AGF Elements Global Portfolio
Global Equity | Canadian Dollar Version
Why Invest in This Fund?
1Expertise & Oversight
Managed by AGF Investments, AGF Elements Portfolios draw on the expertise of the investment teams of the underlying AGF mutual funds and AGFiQ exchange-traded funds (ETFs), as well as the AGF Asset Allocation Committee (Committee).
2Multi-layered Diversification
Each portfolio is comprised of domestic and global mutual funds and ETFs drawn from AGF’s fund lineup with multi-layered diversification across: asset class, geography, sector, securities and more.
3Active Management
A disciplined approach to portfolio construction and risk management designed to deliver repeatable results.
Fund Details
Pricing & Performance
ETF Characteristics
Sector Weightings
Characteristics
Portfolio
Portfolio Managers & Investment Team
Documents
Harmony Maximum Growth Portfolio merged into AGF Elements Global Portfolio on June 28, 2019.
Investments denominated in foreign currencies are subject to fluctuations in exchange rates, which may have an adverse effect on the value of the investments, sale proceeds, and on dividend or interest income. Investors may not necessarily recoup the full value of their original investment. Investors should be aware that forward-looking statements and forecasts may not be realized.
Active Share
Active Share tracks the disparity between a portfolio manager's holdings and that of its benchmark index. A low Active Share score indicates that a portfolio manager is closely replicating the target index, while a high Active Share score indicates that a fund's holdings diverge significantly from the target index.
Beta
A measure of a fund's sensitivity to market movements (as represented by a benchmark index). The benchmark index has a Beta of 1.0. A Beta of more (less) than 1.0 indicates that a fund’s historical returns have fluctuated more (less) than the benchmark index. For example, a Beta of 1.10 shows that the fund performed 10% better than its benchmark index in up markets and 10% worse in down markets, assuming all other factors remain constant.
Downside Capture (Ratio)
The Downside Capture Ratio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return and dividing it by the benchmark's return in periods when the benchmark return was negative. A Downside Capture Ratio of less than 100% is considered desirable.
Forward Earnings Growth
Forward Earnings are an estimate of a company's earnings for an upcoming period; their growth rate is calculated based on forecasted earnings.
Forward Price/Earnings (Forward P/E)
A Forward P/E is calculated based on forecasted earnings per share; a stock’s current price divided by next year’s expected earnings.
Forward Sales Growth
Forward Sales are an estimate of a company's revenues for an upcoming period; their growth rate is calculated based on forecasted revenue.
Information Ratio
The Information Ratio is the ratio of the portfolio returns above the returns of the blended benchmark to the volatility of those returns. It's designed to measure the ability to generate excess returns relative to a benchmark on a risk-adjusted basis.
Management Expense Ratio (MER)
The Management Expense Ratio, commonly referred to as MER, is a measure of the total expenses (fees and other costs) borne by the mutual fund or ETF, expressed as a percentage of the fund's net asset value. The ratio is calculated by dividing the total annual expenses by the average net asset value of the fund for the given year.
Price/Earnings
(P/E ratio or P/E) The ratio of share price to earnings per share.
Return on Equity
A profitability ratio calculated as net income divided by average shareholders’ equity.
Risk Profile
The Risk Profile is based on the historical volatility of a fund, as measured by the 10-year annualized standard deviation of the 10-year average returns of the fund. The investment risk level is required to be determined in accordance with the Canadian Securities Administrators’ standardized risk classification methodology.
Sharpe Ratio
Sharpe Ratio characterizes how well the return of a fund compensates the investor for each unit of absolute risk they assume, as measured by the Standard Deviation of the fund. The greater a fund's Sharpe Ratio, the better its risk-adjusted performance has been.
Standard Deviation
A statistical measure of the range/dispersion of a fund's performance. The more variable the returns, the larger the Standard Deviation. When a fund has a high Standard Deviation, it means that its range of performance was wide for the given period, i.e. greater historical volatility. Standard Deviation does not predict the future volatility of a fund.
Tracking Error
The Tracking Error represents a fund manager's added value variability. It reports the difference between the return received and that of the benchmark being compared to. It is reported as a Standard Deviation percentage difference.
Trading Expense Ratio (TER)
The total gross expenses divided by the fund's average net assets.
Turnover (Ratio)
The portfolio Turnover Ratio is the rate at which assets in a fund are bought and sold by portfolio managers.
Upside Capture (Ratio)
The Upside Capture Ratio is calculated by taking the portfolio’s return and dividing it by the benchmark’s return in periods when the benchmark return was positive. An Upside Capture Ratio of greater than 100% is considered desirable.
Weighted Average Market Cap
Market cap is the market value of all the outstanding shares in a company. In a portfolio the Weighted Average Market Cap is the sum of the products of a company’s market cap and its percentage allocation in the portfolio.