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Commentary iMGP High Income Fund Second Quarter 2024 Commentary

The iMGP High Income Fund rose 1.94% in the second quarter, beating the Bloomberg Aggregate Bond Index (the Agg), which was up 0.07%, and high-yield bonds (BofA Merrill Lynch US High-Yield Cash Pay Index), which rose 1.02%. The fund also outperformed its Morningstar Nontraditional Bond category peer group’s 0.90% gain. Through the first half of the year, the fund was up 4.24%, significantly outperforming the Agg (-0.71%), high-yield bonds (+2.50%), and the category (+2.52%).

Past performance does not guarantee future results.  Index performance is not illustrative of fund performance.  An investment cannot be made directly in an index. The investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Current performance of the fund may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. To obtain the performance of the funds as of the most recently completed calendar month, please visit www.imgpfunds.com. Investment performance reflects fee waivers in effect. In the absence of such waivers, total return would be reduced.

For standardized performance click here: https://imgpfunds.com/high-income-fund/

Quarterly Review

Performance of Managers

During the quarter, all three subadvisors produced positive returns. Neuberger Berman was up 5.01%, Guggenheim returned 2.23%, and BBH gained 1.83%. (All sub-advisor returns are net of the management fees that each sub-advisor charges the fund.) For the first half of the year, Neuberger Berman returned 11.19%, BBH was up 4.48%, and Guggenheim gained 4.20%.

Manager Commentaries

Brown Brothers Harriman

Treasury rates continued to respond to investors’ predictions for forward-looking Fed interest-rate decisions. Strong economic data and still-high inflation data caused investors to continue to shift towards a “higher for longer” disposition for the remainder of 2024. Investors still believe the Fed will cut rates by 50 basis points during 2024, but the anticipated amount of rate cuts was 150 basis points at the start of the year. Longer-term interest rates increased across the yield curve to reflect those changes in expectations. The Fed last met on June 12th and kept the target range of the federal funds rate unchanged at 5.25% – 5.50%. The Fed’s next announcement is scheduled for July 31st, 2024. The Fed continues its campaign of shrinking its portfolio of assets acquired through open market operations by a maximum of $95 billion per month continues.

Shorter duration fixed-income indexes generated positive returns during the second quarter while longer duration indexes experienced negative total returns. Excess returns to credit were generally positive with two notable exceptions: agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and long duration corporate bonds.

Economic data remained strong, with inflationary pressures persisting and few signs of recession on the horizon. Headline consumer inflation prints have been declining, but wage growth and job openings remain higher than historic averages and could still exert upward pressure on inflation. The Chicago Fed National Activity Index remains above its recession indicator threshold. Default rates of below-investment-grade companies remain subdued despite higher interest rates. The U.S. consumer appears to be strong, with loan delinquency rates generally rising off very low bases and not indicating widespread issues. Auto loan delinquency rates rose to their highest levels since 2009 but are within expected ranges for ABS to withstand losses without risk of impairment to bondholders. Business loan performance appears healthy, as delinquency rates are low and default rates are declining. Office delinquency rates remain elevated, while non-office commercial mortgage delinquency rates rose moderately. Return-to-office dynamics remain weak and continue to pressure office real estate values. The weakening office market has not had an outsized impact on banks’ commercial real estate loan portfolios to date, as delinquency rates and charge-offs have been muted.

Credit issuance was robust during the second quarter as issuers took advantage of narrow credit spreads, a clearer economic condition, and heavy demand for credit to refinance looming maturities and issue ahead of any uncertainties that may prevail later this year. Gross investment-grade corporate bond issuance increased 19% from 2023’s pace, although 56% of issuance was for refinancing existing debt. Corporate loan issuance increased 182% while high yield bond issuance increased 77% year-over-year, with 83% of issuance used to refinance existing debt. ABS volumes have been record-setting and eclipsed last year’s pace by 37%, while CMBS issuance jumped 148% off of a low base in 2023 driven by single asset single borrower (SASB) deals.

We are finding fewer opportunities in traditional segments of the credit markets as risk spreads remain narrow and net issuance is low. According to our Valuation Framework, the percentage of investment-grade corporate bonds that screened as a “buy” remained near to 13%, and the percentage of high-yield corporate bonds that screened as a “buy” in our Valuation Framework increased to 20% from 16% at the start of the quarter. No cohort of 30- or 15-year agency MBS met our Valuation Framework for purchases at quarter-end.

There remain opportunities in select subsectors of the market. The percentage of corporate loans that screened as a “buy” according to our Valuation Framework stood at 77% at quarter-end, down from 87% last quarter. Investment-grade corporate bonds in several interest-rate-sensitive subsectors, such as life insurance, banking, and finance companies, continue to offer attractive opportunities. In the structured credit markets, we continue to find opportunities despite the recent narrowing of risk spreads, with spreads in certain sectors remaining disconnected from their underlying credit risk. Opportunities are arising in the CMBS market as investors are differentiating among property types with differing credit dynamics.

The portfolio generated a positive during the second quarter due to its defensive interest rate posture, its sector and quality positioning, and security selection results. The portfolio’s duration posture was managed near shorter-term interest rates that maintained positive returns in spite of changes to longer-term interest rates. This contributed to performance results as shorter-duration bonds managed positive returns despite the overall rise in interest rates. The portfolio’s sector and quality positioning contributed to performance as the portfolio emphasized stronger-performing segments of the credit markets while our valuation discipline helped us avoid two underperforming segments of the market: agency MBS and long-dated corporate bonds. Finally, selection results contributed. Subsectors with the highest impact on results included high yield pharmaceuticals, high-grade property and casualty insurers, electric utilities corporate loans, aircraft equipment ABS, high yield technology, and high-grade banking. Subsectors that detracted from selection during the quarter included healthcare and media entertainment corporate loans and high-grade specialty real estate investment trusts (REITs).

We found numerous opportunities for the portfolio that met our valuation and credit criteria during the quarter despite weakening valuations in mainstream segments of the market. We purchased corporate bonds issued by property and casualty insurers, finance companies, banks, electric utilities, a life insurer, an airline, a midstream energy company, and a packaging company, to name a few. We added positions in corporate loans in several subsectors, including technology, consumer services, aerospace, electric utilities, and healthcare. We also purchased positions in a collateralized loan obligation, aircraft equipment ABS, and recurring revenue ABS.

At the end of the month, the portfolio’s duration was 2.1 years and remained near levels consistent with long-term capital preservation. The portfolio’s weight to reserves decreased to 10% from 23% reflecting opportunities identified by our process in the credit markets. The portfolio’s allocation to high yield and non-rated instruments increased to 38% from 30% at the start of the quarter. The portfolio’s yield to maturity was 8.6% and remained elevated versus bond market alternatives. The portfolio’s option-adjusted spread was 348 basis points; for reference, the Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Index’s option-adjusted spread was 94 basis points, and the Bloomberg U.S. Corporate High Yield Index’s option-adjusted spread was 309 basis points at quarter-end.

We believe that credit discipline remains essential as investors pursue the return potential associated with still-elevated interest rates. With robust issuance, eager investor demand, and narrow credit spreads, it is imperative that each opportunity’s valuation and durability is properly calibrated and vetted prior to investment. The most worrisome risks are often those that are unanticipated, hence the reason we continue to evaluate each credit’s durability, structure, management, and transparency while stress-testing the credit to the worst environment its industry faced before investing. We believe preparation and discipline will be necessary for navigating the months and quarters ahead.

Guggenheim Investments

The U.S. economy has been resilient to tight monetary policy, helped by expansive fiscal policy and a supply-side boost as labor force participation and immigration rose. These tailwinds are likely to fade going forward, which will bring growth closer to potential. Consumption should also slow with weaker labor demand driving slower wage growth and excess savings buffers being used up, particularly for low-income households. Household and corporate balance sheets are generally in good shape, helping contain downside economic risks. Financial conditions are also no longer a headwind to growth.

Balancing these factors, we see real GDP growth slowing to a bit below 2% by the end of 2024 and close to 1.5% in 2025. Recession risk remains elevated. We see an increasingly bifurcated economy, with stress growing for small businesses, commercial real estate, and low-income consumers. We are also mindful of risks of a more abrupt labor market weakening, or a renewed tightening in financial conditions, which are currently supported by lofty equity valuations. Inflation has cooled back down after some hot readings to start the year. We remain optimistic on the outlook now that shelter inflation is cooling, and broader services inflation will be kept in check by slowing wage growth. Base effects will keep year-over-year core PCE above 2.5% this year, but 3- and 6-month annualized rates should be below 2.5% by the end of the year, within the Fed’s comfort zone.

Inflation is likely to come in lower than the Fed’s latest projections, while unemployment should end the year higher. We expect two rate cuts this year, in September and December. We expect further rate cuts in 2025 and 2026, as inflation falls further and the economy slows, especially with elevated recession risk. The fed funds rate should ultimately fall to 3-3.5%, which is where we estimate the neutral rate is. The Fed has tapered the pace of balance sheet runoff, and we expect its quantitative tightening will end in early 2025.

The election will add to policy uncertainty. No matter the outcome, there is little appetite to address fiscal sustainability, meaning large fiscal deficits will continue. More protectionist trade policy and efforts to curb immigration are likely under either candidate, though a Republican victory would see larger and quicker moves on both fronts. The most market friendly outcome is likely a divided government, which would limit ambitious tax and spending proposals that could reignite fiscal sustainability concerns. An extension of the 2017 tax cuts at the end of 2025 and/or sharply higher tariffs are an upside risk for both inflation and interest rates.

Given inflation progress and Fed rate cuts drawing closer, we continue to believe Treasury yields have peaked for the cycle, though 10-year Treasury yields are unlikely to fall below 3%, even with the Fed cutting rates. Indicators of credit conditions, like lending standards and corporate fundamentals, suggest some ongoing stress, but a peak in default rates, later this year. This stress is becoming increasingly bifurcated between large and small companies. While aggregate corporate fundamentals remain solid, investors should remain selective as downgrades continue in the next 6-12 months in sectors most sensitive to high interest rates.

We are finding value in high-quality corporate and structured credit where attractive yields provide an income cushion that could reduce the impact if spreads should widen from here. We are using market strength as an opportunity to rotate, seeking diversification, and adding structured credit exposure that we find attractive. Higher yields at the short end of the curve have lowered the opportunity cost of short-term investments; building our allocation to such holdings not only maintains our return profile, but it also provides the necessary dry powder for us to become a source of opportunistic capital at the appropriate time.

Neuberger Berman

Equity Markets

The second quarter sustained the momentum from the first, delivering positive returns across equity markets despite sector-specific challenges and varied regional performances. Economic resilience in the US and Europe, coupled with persistent inflation, influenced market dynamics, while central banks’ policies and rate expectations played a significant role. Political events, such as the European parliamentary elections and the announcement of snap elections in France, introduced volatility but did not derail the positive trend. The Nasdaq-100 Index led the major indices with an 8.05% return for the second quarter as the S&P 500 Index followed closely with a 4.28% gain for the quarter.

US Treasury Markets

Despite expectations of a potential US Federal Reserve rate cut buoying equity markets, fixed income markets faced challenges over the quarter. The Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index remained relatively flat for the quarter, posting a return of 0.07%. The Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Index performed slightly better, achieving a gain of 1.09% in the second quarter, bolstered by resilient corporate earnings and robust coupon payments. Throughout the quarter, short-term rates, as represented by 3-Month US T-Bills, remained virtually unchanged. In contrast, longer-term rates, indicated by 10-Year US Treasuries, rose by 20bps.

Option Implied Volatility Indexes

In the second quarter, the Cboe S&P 500 Volatility Index (VIX) averaged 14.0, basically unchanged from the previous quarter, reflecting a notable period of sustained market calm and steady investor confidence, mirroring the conditions observed earlier in the year. During the second quarter, positive implied volatility premiums persisted as US markets recorded an average implied volatility premium of 3.7.

Future market volatility is poised to be shaped by a confluence of central bank maneuvers, economic signals, and geopolitical undercurrents. The Federal Reserve’s anticipated rate cuts have been deferred until at least September, hinging on inflation and employment data. Meanwhile, central banks like the ECB, Bank of Canada, and Swiss National Bank have already embarked on easing cycles, setting the stage for potential market volatility. Persistent core inflation in developed markets and stable US unemployment around 4% as of June may further delay rate cuts and contribute to market turbulence.

Geopolitical risks, particularly the looming US elections, are expected to inject additional volatility into the markets, a sentiment already reflected in VIX index futures markets. The November elections will be pivotal, determining the fate of significant fiscal policies, including the $3.5 trillion personal income tax cuts set to expire in 2025. Beyond the US, political uncertainty in Europe, evidenced by the snap election in France, is sure to send ripples through the developed markets.

Walking the Economic Tightrope

The financial landscape is poised for an intriguing second half of 2024, building on the momentum of a robust first half. US equities have thrived so far, with major indices like the Nasdaq-100 and S&P 500 reaching impressive levels, buoyed by the stellar performance of large-cap growth stocks, particularly in the technology space. Historically, it’s hard to beat the results of the first half of 2024 with the S&P 500’s return of 15.29% amid an average VIX level of 13.9. Looking back to 1990, only one other first half of the year (1995) delivered a higher S&P 500 return with comparable volatility. However, a stellar first half doesn’t guarantee a repeat performance in the latter half of the year.

While the Federal Reserve’s much-anticipated rate cuts remain on hold due to persistent inflation and robust economic data, the S&P 500’s remarkable rise seems largely driven by the mere expectation of these cuts. In contrast, fixed income markets have not shared the same optimistic outlook; instead, the asset class faces a challenging landscape marked by rising Treasury yields mixed returns across different bond sectors and significant asset growth in private credit strategies. Looking ahead, the market’s trajectory may hinge on a delicate balance of economic data, inflation trends, and central bank actions – all of which we believe could usher in a period of renewed uncertainty and volatility.

Strategy Allocations

The fund’s target allocations across the three managers are as follows: 40% each to Brown Brothers Harriman and Guggenheim Investments, and 20% to Neuberger Berman. We use the fund’s daily cash flows to bring each manager’s allocation toward their targeted allocation should differences in shorter-term relative performance cause divergences.

Sub-Advisor Portfolio Composition as of June 30, 2024

Brown Brothers Harriman Credit Value Strategy
ABS16.3%
Bank Loans20.3%
Corporate Bonds52.6%
CMBS0.8%
Cash & Equivalents10.0%
Guggenheim Multi-Credit Strategy
ABS39.7%
Bank Loans15.5%
Corporate Bonds30.3%
CMBS (Non-Agency)1.8%
Preferred Stock2.5%
RMBS (Non-Agency)9.3%
RMBS (Agency)5.8%
Other4.5%
Cash0.6%
Neuberger Berman Option Income Strategy
Equity Index Put Writing  100%

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DISCLOSURE

This material must be preceded or accompanied by a prospectus. Please read it carefully before investing.

Dividends, if any, of net investment income are declared and paid monthly. The Fund intends to distribute capital gains, if any, to shareholders on a quarterly basis. There is no assurance that the funds will be able to maintain a certain level of distributions. Dividend yield is the weighted average dividend yield of the securities in the portfolio (including cash). The number is not intended to demonstrate income earned or distributions made by the Fund.

Though not an international fund, the fund may invest in foreign securities. Investing in foreign securities exposes investors to economic, political and market risks, and fluctuations in foreign currencies. Investments in debt securities typically decrease when interest rates rise. This risk is usually greater for longer-term debt securities. Investments in mortgage-backed securities include additional risks that investor should be aware of including credit risk, prepayment risk, possible illiquidity, and default, as well as increased susceptibility to adverse economic developments. Investments in lower-rated and non-rated securities present a greater risk of loss to principal and interest than higher-rated securities. Derivatives may involve certain costs and risks such as liquidity, interest rate, market, credit, management, and the risk that a position could not be closed when most advantageous. Investing in derivatives could lose more than the amount invested. The fund may invest in master limited partnership units. Investing in MLP units may expose investors to additional liability and tax risks. Multi-investment management styles may lead to higher transaction expenses compared to single investment management styles. Outcomes depend on the skill of the sub-advisors and advisor and the allocation of assets amongst them. The fund may make short sales of securities, which involves the risk that losses may exceed the original amount invested. Merger arbitrage investments risk loss if a proposed reorganization in which the fund invests is renegotiated or terminated.

Diversification does not assure a profit nor protect against loss in a declining market.

Asset-backed security (ABS) is a financial security collateralized by a pool of assets such as loans, leases, credit card debt, royalties or receivables.

A basis point is a value equaling one on-hundredth of a percent (1/100 of 1%)

Below Investment Grade bond is a bond with a rating lower than BBB.

Collateral is something pledged as security on a loan to be forfeited in the event of default.

Collateralized put-write is an options trading strategy that involves short positions in put options and the use of the underlying stock as collateral.

Contango is a situation where the futures price of a commodity is higher than the spot price.

A coupon or coupon payment is the annual interest rate paid on a bond, expressed as a percentage of the face value and paid from issue date until maturity.

Distribution yield:  The trailing twelve month (TTM) income distribution yield is the sum of a fund’s total trailing interest and dividend payments divided by the last month’s ending share price (NAV).  12-Month Yield gives you a good idea of the yield (interest and dividend payments) the fund is currently paying.  The trailing twelve month (TTM) total distribution yield is the sum of a fund’s total trailing interest and dividend payments plus capital gains distributions divided by the last month’s ending share price (NAV).  12-Month Yield gives you a good idea of the yield (interest and dividend payments and capital gains) the fund is currently paying.

Duration is a commonly used measure of the potential volatility of the price of a debt security, or the aggregate market value of a portfolio of debt securities, prior to maturity. Securities with a longer duration generally have more volatile prices than securities of comparable quality with a shorter duration.

Floating interest rate, also known as a variable or adjustable rate, refers to any type of debt instrument, such as a loan, bond, mortgage, or credit, that does not have a fixed rate of interest over the life of the instrument.

Futures are derivative financial contracts that obligate parties to buy or sell an asset at a predetermined future date and price

Investment grade bond is a bond with a rating of AAA to BBB

Mortgage-backed security (MBS) is a type of asset-backed security that is secured by a mortgage or collection of mortgages.  Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities are backed by mortgages secured by commercial real estate.  Residential Mortgage Backed Securities are backed by mortgages secured by residential real estate.

Options are a financial derivative sold by an option writer to an option buyer. The contract offers the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy (call option) or sell (put option) the underlying asset at an agreed-upon price during a certain period of time or on a specific date.

Barclays Aggregate U.S. Bond Index is a market capitalization-weighted index, meaning the securities in the index are weighted according to the market size of each bond type. Most U.S. traded investment grade bonds are represented. The index includes US Treasury Securities (non-TIPS), Government agency bonds, Mortgage backed bonds, Corporate bonds, and a small amount of foreign bonds traded in U.S

The Bloomberg.  Credit Index is an unmanaged index that includes strategies with exposure to credit across a broad continuum of credit sub-strategies, including Corporate, Sovereign, Distressed, Convertible, Asset Backed, Capital Structure Arbitrage, Multi-Strategy and other Relative Value and Event Driven sub-strategies.

The Bloomberg US non-Agency Commercial Mortgage Backed securities (CMBS) Index ) Index is the Non-Agency CMBS components of the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index, a market value-weighted index that tracks the daily price, coupon, pay-downs and total return performance of fixed -rate, publicly placed, dollar denominated, and non-convertible investment grade debt issues with at least $300 million par amount outstanding and with at least one year to final maturity.

ICE BofA AA-BBB Miscellaneous Asset Backed Securities (ABS) Index tracks the subset of the ICE BofA US Fixed Rate Index rated AA to BBB and includes all ABS collateralized by anything other than auto loans,, home equity loan, manufactured house, credit card receivables and utility assets.

The CBOE Russell 2000 PutWrite Index (PUTR) is designed to track the performance of a hypothetical strategy that sells a monthly at-the-money (ATM) Russell 2000 Index put option.

The CBOE Russell 2000 Volatility Index (RVX) is a key measure of market expectations of near-term volatility conveyed by Russell 2000® Index (RUT) option prices. The RVX Index measures the market’s expectation of 30-day volatility implicit in the prices of near-term RUT options traded at CBOE.

The CBOE S&P 500 PutWrite Index (ticker symbol PUT) is a benchmark index that measures the performance of a hypothetical portfolio that sells S&P 500 Index (SPX) put options against collateralized cash reserves held in a money market account.

The CBOE S&P 500 2% OTM PutWrite Index (PUTY℠ Index) is designed to track the performance of a hypothetical passive investment strategy that collects option premiums from writing a 2% Out-of-the Money (OTM) SPX Put option on a monthly basis and holds a rolling money market account invested in one-month T-bills to cover the liability from the short SPX Put option position.

The CBOE S&P 500 Volatility Index® (VIX®) is a key measure of market expectations of near-term volatility conveyed by S&P 500 stock index option prices. Since its introduction in 1993, VIX has been considered by many to be the world’s premier barometer of investor sentiment and market volatility. Several investors expressed interest in trading instruments related to the market’s expectation of future volatility, and so VIX futures were introduced in 2004, and VIX options were introduced in 2006.

ICE BofAML 0-3 Year U.S. Treasury Index tracks the performance of U.S. dollar denominated sovereign debt publicly issued by the U.S. government in its domestic market with maturities less than three years.

ICE BofA Merrill Lynch 1-3 US Year Treasury Index is an unmanaged index that tracks the performance of the direct sovereign debt of the U.S. Government having a maturity of at least one year and less than three years.

The ICE BofAML U.S. High Yield TR USD Index is an unmanaged index that measures the performance of short-term U.S. dollar denominated below investment grade corporate debt publicly issued in the U.S. domestic market.

The MSCI EAFE Index measures the performance of all the publicly traded stocks in 22 developed non-U.S. markets

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index captures large and mid-cap representation across 24 Emerging Markets (EM) countries. With 845 constituents, the index covers approximately 85% of the free float-adjusted market capitalization in each country.

The Russell 2000 Index measures the performance of the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell 3,000 Index.

The S&P 500 Index consists of 500 stocks that represent a sample of the leading companies in leading industries. This index is widely regarded as the standard for measuring large-cap U.S. stock market performance.

VIX is a trademarked ticker symbol for the Chicago Board Options Exchange Market Volatility Index, a popular measure of the implied volatility of S&P 500 index options. Often referred to as the fear index or the fear gauge, it represents one measure of the market’s expectation of stock market volatility over the next 30 day period.

You cannot invest directly in an index.

Credit ratings apply the underlying holdings of the fund, and not to the fund itself. S&P and Moody s study the financial condition of an entity to ascertain its creditworthiness. The credit ratings reflect the rating agency’s opinion of the holdings financial condition and histories. The ratings shown are all considered investment grade and are listed by highest to lowest in percentage of what the fund holds.

Mutual fund investing involves risk. Principal loss is possible.

iM Global Partner Fund Management, LLC has ultimate responsibility for the performance of the IMGPFunds due to its responsibility to oversee the funds’ investment managers and recommend their hiring, termination, and replacement.

The IMGP are Distributed by ALPS Distributors, Inc.