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1
The firm, as defined as Reaves Asset Management, has prepared and presented
this report in compliance with the AIMR Performance Presentation Standards
(AIMR-PPS®), the US and Canadian version of GIPS. AIMR has not been
involved with or reviewed W. H. Reaves’ claim of compliance.
2
For illustrative purposes only. The investment process may change over
time. The characteristics set forth are intended as a general illustration
of some of the criteria the strategy team considers in selecting stocks
for client portfolios. Not all stocks in a client’s portfolio will
meet such criteria.
3
Reaves performance data is the W. H. Reaves & Co., Inc. ERISA Composite
and unless otherwise noted, all data is net
of fees. The WHR ERISA Composite reflects
the dollar-weighted return of all corporate ERISA pension accounts with
assets of at least $1 million under management for all periods presented.
Returns are time-weighted and include the reinvestment of all dividends
and other earnings, net of commissions. The ERISA Composite does not reflect
all of the firm’s assets under management.
4
Standard deviation
is a measure of the variability of returns – the higher the standard
deviation, the greater the range of performance (i.e. volatility). The
data shown reflects the deduction of investment management fees and/or
transactions costs. Standard deviation is based on quarterly data. The
risk/return data shown are based on historical annualized rates of return
and standard deviations of the WHR ERISA Composite.
5
The Up Capture
Ratio measures the manager’s overall performance
to the benchmark’s overall performance, considering only quarters
that are positive in the benchmark. The Down
Capture Ratio is the ratio of the manager’s overall
performance to the benchmark’s overall performance, considering
only quarters that are negative in the benchmark.
6
Reaves portfolio characteristics, holdings and sector weightings are subject
to change at any time and are based on a representative portfolio. Holdings,
sector weightings and portfolio characteristics of individual client portfolios
may differ, sometimes significantly, from those shown. This information
does not constitute, and should not be construed as, investment advice
or recommendations with respect to the securities and sectors listed.
Past
results do not guarantee future performance. Further,
the investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate;
thus investor’s equity, when liquidated, may be worth more or less
than the original cost. This document provides only impersonal advice
and/or statistical data and is not intended to meet objectives or suitability
requirements of any specific individual or account.
Index/Term
Definitions:
The S&P
500 Index is a capitalization-weighted, composite index
of 500 stocks designed to measure performance of the broad domestic economy
through changes in the aggregate market value of 500 stocks representing
all major industries. The typical W. H. Reaves (“Reaves”)
portfolio includes a significant percentage of assets that are also found
in the S&P 500. However, Reaves portfolios are far less diversified,
resulting in higher sector concentrations than found in the broad-based
S&P 500 index.
The S&P
Utilities Index is a capitalization-weighted index containing
32 Electric and Gas Utility stocks (including multi-utilities and independent
power producers). Prior to July 1996, this index included telecommunications
equities. This equity index does not currently have telecommunications
or energy equities that are contained in the WHR ERISA Composite.
The Dow
Jones Utility Average (DJUA) is a price-weighted average
of the 15 utility stocks traded in the United States. This equity index
does not have telecommunications or energy equities that are contained
in the WHR ERISA Composite.
Russell
1000 Value Index measures the performance of those Russell
1000 companies with lower price-to-book ratios and lower forecasted growth
values. These stocks are selected from the 1,000 largest companies in
the Russell 3000 Index, which represents approximately 92% of the total
market capitalization of the Russell 3000 Index. Reaves portfolios are
far less diversified, resulting in higher sector concentrations than found
in the broad-based Russell 1000 Value Index.
NASDAQ
Composite Index measures all NASDAQ domestic and international
based common type stocks listed on The NASDAQ Stock Market. Today the
NASDAQ Composite includes over 3,000 companies. This index is heavily
weighted in technology and internet stocks which are not found in the
WHR ERISA Composite.
The debt obligation indexes below are unmanaged and reflect the value
of corporate and government bonds whose rates are fixed at issuance. The
market value will fluctuate but is designed to equal par at maturity.
The WHR ERISA Composite is comprised of equity assets having an indefinite
maturity and no fixed interest payments.
Lehman
Aggregate Bond Index is an index comprised of approximately
6,000 publicly traded bonds including US Government, mortgage-backed,
corporate, and yankee bonds with an approximate average maturity of 10
years.
T-Bill
is a negotiable debt obligation issued by the U.S. government and backed
by its full faith and credit, having a maturity of one year or less.
Citigroup
Treasury 10YR is a treasury index that computes returns
for the current 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, 5-year, 10-year and 30-year on-the-run
Treasury that has been in existence for the entire month. You cannot directly
invest in the index.
Citigroup
Treasury 30YR is a treasury index that computes returns
for the current 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, 5-year, 10-year and 30-year on-the-run
Treasury that has been in existence for the entire month. You cannot directly
invest in the index.
Dividend
Yield is a financial ratio that shows how much a company
pays out in dividends each year relative to its share price. In the absence
of any capital gains, the dividend yield is the return on investment.
Alpha
is a synonym of ‘value added.’ Linearly similar to the way
beta is computed, alpha is the incremental return on a manager when the
market is stationary. In other words, it is the extra expected return
due to non-market factors. This risk-adjusted measurement takes into account
both the performance of the market as a whole and the volatility of a
manager. A positive alpha indicates that a selected portfolio has produced
returns above the expected level at that level of risk, and vice versa
for a negative alpha.
Beta
measures a manager’s volatility relative to the market portfolio.
A manager with a beta higher than 1.0 has historically been more volatile
than the benchmark, while a manager with a beta lower than 1.0 has been
less volatile.
Price-to-Earnings
Ratio (P/E) is a stock’s price divided by its earnings
per share.
Earnings-per-share
(EPS) is the portion of a company’s profit allocated
to each outstanding share of a common stock.
Weighted
average market capitalization is a stock market index
weighted by the value of all shares outstanding for each stock.
Price-to-book
ratio is a ratio used to compare a stock’s market
value to its book value.
Sharpe
ratio is used to measure risk-adjusted performance. It
is calculated by subtracting the risk-free rate from the rate of return
for a portfolio and dividing the result by the standard deviation of the
portfolio returns.
Sortino
ratio is a ratio developed to differentiate between good
and bad volatility in the Sharpe ratio. This differentiation of upwards
and downwards volatility allows the calculation to provide a risk-adjusted
measure of a security or fund’s performance without penalizing it
for upward price changes.
An
investor cannot invest directly in an index. Past performance is no guarantee
of future results. All investments involve risk, including loss of principal.
Important Tax Information: W. H. Reaves & Co., and
its employees are not in the business of providing tax or legal advice
to taxpayers. Any such taxpayer should seek advice based on the taxpayer’s
particular circumstances from an independent tax advisor.
Fees:
Net performance reflects the deduction of advisory fees which are described
in detail in Part II of our Form ADV. Gross performance does not reflect
the deduction of investment management fees and transaction costs which
would reduce the performance shown. For fee schedules, please contact
your financial professional for a copy of our Form ADV Part II.
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