497K 1 ft-behvrunconstrained_equity.htm 497K
SHARE CLASS & TICKER A Shares (FTZAX) Institutional Shares (FTZIX)
  C Shares (FTZCX) R6 Shares (FTZFX)
  Investor Shares ([**])  
  ** Shares listed above denoted with [**] will be offered for sale at a later date.

 

FullerThaler Behavioral
Unconstrained Equity Fund*

Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024
(FULLER AND THALER LOGO)

 

* Effective January 29, 2024, each of the Funds has updated its name from “Fuller & Thaler” to “FullerThaler” consistent with FullerThaler’s rebranding strategy.

 

Before You Invest

 

Before you invest, you may want to review the FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund’s (the “Unconstrained Equity Fund” or the “Fund”) prospectus, which contains more information about the Fund and its risks. You can find the Fund’s Prospectus and other information about the Fund including its statement of additional information (SAI) and most recent reports to shareholders, online at www.fullerthalerfunds.com. You can also get this information at no cost by calling 888-912-4562 or by sending an e-mail request to Fulfillment@ultimusfundsolutions.com. This Summary Prospectus incorporates by reference the Fund’s entire prospectus and SAI, each dated January 29, 2024.

 

Investment Objective

 

The Unconstrained Equity Fund seeks long-term capital appreciation.

 

Fees and Expenses of the Unconstrained Equity Fund

 

The tables below describe the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the Fund. Investors may also pay commissions or other fees to their financial intermediary when they buy and hold shares of the Fund which are not reflected below. Certain financial intermediaries also may offer variations in Fund sales charges to their customers as described in Appendix A – Financial Intermediary Sales Charge Variations of the Fund’s Prospectus. More information about these and other discounts is available from your financial intermediary and as described under “CLASSES OF SHARES” in the Fund’s Prospectus. No initial sales charge is assessed on aggregated purchases of $1 million or more in all FullerThaler Funds. You are also eligible for a discount on A Shares sales charges beginning with a minimum purchase of $50,000. The Fund also permits you to reduce the front-end sales charge you pay on A Shares by exercising your Rights of Accumulation or Letter of Intent privileges with respect to your investments in FullerThaler Funds, as described under “CLASSES OF SHARES – A Shares” in the Fund’s Prospectus.

 

   Share Class
   A  C  Investor(1)  Institutional  R6
Shareholder Fees               
(fees paid directly from your investments)               
Maximum Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Purchases (as a percentage of the offering price)  5.75%  None  None  None  None
Maximum Deferred Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Redemptions (as a percentage of the sale price)  1.00%  1.00%  None  None  None
                
   Share Class
   A  C  Investor(1)  Institutional  R6
Annual Fund Operating Expenses               
(expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)               
Management Fees  0.85%  0.85%  0.85%  0.85%  0.85%
Distribution and/or Service (12b-1) Fees  0.25%  1.00%  0.25%  None  None
Other Expenses     0.63%(2)  0.47%     0.58%(2)     0.57%(2)  0.38%
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses  1.73%  2.32%  1.68%  1.42%  1.23%
Expense Reductions(3)  (0.43)%  (0.52)%  (0.43)%  (0.45)%  (0.36)%
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Expense Reductions(3)  1.30%  1.80%  1.25%  0.97%  0.87%

FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund
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FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024

 

(1)The Fund’s Investor Shares have been approved by the Capitol Series Trust’s (the “Trust”) Board of Trustees but are not yet available for purchase and are not being offered at this time. The Fund’s Investor Shares will be offered for sale at a later date. Because the Fund’s Investor Shares have no operating history, ‘Other Expenses’ for this share class is based on estimated expenses for the current fiscal year.

 

(2)The Trust has adopted an Administrative Services Plan (the “Services Plan”) for A Shares, Investor Shares, and Institutional Shares of the Funds. The Services Plan allows the A Shares, Investor Shares and Institutional Shares of the Fund to pay service organizations for the provision of certain administrative, recordkeeping and other non-distribution related shareholder services to A Share, Investor Share and Institutional Share shareholders. The Services Plan permits the Fund to make service fee payments at an annual rate of up to 0.25% of the Fund’s average daily net assets attributable to its A Shares and up to 0.20% of the Fund’s average daily net assets attributable to its Investor Shares or Institutional Shares. “Other Expenses” reported in the table above for A Shares, Investor Shares and Institutional Shares include an allocation of up to 0.03% of this services fee payable to the Fund’s investment adviser, Fuller & Thaler Asset Management, Inc. (“FullerThaler” or the “Adviser”) for certain non-distribution related shareholder services that it provides pursuant to a Shareholder Services Agreement between the Trust and FullerThaler adopted pursuant to the Services Plan. This Shareholder Services Agreement and fee allocation to FullerThaler were authorized by the Board of Trustees (the “Board”) of the Trust pursuant to the Services Plan in March 2023, and is in effect for the Fund. For additional information regarding the Services Plan, refer to “Service Fees – A Shares, Investor Shares and Institutional Shares” in the Fund’s prospectus.

 

(3)Effective January 29, 2024, FullerThaler has contractually agreed to waive its management fee and/or reimburse Fund expenses so that total annual operating expenses do not exceed 1.30%, 1.80%, 1.25%, 0.97% and 0.87% for A Shares, C Shares, Investor Shares, Institutional Shares and R6 Shares, respectively, of the Fund’s average daily net assets through January 31, 2025. The expense limitation does not apply to (i) interest (other than custodial overdraft fees and expenses associated with the Fund’s participation in an alternative liquidity program), (ii) taxes, (iii) brokerage fees and commissions, (iv) other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of the Fund’s business, (v) dividend expense on short sales and (vi) indirect expenses such as acquired fund fees and expenses incurred by the Fund in any fiscal year. During any fiscal year that the Investment Advisory Agreement between the Adviser and the Trust is in effect, the Adviser may recoup the sum of all fees previously waived or expenses reimbursed, less any reimbursement previously paid, provided that the Adviser is only permitted to recoup fees or expenses within 36 months from the date the fee waiver or expense reimbursement occurred and provided further that such recoupment can be achieved within the Expense Limitation Agreement currently in effect and the Expense Limitation Agreement in place when the waiver/reimbursement occurred. This Expense Limitation Agreement may not be terminated by the Adviser prior to its expiration date, but the Board may terminate such agreement at any time. The Expense Limitation Agreement shall terminate automatically upon the termination of the Advisory Agreement.

 

Example:

 

The Example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in shares of the Fund with the costs of investing in other mutual funds. The Example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the noted class of shares for the time periods indicated and then redeem all of your shares at the end of these periods. The Example also assumes that your investment has a 5% return each year, the Fund’s operating expenses remain the same and the expense waiver/reimbursement remains in place for the contractual period only. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, the Example shows what your costs would be based on these assumptions. The Example is based, for the first year, on Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Expense Reductions and, for all other periods, on Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses.

 

Example: Assuming you redeem your shares at the end of each period

 

Share Class  1 Year  3 Years  5 Years  10 Years
A Shares  $700  $1,049  $1,422  $2,465
C Shares  $183    $675  $1,193  $2,616
Investor Shares  $127    $488    $872  $1,951
Institutional Shares    $99    $405    $733  $1,663
R6 Shares    $89    $355    $641  $1,457

 

Portfolio Turnover

 

The Fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or “turns over” its portfolio). The Fund’s portfolio turnover rate for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2023 was 19% of the average value of its portfolio. High levels of portfolio turnover may indicate higher transaction costs and may result in higher taxes for you if your Fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses or in the Example above, can adversely affect the Fund’s investment performance.

 

Principal Investment Strategies

 

The Fund seeks to achieve its objective by investing at least 80% of its net assets (plus borrowings for investment purposes) in common stocks of companies of all market capitalizations based in the U.S. (“80% Policy”). The Fund must provide shareholders with 60 days’ prior written notice if it changes its 80% Policy. The Fund considers a company to be based in the U.S. if it is publicly traded in the U.S. and it satisfies one or more of the following additional criteria: it is incorporated in the U.S., it is headquartered in the U.S., its reported assets are primarily located in the U.S., or it derives the majority of its revenue from the U.S.

FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund
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FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024

 

The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by building a non-diversified portfolio of U.S. stocks in a disciplined process that applies the proprietary research of FullerThaler, the Fund’s investment adviser, on the behavioral biases of other investors.

 

FullerThaler’s investment process is based on decades of research into behavioral finance. Behavioral finance is the study of how investors actually behave, as opposed to how they should behave, when making investment decisions. Professional investors are human, and like all humans, they make mistakes. Investors make mistakes because they have emotions, use imperfect rules of thumb, and have priorities beyond risk and return. FullerThaler’s process identifies and exploits those mistakes. The Adviser’s analysis includes making educated predictions of when other investors – the “market” – have likely made a behavioral mistake, and in turn, have created a buying opportunity. There are two kinds of mistakes that produce buying opportunities: over-reaction and under-reaction. Investors may over-react to bad news and losses (e.g., panic) that may present opportunities in typically value-oriented stocks, or they may under-react to good news (e.g., not pay attention) that may present opportunities in typically growth-oriented stocks. For example, investor over-reaction may occur when investors become extremely pessimistic about a particular company’s stock due to negative information about that company, e.g. a falling share price, unfavorable news reports, analyst downgrades, etc. FullerThaler regards this negative investor sentiment as excessive and an over-reaction when it persists despite significant bullish signals coming from a company’s management. Similarly, investor under-reaction occurs when investors’ anchoring and over-confidence biases cause them to under-react to new information--especially new information that is inconsistent with their previous analysis of a stock. For example, one type of situation that FullerThaler looks for is significant positive earnings surprises versus consensus earnings forecasts, where sustainable, company-specific improvements have driven better-than-expected earnings. Because of its long-term investment orientation, the Fund further narrows its universe by only investing in a small subset of these under-reaction stocks: those where under-reaction has historically occurred with unusual consistency and frequency.

 

At the individual stock level, FullerThaler employs proprietary screening tools to help identify stocks where such behavioral biases are occurring. This is not a quantitative strategy, and no quantitative factor model is used in the investment process. Through its screening tools, FullerThaler searches for events related to insider buying, earnings announcements, and other news that suggest these types of investor misbehavior (over-reaction or under-reaction) and draws from its more than 30 years of experience in analyzing events that suggest investor misbehavior. If these behaviors are present, FullerThaler then proceeds to its fundamental analysis of the company, which includes a credit-style/downside analysis of the company to determine whether it is suitable for a long-term, multi-year holding period. The portfolio manager performs this stock-specific research and makes all buy and sell decisions for the strategy. In summary, if an investor mistake is likely and the company has solid fundamentals, the portfolio managers buy the stock. The portfolio managers generally sell when they believe investor misbehavior has reversed or the firm’s fundamentals deteriorate. There is no set length of time that the Fund expects to hold a particular security.

 

The Fund may invest a portion of its assets in real estate investment trusts (“REITs”), Business Development Companies (“BDCs”), and Exchange Traded Funds (“ETFs”) whose investment characteristics are consistent with the Fund’s principal investment strategy. REITs are pooled investment vehicles that generally invest in income-producing real estate or real estate-related loans or interests. The Fund will generally invest in liquid REITs that are included in the Russell 3000®, the Fund’s benchmark index. A BDC is a form of unregistered closed-end investment company that typically invests in small and mid-sized businesses to help such companies grow in the initial stages of their development. An ETF is a marketable security that typically tracks a stock index or other basket of assets. Although similar in many ways, ETFs differ from mutual funds because ETF shares trade like common stock on an exchange, with a fluctuating price throughout the day as shares are bought and sold.

 

The Fund may also lend portfolio securities to brokers, dealers and other financial organizations that meet capital and other credit requirements or other criteria established by the Fund’s Board. Loans of portfolio securities will be collateralized by liquid securities and cash. The Fund may invest cash collateral received in securities consistent with its principal investment strategy.

 

The Fund is non-diversified and therefore may invest a greater percentage of its net assets in the securities of fewer issuers than a diversified Fund. The Fund reserves the right to concentrate in a particular industry or group of industries by investing, consistent with the Fund’s investment policies and objectives, up to 35% of its assets in the equity securities of issuers in such industry or group of industries, if, at the time of investment, that industry or group of industries represents 10% or more of the Russell 3000®, the Fund’s benchmark index. While it is not possible to forecast exactly when and how this concentration will occur, it would most likely occur in industries where the strategy has historically had the highest weights: Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment; Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals; Internet & Direct Marketing Retail; Software; Electrical Equipment; Machinery; Biotechnology; and Specialty Retail.

 

The Fund also reserves the right to concentrate in particular sectors, and will concentrate its investments in a particular sector by investing greater than 25% of the Fund’s total assets in such sector when its Behavioral Strategy indicates that such concentration would be appropriate from an investment perspective. The Fund does not have a pre-conceived intention to invest in any particular sector.

FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund
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FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024

 

The Fund typically expects to hold from 20 to 30 positions, with individual position sizes typically ranging up to 12% of the Fund’s net assets. The Unconstrained Equity Fund’s portfolio turnover rate is normally expected to be below 50%.

 

Principal Investment Risks

 

The principal risks of investing in the Fund, which could adversely affect its net asset value, yield and total return, are listed below. Please see “Additional Information Regarding Principal Risks” in the Fund’s Prospectus for a more detailed description of the Fund’s risks. It is possible to lose money on an investment in the Fund. An investment in the Fund is not a deposit of a bank and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency.

 

Market Risk. Movements in the stock market may adversely affect the securities held by the Fund on a daily basis, and as a result, such movements may negatively affect the Fund’s net asset value (“NAV”) and investment return. Prices for securities in which the Fund invests may move up or down, sometimes rapidly and unpredictably, as a result of market influences. The Fund’s investments may decline in value due to factors affecting securities markets generally, or particular industries or sectors represented in those markets. The Fund’s investments are subject to the following market-related risks, among others: inflation risk, geopolitical risks, including wars, terrorism, government shutdowns, and concerns about sovereign debt; natural and environmental disasters, including earthquakes, tsunamis and hurricanes; widespread disease, including pandemics and epidemics; and market manipulation and other fraudulent practices. For additional information regarding Market Risk, including the effect of pandemics such as the novel coronavirus disease, on financial markets, please see “Market Risk” in the section titled “Additional Information Regarding Principal Investment Risks” in the Fund’s Prospectus.

 

Equity Securities Risk. U.S. equity securities may react more strongly to changes in an issuer’s financial condition or prospects than other securities of the same issuer.

 

Micro-Cap Company Risk. Returns from small and micro-capitalization growth stocks may trail returns from the overall stock market. Historically, small and micro-cap stocks have been more volatile in price than the large-cap stocks that dominate the overall market, and they often perform quite differently. Small and microcap-size companies tend to have greater stock volatility because, among other things, these companies are more sensitive to changing economic conditions.

 

Small-Cap Company Risk. Investments in securities of small-cap companies may be riskier, more volatile and more vulnerable to economic, market and industry changes than investments in larger, more established companies. As a result, share price changes may be more sudden or erratic than the prices of other equity securities, especially over the short term. Small-cap companies often have less predictable earnings, more limited product lines, markets, distribution channels, or financial resources, and the management of such companies may be dependent on one or a few key people. The equity securities of small-cap companies are generally less liquid than the equity securities of larger companies.

 

Mid-Cap Company Risk. Mid-cap companies involve greater risk of loss and price fluctuation than larger companies. Many of these companies are younger and have a more limited track record than larger companies. Their securities may trade less frequently and in more limited volume than those of more mature companies making them more volatile and more difficult to buy or sell at an acceptable price. These companies may also lack the managerial, financial or other resources necessary to implement their business plans or succeed in the face of competition.

 

Large Cap Company Risk. Larger, more established companies may be unable to attain the high growth rates of successful, smaller companies, especially during extended periods of economic expansion. Larger, more established companies may be unable to respond quickly to new competitive challenges such as changes in consumer tastes or innovative smaller competitors, potentially resulting in lower market prices for their common stock.

 

Behavioral Strategy Risk. When taking investment positions, FullerThaler will apply principles based on behavioral finance. In order to take advantage of behavioral biases, FullerThaler generally focuses on certain markers of possible under- and over- reaction. Securities identified using this type of strategy may perform differently from the market as a whole based on the following: the criteria used in the analysis; whether the criteria used are successful in predicting investor behavior; the weight placed on each criterion; and changes in the criteria’s historical trends. The criteria used in implementing this strategy and the weight placed on those criteria may not be predictive of a security’s value, and the effectiveness of the criteria can change over time. These changes may not be reflected in the current analytical approach used to implement the behavioral strategy. There can be no guarantee that FullerThaler will be successful in applying behavioral finance principles to successfully predict investor behavior to exploit stock price anomalies.

FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund
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FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024

 

BDC Risk. A BDC may invest in the equity and fixed income securities of smaller and developing companies as well as companies that are experiencing financial crises (“Portfolio Companies”). Investments in smaller and developing Portfolio Companies involve a greater risk of loss due to their youth and limited track records and are more susceptible to competition and economic and market changes due to limited products and market shares. Because Portfolio Companies may have limited capital resources, there is also a greater risk of default on fixed income securities issued and non-payment of dividends on any preferred and common stock issued. Investments in Portfolio Companies typically have limited liquidity. A BDC may use leverage (e.g. borrowing and the issuance of fixed income and preferred securities) to finance its own operations and may suffer significant losses if market fluctuations cause the BDC’s net asset value (“NAV”) to decline or if related interest charges exceed investment income. The Fund has no control over the investments made by BDCs, and BDCs are subject to additional risks such as the fact that their shares may trade at a market price above or below their NAVs or an active market may not develop for their shares.

 

Concentration Risk. Greater than 25% of the Fund’s total assets may be exposed to a particular industry. By concentrating its investments in an industry or sector, the Fund may face more risks than if it were diversified broadly over numerous industries or sectors. An inherent risk associated with an industry-concentrated portfolio is that the Fund may be adversely affected if a small number of its investments in the concentrated industry or group of industries perform poorly.

 

ETF Risk. The Fund is subject to the performance of the ETFs in which it invests for the portion of the Fund’s assets that are so invested. Because the Fund invests its assets in shares of ETFs, the Fund indirectly owns the investments made by such ETFs. By investing in the Fund, you therefore indirectly assume the same types of risks as investing directly in such ETFs. The Fund’s investment performance is affected by the ETF’s investment performance. In addition, the Fund’s risks include the Underlying ETF’s principal risks.

 

Fee Layering Risk. When the Fund invests in another investment company such as a business development company or an ETF, the Fund will indirectly bear its proportionate share of any fees and expenses payable directly by the investment company. Therefore, the Fund will incur additional expenses, some of which are duplicative of the Fund’s own operational expenses.

 

Growth Investing Risk. To the extent that the Fund invests in growth-oriented securities, the Adviser’s perception of the underlying companies’ growth potentials may be wrong, or the securities purchased may not perform as expected.

 

Issuer Risk. The Fund will be affected by factors specific to the issuers of securities and other instruments in which the Fund invests, including actual or perceived changes in the financial condition or business prospects of such issuers.

 

Liquidity Risk. The lack of an active market for investments may cause delay in disposition or force a sale below fair value.

 

Management Risk. The Fund will be affected by the allocation determinations, investment decisions and techniques of the Fund’s management.

 

Non-Diversification Risk. Investment in the securities of a limited number of issuers or sectors exposes the Fund to greater market risk and potentially greater market losses than if its investments were diversified in securities and sectors.

 

Regulatory Risk. Changes in government regulations may adversely affect the operations and value of the Fund or the companies in which it invests. Industries and markets that are not adequately regulated may be susceptible to the initiation of inappropriate practices that adversely affect the Fund or the companies in which it invests.

 

REIT and Real Estate-Related Investment Risk. Adverse changes in the real estate markets may affect the value of REIT and other real estate-related investments.

 

Sector Risk. The Adviser may allocate more of the Fund’s investments to a particular sector or sectors in the market. If the Fund invests a significant portion of its total assets in certain sectors, its investment portfolio will be more susceptible to the financial, economic, business, and political developments that affect those sectors.

 

Securities Lending Risk. The Fund may make secured loans of its portfolio securities in an amount not exceeding 33 ⅓% of the value of the Fund’s total assets. The risks in lending portfolio securities, as with other extensions of credit, consist of possible delay in recovery of the securities and possible loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially, including possible impairment of the Fund’s ability to vote the securities on loan. If a loan is collateralized by cash, the Fund typically will invest the cash collateral for its own account and may pay a fee to the borrower that normally represents a portion of the Fund’s earnings on the collateral. Because the Fund may invest collateral in any investments in accordance with its investment objective, the Fund’s securities lending transactions will result in investment leverage. The Fund bears the risk that the value of the investments made with collateral may decline.

 

Value Investing Risk. The determination that a security is undervalued is subjective. The market may not agree with the Adviser’s determination and the security’s price may not rise to what the Adviser believes is its full fair value.

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FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024

 

Performance Information

 

The performance information below provides some indication of the risks of investing in the Fund. The bar chart shows changes in the performance of the Institutional Shares from year to year.

 

The table shows the average annual returns of the Institutional Shares, R6 Shares, A Shares and C Shares for the periods of 1 Year and Since Inception, as applicable, compared to a broad-based market index. The Fund’s Investor Shares have not yet commenced operations and are not yet available for purchase. Performance information for Investor Shares will be included when the respective share class has been operational for a full calendar year. The Fund’s Investor Shares would have substantially similar annual returns to those classes presented herein because the shares are invested in the same portfolio of securities and the annual returns would differ only to the extent that the classes do not have the same expenses.

 

Visit www.fullerthalerfunds.com for more current performance information.

 

Past performance, before and after taxes, is not necessarily predictive of future performance.

 

UNCONSTRAINED EQUITY FUND

Calendar Year Total Returns – Institutional Shares

 

(BAR GRAPH)

 

Highest and Lowest Quarter Returns

(for periods shown in the bar chart)

 

Highest 4/1/2020 – 6/30/2020 23.91%
Lowest 1/1/2020 – 3/31/2020 (25.15)%

 

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS

(for periods ended 12/31/2023)

 

         Since
   1 Year  5 Years  Inception(1)
Unconstrained Equity Fund         
Institutional Shares - Before Taxes  27.18%  14.92%  15.55%
Institutional Shares - After Taxes on Distributions(2)  27.12%  14.85%  15.48%
Institutional Shares - After Tax on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares(2)  16.13%  12.02%  12.55%
Investor Shares - Before Taxes(1)  N/A  N/A  N/A
R6 Shares - Before Taxes  27.23%  15.02%  15.65%
A Shares - Before Taxes(1)  19.66%  N/A  0.51%
C Shares - Before Taxes(1)  26.66%  N/A  2.38%
Russell 3000® Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes)(3)  25.96%  15.16%  15.49%
Russell Midcap® Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes)(4)  17.23%  12.68%  12.99%

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FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024

 

(1)The inception date of Fund’s Institutional Shares and R6 Shares is December 26, 2018. The inception date of the Fund’s A Shares and C Shares is May 27, 2021. Returns for A Shares reflect the maximum sales charge. The Fund’s Investor Shares have not yet commenced operations and are not yet available for purchase. The Fund’s Investor Shares will be offered for sale at a later date. Performance for Investor Shares will be included when the share class has been operational for a full calendar year.

 

(2)After-tax returns are estimated using the highest historical individual federal marginal income tax rates and do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Actual after-tax returns depend on an investor’s tax situation and may differ from those shown. After-tax returns are not relevant to investors who hold Fund shares through tax-deferred arrangements such as 401(k) plans or individual retirement accounts. After-tax returns are for Institutional Shares only. The Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares for a period may be greater than the Return After Taxes on Distributions for the same period if there was a loss realized on the sale of Fund shares. The benefit of the tax loss (to the extent it can be used to offset other gains) may result in a higher return. After-tax returns for other share classes will vary.

 

(3)The Russell 3000® Index is a widely recognized unmanaged index of equity securities and is representative of a broader domestic equity market and range of securities than is found in the Fund’s portfolio. The Russell 3000® Index represents the performance of the 3000 largest U.S. publicly traded companies as measured by market capitalization. Individuals cannot invest directly in an index; however, an individual can invest in exchange traded funds or other investment vehicles that attempt to track the performance of a benchmark index. The inception date used for the Russell 3000® Index is December 26, 2018, the inception date of the Fund’s Institutional Shares.

 

(4)The Russell Midcap® Index is a widely recognized unmanaged index of equity securities and is representative of a broader domestic equity market and range of securities than is found in the Fund’s portfolio. The Russell Midcap® Index measures the performance of the mid-cap segment of the US equity universe. It is a subset of the Russell 1000® Index and includes approximately 800 of the smallest securities based on a combination of their market cap and current index membership. The Russell Midcap® Index represents approximately 27% of the total market capitalization of the Russell 1000® companies, as of the most recent constitution. The Russell Midcap® Index is constructed to provide a comprehensive and unbiased barometer for the mid-cap segment. The index is completely reconstituted annually to ensure larger stocks do not distort the performance characteristics of the true mid-cap opportunity set. Individuals cannot invest directly in an index; however, an individual can invest in exchange traded funds or other investment vehicles that attempt to track the performance of a benchmark index. The inception date used for the Russell Midcap® Index is December 26, 2018, the inception date of the Fund’s Institutional Shares.

 

Management of the Fund

 

Investment Manager. Fuller & Thaler Asset Management, Inc. (“FullerThaler” or the “Adviser”)

 

Portfolio Managers

 

Raymond Lin, CFA, Partner and Lead Portfolio Manager, has been the Portfolio Manager of the Fund since its December, 2018 inception.

 

Raife Giovinazzo, Ph.D., CFA, Managing Partner and Back-up Portfolio Manager, has been the back-up portfolio manager of the Fund since its December, 2018 inception.

 

Purchase and Sale of Fund Shares

 

Minimum Initial Investment Minimum Subsequent Investment
   
A Shares: $1,000 for most account types A Shares: $50 for all account types
C Shares: $1,000 for most account types C Shares: $50 for all account types
Investor Shares: $1,000 for most account types Investor Shares: $50 for all account types
Institutional Shares: $100,000 for most account types Institutional Shares: $50 for all account types
R6 Shares: $1,000,000 for most account types R6 Shares: $50 for all account types

 

Investments in A Shares and C Shares, when available, may be made only through your dealer or financial adviser. Other share classes may also be purchased directly from the Fund.

 

Minimum investment requirements are waived for any qualified group retirement plan. Minimum investment requirements may be modified for certain financial intermediaries that aggregate trades on behalf of investors. For additional information regarding waiver of investment minimums, please see “Classes of Shares” in the Fund’s Prospectus.

 

To Place Buy or Sell Orders

 

By mail: FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund
  c/o Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC
  PO Box 46707
  Cincinnati, OH 45246-0707
By Phone: 1-888-912-4562

 

You may also purchase and redeem shares through your dealer or financial adviser. Please contact your financial intermediary directly to find out if additional requirements apply.

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FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund Summary Prospectus January 29, 2024

 

Tax Information

 

The Fund’s distributions are generally taxable to you as ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-deferred arrangement, such as a 401(k) plan or an individual retirement account. You should be aware that investments in tax-deferred accounts may be taxable at withdrawal. You should discuss any tax-related concerns with your tax adviser or attorney.

 

Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other Financial Intermediaries

 

If you purchase shares of the Fund through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the Fund, its distributor, its investment manager or their affiliates may pay the intermediary for the sale of Fund shares and related services. These payments may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or intermediary and your salesperson to recommend the Fund over another investment. Ask your salesperson or visit your financial intermediary’s website for more information.

FullerThaler Behavioral Unconstrained Equity Fund
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