SHAREHOLDER FEES
(fees paid directly from your
investment)
|
Investor Class
|
Institutional Class
|
Maximum Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Purchases (as a percentage of offering price)
|
None
|
None
|
Maximum Deferred Sales Charge (Load) (as a percentage of offering price)
|
None
|
None
|
Maximum Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Reinvested Dividends and Other Distributions (as a
percentage of offering price)
|
None
|
None
|
Redemption Fee (as a percentage of amount redeemed on shares held for 30 days or less)
|
2.00%
|
2.00%
|
Exchange Fee
|
None
|
None
|
ANNUAL FUND
OPERATING EXPENSES
(expenses that you pay each year as a
percentage of the value of your investment)
|
||
Management Fees
|
1.00%
|
1.00%
|
Distributions and/or Service (12b-1) Fees
|
0.22%
|
None
|
Other Expenses(1)
|
0.27%
|
0.27%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
|
1.49%
|
1.27%
|
Fee Waiver and/or Expense Reimbursement(2)
|
-0.11%
|
-0.11%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waiver and/or Expense Reimbursement(2)
|
1.38%
|
1.16%
|
(1)
|
“Other Expenses” include Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses of less than one basis point. As a result, Total Annual Fund
Operating Expenses in the table above do not correlate to the ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets found within the “Financial Highlights” section of this prospectus, which does not include Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses.
|
(2)
|
Intrepid Capital Management, Inc. (the “Adviser”) has contractually agreed to reduce its fees and/or reimburse the Fund to the extent
necessary to ensure that Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee Waiver and/or Expense Reimbursement do not exceed 1.15% of the average daily net assets of the Fund. This expense limitation agreement will continue in effect
until January 31, 2020. The Adviser may recoup any waived amount from the Fund pursuant to this agreement if such reimbursement does not cause the Fund to exceed existing expense limitations and the reimbursement is made within three
years after the year in which the Adviser incurred the expense. The Fund may have Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses after Fee Waiver and/or Expense Reimbursement higher than these expense caps as a result of any sales, distribution
and other fees incurred under a plan adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Investment Company Act”), acquired fund fees and expenses or other expenses (such as taxes, interest,
brokerage commissions and extraordinary items) that are excluded from the calculation.
|
1 Year
|
3 Years
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
|
Investor Class
|
$140
|
$460
|
$803
|
$1,770
|
Institutional Class
|
$118
|
$392
|
$686
|
$1,524
|
·
|
Equity
Securities Risks: Equity securities may experience sudden, unpredictable drops in value or long periods of decline in
value. This change may occur because of factors that affect securities markets generally or factors affecting specific industries, sectors or companies in which the Fund invests.
|
·
|
Market Risk:
Securities selected for the Fund’s portfolio may decline in value more than the overall stock market.
|
·
|
Small-Capitalization Company Risk: The risk of investing in the stocks of smaller companies. Small companies can be more sensitive to
changing economic conditions. Stocks of smaller companies are more volatile, often have less trading volume than those of larger companies and are more difficult to sell at quoted market prices.
|
·
|
Value
Investing Risk: The risk associated with the Fund’s investment in companies it considers undervalued relative to their peers or the general stock market where these securities may decline or may not reach what the investment
adviser believes are their full value.
|
·
|
Foreign
Securities Risk: Stocks of non-U.S. companies (whether directly or in ADRs) as an asset class may underperform stocks of U.S. companies, and such stocks may be less liquid and more volatile than stocks of U.S. companies. The
costs associated with securities transactions are often higher in foreign countries than the U.S. The U.S. dollar value of foreign securities traded in foreign currencies (and any dividends and interest earned) held by the Fund may be
affected unfavorably by changes in foreign currency exchange rates. An increase in the U.S. dollar relative to these other currencies will adversely affect the Fund, if the positions are not fully hedged. Additionally, investments in
foreign securities, whether or not publicly traded in the U.S., may involve risks which are in addition to those inherent in domestic investments. Foreign companies may be subject to significantly higher levels of taxation than U.S.
companies, including potentially confiscatory levels of taxation, thereby reducing the earnings potential of such foreign companies. Substantial withholding taxes may apply to distributions from foreign companies. Foreign companies
may not be subject to the same regulatory requirements of U.S. companies and, as a consequence, there may be less publicly available information about such companies. Also, foreign companies may not be subject to uniform accounting,
auditing and financial reporting standards and requirements comparable to those applicable to U.S. companies. Policy and legislative changes in foreign countries and other events affecting global markets, such as the United Kingdom’s
expected exit from the European Union (or Brexit), may contribute to decreased liquidity and increased volatility in the financial markets. Foreign governments and foreign economies often are less stable than the U.S. Government and the
U.S. economy.
|
·
|
Liquidity
Risk: The risk, due to certain investments trading in lower volumes or to market and economic conditions, that the Fund may be unable to find a buyer for its investments when it seeks to sell them or to receive the price it
expects based on the Fund’s valuation of the investments. Events that may lead to increased redemptions, such as market disruptions, may also negatively impact the liquidity of the Fund’s investments when it needs to dispose of them.
If the Fund is forced to sell its investments at an unfavorable time and/or under adverse conditions in order to meet redemption requests, such sales could negatively affect the Fund. Liquidity issues may also make it difficult to
value the Fund’s investments.
|
·
|
Cash Position
Risk: The ability of the Fund to meet its objective may be limited to the extent it holds assets in cash (or cash equivalents) or is otherwise uninvested.
|
·
|
Exchange-Traded
Fund Risk: The risk of owning an ETF generally reflects the risks of owning the underlying securities they are designed to
track, although lack of liquidity in an ETF could result in it being more volatile than the underlying portfolio of securities. Disruptions in the markets for the securities underlying ETFs purchased or sold by the Fund could result in
losses on the Fund’s investment in ETFs. ETFs also have management fees that increase their costs versus the costs of owning the underlying securities directly.
|
Best Quarter
|
June 30, 2009
|
22.51%
|
Worst Quarter
|
September 30, 2011
|
-9.11%
|
Average Annual Total
Returns
(For the period ended December 31,
2018)
|
|||
1 Year
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
|
Investor Class
|
|||
Return Before Taxes
|
-5.29%
|
-0.08%
|
7.45%
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions
|
-5.46%
|
-0.96%
|
6.00%
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares
|
-3.10%
|
-0.15%
|
5.78%
|
Institutional Class
|
|||
Return Before Taxes
|
-5.18%
|
0.140%
|
N/A
|
Morningstar U.S. Small Cap Total Return Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or
taxes)
|
-12.11%
|
4.33%
|
13.09%
|