Literature
An investment in the Funds involves risk, including possible loss of principal. The principal risks of investing in Funds include equity, market, management and non-diversification risks. The market value of a security or instrument may decline due to general market conditions that are not specifically related to a particular company, such as real or perceived adverse economic conditions, changes in the general outlook for corporate earnings, changes in interest or currency rates or adverse investor sentiment generally.
Other risks include:
Small- and Medium-Sized Company Risk: Investing in the securities of small- and medium-sized companies generally will be more volatile, and loss of principal could be greater than investing in the securities of larger, more established companies.
Dividend Investment Risk: Dividends are not guaranteed. A company’s future abilities to pay dividends may be limited and a company may cease paying dividends at any time.
Indirect Foreign Exposure Risk: Investments in foreign companies are subject to special risks, including currency fluctuations, social, economic, and political uncertainties, which could increase volatility.
Sector Concentration Risk: The Fund may concentrate its investments in companies that are in a single sector or related sector. Concentrating investments in a single sector may make the Fund more susceptible to adverse economic, business, regulatory or other developments affecting that sector. If an economic downturn occurs in a sector in which the Fund’s investments are concentrated, the Fund may perform poorly during that period.
ESG Investing Risk: Investing primarily in investments that meet ESG criteria carries the risk that the fund may forgo otherwise attractive investment opportunities or increase or decrease its exposure to certain types of issuers and, therefore, may underperform funds that do not consider ESG factors.
Fixed Income Risks:Fixed income funds are subject to additional risk in that they may invest in high-yield/high-risk bonds and may be subject to greater levels of liquidity risk. Additionally, investing in bonds entails interest rate risk and credit risk.
Municipal Securities Risk: Municipal bond fund income may be subject to state and local income taxes and the alternative minimum tax. Capital gains, if any, will be subject to capital gains tax. Investments in municipal bonds are subject to interest rate risk, or the risk that the bonds will decline in value because of changes in market interest rates. Municipal bonds are also subject to call risk, credit risk, liquidity risk, below investment grade securities risk, and interest rate futures risk.
Single-State Investment Risk: A fund that invests primarily in instruments issued by or on behalf of one state will generally be more volatile and loss of principal could be greater due to state specific risk. Please refer to the prospectus for each fund’s specific risks.
Foreign investment and Emerging Markets risk: Foreign investments can be riskier than U.S. investments. Potential risks include adverse political and legal developments affecting issuers located and/or doing business in foreign countries, currency risk that may result from unfavorable exchange rates, liquidity risk if decreased demand for a security makes it difficult to sell at the desired price, and risks that stem from substantially lower trading volume on foreign markets. These risks are generally greater for investments in emerging markets, which are also subject to greater price volatility, and custodial and regulatory risks.
Growth Stock Risk: The prices of growth stocks may be more sensitive to changes in current or expected earnings than the prices of other stocks.
Options and Futures Risk: Options and futures may be more volatile than investments in securities, involve additional costs and may involve a small initial investment relative to the risk assumed. In addition, the value of an option or future may not correlate perfectly to the underlying securities index or overall securities markets.
Value Investing Risk: Value investing involves the risk that an investment made in undervalued securities may not appreciate in value as anticipated or remain undervalued for long periods of time.
Non-Diversification Risk: A non-diversified fund may be invested in a limited number of issuers and will be susceptible to any negative economic, political and regulatory events than a more diversified fund.
Please consider the Investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses of the Fund(s) carefully before investing. To obtain a prospectus for the SBH Fund(s), which contains this and other important information about the Fund(s), click here. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing.
All indexes are unmanaged and index performance figures do not reflect any fees, expenses, or taxes. Investors cannot invest directly in an index. View index descriptions here.
Russell Inc. is the source and owner of the Russell Index data. MSCI Inc. is the source and owner of the MSCI Index data. Bloomberg U.S. is the source and owner of the Bloomberg Index data. See Terms of Use for additional information.
The mutual funds of the Segall Bryant & Hamill Trust are distributed by Ultimus Fund Distributors, LLC, member FINRA/SIPC. The Segall Bryant & Hamill Select Equity ETF is distributed by Northern Lights Distributors, LLC, member FINRA/SIPC. Segall Bryant & Hamill, LLC is not affiliated with Ultimus Fund Distributors, LLC or Northern Lights Distributors, LLC.
Investing involves risk. Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate, and an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Shares of any ETF are bought and sold at market price (not NAV), may trade at a discount or premium to NAV, and are not individually redeemed from the fund. Brokerage commissions will reduce returns. ETFs are subject to investment advisory and other expenses, which will be indirectly paid by the Fund. ETFs are subject to issuer risks and other risks specific to the Fund. The Fund may face more risks than if it were diversified broadly over numerous industries or sectors. There is no guarantee the Fund will meet its investment objective.
Collective Investment Trusts (CITs)
SEI Trust Company (the “Trustee”) serves as the Trustee of the Fund and maintains ultimate fiduciary authority over the management of, and the investments made, in the Fund. The Fund is part of a Collective Investment Trust (the “Trust”) operated by the Trustee. The Trustee is a trust company organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and wholly owned subsidiary of SEI Investments Company (SEI).
The Segall Bryant & Hamill International Small Cap Trust and the Segall Bryant & Hamill Emerging Markets Trust (the “SBH Trusts”) are trusts for the collective investment of assets or participating tax qualified pension and profit sharing plans and related trusts, and governmental plans as more fully described in the Declaration of Trust. As bank collective trusts, the SBH Trusts are exempt from registration as an investment company. The SBH Trusts are managed by SEI Trust Company, the trustee, based on the investment advice of Segall Bryant & Hamill, the investment adviser to the trusts.
Segall Bryant & Hamill Funds | 225 Pictoria Drive Suite 450 Cincinnati, Ohio 45246
Copyright 2024. All Rights Reserved. Segall Bryant & Hamill is a wholly owned subsidiary of Corient Management LLC, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Corient Holdings Inc. Corient Holdings Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of CI Financial Corp. (TSX:CIX).