01.07.2008 10:00:00
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First American Funds Rolls Out Global Infrastructure Fund
First American Funds announced today that it is opening its new First
American Global Infrastructure Fund to individual investors. The
open-end fund, which has been available to select institutional
investors since Dec. 17, 2007, is one of the first of its kind in the
industry. The fund seeks to provide investors with the benefits of
publicly traded global infrastructure investments that capitalize on the
estimated $41 trillion that will be required to modernize and expand the
world’s infrastructure during the next 25
years.1
For years, large institutional investors have flocked to private
investments in global infrastructure because of their distinctive and
potentially rewarding diversification benefits. Now, the Global
Infrastructure Fund provides both individuals and institutions with
access to infrastructure investments in an open-end mutual fund.
"We’ve used a
differentiated investment strategy to create a diversified portfolio of
global infrastructure stocks that may help investors gain exposure to
predictable and growing cash-flow streams through investment in
opportunities that may not be in their portfolios today,”
said portfolio manager Jay Rosenberg. "This
strategy, we believe, may help investors improve portfolio returns and
reduce the overall volatility in their portfolios.” The First American Global Infrastructure Fund
The new Global Infrastructure Fund seeks to provide long-term growth of
capital and income by investing in equity securities issued by U.S. and
non-U.S. global infrastructure companies. The fund invests in
approximately 100 publicly traded infrastructure stocks of global
companies in the transportation, energy/utilities, communications, and
social infrastructure sectors – companies that
operate water systems, gas and electrical distribution networks, toll
roads, airports, rail systems, renewable energy sources, outsourced
government functions, etc.
Up to 75% of the fund’s holdings are
international (non-U.S.) under normal market conditions, and many are
not included in the fund’s benchmark index –
the S&P Global Infrastructure Index – or
other broadly recognized domestic and global indices, thus reducing
overlap in a diversified portfolio.
The Global Infrastructure Fund seeks to:
1) Capture the performance of global infrastructure
Historically higher portfolio returns than traditional types of
investments, contributing to higher portfolio
returns and lower volatility when added to a portfolio
2) Diversify with ease
• All the benefits
of a mutual fund – lower cost of
entry, daily liquidity, diversification, and transparency
Shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their
original cost.
Diversification does not assure a profit or protect against a loss
in a declining market.
• Lower sensitivity
to global market cycles – providing a
stabilizing force in a portfolio and potentially higher returns
and lower overall portfolio volatility when added to a portfolio
• Historically lower
correlation to other types of investments because of global
infrastructure’s steady cash flows,
consistent demand, and inflation hedge –
contributing to potentially higher returns and lower volatility
when added to a portfolio
3) Enhance a portfolio with First American expertise
• Differentiated
investment strategy designed to reduce overall portfolio
volatility by drawing from an expanded range of global
infrastructure sectors, sub-sectors, and companies
• Time-tested
management expertise with real assets and public policy that may
inspire investor confidence in the fund’s
investment strategy
Capture the Performance of Global Infrastructure
The Global Infrastructure Fund seeks to capture the historically high
returns of global infrastructure investments. Global infrastructure
assets have provided historically higher portfolio returns than other
traditional asset classes, with five-year returns for the S&P Global
Infrastructure Index of 27.12%, three-year returns of 21.0%, and
one-year returns of 5.87% as of 3/31/2008, as the following table
indicates.
Performance of Various Asset Classes as of 3/31/2008
Performance as of 3/31/2008 Asset Class Index 1-Year
3-year
5-Year Infrastructure Global Infrastructure –
S&P Global Infrastructure Index
5.87 21.00 27.12
U.S. Markets
U.S. Equity – S&P 500 Index
-5.08 5.85 11.32 U.S. Fixed Income – Lehman
Brothers Aggregate Bond Index
7.67 5.48 4.58 U.S. Real Estate – FTSE NAREIT
Equity REIT Index
-17.37 11.69 18.34
International Markets
International Equity –
MSCI EAFE Index
-2.27 13.79 21.90 International Fixed Income –
Lehman Brothers Global Aggregate (ex. U.S.) Index
21.69 7.67 9.48 International Real Estate –
Citigroup BMI Global REIT Index
-18.19 15.72 26.33
Source: Morningstar Direct; data as of March 31, 2008
The returns in the chart represent past performance of the indices
and should not be viewed as a guarantee of future index or
investment performance. Market indices do not include fees. You
cannot invest directly in an index.
The chart does not represent the past performance of the First
American Global Infrastructure Fund. The fund's inception date is
Dec. 17, 2007. It has a limited performance track record. You
should not invest based solely on short-term results. For current
performance, visit firstamericanfunds.com or call 800-677-FUND. Diversify with Ease
By diversifying a portfolio with the Global Infrastructure Fund,
investors may increase overall portfolio returns and reduce volatility
with all the benefits of a mutual fund –
lower cost of entry, daily liquidity, diversification, and transparency.
Because of the distinctive characteristics of global infrastructure
investments, they are less sensitive to global market cycles and have
had historically low correlations to other asset classes. Their
distinctive characteristics tend to improve overall portfolio returns
and reduce volatility when global infrastructure is added to a portfolio
of stocks and bonds.
Low sensitivity to global market cycles. Global
infrastructure investments tend to have steady cash flows, consistent
consumer demand, and inflation protection. Even when prices go up,
consumers will continue to use water, electricity, gas, toll roads,
hospitals, and the like.2 Similarly, consumers
will continue to use these services during economic or business
downturns. Because global infrastructure investments are less sensitive
to global market cycles, they tend to act as a stabilizing force in a
portfolio, thus reducing overall portfolio volatility.
Low correlation3
to other types of investments. Because infrastructure
investments tend to behave differently than other types of investments
during the same market periods, they tend to improve overall performance
when they’re added to a portfolio. Investors
who add between 5% to 10% of infrastructure investments to a diversified
portfolio have historically increased portfolio returns and reduced
volatility.4 Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Global infrastructure has historically exhibited relatively low
correlations to other U.S. and global investments, as the following
correlations indicate:
0.13 correlation with U.S. bonds (Lehman Brother Aggregate Bond Index)
0.46 correlation with U.S. real estate (FTSE NAREIT Equity REIT Index)
0.62 correlation with U.S. stocks (S&P 500 Index)
0.41 correlation with international bonds (Lehman Brothers Global
Aggregate (ex. US) Index)
0.57 correlation with international real estate (the Citigroup BMI
Global REIT Index)
0.80 correlation with international stocks (MSCI EAFE Index).
Based on the 73-month period from 12/1/2001 through 12/31/2007.
Source: FAF Advisors, Inc, Morningstar, Bloomberg L.P. Enhance a Portfolio with First American Expertise
The Global Infrastructure Fund offers investors a way to diversify their
portfolios with a differentiated investment strategy managed by an
experienced investment team with extensive experience in managing real
assets and navigating public policy. Managers believe their expertise
may inspire investor confidence in their investment strategy.
Differentiated investment strategy. Portfolio managers seek to
increase the overall portfolio returns and reduce the volatility of the
Global Infrastructure Fund by:
Expanding the range of investments – The fund invests in a broader range of infrastructure sectors and
sub-sectors than those represented by the global infrastructure indices
used today.
Uncovering hidden gems – Unlike
global infrastructure indices, the fund invests in companies across the
entire market-cap spectrum – from micro-cap
companies to large-cap companies – resulting
in less overlap with global indices.
Investing in tangible-asset-based companies –
The fund tends to invest in companies that own, operate, or build
tangible assets, which managers believe are the key to stable,
income-oriented returns.
As a result of this diversified investment strategy, the Global
Infrastructure Fund provides investors with a new way to diversify their
portfolios. Because the Global Infrastructure Fund has relatively low
correlations with other types of investments, it will tend to behave
differently than other types of investments during the same market
periods. Thus, it will be more likely to reduce volatility when it’s
added to a portfolio.
Management expertise. The Global Infrastructure Fund offers
time-tested management expertise with real assets and public policy that
may inspire confidence in the fund’s
investment strategy.
Managing real estate funds since 1992 –
Average of 19 years in managing real estate mutual funds and
estimating future cash flows of companies –
the key to success in investing in real estate mutual funds and global
infrastructure securities
Among top managers of real estate –
Solid, long-term record managing more than $1.6 billion in real assets
Practical knowledge –
Hands-on experience in public policy, crucial for investing in heavily
regulated infrastructure assets
The management team includes two portfolio managers and a number of
supporting analysts.
Jay Rosenberg is the chief architect and primary portfolio
manager of the fund with 12 years of experience in real estate finance
and valuation. He has managed real-asset mutual funds and worked as an
urban planner and real estate developer prior to entering the
financial-services industry and has a master’s
degree in urban planning and public policy.
John Wenker is co-manager of the fund and has 31 years of
experience, including 25 in real estate finance and valuation. He serves
as FAF Advisors’ head of real estate and has
managed real estate funds since 1992. Wenker previously worked in
real-estate property assessment and valuation and as a project manager
on new and redevelopment projects for city government, was director of
revitalization resources at a city community development agency, and has
a bachelor’s degree in public administration.
Supporting analysts – A number of
supporting analysts who specialize in electric utilities, pipelines,
technology infrastructure, electric transmission, water utilities, and
transportation.
Ticker and CUSIP
The Global Infrastructure Fund is available in A shares and Y shares.
Fund Name
Class A Ticker
Class A CUSIP
Class Y Ticker
Class Y CUSIP Global Infrastructure Fund FGIAX 31853P594 FGIYX 31853P586 About First American Funds
The First American Funds mutual fund group had more than $76 billion in
open-end funds as of March 31, 2008. The group, which offers more than
50 open-end mutual funds across a full spectrum of investment styles and
share classes, is advised by FAF Advisors, Inc.
Investors should carefully consider the funds’
investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses before investing.
The prospectus contains this and other information; call 800.677.FUND or
visit firstamericanfunds.com for a copy. Please read it carefully before
investing. Mutual fund investing involves risk; principal loss is possible. Investing in specific sectors such as infrastructure-related
securities may involve greater risk and volatility than more diversified
investments. Risks include greater exposure to adverse economic,
regulatory, political, and other changes affecting such securities.
Foreign investing, especially in emerging markets, entails additional
risks, including currency fluctuations, political and economic
instability, accounting changes, and foreign taxation.
Global Infrastructure is represented by the unmanaged S&P Global
Infrastructure Index, which tracks the performance of the largest 75
leading publicly traded companies in the global infrastructure industry.
U.S. Equity is represented by the unmanaged S&P 500 Index, which tracks
the performance of the largest 500 U.S. company stocks. U.S. Fixed
Income is represented by the unmanaged Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond
Index, which consists of securities from Lehman Brothers
Government/Corporate Bond Index, Mortgage-Backed Securities Index, and
the Asset-Backed Securities Index. U.S. Real Estate is represented by
the unmanaged FTSE NAREIT Equity REIT Index, an unmanaged
capitalization-weighted index of all equity real estate investment
trusts. International Equity is represented is represented by the
unmanaged MSCI EAFE Index, which tracks the performance of stocks from
Europe, Australasia, and the Far East. International Fixed Income is
represented by the unmanaged Lehman Brothers Global Aggregate (ex. U.S.)
Index, which is considered representative of bonds of foreign countries.
International Real Estate is represented by the unmanaged S&P/Citigroup
BMI Global REIT Index, which measures the performance of more than 275
real estate investment trusts (REITs) in 13 developed markets. You
cannot invest in an index.
FAF Advisors, Inc., a registered investment advisor and subsidiary of
U.S. Bank National Association (NYSE: USB), serves as the investment
advisor to First American Funds. First American Funds are distributed by
Quasar Distributors, LLC, an affiliate of the investment advisor.
NOT FDIC INSURED
NO BANK GUARANTEE
MAY LOSE VALUE
7/2008 (1) Source: Strategy + Business magazine
(Spring 2007) by Booz Allen Hamilton, Inc.
(2) The portfolio also invests in other
types of companies not identified here that may exhibit different
demand characteristics
than those referenced.
(3) Correlation is a statistical measure
of the degree to which changes in performance of different asset
classes in the same market
conditions are related.
(4) Based on average annualized total
returns and risk characteristics of two hypothetical portfolios
that included global bonds,
global stocks, and global infrastructure from Jan. 1, 2003, to March
31, 2008. Source: Ibbotson
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