASES AND SALES

 

Purchasing Shares. You may purchase shares of the Funds directly from the Distributor. You may also buy shares through accounts with brokers and other institutions (“authorized institutions”) that are authorized to place trades in Fund shares for their customers. If you invest through an authorized institution, you will have to follow its procedures. Your institution may charge a fee for its services, in addition to the fees charged by the Funds. You will also generally have to address your correspondence or questions regarding the Funds to your authorized institution. The offering price per share is equal to the net asset value next determined after the Funds or authorized institution receives your purchase order, plus any applicable sales charge.

 

Your authorized institution is responsible for transmitting all subscription and redemption requests, investment information, documentation and money to the Funds on time. Certain authorized institutions have agreements with the Funds that allow them to enter confirmed purchase or redemption orders on behalf of clients and customers. Under this arrangement, the authorized institution must send your payment to the Funds by the time it prices its shares on the following day. If your authorized institution fails to do so, it may be responsible for any resulting fees or losses.

 

The Funds reserve the right to reject any purchase order and to suspend the offering of shares. Under certain circumstances the Trust or the Adviser may waive the minimum initial investment for purchases by officers, trustees, and employees of the Trust and its affiliated entities and for certain related advisory accounts and retirement accounts (such as IRAs). The Funds may also change or waive policies concerning minimum investment amounts at any time.

 

Exchanging Shares. If you request the exchange of the total value of your account from one fund to another managed by the Adviser, we will reinvest any declared but unpaid income dividends and capital gain distributions in the new fund at its net asset value. Backup withholding and information reporting may apply. Information regarding the possible tax consequences of an exchange appears in the tax section in this SAI.

 

If a substantial number of shareholders sell their shares of a Fund under the exchange privilege, within a short period, the Fund may have to sell portfolio securities that it would otherwise have held, thus incurring additional transactional costs. Increased use of the exchange privilege may also result in periodic large inflows of money. If this occurs, it is the Funds’ general policy to initially invest in short-term, interest-bearing money market instruments.

 

However, if the Adviser believes that attractive investment opportunities (consistent with a Fund’s investment objective and policies) exist immediately, then it will invest such money in portfolio securities in as orderly a manner as is possible.

 

The proceeds from the sale of shares of a Fund may not be available until the third business day following the sale. The fund you are seeking to exchange into may also delay issuing shares until that third business day. The sale of Fund shares to complete an exchange will be effected at net asset value of the Fund next computed after your request for exchange is received in proper form.

 

Eligible Benefit Plans. An eligible benefit plan is an arrangement available to the employees of an employer (or two or more affiliated employers) having not less than 10 employees at the plan’s inception, or such an employer on behalf of employees of a trust or plan for such employees, their spouses and their children under the age of 21 or a trust or plan for such employees, which provides for purchases through periodic payroll deductions or otherwise. There must be at least 5 initial participants with accounts investing or invested in Fund shares and/or certain other funds.

 

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The initial purchase by the eligible benefit plan and prior purchases by or for the benefit of the initial participants of the plan must aggregate not less than $2,500 and subsequent purchases must be at least $50 per account and must aggregate at least $250. Purchases by the eligible benefit plan must be made pursuant to a single order paid for by a single check or federal funds wire and may not be made more often than monthly. A separate account will be established for each employee, spouse or child for which purchases are made. The requirements for initiating or continuing purchases pursuant to an eligible benefit plan may be modified and the offering to such plans may be terminated at any time without prior notice.

 

Selling Shares. You may sell your shares by giving instructions to the Transfer Agent by mail or by telephone. The Funds will use reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by telephone are genuine and, if the procedures are followed, will not be liable for any losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent telephone transactions.

 

The Funds’ procedure is to redeem shares at the net asset value next determined after the Transfer Agent receives the redemption request in proper order, less any applicable deferred sales charge on purchases held for less than one year and for which no sales charge was paid at the time of purchase. Payment will be made promptly, but no later than the seventh day following the receipt of the redemption request in proper order. The Board may suspend the right of redemption or postpone the date of payment during any period when (a) trading on the New York Stock Exchange is restricted as determined by the SEC or such exchange is closed for other than weekends and holidays, (b) the SEC has by order permitted such suspension, or (c) an emergency, as defined by rules of the SEC, exists during which time the sale of Fund shares or valuation of securities held by the Fund are not reasonably practicable.

 

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES

 

As described briefly in the applicable prospectus, the Funds offer the following shareholder services:

 

Regular Account. The regular account allows for voluntary investments to be made at any time. Available to individuals, custodians, corporations, trusts, estates, corporate retirement plans and others, investors are free to make additions and withdrawals to or from their account as often as they wish. Simply use the account application provided with the prospectus to open your account.

 

Telephone Transactions. A shareholder may redeem shares or transfer into another fund by telephone if this service is requested at the time the shareholder completes the initial account application. If it is not elected at that time, it may be elected at a later date by making a request in writing to the Transfer Agent and having the signature on the request guaranteed. The Funds employ reasonable procedures designed to confirm the authenticity of instructions communicated by telephone and, if they do not, they may be liable for any losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent transactions. As a result of this policy, a shareholder authorizing telephone redemption or transfer bears the risk of loss which may result from unauthorized or fraudulent transactions which the Funds believe to be genuine. When requesting a telephone redemption or transfer, the shareholder will be asked to respond to certain questions designed to confirm he shareholder’s identity as the shareholder of record. Cooperation with these procedures helps to protect the account and the Funds from unauthorized transactions.

 

Automatic Investment Plan. Any shareholder may utilize this feature, which provides for automatic monthly investments into your account. Upon your request, the Transfer Agent will withdraw a fixed amount each month from a checking or savings account for investment into the Funds. This does not require a commitment for a fixed period of time. A shareholder may change the monthly investment, skip a month or discontinue the Automatic Investment Plan as desired by notifying the Transfer Agent toll-free at (800) 628-4077.

 

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Retirement Plans. Fund shares are available for purchase in connection with the following tax-deferred prototype retirement plans:

 

Traditional IRA. An individual retirement account. Your contribution may or may not be deductible depending on your circumstances. Assets can grow tax-deferred and distributions are taxable as income.

 

Roth IRA. An IRA with non-deductible contributions, tax-free growth of assets, and tax-free distributions for qualified distributions.

 

Spousal IRA. An IRA funded by a working spouse in the name of a non-earning spouse.

 

SEP-IRA. An individual retirement account funded by employer contributions. Your assets grow tax-deferred and distributions are taxable as income.

 

Keogh or Profit-Sharing Plans. These plans allow corporations, partnerships and individuals who are self-employed to make tax-deductible contributions of up to $35,000 for each person covered by the plans.

 

403(b) Plans. An arrangement that allows employers of charitable or educational organizations to make voluntary salary reduction contributions to a tax-deferred account.

 

401(k) Plans. Allows employees of corporations of all sizes to contribute a percentage of their wages on a tax-deferred basis. These accounts need to be established by the trustee of the plan.

 

For information about eligibility requirements and other matters concerning these plans and to obtain the necessary forms to participate in these plans, please call the Trust toll-free at (800) 673-0550. Each plan’s custodian charges nominal fees in connection with plan establishment and maintenance. These fees are detailed in the plan documents. You may wish to consult with your attorney or other tax adviser for specific advice concerning your tax status and plans.

 

Exchange Privilege. To the extent that the Adviser manages other funds in the Trust, shareholders may exchange their shares for shares of any other series of the Trust managed by the Adviser, provided the shares of the Fund the shareholder is exchanging into are registered for sale in the shareholder’s state of residence. As of the date of this prospectus, the Adviser manages two funds in the Trust. Each account must meet the minimum investment requirements. Also, to make an exchange, an exchange order must comply with the requirements for a redemption or repurchase order and must specify the value or the number of shares to be exchanged. Your exchange will take effect as of the next determination of the Fund’s net asset value per share (usually at the close of business on the same day). The Trust reserves the right to limit the number of exchanges or to otherwise prohibit or restrict shareholders from making exchanges at any time, without notice, should the Trust determine that it would be in the best interest of its shareholders to do so. For tax purposes, an exchange constitutes the sale of the shares of the fund from which you are exchanging and the purchase of shares of the fund into which you are exchanging. Consequently, the sale may involve either a capital gain or loss to the shareholder for federal income tax purposes. The exchange privilege is available only in states where it is legally permissible to do so.

 

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES PLAN

 

The Funds have adopted a Shareholder Services Plan (the “Plan”) pursuant to Rule 12b-1 of the 1940 Act for the Investor Class shares. As required by Rule 12b-1, the Plan has been approved by the Trustees and separately by a majority of the Trustees who are not interested persons of the Trust and who have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the Plan and the Distribution Agreement.

 

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Potential benefits of the Plan to the Funds include improved shareholder services, savings to the Funds in transfer agency costs, savings to the Funds in other expenses, benefits to the investment process through growth and stability of assets, and maintenance of a financially healthy management organization. The continuation of the Plan must be considered by the Trustees annually.

 

Under the Plan, the Investor Class shares of the Partners Fund and the Focused SCV Fund may each expend up to 0.25% of the Class’s average daily net assets annually to finance any activity related to the servicing of shareholder accounts, provided the Trustees have approved the category of expenses for which payment is being made.

 

The Plan is a type of plan known as a “compensation” plan because payments are made for services rendered to the Funds with respect to Fund shares regardless of the level of expenditures made by the Funds’ distributor. The Trustees will, however, take into account such expenditures for purposes of reviewing operations under the Plan and considering the annual renewal of the Plan. The Plan provides that expenditures may include, without limitation: (a) payments to the Distributor and to securities dealers and others in respect of the sale of shares of the Funds; (b) payment of compensation to and expenses of personnel (including personnel of organizations with which the Trust has entered into agreements related to this Plan) who engage in or support distribution of shares of the Funds or who render shareholder support services not otherwise provided by the Trust’s transfer agent, administrator, or custodian, including but not limited to, answering inquiries regarding the Trust, processing shareholder transactions, providing personal services and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts, providing other shareholder liaison services, responding to shareholder inquiries, providing information on shareholder investments in the shares of the Funds, and providing such other shareholder services as the Trust may reasonably request, arranging for bank wires, assisting shareholders in changing dividend options, account designations and addresses, providing information periodically to shareholders showing their positions in the Funds, forwarding communications from the Funds such as proxies, shareholder reports, annual reports, and dividend distribution and tax notices to shareholders, processing purchase, exchange, and redemption requests from shareholders and placing orders with the Funds or their service providers; (c) formulation and implementation of marketing and promotional activities, including, but not limited to, direct mail promotions and television, radio, newspaper, magazine and other mass media advertising; (d) preparation, printing and distribution of sales literature; (e) preparation, printing and distribution of prospectuses and statements of additional information and reports of the Trust for recipients other than existing shareholders of the Trust; (f) obtaining information and providing explanations to wholesale and retail distributors of contracts regarding Fund investment objectives and policies and other information about the Funds, including the performance of the Funds; (g) obtaining such information, analyses and reports with respect to marketing and promotional activities as the Trust may, from time to time, deem advisable.

 

For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Partners Fund incurred $1,129 in 12b-1 fees, which were received by the Distributor and used for general distribution purposes. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020, the Focused SCV Fund incurred $3 in 12b-1 fees, which were received by the Distributor and used for general distribution purposes.

 

DISCLOSURE OF PORTFOLIO SECURITY HOLDINGS

 

This Disclosure of Portfolio Securities Holdings Policy (the “Policy”) shall govern the disclosure of the portfolio securities holdings of each series of the Trust. The Trust maintains this Policy to ensure that disclosure of information about portfolio securities is in the best interests of the Funds and the Funds’ shareholders. The Board reviews these policies and procedures as necessary and compliance will be periodically assessed by the Board in connection with a report from the Trust’s Chief Compliance Officer. In addition, the Board has reviewed and approved the provision of portfolio holdings information to entities described below that may be prior to and more frequently than the public disclosure of such information (i.e., “non-standard disclosure”). The Board has also delegated authority to the officers of the Trust and Adviser to provide such information in certain circumstances (see below).

 

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The Trust is required by the SEC to publicly file its complete portfolio holdings schedule with the SEC on a quarterly basis. This schedule is filed with the Trust’s annual and semi-annual reports on Form N-CSR for the second and fourth fiscal quarters and on Form N-PORT for the first and third fiscal quarters. Certain portfolio information is also included on Form N-PORT that is filed for the second and fourth fiscal quarters. The portfolio holdings information provided in these reports is as of the end of the respective quarter. Form N-CSR must be filed with the SEC no later than ten (10) calendar days after the Trust transmits its annual or semi-annual report to its shareholders. Form N-PORT must be filed with the SEC and will be made publicly available no later than sixty (60) calendar days after the end of the applicable quarter.

 

Additionally, the Trust’s service providers which have contracted to provide services to the Trust and its funds, including, for example, the custodian, the fund accountants and other service providers assisting with materials utilized in the Board’s 15-c processes that require portfolio holdings information in order to perform those services, may receive non-standard disclosure. Non-standard disclosure of portfolio holdings information may also be provided to a third-party when the Trust has a legitimate business purpose for doing so. The Trust has the following ongoing arrangements with certain third parties to provide the Funds’ portfolio holdings information:

 

1. to the Trust’s auditors within sixty (60) days after the applicable fiscal period or other periods as necessary for use in providing audit opinions and other advice related to financial, regulatory, or tax reporting;

 

2. to financial printers within sixty (60) days after the applicable fiscal period for the purpose of preparing Trust regulatory filings; and

 

3. to the Trust’s administrator, custodian, transfer agent and accounting services provider on a daily basis in connection with their providing services to the Funds.

 

The Trust’s service providers may also disclose non-public portfolio holdings information if such disclosure is required by applicable laws, rules or regulations, or by regulatory authorities. Additionally, the Adviser may establish ongoing arrangements with certain third parties to provide the Funds’ portfolio holdings information that the Adviser determines that the Funds have a legitimate business purpose for doing so and the recipient is subject to a duty of confidentiality. These third parties may include:

 

1. financial data processing companies that provide automated data scanning and monitoring services for the Funds;

 

2. research companies that allow the Adviser to perform attribution analysis for the Funds; and

 

3. the Adviser’s proxy voting agent to assess and vote proxies on behalf of the Funds.

 

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From time to time, employees of the Adviser may express their views orally or in writing on the Funds’ portfolio securities or may state that a Fund has recently purchased or sold, or continues to own, one or more securities. The securities subject to these views and statements may be ones that were purchased or sold since a Fund’s most recent quarter-end and therefore may not be reflected on the list of the Fund’s most recent quarter-end portfolio holdings. These views and statements may be made to various persons, including members of the press, brokers and other financial intermediaries that sell shares of the Funds, shareholders in the Funds, persons considering investing in the Funds or representatives of such shareholders or potential shareholders, such as fiduciaries of a 401(k) plan or a trust and their advisers, and other entities for which the Adviser may determine. The nature and content of the views and statements provided to each of these persons may differ. From time to time, employees of the Adviser also may provide oral or written information (“portfolio commentary”) about the Funds, including, but not limited to, how the Funds’ investments are divided among various sectors, industries, countries, investment styles and capitalization sizes, and among stocks, bonds, currencies and cash, security types, bond maturities, bond coupons and bond credit quality ratings. This portfolio commentary may also include information on how these various weightings and factors contributed to Fund performance. The Adviser may also provide oral or written information (“statistical information”) about various financial characteristics of the Funds or their underlying portfolio securities including, but not limited to, alpha, beta, R-squared, coefficient of determination, duration, maturity, information ratio, Sharpe ratio, earnings growth, payout ratio, price/book value, projected earnings growth, return on equity, standard deviation, tracking error, weighted average quality, market capitalization, percent debt to equity, price to cash flow, dividend yield or growth, default rate, portfolio turnover, and risk and style characteristics. This portfolio commentary and statistical information about the Funds may be based on a Fund’s portfolio as of the most recent quarter-end or the end of some other interim period, such as month-end. The portfolio commentary and statistical information may be provided to various persons, including those described in the preceding paragraph. The nature and content of the information provided to each of these persons may differ.

 

Additionally, employees of the Adviser may disclose one or more of the portfolio securities of a Fund when purchasing and selling securities through broker-dealers, requesting bids on securities, obtaining price quotations on securities, or in connection with litigation involving a Fund’s portfolio securities. The Adviser does not enter into formal non-disclosure or confidentiality agreements in connection with these situations; however, the Funds would not continue to conduct business with a person who the Adviser believed was misusing the disclosed information.

 

The Adviser or its affiliates may manage products sponsored by companies other than itself, including investment companies, offshore funds, and separate accounts and affiliates of the Adviser may provide investment related services, including research services, to other companies, including other investment companies, offshore funds, institutional investors and other entities. In each of these instances, the sponsors of these other companies and the affiliates of the Adviser may receive compensation for their services. In many cases, these other products may be managed in a similar fashion to the Funds and thus have similar portfolio holdings, and the other investment related services provided by affiliates of the Adviser may involve disclosure of information that is also utilized by the Adviser in managing the Funds. The sponsors of these other products may disclose the portfolio holdings of their products at different times than the Adviser discloses portfolio holdings for the Funds, and affiliates of the Adviser may provide investment related services to its clients at times that are different than the times disclosed to the Funds.

 

The Trust and the Adviser currently have no other arrangements for the provision of non-standard disclosure to any party or shareholder. Other than the non-standard disclosure discussed above, if a third-party requests specific, current information regarding the Funds’ portfolio holdings, the Trust will refer the third-party to the latest regulatory filing.

 

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All of the arrangements above are subject to the policies and procedures adopted by the Board to ensure such disclosure is for a legitimate business purpose and is in the best interests of the Trust and its shareholders. The Trust’s CCO is responsible for monitoring the use and disclosure of information relating to Fund portfolio securities. Although no material conflicts of interest are believed to exist that could disadvantage the Funds and their shareholders, various safeguards have been implemented to protect the Funds and their shareholders from conflicts of interest, including: the adoption of Codes of Ethics pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act designed to prevent fraudulent, deceptive or manipulative acts by officers and employees of the Trust, the Adviser and the Distributor in connection with their personal securities transactions; the adoption by the Adviser and Distributor of insider trading policies and procedures designed to prevent their employees’ misuse of material non-public information; and the adoption by the Trust of a Code of Ethics for Officers that requires the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer of the Trust to report to the Board any affiliations or other relationships that could potentially create a conflict of interest with the Funds. There may be instances where the interests of the Trust’s shareholders respecting the disclosure of information about portfolio holdings may conflict or appear to conflict with the interests of the Adviser, the Distributor, or an affiliated person of the Trust, the Adviser or the Distributor. In such situations, the conflict must be disclosed to the Board and the Board will attempt to resolve the situation in a manner that it deems in the best interests of the Funds.

 

Affiliated persons of the Trust who receive non-standard disclosure are subject to restrictions and limitations on the use and handling of such information, including requirements to maintain the confidentiality of such information, pre-clear securities trades and report securities transactions activity, as applicable. Except as provided above, affiliated persons of the Trust and third-party service providers of the Trust receiving such non-standard disclosure will be instructed that such information must be kept confidential and that no trading on such information should be allowed.

 

Neither the Trust, the Funds, nor the Adviser receives compensation or other consideration in connection with the non-standard disclosure of information about portfolio securities.

 

PROXY VOTING POLICIES

 

The Trust is required to disclose information concerning the Funds’ proxy voting policies and procedures to shareholders. The Board has delegated to the Adviser the responsibility for decisions regarding proxy voting for securities held by the Funds. The Adviser will vote such proxies in accordance with its proxy policies and procedures, which have been reviewed by the Board, and which are found in Exhibit B. The Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures of the Trust are included as Exhibit A. Any material changes to the proxy policies and procedures will be submitted to the Board for approval. Information regarding how the Funds voted proxies relating to portfolio securities for the most recent 12-month period ending June 30, will be available (1) without charge, upon request by calling toll-free (800) 628-4077; and (2) on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov/.

 

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FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

 

The Annual Report for the Funds for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2020 has been filed with the SEC. The financial statements contained in the Annual Report are incorporated by reference into this SAI. The financial statements and financial highlights for the Partners Fund and the Focused SCV Fund included in the Annual Report have been audited by the Funds’ independent registered public accounting firm, Cohen & Company, Ltd., whose report thereon also appears in such Annual Report and is also incorporated herein by reference. No other parts of the Annual Report are incorporated by reference herein. The financial statements in such Annual Report have been incorporated herein in reliance upon such report given upon the authority of such firm as experts in accounting and auditing. You can receive free copies of reports, request other information and discuss your questions about the Funds by contacting the Funds directly at:

 

World Funds Trust

8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205

Richmond, Virginia 23235

Telephone: (800) 673-0550

www.cliffordcapfunds.com

 

The Partners Fund is a continuation of the Predecessor Fund and, therefore, the Partners Fund’s financial information includes results of the Partners Fund and the Predecessor Fund. The Predecessor Fund commenced operations on January 31, 2014. Shareholders of the Predecessor Fund approved the reorganization into the Partners Fund on January 13, 2016 and received shares of the Partners Fund on February 8, 2016.

 

 

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Exhibit A

 

World Funds Trust

 

PROXY VOTING POLICY AND PROCEDURES

 

The World Funds Trust (the “Trust”) is registered as an open-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (“1940 Act”). The Trust offers multiple series (each a “Fund” and, collectively, the “Funds”). Consistent with its fiduciary duties and pursuant to Rule 30b1-4 under the 1940 Act (the “Proxy Rule”), the Board of Trustees of the Trust (the “Board”) has adopted this proxy voting policy on behalf of the Trust (the “Policy”) to reflect its commitment to ensure that proxies are voted in a manner consistent with the best interests of the Funds’ shareholders.

 

Delegation of Proxy Voting Authority to Fund Adviser

 

The Board believes that the investment adviser, or the investment sub-adviser as appropriate, of each Fund (each an “Adviser”), as the entity that selects the individual securities that comprise its Fund’s portfolio, is the most knowledgeable and best-suited to make decisions on how to vote proxies of portfolio companies held by that Fund. The Trust shall therefore defer to, and rely on, the Adviser of each Fund to make decisions on how to cast proxy votes on behalf of such Fund.

 

The Trust hereby designates the Adviser of each Fund as the entity responsible for exercising proxy voting authority with regard to securities held in the Fund’s investment portfolio. Consistent with its duties under this Policy, each Adviser shall monitor and review corporate transactions of corporations in which the Fund has invested, obtain all information sufficient to allow an informed vote on all proxy solicitations, ensure that all proxy votes are cast in a timely fashion, and maintain all records required to be maintained by the Fund under the Proxy Rule and the 1940 Act. Each Adviser shall perform these duties in accordance with the Adviser’s proxy voting policy, a copy of which shall be presented to this Board for its review. Each Adviser shall promptly provide to the Board updates to its proxy voting policy as they are adopted and implemented.

 

Conflict of Interest Transactions

 

In some instances, an Adviser may be asked to cast a proxy vote that presents a conflict between the interests of a Fund’s shareholders and those of the Adviser or an affiliated person of the Adviser. In such case, the Adviser is instructed to abstain from making a voting decision and to forward all necessary proxy voting materials to the Trust to enable the Board to make a voting decision. When the Board is required to make a proxy voting decision, only the Trustees without a conflict of interest with regard to the security in question or the matter to be voted upon shall be permitted to participate in the decision of how the Fund’s vote will be cast. In the event that the Board is required to vote a proxy because an Adviser has a conflict of interest with respect to the proxy, the Board will vote such proxy in accordance with the Adviser’s proxy voting policy, to the extent consistent with the shareholders’ best interests, as determined by the Board in its discretion. The Board shall notify the Adviser of its final decision on the matter and the Adviser shall vote in accordance with the Board’s decision.

 

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Availability of Proxy Voting Policy and Records Available to Fund Shareholders

 

If a Fund has a website, the Fund may post a copy of its Adviser’s proxy voting policy and this Policy on such website. A copy of such policies and of each Fund’s proxy voting record shall also be made available, without charge, upon request of any shareholder of the Fund, by calling the applicable Fund’s toll-free telephone number as printed in the Fund’s prospectus. The Trust’s administrator shall reply to any Fund shareholder request within three business days of receipt of the request, by first-class mail or other means designed to ensure equally prompt delivery.

 

Each Adviser shall provide a complete voting record, as required by the Proxy Rule, for each series of the Trust for which it acts as adviser, to the Trust’s administrator within 30 days following the end of each 12-month period ending June 30. The Trust’s administrator will file a report based on such record on Form N-PX on an annual basis with the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission no later than August 31st of each year.

 

Adopted: November 26, 2013

 

Last Amended: February 20, 2019

 

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Exhibit B

 

CLIFFORD CAPITAL PARTNERS, LLC

PROXY VOTING POLICY

 

1. Introduction

 

As a registered investment adviser, CCP has a fiduciary duty to act solely in the best interests of its clients. If the client is a registered investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 or the client requests CCP to do so in writing, CCP will vote proxy materials for its clients.

 

In cases where the discretionary client has delegated proxy voting responsibility and authority to the Company, CCP has adopted and implemented the following policies and procedures, which it believes are reasonably designed to ensure that proxies are voted in the best interests of its clients. In pursuing this policy, proxies should be voted in a manner that is intended to maximize value to the client. In situations where CCP accepts such delegation and agrees to vote proxies, CCP will do so in accordance with these Policies and Procedures. CCP may delegate its responsibilities under these Policies and Procedures to a third party, provided that no such delegation shall relieve CCP of its responsibilities hereunder and CCP shall retain final authority and fiduciary responsibility for such proxy voting.

 

Investment advisers registered with the SEC, and which exercise voting authority with respect to client securities, are required by Rule 206(4)-6 of the Advisers Act to (a) adopt and implement written policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to ensure that client securities are voted in the best interests of clients, which must include how an adviser addresses material conflicts that may arise between an adviser’s interests and those of its clients; (b) disclose to clients how they may obtain information from the adviser with respect to the voting of proxies for their securities; (c) to describe to clients a summary of its proxy voting policies and procedures and, upon request, furnish a copy to its clients; and (d) maintain certain records relating to the adviser’s proxy voting activities when the adviser does have proxy voting authority.

 

2. Voting Guidelines

 

CCP has adopted the Broadridge Proxy Policies and Insights Shareholder Value Template (“Proxy Policies and Insights”) to determine how each issue on proxy ballots is to be voted. The Proxy Policies and Insights is incorporated herein by this reference, and a copy of the Proxy Policies and Insights, as may be revised from time to time, is maintained with CCP’s proxy voting policy.

 

The Proxy Policies and Insights seeks to maximize shareholder value in proxy voting and is created using voting trends of large, top fund families that seek to maximize shareholder value. Proxy statements will be voted in accordance with this template unless:

 

CCP determines it has a conflict,
CCP’s portfolio manager determines there are other reasons not to follow the Proxy Policies and Insights input, or
No input is provided by the Proxy Policies and Insights, in which case CCP will independently determine how a particular issue should be voted and such determination will be documented by the Portfolio Manager.
     

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Any decisions regarding proxy voting where CCP determines not to follow the Shareholder Value Template (“SVT”) input shall be determined by the Portfolio Manager of CCP. The CCO must be notified of the decision and a memo regarding the reason for not following the SVT must be maintained in the proxy voting file.

 

In the event requests for proxies are received with respect to debt securities, CCP will vote on a case by case basis in a manner it believes to be in the best economic interest of the Company’s shareholders.

 

CCP may determine not to vote a particular proxy if the costs and burdens exceed the benefits of voting (e.g., when securities are subject to loan or to share blocking restrictions).

 

3. Responsibility

 

CCP utilizes Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”) an outsourcing provider to the global financial services industry, to coordinate, process, manage and maintain electronic records of CCP proxy votes.

 

CCP has also adopted the Broadridge Proxy Policy and Insights. It is the responsibility of CCP’s CCO (or designee) to at least annually, review the Proxy Policies and Insights for continued relevancy. CCP’s Portfolio Manager is also responsible for responding to any corporate actions as well as to vote any proxies for which a recommendation is not provided by Broadridge, unless it is determined that not voting is in the best interest of the client.

 

CCP has appointed Wayne G. Pierson to oversee the proxy-voting program. He is responsible for maintaining this policy, reviewing it at least annually, and updating it as required. He may delegate certain administrative functions of the program to another member of the staff; but retains overall responsibility for its undertaking.

 

All proxy materials should be directed to Broadridge; however, if CCP receives proxy statements on behalf of clients, the material should be forwarded to Broadridge unless the account is voted manually by CCP. The Company is not responsible for voting proxies it does not receive but will make reasonable efforts to obtain missing proxies.

 

4. Registered Investment Companies

 

In cases in which the client is a registered investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, delegates proxy voting, CCP will vote proxies pursuant to this policy.

 

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5. Conflicts of Interest

 

CCP shall use commercially reasonable efforts to determine whether a potential conflict may exist, and a potential conflict shall be deemed to exist only if the Portfolio Manager actually knows or should have known of the conflict. CCP is sensitive to conflicts of interest that may arise in the proxy decision-making process and has identified the following potential conflicts of interest:

 

A principal of CCP or any person involved in the proxy decision-making process currently serves on the Board of the portfolio company.
An immediate family member of a principal of CCP or any person involved in the proxy decision-making process currently serves as a director or executive officer of the portfolio company.
CCP, any fund managed by CCP, or any affiliate holds a significant ownership interest in the portfolio company.

 

This list is not intended to be exclusive. All employees are obligated to disclose any potential conflict to CCP’s CCO.

 

Conflict Policy for Sub-Advised Relationships and Direct Clients

 

In the event an employee determines that CCP has a conflict of interest due to, for example, a relationship with a company or an affiliate of a company, or for any other reason which could influence the advice given, the employee will advise the CCO and the Portfolio Manager will decide whether CCP should either (1) disclose the conflict to the client to enable the client to evaluate CCP’s proxy voting advice in light of the conflict or (2) disclose to the client the conflict, with no voting recommendation, and vote in accordance with the client’s instructions. CCP will resolve identified conflicts of interest in the best interest of the client.

 

Conflict Policy for Registered Investment Companies

 

In some instances, an Adviser may be asked to cast a proxy vote that presents a conflict between the interests of a Fund’s shareholders and those of the Adviser or an affiliated person of the Adviser. In such case, the Adviser is instructed to abstain from making a voting decision and to forward all necessary proxy voting materials to the Trust to enable the Board to make a voting decision. When the Board is required to make a proxy voting decision, only the Trustees without a conflict of interest with regard to the security in question or the matter to be voted upon shall be permitted to participate in the decision of how the Fund’s vote will be cast. In the event that the Board is required to vote a proxy because an Adviser has a conflict of interest with respect to the proxy, the Board will vote such proxy in accordance with the Adviser’s proxy voting policy, to the extent consistent with the shareholders’ best interests, as determined by the Board in its discretion. The Board shall notify the Adviser of its final decision on the matter and the Adviser shall vote in accordance with the Board’s decision.

 

6. Oversight of Third Parties

 

The Broadridge Proxy Policies and Insights Shareholder Value Template will be reviewed by CCP’s Portfolio manager or his designee at least annually to ensure it remains appropriate for CCP’s needs. The CCO or his designee will conduct annual due diligence to evaluate Broadridge continuing ability to adequately provide services to CCP and its clients and protect and preserve its records.

 

The CCO or his designee will also perform periodic review of Broadridge through reports available on the Broadridge Proxy Edge site.

 

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7. Client Requests for Information

 

All client requests for information regarding proxy votes, or policies and procedures, received by any employee should be forwarded to CCP compliance. The CCO or his designee will prepare a written response to the client with the information requested.

 

8. Disclosure

 

CCP will provide required disclosures in response to Item 17 of Form ADV Part 2A summarizing this proxy voting policy and procedures, including a statement that clients may request information regarding how CCP voted client’s proxies;
CCP will also disclose how clients may obtain a copy of the firm’s proxy voting policies and procedures, however CCP will not disclose how proxies were voted to third-party non-clients, and;
CCP shall make known its proxy voting policy in its advisory agreement or along with its advisory agreement.

 

9. Recordkeeping

 

The CCO is responsible for maintaining the following records, however CCP may rely on its third-party service provider to retain certain records:

 

proxy voting policies and procedures;
proxy statements (provided, however, that CCP may rely on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s EDGAR system if the issuer filed its proxy statements via EDGAR or may rely on a third party as long as the third party has provided CCP with a copy of the proxy statement promptly upon request);
records of electronic votes cast and abstentions; and
any records prepared by CCP that were material to a proxy voting decision or that memorialized a decision.

 

The Fund shall maintain a copy of each of the foregoing records that is related to proxy votes on behalf of the Fund by CCP. These records may be kept as part of CCP’s records.

 

10. Form N-PX – The Funds

 

The Funds must file Form N-PX with the Securities and Exchange Commission to report their proxy voting records for each twelve-month period, ending on June 30 of each year. The reports must be submitted not later than August 31 and are made publicly available. The CCO is responsible for ensuring that CCP maintains the information required to complete form N-PX, as listed below:

 

The name of the issuer of the portfolio security;

The exchange ticker symbol of the portfolio security;

The CUSIP number for the portfolio security;

The shareholder meeting date;

A brief identification of the matter voted on;

Whether the matter was proposed by the issuer or by a security holder;

Whether the fund cast its vote on the matter;

How the fund cast its vote (e.g., for or against proposal, or abstain; for or withhold regarding election of directors); and

 

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Whether the fund cast its vote for or against management.

 

CCP’s CCO is responsible for preparing the Form N-PX and will submit the Form to the Trust upon request. The Trust’s administrator will submit the Form N-PX to the SEC on behalf of the Funds.

 

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Exhibit C

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee Charter

World Funds Trust

 

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee Membership

 

1. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of World Funds Trust (the “Trust”) shall be composed entirely of Independent Trustees.

 

Board Nominations and Functions

 

1. The Committee shall make nominations for Trustee membership on the Board of Trustees, including the Independent Trustees. The Committee shall evaluate candidates’ qualifications for Board membership and their independence from the investment advisers to the Trust’s series portfolios and the Trust’s other principal service providers. Persons selected as Independent Trustees must not be “interested person” as that term is defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, nor shall Independent Trustee have and affiliations or associations that shall preclude them from voting as an Independent Trustee on matters involving approvals and continuations of Rule 12b-1 Plans, Investment Advisory Agreements and such other standards as the Committee shall deem appropriate. The Committee shall also consider the effect of any relationships beyond those delineated in the 1940 Act that might impair independence, e.g., business, financial or family relationships with managers or service providers. See Appendix A for Procedures with Respect to Nominees to the Board.

 

2. The Committee shall periodically review Board governance procedures and shall recommend any appropriate changes to the full Board of Trustees.

 

3. The Committee shall periodically review the composition of the Board of Trustees to determine whether it may be appropriate to add individuals with different backgrounds or skill sets from those already on the Board.

 

4. The Committee shall periodically review trustee compensation and shall recommend any appropriate changes to the Independent Trustees as a group.

 

Committee Nominations and Functions

 

1. The Committee shall make nominations for membership on all committees and shall review committee assignments at least annually.

 

2. The Committee shall review, as necessary, the responsibilities of any committees of the Board, whether there is a continuing need for each committee, whether there is a need for additional committees of the Board, and whether committees should be combined or reorganized. The Committee shall make recommendations for any such action to the full Board.

 

Other Powers and Responsibilities

 

1. The Committee shall have the resources and authority appropriate to discharge its responsibilities, including authority to retain special counsel and other experts or consultants at the expense of the Trust.

 

2. The Committee shall review this Charter at least annually and recommend any changes to the full Board of Trustees.

 

Adopted:     August 2, 2013

 

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APPENDIX A TO THE NOMINATING AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE CHARTER

 

WORLD FUNDS TRUST

 

PROCEDURES WITH RESPECT TO NOMINEES TO THE BOARD

 

I. Identification of Candidates. When a vacancy on the Board of Trustees exists or is anticipated, and such vacancy is to be filled by an Independent Trustee, the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee shall identify candidates by obtaining referrals from such sources as it may deem appropriate, which may include current Trustees, management of the Trust, counsel and other advisors to the Trustees, and shareholders of the Trust who submit recommendations in accordance with these procedures. In no event shall the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee consider as a candidate to fill any such vacancy an individual recommended by any investment adviser of any series portfolio of the Trust, unless the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee has invited management to make such a recommendation.

 

II. Shareholder Candidates. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee shall, when identifying candidates for the position of Independent Trustee, consider any such candidate recommended by a shareholder if such recommendation contains: (i) sufficient background information concerning the candidate, including evidence the candidate is willing to serve as an Independent Trustee if selected for the position; and (ii) is received in a sufficiently timely manner as determined by the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee in its discretion. Shareholders shall be directed to address any such recommendations in writing to the attention of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, c/o the Secretary of the Trust. The Secretary shall retain copies of any shareholder recommendations which meet the foregoing requirements for a period of not more than 12 months following receipt. The Secretary shall have no obligation to acknowledge receipt of any shareholder recommendations.

 

III. Evaluation of Candidates. In evaluating a candidate for a position on the Board of Trustees, including any candidate recommended by shareholders of the Trust, the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee shall consider the following: (i) the candidate’s knowledge in matters relating to the mutual fund industry; (ii) any experience possessed by the candidate as a director or senior officer of public companies; (iii) the candidate’s educational background; (iv) the candidate’s reputation for high ethical standards and professional integrity; (v) any specific financial, technical or other expertise possessed by the candidate, and the extent to which such expertise would complement the Board’s existing mix of skills, core competencies and qualifications; (vi) the candidate’s perceived ability to contribute to the ongoing functions of the Board, including the candidate’s ability and commitment to attend meetings regularly and work collaboratively with other members of the Board; (vii) the candidate’s ability to qualify as an Independent Trustee and any other actual or potential conflicts of interest involving the candidate and the Trust; and (viii) such other factors as the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee determines to be relevant in light of the existing composition of the Board and any anticipated vacancies. Prior to making a final recommendation to the Board, the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee shall conduct personal interviews with those candidates it concludes are the most qualified candidates.

 

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OTHER INFORMATION

 

Item 28. Exhibits

 

(a)(1)   Certificate of Trust of World Funds Trust (formerly, Abacus World Funds Trust) (the “Registrant”) dated April 9, 2007 is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(a)(2)   Certificate of Amendment dated January 7, 2008 to the Registrant’s Certificate of Trust dated April 9, 2007 is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(a)(3)   Registrant’s Amended Agreement and Declaration of Trust dated April 9, 2007 and amended on June 23, 2008 and November 16, 2016 is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 237 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2017.
     
(b)   Registrant’s Amended and Restated By-Laws dated November 16, 2016 is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 237 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2017.
     
(c)   Not applicable.
     
(d)(1)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Union Street Partners, LLC with respect to the Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 144 on Form N-1A filed on November 20, 2015.
     
(d)(2)   Investment Sub-Advisory Agreement between Union Street Partners, LLC and McGinn Investment Management, Inc. with respect to the Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 144 on Form N-1A filed on November 20, 2015.
     
(d)(3)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Perkins Capital Management, Inc. with respect to the Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 361 on Form N-1A filed on June 29, 2020.
     
(d)(4)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC with respect to the DGHM MicroCap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 175 on Form N-1A filed on May 31, 2016.
     
(d)(5)   Amended and Restated Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Applied Finance Advisors, LLC with respect to the Applied Finance Core Fund, Applied Finance Explorer Fund and Applied Finance Select Fund (collectively, the “Applied Finance Funds”) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(d)(6)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Mission Institutional Advisors, LLC dba Mission Funds Advisers with respect to the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 275 on Form N-1A filed on January 29, 2018.
     
(d)(7)   Investment Sub-Advisory Agreement between Mission Institutional Advisors, LLC and Auour Investment, LLC with respect to the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 275 on Form N-1A filed on January 29, 2018.

 

 

 

 

(d)(8)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC with respect to the REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund and the REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 323 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2019.
     
(d)(9)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC with respect to the REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 87 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
     
(d)(10)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Clifford Capital Partners, LLC with respect to the Clifford Capital Partners Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 155 on Form N-1A filed on February 8, 2016.
     
(d)(11)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Clifford Capital Partners, LLC with respect to the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(d)(12)   Amended Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Cboe Vest Financial LLC, with respect to the Cboe Vest S&P 500® Buffer Strategy Fund, Cboe Vest S&P 500® Enhanced Growth Strategy Fund, and Cboe Vest S&P 500® Dividend Aristocrats Target Income Fund.  (collectively the “Cboe Vest Family of Funds”) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 355 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.
     
(d)(13)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Systelligence, LLC with respect to The E-Valuator Very Conservative (0%-15%) RMS Fund, The E-Valuator Conservative (15%-30%) RMS Fund, The E-Valuator Conservative/Moderate (30%-50%) RMS Fund, The E-Valuator Moderate (50%-70%) RMS Fund, The E-Valuator Growth (70%-85%) RMS Fund, The E-Valuator Aggressive Growth (85%-99%) RMS Fund (“collectively “The E-Valuator Funds”) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 361 on Form N-1A filed on  June 29, 2020.
     
(d)(14)   Amended Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Secure Investment Management, LLC, with respect to the SIM U.S Managed Accumulation Fund, SIM Global Managed Accumulation Fund and SIM Income Fund (“the SIM Funds”) (Filed herewith)  
     
(d)(15)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Strategic Asset Management, Ltd. with respect to the OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(d)(16)   Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Rule One Partners, LLC with respect to the Rule One Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(d)(17)   Interim Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Third Avenue Management Services Group, LLC with respect to the Third Avenue Real Estate Value Fund (Filed herewith).
     
(e)(1)   Principal Underwriter Agreement dated February 18, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 157 on Form N-1A filed on February 23, 2016.
     
(e)(2)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated February 18, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the Union Street Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 208 on Form N-1A filed on January 30, 2017.

 

 

 

 

(e)(3)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated February 18, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the Clifford Capital Partners Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 207 on Form N-1A filed on January 30, 2017.
     
(e)(4)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated August 29, 2019 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(e)(5)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated February 18, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 190 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2016.
     
(e)(6)   Amended Schedule A dated November 14, 2017 to the Principal Underwriter Agreement between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 268 on Form N-1A filed on December 28, 2017.
     
(e)(7)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated February 18, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund, the REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund and the REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund (collectively the “REMS Funds”) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 166 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2016.
     
(e)(8)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated April 21, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp with respect to the DGHM V2000 SmallCap Value Fund and the DGHM MicroCap Value Fund (collectively the “DGHM Funds”) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 175 on Form N-1A filed on May 31, 2016.
     
(e)(9)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated April 21, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp with respect to the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 195 on Form N-1A filed on August 23, 2016.
     
(e)(10)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated August 24, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp with respect to the Cboe Vest Enhanced Growth Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 203 on Form N-1A filed on December 12, 2016.
     
(e)(11)   Amended Principal Underwriter Agreement dated July 14, 2017 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp with respect to the Cboe Vest S&P 500® Dividend Aristocrats Target Income Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 230 on Form N-1A filed on July 25, 2017.
     
(e)(12)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated April 21, 2016 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp with respect to The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 173 on Form N-1A filed on May 26, 2016.
     
(e)(13)   Principal Underwriter Agreement dated August 31, 2019 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp with respect to the Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(e)(14)   Amended Principal Underwriter Agreement dated May 16, 2018 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp with respect to the SIM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 302 on Form N-1A filed on June 28, 2018.

 

 

 

(e)(15)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated February 20, 2019 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the OTG Latin American Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(e)(16)   Schedule A to the Principal Underwriter Agreement dated February 20, 2019 between the Registrant and First Dominion Capital Corp. with respect to the Rule One Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(f)   Not applicable.
     
(g)(1)   Custody Agreement dated July 30, 2008 between the Registrant and UMB Bank, N.A., is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(g)(2)   Amended Appendix B and revised Appendix C to the Custody Agreement, dated July 30, 2008, between the Registrant and UMB Bank, N.A., to include the Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 88 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
     
(g)(3)   Amended Appendix B and revised Appendix C to the Custody Agreement, dated July 30, 2008, between the Registrant and UMB Bank, N.A., to include the Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 88 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
   
(g)(4)   Amended Appendix B and revised Appendix C to the Custody Agreement, dated August 15, 2014 between the Registrant and UMB Bank, N.A., to include the REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 87 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
   
(g)(5)   Amended Appendix B and revised Appendix C to the Custody Agreement, dated August 15, 2014 between the Registrant and UMB Bank, N.A., to include the REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 88 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
   
(g)(6)   Amended Exhibit A to the Custody Agreement between the Registrant and Fifth Third Bank on behalf of certain portfolio series is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
   
(g)(7)   Amended Appendix B and revised Appendix C to the Custody Agreement dated June 15, 2008 between the Registrant and UMB Bank, N.A., to include the OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 365 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(h)(1)   Fund Services Agreement dated December 1, 2015 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 157 on Form N-1A filed on February 23, 2016.
     
(h)(2)   Amendment No. 1 and Exhibit A to the Fund Services Agreement dated December 1, 2015 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 275 on Form N-1A filed on January 29, 2018.
     
(h)(3)   Exhibit A to the Fund Services Agreement dated December 1, 2015 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 190 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2016.

 

 

 

 

(h)(4)   Fund Services Agreement dated September 20, 2017 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 268 on Form N-1A filed on December 28, 2017.
     
(h)(5)   Fund Services Agreement dated January 1, 2016 and Amended March 1, 2018 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the REMS Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 323 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2019.
     
(h)(6)   Fund Services Agreement dated August 29, 2019 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(h)(7)   Amended Fund Services Agreement dated March 1, 2017 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the DGHM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 224 on Form N-1A filed on June 28, 2017.
     
(h)(8)   Exhibit A to the Fund Services Agreement dated December 1, 2015 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 195 on Form N-1A filed on August 23, 2016.
     
(h)(9)   Exhibit A to the Fund Services Agreement dated August 24, 2016 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Cboe Vest Enhanced Growth Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 203 on Form N-1A filed on December 12, 2016.
     
(h)(10)   Amended Fund Services Agreement dated July 14, 2017 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Cboe Vest S&P 500® Dividend Aristocrats Target Income Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 230 on Form N-1A filed on July 25, 2017.
     
(h)(11)   Exhibit A to the Fund Services Agreement dated December 1, 2015 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 342 on Form N-1A filed on June 28, 2019.
     
(h)(12)   Fund Services Agreement dated August 29, 2019 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(h)(13)   Fund Services Agreement dated April 24, 2018 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the SIM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 302 on Form N-1A filed on June 28, 2018.
     
(h)(14)   Fund Services Agreement dated February 20, 2019 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(h)(15)   Fund Services Agreement dated February 20, 2019 between the Registrant and Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc. on behalf of the Rule One Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(h)(16)   Amended and Restated Schedule A dated October 31, 2014 to the Accounting Services Agreement between the Registrant and UMB Fund Services, Inc. with respect to REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 100 on Form N-1A filed on October 31, 2014.

 

 

 

 

(h)(17)   Amended and Restated Schedule A dated February 29, 2016 to the Accounting Services Agreement between the Registrant and UMB Fund Services, Inc. with respect to OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 365 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(h)(18)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Union Street Partners, LLC with respect to the shares of the Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 320 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2019.
     
(h)(19)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Perkins Capital Management, Inc. with respect to shares of the Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 363 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(h)(20)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC with respect to the DGHM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 363 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(h)(21)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC with respect to the REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund, REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund and REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 358 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2020.
     
(h)(22)   Amended Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Applied Finance Advisors, LLC with respect to the Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(h)(23)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Mission Institutional Advisors, LLC with respect to the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 357 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2020.
     
(h)(24)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Cboe Vest Financial LLC, with respect to the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 357 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2020.
     
(h)(25)   Amended Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Systelligence, LLC, with respect to The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 323 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2019.
     
(h)(26)   Amended Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Secure Investment Management, LLC, with respect to the SIM Funds (Filed herewith).
     
(h)(27)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Strategic Asset Management, Ltd. with respect to the OTG Latin America is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 365 on Form N-1A filed on  July 29, 2020.
     
(h)(28)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Rule One Partners, LLC with respect to the Rule One Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 364 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(h)(29)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Clifford Capital Partners, LLC with respect to the Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 354 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.

 

 

 

 

     
(h)(30)   Interim Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Third Avenue Management LLC with respect to the Third Avenue International Real Estate Value Fund (Filed herewith).
     
(h)(31)   Shareholder Services Plan, dated August 2, 2013 as amended April 21, 2016, with respect to Investor Class Shares of the DGHM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 175 on Form N-1A filed on May 31, 2016.
     
(h)(32)   Shareholder Services Plan, dated December 21, 2016 (Schedule A amended August 29, 2019), with respect to Institutional Class Shares and Investor Class Shares to the Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(h)(33)   Shareholder Services Plan, dated April 21, 2016, with respect to the Cboe Vest Family of Funds Class A Shares and Class C Shares is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 195 on Form N-1A filed on August 23, 2016.
     
(h)(34)   Shareholder Services Plan, dated August 24, 2016, with respect to the Cboe Vest Enhanced Growth Fund Class A Shares and Class C Shares is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 203 on Form N-1A filed on December 12, 2016.
     
(h)(35)   Amended Shareholder Services Plan, dated July 14, 2017, with respect to the Cboe Vest S&P 500® Dividend Aristocrats Target Income Fund Class A Shares, Class C Shares, Institutional and Investor Class Shares is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 230 on Form N-1A filed on July 25, 2017.
     
(h)(36)   Amended Shareholder Services Plan with respect to the REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund, REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund and the REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 225 on Form N-1A filed on June 30, 2017.
     
(h)(37)   Shareholder Services Plan, dated April 21, 2016, with respect to The E-Valuator Funds Investor Class Shares and Institutional Class Shares is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 173 on Form N-1A filed on May 26, 2016.
     
(h)(38)   Shareholder Services Plan, dated September 20, 2017, with respect to the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund Class A Shares, Institutional Shares and Investor  Shares is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 268 on Form N-1A filed on December 28, 2017.
     
(h)(39)   Shareholder Services Plan, dated February 20, 2019, with respect to the OTG Latin America Fund Class A Shares and Class C Shares is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(h)(40)   Administrative Services Agreement dated April 18, 2018, with respect to the SIM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 306 on Form N-1A filed on July 30, 2018.
     
(i)(1)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(i)(2)   Consent of Legal Counsel for Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 351 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(i)(3)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.

 

 

 

 

(i)(4)   Consent of Legal Counsel for Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 363 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.   
     
(i)(5)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for DGHM V2000 Small Cap Value Fund, is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(i)(6)   Consent of Legal Counsel for DGHM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 361 on Form N-1A filed on June 29, 2020.
     
(i)(7)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for DGHM MicroCap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 175 on Form N-1A filed on May 31, 2016.
     
(i)(8)   Consent of Legal Counsel for Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 369 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2020.
     
(i)(9)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Applied Finance Core Fund (formerly Toreador Core Fund) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 117 on Form N-1A filed on May 8, 2015.
     
(i)(10)   Opinion of Legal Counsel for Applied Finance Core Fund (formerly Toreador Core Fund) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 117 on Form N-1A filed on May 8, 2015.
     
(i)(11)   Opinion and Consent of Counsel regarding tax matters for the reorganization of the Applied Finance Core Fund (formerly Toreador Core Fund) from the Unified Series Trust into World Funds Trust is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 129 on Form N-1A filed on August 6, 2015.
     
(i)(12)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Applied Finance Explorer Fund (formerly Toreador Explorer Fund) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 115 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2015.
     
(i)(13)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Applied Finance Select Fund (formerly Toreador Select Fund) is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 183 on Form N-1A filed on June 30, 2016.
     
(i)(14)   Opinion and Consent of Counsel regarding tax matters for the reorganization of the Applied Finance Dividend Fund into the Applied Finance Core Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 369 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2020.
     
(i)(15)   Opinion of Legal Counsel for the Applied Finance Core Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 369 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2020.
     
(i)(16)   Consent of Legal Counsel for the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 357 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2020.
     
(i)(17)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(i)(18)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 87 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.

 

 

 

 

(i)(19)   Opinion of Legal Counsel for REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 105 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2015.
     
(i)(20)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 88 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2014.
     
(i)(21)   Opinion of Legal Counsel for REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 105 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2015.
     
(i)(22)   Consent of Legal Counsel for REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund, REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund and REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 358 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2020.
     
(i)(23)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Clifford Capital Partners Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 155 on Form N-1A filed on February 8, 2016.
     
(i)(24)   Consent of Legal Counsel for Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund (Filed herewith).
     
(i)(25)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(i)(26)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 195 on Form N-1A filed on August 23, 2016.
     
(i)(27)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Cboe Vest Enhanced Growth Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 203 on Form N-1A filed on December 12, 2016.
     
(i)(28)   Consent of Legal Counsel for the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 355 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.
     
(i)(29)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Cboe Vest S&P 500® Dividend Aristocrats Target Income Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 230 on Form N-1A filed on July 25, 2017.
     
(i)(30)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for the Cboe Vest Family of Funds with respect to the Class Y Shares is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 285 on Form N-1A filed on February 27, 2018.
     
(i)(31)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 173 on Form N-1A filed on May 26, 2016.
     
(i)(32)   Consent of Legal Counsel for The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 350 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(i)(33)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for the SIM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 292 on Form N-1A filed on April 18, 2018.
     
(i)(34)   Consent of Legal Counsel for SIM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 354 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.  

 

 

 

 

(i)(35)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 328 on Form N-1A filed on February 27, 2019.
     
(i)(36)   Consent of Legal Counsel for OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 365 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(i)(37)   Opinion and Consent of Legal Counsel for Rule One Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(i)(38)   Consent of Legal Counsel for the Rule One Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 364 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(j)(1)   Consent of Independent Public Accountants for Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 351 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(j)(2)   Consent of Independent Public Accountants for Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 363 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(j)(3)   Consent of Independent Public Accountants for DGHM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 361 on Form N-1A filed on June 29, 2020.
     
(j)(4)   Consent of Independent Certified Public Accountants, Grant Thornton LLP for the DGHM MicroCap, G.P. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 175 on Form N-1A filed on May 31, 2016.
     
(j)(5)   Consent of Independent Certified Public Accountants, Grant Thornton LLP for the DGHM MicroCap, G.P. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 224 on Form N-1A filed on June 28, 2017.
     
(j)(6)   Consent of Independent Public Accountants for REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund, REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund and REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 358 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2020.
     
(j)(7)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm for the Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 369 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2020.  
     
(j)(8)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 357 on Form N-1A filed on April 29, 2020.
     
(j)(9)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Fund (Filed herewith).
     
(j)(10)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 355 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.

 

 

 

 

(j)(11)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 350 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(j)(12)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for SIM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 354 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.
     
(j)(13)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 365 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(j)(14)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for Rule One Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 364 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(k)   Not applicable.
     
(l)   Not applicable.
     
(m)(1)   Amended Schedule A to the Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 100 on Form N-1A filed on October 31, 2014.
     
(m)(2)   Fixed Compensation Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Perkins Discovery Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 78 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2014.
     
(m)(3)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for the Investor Class Shares and Class C Shares of the DGHM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 175 on Form N-1A filed on May 31, 2016.
     
(m)(4)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated August 31, 2019, for the Investor Class Shares of the Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(m)(5)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated August 15, 2014, for the Class A Shares and Class C Shares of the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 268 on Form N-1A filed on December 28, 2017.
     
(m)(6)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated August 15, 2014, for the Platform Class Shares of the REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 87 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
     
(m)(7)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated August 15, 2014, for the Platform Class Shares of the REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 88 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
     
(m)(8)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated May 16, 2017, for the Platform Class Shares of the REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 225 on Form N-1A filed on June 30, 2017.
     
(m)(9)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated November 10, 2015, for the Clifford Capital Partners Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 155 on Form N-1A filed on February 8, 2016.
     
(m)(10)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated August 29, 2019, for the Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.

 

 

 

 

(m)(11)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated July 6, 2016, for the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 195 on Form N-1A filed on August 23, 2016.
     
(m)(12)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated August 24, 2016, for the Cboe Vest Enhanced Growth Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 203 on Form N-1A filed on December 12, 2016.
     
(m)(13)   Amended Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated July 14, 2017 for the Cboe Vest S&P 500® Dividend Aristocrats Target Income Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 230 on Form N-1A filed on July 25, 2017.
     
(m)(14)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated April 21, 2016, for The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 173 on Form N-1A filed on May 26, 2016.
     
(m)(15)   Distribution Plan Pursuant to Rule 12b-1, dated February 20, 2019 for the OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(n)(1)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the Union Street Partners Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 275 on Form N-1A filed on January 29, 2018.
     
(n)(2)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the DGHM Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 224 on Form N-1A filed on June 28, 2017.
     
(n)(3)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the Applied Finance Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(n)(4)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 268 on Form N-1A filed on December 28, 2017.
     
(n)(5)   Amended Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund, REMS International Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund and the REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 284 on Form N-1A filed on February 23, 2018.
     
(n)(6)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the Clifford Capital Partners and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(n)(8)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the Cboe Vest Family of Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 286 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2018.
     
(n)(9)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for The E-Valuator Funds is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 173 on Form N-1A filed on May 26, 2016.
     
(n)(10)   Rule 18f-3 Multiple Class Plan for the OTG Latin America Fund is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(o)   Reserved.

 

 

 

 

(p)(1)   Code of Ethics for the Registrant is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 237 on Form N-1A filed on August 28, 2017.
     
(p)(2)   Code of Ethics for Principal Underwriter is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 302 on Form N-1A filed on June 28, 2018.
     
(p)(3)   Code of Ethics for Union Street Partners, LLC. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(p)(4)   Code of Ethics for McGinn Investment Management, Inc. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 87 on Form N-1A filed on August 15, 2014.
     
(p)(5)   Code of Ethics for Perkins Capital Management, Inc. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.
     
(p)(6)   Code of Ethics for Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC (filed herewith)  
     
(p)(7)   Code of Ethics for Applied Finance Advisors, LLC is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 363 on Form N-1A filed on July 29, 2020.
     
(p)(8)   Code of Ethics for Mission Institutional Advisors, LLC dba Mission Funds Advisors is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 268 on Form N-1A filed on December 28, 2017.
     
(p)(9)   Code of Ethics for Auour Investments, LLC is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 349 on Form N-1A filed on January 28, 2020.
     
(p)(10)   Code of Ethics for Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC, is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No 361 on Form N-1A filed on June 29, 2020.
     
(p)(11)   Code of Ethics for Strategic Asset Management, Ltd. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 100 on Form N-1A filed on October 31, 2014.
     
(p)(12)   Code of Ethics for Clifford Capital Partners, LLC. is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 354 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.
     
(p)(13)   Code of Ethics for Cboe Vest Financial LLC is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 355 on Form N-1A filed on February 28, 2020.
     
(p)(14)   Code of Ethics for Systelligence, LLC (Filed herewith)
     
(p)(15)   Code of Ethics for Secure Investment Management, LLC is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 292 on Form N-1A filed on April 18, 2018.
     
(p)(16)   Code of Ethics for Rule One Partners, LLC is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 334 on Form N-1A filed on March 27, 2019.
     
(q)   Powers of Attorney is herein incorporated by reference from the Registrant’s Post-Effective Amendment No. 241 on Form N-1A filed on October 4, 2017.

 

 

 

 

Item 29. Persons Controlled By or Under Common Control With Registrant

 

    None.

 

Item 30. Indemnification

 

See Article VIII, Section 2 of the Registrant’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust and the section titled “Indemnification of Trustees, Officers, Employees and Other Agents” in the Registrant’s By-Laws.

 

Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (“Securities Act”), may be permitted to trustees, officers and controlling persons of the Registrant by the Registrant pursuant to the Declaration of Trust or otherwise, the Registrant is aware that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission, such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and, therefore, is unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by trustees, officers or controlling persons of the Registrant in connection with the successful defense of any act, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such trustees, officers or controlling persons in connection with the shares being registered, the Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issues.

 

Item 31. Business and other Connections of the Investment Adviser

 

The list required by this Item 31 as to any other business, profession, vocation or employment of a substantial nature in which each of the investment advisers and sub-advisers, and each director, officer or partner of such investment advisers or sub-advisers, is or has been engaged within the last two fiscal years for his or her own account or in the capacity of director, officer, employee, partner or trustee, is incorporated herein by reference to Schedules A and D of each investment adviser's or sub-adviser's Form ADV listed opposite such investment adviser's or sub-adviser's name below, which is currently on file with the SEC as required by the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended.

 

Name of Investment Adviser / Sub-Adviser Form ADV File No.
Union Street Partners, LLC   801-72120
McGinn Investment Management, Inc. 801-40578
Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC 801-62895
Perkins Capital Management, Inc. 801-22888
Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC 801-61061
Mission Institutional Advisors, LLC dba Mission Funds Advisors 801-111759
Auour Investments, LLC 801-80544
Applied Finance Advisors, LLC 801-66461
Strategic Asset Management, Ltd. 801-70903
Clifford Capital Partners, LLC 801-78911
Cboe Vest Financial LLC 801-77463
Systelligence, LLC 801-107695
Secure Investment Management, LLC 801-80752
Rule One Partners, LLC 801-114860
Third Avenue Management LLC 801-27792

 

Item 32. Principal Underwriters

 

a)   Not applicable.
     
b)   First Dominion Capital Corp. The information required by this Item 32(b) with respect to each director, officer or partner of FDCC is incorporated herein by reference to Schedule A of Form BD, filed by FDCC with the SEC pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (File No. 8-33719).

 

 

 

 

c)   Not applicable.
     


Item 33. Location of Accounts and Records

 

The accounts, books or other documents of the Registrant required to be maintained by Section 31(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and the rules promulgated thereunder are kept in several locations:

 

a)   Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235 (records relating to its function as transfer agent to the Funds).
     
b)   First Dominion Capital Corporation, 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, Virginia 23235 (records relating to its function as distributor to the Funds).
     
c)   Union Street Partners LLC, 1421 Prince Street, Suite 400 Alexandria, Virginia 22314. (records relating to its function as investment adviser to the Union Street Partners Value Fund).
     
d)   McGinn Investment Management, Inc., 201 North Union Street, Suite 101, Alexandria, Virginia 22314 (records relating to its function as sub-adviser to the Union Street Partners Value Fund).
     
e)   Perkins Capital Management, Inc., 730 East Lake Street, Wayzata, Minnesota 55391-1769 (records relating to its function as investment adviser to the Perkins Discovery Fund).
     
f)   Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC, 565 Fifth Avenue, Suite 2101, New York, New York 10017 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the DGHM MicroCap Fund).
     
g)   Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC, 1100 Fifth Avenue, South, Suite 301, Naples, Florida 34102-6407 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to REMS Real Estate Income 50/50 Fund and REMS Real Estate Value-Opportunity Fund).
     
h)   Applied Finance Advisors, LLC, 17806 IH 10, Suite 300, San Antonio, Texas  78257 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the Applied Finance Funds).
     
i)   Mission Institutional Advisors, LLC dba Mission Funds Advisors, 5956 Sherry Lane, Suite 1000, Dallas, Texas 75225 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund).
     
j)   Auour Investments, LLC, 162 Main Street, Suite 2, Wenham, Massachusetts 01984 (records relating to its function as sub-adviser to the Mission-Auour Risk-Managed Global Equity Fund).
     
k)   Strategic Asset Management, Ltd., Calle Ayacucho No. 277, La Paz, Bolivia (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the OTG Latin America Fund).
     
l)   Clifford Capital Partners, LLC, 395 S. Main Street, #203 Alpine, Utah 84020 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the Clifford Capital Partners Fund and the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund).
     
m)   Cboe Vest Financial LLC, 1765 Greensboro Station Place, 9th Floor, McLean, Virginia 22102 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the Cboe Vest Family of Funds).
     
n)   Systelligence, LLC, 7760 France Avenue South, Suite 620, Bloomington, Minnesota 55435 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to The E-Valuator Funds).
     
o)   Secure Investment Management, LLC, 3067 W Ina Road, Suite 125, Tucson, Arizona 85741 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the SIM Funds).

 

 

 

 

p)   Rule One Partners, LLC, 891 Bear Creek Road, Moreland, Georgia 30259, (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the Rule One Fund).
q)  

Third Avenue Management, LLC, 622 Third Avenue, 32nd Floor, New York, NY 10017-6715 (records relating to its function as the investment adviser to the Third Avenue International Real Estate Value Fund).

 

Item 34. Management Services

 

    There are no management-related service contracts not discussed in Parts A or B of this Form.

 

Item 35. Undertakings

 

    Not applicable.

 

 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of the requirements for effectiveness of this registration statement under Rule 485(b) of the Securities Act and has duly caused this Post-Effective Amendment No. 374 to the Registrant’s Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Richmond, Commonwealth of Virginia on the 28th day of January, 2021.

 

WORLD FUNDS TRUST

 

By: /s/ Karen M. Shupe                                 
Karen M. Shupe
Treasurer and Principal Executive Officer

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act, this Post-Effective Amendment No. 374 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A has been signed below by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

         
Signature   Title   Date
         
*David J. Urban   Trustee   January 28, 2021
         
*Mary Lou H. Ivey   Trustee   January 28, 2021
         
*Theo H. Pitt, Jr.   Trustee   January 28, 2021
         
/s/ Karen M. Shupe   Treasurer and Principal Executive Officer   January 28, 2021
         
/s/ Ann T. MacDonald   Assistant Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer   January 28, 2021
         
*By: /s/ Karen M. Shupe        
         

*Attorney-in-fact pursuant to Powers of Attorney

 

 

 

 

EXHIBITS

 

(d)(14)   Amended Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Secure Investment Management, LLC, with respect to the SIM U.S Managed Accumulation Fund, SIM Global Managed Accumulation Fund and SIM Income Fund (“the SIM Funds”)
     
(d)(17)   Interim Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Third Avenue Management Services Group, LLC with respect to the Third Avenue Real Estate Value Fund
     
(h)(26)   Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Secure Investment Management, LLC, with respect to the SIM Funds
     
(h)(30)   Interim Expense Limitation Agreement between the Registrant and Third Avenue Management LLC with respect to the Third Avenue International Real Estate Value Fund
     
(i)(24)   Consent of Legal Counsel for Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund
     
(j)(9)   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting firm for Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund
     
(p)(6)   Code of Ethics for Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC
     
(p)(14)   Code of Ethics for Systelligence, LLC
     

 

 

World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(d)(14)

 

AMENDED INVESTMENT ADVISORY
AGREEMENT

 

THIS AMENDED INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT (the “Agreement”), which was first made as of the 20th day of September, 2017,amended as of May 16, 2018, and is hereby amended as of November 17, 2020, is by and between World Funds Trust (the “Trust”), a Delaware statutory trust registered as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), and Secure Investment Management, LLC (the “Adviser”), an Arizona limited liability company.

 

WITNESSETH

 

WHEREAS, the Board of Trustees (the “Board”) of the Trust has selected the Adviser to act as investment adviser to the series portfolios of the Trust set forth on the Schedule(s) A to this Agreement (each, a “Fund” and collectively, the “Funds”), as such Schedule As may be amended from time to time upon mutual agreement of the parties, and to provide certain related services, as more fully set forth below, and to perform such services under the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth;

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants and benefits set forth herein, the Trust and the Adviser do hereby agree as follows:

 

1. THE ADVISER’S SERVICES.

 

(a) Discretionary Investment Management Services. The Adviser shall act as investment adviser with respect to each Fund. In such capacity, the Adviser shall, subject to the supervision of the Board, regularly provide each Fund with investment research, advice and supervision and shall furnish continuously an investment program for each Fund, consistent with the respective investment objectives and policies of each Fund. The Adviser shall determine, from time to time, what securities shall be purchased for each Fund, what securities shall be held or sold by each Fund and what portion of each Fund’s assets shall be held uninvested in cash, subject always to the provisions of the Trust’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust (“Declaration of Trust”), as amended and supplemented (the “Declaration of Trust”), Bylaws and its registration statement on Form N-1A (the “Registration Statement”) under the 1940 Act, and under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “1933 Act”), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”), and with the investment objectives, policies and restrictions of each Fund, as each of the same shall be from time to time in effect. To carry out such obligations, and to the extent not prohibited by any of the foregoing, the Adviser shall exercise full discretion and act for each Fund in the same manner and with the same force and effect as each Fund itself might or could do with respect to purchases, sales or other transactions, as well as with respect to all other such things necessary or incidental to the furtherance or conduct of such purchases, sales or other transactions. No reference in this Agreement to the Adviser having full discretionary authority over each Fund’s investments shall in any way limit the right of the Board, in its sole discretion, to establish or revise policies in connection with the management of a Fund’s assets or to otherwise exercise its right to control the overall management of a Fund.

 

(b) Compliance. The Adviser agrees to comply with the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the “Advisers Act”), the 1933 Act, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “1934 Act”), and the respective rules and regulations thereunder, as applicable, as well as with all other applicable federal and state laws, rules and regulations that relate to the services and relationships described hereunder and to the conduct of its business as a registered investment adviser. The Adviser also agrees to comply with the objectives, policies and restrictions set forth in the Registration Statement, as amended or supplemented, of each Fund, and with any policies, guidelines, instructions and procedures approved by the Board and provided to the Adviser. In selecting each Fund’s portfolio securities and performing the Adviser’s obligations hereunder, the Adviser shall cause the Fund to comply with the diversification and source of income requirements of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), for qualification as a regulated investment company. The Adviser shall maintain compliance procedures that it reasonably believes are adequate to ensure its compliance with the foregoing. No supervisory activity undertaken by the Board shall limit the Adviser’s full responsibility for any of the foregoing.

1 

 

 

(c) Recordkeeping. The Adviser agrees to preserve any Trust records that it creates or possesses that are required to be maintained under the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder (“Fund Books and Records”) for the periods prescribed by Rule 31a-2 under the 1940 Act. In compliance with the requirements of Rule 31a-3 under the 1940 Act, the Adviser agrees that all such records are the property of the Trust and will surrender promptly to the Trust any of such records upon the Trust’s request.

 

(d) Holdings Information and Pricing. The Adviser shall provide regular reports regarding Fund holdings, and shall, on its own initiative, furnish the Trust and its Board from time to time with whatever information the Adviser believes is appropriate for this purpose, and at the request of the Board, such information and reports requested by the Board. The Adviser agrees to notify the Trust as soon as practicable if the Adviser reasonably believes that the value of any security held by a Fund may not reflect fair value. The Adviser agrees to provide any pricing information of which the Adviser is aware to the Trust, its Board and/or any Fund pricing agent to assist in the determination of the fair value of any Fund holdings for which market quotations are not readily available or as otherwise required in accordance with the 1940 Act or the Trust’s valuation procedures for the purpose of calculating the Fund net asset value in accordance with procedures and methods established by the Board.

 

(e) Cooperation with Agents of the Trust. The Adviser agrees to cooperate with and provide reasonable assistance to the Trust, any Trust custodian or foreign sub-custodians, any Trust pricing agents and all other agents and representatives of the Trust with respect to such information regarding each Fund as such entities may reasonably request from time to time in the performance of their obligations, provide prompt responses to reasonable requests made by such persons and use appropriate interfaces established by such persons so as to promote the efficient exchange of information and compliance with applicable laws and regulations.

 

(f) Delegation of Authority. Any of the duties, responsibilities and obligations of the Adviser specified in this Section 1 and throughout the remainder of this Agreement with respect to one or more Funds may be delegated by the Adviser, at the Adviser’s expense, to an appropriate party (a “Sub-Adviser”), subject to such approval by the Board and shareholders of the applicable Funds to the extent required by the 1940 Act. The Adviser shall oversee the performance of delegated duties by any Sub-Adviser and shall furnish the Board with periodic reports concerning the performance of delegated responsibilities by such Sub-Adviser. The retention of a Sub-Adviser by the Adviser pursuant to this Paragraph 1(f) shall in no way reduce the responsibilities and obligations of the Adviser under this Agreement and the Adviser shall be responsible to the Trust for all acts or omissions of any Sub-Adviser to the same extent the Adviser would be liable hereunder. Insofar as the provisions of this Agreement impose any restrictions, conditions, limitations or requirements on the Adviser, the Adviser shall take measures through its contract with, or its oversight of, the Sub-Adviser that attempt to impose similar (insofar as the circumstances may require) restrictions, conditions, limitations or requirements on the Sub-Adviser.

 

2 

 

 

2. CODE OF ETHICS. The Adviser has adopted a written code of ethics (“Adviser’s Code of Ethics”) that it reasonably believes complies with the requirements of Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act, which it has provided to the Trust. The Adviser has adopted procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with the Adviser’s Code of Ethics. Upon request, the Adviser shall provide the Trust with a (i) copy of the Adviser’s Code of Ethics, as in effect from time to time, and any proposed amendments thereto that the Chief Compliance Officer (“CCO”) of the Trust determines should be presented to the Board, and (ii) certification that it has adopted procedures reasonably necessary to prevent Access Persons from engaging in any conduct prohibited by the Adviser’s Code of Ethics. Annually, the Adviser shall furnish a written report to the Board, which complies with the requirements of Rule 17j-1, concerning the Adviser’s Code of Ethics. The Adviser shall respond to requests for information from the Trust as to violations of the Adviser’s Code of Ethics by Access Persons and the sanctions imposed by the Adviser. The Adviser shall notify the Trust as soon as practicable after it becomes aware of any material violation of the Adviser’s Code of Ethics, whether or not such violation relates to a security held by any Fund.

 

3. INFORMATION AND REPORTING. The Adviser shall provide the Trust and its respective officers with such periodic reports concerning the obligations the Adviser has assumed under this Agreement as the Trust may from time to time reasonably request.

 

(a) Notification of Breach / Compliance Reports. The Adviser shall notify the Trust’s CCO promptly upon detection of: (i) any material failure to manage any Fund in accordance with its investment objectives and policies or any applicable law; or (ii) any material breach of any of each Fund’s or the Adviser’s policies, guidelines or procedures with respect to the Fund. In addition, the Adviser shall respond to quarterly requests for information concerning the Fund’s compliance with its investment objectives and policies, applicable law, including, but not limited to the 1940 Act and Subchapter M of the Code, and the Fund’s policies, guidelines or procedures as applicable to the Adviser’s obligations under this Agreement. The Adviser agrees to correct any such failure promptly and to take any action that the Board may reasonably request in connection with any such breach. Upon request, the Adviser shall also provide the officers of the Trust with supporting certifications in connection with such certifications of Fund financial statements and disclosure controls pursuant to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The Adviser will promptly notify the Trust in the event: (x) the Adviser is served or otherwise receives notice of any action, suit, proceeding, inquiry or investigation, at law or in equity, before or by any court, public board, or body, involving the affairs of the Trust (excluding class action suits in which a Fund is a member of the plaintiff class by reason of the Fund’s ownership of shares in the defendant) or the compliance by the Adviser with the federal or state securities laws; or (y) of an actual change in control of the Adviser resulting in an “assignment” (as defined in Section 15) that has occurred or is otherwise proposed to occur.

 

(b) Board and Filings Information. The Adviser will also provide the Trust with any information reasonably requested regarding its management of each Fund required for any meeting of the Board, or for any shareholder report on Form N-CSR, Form N-Q, Form N-PX, Form N-SAR, Registration Statement or any amendment thereto, proxy statement, prospectus supplement, or other form or document to be filed by the Trust with the Commission. The Adviser will make its officers and employees available to meet with the Board from time to time on a reasonable basis on due notice to review its investment management services to each Fund in light of current and prospective economic and market conditions and shall furnish to the Board such information as may reasonably be necessary in order for the Board to evaluate this Agreement or any proposed amendments thereto.

 

(c) Transaction Information. The Adviser shall furnish to the Trust such information concerning portfolio transactions as may be necessary to enable the Trust or its designated agent to perform such compliance testing on each Fund and the Adviser’s services as the Trust may, in its sole discretion, determine to be appropriate. The provision of such information by the Adviser to the Trust or its designated agent in no way relieves the Adviser of its own responsibilities under this Agreement.

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4. BROKERAGE.

 

(a) Principal Transactions. In connection with purchases or sales of securities for the account of a Fund, neither the Adviser nor any of its directors, officers or employees will act as a principal or agent or receive any commission except as permitted by the 1940 Act.

 

(b) Placement of Orders. The Adviser shall place all orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities for each Fund’s account with brokers or dealers selected by the Adviser. The Adviser will not execute transactions with a broker dealer which is an “affiliated person” of the Trust except in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board. The Adviser shall use its best efforts to seek to execute portfolio transactions at prices which are advantageous to each Fund and at commission rates which are reasonable in relation to the benefits received. In selecting brokers or dealers qualified to execute a particular transaction, brokers or dealers may be selected who also provide brokerage and research services (as those terms are defined in Section 28(e) of the 1934 Act) to each Fund and/or the other accounts over which the Adviser or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. The Adviser is authorized to pay a broker or dealer who provides such brokerage and research services a commission for executing a portfolio transaction for each Fund which is in excess of the amount of commission another broker or dealer would have charged for effecting that transaction if the Adviser determines in good faith that such amount of commission is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided by such broker or dealer. This determination may be viewed in terms of either that particular transaction or the overall responsibilities which the Adviser and its affiliates have with respect to accounts over which they exercise investment discretion. The Board shall periodically review the commissions paid by each Fund to determine if the commissions paid over representative periods of time were reasonable in relation to the benefits received by each Fund.

 

5. CUSTODY. Nothing in this Agreement shall permit the Adviser to take or receive physical possession of cash, securities or other investments of a Fund.

 

6. ALLOCATION OF CHARGES AND EXPENSES. The Adviser will bear its own costs of providing services hereunder. Other than as herein specifically indicated or otherwise agreed to in a separate signed writing, the Adviser shall not be responsible for a Fund’s expenses, including brokerage and other expenses incurred in placing orders for the purchase and sale of securities and other investment instruments.

 

7. REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES AND COVENANTS.

 

(a) Properly Registered. The Adviser is registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Advisers Act, and will remain so registered for the duration of this Agreement. The Adviser is not prohibited by the Advisers Act or the 1940 Act from performing the services contemplated by this Agreement, and to the best knowledge of the Adviser, there is no proceeding or investigation pending or threatened that is reasonably likely to result in the Adviser being prohibited from performing the services contemplated by this Agreement. The Adviser agrees to promptly notify the Trust of the occurrence of any event that would disqualify the Adviser from serving as an investment adviser to an investment company. The Adviser is in compliance in all material respects with all applicable federal and state law in connection with its investment management operations.

 

(b) ADV Disclosure. The Adviser has provided the Board with a copy of its Form ADV and will, promptly after amending its Form ADV, furnish a copy of such amendments to the Trust. The information contained in the Adviser’s Form ADV is accurate and complete in all material respects and does not omit to state any material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.

 

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(c) Fund Disclosure Documents. The Adviser has reviewed and will in the future review the Registration Statement and any amendments or supplements thereto, the annual or semi- annual reports to shareholders, other reports filed with the Commission and any marketing material of a Fund (collectively the “Disclosure Documents”) and represents and warrants that with respect to disclosure about the Adviser, the manner in which the Adviser manages the Fund or information relating directly or indirectly to the Adviser, such Disclosure Documents contain or will contain, as of the date thereof, no untrue statement of any material fact and do not and will not omit any statement of material fact which was required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements contained therein not misleading.

 

(d) Use of the Names “Secure” and “SIM”. The Adviser has the right to use the names “Secure” and “SIM” or any derivation thereof in connection with its services to the Trust and, subject to the terms set forth in Section 8 of this Agreement, the Trust shall have the right to use the name “Secure” and “SIM” in connection with the management and operation of each Fund. The Adviser is not aware of any actions, claims, litigation or proceedings existing or threatened that would adversely affect or prejudice the rights of the Adviser or the Trust to use the name “Secure” and “SIM”.

 

(e) Insurance. The Adviser maintains errors and omissions insurance coverage in the amount disclosed to the Trust in connection with the Board’s approval of the Agreement and shall provide prior written notice to the Trust: (i) of any material changes in its insurance policies or insurance coverage; or (ii) if any material claims will be made on its insurance policies. Furthermore, the Adviser shall, upon reasonable request, provide the Trust with any information it may reasonably require concerning the amount of or scope of such insurance.

 

(f) No Detrimental Agreement. The Adviser represents and warrants that it has no arrangement or understanding with any party, other than the Trust, that would influence the decision of the Adviser with respect to its selection of securities for a Fund and its management of the assets of the Fund, and that all selections shall be done in accordance with what is in the best interest of the Fund.

 

(g) Conflicts. The Adviser shall act honestly, in good faith and in the best interests of its clients and the Fund. The Adviser maintains a Code of Ethics which defines the standards by which the Adviser conducts its operations consistent with its fiduciary duties and other obligations under applicable law.

 

(h) Representations. The representations and warranties in this Section 7 shall be deemed to be made on the date this Agreement is executed and at the time of delivery of the quarterly compliance report required by Section 3(a), whether or not specifically referenced in such report.

 

8. THE NAMES “Secure” AND “SIM”. The Adviser grants to the Trust a license to use the names “Secure” and “SIM” (the “Name”) as part of the name of any Fund during the term of this Agreement. The foregoing authorization by the Adviser to the Trust to use the Name as part of the name of any Fund is not exclusive of the right of the Adviser itself to use, or to authorize others to use, the Name; the Trust acknowledges and agrees that, as between the Trust and the Adviser, the Adviser has the right to use, or authorize others to use, the Name. The Trust shall: (i) only use the Name in a manner consistent with uses approved by the Adviser; (ii) use its best efforts to maintain the quality of the services offered using the Name; and (iii) adhere to such other specific quality control standards as the Adviser may from time to time promulgate. At the request of the Adviser, the Trust will (i) submit to the Adviser representative samples of any promotional materials using the Name, and (ii) change the name of any Fund within three months of its receipt of the Adviser’s request, or such other shorter time period as may be required under the terms of a settlement agreement or court order, so as to eliminate all reference to the Name and will not thereafter transact any business using the Name in the name of any Fund. As soon as practicable following the termination of this Agreement, but in no event longer than three months, the Trust shall cease the use of the Name and any related logos or any confusingly similar name and/or logo in connection with the marketing or operation of the Funds.

 

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9. ADVISER’S COMPENSATION. Each Fund shall pay to the Adviser, as compensation for the Adviser’s services hereunder, a fee, determined as described in each Schedule A that is attached hereto and made a part hereof. Such fee shall be computed daily and paid not less than monthly in arrears by each Fund. The method for determining net assets of a Fund for purposes hereof shall be the same as the method for determining net assets for purposes of establishing the offering and redemption prices of Fund shares as described in the Fund’s Registration Statement. In the event of termination of this Agreement, the fee provided in this Section shall be computed on the basis of the period ending on the last business day on which this Agreement is in effect subject to a pro rata adjustment based on the number of days elapsed in the current month as a percentage of the total number of days in such month.

 

10. INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR. In the performance of its duties hereunder, the Adviser is and shall be an independent contractor and, unless otherwise expressly provided herein or otherwise authorized in writing, shall have no authority to act for or represent the Trust or any Fund in any way or otherwise be deemed to be an agent of the Trust or any Fund. If any occasion should arise in which the Adviser gives any advice to its clients concerning the shares of a Fund, the Adviser will act solely as investment counsel for such clients and not in any way on behalf of the Fund.

 

11. ASSIGNMENT AND AMENDMENTS. This Agreement shall automatically terminate, without the payment of any penalty, in the event of its “assignment” (as defined in Section 15). This Agreement may not be added to or changed orally and may not be modified or rescinded except by a writing signed by the parties hereto and in accordance with the requirements of the 1940 Act, when applicable.

 

12. DURATION AND TERMINATION.

 

(a) This Agreement shall become effective as of the date executed with respect to a particular Fund (the “Effective Date”) and shall remain in full force and effect continually thereafter, subject to renewal as provided in Section 12(a)(ii) hereof and unless terminated automatically as set forth in Section 11 hereof or until terminated as follows:

 

i. Either party hereto may, at any time on sixty (60) days’ prior written notice to the other, terminate this Agreement, without payment of any penalty. With respect to a Fund, termination may be authorized by action of the Board or by an “affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund” (as defined in Section 15); or

 

ii. This Agreement shall automatically terminate two years from the date of its execution with respect to a particular Fund unless the terms of such contract and any renewal thereof is specifically approved at least annually thereafter by (i) a majority vote of the Trustees, including a majority vote of such Trustees who are not parties to the Agreement or “interested persons” (as defined in Section 15) of the Trust or the Adviser, at an in-person meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval, or (ii) the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of each Fund; provided, however, that if the continuance of this Agreement is submitted to the shareholders of each Fund for their approval and such shareholders fail to approve such continuance of this Agreement as provided herein, the Adviser may continue to serve hereunder as to each Fund in a manner consistent with the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder.

 

(b) In the event of termination of this Agreement for any reason, the Adviser shall, immediately upon notice of termination or on such later date as may be specified in such notice, cease all activity on behalf of the Fund and with respect to any of its assets, except as otherwise required by any fiduciary duties of the Adviser under applicable law. In addition, the Adviser shall deliver the Fund Books and Records to the Trust by such means and in accordance with such schedule as the Trust shall direct and shall otherwise cooperate, as reasonably directed by the Trust, in the transition of portfolio asset management to any successor of the Adviser.

 

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13. NOTICE. Any notice or other communication required by or permitted to be given in connection with this Agreement shall be in writing, and shall be delivered in person or sent by first-class mail, postage prepaid, to the respective parties at their last known address, or by e-mail or fax to a designated contact of the other party or such other address as the parties may designate from time to time. Oral instructions may be given if authorized by the Board and preceded by a certificate from the Trust’s Secretary so attesting. Notices to the Trust shall be directed to Commonwealth Companies, 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, VA, 23235 Attention: President; and notices to the Adviser shall be directed to Secure Investment Management, LLC, 3067 W. Ina Road, Suite 125, Tucson, AZ 85741, Attention: President.

 

14. CONFIDENTIALITY. The Adviser agrees on behalf of itself and its employees to treat confidentially all records and other information relative to the Trust and its shareholders received by the Adviser in connection with this Agreement, including any non-public personal information as defined in Regulation S-P, and that it shall not use or disclose any such information except for the purpose of carrying out the terms of this Agreement; provided, however, that the Adviser may disclose such information as required by law or in connection with any requested disclosure to a regulatory authority with appropriate jurisdiction after prior notification to the Trust.

 

15. CERTAIN DEFINITIONS. For the purpose of this Agreement, the terms “affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund,” “assignment” and “interested person” shall have their respective meanings as defined in the 1940 Act and rules and regulations thereunder, subject, however, to such exemptions as may be granted by the Commission under the 1940 Act or any interpretations of the Commission staff.

 

16. LIABILITY OF THE ADVISER. Neither the Adviser nor its officers, directors, employees, agents, affiliated persons or controlling persons or assigns shall be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss arising out of any investment or for any act or omission in the execution of securities transactions of a Fund; provided that nothing in this Agreement shall be deemed to protect the Adviser against any liability to a Fund or its shareholders to which the Adviser would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or obligations hereunder or by reason of its reckless disregard of its duties or obligations hereunder.

 

17. RELATIONS WITH THE TRUST. It is understood that the Trustees, officers and shareholders of the Trust are or may be or become interested persons of the Adviser as directors, officers or otherwise and that directors, officers and stockholders of the Adviser are or may be or become interested persons of the Fund, and that the Adviser may be or become interested persons of the Fund as a shareholder or otherwise.

 

18. ENFORCEABILITY. If any part, term or provision of this Agreement is held to be illegal, in conflict with any law or otherwise invalid, the remaining portion or portions shall be considered severable and not be affected, and the rights and obligations of the parties shall be construed and enforced as if the Agreement did not contain the particular part, term or provision held to be illegal or invalid. This Agreement shall be severable as to each Fund.

 

19. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY. The Adviser is expressly put on notice of the limitation of liability as set forth in the Declaration of Trust or other Trust organizational documents and agrees that the obligations assumed by each Fund pursuant to this Agreement shall be limited in all cases to each Fund and each Fund’s respective assets, and the Adviser shall not seek satisfaction of any such obligation from shareholders or any shareholder of each Fund. In addition, the Adviser shall not seek satisfaction of any such obligations from the Trustees of the Trust or any individual Trustee. The Adviser understands that the rights and obligations of any Fund under the Declaration of Trust or other organizational document are separate and distinct from those of any of and all other Funds.

 

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20. NON-EXCLUSIVE SERVICES. The services of the Adviser to the Trust are not deemed exclusive, and the Adviser shall be free to render similar services to others, to the extent that such service does not affect the Adviser’s ability to perform its duties and obligations hereunder.

 

21. GOVERNING LAW. This Agreement shall be governed by and construed to be in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware, without preference to choice of law principles thereof, and in accordance with the applicable provisions of the 1940 Act. To the extent that the applicable laws of the State of Delaware, or any of the provisions herein, conflict with the applicable provisions of the 1940 Act, the latter shall control. Any question of interpretation of any term or provision of this Agreement having a counterpart in or otherwise derived from a term or provision of the 1940 Act shall be resolved by reference to such term or provision of the 1940 Act and to any interpretations thereof, if any, by the United States courts or in the absence of any controlling decision of any such court, by the Commission or its staff. In addition, where the effect of a requirement of the 1940 Act, reflected in any provision of this Agreement, is revised by rule, regulation, order or interpretation of the Commission or its staff, such provision shall be deemed to incorporate the effect of such revised rule, regulation, order or interpretation.

 

22. PARAGRAPH HEADINGS; SYNTAX. All Section headings contained in this Agreement are for convenience of reference only, do not form a part of this Agreement and will not affect in any way the meaning or interpretation of this Agreement. Words used herein, regardless of the number and gender specifically used, will be deemed and construed to include any other number, singular or plural, and any other gender, masculine, feminine, or neuter, as the contract requires.

 

23. COUNTERPARTS. This Agreement may be executed in two or more counterparts, each of which, when so executed, shall be deemed to be an original, but such counterparts shall together constitute but one and the same instrument.

 

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Signature Page to Follow

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be signed on their behalf by their duly authorized officers effective as of the Effective Date noted on each Schedule A to this agreement.

 

World Funds Trust   Secure Investment Management, LLC  
           
By: /s/ David A. Bogaert   By: /s/ Joshua Mellberg  
           
Name: David A. Bogaert   Name: Joshua Mellberg  
           
Title: President and Principal Executive Officer   Title: President  

 

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SCHEDULE A-1

 

Investment Advisory Agreement

between

World Funds Trust (the “Trust”) and

Secure Investment Management, LLC (the “Adviser”)

 

The Trust will pay to the Adviser as compensation for the Adviser’s services rendered, a fee, computed daily at an annual rate based on the average daily net assets of the respective Fund in accordance the following fee schedule:

 

Fund Asset Breakpoint Rate

Effective Date

SIM Global Managed Accumulation Fund None 0.65% November 17, 2020
SIM U.S. Managed Accumulation Fund None 0.65% November 17 2020
SIM Income Fund None 0.75% May 1, 2018

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be signed on their behalf by their duly authorized officers effective as of the Effective Date noted in the Schedule A above.

 

World Funds Trust   Secure Investment Management, LLC
           
By: /s/ David A. Bogaert   By: /s/ Joshua Mellberg  
           
Name: David A. Bogaert   Name: Joshua Mellberg  
           
Title: President and Principal Executive Officer   Title: President  

 

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World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(d)(17)

 

INTERIM INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT

 

THIS INTERIM INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT (the “Agreement”) is made by and between World Funds Trust (the “Trust”), a Delaware statutory trust registered as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), and Third Avenue Management, LLC (the “Adviser”), a Delaware limited liability company with its principal place of business in 622 Third Avenue, 32nd Floor, New York, NY 10017-6715. This Agreement is made effective as to the Fund (defined below) as of date set forth on the schedule to this Agreement identified as “Schedule A” attached hereto as of the “Effective Date” noted on Schedule A with respect to the Fund.

 

WITNESSETH

 

WHEREAS, the Board of Trustees (the “Board”) of the Trust has selected the Adviser to act as investment adviser to the series portfolio of the Trust set forth on Schedule A to this Agreement (the “Fund”) and to provide certain related services, as more fully set forth below, and to perform such services under the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth;

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants and benefits set forth herein, the Trust and the Adviser do hereby agree as follows:

 

1. THE ADVISER’S SERVICES.

 

(a) Discretionary Investment Management Services. The Adviser shall act as investment adviser with respect to the Fund. In such capacity, the Adviser shall, subject to the supervision of the Board, regularly provide the Fund with investment research, advice and supervision and shall furnish continuously an investment program for the Fund, consistent with the respective investment objectives and policies of the Fund. The Adviser shall determine, from time to time, what securities shall be purchased for the Fund, what securities shall be held or sold by the Fund and what portion of the Fund’s assets shall be held uninvested in cash, subject always to the provisions of the Trust’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust, as amended and supplemented (the “Declaration of Trust”), Bylaws and its registration statement on Form N-1A (the “Registration Statement”) under the 1940 Act, and under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “1933 Act”), as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”), and with the investment objectives, policies and restrictions of the Fund, as each of the same shall be from time to time in effect. To carry out such obligations, and to the extent not prohibited by any of the foregoing, the Adviser shall exercise full discretion and act for the Fund in the same manner and with the same force and effect as the Fund itself might or could do with respect to purchases, sales or other transactions, as well as with respect to all other such things necessary or incidental to the furtherance or conduct of such purchases, sales or other transactions. No reference in this Agreement to the Adviser having full discretionary authority over the Fund’s investments shall in any way limit the right of the Board, in its sole discretion, to establish or revise policies in connection with the management of the Fund’s assets or to otherwise exercise its right to control the overall management of the Fund.

 

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(b) Compliance. The Adviser agrees to comply with the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the “Advisers Act”), the 1933 Act, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “1934 Act”), and the respective rules and regulations thereunder, as applicable, as well as with all other applicable federal and state laws, rules and regulations that relate to the services and relationships described hereunder and to the conduct of its business as a registered investment adviser. The Adviser also agrees to comply with the objectives, policies and restrictions set forth in the Registration Statement, as amended or supplemented, of the Fund, and with any policies, guidelines, instructions and procedures approved by the Board and provided to the Adviser. In selecting the Fund’s portfolio securities and performing the Adviser’s obligations hereunder, the Adviser shall use its best efforts to cause the Fund to comply with the diversification and source of income requirements of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), for qualification as a regulated investment company. The Adviser shall maintain compliance procedures that it reasonably believes are adequate to ensure its compliance with the foregoing. No supervisory activity undertaken by the Board shall limit the Adviser’s full responsibility for any of the foregoing.

 

(c) Recordkeeping. The Adviser agrees to preserve any Trust records that it creates or possesses that are required to be maintained under the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder (“Fund Books and Records”) for the periods prescribed by Rule 31a-2 under the 1940 Act. In compliance with the requirements of Rule 31a-3 under the 1940 Act, the Adviser agrees that all such records are the property of the Trust and will surrender promptly to the Trust any of such records upon the Trust’s request.

 

(d) Holdings Information and Pricing. The Adviser shall provide regular reports regarding Fund holdings, and shall, on its own initiative, furnish the Trust and its Board from time to time with whatever information the Adviser believes is appropriate for this purpose, and at the request of the Board, such information and reports requested by the Board. The Adviser agrees to notify the Trust as soon as practicable if the Adviser reasonably believes that the value of any security held by the Fund may not reflect fair value. The Adviser agrees to provide any pricing information of which the Adviser is aware to the Trust, its Board and/or any Fund pricing agent to assist in the determination of the fair value of any Fund holdings for which market quotations are not readily available or as otherwise required in accordance with the 1940 Act or the Trust’s valuation procedures for the purpose of calculating the Fund’s net asset value in accordance with procedures and methods established by the Board.

 

(e) Cooperation with Agents of the Trust. The Adviser agrees to cooperate with and provide reasonable assistance to the Trust, any Trust custodian or foreign sub-custodians, any Trust pricing agents and all other agents and representatives of the Trust with respect to such information regarding the Fund as such entities may reasonably request from time to time in the performance of their obligations, provide prompt responses to reasonable requests made by such persons and use appropriate interfaces established by such persons so as to promote the efficient exchange of information and compliance with applicable laws and regulations.

 

(f) Delegation of Authority. Any of the duties, responsibilities and obligations of the Adviser specified in this Section 1 and throughout the remainder of this Agreement with respect to the Fund may be delegated by the Adviser, at the Adviser’s expense, to an appropriate party (a “Sub-Adviser”), subject to such approval by the Board and shareholders of the Fund to the extent required by the 1940 Act. The Adviser shall oversee the performance of delegated duties by any Sub-Adviser and shall furnish the Board with periodic reports concerning the performance of delegated responsibilities by such Sub-Adviser. The retention of a Sub-Adviser by the Adviser pursuant to this Paragraph 1(f) shall in no way reduce the responsibilities and obligations of the Adviser under this Agreement and the Adviser shall be responsible to the Trust for all acts or omissions of any Sub-Adviser to the same extent the Adviser would be liable hereunder. Insofar as the provisions of this Agreement impose any restrictions, conditions, limitations or requirements on the Adviser, the Adviser shall take measures through its contract with, or its oversight of, the Sub-Adviser that attempt to impose similar (insofar as the circumstances may require) restrictions, conditions, limitations or requirements on the Sub-Adviser.

 

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2. CODE OF ETHICS. The Adviser has adopted a written code of ethics (“Adviser’s Code of Ethics”) that it reasonably believes complies with the requirements of Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act, which it has provided to the Trust. The Adviser has adopted procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with the Adviser’s Code of Ethics. Upon request, the Adviser shall provide the Trust with a copy of the Adviser’s Code of Ethics, as in effect from time to time, and any proposed amendments thereto that the Chief Compliance Officer (“CCO”) of the Trust determines should be presented to the Board, and (ii) certification that it has adopted procedures reasonably necessary to prevent Access Persons from engaging in any conduct prohibited by the Adviser’s Code of Ethics. Annually, the Adviser shall furnish a written report to the Board, which complies with the requirements of Rule 17j-1, concerning the Adviser’s Code of Ethics. The Adviser shall respond to requests for information from the Trust as to violations of the Adviser’s Code of Ethics by Access Persons and the sanctions imposed by the Adviser. The Adviser shall notify the Trust as soon as practicable after it becomes aware of any material violation of the Adviser’s Code of Ethics, whether or not such violation relates to a security held by the Fund.

 

3. INFORMATION AND REPORTING. The Adviser shall provide the Trust and its respective officers with such periodic reports concerning the obligations the Adviser has assumed under this Agreement as the Trust may from time to time reasonably request.

 

(a) Notification of Breach / Compliance Reports. The Adviser shall notify the Trust’s CCO promptly upon detection of: (i) any material failure to manage the Fund in accordance with its investment objectives and policies or any applicable law; or (ii) any material breach of any of the Fund’s or the Adviser’s policies, guidelines or procedures with respect to the Fund. In addition, the Adviser shall respond to quarterly requests for information concerning the Fund’s compliance with its investment objectives and policies, applicable law, including, but not limited to the 1940 Act and Subchapter M of the Code, and the Fund’s policies, guidelines or procedures as applicable to the Adviser’s obligations under this Agreement. The Adviser agrees to correct any such failure promptly and to take any action that the Board may reasonably request in connection with any such breach. Upon request, the Adviser shall also provide the officers of the Trust with supporting certifications in connection with such certifications of Fund financial statements and disclosure controls pursuant to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The Adviser will promptly notify the Trust in the event: (a) the Adviser is served or otherwise receives notice of any action, suit, proceeding, inquiry or investigation, at law or in equity, before or by any court, public board, or body, involving the affairs of the Trust (excluding class action suits in which the Fund is a member of the plaintiff class by reason of the Fund’s ownership of shares in the defendant) or the compliance by the Adviser with the federal or state securities laws; or (b) of an actual change in control of the Adviser resulting in an “assignment” (as defined in Section 15 of the 1940 Act) that has occurred or is otherwise proposed to occur.

 

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(b) Board and Filings Information. The Adviser will also provide the Trust with any information reasonably requested regarding its management of the Fund required for any meeting of the Board, or for any shareholder report on Form N-CSR, Form N-Q, Form N-PX, Form N-SAR, Registration Statement or any amendment thereto, proxy statement, prospectus supplement, or other form or document to be filed by the Trust with the Commission. The Adviser will make its officers and employees available to meet with the Board from time to time on a reasonable basis on due notice to review its investment management services to the Fund in light of current and prospective economic and market conditions and shall furnish to the Board such information as may reasonably be necessary in order for the Board to evaluate this Agreement or any proposed amendments thereto.

 

(c) Transaction Information. The Adviser shall furnish to the Trust such information concerning portfolio transactions as may be necessary to enable the Trust or its designated agent to perform such compliance testing on the Fund and the Adviser’s services as the Trust may, in its sole discretion, determine to be appropriate. The provision of such information by the Adviser to the Trust or its designated agent in no way relieves the Adviser of its own responsibilities under this Agreement.

 

4. BROKERAGE.

 

(a) Principal Transactions. In connection with purchases or sales of securities for the account of the Fund, neither the Adviser nor any of its directors, officers or employees will act as a principal or agent or receive any commission except as permitted by the 1940 Act.

 

(b) Placement of Orders. The Adviser shall place all orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities for the Fund’s account with brokers or dealers selected by the Adviser. The Adviser will not execute transactions with a broker dealer which is an “affiliated person” of the Trust except in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board. The Adviser shall use its best efforts to seek to execute portfolio transactions at prices which are advantageous to the Fund and at commission rates which are reasonable in relation to the benefits received. In selecting brokers or dealers qualified to execute a particular transaction, brokers or dealers may be selected who also provide brokerage and research services (as those terms are defined in Section 28(e) of the 1934 Act) to the Fund and/or the other accounts over which the Adviser or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. The Adviser is authorized to pay a broker or dealer who provides such brokerage and research services a commission for executing a portfolio transaction for the Fund which is in excess of the amount of commission another broker or dealer would have charged for effecting that transaction if the Adviser determines in good faith that such amount of commission is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided by such broker or dealer. This determination may be viewed in terms of either that particular transaction or the overall responsibilities which the Adviser and its affiliates have with respect to accounts over which they exercise investment discretion. The Board shall periodically review the commissions paid by the Fund to determine if the commissions paid over representative periods of time were reasonable in relation to the benefits received by the Fund.

 

5. CUSTODY. Nothing in this Agreement shall permit the Adviser to take or receive physical possession of cash, securities or other investments of the Fund.

 

6. ALLOCATION OF CHARGES AND EXPENSES. The Adviser will bear its own costs of providing services hereunder. Other than as herein specifically indicated or otherwise agreed to in a separate signed writing, the Adviser shall not be responsible for the Fund’s expenses, including brokerage and other expenses incurred in placing orders for the purchase and sale of securities and other investment instruments.

 

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7. REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES AND COVENANTS.

 

(a) Properly Registered. The Adviser is registered with the Commission as an investment adviser under the Advisers Act, and will remain so registered for the duration of this Agreement. The Adviser is not prohibited by the Advisers Act or the 1940 Act from performing the services contemplated by this Agreement, and to the best knowledge of the Adviser, there is no proceeding or investigation pending or threatened that is reasonably likely to result in the Adviser being prohibited from performing the services contemplated by this Agreement. The Adviser agrees to promptly notify the Trust of the occurrence of any event that would disqualify the Adviser from serving as an investment adviser to an investment company. The Adviser is in compliance in all material respects with all applicable federal and state law in connection with its investment management operations.

 

(b) ADV Disclosure. The Adviser has provided the Board with a copy of its Form ADV and will, promptly after amending its Form ADV, furnish a copy of such amendments to the Trust. The information contained in the Adviser’s Form ADV is accurate and complete in all material respects and does not omit to state any material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.

 

(c) Fund Disclosure Documents. The Adviser has reviewed and will in the future review the Registration Statement and any amendments or supplements thereto, the annual or semi- annual reports to shareholders, other reports filed with the Commission and any marketing material of the Fund (collectively the “Disclosure Documents”) and represents and warrants that with respect to disclosure about the Adviser, the manner in which the Adviser manages the Fund or information relating directly or indirectly to the Adviser, such Disclosure Documents contain or will contain, as of the date thereof, no untrue statement of any material fact and do not and will not omit any statement of material fact which was required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements contained therein not misleading.

 

(d) Insurance. The Adviser maintains errors and omissions insurance coverage in the amount disclosed to the Trust in connection with the Board’s approval of the Agreement and shall provide prior written notice to the Trust: (i) of any material changes in its insurance policies or insurance coverage; or (ii) if any material claims will be made on its insurance policies. Furthermore, the Adviser shall, upon reasonable request, provide the Trust with any information it may reasonably require concerning the amount of or scope of such insurance.

 

(e) No Detrimental Agreement. The Adviser represents and warrants that it has no arrangement or understanding with any party, other than the Trust, that would influence the decision of the Adviser with respect to its selection of securities for the Fund and its management of the assets of the Fund, and that all selections shall be done in accordance with what is in the best interest of the Fund.

 

(f) Conflicts. The Adviser shall act honestly, in good faith and in the best interests of its clients and the Fund. The Adviser maintains a Code of Ethics which defines the standards by which the Adviser conducts its operations consistent with its fiduciary duties and other obligations under applicable law.

 

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(g) Representations. The representations and warranties in this Section 7 shall be deemed to be made on the date this Agreement is executed and at the time of delivery of the quarterly compliance report required by Section 3(a), whether specifically referenced in such report.

 

8. THE NAME “THIRD AVENUE”. The Adviser grants to the Trust a license to use the name “Third Avenue” (the “Name”) as part of the name of the Fund during the term of this Agreement. The foregoing authorization by the Adviser to the Trust to use the Name as part of the name of the Fund is not exclusive of the right of the Adviser itself to use, or to authorize others to use, the Name; the Trust acknowledges and agrees that, as between the Trust and the Adviser, the Adviser has the right to use, or authorize others to use, the Name. The Trust shall: (i) only use the Name in a manner consistent with uses approved by the Adviser; (ii) use its best efforts to maintain the quality of the services offered using the Name; and (iii) adhere to such other specific quality control standards as the Adviser may from time to time promulgate. At the request of the Adviser, the Trust will (i) submit to the Adviser representative samples of any promotional materials using the Name, and (ii) change the name of the Fund within three months of its receipt of the Adviser’s request, or such other shorter time period as may be required under the terms of a settlement agreement or court order, so as to eliminate all reference to the Name and will not thereafter transact any business using the Name in the name of the Fund. As soon as practicable following the termination of this Agreement, but in no event longer than three months, the Trust shall cease the use of the Name and any related logos or any confusingly similar name and/or logo in connection with the marketing or operation of the Fund.

 

9. ADVISER’S COMPENSATION. The Fund shall pay to the Adviser, as compensation for the Adviser’s services hereunder, a fee, determined as described in Schedule A that is attached hereto and made a part hereof. Such fee shall be computed daily and paid not less than monthly in arrears by the Fund. Such fee shall, during the term of this Agreement, be held in an interest-bearing escrow account with the Fund’s custodian or a bank. If a majority of the Fund’s outstanding voting securities approves the Investment Advisory Agreement between the Trust and the Adviser before the termination of this Agreement, the fee held in escrow with respect to the Fund and any interest earned will be paid to the Adviser. If a majority of the Fund’s outstanding voting securities do not approve the Investment Advisory Agreement between the Trust and the Adviser before the termination of this Agreement, the Adviser will be paid, out of the escrow account, the lesser of: (i) any costs incurred in performing this Agreement, plus interest earned on that amount while in escrow; or (ii) the total amount in the escrow account, plus interest earned. The method for determining net assets of the Fund for purposes hereof shall be the same as the method for determining net assets for purposes of establishing the offering and redemption prices of Fund shares as described in the Fund’s Registration Statement. In the event of termination of this Agreement, the fee provided in this Section shall be computed on the basis of the period ending on the last business day on which this Agreement is in effect subject to a pro rata adjustment based on the number of days elapsed in the current month as a percentage of the total number of days in such month.

 

10. INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR. In the performance of its duties hereunder, the Adviser is and shall be an independent contractor and, unless otherwise expressly provided herein or otherwise authorized in writing, shall have no authority to act for or represent the Trust or the Fund in any way or otherwise be deemed to be an agent of the Trust or the Fund. If any occasion should arise in which the Adviser gives any advice to its clients concerning the shares of the Fund, the Adviser will act solely as investment counsel for such clients and not in any way on behalf of the Fund.

 

11. ASSIGNMENT AND AMENDMENTS. This Agreement shall automatically terminate, without the payment of any penalty, in the event of its “assignment” (as defined in Section 15 of the 1940 Act). This Agreement may not be added to or changed orally and may not be modified or rescinded except by a writing signed by the parties hereto and in accordance with the requirements of the 1940 Act, when applicable.

 

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12. DURATION AND TERMINATION.

 

(a) This Agreement shall become effective as of the date executed and shall remain in full force and effect for a period of 150 calendar days, unless terminated by a party pursuant to subsections 12(b) or (c).

 

(b) The Adviser may, at any time on sixty (60) calendar days’ prior written notice to the Board, terminate this Agreement, without payment of any penalty.

 

(c) The Board or a vote of a majority of the Fund’s outstanding voting securities may terminate this Agreement at any time, without the payment of any penalty, upon not more than ten (10) calendar days’ written notice to the Adviser.

 

(c) In the event of termination of this Agreement for any reason, the Adviser shall, immediately upon notice of termination or on such later date as may be specified in such notice, cease all activity on behalf of the Fund and with respect to any of its assets, except as otherwise required by any fiduciary duties of the Adviser under applicable law. In addition, the Adviser shall deliver the Fund Books and Records to the Trust by such means and in accordance with such schedule as the Trust shall direct and shall otherwise cooperate, as reasonably directed by the Trust, in the transition of portfolio asset management to any successor of the Adviser.

 

13. NOTICE. Any notice or other communication required by or permitted to be given in connection with this Agreement shall be in writing, and shall be delivered in person or sent by first-class mail, postage prepaid, to the respective parties at their last known address, or by e-mail or fax to a designated contact of the other party or such other address as the parties may designate from time to time. Oral instructions may be given if authorized by the Board and preceded by a certificate from the Trust’s Secretary so attesting. Notices to the Trust shall be directed to Commonwealth Fund Services, Inc., 8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205, Richmond, VA, 23235, Attention: President; and notices to the Adviser shall be directed to Mark J. Aaron, Chief Operating Officer, 622 Third Avenue, 32nd Floor, New York, NY 10017-6715.

 

14. CONFIDENTIALITY. The Adviser agrees on behalf of itself and its employees to treat confidentially all records and other information relative to the Trust and its shareholders received by the Adviser in connection with this Agreement, including any non-public personal information as defined in Regulation S-P, and that it shall not use or disclose any such information except for the purpose of carrying out the terms of this Agreement; provided, however, that the Adviser may disclose such information as required by law or in connection with any requested disclosure to a regulatory authority with appropriate jurisdiction after prior notification to the Trust.

 

15. CERTAIN DEFINITIONS. For the purpose of this Agreement, the terms “affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund,” “assignment” and “interested person” shall have their respective meanings as defined in the 1940 Act and rules and regulations thereunder, subject, however, to such exemptions as may be granted by the Commission under the 1940 Act or any interpretations of the Commission staff.

 

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16. LIABILITY OF THE ADVISER. Neither the Adviser nor its officers, directors, employees, agents, affiliated persons or controlling persons or assigns shall be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss arising out of any investment or for any act or omission in the execution of securities transactions of the Fund; provided that nothing in this Agreement shall be deemed to protect the Adviser against any liability to the Fund or its shareholders to which the Adviser would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or obligations hereunder or by reason of its reckless disregard of its duties or obligations hereunder.

 

17. RELATIONS WITH THE TRUST. It is understood that the Trustees, officers and shareholders of the Trust are or may be or become interested persons of the Adviser as directors, officers or otherwise and that directors, officers and stockholders of the Adviser are or may be or become interested persons of the Fund, and that the Adviser may be or become interested persons of the Fund as a shareholder or otherwise.

 

18. ENFORCEABILITY. If any part, term or provision of this Agreement is held to be illegal, in conflict with any law or otherwise invalid, the remaining portion or portions shall be considered severable and not be affected, and the rights and obligations of the parties shall be construed and enforced as if the Agreement did not contain the particular part, term or provision held to be illegal or invalid. This Agreement shall be severable as to the Fund.

 

19. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY. The Adviser is expressly put on notice of the limitation of liability as set forth in the Declaration of Trust or other Trust organizational documents and agrees that the obligations assumed by the Fund pursuant to this Agreement shall be limited in all cases to the Fund and the Fund’s assets, and the Adviser shall not seek satisfaction of any such obligation from shareholders or any shareholder of the Fund. In addition, the Adviser shall not seek satisfaction of any such obligations from the Trustees of the Trust or any individual Trustee. The Adviser understands that the rights and obligations of the Fund under the Declaration of Trust or other organizational document are separate and distinct from those of any and all other series of the Trust it manages.

 

20. NON-EXCLUSIVE SERVICES. The services of the Adviser to the Trust are not deemed exclusive, and the Adviser shall be free to render similar services to others, to the extent that such service does not affect the Adviser’s ability to perform its duties and obligations hereunder.

 

21. GOVERNING LAW. This Agreement shall be governed by and construed to be in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware, without preference to choice of law principles thereof, and in accordance with the applicable provisions of the 1940 Act. To the extent that the applicable laws of the State of Delaware, or any of the provisions herein, conflict with the applicable provisions of the 1940 Act, the latter shall control. Any question of interpretation of any term or provision of this Agreement having a counterpart in or otherwise derived from a term or provision of the 1940 Act shall be resolved by reference to such term or provision of the 1940 Act and to any interpretations thereof, if any, by the United States courts or in the absence of any controlling decision of any such court, by the Commission or its staff. In addition, where the effect of a requirement of the 1940 Act, reflected in any provision of this Agreement, is revised by rule, regulation, order or interpretation of the Commission or its staff, such provision shall be deemed to incorporate the effect of such revised rule, regulation, order or interpretation.

 

22. PARAGRAPH HEADINGS; SYNTAX. All Section headings contained in this Agreement are for convenience of reference only, do not form a part of this Agreement and will not affect in any way the meaning or interpretation of this Agreement. Words used herein, regardless of the number and gender specifically used, will be deemed and construed to include any other number, singular or plural, and any other gender, masculine, feminine, or neuter, as the contract requires.

 

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23. COUNTERPARTS. This Agreement may be executed in two or more counterparts, each of which, when so executed, shall be deemed to be an original, but such counterparts shall together constitute but one and the same instrument.

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be executed on their behalf by their duly authorized officers as of the “Effective Date” noted on Schedule A with respect to the Fund.

 

WORLD FUNDS TRUST                   

 

        /s/ David A. Bogaert                                 

        Signature

 

By: David A. Bogaert                  

 

Title: President              

 

THIRD AVENUE MANAGEMENT, LLC                  

 

        /s/ Mark J. Aaron                                     

        Signature  

 

By: Mark J. Aaron

 

       Title: Chief Operating Officer

 

Page 9 of 10 

 

SCHEDULE A

 

Interim Investment Advisory Agreement
between
World Funds Trust (the “Trust”) and
Third Avenue Management, LLC] (the “Adviser”)

 

The Trust will pay to the Adviser as compensation for the Adviser’s services rendered, a fee, computed daily at an annual rate based on the average daily net assets of the Fund in accordance the following fee schedule:

 

Fund Asset
Breakpoint
Rate Effective Date
Third Avenue International Real Estate Value Fund None 1.00% November 23, 2020

    

WORLD FUNDS TRUST                  

 

        /s/ David A. Bogaert                                 

        Signature                        

 

By: David A. Bogaert                  

 

Title: President      

                         

       THIRD AVENUE MANAGEMENT, LLC             

 

        /s/ Mark J. Aaron                                    

        Signature                       

 

By: Mark J. Aaron                  

 

       Title: Chief Operating Officer


Page 10 of 10 

 

 

World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(h)(26)

 

WORLD FUNDS TRUST

 

EXPENSE LIMITATION AGREEMENT

 

EXPENSE LIMITATION AGREEMENT, effective as of the dates set forth on Schedule A by and between Secure Investment Management, LLC (the “Adviser”) and World Funds Trust (the “Trust”) (“Agreement”), on behalf of the series of the Trust set forth in Schedule A attached hereto (each a “Fund,” and collectively, the “Funds”).

 

WHEREAS, the Trust is a Delaware statutory trust, and is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), as an open-end management investment company of the series type, and each Fund is a series of the Trust;

 

WHEREAS, the Trust, with respect to each of the Funds, and the Adviser have entered into an Advisory Agreement (“Advisory Agreement”), pursuant to which the Adviser provides investment management services to each Fund for compensation based on the value of the average daily net assets of each such Fund;

 

WHEREAS, the Trust and the Adviser have determined that it is appropriate and in the best interests of each Fund and its shareholders to maintain the expenses of each Fund at a level no greater than the level to which each such Fund would normally be subject in order to maintain each Fund’s expense ratio at the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit (as hereinafter defined) specified in Schedule A hereto;

 

NOW THEREFORE, the parties hereto agree as follows:

 

1. Expense Limitation.

 

a. Applicable Expense Limit. To the extent that the aggregate expenses of every character incurred by a Fund in any fiscal year, including but not limited to investment advisory fees of the Adviser (but excluding interest, expenses incurred under a plan of distribution adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, taxes, acquired fund fees and expenses, brokerage commissions, dividend expenses on short sales, and other expenditures which are capitalized in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of such Fund’s business) (“Fund Operating Expenses”), exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit, as defined in Section 1.2 below, such excess amount (the “Excess Amount”) shall be the liability of the Adviser.

 

b. Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit. The Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit with respect to each Fund shall be the amount specified in Schedule A based on a percentage of the average daily net assets of each Fund.

 

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c. Method of Computation. To determine the Adviser’s liability with respect to the Excess Amount, each month the Fund Operating Expenses for each Fund shall be annualized as of the last day of the month. If the annualized Fund Operating Expenses for any month of a Fund exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit of such Fund, the Adviser shall first waive or reduce its investment advisory fee for such month by an amount sufficient to reduce the annualized Fund Operating Expenses to an amount no higher than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit. If the amount of the waived or reduced investment advisory fee for any such month is insufficient to pay the Excess Amount, the Adviser may also remit to the appropriate Fund or Funds an amount that, together with the waived or reduced investment advisory fee, is sufficient to pay such Excess Amount.

 

d. Year-End Adjustment. If necessary, on or before the last day of the first month of each fiscal year, an adjustment payment shall be made by the appropriate party in order that the amount of the investment advisory fees waived or reduced and other payments remitted by the Adviser to the Fund or Funds with respect to the previous fiscal year shall equal the Excess Amount.

 

2. Reimbursement of Fee Waivers and Expense Reimbursements.

 

a. Reimbursement. If, during any fiscal month in which the Advisory Agreement is still in effect, the estimated aggregate Fund Operating Expenses of such Fund for the fiscal month are less than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit for that month, the Adviser shall be entitled to reimbursement by such Fund, in whole or in part as provided below, of the sum of all investment advisory fees waived or reduced and other payments remitted by the Adviser with respect to a particular class of such Fund pursuant to Section 1 hereof, for a three year period following the date such waiver or reduction was made or payment was remitted by the Adviser (“Reimbursement Amount”), less any reimbursement previously paid by such Fund to the Adviser, pursuant to this Section 2.a, with respect to such waivers, reductions, and payments. The Reimbursement Amount shall not include any additional charges or fees whatsoever, including, e.g., interest accruable on the Reimbursement Amount. To the extent any reimbursement is made pursuant to this Section 2.a., such reimbursement shall not cause the Fund Operating Expenses to exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit that was in place at the time the Adviser waived or reduced its advisory fees or reimbursed other expenses of the Fund.

 

b. Method of Computation. To determine each Fund’s accrual, if any, to reimburse the Adviser for the Reimbursement Amount, each month the Fund Operating Expenses of each Fund shall be annualized as of the last day of the month. If the annualized Fund Operating Expenses of a Fund for any month are less than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit of such Fund, such Fund shall accrue into its net asset value an amount payable to the Adviser sufficient to increase the annualized Fund Operating Expenses of that Fund to an amount no greater than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit of that Fund, provided that such amount paid to the Adviser will in no event exceed the total Reimbursement Amount. For accounting purposes, amounts accrued pursuant to this Section 2 shall be a liability of the Fund for purposes of determining the Fund’s net asset value.

 

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c. Payment and Year-End Adjustment. Amounts accrued pursuant to this Agreement shall be payable to the Adviser as of the last day of each month. If necessary, on or before the last day of the first month of each fiscal year, an adjustment payment shall be made by the appropriate party in order that the actual Fund Operating Expenses of a Fund for the prior fiscal year (including any reimbursement payments hereunder with respect to such fiscal year) do not exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit.

 

d. Limitation of Liability. The Adviser shall look only to the assets of the Fund for which it waived or reduced fees or remitted payments for reimbursement under this Agreement and for payment of any claim hereunder, and neither the Fund, nor any of the Trust’s trustees, officers, employees, agents, or shareholders, whether past, present or future shall be personally liable therefor.

 

3. Term and Termination of Agreement.

 

This Agreement with respect to each of the Funds shall continue in effect until the expiration date set forth on Schedule A (the “Expiration Date”). With regard to the Operating Expense Limits, the Trust’s Board of Trustees and the Advisor may terminate or modify this Agreement prior to the Expiration Date only by mutual written consent. This Agreement shall terminate automatically upon the termination of the Advisory Agreement; provided, however, that the obligation of the Trust to reimburse the Adviser with respect to the Fund shall survive the termination of this Agreement unless the Trust and the Adviser agree otherwise.

 

4. Miscellaneous.

 

a. Captions. The captions in this Agreement are included for convenience of reference only and in no other way define or delineate any of the provisions hereof or otherwise affect their construction or effect.

 

b. Interpretation. Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to require the Trust or the Funds to take any action contrary to the Trust’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust or by-laws, as amended from time to time, or any applicable statutory or regulatory requirement to which it is subject or by which it is bound, or to relieve or deprive the Trust’s Board of Trustees of its responsibility for and control of the conduct of the affairs of the Trust or the Funds. The parties to this Agreement acknowledge and agree that all litigation arising hereunder, whether direct or indirect, and of any and every nature whatsoever shall be satisfied solely out of the assets of the affected Fund and that no Trustee, officer or holder of shares of beneficial interest of the Fund shall be personally liable for any of the foregoing liabilities. The Trust’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust is on file with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware. The Agreement and Declaration of Trust and by-laws describe in detail the respective responsibilities and limitations on liability of the Trustees, officers, and holders of shares of beneficial interest.

 

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c. Definitions. Any question of interpretation of any term or provision of this Agreement, including but not limited to the investment advisory fee, the computations of net asset values, and the allocation of expenses, having a counterpart in or otherwise derived from the terms and provisions of the Advisory Agreement or the 1940 Act, shall have the same meaning as and be resolved by reference to such Advisory Agreement or the 1940 Act.

 

d. Enforceability. Any term or provision of this Agreement which is invalid or unenforceable in any jurisdiction shall, as to such jurisdiction be ineffective to the extent of such invalidity or unenforceability without rendering invalid or unenforceable the remaining terms or provisions of this Agreement or affecting the validity or enforceability of any of the terms or provisions of this Agreement in any other jurisdiction.

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be signed on their behalf by their duly authorized officers as of the date first above written.

 

  World Funds Trust, on behalf of each Fund Listed on Schedule A
       
  By: /s/ David A. Bogaert  
  Name: David A. Bogaert  
  Title: President  
       
  Secure Investment Management, LLC
       
  By: /s/ Joshua Mellberg  
       
  Name: Joshua Mellberg  
       
  Title: President  

 

4

 

 

SCHEDULE A

to the 

EXPENSE LIMITATION AGREEMENT (the “Agreement”) 

between

WORLD FUNDS TRUST (the “Trust”)

and

Secure Investment Management, LLC (advisor)

 

This Agreement relates to the following Funds of the Trust:

 

Fund Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit Effective Date Expiration Date
SIM Global Managed Accumulation Fund 1.50% November 17, 2020 February 28, 2022
SIM U.S. Managed Accumulation Fund 1.50% November 17, 2020 February 28, 2022
SIM Income Fund 2.15% February 29, 2020 February 28, 2021

 

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World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(h)(30)

 

WORLD FUNDS TRUST

 

INTERIM EXPENSE LIMITATION AGREEMENT

 

THIS INTERIM EXPENSE LIMITATION AGREEMENT, is made by and between Third Avenue Management, LLC (the “Adviser”) and World Funds Trust (the “Trust”) (“Agreement”), on behalf of the series of the Trust set forth in Schedule A attached hereto (the “Fund”), as of the effective date of the Interim Investment Advisory Agreement between the Trust and the Adviser.

 

WHEREAS, the Trust is a Delaware statutory trust, and is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (“1940 Act”), as an open-end management investment company of the series type, and the Fund is a series of the Trust;

 

WHEREAS, the Trust and the Adviser have entered into an Interim Investment Advisory Agreement, effective on November 23, 2020 (“Interim Advisory Agreement”), pursuant to which the Adviser provides investment management services to the Fund for compensation based on the value of the average daily net assets of the Fund;

 

WHEREAS, the Trust and the Adviser contemplate that the shareholders of the Fund will be presented with a proposal to approve a new investment advisory agreement (the “Advisory Agreement”) between the Adviser and the Trust on behalf of the Fund; and

 

WHEREAS, the Trust and the Adviser have determined that it is appropriate and in the best interests of the Fund and its shareholders to maintain the expenses of the Fund at a level no greater than the level to which the Fund would normally be subject in order to maintain the Fund’s expense ratio at the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit (as hereinafter defined) specified in each Schedule A hereto;

 

NOW THEREFORE, the parties hereto agree as follows:

 

1. Expense Limitation.

 

a. Applicable Expense Limit. To the extent that the aggregate expenses of every character incurred by the Fund in any fiscal year, including but not limited to investment advisory fees of the Adviser (but excluding interest, expenses incurred under a plan of distribution adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, taxes, acquired fund fees and expenses, brokerage commissions, dividend expenses on short sales, and other expenditures which are capitalized in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of such Fund’s business) (“Fund Operating Expenses”), exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit, as defined in Section 1.2 below, such excess amount (the “Excess Amount”) shall be the liability of the Adviser.

 

b. Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit. The Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit with respect to the Fund shall be the amount specified in each Schedule A based on a percentage of the average daily net assets of the Fund.

 

c. Method of Computation. To determine the Adviser’s liability with respect to the Excess Amount, each month the Fund Operating Expenses for the Fund shall be annualized as of the last day of the month. If the annualized Fund Operating Expenses for any month of the Fund exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit of the Fund, the Adviser shall first waive or reduce its investment advisory fee for such month by an amount sufficient to reduce the annualized Fund Operating Expenses to an amount no higher than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit. If the amount of the waived or reduced investment advisory fee for any such month is insufficient to pay the Excess Amount, the Adviser may also remit to the Fund an amount that, together with the waived or reduced investment advisory fee, is sufficient to pay such Excess Amount.

 

 

 

 

d. Year-End Adjustment. If necessary, on or before the last day of the first month of each fiscal year, an adjustment payment shall be made by the appropriate party in order that the amount of the investment advisory fees waived or reduced and other payments remitted by the Adviser to the Fund with respect to the previous fiscal year shall equal the Excess Amount.

 

2. Reimbursement of Fee Waivers and Expense Reimbursements.

 

a. Reimbursement. If, during any fiscal month in which the Advisory Agreement is in effect, the estimated aggregate Fund Operating Expenses of the Fund for the fiscal month are less than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit for that month, the Adviser shall be entitled to reimbursement by the Fund, in whole or in part as provided below, of the sum of all investment advisory fees waived or reduced and other payments remitted by the Adviser with respect to a particular class of the Fund pursuant to Section 1 hereof, for a three year period following the date such waiver or reduction was made or payment was remitted by the Adviser (“Reimbursement Amount”), less any reimbursement previously paid by the Fund to the Adviser, pursuant to this Section 2.a, with respect to such waivers, reductions, and payments. The Reimbursement Amount shall include amounts waived and/or reimbursed during periods that the Interim Advisory Agreement and/or the Advisory Agreement was in place. The Reimbursement Amount shall not include any additional charges or fees whatsoever, including, e.g., interest accruable on the Reimbursement Amount. To the extent any reimbursement is made pursuant to this Section 2.a., such reimbursement shall not cause the Fund Operating Expenses to exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit that was in place at the time the Adviser waived or reduced its advisory fees or reimburse other expenses of the Fund.

 

b. Method of Computation. To determine the Fund’s accrual, if any, to reimburse the Adviser for the Reimbursement Amount, each month the Fund Operating Expenses of the Fund shall be annualized as of the last day of the month. If the annualized Fund Operating Expenses of the Fund for any month are less than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit of the Fund, the Fund shall accrue into its net asset value an amount payable to the Adviser sufficient to increase the annualized Fund Operating Expenses of the Fund to an amount no greater than the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit of that Fund, provided that such amount paid to the Adviser will in no event exceed the total Reimbursement Amount. For accounting purposes, amounts accrued pursuant to this Section 2 shall be a liability of the Fund for purposes of determining the Fund’s net asset value.

 

c. Payment and Year-End Adjustment. Amounts accrued pursuant to this Agreement shall be payable to the Adviser as of the last day of each month. If necessary, on or before the last day of the first month of each fiscal year, an adjustment payment shall be made by the appropriate party in order that the actual Fund Operating Expenses of the Fund for the prior fiscal year (including any reimbursement payments hereunder with respect to such fiscal year) do not exceed the Maximum Annual Operating Expense Limit.

 

 

 

 

3. Term and Termination of Agreement.

 

This Agreement shall continue in effect with respect to the Fund until the earlier of a period of 150 days, the termination of the Interim Advisory Agreement pursuant to its terms or the Advisory Agreement is approved by shareholders of the Fund and becomes effective.

 

4. Miscellaneous.

 

a. Captions. The captions in this Agreement are included for convenience of reference only and in no other way define or delineate any of the provisions hereof or otherwise affect their construction or effect.

 

b. Interpretation. Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to require the Trust or the Fund to take any action contrary to the Trust’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust or by-laws, as amended from time to time, or any applicable statutory or regulatory requirement to which it is subject or by which it is bound, or to relieve or deprive the Trust’s Board of Trustees of its responsibility for and control of the conduct of the affairs of the Trust or the Fund. The parties to this Agreement acknowledge and agree that all litigation arising hereunder, whether direct or indirect, and of any and every nature whatsoever shall be satisfied solely out of the assets of the Fund and that no Trustee, officer or holder of shares of beneficial interest of the Fund shall be personally liable for any of the foregoing liabilities. The Trust’s Agreement and Declaration of Trust is on file with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware. The Agreement and Declaration of Trust and by-laws describe in detail the respective responsibilities and limitations on liability of the Trustees, officers, and holders of shares of beneficial interest.

 

c. Definitions. Any question of interpretation of any term or provision of this Agreement, including but not limited to the investment advisory fee, the computations of net asset values, and the allocation of expenses, having a counterpart in or otherwise derived from the terms and provisions of the Advisory Agreement or the 1940 Act, shall have the same meaning as and be resolved by reference to such Advisory Agreement or the 1940 Act.

 

d. Enforceability. Any term or provision of this Agreement which is invalid or unenforceable in any jurisdiction shall, as to such jurisdiction be ineffective to the extent of such invalidity or unenforceability without rendering invalid or unenforceable the remaining terms or provisions of this Agreement or affecting the validity or enforceability of any of the terms or provisions of this Agreement in any other jurisdiction.

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

 

 

IN WITNESS, WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be executed on their behalf by their duly authorized officers as of November 19, 2020.

 

WORLD FUNDS TRUST
On behalf of the Fund
     
By: /s/ David A. Bogaert  
     
Name: David A. Bogaert  
Title: President  
     
THIRD AVENUE MANAGEMENT, LLC
     
By: /s/ Mark J. Aaron  
     
Name: Mark J. Aaron  
Title: Chief Operating Officer  

 

 

 

 

SCHEDULE A

to the

INTERIM EXPENSE LIMITATION AGREEMENT (the “Agreement”)

between

WORLD FUNDS TRUST (the “Trust”)

and

THIRD AVENUE MANAGEMENT, LLC

 

This Agreement relates to the following Fund of the Trust:

 

Fund Maximum Annual Operating
Expense Limit
Effective Date Expiration Date
Third Avenue International Real Estate Value Fund 1.00% November 23, 2020 April 23, 2021

 

IN WITNESS, WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be executed on their behalf by their duly authorized officers as of November 19, 2020.

 

WORLD FUNDS TRUST
On behalf of the Fund
     
By: /s/ David A. Bogaert  
     
Name: David A. Bogaert  
Title: President  
     
THIRD AVENUE MANAGEMENT, LLC
     
By: /s/ Mark J. Aaron  
     
Name: Mark J. Aaron  
Title: Chief Operating Officer  

 

 

 

 

 

World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(i)(24)

 

 

January 28, 2021

 

World Funds Trust

8730 Stony Point Parkway, Suite 205

Richmond, VA 23235

 

Ladies and Gentlemen:

 

We hereby consent to the use of our name and to the reference to our firm under the caption “Legal Counsel” in the Statement of Additional Information for the Clifford Capital Partners Fund and the Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund, each a series portfolio of the World Funds Trust (the “Trust”), which is included in Post-Effective Amendment No. 374 to the Trust’s Registration Statement under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (No. 333-148723), and Amendment No. 375 to the Trust’s Registration Statement under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (No. 811-22172), on Form N-1A.

 

If you have any questions concerning the foregoing, please contact the undersigned at (913) 660-0778 or John.Lively@practus.com.

 

Regards,

 

/s/ John H. Lively 

On behalf of Practus, LLP

 

JOHN H. LIVELY ● MANAGING PARTNER

 

11300 Tomahawk Creek Pkwy Ste. 310 Leawood, KS 66211 p: 913.660.0778 c: 913.523.6112

Practus, LLP John.Lively@Practus.com Practus.com

 

 

 

 

World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(j)(9)

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

We hereby consent to the incorporation by reference in this Registration Statement on Form N‐1A of our report dated November 30, 2020, relating to the financial statements and financial highlights of Clifford Capital Partners Fund and Clifford Capital Focused Small Cap Value Fund, each a series of World Funds Trust, for the year or period ended September 30, 2020, and to the references to our firm under the headings “Financial Highlights” and “Fund Service Providers” in the Prospectus and “Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm” and “Financial Statements” in the Statement of Additional Information.

 

 

Cohen & Company, Ltd.

Cleveland, Ohio

January 28, 2021

 

 

     

 

 

 

World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(p)(6)

 

  

CODE OF ETHICS

 

Introduction 

This is the Code of Ethics (the “Code”) of Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC ( "REMS"). REMS’s policies on Insider Trading and Personal Securities Transactions are included in the Code.

 

General Principles 

REMS is a fiduciary for its investment advisory clients. Because of this fiduciary relationship, it is generally improper for REMS or its employees to:

use for their own benefit (or the benefit of anyone other than the client) information about REMS’s trading or recommendations for client accounts; or

take advantage of investment opportunities that would otherwise be available for REMS’s clients.

 

As a matter of business policy, REMS strives to avoid even the appearance that REMS, its employees or others receive any improper benefit from information about client trading, client accounts or from our relationships with our clients and with the brokerage community.

 

All employees will be expected to read, understand, and abide by these Policies and to follow all related procedures to uphold the standards of set forth by REMS.

 

REMS treats violations of this Code (including violations of the spirit of the Code) very seriously. If you violate either the letter or the spirit of this Code, REMS may take disciplinary measures against you, including, without limitation, reducing compensation, demotion, requiring unwinding of the trade, requiring disgorgement of trading gains, suspending or terminating employment, written memo, suspension of trading activity or any combination of the foregoing.

 

REMS views protecting its clients’ private information as a top priority and, pursuant to the requirements of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (the “GLBA”), REMS has instituted policies and procedures to ensure that client information is kept private and secure. The Privacy section and the related procedures contained herein, are designed to comply with applicable privacy laws, including the GLBA, and to protect nonpublic personal information of REMS’ clients.

 

Improper trading activity can constitute a violation of this Code. Nevertheless, you can also violate this Code by failing to file required reports, or by making inaccurate or misleading reports or statements concerning trading activity or securities accounts.

 

These terms have special meanings in this Code of Ethics

 

Supervised Person

This term includes employees, directors, officers, and partners of REMS, as well as any other person occupying a similar status or performing similar functions. REMS may also include in this category temporary workers, consultants, independent contractors and anyone else designated by the CCO. For purposes of the Code, such ‘outside individuals’ will generally only be included in the definition of a supervised person if their duties include access to certain types of information, which would put them in a position of sufficient knowledge to necessitate their inclusion under the Code. The CCO shall make the final determination as to which of these are considered Supervised Persons. The term “Employee” as used herein shall include Supervised Persons.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  1

 

 

Access Person

An employee or other person (i) who has access to nonpublic information regarding any client’s purchase or sale of securities, is involved in making securities recommendations to clients, or has access to such recommendations that are nonpublic, (ii) includes each member of the family/household (as defined below) of such person that is directly employed by REMS, and (iii) each person to whom such person contributes support. For purposes of this Code, all Supervised Persons and employees are collectively referred to as ‘Access Person’.

 

Advisory Client

Any person to whom or entity to which REMS serves as an investment adviser, renders investment advice to or makes any investment decisions for a fee is considered to be a client.

 

Beneficial Ownership

Means any opportunity, directly or indirectly, to profit or share in the profit from any transaction in securities. Beneficial Ownership is a very broad concept.

 

Chief Compliance Officer

The person appointed by REMS as specified in Exhibit A. For purposes of reviewing the CCO’s own transactions and reports under this Code, the functions of the CCO are performed by an executive officer of REMS, or alternate staff member, and shall be clearly denoted in REMS’s compliance files.

 

Securities

Anything that is considered a "security" under the Investment Company Act of 1940, except:

Direct obligations of the U.S. Government.

Money market instructions - Bankers' acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper and high quality short- term debt obligations, including repurchase agreements.

Shares of money markets funds

Shares of open-end investment companies that are registered under the Investment Company Act (mutual funds).

Unit investment trust if the unit investment trust is invested exclusively in unaffiliated mutual funds.

 

This is a very broad definition of security. If you have any question or doubt about whether an investment is a considered a security or a Covered Security under this Code, ask the CCO.

 

Members of your Family/Household include

Your spouse or domestic partner (unless they do not live in the same household as you and you do not contribute in any way to their support).

Your children under the age of 18.

Your children who are 18 or older (unless they do not live in the same household as you and you do not contribute in any way to their support).

Any of the people who live in your household: your stepchildren, grandchildren, parents, stepparents, grandparents, brothers, sisters, parents-in-law, sons-in-law, daughters-in-law, brothers-in-law, and sisters-in-law, including adoptive relationships.

Any of the above to whom you provide investment advice whether they live in the same household or not.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  2

 

 

There are several reasons why this Code covers transactions in which members of Family/Household have Beneficial Ownership. First, the SEC regards any benefit to a person that is supported financially as indirectly benefiting you, because it could reduce the amount that you might otherwise contribute to that person's support. Second, members of a household could, in some circumstances, learn of information regarding REMS’s trading or recommendations for client accounts, and they must not be allowed to benefit from that information.

 

Guidelines for Professional Standards

All employees must at all times reflect the professional standards expected of those engaged in the investment advisory business, and shall act within the spirit and the letter of the federal, state and local laws and regulations pertaining to investment advisers and the general conduct of business. These standards require all personnel to be judicious, accurate, objective, and reasonable in dealing with both clients and other parties so that their personal integrity is unquestionable.

All employees are required to report any violation of the Code, by any person, to the CCO or other appropriate person of REMS immediately. Such reports will be held in confidence.

Employees must place the interests of advisory clients first. All employees must scrupulously avoid serving their own personal interests ahead of the interests of REMS's advisory clients. In addition, Employees must work diligently to ensure that no client is preferred over any other client.

All employees are naturally prohibited from engaging in any practice that defrauds or misleads any client or the Mutual Funds, or engaging in any manipulative or deceitful practice with respect to clients or securities or the Mutual Funds, employing any device, scheme or artifice to defraud the Mutual Fund or making any untrue statement of a material fact to the Mutual Funds or omitting to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made to the Mutual Funds, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading.

No employee may serve on the board of directors of any publicly traded company without prior written permission by the CCO, or designee.

Employees must conduct all personal securities transactions in full compliance with this Code. Doubtful situations always should be resolved in favor of advisory clients and in cooperation with the CCO. Technical compliance with the Code's provisions shall not automatically insulate from scrutiny any securities transactions or actions that could indicate a violation of REMS's fiduciary duties.

Personal transactions in securities by employees must be accomplished to avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest on the part of such personnel with the interests of REMS’s clients. Likewise, employees must avoid actions or activities that allow (or appear to allow) a person to profit or benefit from his or her position with REMS at the expense of clients, or that otherwise bring into question the person’s independence or judgment.

REMS has adopted Insider Trading Policies, which set parameters for the establishment, maintenance, and enforcement of policies and procedures to detect and prevent the misuse of material non-public information.

Employees are prohibited from accepting compensation for investment related services from outside sources without the specific prior written permission of the CCO or other appropriate personnel.

When any employee faces a conflict or potential conflict between their personal interest and the interests of clients, they are required to immediately report the conflict to the CCO for instruction regarding how to proceed.

The recommendations and actions of REMS are confidential and private matters. Accordingly, we have adopted a Privacy Policy to prohibit the transmission, distribution, or communication of any information regarding securities transactions in client accounts or other non-public information, except to broker/dealers or other bona fide service providers in the ordinary course of business. In addition, no information obtained during the course of employment regarding particular securities (including internal reports and recommendations) may be transmitted, distributed, or communicated to anyone who is not affiliated with REMS, without the prior written approval of REMS management or the CCO.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  3

 

 

No employee may solicit or accept gifts or gratuities from clients, brokers, vendors or other persons in connection with the employee's activities at or on behalf of the Firm. Notwithstanding the foregoing general prohibition, an employee may accept gifts of a nominal value (i.e., gifts whose reasonable value is no more than $250 in the form of promotional items such as pens, mugs, T-shirts, or similar items) and an employee may accept customary business meals, entertainment (e.g., sporting events, concerts), and similar items in an amount of $500* without prior written approval from the CCO. If an employee receives any gift that might be prohibited under this Code, the Employee must return the gift and inform the CCO.

No employee may give on their own behalf or on behalf of REMS any gift which has a nominal value in excess of $250 (i.e., gifts whose reasonable value is no more than $250 in the form of promotional items such as pens, mugs, T-shirts, or similar items) or customary business meals, entertainment (e.g., sporting events, concerts), and similar items in an amount of $500* without prior written approval from the CCO or where prior approval is impractical prompt notification to the CCO after the event.

 

*The value of meals and entertainment over $500 will be evaluated as to reasonability based upon location, number of attendees and other relevant factors.

 

Personal Trading Policies

 

General Information

The following policies and procedures apply to all brokerage accounts or other account that can hold a Reportable Security owned or controlled by an employee, those accounts owned or controlled by members of the employee’s immediate family, including any relative by blood or marriage living in the same household, and any account in which the employee has any beneficial interest, such as a trust account and certain investment pools in which you might participate. These accounts are collectively referred to as “Covered Accounts.” Any account in question should be addressed with the CCO immediately to determine if it is a Covered Account. Accounts managed by a third-party under an investment management contract are typically not considered Covered Accounts and should be discussed with the CCO to determine whether the account is a Covered Account.

 

Reporting Requirements

The reports described below must be filed, even if you have no holdings, transactions, or accounts to list in the reports. Reports are submitted through the Firm’s compliance system, BasisCode.

 

1.             Initial Holdings Reports

No later than 10 calendar days after you become an employee (or within 10 days of the adoption of this Code if you were already an employee at the time of its adoption), you must file an Initial Holdings Report with the CCO.

 

The Initial Holdings Report requires you to list all Covered Accounts and Covered Securities owned or controlled by you, or members of your Family/Household of which you may reasonably be assumed to have or should have knowledge of. It also requires you to list all brokers, dealers and banks where you maintained an account in which any security (not just Covered Securities) may be deemed to be in any way real estate related and is held for the direct or indirect benefit of you or a member of your Family/Household on the date you became an employee (or on the date this Code was adopted, if you were already an employee on such date).

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  4

 

 

The Initial Holdings Report also requires confirmation that you have read and understand this Code and that you understand that it applies to each Employee and members of their Family/Household.

 

Each Employee is responsible for notifying the CCO of any new accounts opened by the Employee or by a member of their Family/Household which would meet the reporting requirements using the quarterly certification submitted via BasisCode.

 

2.             Quarterly Certification

Each Employee must complete a Quarterly Certification in BasisCode within 30 days after the end of the calendar quarter. This certification requires employees to submit monthly or quarterly statements for all Reportable Accounts and to attest to the employee’s adherence to the Compliance Manual and the Code of Ethics. This certification also serves to verify an employee’s Reportable Accounts and Reportable Holdings.

 

Review and Recordkeeping

1. The CCO shall perform a sample review of and compare reported transactions with:

a. preclearance requests; and

b. the transactions of clients of REMS.

2. If the CCO suspects that an Employee has violated these Procedures, the alleged violation shall be investigated, and, as a part of that investigation, the Employee shall have an opportunity to explain why the violation occurred or did not occur.

3. If the CCO concludes that an Employee has violated these Procedures, a report of such violation shall be submitted, including scope and results of the investigation of such violation, and a recommendation on what steps should be taken to address such violation, including recommending sanctions if warranted, to the chief executive officer of the Investment Adviser.

4. After reviewing the report of the CCO and any other relevant information, the Managing Director and/or other officers designated to review violations of these Procedures, shall as he or she deems appropriate, impose a sanction, which may include a letter of censure, forfeiture of profits, suspension, and/or termination of employment

5. All material violations of this Code and any sanctions imposed with respect thereto shall be reported periodically to the board of directors of the Funds.

 

REMS reserves the right to require the employee to reverse, cancel or freeze, at the employee’s expense, any transaction or position in a specific security if REMS believes the transaction or position violates its policies or appears improper. REMS will keep all such information confidential except as required to enforce this policy or to participate in any investigation concerning violations of applicable law.

 

Exceptions from Reporting

 

Permitted Exceptions

Purchases and sales of the following Securities are exempt from the restrictions:

1. Certain Debt Instruments. Any transaction in the following:

a. bankers’ acceptances,

b. bank certificates of deposit,

c. commercial paper,

d. repurchase agreements,

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  5

 

 

e. securities that are direct obligations of U.S. Government, and

2. No Knowledge or Control. Securities Transactions where the employee has no knowledge of the transaction before it is completed, or where the transaction is effected in an account over which such person has no direct or indirect influence or control (for example, Securities Transactions effected for an employee by a trustee of a blind trust, or discretionary trades involving an investment partnership or investment club, in connection with which the employee is neither consulted nor advised of the trade before it is executed);

3. Certain Corporate Actions. Any acquisition of Securities through stock dividends, dividend reinvestments stock splits, reverse stock splits, mergers, consolidations, spin-offs, or other similar corporate reorganizations or distributions generally applicable to all holders of the same class of Securities;

4. Mutual Funds. Any purchase or sales of a Security issued by any non-affiliated registered open-end investment companies (preclearance is required for REMS Mutual Funds);

5. The exercise of rights that were received pro rata with other security holders, to the extent such rights were acquired from such issuer, and sales of such rights so acquired;

6. Other non-volitional events such as assignment of options or exercise of an option at expiration; and

7. Commodities and Currency transactions.

 

Prohibited and Restricted Transactions

1. Employees are restricted from purchasing real estate related securities without pre-clearance from the firm’s Managing Director.

2. Neither the employee nor any family or household member may acquire any Beneficial Ownership in an Initial Public Offering (“IPO”) without first seeking written approval from the Managing Director.

3. Purchases and sales of restricted securities issued by public companies are generally prohibited, unless the Managing Director determines that the contemplated transaction will raise no actual, potential, or apparent conflict of interest.

4. Any employee wishing to purchase or sell a security obtained through a private placement, including purchase of any interest in a hedge fund, must first seek approval by the Managing Director. In addition, if an Employee who owns a security in a private company knows that REMS is about to engage in an IPO, she/he must disclose this information to the Managing Director.

 

Case-by-Case Exemptions

Because no written policy can provide for every possible contingency, the CCO may consider granting additional exemptions from the Prohibitions on Trading on a case-by-case basis. Any request for such consideration must be submitted by the Employee in writing to the CCO. Exceptions will only be granted in those cases in which the CCO determines that granting the request will create no actual, potential, or apparent conflict of interest.

 

Pre-clearance

With respect to real estate related securities and transactions of REMS advised fund shares, the employee and members of their family or household are prohibited from engaging in any transaction for any account in which the employee or a family or household member has any Beneficial Ownership, unless you obtain, in advance of the transaction, pre-clearance for that transaction. Pre-clearance is obtained by email to the Managing Director. Reasons supporting the acquisition of any limited offering or IPO must be stated in the email.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  6

 

 

If pre-clearance is obtained, the approval is valid for the calendar day on which it is granted and the following business day. In no event will pre-clearance be granted for any Security if REMS has a buy or sell order pending for that same security or a closely related security (such as an option relating to that security, or a related convertible or exchangeable security).

 

The pre-clearance requirements do not apply to the following categories of transactions:

Securities not directly related to the real estate industry and outside of REMS’ mandate to its client base.

Transactions in Securities issued or guaranteed by any national government, that is a member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or any agency, or authority thereof.

Transactions that occur by operation of law or under any other circumstance in which neither the Employee nor any family or household member exercises any discretion to buy or sell or makes recommendations to a person who exercises such discretion.

Purchases of Securities pursuant to an automatic dividend reinvestment plan.

Purchases pursuant to the exercise of rights issued pro rata to all holders of the class of Securities held by the Employee (or Family/Household member) and received from the issuer.

 

Blackout Period 

The blackout period described below applies to employees of REMS who are most likely to have access to information about which securities will be purchased or sold on behalf of client accounts. It is designed to prevent front running and various other activities that create conflicts with the interests of clients.

 

No employee (including any member of the Family/Household of such employee) may purchase or sell any Covered Security which may be deemed to be related to real estate within the two calendar days immediately before or after a calendar day on which any client account managed by REMS purchases or sells that Covered Security (or any closely related security, such as an option or a related convertible or exchangeable security), unless the employee had no actual knowledge that the Covered Security (or any closely related security) was being considered for purchase or sale or was in fact purchased or sold for any client account. Note that the total blackout period is 5 days (the day of the client trade, plus two days before and two days after).

 

REMS recognizes that certain situations may occur entirely in good faith and will not take disciplinary measures in such instances if it appears that the employee acted in good faith and in the best interests of REMS’s clients. The above notes are not intended to specify instances of compliance and non-compliance with the Blackout Period restrictions, but rather are provided for clarification purposes to help ensure that any apparent or real conflicts that may arise between compliance with the Blackout Period and the pursuit of clients’ interests are always resolved in favor of the clients’ interests.

 

The blackout requirements do not apply to the following categories of transactions:

 

Transactions that occur by operation of law or under any other circumstance in which neither the employee nor any member of his or her Family/Household exercises any discretion to buy or sell or makes recommendations to a person who exercises such discretion.

Purchases of Securities pursuant to an automatic dividend reinvestment plan.

Purchases pursuant to the exercise of rights issued pro rata to all holders of the class of Securities held by the employee (or Family/Household member) and received by the Employee (or Family/Household member) from the issuer.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  7

 

 

Insider Trading

The purpose of these policies and procedures (the “Insider Trading Policies”) is to educate employees regarding insider trading, and to detect and prevent insider trading by any person associated with REMS. The term “insider trading” is not defined in the securities laws, but generally, it refers to the use of material, non-public information to trade in securities or the communication of material, non- public information to others.

 

Prohibited Activities

All employees of REMS, including contract, temporary, or part-time personnel, or any other person associated with REMS are prohibited from the following activities:

 

a) trading or recommending trading in securities for any account (personal or client) while in possession of material, non-public information about the issuer of the securities; or

b) communicating material, non-public information about the issuer of any securities to any other person.

 

The activities described above are not only violations of these Insider Trading Policies, but also may be violations of applicable law.

 

Reporting of Material, Non-Public Information

 

Any employee who possesses or believes that she/he may possess material, non-public information about any issuer of securities must report the matter immediately to the CCO. The CCO will review the matter and provide further instructions regarding appropriate handling of the information to the reporting individual.

 

Definitions

 

Material Information

“Material information” generally includes:

any information that a reasonable investor would likely consider important in making his or her investment decision; or

any information that is reasonably certain to have a substantial effect on the price of a company’s securities.

Examples of material information include the following: dividend changes, earnings estimates, changes in previously released earnings estimates, significant merger or acquisition proposals or agreements, major litigation, liquidation problems, and extraordinary management developments.

 

Non-Public Information

Information is “non-public” until it has been effectively communicated to the market and the market has had time to “absorb” the information. For example, information found in a report filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or appearing in Dow Jones, Reuters Economic Services, The Wall Street Journal, or other publications of general circulation would be considered public.

 

Insider Trading

While the law concerning “insider trading” is not static, it generally prohibits: (1) trading by an insider while in possession of material, non-public information; (2) trading by non-insiders while in possession of material, non-public information, where the information was either disclosed to the non-insider in violation of an insider’s duty to keep it confidential or was misappropriated; and (3) communicating material, non-public information to others.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  8

 

 

Insiders

The concept of “insider” is broad, and includes all employees of a company. In addition, any person may be a temporary insider if she/he enters into a special, confidential relationship with a company in the conduct of a company’s affairs and as a result has access to information solely for use in REMS’s business purposes. Any person associated with the Adviser may become a temporary insider for a company it advises or for which it performs other services. Temporary insiders may also include the following: a company’s attorneys, accountants, consultants, bank lending officers and the employees of such organizations.

 

Penalties for Insider Trading

The legal consequences for trading on or communicating material, non-public information are severe, both for individuals involved in such unlawful conduct and their employers. An employee may be subject to some or all of the penalties below even if he/she does not personally benefit from the violation. Penalties may include:

civil injunctions

jail sentences

revocation of applicable securities-related registrations and licenses

fines for the person who committed the violation of up to three times the profit gained or loss avoided, whether or not the person actually benefited; and

fines for the Employee or other controlling person of up to the greater of $1,000,000 or three times the amount of the profit gained or loss avoided.

In addition, REMS’s management will impose serious sanctions on any person who violates the Insider Trading Policies. These sanctions may include suspension or dismissal of the person or persons involved.

 

Sanctions

All disciplinary responses to violations of the Code shall be recommended by the CCO to the Managing Director of REMS for approval and administration. Determinations regarding appropriate disciplinary responses will be administered on a case-by-case basis.

 

Certification

Upon REMS’ adoption of this Code and annually thereafter, all employees are required to certify in writing his or her understanding and continuing acceptance of, as well as agreement to abide by, the guidelines and polices set forth herein. Additionally, any change or modification to the Code will be distributed to all Employees and they will be required to certify in writing their receipt, understanding, and acceptance of the change(s).

 

Political and Charitable Contributions

Employees making political contributions of more than $150, in cash or services under the below circumstances must report each such contribution to the CCO at compliance@remsgroup.com, who will compile and report thereon as required under relevant regulations. In accordance with Rule 206(4)-5 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940:

Where REMS and/or its employees have made a political contribution of more than $150 to an elected official of a state or local government entity who is in a position to influence the selection of REMS for government contracts, REMS and its employees will be prohibited from providing advisory services, for compensation (either directly or through a pooled investment vehicle) to that government entity for two years.

REMS and/or its employees are prohibited from soliciting or coordinating campaign contributions from others — a practice referred to as "bundling" — for an elected official who is in a position to influence the selection of REMS. REMS and/or its employees are also prohibited from the solicitation and coordination of payments to political parties in the state or locality where REMS is seeking business.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  9

 

 

REMS and/or its employees are prohibited from paying a third-party, such as a solicitor or placement agent, to solicit a government client on behalf of REMS, unless that third-party is an SEC-registered investment adviser or broker-dealer subject to the restrictions under Rule 206(4)-5 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.

 

Confidentiality

 

As an essential part of employment, REMS’ employees will have access to Trade Secrets, Client Nonpublic Personal Information and Company Confidential Information which are the sole and exclusive property of REMS.

 

Trade Secrets

Those special and unique items which are not commonly known by or available to the public and which information REMS and REMS’ Clients derive substantial economic value. The Company considers its proprietary Value, Yield-Advantage analysis of public real estate companies, including but not limited to its Risk Control Monitor, stock selection screens, company financial models and related portfolio structuring and trading practices as fundamentally distinct from other investment groups and examples of REMS’ Trade Secrets.

 

Client Nonpublic Personal Information

Information with respect to current and former individual Clients and prospective Clients required to be maintained in confidence and protected by REMS including any personally identifiable financial information provided to REMS in subscription/new client documents or otherwise by the Client or its representatives that is not publicly available, any list that is derived using any personally identifiable financial information that is not publicly available, account balances and investment information, and the identity of the Client as a REMS client or a fund investor; and in particular encompasses social security numbers, personal cell phone numbers, home email addresses, net worth and investments, and credit information.

 

REMS views protecting its clients’ private information as a top priority and, pursuant to the requirements of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (the “GLBA”), REMS has instituted the herein described policies and procedures to ensure that client information is kept private and secure.

 

Company Confidential Information

Information (in any form or media whatsoever) regarding REMS' Clients, prospective Clients, terms of contracts with Clients, planning and financial information of REMS or its Clients, marketing strategies, REMS' finances and strategic planning, employee compensation or other employment practices, logos, trade names, service marks, internal forms and procedures, or other business information relating to REMS which REMS determines to have value to its business.

 

Employees may use the Trade Secrets, Client Nonpublic Personal Information and Company Confidential Information solely for the benefit of REMS and its Clients in the course of employee’s duties with REMS. Any disclosures by an employee to a third-party outside of the employees duties and responsibilities must be by expressly authorized by either REMS' President or Managing Director. Employees will not, directly or indirectly, while employee is in REMS' employ or at any time thereafter, disclose to any person, or improperly use or exploit, any Trade Secret, Client Nonpublic Personal Information or Confidential Information which was disclosed to employee or came within Employee's knowledge while at REMS. This encompasses any such disclosure for employee's own personal benefit, or the benefit of any entity to which employee is then employed or engaged or may become employed or engaged, or other third-party where the disclosure is not authorized by REMS.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  10

 

 

Upon separation from the Company for any reason, employees shall promptly deliver to REMS all property belonging to the company, including, without limitation, all Company Confidential Information and Trade Secrets in the employee’s possession, custody or control. REMS may use all legal avenues available to enforce this section.

 

Privacy Policy

 

This Privacy Policy applies to all nonpublic personally identifiable information of our former, current and prospective clients.

 

Overview of the Guidelines for Protecting Client Information

In Regulation S-P, the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) published guidelines, pursuant to section 501(b) of the GLBA, that address the steps a financial institution should take in order to protect client information. The overall security standards that must be upheld are:

 

1. Ensure the security and confidentiality of client records and information;

2. Protect against any anticipated threats or hazards to the security or integrity of client records and information; and

3. Protect against unauthorized access to or use of client records or information that could result in substantial harm or inconvenience to any client.

 

Employee Responsibility

1. Each Employee has a duty to protect the nonpublic personal information of clients collected by REMS.

2. No Employee is authorized to disclose or use the nonpublic information of clients on behalf of REMS.

3. Each Employee has a duty to ensure that nonpublic personal information of REMS’ clients is shared only with Employees and others in a way that is consistent with REMS’ Privacy Notice and the procedures contained in this Policy.

4. Every employee has a duty to ensure that access to nonpublic personal information of REMS’ clients is limited as provided in the Privacy Notice and this Policy.

5. No Employee is authorized to sell, on behalf of REMS or otherwise, nonpublic information of REMS’ clients.

6. Employees with questions concerning the collection and sharing of, or access to, nonpublic personal information of REMS’ clients must look to REMS’ CCO for guidance.

7. Violations of these policies and procedures will be addressed in a manner consistent with other Company disciplinary guidelines.

 

Information Practices 

REMS collects nonpublic personal information about clients from various sources. These sources and examples of types of information collected include:

1. Product and service applications or other forms, such as client surveys, agreements, etc – information typically gathered: name, address, age, social security number or taxpayer ID number, assets and income;

2. Transactions - account balance, types of transactions and investments;

3. Other third-party sources.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  11

 

 

Disclosure of Information to Non-affiliated Third Parties

REMS has a “do not share” policy. We do not disclose nonpublic personal information to nonaffiliated third parties, except under one of the GLBA privacy exceptions, as described below. Since REMS currently operates under a “do not share” policy, it does not need to provide the right for its clients to opt out of information sharing with nonaffiliated third parties, as long as such entities are exempted as described below. If our information sharing practices change in the future, we will implement opt out policies and procedures, and we will make appropriate disclosures to our clients.

 

Types of Permitted Disclosures – The Exceptions.

Regulation S-P contains several exceptions that permit REMS Group, LLC to disclose client information (the “Exceptions”). For example, REMS Group, LLC is permitted under certain circumstances to provide information to non-affiliated third parties to perform services on REMS’ behalf. In addition, there are several “ordinary course” exceptions which allow REMS Group, LLC to disclose information that is necessary to effect, administer, or enforce a transaction that a client has requested or authorized. A more detailed description of these Exceptions is set forth below.

1. Service Providers

REMS may from time to time have relationships with non-affiliated third parties that require it to share client information in order for the third-party to carry out services for REMS. These nonaffiliated third parties would typically represent situations where REMS Group, LLC or its employees offer products or services jointly with another financial institution, thereby requiring REMS to disclose client information to that third-party.

 

Every nonaffiliated third-party that falls under this exception is required to enter into an agreement that will include the confidentiality provisions required by Regulation S-P, which ensure that each such nonaffiliated third-party uses and re-discloses client nonpublic personal information only for the purpose(s) for which it was originally disclosed.

2. Processing and Servicing Transactions

REMS may also share information when it is necessary to effect, administer, or enforce a transaction for our clients or pursuant to written client requests. In this context, “Necessary to effect, administer, or enforce a transaction” means that the disclosure is required, or is a usual, appropriate, or acceptable method:

a. To carry out the transaction or the product or service business of which the transaction is a part, and record, service, or maintain the consumer's account in the ordinary course of providing the financial service or financial product;

b. To administer or service benefits or claims relating to the transaction, product or service of which it is a part;

c. To provide a confirmation, statement, or other record of the transaction, or information on the status or value of the financial service or financial product to the consumer or the consumer's agent or broker; or

d. To accrue or recognize incentives or bonuses associated with the transaction that are provided by REMS or any other party.

3. Sharing as Permitted or Required by Law

REMS may disclose information to nonaffiliated third parties as required or allowed by law. This may include, for example, disclosures in connection with a subpoena or similar legal process, a fraud investigation, recording of deeds of trust and mortgages in public records, an audit, or examination.

 

REMS has taken the appropriate steps to ensure that it is sharing client data only within the Exceptions noted above. REMS has achieved this by understanding how REMS shares data with its clients, their agents, service providers, parties related to transactions in the ordinary course or joint marketers.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  12

 

 

Mutual Funds’ records are subject to the same standards on security and safeguarding.

 

Privacy Notice

REMS Group, LLC has developed a Privacy Notice, as required under Regulation S-P, to be delivered to clients initially and on an annual basis. The notice discloses REMS’ information collection and sharing practices and other required information and has been formatted and drafted to be clear and conspicuous. The notice will be revised as necessary any time information practices change. A copy of REMS Group, LLC’s Privacy Notice is included as Appendix B.

 

Privacy Notice Delivery

Initial Privacy Notice - As regulations require, all new clients receive an initial Privacy Notice at the time when the client relationship is established, for example on execution of the agreement for services.

Annual Privacy Notice - REMS Group, LLC will deliver its annual Privacy Notice in conjunction with the annual offer of its Form ADV Part 2.

 

Revised Privacy Notice

Regulation S-P requires that REMS amend its Privacy Policy and distribute a revised disclosure to clients if there is a change in REMS’ collection, sharing, or security practices.

 

Service on a Board of Directors

Employees shall not serve on the board of directors of publicly traded companies without the prior authorization of the CCO. Any such approval may only be made if it is determined that such board service will be consistent with the interests of the clients and of REMS, and that such person serving as a director will be isolated from those making investment decisions with respect to such company by appropriate procedures. A director of a private company may be required to resign, either immediately or at the end of the current term, if REMS goes public during his or her term as director.

 

Reporting Violations

Employees must report known or suspected violations of REMS’s Code of Ethics promptly to the CCO. If the CCO is involved in the violation or is unreachable, employees may report directly to REMS' Management. All reports of violations will be treated confidentially to the extent permitted by law and investigated promptly and appropriately. Persons may report violations of the Code of Ethics on an anonymous basis. Examples of violations that must be reported are (but are not limited to):

 

noncompliance with applicable laws, rules, and regulations;

fraud or illegal acts involving any aspect of REMS’ business;

material misstatements in regulatory filings, internal books and records, clients records or reports;

activity that is harmful to clients, including fund shareholders; and deviations from required controls and procedures that safeguard clients and REMS.

 

No retribution will be taken against a person for reporting, in good faith, a violation or suspected violation of this Code of Ethics or a violation of any of REMS’ policies or procedures.

 

Retaliation against an individual who reports a violation is prohibited and constitutes a further violation of the Code.

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  13

 

 

Annual Reporting Package

The CCO will send out annually, to all employees compliance documents to include:

1. Annual Personal Securities Holdings Form,

2. Annual Certification of Compliance with the Personal Securities Transactions Disclosure Requirements and Code of Ethics,

3. Outside Business Activities Reporting Form,

4. Acknowledgement of Receipt and Acceptance of the Compliance Manual, and

5. Pay to Play Certification.

  

These documents must be returned to the CCO within 30 days of receipt.

 

In addition to the above code of ethics, REMS Group, LLC and its employees are subject to the Code of Ethics for the Funds and will comply with all provisions of said Code.

 

 

Revised: October 31, 2020  14

 

 

World Funds Trust 485BPOS

Exhibit 99.(p)(14)

 

Code of Ethics with Insider Trading Policy

Systelligence (the “Firm”) and E-Valuator Fund(s) (the “Fund(s)”)

 

Amended and Restated
October 1, 2020

 

1.1 Overview

 

This Code of Ethics (the “Code”) has been adopted by the Firm, as the investment advisor to investment companies (collectively, the “Funds”) registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), in compliance with Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (the “Advisers Act”).

 

The 1940 Act prohibits the Firm and its employees, in connection with the purchase and sale, directly or indirectly, of a security held or to be acquired by the Funds to a) employ any device, scheme or artifice to defraud the Funds; b) make any untrue statement of a material fact to the Funds or omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made to the Funds, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading; c) engage in any act, practice or course of business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit on the Funds; or d) engage in any manipulative practice with respect to the Funds.

 

The Code is also based on the principle that every director, officer and employee, or outsourced Supervised Person of the Firm, including all Access Persons, is to place the interests of all clients of the Firm before his or her own personal interests at all times. Each director, officer, employee, and outsourced third party service provider covered by this Code is to avoid any actual or potential conflicts of interest with the Firm and the Firm’s clients, and must comply with the provisions of the Code in all personal securities transactions.

 

Questions concerning this Code should be directed to the Chief Compliance Officer of the Firm.

 

1.2 Definitions

 

1. “Access Person” means:

 

The Firm considers certain full-time employees of the Firm who have routine access in advance of non-public information regarding the investment decisions, recommendations, or knowledge of portfolio holdings or potential portfolio holdings of any Firm client to be Access Persons. Any other full-time, part-time, temporary, intern, contract person, or other outsourced third-party service provider who performs administrative or non-investment functions for the Firm and who does not have routine access in advance of non-public information regarding the investment decisions, recommendations, or knowledge of the potential portfolio holdings of any Firm client, will not be considered to be Access Persons.

 

An Access Person may include any outsourced third-party service provider who other than not being employed by the Firm, meets the criteria of being an Access Person. It is the Firm’s policy that all Supervised Persons, including all Access Persons, will be subject to all the provisions of the Code and their compliance with the Code is the responsibility of the Firm.

 

2. “Advisory Person” means:

 

a. Any Firm employee who, in connection with his/her regular functions or duties, is involved in making securities recommendations to a client, or who has access to such recommendations that are nonpublic;

 

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b. Any Firm employee acting as a portfolio manager of any Firm client;

 

c. Any Firm employee who, in connection with their regular functions or duties, makes, participates in, or executes the purchase or sale of a security for a client; and

 

d. Any Supervised Person of the Firm whose functions relate to making any recommendations with respect to the purchase or sale of a security for a client.

 

A person does not become an “Advisory Person” simply by (i) normally assisting in the preparation of public reports, or receiving public reports, but not receiving information about current recommendations or trading; or (ii) infrequently or inadvertently obtaining knowledge of current recommendations or trading activity. All Advisory Persons are Access Persons. However, not all Access Persons are Advisory Persons.

 

3. “Automatic Investment Plan” means a program in which regular periodic purchases (or withdrawals) are made automatically in (or from) investment accounts in accordance with a predetermined schedule and allocation. An automatic investment plan includes a dividend reinvestment plan as well as a 401k plan in which automatic payroll deductions are being made on a regular schedule.

 

4. “BasisCode” is the compliance software system utilized by the Firm for monitoring Code requirements such as pre-clearance, personal securities trading, gifts and entertainment, outside business activities, political donations, and more.

 

5. “Beneficial Ownership” will be interpreted in the same manner as it would be in determining whether a person has beneficial ownership of a security as outlined in Section 16a-1(a)(2) of the 1934 Act. The determination of direct or indirect beneficial ownership shall apply to all securities which a Supervised Person has or acquires. For purposes of this policy, “Beneficial Ownership” includes securities held by:

 

Your spouse, minor children or relatives who share the same house with you;

An estate for your benefit;

A trust, of which (a) you are a trustee or you or members of your immediate family have a vested interest in the income or corpus of the trust, or (b) you own a vested beneficial interest, or (c) you are the grantor and you have the power to revoke the trust without the consent of all beneficiaries;

A partnership in which you are a partner;

A corporation (other than with respect to treasury shares of the corporation) of which you are an officer, director, or 10% stockholder;

Any other person if, by reason of contract, understanding, relationship, agreement, or other arrangement, you obtain benefits substantially equivalent to those of ownership; and

Your spouse or minor children or any other person, if, even though you do not obtain from them benefits of ownership, you can vest or re-vest title in yourself at once or at some future time.

 

A beneficial owner of a security also includes any person who, directly or indirectly, through any contract, arrangement, understanding, relationship or otherwise, has or shares voting power and/or investment power with respect to such security. Voting power includes the power to vote, or to direct the voting of such security, and investment power includes the power to dispose, or direct the disposition of such security. A person is the beneficial owner of a security if he or she has the right to acquire beneficial ownership of such security at any time within sixty days.

 

6. “Brokerage Account” means any account with a broker, dealer, or bank that may hold securities.

 

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7. CCO” means the Firm’s Chief Compliance Officer. The CCO is a Supervised Person of the Firm.

 

8. “Control” has the same meaning as set forth in Section 2(a)(9) of the 1940 Act. In summary, control means the power to exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of a company, unless such power is solely the result of an official position with such company.

 

9. “Client” means any person or entity for which the Firm acts as an investment adviser.

 

10. “ETF’s” include shares issued by open-end and closed-end investment companies and those issued by Unit Investment Trusts.

 

11. “Excluded Securities” include the following securities:

 

Direct obligations of the United States government;

Bankers’ acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other high quality short-term debt instruments, including repurchase agreements;

Shares issued by any money market fund; and

Shares issued by open-end Funds other than a “Reportable Fund”.

 

12. “Fund” means an investment company registered under the 1940 Act.

 

13. “Immediate Family Members” includes the following:

 

child grandparent son-in-law
step-child spouse daughter-in-law
grandchild sibling brother-in-law
parent mother-in-law sister-in-law
step-parent father-in-law  

 

Immediate Family includes adoptive relationships and any other relationship (whether or not recognized by law) which could lead to possible conflicts of interest, diversions of corporate opportunity, or appearances of impropriety, which this Code is intended to prevent.

 

14. “Limited Offering”, also known as a “Private Placement Offering” means an offering that is exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933.

 

15. “Purchase or Sale of a Security” includes, among other things, the writing of an option to purchase or sell a security. A security is “being considered for purchase or sale” when a recommendation is made by a Firm portfolio manager to purchase or sell a security, and such recommendation has been communicated to Firm members or a Client, and with respect to the person making the recommendation, when such person seriously considers making such a recommendation. Serious consideration includes the act of writing a trade ticket and/or entering an order with a broker.

 

16. “Material Non-Public Information” refers to certain information about a company that has not been disseminated to the general public which could affect its market value and investment decisions.

 

Material non-public information, as opposed to immaterial non-public information, could be manipulated to gain an unfair advantage in the marketplace. This is known as insider trading or insider dealing.

 

17. Reportable Fund” means:

 

a. Any Fund(s) for which the Firm serves as an investment adviser as defined in section 2(a)(20) of the 1940 Act; or

 

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b. Any Fund(s) whose investment adviser or principal underwriter controls the Firm, is controlled by the Firm, or is under common control with the Firm. For purposes of this section, “control” has the same meaning as it does in section 2(a)(9) of the 1940 Act.

 

18. “Reportable Security” has the same meaning as set forth in Section 202(a)(18) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and includes:

 

any note, stock, treasury stock, bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest or participation in any profit-sharing agreement, collateral-trust certificate, pre- organization certificate or subscription, transferable share, investment contract, voting- trust certificate, certificate of deposit for a security, fractional undivided interest in oil, gas, or other mineral rights, any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege on any security (including a certificate of deposit) or on any group or index of securities (including any interest therein or based on the value thereof), or any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege entered into on a national securities exchange relating to foreign currency, or, in general, any interest or instrument commonly known as a “security,” or any certificate of interest or participation in, temporary or interim certificate for, receipt for, guaranty of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase any of the foregoing.

 

For the purposes of this Code all ETF’s are considered a Reportable Security.

 

A Reportable Security does not require pre-clearance but if owned by any Supervised Person of the Firm, should be included in any required reporting.

 

19. “Supervised Person” has the same meaning as set forth in Section 202(a)(25) of the Advisers Act. In summary, a supervised person is any officer, director, partner, and employee of an Adviser, and any other person who provides advice on behalf of an Adviser and is subject to the Adviser’s supervision and control. This can include outsourced third- parties.

 

1.3 Standards of Conduct

 

The Firm believes all its Supervised Persons, as fiduciaries, have a duty of utmost good faith to act solely in the best interests of the Firm’s clients. The Firm’s fiduciary duty compels all its Supervised Persons to act with the utmost integrity in all dealings. This fiduciary duty is the core principle underlying this Code, and represents the Firm’s core expectations related to any activities of its Supervised Persons.

 

Personal Conduct

 

1. Giving or Receiving of Gifts or Entertainment

 

No employee, director or officer may give or receive any single gift or entertainment with a value of more than $500 to/from any person that does business with or on behalf of the Firm without specific approval in advance by the Firm CCO.

 

All gifts and entertainment requests must be submitted through BasisCode, the Firm’s compliance software, detailing the provider/recipient of the gift or entertainment and the nature and value of the gift or entertainment. If the value is under $500, submission alone is sufficient. If any single instance of providing or receiving a gift or entertainment is in excess of the $500 threshold, the CCO or his/her designated person must approve the request in advance. The request will include an attestation that indicates that the provider/recipient is not obligated, nor have they committed the Firm to any activity which would cause the individual or Firm to be out of compliance with the Code.

 

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2. Charitable Contributions

 

All charitable contributions in excess of $500 made by the Firm to any charitable organization, including those requested by a client of the Firm, must be approved in advance by the Firm’s CCO or his/her designated person. No charitable contribution can be made payable directly to a client of the Firm. All charitable contributions will be submitted through BasisCode but only those contributions over $500 will require approval.

 

3. Service as Director for an Outside Company

 

Advisory Persons may not serve on the Board of Directors of a publicly traded company without the prior written approval of the Firm’s CCO. Such approval shall be based upon a documented finding by the CCO that such service shall not be likely to result in a conflict of interest with the Firm and the Advisory Person.

 

4. Protection of Material Non-Public Information

 

All employees must review and comply with the Firm’s Insider Trading Policies and Procedures in the attached Appendix.

 

1.4 Personal Securities Trading Policy

 

A. General Pre-Clearance of Personal Securities Transactions

 

The Firm generally only conducts transactions in mutual funds and ETFs. As such the ability of any of our personnel to influence market prices of these securities or the underlying holdings in these securities is deemed to be virtually non-existent. As such, no Supervised Person, including Access Persons, are required to obtain pre-clearance of any personal securities transactions in any Reportable Security. However, all Supervised Persons, including all Access Persons, must report any proposed transactions in any Reportable Fund, in advance of placing such transaction, through the Firm’s BasisCode compliance software. This pre-clearance extends to trusts over which the Supervised Person has discretionary authority.

 

Once approval is received through BasisCode for any transaction in any Reportable Fund, the individual receiving such approval shall have two full trading days following the date of approval to execute the transaction (e.g. trade placed on Monday must be executed by the end of the day Wednesday), after which time a new approval through BasisCode must be obtained if the initial trade was not executed in a timely fashion.

 

It is the responsibility of the individual receiving trade approval to execute the trade within the time frame allowed. Should any previously approved trade be completed after the allowed period, a reversal of the trade and disgorgement of any profits may be required at the sole discretion of the CCO given the facts of such trade activity.

 

B. Reportable Fund(s)

 

As indicated in 1.4(A) above, Supervised Persons, including all Access Persons, may not purchase or sell, directly or indirectly, any Reportable Fund(s), without receiving approval in advance through BasisCode.

 

Notification of a prospective transaction and any subsequent approval of a prospective transaction in a Reportable Fund(s) will be submitted and received through BasisCode. No transaction can be initiated until such approval is received in advance of such transaction by the individual contemplating the transaction. For any proposed trade request initiated for the benefit of the CCO, such trade will be submitted through BasisCode and an email confirmation of the desire to place a trade will also be sent to an executive officer of the Firm.

 

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1.5 Reporting Requirements

 

A. Reporting Requirements by Access Persons

 

1. Initial & Annual Holdings Reports

 

Upon employment, any Supervised Person, including all Access Persons, shall be required to provide an initial report of all personal holdings in a Reportable Fund through the New Hire or Access Person Compliance Onboarding process in BasisCode, no later than 10 calendar days after employment or being designated as a Supervised Person.

 

All Supervised Persons are further required to provide a certification through BasisCode on an annual basis no later than 45 calendar days after each calendar year end attesting that they have caused to be submitted duplicate statements for all active brokerage accounts. The information provided and certification will cover all personal holdings in a Reportable Fund as well as any transactions in Reportable Securities. Copies of brokerage statements delivered via hard copy, uploaded electronically, or submitted through the BasisCode Direct Feed, and which contain the same information noted below will be viewed as an acceptable form of reporting, provided they are received within thirty days of the end of any reporting period, or in accordance with the particular brokerage firm’s delivery schedule.

 

In addition, each Supervised Person when submitting a report, shall certify that the information contained in each such report is accurate, complete and that the Supervised Person has reported all required information. The report described in this Section must contain substantially the following information:

 

(a) Security Name

(b) Ticker Symbol or CUSIP number

(c) Number of Shares or Par

(d) Principal Amount

(e) Broker, Dealer or Bank Name

(f) Date of the Report

 

Additionally, Supervised Persons, on an on-going basis shall also list all open or closed brokerage accounts in which the Supervised Person or immediate family member holds, can hold, or held a personal Reportable Security or Reportable Fund.

 

2. Quarterly Transaction Reports

 

No later than 30 calendar days following the end of each calendar quarter, all Supervised Persons, including all Access Persons, shall submit through BasisCode a certification listing all personal transactions in any Reportable Fund pursuant to which the Supervised Person obtained a direct or indirect beneficial ownership interest. The information required as outlined in Section 1.5(A)(1)(a-f) above, can be delivered via hard copy, uploaded electronically, or submitted through the BasisCode Direct Feed.

 

The following transactions are required to be reported and included in the information submitted:

 

(a) Transactions in Reportable Funds.

(b) Transactions in Reportable Securities.

 

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B. Submission of Duplicate Periodic Statements

 

Each Supervised Person, including all Access Persons, must arrange for duplicate copies of statements of all brokerage accounts for which they have direct or indirect beneficial interest, as well as duplicate statements for accounts of Immediate Family Members living in the household for which they have direct or indirect beneficial interest be delivered via hardcopy, uploaded electronically, or submitted through the BasisCode Direct Feed.

 

If the CCO maintains any brokerage accounts which can hold, or currently hold Reportable Funds or Reportable Securities, duplicate copies of those statements will be provided via BasisCode.

 

1.6 Record Keeping Requirements

 

The Firm’s CCO will keep the applicable records regarding this Code for the specified number of years as required in the Advisers Act and also in accordance with Rule 17j-1(f) of the 1940 Act and its associated requirements.

 

1.7 Certifications

 

Each Access Person will provide written certification initially upon receiving the Code, and then again at any point in the future if the Code is updated and contains any material changes.

 

1.8 Reporting of Violations

 

The Firm takes the potential for conflicts of interest caused by personal investing very seriously. Accordingly, persons that become aware of a violation of the Code are required to promptly report such violation to the CCO, or in the event the violation involves the CCO, to the President of the Firm. Any person who seeks to retaliate against a person who reports a Code violation shall be subject to sanctions. The Firm provides an anonymous Whistleblower Portal through BasisCode.

 

1.9 Sanctions

 

The Firm’s management may impose sanctions it deems appropriate upon any person who violates the Code. In addition, the Firm’s management may impose sanctions it deems appropriate upon any person who has engaged in a course of conduct that, although in technical compliance with the Code, is part of a plan or scheme to evade the provisions of the Code. Sanctions may include a letter of censure, suspension of employment, termination of employment, fines, and disgorgement of profits from prohibited or restricted transactions.

 

2.0 Review and Supervisory Reporting

 

A. Review Procedures

 

1. The CCO, or his/her designee, shall review reports, including any initial holdings reports, annual holdings reports, personal securities transaction reports, quarterly transaction reports, and brokerage statements, provided in any format, to attempt to detect possible violations of the Code.

 

2. No less frequently than annually, the Firm must furnish to any Board of any Series of any of its Reportable Funds, upon that Board’s request, and in whatever reasonable fashion the Board requests, information concerning any Code in effect for the period requested that will a) describe any issues arising under the Code or its procedures since the last report to the Board, including, but not limited to, information about material violations of the Code, or its procedures and sanctions imposed in response to the material violations; and b) which certifies that the Advisor has adopted procedures reasonably necessary to prevent Supervised Persons, including all Access Persons, from violating the Code.

 

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3. Senior management, or the CCO of the Firm, shall review this Code annually.

 

B. Reporting Procedures

 

1. The CCO, or other designated Firm compliance person shall promptly report to the CCO, or to the Firm’s senior management if any issue should involve the CCO: (a) any transaction that appears to be in violation of the prohibitions contained in this Code; (b) any apparent violations of the reporting requirements contained in this Code; and (c) any procedures or sanctions imposed in response to a violation of this Code, including but not limited to a letter of censure, suspension or termination of the employment of the violator as imposed by the President of the Firm, or the unwinding of the transaction and disgorgement of the profits.

 

In addition, the CCO will include this information in the CCO’s Annual Report to be completed in accordance with Rule 206(4)-7.

 

2. The CCO will also include the following information, as is deemed appropriate and applicable, in the CCO’s Annual Report to be completed in accordance with Rule 206(4)-7:

 

(a) a copy of the current Code;

(b) a summary of existing procedures and any changes in the Code’s policies or procedures during the past year;

(c) a description of any issues arising under the Code or its procedures since the last report, including but not limited to, information about material violations of the Code and sanctions imposed in response to material violations;

(d) an evaluation of the current Code and a report on any recommended changes to the Code based upon the CCO’s experience, evolving industry practices, or developments in applicable laws or regulations; and

(e) a certification that the Firm has adopted procedures reasonably necessary to prevent Supervised Persons, including all Access Persons, from violating the Code.

 

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APPENDIX

 

INSIDER TRADING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

 

The Insider Trading and Securities Fraud Enforcement Act of 1988 (“ITSFEA”) requires that all investment advisers and broker-dealers establish, maintain, and enforce written policies and procedures designed to detect and prevent the misuse of material non-public information by such investment adviser and/or broker- dealer, or any person associated with the investment adviser and/or broker-dealer.

 

Section 204A of the Advisers Act states that an investment adviser must adopt and disseminate written policies with respect to ITSFEA, and an investment adviser must also vigilantly review, update, and enforce them. Section 204A provides that every adviser subject to Section 204 of the Advisers Act shall be required to establish procedures to prevent insider trading.

 

The Firm has adopted the following policy, procedures, and supervisory procedures in addition to the Code of Ethics.

 

SECTION I – POLICY

 

The purpose of this Section 1 is to familiarize the officers, directors, and employees of the Firm with issues concerning insider trading and to assist them in putting into context the policy and procedures on insider trading.

 

Policy Statement:

 

No person to whom this Statement on Insider Trading applies, including officers, directors, and employees, may trade, either personally or on behalf of others (such as private accounts managed by the Firm) while in possession of material, non-public information; nor may any officer, director, or employee of the Firm communicate material, non-public information to others in violation of the law. This conduct is frequently referred to as “insider trading.” This policy applies to every officer, director, and employee of the Firm and extends to activities within and outside their duties with the Firm. It covers not only personal transactions of Firm Personnel, but indirect trading by family, friends and others, or the non-public distribution of inside information from you to others. Every officer, director, and employee must read and retain this policy statement. Any questions regarding the policy and procedures should be referred to the Chief Compliance Officer.

 

The term “insider trading” is not defined in the Federal securities laws, but generally is used to refer to the use of material non-public information to trade in securities (whether or not one is an “insider”) or the communications of material nonpublic information to others who may then seek to benefit from such information.

 

While the law concerning insider trading is not static, it is generally understood that the law prohibits:

 

(a) Trading by an insider, while in possession of material non-public information; or

(b) Trading by a non-insider, while in possession of material non-public information, where the information either was disclosed to the non-insider in violation of an insider’s duty to keep it confidential or was misappropriated; or

(c) Communicating material non-public information to others.

 

The elements of insider trading and the penalties for such unlawful conduct are discussed below.

 

1. Who is an Insider? The concept of “insider” is broad. It includes officers, directors, and employees of a company. In addition, a person can be a “temporary insider” if he or she enters into a special confidential relationship in the conduct of a company’s affairs and as a result is given access to information solely for the company’s purposes. A temporary insider can include, among others, a company’s attorneys, accountants, consultants, bank lending officers, and the employees of such organizations. In addition, an investment adviser may become a temporary insider of a company it advises or for which it performs other services. According to the Supreme Court, the company must expect the outsider to keep the disclosed non-public information confidential and the relationship must at least imply such a duty before the outsider will be considered an insider.

 

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2. What is Material Information? Trading on inside information can be the basis for liability when the information is material. In general, information is “material” when there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable investor would consider it important in making his or her investment decisions, or information that is reasonably certain to have a substantial effect on the price of a company’s securities. Information that officers, directors, and employees should consider material includes, but is not limited to: dividend changes, earnings estimates, changes in previously released earnings estimates, significant merger or acquisition proposals or agreements, major litigation, liquidation problems, a significant cybersecurity incident experienced by the company that has not yet been made public, and extraordinary management developments.

 

3. What is Non-Public Information? Information is non-public until it has been effectively communicated to the marketplace. One must be able to point to some fact to show that the information is generally public. For example, information found in a report filed with the SEC, or appearing in Dow Jones, Reuters Economic Services, the Wall Street Journal, or other publications of general circulation would be considered public. (Depending on the nature of the information, and the type and timing of the filing or other public release, it may be appropriate to allow for adequate time for the information to be “effectively” disseminated.)

 

4. Reason for Liability. (a) Fiduciary duty theory - in 1980, the Supreme Court found that there is no general duty to disclose before trading on material non-public information, but that such a duty arises only where there is a direct or indirect fiduciary relationship with the issuer or its agents. That is, there must be a relationship between the parties to the transaction such that one party has a right to expect that the other party will disclose any material non-public information or refrain from trading. (b) Misappropriation theory - another basis for insider trading liability is the, ‘misappropriation” theory, where liability is established when trading occurs on material non-public information that was stolen or misappropriated from any other person.

 

5. Penalties for Insider Trading. Penalties for trading on or communicating material non-public information are severe, both for individuals and their employers. A person can be subject to some or all of the penalties below even if he or she does not personally benefit from the violation. Penalties include:

 

a. civil injunctions

b. treble damages

c. disgorgement of profits

d. jail sentences

e. fines for the person who committed the violation of up to three times the profit gained, or loss avoided, whether or not the person actually benefited, and

f. fines for the employer or other controlling person of up to the greater of $1 million or three times the amount of the profit gained, or loss avoided.

 

In addition, any violation of this policy statement can be expected to result in serious sanctions by the Firm, including dismissal of the persons involved.

 

SECTION II - PROCEDURES

 

The following procedures have been established to aid the officers, directors, and employees of the Firm in avoiding insider trading, and to aid in preventing, detecting, and imposing sanctions against insider trading. Every officer, director, and employee of the Firm must follow these procedures or risk serious sanctions, including dismissal, substantial personal liability, and/or criminal penalties. If you have any questions about these procedures, you should consult the Chief Compliance Officer.

 

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1. Identifying Inside Information. Before trading for yourself or others, including private accounts managed by the Firm, in the securities of a company about which you may have potential inside information, ask yourself the following questions:

 

i. Is the information material? Is this information that an investor would consider important in making his or her investment decisions? Is this information that would substantially affect the market price of the securities if generally disclosed?

ii. Is the information non-public? To whom has this information been provided? Has the information been effectively communicated to the marketplace by being published in Reuters, The Wall Street Journal, or other publications of general circulation?

 

If, after consideration of the above, you believe that the information is material and non-public, or if you have questions as to whether the information is material and non-public, you should take the following steps:

 

i. Report the matter immediately to the Chief Compliance Officer.

ii. Do not purchase or sell the security on behalf of yourself or others, including investment companies or private accounts managed by a Provider.

iii. Do not communicate the information to anybody, other than to the Chief Compliance Officer.

iv. After the Chief Compliance Officer has reviewed the issue, you will be instructed to either continue the prohibitions against trading and communication, or you will be allowed to communicate the information and then trade.

 

2. Restricting Access to Material Non-public Information. Any information in your possession that you identify as material and non-public may not be communicated other than in the course of performing your duties to anyone, including persons within your company, except as provided in paragraph I above. In addition, care should be taken so that such information is secure. For example, files containing material non-public information should be sealed; access to computer files containing material non-public information should be restricted.

 

3. Resolving Issues Concerning Insider Trading. If, after consideration of the items set forth in paragraph 1, doubt remains as to whether information is material or non-public, or if there is any unresolved question as to the applicability or interpretation of the foregoing procedures, or as to the propriety of any action, it must be discussed with the Chief Compliance Officer before trading or communicating the information to anyone.

 

SECTION III – SUPERVISION

 

The role of the Chief Compliance Officer is critical to the implementation and maintenance of this Statement on Insider Trading. These supervisory procedures can be divided into two classifications, (1) the prevention of insider trading, and (2) the detection of insider trading.

 

1. Prevention of Insider Trading

 

To prevent insider trading the compliance official should:

 

(a) Answer promptly any questions regarding the Statement on Insider Trading;

(b) Resolve issues of whether information received by an officer, director, or employee is material and nonpublic;

(c) Ensure that all personnel are made aware of, review, and attest to any material changes to the Statement on Insider Trading; and

(d) If it has been determined that any Firm personnel has come into possession of any material non-public information,

 

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(i) Implement measures to prevent dissemination of such information, and

(ii) If necessary, restrict Firm personnel from trading such securities, as may be applicable.

 

2. Detection of Insider Trading

 

To detect insider trading, the Chief Compliance Officer should:

 

(b) Cause to be reviewed in any manner deemed appropriate by the CCO, including through the use of BasisCode, trading activity of Firm personnel;

(c) Coordinate, if necessary, the review of such trading activity with other appropriate officers, directors, or employees of the Firm.

 

3. Special Reports to Management

 

Promptly, upon learning of a potential violation of the Statement on Insider Trading, the Chief Compliance Officer must prepare a written report to management of the Firm providing full details and recommendations for further action.

 

4. Annual Reports

 

On an annual basis, the CCO will include the following information in the Chief Compliance Officer’s Annual Report to be completed in accordance with Rule 206(4)-7. The report to the management of the Firm will set forth the following:

 

(a) A summary of the existing procedures to detect and prevent insider trading;

(b) Full details of any investigation, either internal or by a regulatory agency, of any suspected insider trading and the results of such investigation; and

(c) An evaluation of the current procedures and any recommendations for improvement.

 

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