Form 486BPOS GROSVENOR REGISTERED
Grosvenor Registered Funds |
George J. Zornada, Esq. K&L Gates LLP One Congress Street Suite 2900 Boston, Massachusetts 02114-2023 |
Check box if the only securities being registered on this Form are being offered pursuant to dividend or interest reinvestment plans. |
Check box if any securities being registered on this Form will be offered on a delayed or continuous basis in reliance on Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933 (“Securities Act”), other than securities offered in connection with a dividend reinvestment plan. |
Check box if this Form is a registration statement pursuant to General Instruction A.2 or a post-effective amendment thereto. |
Check box if this Form is a registration statement pursuant to General Instruction B or a post-effective amendment thereto that will become effective upon filing with the Commission pursuant to Rule 462(e) under the Securities Act. |
Check box if this Form is a post-effective amendment to a registration statement filed pursuant to General Instruction B to register additional securities or additional classes of securities pursuant to Rule 413(b) under the Securities Act. |
when declared effective pursuant to Section 8(c) of the Securities Act |
immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) |
on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b) |
60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a) |
on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a) |
This post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed post-effective amendment registration statement. |
This Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is |
This Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: . |
This Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: . |
Registered Closed-End Fund (closed-end company that is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“Investment Company Act”)). |
Business Development Company (closed-end company that intends or has elected to be regulated as a business development company under the Investment Company Act). |
Interval Fund (Registered Closed-End Fund or a Business Development Company that makes periodic repurchase offers under Rule 23c-3 under the Investment Company Act). |
A.2 Qualified (qualified to register securities pursuant to General Instruction A.2 of this Form). |
Well-Known Seasoned Issuer (as defined by Rule 405 under the Securities Act). |
Emerging Growth Company (as defined by Rule 12b-2 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”). |
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If an Emerging Growth Company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 7(a)(2)(B) of Securities Act. |
New Registrant (registered or regulated under the Investment Company Act for less than 12 calendar months preceding this filing). |
The Fund’s Price to Public (1) |
Sales Load (2) |
Proceeds to the Fund (3)(4) | ||||
Per Share |
At Current NAV |
2.50% |
Amount Invested at Current NAV | |||
Total |
$30,000,000 |
$750,000 |
$29,250,000 |
| (1) | Shares are offered monthly at net asset value (“ NAV |
| (2) | Shares may be subject to a sales load of up to 2.50%. Such a load will be computed as a percentage of the public offering price. |
| (3) | Assumes sale at the NAV of all Shares currently registered. |
| (4) | See “The Distributor” regarding distribution-related compensation. |
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The Fund |
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 2), LLC (the “ Fund 1940 Act closed-end, diversified, management investment company. | |
Investors who purchase shares of limited liability company interests in the Fund (“ Shares Members | ||
The Fund is a specialized investment vehicle that combines many of the features of a private investment fund with those of a closed-end investment company. Like a private investment fund, the Shares will be sold only to qualified investors, and are subject to substantial restrictions on transfer. See | ||
Investment Program |
The Fund’s primary investment objectives are to provide investors (i) an attractive, long-term rate of return, on an absolute as well as a risk-adjusted basis, (ii) low performance volatility and (iii) minimal correlation with the equity and fixed income markets. In pursuing its investment objectives, the Fund invests substantially all of its assets in Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC (the “ Master Fund | |
Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P. (the “ Adviser GCMLP Investment Funds Investment Managers non-traditional investment strategies and (ii) are expected to exhibit a low degree of performance correlation, not only with broad market indices but also with each other. These Investment Funds are managed by selected Investment Managers who specialize in the chosen strategies. The Master Fund generally invests in between 15 and 50 Investment Funds.The Master Fund allocates its assets among registered and unregistered Investment Managers that utilize a variety of investment strategies, with the objective of significantly lowering the risk (volatility) from that which would be associated with investing with any single Investment Manager. | ||
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It is expected that the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests will not be registered under the 1940 Act and as such will not provide the same types of protections afforded by the 1940 Act, including the limitations on leverage and borrowing, independent board oversight and the limitations on affiliated transactions. The Master Fund may invest in Investment Funds offered as private funds in the United States that are not subject to substantial regulation in other countries as well as Investment Funds that are subject to substantial regulation such as UCITS funds based in the European Union and that adhere to the European Union Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities as implemented by the jurisdiction where the Investment Fund is based. Investment Manager Selection Process. See | ||
The Master Fund limits its investment position in any one Investment Fund to less than 5% of the Investment Fund’s outstanding voting securities, absent an order of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “ SEC non-voting securities of, or irrevocably waive its right to vote some or all of its interests in, Investment Funds. Although the Master Fund may hold non-voting interests, the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder may nevertheless require the Master Fund to limit its position in any one Investment Fund, such that the Master Fund’s investments (aggregated with the investments of other affiliates of the Adviser) in an Investment Fund will not equal or exceed 25% of the Investment Fund’s assets, or such other percentage limit as may be determined by the Master Fund in consultation with its counsel. These restrictions may be changed by the board of directors of the Master Fund (the “Master Fund Board Board of Directors | ||
Investment Fund Investment Practices. e.g. | ||
The Investment Managers may use various investment techniques for hedging and non-hedging purposes. For example, an Investment Manager may sell securities short and purchase and sell options and futures contracts and engage in other derivative transactions, subject to certain limitations described elsewhere in this Prospectus. Investing in derivative instruments involves risks different from, or possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing | ||
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directly in securities and other traditional investments and, in a down market, derivative instruments could become harder to value or sell at a fair price. The use of these techniques may be an integral part of an Investment Manager’s investment program, and involve certain risks. The Investment Managers may use leverage, which also entails risk. ( See While it is in the current master/feeder structure, with respect to its own investment restrictions, the Fund will “look through” to the Master Fund’s investments. | ||
An investment in the Fund involves substantial risks and no assurance can be given that the Fund will achieve its investment objectives. | ||
Potential Benefits of Investing in the Fund |
By investing in the Fund, Members gain access to Investment Managers whose services are not typically available to the general investing public, whose Investment Funds may be closed from time to time to new investors or who otherwise may place stringent restrictions on the number and type of persons whose money they will manage. The Fund provides Members the opportunity to participate in the investment programs of a professionally selected cross-section of Investment Managers without being subject to the high minimum investment requirements those Investment Managers typically would impose on investors. | |
In addition to the potential benefits associated with the Investment Managers’ individual investment strategies, the Fund offers the potential benefit of asset allocation among a carefully selected group of Investment Managers, which may reduce the volatility inherent in a direct investment with any single Investment Manager. The potential benefits of investing in the Fund must be weighed against the risks involved. ( See | ||
Borrowings |
The Fund and the Master Fund may borrow money on a secured or unsecured basis for certain purposes, such as to address timing mismatches between inflows and outflows of capital to and from the Fund in connection with (i) investor subscriptions and repurchases/withdrawals, (ii) the Fund and the Master Fund’s investment activities; and (iii) the payment of fees, expenses and other obligations of the Fund and the Master Fund in the ordinary course of business. The Fund and the Master Fund may not borrow for longer-term, strategic investment purposes or to generate out-sized returns. All interest and other fees charged under any line of credit or other borrowing arrangements will be paid by the Fund or the Master Fund, as applicable. If the cash flows of the Master Fund are insufficient to meet required payments on a line of credit or other borrowing arrangements, the Master Fund could be forced to liquidate investments in Investment Funds at times or in amounts that are not advantageous to the Master Fund. | |
Risk Factors |
The Fund’s investment program is speculative and entails substantial risks. There can be no assurance that the Fund’s investment objectives will be achieved. The Fund’s performance depends upon the performance of the Master Fund, which, in turn, will depend on the performance of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests, and GCMLP’s ability to select, allocate and reallocate effectively the Master Fund’s assets among them. Many factors will affect the performance of such Investment Funds. The value of an investment in | |
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the Fund will fluctuate with changes in the values of the Master Fund’s investments. ( See “Types of Investments and Related Risk Factors.”) An investment in the Fund involves the following general risks: | ||
• Economic and market conditions and factors may materially adversely affect the value of the Master Fund’s investments. • The possible failure of the investment strategies, techniques and practices employed by one or more Investment Managers. • Members will bear certain expenses of the Fund, in addition to fees and expenses associated with the Fund’s investment in the Master Fund. The Master Fund also may invest in Investment Funds that invest in other investment vehicles thereby subjecting the Fund, and, indirectly, Members, to an additional level of fees, which could be substantial. • Investing in the Fund can result in loss of invested capital. Use of leverage, short sales and derivative transactions by Investment Managers, among other things, can result in significant losses to the Master Fund, and, indirectly, to the Fund. • The Master Fund invests in Investment Funds that may not have diversified investment portfolios, thereby increasing investment risk. • There are special tax risks associated with an investment in the Fund, including the potential tax risks of investments in limited partnerships and/or the potential failure to meet the Subchapter M tests. (See “Taxes.”) • Most U.S. pension and profit sharing plans, individual retirement accounts and other tax-advantaged retirement funds are subject to provisions of the Code, ERISA or both, which may be relevant to a decision as to whether such an investor should invest in the Fund. There may, for example, be issues as to whether such an investment is prudent or whether it results in prohibited transactions. Prospective investors should consult with their own independent legal counsel before investing in the Fund. • Cybersecurity breaches may allow an unauthorized party to gain access to the Fund’s assets, customer data, or proprietary information, or cause the Fund and/or its service providers to suffer data corruption or lose operational functionality. Additionally, cybersecurity breaches can also be carried out in a manner that does not require gaining unauthorized access, such as denial-of-service attacks on service providers’ systems or websites rendering them unavailable to intended users or via “ransomware” that renders systems inoperable until appropriate actions are taken. • Operational risk may arise from human error, error by third parties, communication errors, or technology system failures, among other causes. • A widespread health crisis, such as a global pandemic, has and could continue to cause substantial business interruptions, market volatility, exchange trading suspensions and closures, impact the ability to complete Fund repurchases, Investment Fund redemptions, and affect Fund performance. The impact of health crises, epidemics or pandemics that may arise in the future, could adversely affect the global economy in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen. • The Federal Reserve has increased substantially interest rates to combat inflationary pressures following a very long period of historically low interest rates. Rising and/or continuing high interest rates may slow economic activity, including triggering a recession, which could expose fixed-income and related markets to heightened volatility and could cause | ||
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the value of the Fund’s investments, and the Fund’s net asset value (NAV), to decline, potentially suddenly and significantly. • There is a risk of inflation, which is the risk that the present value of assets or income from investments will be less in the future. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of factors, such as unexpected shifts in the domestic or global economy, and the Master Fund’s investments may be affected, which may reduce the Master Fund’s performance. Further, inflation may lead to the rise in interest rates, which may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the Master Fund’s investments, resulting in a negative impact on the Master Fund’s performance. Inflation has accelerated and inflation risk is elevated compared to normal conditions because of, among other things, recent monetary policy measures and the current interest rate environment. Inflation risk may continue for an extended period and may affect adversely the value and liquidity of the Master Fund’s investments. In addition, efforts to curb inflation may result in economic slowdown, or recession, and there is a related risk that pressures from stagnant economic growth and inflation together can result in a circumstance referred to as stagflation, where purchasing power declines and economic activity and employment slow, with resulting negative impact on securities and other markets. • As a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine commencing in February of 2022, the United States and the European Union, along with the regulatory bodies of a number of countries, have imposed economic sanctions on certain Russian corporate entities and individuals, and certain sectors of Russia’s economy. Economic sanctions and other actions against Russian institutions, companies, and individuals, as well as impacts from Russia’s invasion on Ukrainian exports, may also have a substantial negative impact on other economies and commodity and security markets both regionally and globally, as well as on companies with operations in the conflict region, the extent to which is unknown at this time. • Shares are not traded on any securities exchange or other market and are subject to substantial restrictions on transfer. (See “Additional Risk Factors,” “Redemptions, Repurchases of Shares and Transfers” and “Taxes.”) Liquidity will be provided to Members only through repurchase offers made from time to time by the Fund in the discretion of the Board of Directors. There is no assurance that a Member tendering Shares for repurchase in connection with a repurchase offer made by the Fund will have those Shares repurchased in that repurchase offer. • An investor who meets the conditions imposed by the Investment Managers, including minimum initial investment requirements that may, in many cases, be substantially higher than the minimum investment of the Fund, could invest directly in Investment Funds or with Investment Managers. By investing in Investment Funds indirectly through the Fund, a Member bears a pro rata portion of the asset-based fee and other expenses of the Fund and a pro rata portion of the asset-based fee and other expenses of the Master Fund and also indirectly bears a pro rata portion of the asset-based fees, performance-based compensation and other expenses borne by the Master Fund as an investor in Investment Funds. • The fees and other expenses borne directly and indirectly by the Fund, including those of the Master Fund and the fees, expenses and performance-based fees or allocations that are borne by the Master Fund as an investor |
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| in Investment Funds may be higher than those of most other registered investment companies. Investing in Investment Funds involves special risks, including the following: • Investment Funds generally will not be registered as investment companies under the 1940 Act. Therefore, the Master Fund, as an investor in Investment Funds, will not have the benefit of the protections afforded by the 1940 Act to investors in registered investment companies, such as mutual funds. • An Investment Fund may, in some cases, concentrate its investments in a single industry, group of related industries, asset class or strategy. This increases the sensitivity of such Investment Fund’s investment returns to economic factors affecting that industry, group of industries, asset class or strategy. However, the Master Fund will adhere to its own investment restrictions with respect to concentration when investing in Investment Funds. ( See • An Investment Fund may experience a cybersecurity breach that could allow an unauthorized party to gain access to the Investment Fund’s assets, customer data, or proprietary information, or cause the Investment Fund and/or its service providers to suffer data corruption or lose operational functionality. Additionally, cybersecurity breaches can also be carried out in a manner that does not require gaining unauthorized access, such as denial-of-service • Operational risk may arise from human error, error by third parties, communication errors, or technology system failures, among other causes. • GCMLP’s inability to gauge (due to limited position-level transparency) on a “real time” basis the specific strategy-related and/or position-level risks associated with positions held by the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests. This could cause GCMLP to be unable at any given time to determine with precision, whether the Fund has achieved an adequate degree of diversification with respect to indirect overall hedged or directional positions, or the extent of its concentration risk or exposure to specific financial instruments, securities, markets or strategies through its investments in Investment Funds. • Liquidity restraints imposed by certain Investment Funds as well as other factors may make it impossible for GCMLP to take any meaningful actions designed to reduce or mitigate risk during periods of market crises or other challenging market environments before the Investment Funds (and the Fund) have incurred substantial losses. There can be no assurance GCMLP’s investment program and risk management process can successfully mitigate or reduce downside risk under any particular market condition (and, in particular, during adverse market conditions and challenging market environments). • GCMLP receives detailed information from each Investment Manager regarding its investment performance and investment strategy. GCMLP may have little or no means of independently verifying information provided by Investment Managers and thus, may not be able to ascertain whether Investment Managers are adhering to their disclosed investment strategies and their investment and risk management policies. An Investment Manager may use proprietary investment strategies that are not fully |
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| disclosed to GCMLP, which may involve risks that are not anticipated by GCMLP. • The Master Fund relies primarily on information provided by Investment Managers and/or their independent administrator in valuing its investments in Investment Funds. There is a risk that inaccurate valuations provided by Investment Managers and/or their independent administrator could indirectly adversely affect the value of Shares and the amounts Members receive upon the repurchase of Shares. Because Investment Funds generally provide net asset value information on a monthly basis, and may not provide detailed information on their investment positions except on an annual basis, the Master Fund generally will not be able to determine the fair value of its investments in Investment Funds or its net asset value other than as of the end of each month and may not be able to verify valuation information given to the Master Fund by Investment Managers and/or their independent administrator. • Investment Managers typically charge asset-based management fees, and typically also are entitled to receive performance-based compensation. The Master Fund, as an investor in Investment Funds, will be subject to these fees and allocations, which will reduce the investment returns of the Master Fund and, in turn, the Fund. These fees and allocations are in addition to the Management Fee (as defined below) the Fund pays to the Adviser, the Advisory Fee (as defined below) the Master Fund pays to the Adviser and the Servicing Fee (as defined below) the Fund pays to the Servicing Agent (as defined below). • The performance-based compensation to Investment Managers may create an incentive for Investment Managers to make investments that are riskier or more speculative than those that might have been made in the absence of performance-based compensation. In addition, because performance-based compensation is generally calculated on a basis that includes unrealized appreciation of an Investment Fund’s assets, the allocation may be greater than if it were based solely on realized gains. • Each Investment Manager will receive any performance-based compensation to which it is entitled, irrespective of the performance of the other Investment Managers and the Master Fund generally. Accordingly, an Investment Manager with positive performance may receive performance-based compensation from the Master Fund, and thus indirectly from the investors in the Fund, even if the Master Fund’s overall returns are negative. • Investment decisions for the Investment Funds are made by the Investment Managers independently of each other. As a result, at any particular time, one Investment Fund may be purchasing shares of an issuer whose shares are being sold by another Investment Fund. Consequently, the Master Fund could directly or indirectly incur certain transaction costs without accomplishing any net investment result. • The Master Fund expects it may purchase non-voting securities of an Investment Fund or waive some or all of its right to vote its securities with respect to Investment Funds. Consequently, in that situation, it may not be able to vote (or would have its vote limited) on matters that require the approval of the investors in the Investment Fund, including matters that could adversely affect the Master Fund’s investment in the Investment Fund. • The Master Fund may make additional investments in or effect withdrawals from Investment Funds only at certain specified times. The Master Fund may not be able to withdraw its investment in an Investment Fund promptly |
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| after it has made a decision to do so, which may result in a loss and adversely affect the Master Fund’s, and, in turn, the Fund’s investment return. • Investment Funds may be permitted to distribute securities “in-kind” to investors making withdrawals of capital. Upon the Master Fund’s withdrawal of all or a portion of its interest in an Investment Fund, the Master Fund may receive securities that are illiquid or difficult to value. In such circumstances, the Adviser would determine whether to attempt to liquidate the security, hold it in the Master Fund’s portfolio or distribute it to investors in the Master Fund. In the event the Fund were to receive such securities from the Master Fund, it would be required to dispose of such securities either through liquidation or by distributing such securities to Members in connection with a repurchase by the Fund of all or a portion of Shares of Members.• Delays in Investment Manager reporting may delay reports to Members. Investing in a master/feeder fund arrangement involves certain risks, including the following: • The Fund pursues its investment objectives by investing in the Master Fund. The Fund does not have the right to withdraw its investment in the Master Fund. Instead, it may only do so through periodic repurchases by the Master Fund of the Fund’s interests in the Master Fund. This may limit the ability of the Fund to make offers to repurchase Shares. In addition, the Fund may receive securities and other investments from the Master Fund in lieu of cash when it withdraws capital from the Master Fund. The Fund may incur expenses in liquidating investments received in connection with any “in-kind” distributions.• A change in the investment objectives, policies or restrictions of the Master Fund may cause the Fund to seek to have repurchased its interests in the Master Fund. Alternatively, the Fund could seek to change its investment objectives, policies or restrictions to conform to those of the Master Fund. Except for the investment restrictions described as “fundamental” in the section of this Prospectus entitled “Investment Policies and Restrictions,” the investment objectives and policies of the Master Fund are not fundamental and may be changed without the approval of investors in the Master Fund (including the Fund). Investors in the Master Fund and in the Fund will be notified if the Master Fund or the Fund changes its investment objectives. • Interests in the Master Fund also may be held by investors other than the Fund. These investors may include other investment funds, including investment companies that, like the Fund, are registered under the 1940 Act (including, without limitation, Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC a parallel entity that invests directly in the Master Fund), and other types of pooled investment vehicles. When investors in the Master Fund vote on matters affecting the Master Fund, the Fund could be outvoted by other investors. The Fund also may be adversely affected otherwise by other investors in the Master Fund. • Other investors in the Master Fund may offer shares (or interests) to their respective investors, if any, that have costs and expenses that differ from those of the Fund. Thus, the investment returns for investors in other funds that invest in the Master Fund may differ from the investment return of investors in the Fund. In view of the risks of investing in Investment Funds and other risks noted above, as well as the risks described in “Types of Investments and Related Risk Factors” and “Additional Risk Factors” that are not summarized above, |
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| there can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objectives. Thus, an investment in the Fund should be considered a speculative investment and investors should invest in the Fund only if they can sustain a complete loss of their investment. The potential benefits of investing in the Fund must be weighed against the risks involved. No guarantee or representation is made that the investment program of the Fund or any Investment Manager will be successful, that the various Investment Managers selected will produce positive returns or that the Fund will achieve its investment objectives. | ||
| Management |
The Board of Directors has oversight responsibility over the management and operations of the Fund. Any vacancy on the Board of Directors may be filled by the remaining directors, except to the extent the 1940 Act requires the election of directors by Members. A majority of the directors are persons who are not “interested persons” (as defined by the 1940 Act) of the Fund or the Adviser (the “ Independent Directors See | |
| As noted previously, the Master Fund also has a board of directors that is comprised of the same persons who comprise the Board of Directors of the Fund. The Master Fund’s board of directors has oversight responsibility over the management and operations of the Master Fund. | ||
| The Adviser |
Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P. serves as the management services provider of the Fund and the investment adviser of the Master Fund and is registered as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended. GCMLP has provided investment management and advisory services for hedge fund investments since 1971. GCMLP and its affiliates (collectively, “ GCM Grosvenor The principal office of the Adviser is located at 900 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1100, Chicago, Illinois 60611, and its telephone number is (312) 506-6500. | |
| Pursuant to the investment advisory agreement between the Master Fund and the Adviser (the “ Advisory Agreement Advisory Fee | ||
| The Adviser provides various management and administrative services to the Fund pursuant to a management agreement with the Fund (the “ Management Agreement | ||
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| withdrawals or distributions during the month (the “ Management Fee The Fund has also entered into a member servicing agreement with GCMLP (the “ Servicing Agent Servicing Agreement Servicing Fee sub-servicing agents to assist with investor servicing and administration. When the Servicing Agent employs sub-servicing agents, the Servicing Agent compensates such sub-servicing agents out of its own resources. | ||
| Administrator and Transfer Agent |
The Fund has retained BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (U.S.) Inc. (the “ Administrator and Transfer Agent | |
| Fees and Expenses |
The Adviser generally bears all of its own expenses incurred in providing services to the Master Fund and the Fund, except that the Master Fund reimburses the Adviser up to $25,000 per year for certain out-of-pocket | |
| The Fund bears its own expenses, and, indirectly through its investment in the Master Fund, a pro rata | ||
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| The Adviser and the Fund have entered into an expense limitation and reimbursement agreement (the “ Expense Limitation Agreement ”) under which the Adviser will, subject to possible reimbursement by the Fund as described below, waive fees or pay or absorb expenses of the Fund (including the Fund’s share of the ordinary operating expenses of the Master Fund and certain indemnification obligations of the Master Fund as described herein under “Investment Advisory Agreement and Management Agreement”, but excluding any fees, expenses and incentive allocations of the Investment Funds), to the extent necessary to limit the ordinary operating expenses of the Fund (including the Fund’s share of the ordinary operating expenses of the Master Fund, but excluding taxes, interest and related costs of borrowing, brokerage commissions and any extraordinary expenses of the Fund and the Master Fund) to 2.34% per annum of the Fund’s average monthly net assets (the “ Expense Limitation ”). In consideration of the Adviser’s agreement to limit the Fund’s expenses, the Fund will carry forward the amount of fees waived and expenses paid or absorbed by the Adviser in excess of the Expense Limitation, for a period not to exceed three years from the end of the fiscal year in which the fee was waived or the expense was paid or absorbed, and will reimburse the Adviser such amounts. Recoupment will be made as promptly as possible, but will be limited to, after giving effect to the recoupment amount, the lesser of (a) the expense cap in effect at the time of a waiver and (b) the expense cap in effect at the time of the recoupment. The Expense Limitation Agreement will remain in effect until July 31, 2025, and will terminate unless renewed by the Adviser. ( See “Fees and Expenses.”) | ||
| Conflicts of Interest |
The investment activities of the Adviser, the Investment Managers and their affiliates for their own accounts and other accounts they manage may give rise to conflicts of interest which may disadvantage the Fund. ( See “Conflicts of Interest.”) | |
| The Distributor |
GRV Securities LLC (the “ Distributor ”), which is an affiliate of the Adviser, presently acts as the distributor for the Fund and bears its own costs associated with its activities as Distributor. The Distributor is not compensated by the Fund for such services. The Distributor may retain unaffiliated broker-dealers to act as selling agents and retain, or arrange for the Fund’s retention of, broker-dealers that manage Intermediary Platforms for the Fund and may compensate them for their services. The Fund does not bear any of the costs associated with these compensation arrangements. Financial intermediaries may impose fees, terms and conditions on investor accounts and investments in the Fund that are in addition to the terms and conditions imposed by the Fund. The Adviser (or one of its affiliates) may pay from its own resources (which may include revenue from advisory and management services) additional compensation or commissions, either at the time of sale or on an ongoing basis, to intermediaries for sales of Fund Shares by such intermediaries and for ongoing investor servicing. ( See “Purchasing Shares - The Distributor.”) | |
| Purchasing Shares |
Shares may be purchased at the Fund’s net asset value plus the sales load, if any. The minimum initial investment in the Fund is $25,000 and the minimum additional investment in the Fund is $5,000. The minimum additional investments may be reduced by the Board of Directors. In connection with initial and additional investments, investors may be charged a maximum sales load of up to 2.50% (the “ Sales Load ”) on Shares purchased through selling agents. No Sales Load will be charged by the Selling Agents to certain types of investors. In addition, no Sales Load will be charged to any investor investing directly with the Fund through the Distributor. Sales Loads, if any, will reduce the amount of an investor’s investment in the Fund and will neither constitute an investment | |
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| made by the investor in the Fund, nor form part of the assets of the Fund. ( See | ||
| The Fund may accept initial and additional purchases of Shares as of the first day of each month. The Board of Directors has authorized the Adviser to offer Shares more or less frequently. All purchases are subject to the receipt of cleared funds prior to the applicable purchase date in the full amount of the purchase, although the Adviser may accept, in its sole discretion, a purchase prior to receipt of cleared funds. The investor must also submit a completed investor application document, in good order, before the applicable purchase date. The Board of Directors reserves the right to reject any purchase of Shares and may, in its sole discretion, suspend sales of Shares at any time. | ||
| Investor Eligibility |
Each prospective investor is required to certify that the Shares purchased are being acquired directly or indirectly for the account of an “accredited investor” as defined in Regulation D under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. Members who purchase additional Shares are required to meet the foregoing eligibility criteria at the time of the additional purchase. The relevant investor qualifications are set forth in the investor application documents that must be completed by each prospective investor. Shares may not be purchased by nonresident aliens, foreign corporations, foreign partnerships, foreign trusts or foreign estates, all as defined in the U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “ Code | |
| Investor Suitability |
An investment in the Fund involves substantial risks and is not necessarily suitable for all eligible investors. You may lose some or all of your investment in the Fund. Before making a decision to invest in the Fund, you should consider whether the investment is consistent with your investment goals and needs and your personal financial situation, considering such factors as personal net worth, income, age, risk tolerance and liquidity needs. | |
| The Fund is not expected to generate “unrelated business taxable income” (“ UBTI ERISA tax-exempt investors unless such an investor incurs acquisition indebtedness in connection with its investment in the Fund. | ||
| Transfer Restrictions |
Shares held by Members may be transferred only under certain limited circumstances, with the written consent of the Board of Directors or its delegate (which may be withheld in its sole discretion and is granted, if at all, only under extenuating circumstances). A Member who transfers Shares may be charged reasonable expenses, including attorneys’ and accountants’ fees, incurred by the Fund in connection with the transfer. ( See | |
| Redemptions and Repurchases of Shares by the Fund |
The Fund will repurchase Shares at the net asset value determined as of the valuation date, which is generally expected to be the last day of each calendar quarter. It is expected that the Fund will determine the net asset value per Share as of the valuation date within thirty days after the valuation date. Shares are not redeemable and a Member has no right to require the Fund to redeem its Shares. The Fund will from time to time offer to repurchase Shares pursuant to written tenders by Members. Repurchase offers will be made at such times and on such terms as may be determined by the Board of Directors, in its sole discretion. In determining whether the Fund should offer to repurchase Shares from Members, the Board of Directors will consider the recommendation of the Adviser. The Adviser expects that generally it will recommend to the Board of Directors that the Fund offer to repurchase Shares from Members four times each year, effective as of the last day of each calendar quarter. The Board of Directors will also consider the following factors, among others, in making | |
12 |
||||||
| this determination: (i) whether any Members have requested that the Fund repurchase their Shares; (ii) the liquidity of the Fund’s assets; (iii) the investment plans and working capital requirements of the Fund; (iv) the relative economies of scale with respect to the size of the Fund; (v) the history of the Fund in repurchasing Shares; and (vi) the economic condition of the securities markets. ( See | ||
| If a repurchase offer is oversubscribed by Members who tender their Shares for repurchase (in other words, if the amount of Shares tendered exceeds the amount that the Fund has offered to repurchase), the Fund will repurchase only a pro rata portion of the Shares tendered by each Member. Similarly, if an offer to repurchase interests in the Master Fund is oversubscribed, the Master Fund will repurchase only a pro rata portion of the interests tendered by the Fund to the Master Fund, unless the offer to repurchase interests in the Master Fund is increased and extended, and accordingly the Fund may be required to scale down the repurchase of Shares from Members. If the offer to repurchase interests in the Master Fund is extended, the Fund will receive notice of such extension. In addition, a Member who tenders for repurchase only a portion of such Member’s Shares will be required to continue to own Shares having a net asset value not less than $25,000, or such lesser amount as may be established by the Board of Directors. In the event that a Member’s investment falls below the required minimum due to the repurchase by the Fund of Shares on a pro rata basis, the Fund shall waive the required minimum amount. Additionally, the Fund will only repurchase securities in accordance with Rule 13e-4 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, (the “Securities Exchange Act pro-rata basis, or in such other manner as it will not discriminate unfairly against any Member.The Fund Agreement provides that the Board of Directors will call a meeting of Members for the purpose of determining whether the Fund should be dissolved in the event that the Fund does not at least once during any 24-month period repurchase any of the Shares tendered in accordance with the procedures determined by the Board of Directors from time to time. | ||
| Taxation |
The Fund has elected to be treated, and expects each year to qualify, as a “regulated investment company” (“ RIC Code The Fund will distribute substantially all of its net investment income and net capital gains to Members. Distributions from net investment income and net short-term capital gain generally will be taxable as ordinary income to the Members, but long-term capital gain distributions paid by the Fund will be taxable to Members as long-term capital gain. Members not subject to tax on their income will not be required to pay tax on amounts distributed to them. The Fund will inform Members of the amount and character of the distributions to Members. ( See Subchapter M of the Code imposes strict requirements for the diversification of a RIC’s investments, the nature of a RIC’s income and the distribution and timely reporting of income and gains. (See “Taxes.”) | |
13 |
||||||
| The Fund’s compliance with the diversification and income requirements will be based upon its share of the assets and income of the Master Fund, which will be classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes. | ||
| In order to satisfy these requirements, the Master Fund will invest primarily in a portfolio of private investment funds, including both private investment funds organized outside of the United States that are classified as corporations for U.S. tax purposes and are expected to be treated as passive foreign investment companies (“ PFICs | ||
| Distributions and Dividend Reinvestment |
Distributions will be paid at least annually on the Shares in an amount representing substantially all of the net investment income and net capital gains, if any, earned each year. The Fund is not a suitable investment for any investor requiring routine distributions of income. Each Member will automatically be a participant under the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (“ DRP | |
| ERISA Plans |
Entities subject to ERISA may purchase Shares provided they meet certain qualifications. ( See | |
| Term |
The Fund’s term is perpetual unless the Fund is otherwise terminated under the terms of the Fund Agreement. | |
| Reports to Members |
The Fund furnishes to Members as soon as practicable after the end of each calendar year, information on IRS Form 1099 as is required by law to assist the Members in preparing their tax returns. The Fund sends to Members unaudited semi-annual and audited annual reports no later than 60 days after the close of the period for which the report is being made, or as otherwise required by the 1940 Act or other applicable law. Members may also receive interim reporting regarding the Fund. Any Member may request from the Adviser an estimate, based on unaudited data, of the net asset value of the Fund as of the end of any calendar month. | |
| The Fund’s semi-annual and annual reports contain financial statements that provide important information regarding the operations of the Fund, its investments and its investment performance. Prospective investors should obtain and review the Fund’s most recent annual report and, if more recent, the Fund’s latest semi-annual report, before investing. | ||
14 |
||||||
| Fiscal Year |
For accounting purposes, the Fund’s fiscal year is the 12-month period ending March 31. The 12-month period ending October 31 of each year is the taxable year of the Fund. | |
| Custodian |
The Bank of New York Mellon serves as custodian for the assets of the Fund. | |
| Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP serves as the independent registered public accounting firm of the Fund. | |
15 |
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| Shareholder Transaction Expenses |
||||
| Maximum Sales Load ( (1) |
||||
| Annual Expenses ( |
||||
| Management Fee (2) |
||||
| Other Expenses (3) |
||||
| Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses (4) |
||||
| Total Annual Expenses (5) |
||||
| Amount Paid or Absorbed by Adviser Under Expense Limitation Agreement (5) |
- |
|||
| Net Annual Expenses After Expense Limitation |
||||
(1) |
In connection with initial and additional purchases of Shares, investors may be charged a sales load of up to 2.50% of the investment amount. No Sales Load is charged to certain types of investors. (See “Purchasing Shares.”) |
(2) |
|
(3) |
|
(4) |
The acquired fund fees and expenses ( AFFE ) are the expenses indirectly incurred by the Fund as a result of the Master Fund’s investments in the underlying Investment Funds. AFFE are based on historic earnings of the Investment Funds, which may (and which should be expected to) change substantially over time and, therefore, significantly affect the Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses line item. In addition, the Investment Funds held by the Fund will change, which further impacts the calculation of AFFE. Generally, management fees payable to Investment Managers of the Investment Funds will range from 0% to 2.5% (annualized) of the average net asset value of the Fund’s investment in such Investment Funds. In addition, most Investment Managers charge incentive compensation based on a percentage of the appreciation of the applicable Investment Fund over a specific performance period. Such percentage typically ranges from 15% to 25% although it is possible that such range may be exceeded for certain Investment Managers. AFFE in the future may be substantially higher or lower because the performance fees paid to some Investment Managers may fluctuate over time. The amounts charged by the underlying Investment Funds are not paid to the Adviser and represent the costs incurred indirectly by investing in the Investment Funds. The “Total Annual Expenses” line item disclosed above will differ significantly from the ratio of expenses to average net assets (i.e., the Fund’s expense ratio) that is included in the financial statements in the Fund’s annual report because (a) the Fund’s financial statements will depict the Fund’s expenses and (b) the Fund’s financial statements will not include the portion of Acquired Fund (Investment Fund) Fees and Expenses that represent costs incurred at the Investment Fund level, as required to be disclosed in the above table. |
(5) |
|
16 |
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EXAMPLE |
||||||||||||||||||
1 Year |
3 Years |
5 Years |
10 Years |
|||||||||||||||
An investor would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual return and that such shares are held rather than sold during the period reflected: |
$ |
$ |
$ |
$ |
||||||||||||||
An investor would pay the following expenses on a $25,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual return and that such shares are held rather than sold during the period reflected: |
$ |
$ |
$ |
$ |
||||||||||||||
17 |
||||
Years Ended March 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2024 |
2023 |
2022 |
2021 |
2020 |
2019 |
2018 |
2017 |
2016 |
2015 | |||||||||||||
Per Share operating performance: * |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value per Share, beginning of year |
$819.29 |
$844.35 |
$950.60 |
$855.74 |
$927.38 |
$956.67 |
$967.94 |
$906.32 |
$1,006.59 |
$1,011.11 |
||||||||||||
Income/(loss) from investment operations: |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment loss |
(18.80) |
(18.98) |
(22.71) |
(22.34) |
(21.81) |
(21.62) |
(22.80) |
(22.25) |
(22.53) |
(23.00) |
||||||||||||
Net realized and unrealized gain/(loss) from investment operations |
102.62 |
(6.08) |
(18.02) |
167.12 |
(26.73) |
13.41 |
77.97 |
83.87 |
(35.63) |
59.67 |
||||||||||||
Total income/(loss) from investment operations |
83.82 |
(25.06) |
(40.73) |
144.78 |
(48.54) |
(8.21) |
55.17 |
61.62 |
(58.16) |
36.67 |
||||||||||||
Distributions to Members from net investment income |
(28.34) |
— |
(65.52) |
(49.92) |
(23.10) |
(21.08) |
(66.44) |
— |
(42.11) |
(41.19) |
||||||||||||
Net asset value per Share, end of year |
$874.77 |
$819.29 |
$844.35 |
$950.60 |
$855.74 |
$927.38 |
$956.67 |
$967.94 |
$906.32 |
$1,006.59 |
||||||||||||
Ratios to average Members’ Capital: (a) |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment loss – net of expense limitation reimbursement (b)(c) |
(2.23%) |
(2.32%) |
(2.42%) |
(2.42%) |
(2.35%) |
(2.29%) |
(2.35%) |
(2.39%) |
(2.32%) |
(2.30%) |
||||||||||||
Expenses – gross of expense limitation reimbursement (c)(d) |
2.66% |
2.57% |
2.42% |
2.46% |
2.41% |
2.32% |
2.37% |
2.39% |
2.32% |
2.24% |
||||||||||||
Expenses – net of expense limitation reimbursement (c)(d) |
2.39% |
2.41% |
2.42% |
2.42% |
2.41% |
2.32% |
2.37% |
2.39% |
2.32% |
2.30% |
||||||||||||
Total return (e) |
10.45% |
(2.97%) |
(4.70%) |
16.85% |
(5.45%) |
(0.76%) |
5.80% |
6.80% |
(5.92%) |
3.69% |
||||||||||||
Members’ Capital, end of year ($000) |
$46,163 |
$64,972 |
$74,093 |
$80,752 |
$74,031 |
$83,025 |
$97,797 |
$92,738 |
$99,436 |
$119,983 |
||||||||||||
| * | Based on Shares outstanding at the end of each month. |
| (a) | Average Members’ Capital is determined by using the net assets as of the first day of the fiscal year and at the end of each month during the year. |
| (b) | The ratio reflects the income and expenses including the TI 2 Fund’s proportionate share of income and expenses of Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC. |
18 |
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(c) |
Ratio excludes the current and deferred income tax expense or benefit related to the net investment income/loss and realized and unrealized gain or loss from GRF Domestic Sub-Fund LLC (the “Sub-Fund”). For the year ended March 31, 2024, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.01% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2023, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.02% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2022, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.01% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2021, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.02% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2020, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.01% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2019, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.06% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2018, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.04% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2017, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.01% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2016, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.02% of average Members’ Capital. For the year ended March 31, 2015, this amount was a tax benefit of 0.04% of average Members’ Capital. |
| (d) | The ratio reflects the expenses including the TI 2 Fund’s proportionate share of the expenses of Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC. |
| (e) | Total return is based on the combination of changes in the net asset value per Share and the effect of reinvested dividend income and reinvested capital gains distributions, if any, at the average price paid per Share at the time of reinvestment. |
Years Ended March 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||
2024 |
2023 |
2022 |
2021 |
2020 |
2019 |
2018 |
2017 |
2016 |
2015 | |||||||||||
Portfolio turnover rate (a) |
0.00% |
10.13% |
6.14% |
18.08% |
36.66% |
12.40% |
13.93% |
20.57% |
0.40% |
22.24% | ||||||||||
19 |
||||
20 |
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Investment Objective |
The Fund’s primary investment objectives are to provide investors (i) an attractive, long-term rate of return, on an absolute as well as a risk-adjusted basis, (ii) low performance volatility and (iii) minimal correlation with the equity and fixed income markets. In pursuing its investment objectives, the Fund invests substantially all of its assets in the Master Fund, a Delaware limited liability company. The Master Fund has the same investment objectives and substantially the same investment policies as those of the Fund. This form of investment structure is commonly known as a “master/feeder fund” arrangement. Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P. (the “ Adviser GCMLP The Master Fund seeks diversification by investing in Investment Funds that (i) pursue non-traditional investment strategies and (ii) are expected to exhibit a low degree of performance correlation, not only with broad market indices but also with each other. These Investment Funds are commonly known as “hedge funds” and are managed by selected Investment Managers who specialize in the chosen strategies. The Master Fund generally invests in between 15 and 50 Investment Funds. | |
Investment Strategy |
Investment Managers are selected on the basis of various criteria, as described further below. Investment Managers selected generally conduct their investment programs through Investment Funds. Generally, Investment Funds are private investment funds that have investors other than the Master Fund. The Master Fund currently intends to invest its assets primarily in Investment Funds. The Investment Managers utilized by the Master Fund may invest and trade in a wide range of instruments and markets and may pursue various investment strategies. The Investment Managers may use various investment techniques for hedging and non-hedging purposes. For example, an Investment Manager may sell securities short and purchase and sell options and futures contracts and engage in other derivative transactions. The use of these techniques may be an integral part of an Investment Manager’s investment program, and involve certain risks. Certain Investment Managers may use leverage, which also entails risk, including significant amounts of leverage, as Investment Funds may not be subject to any limits on the amount of leverage that they can employ. The Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests are not subject to the investment restrictions of the Fund or the Master Fund and, unless registered under the 1940 Act, are not subject to any of the investment limitations imposed by the 1940 Act. The Master Fund may invest in Investment Funds offered as private funds in the United States that are not subject to substantial regulation in other countries as well as Investment Funds that are subject to substantial regulation such as UCITS funds based in the European Union and that adhere to the European Union Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities as implemented by the jurisdiction where the Investment Fund is based. Neither the Fund nor the Master Fund will invest 25% or more of the value of their total assets in Investment Funds that focus on investing in any single industry or group of related industries. | |
Investment Philosophy |
The investment process for the Master Fund is based on three fundamental principles: | |
21 |
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1. Seek Absolute Returns • Focus on investment strategies and sub-strategies (collectively, “investment strategies”) that, when combined, generally seek to achieve positive returns that are not dependent upon directional movements of traditional equity and fixed-income markets.2. Superior Investment Managers • Identify and invest with Investment Managers that GCMLP regards as among the most talented Investment Managers available on a global basis within their respective investment strategies. 3. Diversification • Combine investment strategies that historically have, over the long-term, demonstrated a relatively low degree of correlation to each other into a broadly-diversified portfolio in an effort to reduce volatility and mitigate strategy and market risks. • Seek to select multiple Investment Managers within each investment strategy in an effo rt to enhance diversification and reduce manager-specific risk. | ||
Risk Management |
GCMLP’s investment process for the Master Fund is designed to control risk through the construction of a portfolio that: • Includes investments that are spread across a broad range of investment strategies and Investment Managers; and • Focuses on Investment Managers that GCMLP regards as among the most talented available within their respective investment strategies. | |
GCMLP’s Investment Process |
GCMLP’s investment process as applicable to the Fund has developed and evolved since its inception and can be expected to continue to do so. • As discussed in greater detail below, GCMLP’s investment process is: • overseen by its Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee (“ Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee • implemented by its Absolute Return Strategies Investments Department, which is comprised of three functional teams: Research, Portfolio Management and Risk Management. 1. Research GCMLP’s Absolute Return Strategies Research Team (“ Research Team co-led by Mr. David S. Richter, who is also the Chair of the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, and by Mr. Frederick E. Pollock, GCM Grosvenor’s Chief Investment Officer, who is also a member of GCMLP’s Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee. As further described below, investment professionals assigned to the Research Team are responsible for strategy research, investment due diligence and monitoring of Investment Managers and Investment Funds. Investment professionals within the Research Team are organized into strategy or regional teams, each led by a strategy head. The Research Team is responsible for sourcing, identifying, underwriting and monitoring Investment Managers.2. Portfolio Management The Absolute Return Strategies Portfolio Management Department is led by Mr. Br adley H. Meyers, who is a member of the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee. Investment professionals are assigned to separate portfolio management teams (each, a “Portfolio Management Team | |
22 |
||||
each of which is responsible for the day-to-day management of the account(s) managed by GCMLP and its affiliates (“ GCMLP-Managed Account ”) to which it is assigned. The Portfolio Management Team assigned to a GCMLP-Managed Account constructs the initial portfolio for such GCMLP-Managed Account (subject to approval by the Portfolio Committee (as defined below)), evaluates such GCMLP-Managed Account’s portfolio composition on an ongoing basis and proposes allocation changes for such GCMLP-Managed Account to GCMLP’s Portfolio Committee. Mr. Richter and Mr. Meyers (who together serve as GCMLP’s “ Portfolio Committee ”) review and approve all initial and subsequent portfolio allocations proposed by each Portfolio Management Team. 3. Risk Management GCMLP’s Risk Management Team (“ Risk Management Team ”) works with the Research Team and the Portfolio Management Team to drive efficiency, discipline and consistency in portfolio construction, risk management and performance evaluation of investment strategies, Investment Managers, Investment Funds and GCMLP-Managed Accounts. The Risk Management Team’s responsibilities in Absolute Return Strategies include: • performing independent analysis of realized and expected risk and return attributes of GCMLP-Managed Accounts, Investment Funds and clients’ hedge fund programs; • designing and applying proprietary quantitative portfolio construction and risk quantification tools; and • collaborating in initial and ongoing risk management governance, process and tools evaluation of Investment Managers and their Investment Funds. GCMLP’s investment process involves five basic facets: 1. Strategy Due Diligence The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee is responsible for identifying and evaluating the investment strategies and sub-strategies that may be used by GCMLP - Managed Accounts, including the Master Fund. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee makes investment decisions with input from the Research Team, Portfolio Management Team and the Risk Management Team. GCMLP appoints investment professionals within the Research Team to source, identify, evaluate, underwrite and monitor opportunities associated with particular investment strategies. Investment professionals within the Research Team are organized into strategy and regional teams. The Risk Management Team assesses strategy-specific risks associated with the opportunities identified by the Research Team. When evaluating strategies, GCMLP examines factors such as the following: • the historical returns of the strategy in various market environments; • the fundamental and/or technical factors driving the expected profitability of the strategy; • the expected returns from the strategy over a market cycle; • the expected variability of the strategy’s returns over a market cycle; • the magnitude of the strategy’s potential losses in extremely adverse markets; |
23 |
||||||
• the extent to which the performance of the strategy is expected to correlate with that of traditional market indices, as well as with investment strategies already being used by GCMLP-Managed Accounts and with certain other investment strategies; • the liquidity characteristics of the underlying securities used in implementing the strategy; • the amounts and forms of leverage typically employed by the Investment Managers implementing the strategy; • the degree of difficulty in pricing and hedging the underlying securities used in implementing the strategy; • the cost of implementing the strategy, including transaction costs and fees and expenses paid to the Investment Managers that implement the strategy; • the quality of the pool of Investment Managers available to implement the strategy; and • the potential impact of macroeconomic factors on the strategy . The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee evaluates a range of strategies that rely upon a range of investment approaches and that employ techniques designed to mitigate systemic or market risks. GCMLP does not maintain a formal list of approved or unapproved strategies. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may approve investments with Investment Managers implementing any strategy that GCMLP believes is appropriate for inclusion in the GCMLP-Managed Accounts. As part of the investment strategy evaluation process, the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee determines (and reviews and amends from time to time) guidelines (usually determined as a range) that the Portfolio Management Teams (as defined below) generally follow in proposing, for the GCMLP-Managed Accounts assigned to them, with respect to initial and subsequent portfolio allocations to particular Investment Managers, investment strategies and underlying exposure categories, based in part on the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee’s outlook for such investment strategies and underlying exposure categories. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, with input from the Research, Risk Management and Portfolio Management Teams, bases its outlook for particular investment strategies and underlying exposure categories on its evaluation of the risk/reward profiles of such investment strategies/underlying exposure categories. In evaluating the risk/reward profiles of specific investment strategies/underlying exposure categories, the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee ordinarily considers factors such as: • its ongoing review and monitoring of the macroeconomic environment and assessment of the likely impact of macroeconomic variables on such investment strategies/underlying exposure categories; • its ongoing analysis of the primary drivers impacting such investment strategies/underlying exposure categories; • communications with Investment Managers (as well as other third-party investment managers) regarding their assessments of their particular opportunity sets; and |
24 |
||||||
• communications with other market participants, such as broker-dealers. 2. Investment Manager/Investment Fund Due Diligence GCMLP’s process for identifying, evaluating and approving particular Investment Managers and particular Investment Funds managed by them has four key phases: • Identification and Initial Screening The Research Team is organized into strategy and regional teams, each of which is primarily responsible for sourcing, identifying, evaluating, underwriting and monitoring investments globally with Investment Managers. The Research Team uses a number of methods to identify potential Investment Managers, but relies primarily upon GCMLP’s extensive network of industry contacts, proprietary databases, analytical tools and other industry data to source Investment Managers and Investment Funds. Examples of specific sources include: › internally generated “peer universe” reports in each strategy that include Investment Managers from various sources; › regular conversations with Investment Managers with whom GCMLP has existing investments; › familiar senior-level staff who left positions at firms with which GCMLP invests and launched their own funds; › conversations with, and referrals from, staff of major investment firms; › attendance at industry conferences; › participation in capital introduction programs offered by prime brokerage firms; › daily review of industry-related journals and other publications; › communication with consultants and investors; and › third-party databases. During initial screening, the strategy teams evaluate, among other things: › management company; › background/experience of key personnel; › manager’s risk and return expectations for the portfolio; › portfolio mandate/investment universe; › investment decision-making structure; › comparative investment skill and performance; › performance history; › level of principals’ investment; and › assets under management. • Initial “Investment” Due Diligence The Research Team performs initial due diligence on Investment Managers and Investment Funds that pass the screening process. The |
25 |
||||||
decision to commence initial due diligence is typically made by the relevant regional or strategy team. In some cases, the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may direct the Research Team to conduct targeted searches and evaluations for Investment Funds focused on a particular strategy or region. Initial due diligence involves a more in-depth review and analysis of the factors listed above under “Identification and Initial Screening,” plus additional quantitative analyses on performance, risk/return statistics and exposure. If the Research Team believes additional work is warranted, it will present the Investment Manager/Investment Fund to the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, which may direct the Research Team to:› cease work on the Investment Manager/Investment Fund (either temporarily or permanently); › perform additional work and present to the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee again; or › commence full due diligence. • Full Due Diligence – Investment and Operational Investment Due Diligence If the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee authorizes the Research Team to conduct full due diligence with respect to an Investment Manager/Investment Fund, GCMLP assigns an investment due diligence team (“ Investment Due Diligence Team › particular quantitative data relating to the Investment Fund, including performance relative to peers, key realized and expected return and risk statistics, attribution and drivers of performance, and quality of historical returns; and › certain qualitative factors relating to the potential Investment Manager, such as its investment philosophy, investment mandate and investment decision-making structure, the skills and commitment of its key professionals, its depth and breadth of experience in the relevant investment strategy, its investment and risk management processes, its organizational infrastructure and its stability. In conducting investment due diligence with respect to a potential Investment Manager/Investment Fund, the Investment Due Diligence Team assigned to the Investment Manager/Investment Fund typically will complete the following: › multiple on-site visits to the Investment Manager’s primary investment office and, if applicable, key satellite investment offices;› multiple video conference and digital diligence sessions with key personnel of the Investment Manager and affiliates; › multiple reference checks on key investment personnel; › a proprietary information packet that may include an introductory memorandum, a profile of the Investment Manager, a description of the proposed Investment Fund and a summary of completed due diligence, references and the nature of the quantitative and qualitative due diligence performed; and |
26 |
||||||
› comprehensive risk due diligence (performed by the Risk Management Team in collaboration with the Research Team), including analysis of historical and expected forward looking return and risk metrics, analysis of key risk factors (e.g., market sensitivity, loss potential, leverage, exposure, concentration, etc.), as outlined in more detail below. Operational Due Diligence GCMLP’s operational due diligence team (“ Operational Due Diligence Team ”) evaluates the Investment Manager/Investment Fund from an operational and legal perspective. GCMLP’s Operational Due Diligence Team is responsible for: › evaluating the people, processes and systems that support the Investment Manager’s infrastructure and operations; › reviewing and analyzing relevant legal and regulatory documentation; and › utilizing independent third-party investigative firms to perform background checks of the Investment Manager, its key personnel, its target Investment Funds and (if applicable) the independent directors of such target Investment Funds. The Operational Due Diligence Team is charged with evaluating a potential Investment Manager’s operational infrastructure and the overall design of the Investment Manager’s internal control environment. This evaluation includes a review of the audited financial statements of the target Investment Funds managed by such Investment Manager (if available) and evaluation of the audit firm engaged by such Investment Manager to audit such target Investment Funds. • Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee and Operations Committee approval The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee members are: Mr. David S. Richter (Chair), Mr. Bradley H. Meyers, Mr. Jonathan R. Levin and Mr. Frederick Pollock. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee makes decisions by majority vote. Mr. Pollock has the authority to determine the outcome in the event of a tie. Mr. Michael J. Sacks, the firm’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, has the authority to veto any affirmative decision made by the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee. If, however, the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee rejects or terminates an Investment Manager or Investment Fund, Mr. Sacks is not authorized to override the rejection or termination. Brief biographies of the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee members and Mr. Sacks appear below. Michael J. Sacks , J.D. , Board Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Office of the Chairman • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 1990 • Previous Experience ○ Harris Associates, L.P., 1988-1990 • Education and Accreditations ○ Northwestern University School of Law; J.D., 1988 ○ Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management; M.B.A., 1988 |
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○ Tulane University; B.A., Economics, 1984 ○ Member of Illinois Bar Jonathan R. Levin, Managing Director, President, Office of the Chairman • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 2011 • Previous Experience ○ Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., 2004-2011 • Education ○ Harvard College; A.B., Economics, 2003 Frederick Pollock, J.D., Managing Director, Chief Investment Officer, Office of the Chairman • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 2015 • Previous Experience ○ Morgan Stanley, 2006-2015 ○ Deutsche Bank, 2005-2006 • Education ○ Harvard Law School; J.D., 2004 ○ University of Nevada; B.S., Economics, 2001 David S. Richter , CPA , Managing Director, Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee Chair, Co-Head of Absolute Return Strategies Research• Associated with GCM Grosvenor since 1994; joined GCM Grosvenor, 2003 • Previous Experience ○ Waveland Capital Management, L.P. (Long/Short Equity Hedge Fund), 1994-2002 ○ JMB Realty Corporation, 1988-1994 ○ KPMG Peat Marwick, 1983-1988 • Education and Accreditations ○ University of Illinois; B.S. (summa cum laude), Accountancy 1983 ○ Certified Public Accountant ○ AICPA Elijah Watt Sells Award, CPA Exam Scores Bradley H. Meyers, Managing Director, Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee Member, Head of Absolute Return Strategies Portfolio Management • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 2003 • Previous Experience ○ Merrill Lynch, 1999-2001 ○ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, 1997-1999 |
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• Education and Accreditations ○ University of Chicago Booth School of Business; M.B.A., 2003 ○ University of Illinois; B.S., Accounting, 1997 ○ Certified Public Accountant The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee must approve a particular Investment Manager and particular Investment Funds managed by such Investment Manager from an “investment” and “risk” perspective before GCMLP may invest the assets of the Master Fund in such Investment Funds. In connection with approving particular Investment Managers and Investment Funds and from time to time thereafter, the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee determines guidelines specifying the target percentages of assets (usually determined as a range) that the Portfolio Management Teams generally follow in proposing, for the portfolios assigned to them, initial and subsequent portfolio allocations to a particular Investment Fund or Investment Funds managed by a particular Investment Manager (“ Target Allocations ”). The members of the Operations Committee are: Mr. Paul A. Meister (Chair), Ms. Pamela Bentley, Ms. Lilly Farahnakian, and Mr. Burke J. Montgomery. The Operations Committee makes decisions by majority vote. Mr. Sacks has the authority to determine the outcome in the event of a tie. As is the case with respect to decisions made by the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, Mr. Sacks has the authority to veto any affirmative decision made by the Operations Committee. However, if the Operations Committee rejects or terminates a particular Investment Manager or Investment Fund, Mr. Sacks is not authorized to override such rejection or termination. Brief biographies of the Operations Committee Members appear below. Paul A. Meister , CPA, J.D., Vice Chairman, Office of the Chairman • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 1991 • Previous Experience ○ Barack, Ferrazzano, Kirschbaum, & Nagelberg, L.L.P., 1987-1989; 1990-1991 ○ Sportmart, 1989-1990 • Education and Accreditations ○ Northwestern University School of Law; J.D. (cum laude), 1987 ○ University of Illinois; B.S., Accounting, 1984 ○ Certified Public Accountant ○ Member of Illinois Bar Pamela Bentley , Managing Director, Chief Financial Officer, Office of the Chairman • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 2020 • Previous Experience ○ The Carlyle Group, 2005-2020 ○ Transaction Network Services, Inc., 2002-2005 |
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○ • Education and Accreditations ○ ○ Lilly Farahnakian, J.D., Managing Director, Global Chief Compliance Officer, Operations Committee Member • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 2014 • Previous Experience ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ • Education and Accreditations ○ ○ ○ ○ Burke J. Montgomery, J.D., Managing Director, General Counsel, Operations Committee Member • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 2004 • Previous Experience ○ • Education and Accreditations ○ ○ ○ The Operations Committee must approve a particular Investment Manager and particular Investment Funds managed by such Investment Manager from an “operational” perspective before GCMLP may invest the assets of the Master Fund in such Investment Funds. 3. Establishing investment objectives and constraints for the Master Fund GCMLP and the Fund have agreed to certain investment objectives and constraints for the Master Fund (“ Investment Objectives and Constraints . day-to - The Board and GCMLP may re-evaluate the Investment Objectives and Constraints from time to time based on various factors, including their |
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assessment of market conditions, and may amend or modify the Investment Objectives and Constraints from time to time based on such re-evaluations. Such modifications may be made without notice to investors in the Master Fund.GCMLP seeks to ensure that whenever the Master Fund invests in, or withdraws or redeems capital from, an Investment Fund, the Master Fund does so in accordance with the Investment Objectives and Constraints in effect at the time of such investment or withdrawal or redemption. In certain cases, however, the Master Fund may fall out of compliance with the Investment Objectives and Constraints because of, among other things, appreciation or depreciation in the value of investments, recharacterization or reclassification of investments, limitations on withdrawals or redemptions by one or more Investment Funds, inadvertent errors or other factors that are beyond GCMLP’s control. Should the Master Fund not be in compliance with the Investment Objectives and Constraints, GCMLP ordinarily will implement measures designed to bring the Master Fund into compliance with the Investment Objectives and Constraints as soon as reasonably practicable. In certain cases, however, factors (such as liquidity restrictions relating to one or more investments) may affect GCMLP’s ability to bring the Master Fund into compliance with the Investment Objectives and Constraints in an expeditious manner. In certain cases, the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may recommend that, under the circumstances, it is appropriate to modify an Investment Objective or Constraint, or to adjust or refine the method or formula by which compliance with an Investment Objective or Constraint is tested, resulting in the change of the status of the Master Fund from non-compliant to compliant. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may also conclude and recommend that, under the circumstances, it is appropriate for the Master Fund to continue to be non-compliant, even though the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee has also concluded that, as a general matter, it is not appropriate to modify the relevant Investment Objective or Constraint or to adjust or refine the method or formula by which compliance with such Investment Objective or Constraint is tested.4. Constructing a portfolio designed to meet the objectives of the Master Fund, through the use of approved investment strategies and Investment Funds Mr. David S. Richter and Mr. Bradley H. Meyers, who are members of GCMLP’s Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, assign a portfolio management team (“ Portfolio Management Team Mr. Meyers has general oversight over the functions of each Portfolio Management Team. The Portfolio Committee has designated Mr. Andrew T. Preda as the portfolio manager of the Master Fund. Andrew T. Preda, Managing Director, Absolute Return Strategies • Joined GCM Grosvenor, 2007 |
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• Previous Experience ○ ○ • Education and Accreditations ○ ○ The Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team is responsible for proposing the initial portfolio of the Master Fund, and for proposing changes to such portfolio from time to time by employing a combination of “top-down” and “bottom-up” inputs. The “top-down” inputs consist of:• the Master Fund’s Investment Objectives and Constraints; • using strategies consistent with the relevant mandate; • the requirement to use Investment Managers and Investment Funds that have been approved both by the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee and the Operations Committee; and • the Target Allocations applicable to the Master Fund. The “bottom-up” inputs consist of the Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team’s judgment in selecting and proposing the allocation of capital to approved Investment Funds in a manner that the Portfolio Management Team determines to be appropriate in light of the Master Fund’s Investment Objectives and Constraints and other investment restrictions. The Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team bases its allocation proposals upon both qualitative and quantitative factors, supplementing experienced investment judgment with quantitative analyses.The Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team may consider a number of factors in selecting Investment Funds for the Master Fund, including, but not limited to: the perceived attractiveness of the Investment Fund’s opportunity set; the Investment Fund’s strategy, sub-strategy and region, and the exposure bias and investment style of its Investment Manager (e.g., shorter-term versus longer-term investment horizon, level of activism, value versus growth orientation, concentrated versus diversified, long- versus short-bias, etc. The Risk Management Team designs and applies quantitative sizing frameworks used in the portfolio construction process and is responsible for analyzing the risk and exposure of each GCMLP-Managed Account, including the Master Fund, and developing technology solutions for risk evaluation, including risk aggregation. The Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team utilizes certain quantitative analytical reports developed by the Risk Management Team and generated by GCMLP’s proprietary risk management software (as well as certain third-party software) to test and refine its judgment regarding: (i) its selection of Investment Managers/Investment Funds for the Master Fund; and (ii) the amount of assets to be allocated to each such Investment Manager/Investment Fund. Such tools are designed to enable the Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team to evaluate the risk and return characteristics of proposed alternative allocations to particular Investment |
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Managers. These tools consist of, but are not limited to, historic performance and risk analysis, expected outcomes analysis including risk factor and scenario assessment, and liquidity analysis. Messrs. Richter and Meyers must review and approve all portfolio allocations proposed for the Master Fund by the Portfolio Management Team assigned to the Master Fund. Mr. Sacks has a veto right over portfolio management activity for the GCMLP-Managed Accounts, including the Master Fund. 5. Monitoring investment strategies, Investment Managers and Investment Funds and adjusting the composition of each GCMLP-Managed Account, including the Master Fund, from time to time when GCMLP believes such adjustment is appropriate Strategy Monitoring Certain investment professionals within the Manager Research Team are responsible for staying abreast of market developments affecting specific investment strategies and communicating their findings to the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee reviews such findings to determine whether particular investment strategies (and the Target Allocations previously established by the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee) continue to be appropriate. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may decide to add or terminate a particular investment strategy, or change the position size target ranges applicable to such investment strategy, based on any number of factors, such as: (i) better alternatives for investing the capital invested in such investment strategy; (ii) changes in the expectations for such investment strategy; or (iii) changes in the investment or economic environment. Investment and Risk Monitoring The Manager Research Team assigned to a particular Investment Manager and Investment Fund are responsible for staying abreast of current developments affecting the Investment Manager/Investment Fund and communicating its findings to the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee and Portfolio Management Teams, including the Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team. The Manager Research Team monitors certain aspects of Investment Manager/Investment Fund performance and communicates from time to time with Investment Managers to review the performance of the Investment Funds managed by such Investment Managers and to discuss such Investment Managers’ investment outlook. GCMLP obtains certain exposure-level information designed to enable the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, the Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team and the Manager Research Team to analyze various investment strategies, markets and sectors on a “look-through” basis. Investment Managers |
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ongoing conversations with the Investment Manager of the Investment Fund and, together with such conversations, is intended to provide an overall view of the relevant Investment Fund’s risk exposure. The Risk Management Team also monitors each Investment Manager, Investment Fund and GCMLP-Managed Account on an ongoing basis, so as to understand the key drivers of risk at the strategy, Investment Fund and systematic level and to recommend, to the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, appropriate measures to mitigate the potential impact of such risks on the GCMLP-Managed Accounts. Generally, GCMLP intends to make medium- to long-term commitments to Investment Managers on behalf of GCMLP-Managed Accounts, including the Master Fund, in order to give the Investment Managers a reasonable opportunity to achieve their objectives. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee, however, may decide to terminate an existing Investment Manager based on any number of factors, such as: (1) disappointing performance relative to the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee’s expectations for the Investment Manager or to other Investment Managers using the same general type of investment strategy; (2) indicators of excessive risk taking (such as exposure, concentration, or performance data) that are inconsistent with the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee’s expectations; (3) deviation from stated investment strategy; (4) deviation from area of expertise; (5) significant revisions of reported results; and (6) a change in circumstances regarding the Investment Manager, including but not limited to changes in the Investment Manager’s investment process or style, in the type or amount of the Investment Manager’s assets under management, in the types of products offered by the Investment Manager, in key personnel, in the terms and conditions of investments in the Investment Funds managed by the Investment Manager; new conflicts of interest affecting the Investment Manager; legal or ethical issues; lack of or misleading disclosure; and/or withdrawal of the Investment Manager’s investment or withdrawal of investments by the Investment Manager’s personnel.These factors, either alone or in combination, are not necessarily grounds for immediate Investment Manager/Investment Fund termination, but may lead the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee to place an Investment Manager on its “watch list,” triggering additional due diligence measures relating to the factors that resulted in the decision to place such Investment Manager on the “watch list.” No additional capital of the Master Fund may be allocated to an Investment Manager/Investment Fund once the Investment Manager/Investment Fund is placed on the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee’s “watch list.” The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may remove an Investment Manager/Investment Fund from its “watch list” if the results of the review are favorable, or terminate the Investment Manager/Investment Fund if the results of the review are unfavorable. While the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may elect to terminate an Investment Manager/Investment Fund, its ability to cause GCMLP-Managed Accounts, including the Master Fund, to fully withdraw or redeem from the Investment Manager’s Investment Funds may be limited by the investor liquidity provisions of such Investment Funds. The Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee also may determine that developments at the Investment Manager should be followed more closely for a period of time – perhaps an extended period of time – |
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Monitoring of Investment Managers’ Operations The Operational Due Diligence Team is responsible for staying abreast of current developments affecting the Investment Managers’ personnel, infrastructure, operations and service providers, as well proposed amendments to the governing documents of Investment Funds managed by the Investment Managers, and for communicating its findings to the Operations Committee. The Operational Due Diligence Team monitors certain aspects of the Investment Managers’ operations, which prompts frequent communication with the Investment Managers. The Operational Due Diligence Team follows procedures designed to: (i) identify inaccuracies in financial results and Investment Fund valuations reported by Investment Managers; (ii) identify changes in the Investment Managers’ personnel, processes or systems that support the Investment Managers’ operations; (iii) identify changes in third-party service providers such as administrators or auditors used by the Investment Managers; and (iv) determine the nature and extent of future due diligence procedures to perform.The Operational Due Diligence Team, through its monitoring procedures discussed above, may identify issues that are not necessarily grounds for immediate Investment Manager/Investment Fund termination, but may lead the Operations Committee to place an Investment Manager/Investment Fund on its “watch list,” triggering additional due diligence measures relating to the factors that resulted in the decision to place such Investment Manager/Investment Fund on such list. No additional capital of the Master Fund may be allocated to an Investment Manager/Investment Fund once the Investment Manager is placed on the Operations Committee’s “watch list” without the specific approval of the Operations Committee (which may delegate such approval authority in certain cases). The Operations Committee may remove an Investment Manager/Investment Fund from its “watch list” if the results of the review are favorable, or terminate the Investment Manager/Investment Fund if the results of the review are unfavorable. While the Operations Committee may elect to terminate an Investment Manager/Investment Fund, its ability to cause GCMLP-Managed Accounts, including the Master Fund, to fully withdraw or redeem from the Investment Manager’s Investment Funds may be limited by the investor liquidity provisions of such Investment Funds. The Operations Committee also may determine that developments at the Investment Manager/Investment Fund should be followed more closely for a period of time – perhaps an extended period of time – The Operational Due Diligence Team is also responsible for: (1) periodically updating background investigations into the key personnel of the Investment Managers; and (2) communicating its findings to the Operations Committee. Portfolio Adjustment The Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team is responsible for proposing changes to the portfolio of the Master Fund from time to time in a manner designed to comply with the Master Fund’s investment objectives. The Master Fund’s Portfolio Management Team is likely to propose changes to the amounts it wishes to allocate to particular Investment Managers/Investment Funds on behalf of the Master Fund from time to time, in a continuing effort to achieve the Master Fund’s investment objectives, based on factors such as: (1) the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee’s approval of new Investment Managers or |
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termination of existing Investment Managers/Investment Funds; (2) changes in the Master Fund’s investment restrictions; and (3) such Portfolio Management Team’s ongoing analysis of Investment Manager/Investment Fund allocations in light of the Master Fund’s investment objectives. | ||
Investment Strategies |
The Master Fund pursues a broad range of various strategies discussed below. The descriptions of the categories of investment strategies and sub-strategies approved by the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee may change from time to time without notice to Members. GCMLP classifies each Investment Fund that has been approved by the Absolute Return Strategies Investment Committee into specific strategy and sub-strategy categories based upon such Investment Fund’s primary investment strategy. GCMLP’s current strategy and sub-strategy categories applicable to the Master Fund are as follows: • Credit Strategies › Fundamental credit › Structured credit › Long-short credit › Distressed credit › Emerging market credit › Specialist credit • Relative Value Strategies › Convertible arbitrage › Fixed-income arbitrage › Fundamental market neutral equity › Option volatility arbitrage › Diversified relative value • Equity Strategies › Directional equity › Low-net equity › Activism › Event driven › Emerging market equity › Specialist equity • Quantitative Strategies › Directional quantitative strategies › Non-directional quantitative strategies • Multi-Strategy • Macro Strategies › Diversified macro › Emerging market macro |
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› Specialist Macro • Commodities Strategies › Diversified commodities › Specialist commodities • Portfolio Hedging Strategies › Dedicated short equity › Dedicated short credit › Volatility protection › Opportunistic hedging Credit Strategies Credit strategies include directional and hedged investments in debt securities, credit derivatives and related instruments. The primary investment approaches include fundamental credit, structured credit, long-short credit, distressed credit, emerging market credit, and specialist credit. Credit strategies, although diverse, can exhibit highly correlated losses during certain market periods. Fundamental Credit Fundamental credit consists primarily of diversified credit portfolios that may engage in a wide range of investment approaches including, but not limited to, • Distressed investing consists primarily of long and short directional investments in securities of companies that are in various stages of financial difficulty, including bankruptcy. The goal of the strategy is to earn an attractive absolute rate of return through investing in specific events with limited exposure to broad market fluctuations. Investment Managers seek to capitalize on market opportunities resulting from a lack of information, illiquidity, excessive selling pressure, and complexity of capital structures or securities. • High-yield credit involves taking long positions in levered loans or high-yield bonds. High-yield bonds are also known as “junk bonds.” The positions in this sub-strategy are motivated primarily by fundamental credit views that also could consider technical market factors such as short-term supply/demand imbalances. An Investment Manager may be long an issuing company’s credit either by investing directly in bonds or loans or by establishing a synthetic long position or short position through a credit default swap (“CDS • Direct lending investments are primarily in debt securities of issuers that require capital for growth, acquisitions, recapitalizations or changes of control. Such securities include first and second lien loans, as well as subordinated debt, which may include an associated equity component such as warrants, preferred stock or other similar securities. An Investment Manager directly originates these loans, which typically include relatively high coupons and generous structuring fees. To compensate for the less liquid nature of the instruments and other inherent risks of direct lending, direct financing arrangements often will be collateralized with assets, include restrictive covenants and provide upside equity participation. Structured Credit |
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Structured credit consists of investments in residential mortgage-backed securities, commercial mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities, and corporate credit-related structured credit instruments such as collateralized debt obligations (“ CDOs Long-Short Credit Long-short credit consists primarily of long-short credit, correlation trades and credit volatility arbitrage. • Long-short credit involves taking long and short positions that reflect relative-value views between, or among, different credits, groups of credits, sectors or indices. The positions in this sub-strategy typically are motivated by fundamental credit views with an appreciation for market technicals. One example of a long-short credit trade is a pairs trade in which the Investment Manager could be long a company’s CDS and short a competitor’s CDS. Not all positions entail related credits; for example, an Investment Manager could construct a portfolio that is long a basket of telecom credits via a CDS and short a basket of financial services credits via a CDS.• Correlation trades involve arbitraging perceived mispricings in baskets or portfolios of credits versus the individual components of the basket, an index or a highly-correlated derivative of the basket. Frequently, the trade is structured to be neutral to credit spread movements in the broad market. The securities used in the arbitrage may include CDOs, synthetic CDOs, bespoke CDS baskets, credit indices, and individual CDSs. Synthetic CDOs are similar to CDOs, except that the credits are included in the pool via CDS contracts instead of cash bonds. Bespoke CDS baskets represent a collection of credits that are selected individually to create a customized hedge of specific portfolio risks. These instruments are less liquid due to their customized nature.• Credit volatility arbitrage typically involves buying and selling options on credit spreads of individual companies or on traded indices. An Investment Manager also could buy and sell volatility across various asset classes. In this strategy, an Investment Manager invests based upon an expectation that the volatility (rather than the price) of the credit asset(s) will either rise or fall. For example, an Investment Manager could sell volatility via options on credit spreads and buy volatility on the same company via the equity markets. Credit volatility arbitrage managers typically invest in liquid instruments including index options and credit default swaps, which allow them to take advantage of discrepancies in the implied volatility of the underlying securities. Distressed Credit Distressed Credit consists of Investment Funds that are explicitly focused on capturing opportunities in distressed situations primarily in corporate capital structures and at times within sovereign credits. This may range from buy-and-hold |
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Emerging Market Credit Emerging Market Credit consists of Investment Funds that opportunistically invest in stressed, distressed and other value-oriented investments in emerging markets on a dedicated basis. Such investments may extend across the corporate capital structure and could periodically include more junior claims. Additionally, emerging market credit investments may at times include sovereign credit or rate positions, both long and short, either as value investment opportunities or as portfolio hedging tools. Specialist Credit Specialist credit consists of a variety of underlying strategies that tend to focus on niche subsets of global credit and fixed income markets. These strategies will typically seek to exploit idiosyncratic mispricings or structural return premia available within the identified market segment. Examples of specialist credit strategies include, but are not limited to, aviation finance, litigation finance, origination platforms and trade finance. Relative Value Strategies Relative value strategies include convertible arbitrage, fixed income arbitrage, option volatility arbitrage and diversified relative value. Convertible Arbitrage Convertible Arbitrage strategies include a variety of strategies involving investments in convertible securities that Investment Managers perceive to be undervalued from a fundamental or volatility perspective. The primary convertible arbitrage strategies include, but are not limited to: long volatility or gamma trading, catalyst/event-driven investing and credit sensitive investing. In general, a position in each strategy involves taking a long position in convertible bonds or convertible preferred shares and short positions in the underlying common stock into which the convertible securities are exchangeable, to isolate the aspect of the security that the Investment Manager believes is mispriced and largely eliminate the effect of directional moves in the underlying stock price. • Long volatility or gamma trading primarily involves taking positions where the Investment Manager perceives that the volatility level of the underlying security implied by the price of the convertible security is too low relative to historical or expected future volatility of the security. The Investment Manager typically will fully hedge the long convertible position by shorting the appropriate amount of the underlying security and generally will make a profit if the underlying security exhibits high volatility. In the trades, the Investment Manager seeks to hedge interest rate and credit risk by using interest rate futures or swaps and credit derivatives. • Catalyst or event-driven investing involves taking positions where the Investment Manager expects that a catalyst or event will cause the implied volatility of the convertible bonds or the actual volatility of stock price changes to increase. Such catalysts may include new product announcements, litigation, management changes, or regulatory approval of a new drug. The Investment Manager typically • Credit sensitive investing involves taking positions where the Investment Manager expects that the financial condition of the underlying company will improve and credit spreads of the convertible bond will narrow. Such a view may be based on improved trends in earnings, refinancing of existing debt |
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or the selling of assets. The credit risk of such a position typically will be largely unhedged. Fixed Income Arbitrage Fixed income arbitrage includes a variety of strategies involving investments in fixed income instruments designed to i) to eliminate or reduce exposure to changes in the level of interest rates; and/or ii) profit from perceived dislocations ( i.e. , anomalous yield differences) between related sets of fixed-income securities. Examples of types of fixed-income arbitrage trades include the following: yield curve arbitrage, swap spreads versus government yield spreads, cash versus futures basis trades, and U.S. government agency debt versus U.S. Treasuries and the trading of agency mortgage derivatives. Fundamental Market Neutral Equit y Fundamental market neutral equities consist primarily of portfolios that exercise a multi-portfolio manager investment approach and maintain a closely beta and factor hedged portfolio in most market environments, with underlying investment decisions primarily based on fundamental security analysis (as opposed to various forms of quantitative analysis). Investment Managers assigned to this category typically have a risk adjusted net equity exposure that will average close to zero over a full market cycle. Option Volatility Arbitrage Option volatility arbitrage managers typically invest in liquid instruments including options and variance swaps in order to trade volatility as an asset class. Investment Managers in this strategy focus on and invest in the volatility levels of an asset (or group of assets) rather than the price of such asset(s). For example, an Investment Manager may not have a defined view as to whether U.S. stocks are more likely to rise or fall; however such Investment Manager may have a clear view that the volatility of U.S. stocks will increase, and may therefore purchase call options on the Chicago Board of Options Exchange Volatility Index (“ VIX ”) which is a volatility index of the S&P 500. Exposures may be long, short, or neutral to the direction of implied volatility. Option volatility arbitrage strategies may be either directional or relative value in nature. Specifically, directional volatility arbitrage strategies seek to express a view on the likely trend of implied volatility across various asset classes including equities, foreign exchange, interest rates and commodities, whereas relative value volatility arbitrage strategies seek to exploit mispricings between multiple options or instruments containing implied volatility. Diversified Relative Value Diversified relative value strategies consist primarily of highly diversified multi-asset class portfolios that may engage in a wide range of investment approaches including, but not limited to convertible arbitrage, fixed income arbitrage and option volatility arbitrage, as well as a range of other strategies. Diversified relative value strategies will typically exhibit a low beta and correlation profile to traditional equity and fixed income benchmarks. Equity Strategies Equity strategies involve the purchase or short sale of equity and equity-linked instruments in global markets. Equity-linked instruments may include the following, all of which offer some form of equity-oriented exposure: equity options, futures, swaps or equity-linked notes. Investment Managers may prefer to invest through these instruments instead of traditional equities if they perceive benefits such as: cost efficiency, enhanced liquidity, potential for limited downside in some cases, potential for excess returns and/or the ability to be used for hedging purposes. An equity Investment Manager may focus on a particular capitalization range ( e.g ., small cap vs. large cap) or a particular industry sector ( e.g ., healthcare, |
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technology, or consumer), may employ a specific investment style ( e.g ., value vs. growth) or may pursue a broad mandate, investing in securities without specific regard for their issuers’ capitalization, sector or geography. Some Investment Managers employ an activist approach whereby they attempt to influence company management to take specific measures to maximize shareholder value, while others may utilize “top-down” macroeconomic analysis to guide capital-allocation strategies and fundamental security selection. An equity Investment Manager typically seeks to capitalize on discrepancies between such Investment Manager’s own evaluation of the intrinsic value of an equity security and assessment of the forward-looking prospects of the issuer of such security, on the one hand, and the consensus view reflected in the market price of such security, on the other hand. Some Investment Managers also seek to extract value by being more trading-oriented or catalyst-driven. To the extent GCMLP-Managed Accounts, including the Master Fund, invest with equity Investment Managers, GCMLP focuses and expects to continue to focus on Investment Managers that primarily employ “hedged equity” investment strategies. A hedged equity Investment Manager typically implements its particular investment strategy by establishing long and short positions in equity or equity-linked instruments. However, while hedged equity Investment Managers typically focus on establishing both long and short positions, some of these Investment Managers focus exclusively or predominately on establishing long or short positions. In addition to selling securities short, an equity Investment Manager may seek to hedge portfolio exposure by using instruments such as exchange-traded funds, equity-linked options, index options and futures. Additionally, an Investment Manager could at times hold a portion of the portfolio in non-equity securities, including, but not limited to, preferred or convertible securities, equity options or at times fixed income instruments, though it is expected these exposures will represent a relatively minor portion of the portfolios’ overall exposure. An equity Investment Manager also could manage risk by adopting “top-down” constraints on leverage, limits on net market exposure, net regional exposure and net sector exposure, position size limits, position stop-loss limits and parameters relating to the number of its positions. Equity sub-strategies include directional equities, low-net equities, fundamental market neutral equities, activism, event-driven strategies, emerging market equity, and specialist equity. Directional Equity Directional equity strategies consist primarily of diversified equity portfolios that engage in a wide range of equity investment approaches. Investment Managers assigned to this category will often have net long equity exposure in excess of 50%. Low-Net EquityLow-net equity strategies consist primarily of diversified generalist equity portfolios that may engage in a wide range of equity investment approaches. Investment Managers assigned to this category typically have a net equity exposure greater than 50% net long in most market conditions and sometimes have net short portfolio exposure. Activism Within the equity strategy, activism primarily relies on the ability of an Investment Manager to acquire a significant economic stake that will most frequently be held in the voting equity instruments of a company to influence management and corporate decisions in such a way as to increase the value of the holdings. Examples include seeking management changes, selling business units, securing special dividends and influencing financial restructurings. Event Driven |
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Event driven strategies include investing in spin-offs, “stubs” (the remaining publicly traded equity left over after a buyout, spin-off or other restructuring), post-restructuring equities, post-bankruptcy equities, risk (merger) arbitrage, equities of companies involved in litigation and recapitalizations. A post-restructuring equity investment involves purchasing the equity of a company that has completed a recent restructuring, most commonly as part of a bankruptcy plan. Spin-offs are subsidiaries of large public companies that are distributed to investors as a means of enhancing shareholder value.Risk arbitrage is a strategy that seeks to capitalize on perceived pricing discrepancies, or “spreads,” in the equity securities of two companies involved in announced corporate transactions, such as mergers, tender or exchange offers, reorganizations, liquidations and recapitalizations. For merger transactions, the strategy typically Investment Managers investing in merger arbitrage seek to capture the spread between the current stock price and the price upon the completion of the deal. In a cash/tender transaction, the Investment Manager seeks to capture the spread between the tender price and the price at which the target company’s stock is trading. Emerging Market Equity Emerging market equity strategies consist of Investment Funds focused specifically on investing in emerging markets. This includes a variety of portfolio construction methodologies and underlying investment techniques. Emerging market investing may differ in the risk/return, liquidity, legal infrastructure and accounting profile of underlying corporate reporting as compared to similar portfolio construction techniques deployed in developed equity markets. Specialist Equity The specialist equity strategy consists largely of niche sector, regional and market focused Investment Funds across a range of portfolio construction approaches. These strategies will typically seek to leverage a narrow, focused investment approach to isolate returns from particular market sectors that are uncorrelated with returns from broader global equity markets, or that generate attractive risk adjusted exposure to a specific market opportunity. Examples of specialist equity strategies include, but are not limited to, healthcare, energy and other sector focused funds, as well as regionally focused equity strategies. Quantitative Strategies Quantitative strategies, in general, primarily use quantitative mathematical models, and in some cases models that employ machine learning, to identify and implement underlying portfolio investments. Such quantitative mathematical models rely on patterns inferred from historical prices and other financial data in evaluating prospective investments. Machine learning techniques involve the use of mathematical models that have the capability to adjust based on information received. These formulas and models are typically developed and implemented using high-powered computers that generate buy or sell indications to assist the Investment Manager in identifying securities and other financial instruments which appear mispriced based on the underlying models. Furthermore, these systems will often implement buy or sell orders directly to brokers. The models used are often highly complex and rely on quantitative (and to a lesser extent, technical) analysis of substantial amounts of real-time and historic data with a view towards identifying pricing discrepancies, inefficiencies and/or anomalies. |
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In addition to the models described above, quantitative strategies may also employ models that focus more on fundamental analysis and research conducted by analysts (rather than computer-based quantitative and technical analysis) and models that combine two or more types of analysis in varying degrees. Fundamental analysis and research explores, among other things, issuers, industries, current market and financial conditions and an understanding of the drivers of change within these areas. Such fundamental analysis and research is expected to be generated by substantial numbers of external investment professionals, data vendors, market participants and/or other consultants and may be augmented by an Investment Manager’s internally generated fundamental analysis. The Investment Manager could apply systematic mathematical formulas to such analysis and research, or use such analysis and research alone, without further quantitative analysis to assist in developing their quantitative investment decision making process. Multi-Strategy Multi-strategy portfolios seek to obtain a broad range of the various strategies discussed herein. As such, multi-strategies portfolios are subject to the risks and limitations of the various underlying strategies that they use. While a multi-strategy portfolio seeks to limit the losses due to any particular underlying strategy via diversification, certain underlying strategies can exhibit highly correlated losses during certain market periods. Macro Strategies Global macro includes a variety of strategies involving investments based on analysis, expectations, and forecasts of macroeconomic trends; government and central bank policies; various macroeconomic and/or geopolitical events; and overall themes impacting regions, countries, sectors, or specific companies and the resulting impact on global capital markets. Specifically, trades within these strategies are typically based on analysis of broad factors including: governmental and central bank policies; political changes; deficit trends; trade imbalances; interest rate trends; commodity price trends; global investor sentiment; and inter-country government relations. Global macro strategies may be diversified in nature trading across a wide range of asset classes globally or could be specialized to focus on regions, or sub-sets of tradeable macroeconomic asset classes, such as currencies or rates.Commodities Strategies Investing in commodities includes a variety of strategies involving investments based on the evaluation of market data and relationships as they pertain to commodity markets, including, but not limited to, energy, agriculture, resources and metals. Investment Managers pursuing these strategies analyze several factors including: supply and demand; legislative and environmental policy changes; trends in growth rates and resource consumption; changes in global monetary and trade policy; geopolitical events; and technical factors. GCMLP considers and evaluates commodity Investment Managers that perform fundamental research and make discretionary trading decisions as well as managers that employ systematic investment processes designed to make investment decisions based on mathematical, algorithmic or technical models. Commodity Investment Managers generally seek to anticipate changes in market fundamentals and prices or identify situations where prices do not properly reflect fundamentals. Commodity Investment Managers typically invest in liquid instruments including exchange traded futures and options. Notwithstanding the foregoing, as described further in this Prospectus, with respect to the Master Fund and the Fund, GCMLP currently relies on the no-action relief afforded by Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC |
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| No. 12-38 and the exception from “commodity pool operator” registration in CFTC Regulation 4.5. Therefore, GCMLP will not be required to deliver a CFTC disclosure document to Members, nor will it be required to provide Members certified annual reports that satisfy the requirements of CFTC regulations generally applicable to registered CPOs. As of the date of this Prospectus, there is no certainty that the Adviser or other parties will be able to rely on these exclusions and exemptions in the future. Any necessary compliance and reporting obligations to comply with additional CFTC regulation may increase Master Fund and Fund expenses or otherwise negatively impact the Master Fund and the Fund.Portfolio Hedging Strategies If conditions warrant, GCMLP generally employs four primary hedging strategies: dedicated short equity, dedicated short credit, volatility protection and opportunistic hedging. Dedicated Short Equity Short equity strategies involve the short sale of equity and equity-linked instruments in global markets that would profit in the event of a decrease in the price of such securities. A dedicated short equity Investment Manager focuses on a particular capitalization range ( e.g e.g. i.e., “top-down” macroeconomic analysis to guide their capital-allocation strategies and/or fundamental security selection. Investment Managers that pursue this strategy typically seek to capitalize on discrepancies between such Investment Manager’s own evaluation of the intrinsic value of an equity security and assessment of the forward-looking prospects of the issuer of such security and the consensus view reflected in the market price of such security. Some Investment Managers also may seek to extract value by being more trading-oriented or catalyst driven.Dedicated Short Credit Dedicated short credit involves shorting individual investment-grade or high-yield credits that exhibit either perceived anomalous pricing relative to similar credits or perceived weakening fundamentals with a high probability of credit deterioration. The short position typically Volatility Protection Volatility protection strategies are portfolio hedging strategies that are designed to provide convex payoffs during extreme market crises. Volatility protection strategies generally invest in highly liquid financial derivatives and other securities that are expected to be profitable when global capital markets decline precipitously and volatility rises sharply. The generic types of volatility protection trades include, but are not limited to, the following: equity index puts and put spreads at various strike points, credit index protection positions at various strike points, volatility based securities such as variance swaps and Chicago Board of Trade Volatility Index options, directional currency positions, and directional commodity positions. While volatility protection strategies are expected to provide positive returns when global capital markets decline significantly, they are a form of portfolio “insurance” and, as such, are expected to perform poorly, and could potentially lose all or substantially all capital allocated to them, when global capital markets are stable or upward-trending while providing positive returns when global capital markets decline significantly. |
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| Modifications of GCMLP’s Investment Process |
Opportunistic Hedging Opportunistic hedging strategies may include a variety of short term positions that have a positive expected rate of return in an environment where we would expect traditional equity or credit market risk factors to perform poorly. Relative to the other portfolio hedging strategies outlined herein, opportunistic hedges are more likely to target discrete trades or risk factors, rather than shorting market benchmarks or purchasing derivative protection on a benchmark, for example through futures or swaps on such benchmarks. The discussion above summarizes GCMLP’s investment process in effect as of the date of this Prospectus. GCMLP has modified its investment process from time to time in the past and expects to continue to modify its investment process from time to time in the future. Such modifications may be material and may be made without notice to investors in the Master Fund. | |
| Direct Investments and Hedging Transactions |
GCMLP may from time to time invest the Master Fund’s assets directly in the types of financial instruments in which Investment Funds invest (“ Direct Investments e.g. e.g. |
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| General |
This section discusses the types of investments generally made by the Investment Managers and the related risk factors with respect to such investments. The impact of a particular risk on an Investment Fund managed by an Investment Manager will impact the Master Fund and, in turn, have a corresponding impact on the Fund. All securities investments risk the loss of capital. The value of the Fund’s total net assets should be expected to fluctuate based on the fluctuation in the value of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests. To the extent that the portfolio of an Investment Manager is concentrated in securities of a single issuer or issuers in a single industry, the risk of any investment decision is increased. An Investment Manager’s use of leverage is likely to cause the value of the Investment Manager’s portfolio to appreciate or depreciate at a greater rate than if leverage were not used. | |
| Equity Securities |
Investment Managers’ investment portfolios may include long and short positions in common stocks, preferred stocks and convertible securities of U.S. and foreign issuers. Investment Managers also may invest in depositary receipts relating to foreign securities. Investment Funds that invest in securities issued by U.S. entities with substantial foreign operations may be subject to risks relating to economic, political or regulatory conditions in such foreign countries. ( See Investment Managers may invest in equity securities without restriction as to market capitalization, such as those issued by smaller capitalization companies, including micro cap companies. The prices of the securities of smaller companies may be subject to more abrupt or erratic market movements than larger, more established companies, because these securities typically are traded in lower volume and the issuers typically are more subject to changes in earnings and prospects. Investment Managers may purchase securities in all available securities trading markets. | |
| Common Stocks . pro rata | ||
| Preferred Stocks . | ||
| Convertible Securities . within a | ||
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| particular period of time at a specified price or formula. A convertible security entitles the holder to receive interest that is generally paid or accrued on debt or a dividend that is paid or accrued on preferred stock until the convertible security matures or is redeemed, converted or exchanged. Convertible securities have unique investment characteristics, in that they generally: (i) have higher yields than common stocks, but lower yields than comparable non-convertible securities; (ii) are less subject to fluctuation in value than the underlying common stock due to their fixed-income characteristics; and (iii) provide the potential for capital appreciation if the market price of the underlying common stock increases.The value of a convertible security is a function of its “investment value” (determined by its yield in comparison with the yields of other securities of comparable maturity and quality that do not have a conversion privilege) and its “conversion value” (the security’s worth, at market value, if converted into the underlying common stock). The investment value of a convertible security is influenced by changes in interest rates, with investment value declining as interest rates increase and increasing as interest rates decline. Recent and potential future changes in government monetary policy may affect the level of interest rates. The credit standing of the issuer and other factors may also have an effect on the convertible security’s investment value. The conversion value of a convertible security is determined by the market price of the underlying common stock. If the conversion value is low relative to the investment value, the price of the convertible security is governed principally by its investment value. Generally, the conversion value decreases as the convertible security approaches maturity. To the extent the market price of the underlying common stock approaches or exceeds the conversion price, the price of the convertible security will be increasingly influenced by its conversion value. A convertible security generally will sell at a premium over its conversion value by the extent to which investors place value on the right to acquire the underlying common stock while holding a fixed-income security. Certain countries have experienced negative interest rates on deposits, and debt instruments traded at negative yields. A negative interest rate policy is an unconventional central bank monetary policy tool where nominal target interest rates are set with a negative value (i.e., below zero percent), which is intended to facilitate self-sustaining growth in the local economy. For example, if a bank charges negative interest, a depositor must pay the bank fees to keep money with the bank instead of receiving interest on deposits. There is a risk that negative interest rates will become more prevalent among non-U.S. issuers or even among U.S. issuers.A convertible security may be subject to redemption at the option of the issuer at a price established in the convertible security’s governing instrument. If a convertible security held by an Investment Fund is called for redemption, the Investment Fund will be required to permit the issuer to redeem the security, convert it into the underlying common stock or sell it to a third party. Any of these actions could have an adverse effect on an Investment Fund’s ability to achieve its investment objective, which, in turn, could result in losses to the Master Fund. | ||
| Bonds and Other Fixed-Income Securities |
Investment Managers may invest in bonds and other fixed-income securities. Investment Managers will invest in these securities when they offer opportunities for capital appreciation and may also invest in these securities for temporary defensive purposes and to maintain liquidity. | |
| Fixed-income securities include, among other securities: bonds, notes and debentures issued by corporations; debt securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or one of its agencies or instrumentalities (“ U.S. Government | ||
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| Securities i.e. i.e. (COVID-19) pandemic and the negative impact on tax revenues has adversely affected the financial condition of many states and political subdivisions. The effects of coronavirus (COVID-19) and other future similar pandemics could affect the ability of states and political subdivisions to make payments on debt obligations when due and could adversely impact the value of their bonds, which could also negatively impact the performance of the Investment Funds. | ||
| In addition, the mortgage-backed securities market has been and may continue to be negatively affected by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. The U.S. government, its agencies or its instrumentalities may implement initiatives in response to the economic impacts of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic applicable to federally backed mortgage loans. These initiatives could involve forbearance of mortgage payments or suspension or restrictions of foreclosures and evictions. The Fund cannot predict with certainty the extent to which such initiatives or the economic effects of the pandemic generally may affect rates of prepayment or default or adversely impact the value of the Fund’s investments in securities in the mortgage industry as a whole. | ||
| Investment Managers may invest in both investment grade and non-investment grade debt securities. Investment grade debt securities are securities that have received a rating from at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization (“NRSRO Non-investment grade debt securities (typically called “junk bonds”) are securities that have received a rating from a NRSRO of below investment grade or have been given no rating, and are considered by the NRSRO to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal. Non-investment grade debt securities in the lowest rating categories may involve a substantial risk of default or may be in default. Adverse changes in economic conditions or developments regarding the individual issuer are more likely to cause price volatility and weaken the capacity of the issuers of non-investment grade debt securities to make principal and interest payments than is the case for higher grade debt securities. An economic downturn affecting an issuer of non-investment grade debt securities may result in an increased incidence of default. In addition, the market for lower grade debt securities may be thinner and less active than for higher grade debt securities. | ||
| The longer a fixed-income security’s duration, the more sensitive it will be to interest rate fluctuations. Similarly, longer average portfolio duration will also cause the Fund or an Investment Fund to be more sensitive to interest rate fluctuations. Duration is a measure used to determine the sensitivity of a security’s price to changes in interest rates that incorporates a security’s yield, coupon, final maturity, and call features, among other characteristics. All other points remaining equal, for each one percentage point increase in interest rates, the value of a portfolio of fixed-income investments would generally be expected to decline by one percent for every year of the portfolio’s average duration above zero. For example, the price of a bond fund with an average duration of eight | ||
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| years would be expected to fall approximately 8% if interest rates rose by one percentage point. The maturity of a security, another commonly used measure of price sensitivity, measures only the time until final payment is due, whereas duration takes into account the pattern of all payments of interest and principal on a security over time, including how these payments are affected by prepayments and by changes in interest rates, as well as the time until an interest rate is reset (in the case of variable-rate securities). Duration measures sensitivity more accurately than maturity because it takes into account the time value of cash flows generated over the life of a debt security. The CDOs in which Investment Managers may participate involve substantial organizational, syndication and ancillary fees. An investment in CDOs will frequently be subordinate in right of payment to other securities sold by the CDO and will not be readily marketable. Depending upon the default rate on the collateral of the CDO, substantial losses may be incurred on CDO investments. CDO structures are complex and evolving; investments in CDOs may be subject to a number of yet unanticipated risks. The CDO market experienced significant disruptions in 2008-2009 due to the sharply increased default rates on sub-prime and other mortgages. The economic conditions caused by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic may have similar effects. Similar disruptions may recur. | ||
| Master Limited Partnership (“MLP”) Risk |
Investing in MLPs involves certain risks related to investing in the underlying assets of MLPs and risks associated with pooled investment vehicles. MLPs holding credit-related investments are subject to interest-rate risk and the risk of default on payment obligations by debt securities. In addition, investments in the debt and securities of MLPs involve certain other risks, including risks related to limited control and limited rights to vote on matters affecting MLPs, risks related to potential conflicts of interest between an MLP and the MLP’s general partner, cash flow risks, dilution risks and risks related to the general partner’s right to require unit-holders to sell their common units at an undesirable time or price. An Investment Fund’s investments in MLPs may be subject to legal and other restrictions on resale or may be less liquid than publicly traded securities. Certain MLP securities may trade in lower volumes due to their smaller capitalizations, and may be subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements and may lack sufficient market liquidity to enable the Investment Fund to effect sales at an advantageous time or without a substantial drop in price. If an Investment Fund is one of the largest investors in an MLP, it may be more difficult for the Investment Fund to buy and sell significant amounts of such investments without an unfavorable impact on prevailing market prices. Larger purchases or sales of MLP investments by an Investment Fund in a short period of time may cause abnormal movements in the market price of these investments. As a result, these investments may be difficult to dispose of at an advantageous price when the fund desires to do so. During periods of interest rate volatility, these investments may not provide attractive returns, which may adversely impact the overall performance of an Investment Fund, and thus the Fund. MLPs in which an Investment Fund may invest operate oil, natural gas, petroleum, or other facilities within the energy sector. As a result, an Investment Fund will be susceptible to adverse economic, environmental, or regulatory occurrences impacting the energy sector. | |
| LIBOR Discontinuation Risk |
Many debt securities, derivatives and other financial instruments may have previously utilized the London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) as the reference or benchmark rate for variable interest rate calculations. However, following allegations of manipulation and concerns regarding liquidity, the UK Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) announced that LIBOR would be discontinued on June 30, 2023. The FCA elected to require the ICE Benchmark Administration Limited (the “ICE”), the administrator of LIBOR, to continue publishing a subset of LIBOR settings on a “synthetic” basis. The synthetic |
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| publication of the 1-, 3- and 6-month U.S. Dollar LIBOR tenors will continue until September 30, 2024, using an unrepresentative “synthetic” methodology. There is a risk these synthetic LIBOR maturities may cease to be published before September 30, 2024. Additionally, the 3-month synthetic sterling LIBOR ceased publication on March 28, 2024. Although the transition process away from LIBOR has become increasingly well-defined in advance of the discontinuation dates, the impact on certain debt securities, derivatives and other financial instruments remains uncertain. Market participants have adopted alternative rates such as Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) or otherwise amended financial instruments referencing LIBOR to include fallback provisions and other measures that contemplated the discontinuation of LIBOR or other similar market disruption events, but neither the effect of the transition process nor the viability of such measures is fully known. To facilitate the transition of legacy derivatives contracts referencing LIBOR, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. launched a protocol to incorporate fallback provisions. There is no assurance that the composition or characteristics of any alternative reference rate will be similar to or produce the same value or economic equivalence as LIBOR or that it will have the same volume or liquidity as did LIBOR prior to its discontinuance or unavailability, which may affect the value or liquidity or return on certain investments and result in costs incurred in connection with closing out positions and entering into new trades. Certain replacement rates to LIBOR, such as SOFR, which is a broad measure of secured overnight U.S. Treasury repo rates, are materially different from LIBOR, and changes in the applicable spread for financial instruments transitioning away from LIBOR will need to be made to accommodate the differences. | ||
| Foreign Securities and Forward Currency Exchange Contracts |
Investment Managers may invest in securities of foreign issuers and in depositary receipts, such as American Depositary Receipts (“ ADRs ”), that represent indirect interests in securities of foreign issuers. Foreign securities in which Investment Managers may invest may be listed on foreign securities exchanges or traded in foreign over-the-counter markets. Investments in foreign securities are affected by risk factors generally not thought to be present in the United States. These factors include, but are not limited to, the following: varying custody, brokerage and settlement practices; difficulty in pricing; less public information about issuers of foreign securities; less governmental regulation and supervision over the issuance and trading of securities than in the United States; the unavailability of financial information regarding the foreign issuer, including foreign government issuers, or the difficulty of interpreting financial information prepared under foreign accounting standards; less liquidity and more volatility in foreign securities markets; the possibility of expropriation or nationalization; the imposition of withholding and other taxes; adverse political, social or diplomatic developments; limitations on the movement of funds or other assets of an Investment Fund between different countries; difficulties in invoking legal process abroad and enforcing contractual obligations; and the difficulty of assessing economic trends in foreign countries. Investments in foreign issuers may require significant government approvals under corporate, securities, exchange control, non-U.S. investment and other similar laws and regulations and may require financing and structuring alternatives and exit strategies that differ substantially from those commonly used in the United States. Moreover, governmental issuers of foreign securities may be unwilling to repay principal and interest due, and may require that the conditions for payment be renegotiated. Investment in foreign countries also involves higher brokerage and custodian expenses than does investment in domestic securities. Foreign securities may be subject to foreign taxes. |
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| Other risks of investing in foreign securities include changes in currency exchange rates (in the case of securities that are not denominated in U.S. dollars) and currency exchange control regulations or other foreign or U.S. laws or restrictions, or devaluations of foreign currencies. A decline in the exchange rate would reduce the value of certain of an Investment Fund’s foreign currency denominated portfolio securities irrespective of the performance of the underlying investment. In addition, an Investment Fund may incur costs in connection with conversion between various currencies. The foregoing risks may be greater in emerging industrialized and less developed countries. Additionally, the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act (HFCAA) could cause securities of foreign companies, including American depositary receipts, to be delisted from U.S. stock exchanges if the companies do not allow the U.S. government to oversee the auditing of their financial information. Although the requirements of the HFCAA apply to securities of all foreign issuers, the SEC has thus far limited its enforcement efforts to securities of Chinese companies. If securities are delisted, a fund’s ability to transact in such securities will be impaired, and the liquidity and market price of the securities may decline. The fund may also need to seek other markets in which to transact in such securities, which could increase the fund’s costs. An Investment Manager may enter into forward currency exchange contracts (“ forward contracts ”) for hedging purposes and non-hedging purposes to pursue its investment objective. Forward contracts are transactions involving an Investment Fund’s obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency at a future date at a specified price. Forward contracts may be used by an Investment Fund for hedging purposes to protect against uncertainty in the level of future foreign currency exchange rates, such as when an Investment Fund anticipates purchasing or selling a foreign security. This technique would allow the Investment Fund to “lock in” the U.S. dollar price of the security. Forward contracts may also be used to attempt to protect the value of an Investment Fund’s existing holdings of foreign securities. There may be, however, imperfect correlation between an Investment Fund’s foreign securities holdings and the forward contracts entered into with respect to those holdings. Forward contracts may also be used for non-hedging purposes to pursue an Investment Fund’s investment objective, such as when an Investment Manager anticipates that particular foreign currencies will appreciate or depreciate in value, even though securities denominated in those currencies are not then held in the Investment Fund’s investment portfolio. There is no requirement that the Investment Funds hedge all or any portion of their exposure to foreign currency risks. | ||
| Emerging Markets |
Investments in the securities of issuers based in countries with emerging-market economies are subject to greater levels of risk and uncertainty than investments in more-developed foreign markets, since emerging-market securities may present market, credit, currency, liquidity, legal, political, and other risks greater than, or in addition to, the risks of investing in developed foreign countries. These risks include: high currency exchange-rate fluctuations; increased risk of default (including both government and private issuers); greater social, economic, and political uncertainty and instability (including the risk of war); more substantial governmental involvement in the economy; less governmental supervision and regulation of the securities markets and participants in those markets, possibly allowing for additional market manipulation concerns; controls on foreign investment and limitations on repatriation of invested capital and on a fund’s ability to exchange local currencies for U.S. dollars; unavailability of currency hedging techniques in certain emerging-market countries; the fact that companies in emerging-market countries may be newly organized, smaller, and less seasoned; the difference in, or lack of, recordkeeping, accounting, auditing and financial reporting requirements or standards, which may result in |
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| the unavailability of material information about issuers; different clearance and settlement procedures, which may be unable to keep pace with the volume of securities transactions or otherwise make it difficult to engage in such transactions; difficulties in obtaining and/or enforcing legal judgments against non-U.S. companies and non-U.S. persons, including company directors and officers, in foreign jurisdictions; and significantly smaller market capitalizations of emerging-market issuers. In addition, shareholders of emerging market issuers, such as the fund, often have limited rights and few practical remedies in emerging markets. Finally, the risks associated with investments in emerging markets often are significant, and vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction and company to company. | ||
| Leverage |
Borrowing by Investment Funds and/or the Master Fund for investment purposes (a practice known as “leverage”) is a speculative practice that involves certain risks. Some or all of the Investment Managers may make margin purchases of securities, which means they will borrow money from brokers and banks for investment purposes. | |
| Trading equity securities on margin generally involves an initial cash requirement representing at least 50% of the underlying security’s value with respect to transactions in U.S. markets and varying (typically lower) percentages with respect to transactions in foreign markets. Borrowings to purchase equity securities typically will be secured by the pledge of those securities. The financing of securities purchases may also be effected through reverse repurchase agreements with banks, brokers and other financial institutions. | ||
| As a general matter, the banks and dealers that provide financing to the Master Fund or an Investment Fund can apply essentially discretionary margin, haircut, financing, security and valuation policies. Changes by banks and dealers in such financing policies, or the imposition of other credit limitations or restrictions, whether due to market circumstances or governmental, regulatory or judicial action, may result in large margin calls, loss of financing, forced liquidation of positions at disadvantageous prices, termination of swap and repurchase agreements and cross-defaults to agreements with dealers. Any such effects may be exacerbated if such limitations or restrictions are imposed suddenly and/or by multiple market participants at or about the same time. The imposition of such limitations or restrictions could compel the Master Fund or an Investment Fund to liquidate all or part of its portfolio at disadvantageous prices. As such, the Master Fund could be impacted by an Investment Fund’s borrowing. | ||
| Although leverage will increase investment return if an Investment Fund earns a greater return on the investments purchased with borrowed funds than it pays for the use of those funds, the use of leverage will decrease investment return if an Investment Fund fails to earn as much on investments purchased with borrowed funds as it pays for the use of those funds. The use of leverage will therefore magnify the volatility of changes in the value of an investment in the Investment Funds. In the event that an Investment Fund’s equity or debt instruments decline in value, the Investment Fund could be subject to a “margin call” or “collateral call,” pursuant to which the Investment Fund must either deposit additional collateral with the lender or suffer mandatory liquidation of the pledged securities to compensate for the decline in value. In the event of a sudden, precipitous drop in value of an Investment Fund’s assets, the Investment Manager might not be able to liquidate assets quickly enough to pay off its borrowing. Money borrowed for leveraging will be subject to interest costs that may or may not be recovered by return on the securities purchased. The Investment Manager also may be required to maintain minimum average balances in connection with its borrowings or to pay a commitment or other fee | ||
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| to maintain a line of credit; either of these requirements would increase the cost of borrowing over the stated interest rate. | ||
| In addition to the Investment Funds, the Master Fund is also authorized to borrow. The Master Fund may borrow money for certain purposes, such as making payments to Investment Funds in accordance with the Master Fund’s investment commitments, repurchasing Shares and paying fees and expenses of the Master Fund, subject to any limitations imposed by applicable law. The 1940 Act requires an investment company to satisfy an asset coverage requirement of 300% of its indebtedness, including amounts borrowed, measured at the time the investment company incurs the indebtedness (the “ Asset Coverage Requirement one-third the value of its total assets (including such indebtedness). Since the Investment Funds generally will not be registered under the 1940 Act, these limits generally would not apply to the Investment Funds and, therefore, the Master Fund’s portfolio may be exposed to the risk of highly leveraged investment programs of certain Investment Funds and the volatility of the value of Shares may be great. | ||
| During periods of “credit squeezes” or “flights to quality,” the market for credit instruments, other than U.S. Treasury bills, can become substantially reduced. This poses a particular risk that leveraged positions held by Investment Funds may need to be sold at discounts to fair value in order to meet margin calls. Particularly in the case of strategies that leverage positions in less liquid instruments, if an Investment Fund implementing such strategies is forced to sell positions at a discount, such Investment Fund’s dealers may reduce the value of such Investment Fund’s outstanding positions, resulting in additional margin calls as loan to value triggers are hit under prime brokerage and swap agreements. In addition to the risk of discounted sales of assets made to meet margin calls causing a reduction in the dealer values of similar assets held by an Investment Fund and further margin calls, there is the risk that the need to meet margin calls could lead to material reductions in an Investment Fund’s holdings. Similarly, “funds of funds” may have to redeem from the more liquid strategies to fund their own redemptions, materially adversely affecting the performance of such strategies. Selling liquid assets to fund margin calls on illiquid assets increases the illiquidity of an Investment Fund’s overall portfolio—potentially materially increasing the risk of major, if not total, losses. The availability of leverage, both to Investment Funds and to funds investing in Investment Funds, was materially reduced during the market disruptions of 2008–2009, and its availability continues to be restricted. This trend may continue. In addition, the general availability of leverage may be limited by regulation. An ongoing reduction and/or increase in the cost of leverage could materially diminish the profit potential of many of the strategies and/or sub-strategies in which the Master Fund invests. | ||
| The use of leverage may increase the opportunities for gain, but also may substantially increase the risks of volatility and loss. | ||
| Short Sales |
Some or all of the Investment Managers may attempt to limit an Investment Fund’s exposure to a possible market decline in the value of its portfolio securities through short sales of securities that the Investment Manager believes possess volatility characteristics similar to those being hedged. In addition, the Investment Managers may use short sales for non-hedging purposes to pursue their investment objectives. For example, an Investment Fund may “short” a security of a company if, in the Investment Manager’s view, the security is over-valued in relation to the issuer’s prospects for earnings growth. | |
| To effect a short sale, the Investment Manager will borrow a security from a brokerage firm to make delivery to the buyer. The Investment Fund is then | ||
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| obligated to replace the borrowed security by purchasing it at the market price at the time of replacement. The price at such time may be more or less than the price at which the security was sold by the Investment Manager, which would result in a loss or gain, respectively. These techniques are speculative and, in certain circumstances, can substantially increase the impact of adverse price movements on an Investment Fund’s portfolio. A short sale of a security involves the risk of an unlimited increase in the market price of the security, which could result in an inability to cover the short position and thus a theoretically unlimited loss. There can be no assurance that securities necessary to cover a short position will be available for purchase. | ||
| Another risk is that the short seller may be forced to unwind a short sale at a disadvantageous time for any number of reasons. For example, although a short seller may attempt to mitigate losses by replacing the securities sold short before the market price has increased significantly, under adverse market conditions the short seller might have to sell portfolio securities that the short seller otherwise would have retained in order to raise the capital necessary to replace the securities sold short. In addition, a lender may call back a security at a time when the market for such security is illiquid or additional securities are not available to borrow, forcing the short seller to cover the short sale, by repurchasing the underlying security, at a price that results in a significant loss. | ||
| An Investment Fund may also make short sales against-the-box, against-the-box, in-kind and amount to the securities sold short (or securities convertible or exchangeable into those securities) and will be required to hold those securities while the short sale is outstanding. An Investment Fund will incur transaction costs, including interest expenses, in connection with opening, maintaining and closing short sales against-the-box. | ||
| From time to time, certain traders may attempt to profit by forcing short sellers to cover their short positions. These traders make large purchases of a security that has been sold short with the objective of driving up the price of such security through their purchases in the expectation that short sellers will seek to limit their losses by buying such security in the open market for return to their lenders, thereby driving the price of such security even higher: a so-called “short squeeze.” For example, in January 2021, a short squeeze of the stock of the American video game retailer GameStop and other securities took place, causing major financial consequences and substantial losses for short sellers, including a number of hedge funds and funds of hedge funds. The short squeeze was triggered by users of various social media sites with the apparent intent of driving up the price of GameStop and other securities for reasons unrelated to the underlying fundamentals of the issuers. There can be no assurance that other coordinated and targeted short squeezes such as those that occurred in January 2021 will not happen again in the future. | ||
| Reverse Repurchase Agreements |
Reverse repurchase agreements involve a sale of a security by an Investment Fund to a bank or securities dealer and the Investment Fund’s simultaneous agreement to repurchase that security for a fixed price (reflecting a market rate of interest) on a specific date. These transactions involve a risk that the other party to a reverse repurchase agreement will be unable or unwilling to complete the transaction as scheduled, which may result in losses to the Investment Fund. Reverse repurchase transactions are a form of leverage, which may also increase the volatility of an Investment Fund’s investment portfolio and therefore increase fluctuations in the Investment Fund’s net asset value. |
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| Foreign Currency Transactions |
The Investment Managers may engage in foreign currency transactions for a variety of purposes, including to fix in U.S. dollars, between trade and settlement date, the value of a security an Investment Fund has agreed to buy or sell, or to hedge the U.S. dollar value of securities the Investment Fund already owns, particularly if the Investment Manager expects a decrease in the value of the currency in which the foreign security is denominated. Foreign currency transactions may involve, for example, the purchase of foreign currencies for U.S. dollars or the maintenance of short positions in foreign currencies, which would involve an Investment Fund agreeing to exchange an amount of a currency it did not currently own for another currency at a future date in anticipation of a decline in the value of the currency sold relative to the currency the Investment Fund contracted to receive in the exchange. An Investment Manager’s success in these transactions will depend principally on its ability to predict accurately the future exchange rates between foreign currencies and the U.S. dollar. | |
| Money Market Instruments |
Each Investment Manager may invest, for defensive purposes or otherwise, some or all of an Investment Fund’s assets in high quality fixed-income securities, money market instruments, and money market mutual funds, or hold cash or cash equivalents in such amounts as the Investment Manager deems appropriate under the circumstances. Pending allocation of the offering proceeds and thereafter, from time to time, the Fund and the Master Fund also may invest in these instruments. Money market instruments are high quality, short-term fixed-income obligations, which generally have remaining maturities of one year or less, and may include U.S. Government Securities, commercial paper, certificates of deposit and bankers’ acceptances issued by domestic branches of United States banks that are members of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and repurchase agreements. | |
| Purchasing Initial Public Offerings |
The Investment Managers may purchase securities of companies in initial public offerings or shortly thereafter. Special risks associated with these securities may include a limited number of shares available for trading, unseasoned trading, lack of investor knowledge of the issuer, and limited operating history. These factors may contribute to substantial price volatility for the shares of these companies and, thus, for Shares. The limited number of shares available for trading in some initial public offerings may make it more difficult for an Investment Fund to buy or sell significant amounts of shares without an unfavorable impact on prevailing market prices. In addition, some companies in initial public offerings are involved in relatively new industries or lines of business, which may not be widely understood by investors. Some of these companies may be undercapitalized or regarded as developmental stage companies, without revenues or operating income, or the near-term prospects of achieving them. | |
| Special Investment Instruments and Techniques |
The Investment Managers may utilize a variety of special investment instruments and techniques (a number of which are described below) to hedge the portfolios of the Investment Funds against various risks (such as changes in interest rates or other factors that affect security values) or for non-hedging purposes to pursue an Investment Fund’s investment objective. These strategies may be executed through derivative transactions. The instruments the Investment Managers may use and the particular manner in which they may be used may change over time as new instruments and techniques are developed or regulatory changes occur. Certain of the special investment instruments and techniques that the Investment Managers may use are speculative and involve a high degree of risk, particularly in the context of non-hedging transactions.Derivatives. Some or all of the Investment Managers may invest in, or enter into financial instruments which derive their performance, at least in part, from the |
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performance of an underlying asset, index or interest rate (“Derivatives”). Derivatives can be volatile and involve various types and degrees of risk, depending upon the characteristics of the particular Derivative and the portfolio as a whole. Derivatives permit an Investment Manager to increase or decrease the level of risk of an investment portfolio, or change the character of the risk, to which an investment portfolio is exposed in much the same way as the Investment Manager can increase or decrease the level of risk, or change the character of the risk, of an investment portfolio by making investments in specific securities. | ||
Derivatives | ||
Uncertainties remain as to how the markets for certain derivative instruments will perform during periods of unusual price volatility or instability, market illiquidity or credit distress. A number of these markets have a limited history of operating during a period of “market crisis.” Certain market conditions have, for example, made it impossible for an Investment Manager to liquidate derivative positions to limit losses or recognize profits or to maintain such positions to continue to hedge other market exposures. If an Investment Manager invests in Derivatives at inopportune times or judges market conditions incorrectly, such investments may lower the Investment Fund’s return or result in a loss. An Investment Fund also could experience losses if Derivatives are poorly correlated with its other investments, or if an Investment Manager is unable to liquidate its position because of an illiquid secondary market. The market for many Derivatives is, or suddenly can become, illiquid. Changes in liquidity may result in significant, rapid and unpredictable changes in the prices for Derivatives. Regulatory changes in Derivatives markets could impact the cost of or an Investment Fund’s ability to engage in derivative transactions. | ||
Many derivative instruments are traded not on exchanges but through an informal network of banks and dealers that have no obligation to make markets in such instruments. The trading of over-the-counter | ||
The U.S. Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (including the regulations promulgated and to be promulgated thereunder, “ Dodd-Frank Act over-the-counter | ||
The Dodd-Frank Act requires that a substantial portion of over-the-counter | ||
The Dodd-Frank Act significantly expanded the CFTC’s authority to impose position limits with respect to futures contracts, options on futures contracts, swaps that are economically equivalent to futures or options on futures, swaps that are traded on a regulated exchange and certain swaps that perform a significant price discovery function. In October 2020, the CFTC adopted a new position limits rule (“ New Position Limits Rule (16) non-legacy contracts and associated referenced contracts (including economically equivalent swaps) to become subject to federal position limits and (iii) requires Exchanges to share additional trading data with the CFTC. The requirements of the New Position Limits Rule are subject to additional phase-in periods. The CFTC also recently adopted position limits on certain physical commodity swaps. Effective January 1, 2023, the size or duration of positions available to an Investment Fund may be further severely limited, such | ||
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that the Investment Fund could be required to liquidate positions or constrain the implementation of trading instructions. | ||
The CFTC and the U.S. futures exchanges’ rules require “aggregation” of positions across multiple accounts for which a person directly or indirectly controls trading or holds a 10% or greater ownership interest, as well as the positions of any other entity with whom the person trades pursuant to an express or implied agreement. Aggregation is not done on a pro rata | ||
All trading accounts owned or managed by an Investment Manager and its principals are combined for the purposes of applying the speculative position limits established by the CFTC and the Exchanges. With respect to trading in financial instruments subject to position limits, the Investment Manager may reduce the size of the positions that would otherwise be taken in such financial instruments and may not trade certain financial instruments in order to avoid exceeding such limits. Such modification, if required, could adversely affect the operations and profitability of the Investment Funds. In the event that an Investment Manager is required to modify positions as a result of reaching speculative position limits, such liquidation would be done on a pro rata | ||
Options and Futures. so-called “synthetic” options or other derivative instruments written by broker-dealers or other permissible financial intermediaries. Options transactions may be effected on securities exchanges or in the over-the-counter over-the-counter, Over-the-counter | ||
The Investment Managers may purchase call and put options on specific securities, and may write and sell covered or uncovered call and put options for hedging purposes and non-hedging purposes to pursue their investment objectives. A put option gives the purchaser of the option the right to sell, and obligates the writer to buy, the underlying security at a stated exercise price at any time prior to the expiration of the option. Similarly, a call option gives the purchaser of the option the right to buy, and obligates the writer to sell, the underlying security at a stated exercise price at any time prior to the expiration of the option. A covered call option is a call option with respect to which an Investment Fund owns the underlying security. The sale of such an option exposes an Investment Fund during the term of the option to possible loss of opportunity to realize appreciation in the market price of the underlying security or to possible continued holding of a security that might otherwise have been sold to protect against depreciation in the market price of the security. A covered put option is a put option with respect to which cash or liquid securities have been placed in a segregated account on an Investment Fund’s books or with the Investment Fund’s custodian to fulfill the obligation undertaken. The sale of such an option exposes an Investment Fund | ||
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during the term of the option to a decline in price of the underlying security while depriving the Investment Fund of the opportunity to invest the segregated assets. | ||
An Investment Manager may close out a position when writing options by purchasing an option on the same security with the same exercise price and expiration date as the option that it has previously written on the security. An Investment Fund will realize a profit or loss if the amount paid to purchase an option is less or more, as the case may be, than the amount received from the sale thereof. To close out a position as a purchaser of an option, an Investment Manager would ordinarily make a similar “closing sale transaction,” which involves liquidating the underlying position by selling the option previously purchased, although the Investment Manager would be entitled to exercise the option should it deem it advantageous to do so. | ||
The Investment Funds may use derivatives that are subject to regulation by the CFTC. However, with respect to the Fund and the Master Fund, GCMLP currently relies on the no-action relief afforded by CFTC Staff Letter No. 12-38 and the exception from “commodity pool operator” registration in CFTC Regulation 4.5. Therefore, GCMLP will not be required to deliver a CFTC disclosure document to Members, nor will it be required to provide Members certified annual reports that satisfy the requirements of CFTC regulations generally applicable to registered CPOs. As of the date of this Prospectus, there is no certainty that the Adviser or other parties will be able to rely on these exclusions and exemptions in the future. Any necessary compliance and reporting obligations to comply with additional CFTC regulation may increase Master Fund and Fund expenses or otherwise negatively impact the Master Fund and the Fund. | ||
The Investment Managers may enter into futures contracts in U.S. domestic markets or on exchanges located outside the United States. Foreign markets may offer advantages such as trading opportunities or arbitrage possibilities not available in the United States. Foreign markets, however, may have greater risk potential than domestic markets. For example, some foreign exchanges are principal markets so that no common clearing facility exists and an investor may look only to the broker for performance of the contract. In addition, any profits an Investment Manager might realize in trading could be eliminated by adverse changes in the exchange rate, or an Investment Fund could incur losses as a result of those changes. Transactions on foreign exchanges may include both commodities which are traded on domestic exchanges and those which are not. Unlike trading on domestic commodity exchanges, trading on foreign commodity exchanges is not regulated by the CFTC. | ||
Engaging in these transactions involves risk of loss to the Investment Funds which could adversely affect the value of the Master Fund’s net assets and result in a loss to the Fund. No assurance can be given that a liquid market will exist for any particular futures contract at any particular time. Many futures exchanges and boards of trade limit the amount of fluctuation permitted in futures contract prices during a single trading day. Once the daily limit has been reached in a particular contract, no trades may be made that day at a price beyond that limit or trading may be suspended for specified periods during the trading day. Futures contract prices could move to the limit for several consecutive trading days with little or no trading, thereby preventing prompt liquidation of futures positions and potentially subjecting the Investment Funds to substantial losses. | ||
Successful use of futures also is subject to the Investment Manager’s ability to predict correctly movements in the direction of the relevant market, and, to the extent the transaction is entered into for hedging purposes, to ascertain the appropriate correlation between the transaction being hedged and the price movements of the futures contract. | ||
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Pursuant to regulations or published positions of the CFTC, an Investment Manager may be required to segregate permissible liquid assets in connection with its commodities transactions in an amount generally equal to the value of the underlying commodity. If an Investment Manager is required to do so, the segregation of such assets will have the effect of limiting its ability to otherwise invest those assets. | ||
Some or all of the Investment Managers may purchase and sell stock index futures contracts for the Investment Funds. A stock index future obligates an Investment Fund to pay or receive an amount of cash equal to a fixed dollar amount specified in the futures contract multiplied by the difference between the settlement price of the contract on the contract’s last trading day and the value of the index based on the stock prices of the securities that comprise it at the opening of trading in such securities on the next business day. | ||
Some or all of the Investment Managers may purchase and sell interest rate futures contracts for the Investment Funds. An interest rate future obligates an Investment Fund to purchase or sell an amount of a specific debt security at a future date at a specific price. | ||
Some or all of the Investment Managers may purchase and sell currency futures. A currency future obligates an Investment Fund to purchase or sell an amount of a specific currency at a future date at a specific price. Derivatives associated with foreign currency transactions are subject to currency risk. | ||
Call and Put Options on Securities Indices. over-the-counter non-hedging purposes to pursue its investment objective. A stock index fluctuates with changes in the market values of the stocks included in the index. Accordingly, successful use by the Investment Manager of options on stock indexes will be subject to the Investment Manager’s ability to correctly predict movements in the direction of the stock market generally or of a particular industry or market segment. This requires different skills and techniques than predicting changes in the price of individual stocks. | ||
Warrants and Rights. | ||
Swap Agreements. two-party contracts entered into primarily by institutional investors for periods ranging from a few weeks to more than a year. In a standard swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the returns (or differentials in rates of return) earned or realized on particular predetermined investments or instruments, which may be adjusted for an interest factor. The gross returns to be exchanged or “swapped” between the parties are generally calculated with respect to a “notional amount,” i.e., the return on or increase in | ||
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value of a particular dollar amount invested at a particular interest rate, in a particular foreign currency, or in a “basket” of securities representing a particular index. Forms of swap agreements include interest rate caps, under which, in return for a premium, one party agrees to make payments to the other to the extent interest rates exceed a specified rate or “cap”; interest rate floors, under which, in return for a premium, one party agrees to make payments to the other to the extent interest rates fall below a specified level or “floor”; and interest rate collars, under which a party sells a cap and purchases a floor or vice versa in an attempt to protect itself against interest rate movements exceeding given minimum or maximum levels. | ||
Most swap agreements entered into by the Investment Fund would require the calculation of the obligations of the parties to the agreements on a “net basis.” Consequently, an Investment Fund’s current obligations (or rights) under a swap agreement generally will be equal only to the net amount to be paid or received under the agreement based on the relative values of the positions held by each party to the agreement (the “net amount”). The risk of loss with respect to swaps is limited to the net amount of interest payments that an Investment Fund is contractually obligated to make. If the other party to a swap defaults, an Investment Fund’s risk of loss consists of the net amount of payments that the Investment Fund contractually is entitled to receive. | ||
Credit Default Swaps. non-hedging) purposes, as the swaps may act as protection against non-payment by the underlying third party by transferring the risk of default from the holder of the security (the buyer) to the seller of the swap. When used in respect of a basket of securities or an index, credit default swaps may be used to profit from changes in the perceived credit risk of the referenced securities. If the Investment Manager incorrectly assesses the amount or timing of these changes, the position may lose money, possibly on an economically leveraged basis. | ||
Lending Portfolio Securities |
Some or all of the Investment Managers may lend securities from their portfolios to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions needing to borrow securities to complete certain transactions. The lending portfolio continues to be entitled to payments in amounts equal to the interest, dividends or other distributions payable on the loaned securities which affords it an opportunity to earn interest on the amount of the loan and on the loaned securities’ collateral. An Investment Fund might experience losses if the institution with which the Investment Fund has engaged in a portfolio loan transaction breaches its agreement with the Investment Fund. | |
When-Issued and Forward Commitment Securities |
Some or all of the Investment Managers may purchase securities on a “when-issued” basis and may purchase or sell securities on a “forward commitment” basis in order to hedge against anticipated changes in interest rates and prices. These transactions involve a commitment by an Investment Fund to purchase or sell securities at a future date (ordinarily one or two months later). The price of the underlying securities, which is generally expressed in terms of yield, is fixed at the time the commitment is made, but delivery and payment for the securities takes place at a later date. No income accrues on securities that have been purchased pursuant to a forward commitment or on a when-issued basis prior to delivery to the Investment Fund. When-issued securities and forward commitments may be sold prior to the settlement date. If an Investment Fund disposes of the right to acquire a when-issued security prior to its acquisition or disposes of its right to deliver or receive against a forward commitment, it may |
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incur a gain or loss. These transactions, if effected by the Master Fund, will be subject to the Master Fund’s limitation on indebtedness unless, at the time the transaction is entered into, a segregated account consisting of cash, U.S. Government Securities or liquid securities equal to the value of the when-issued or forward commitment securities is established and maintained. There is a risk that securities purchased on a when-issued basis may not be delivered and that the purchaser of securities sold by an Investment Manager on a forward basis will not honor its purchase obligation. In such cases, an Investment Fund may incur a loss. | ||
Restricted and Illiquid Investments |
Although it is anticipated that most Investment Funds will invest primarily in publicly traded securities, they generally may invest a portion of the value of their total assets in restricted securities and other investments which are illiquid. Restricted securities are securities that may not be sold to the public without an effective registration statement under the 1933 Act, or, if they are unregistered, may be sold only in a privately negotiated transaction or pursuant to an exemption from registration. Illiquid investments are any investments that the Investment Fund reasonably expects cannot be sold or disposed of in current market conditions in seven calendar days or less without the sale or disposition significantly changing the market value of the investment. | |
Where registration is required to sell a security, an Investment Fund may be obligated to pay all or part of the registration expenses, and a considerable period may elapse between the decision to sell and the time the Investment Manager may be permitted to sell a security under an effective registration statement. If, during such period, adverse market conditions were to develop, an Investment Fund might obtain a less favorable price than prevailed when it decided to sell. Investment Managers may be unable to sell restricted and other illiquid securities at the most opportune times or at prices approximating the value at which they purchased such securities. | ||
In addition, the Master Fund’s interests in unregistered Investment Funds are themselves illiquid and subject to substantial restrictions on transfer. The Master Fund may liquidate an interest and withdraw from an Investment Fund pursuant to limited withdrawal rights. In general, most of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests provide for periodic withdrawals of capital ranging from monthly to annually and, in some cases, have lock up provisions under which the Master Fund may not withdraw capital for a specified period after the date of its contribution. Additionally, the governing documents of the Investment Funds generally provide that the Investment Fund may suspend, limit or delay the right of its investors, such as the Master Fund, to withdraw capital. The illiquidity of these interests may adversely affect the Master Fund were it to have to sell interests at an inopportune time. | ||
Binary Investments |
Certain investments by the Investment Funds may depend on discrete events with binary outcomes in which there is potentially a material and abrupt adjustment to net asset value (a “gapping” net asset value) at the point that the result of a certain event is determined. For example, certain of the investments may be subject to litigation, and the outcome of litigation is usually unpredictable and such proceedings may continue without resolution for extended periods of time. While the market prices of such investments may be affected by the perceived change in probability of a certain outcome, until there is a final resolution, there is a material potential uncertainty in the net asset values as currently determined. Subscriptions and redemptions will, however, be processed at what is determined to be “fair value,” which may or may not factor in any such “gapping” (which GCMLP believes cannot be reasonably predicted, much less quantified). As a result, subscribing and redeeming Members are subject to the risk of economic dilution, i.e., to the risk of a subscription or redemption being processed in accordance with a net asset value which is |
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suddenly and materially changed by the outcome of a certain e vent. The risk of such economic dilution will typically increase the nearer an outstanding transaction in which the Investment Fund is invested comes to its “decision date.” | ||
Investments in Third-Party Legal Claims |
Investment Managers may make investments to fund third-party legal claims in return for a share of any favorable settlement or award. Such investments create the risk of a complete loss of investment where a claim proves unsuccessful. There exists a large degree of uncertainty with respect to the outcome of any claim, including the amount of damages that may be assessed. Such uncertainties may result in a judgment or settlement for amounts lower than predicted, or a failure to reach a settlement. Finally, even if a case is resolved in favor of the Investment Manager’s position, there exists uncertainty with respect to the ability of the opposing party and/or its insurance company to pay a settlement or judgment. As the timing and amounts recovered in such cases are outside of the Investment Manager’s control, the returns on the Master Fund’s or the Investment Fund’s investments may be affected. | |
Use of Proceeds; Cash Equivalents |
The net proceeds of the offering of Shares (after payment of expenses) are expected to be invested at all times in accordance with the investment objectives and policies of the Master Fund as soon as practicable, consistent with normal market conditions and the availability of suitable investments, generally within three months of receipt, and in any event, not more than after six months of receipt. The Master Fund may invest in money market instruments or shares of money market funds, or hold cash, for liquidity purposes. ( See |
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| (1) | The Fund will not invest 25% or more of the value of its total assets in the securities (other than U.S. Government Securities) of issuers engaged in any single industry, except that: the Fund may pursue its investment objectives by investing substantially all of its assets in the Master Fund (or another investment company that has the same investment objective and substantially the same investment policies as the Fund); and the Fund (if it invests directly in Investment Funds rather than investing in the Master Fund) and the Master Fund will invest 25% or more of the value of their total assets in Investment Funds, except during temporary adverse market conditions affecting Investment Funds in which they may invest, but will not invest 25% or more of the value of their total assets in Investment Funds that focus on investing in any single industry or group of related industries. |
| (2) | With respect to 75% of its total assets, the Fund will not invest more than 5% of the value of its total assets in the securities of any one issuer or purchase more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of any one issuer, except that such limitations do not apply to U.S. Government securities and securities of other investment companies. |
| (3) | The Fund will not issue senior securities representing stock, except that, to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, (a) the Fund may borrow money from banks, brokers and other lenders, to finance portfolio transactions and engage in other transactions involving the issuance by the Fund of “senior securities” representing indebtedness, and (b) the Fund may borrow money from banks for temporary or emergency purposes or in connection with repurchases of, or tenders for, Shares. |
| (4) | The Fund will not underwrite securities of other issuers, except insofar as the Fund may be deemed an underwriter under the 1933 Act in connection with the disposition of its portfolio securities. |
| (5) | The Fund will not make loans of money or securities to other persons, except through purchasing fixed-income securities, lending portfolio securities or entering into repurchase agreements in a manner consistent with the Fund’s investment policies. |
| (6) | The Fund will not purchase or sell commodities or commodity contracts, except that it may purchase and sell foreign currency, options, futures and forward contracts, including those related to indexes, and options on indices, and may invest in commodity pools and other entities that purchase and sell commodities and commodity contracts. |
| (7) | The Fund will not purchase, hold or deal in real estate, except that it may invest in securities that are secured by real estate or that are issued by companies that invest or deal in real estate. |
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Borrowing |
The Fund and the Master Fund are authorized to borrow. The Fund and the Master Fund may borrow money for certain purposes, such as making payments to Investment Funds in accordance with the Master Fund’s investment commitments and paying fees and expenses of the Fund and the Master Fund, subject to any limitations imposed by applicable law. The Fund and the Master Fund must maintain continuous asset coverage (that is, total assets including borrowings, less liabilities exclusive of borrowings) of 300% of the amount borrowed. If the 300% asset coverage should decline as a result of market fluctuations or other reasons, the Master Fund may be required to liquidate investments in Investment Funds to reduce its borrowings and restore the 300% asset coverage at times or in amounts that are not advantageous to the Master Fund. Borrowing may exaggerate the effect on net asset value of any increase or decrease in the market value of the Fund and/or the Master Fund, as applicable. The Fund and the Master Fund may borrow money on a secured or unsecured basis for certain purposes, such as to address timing mismatches between inflows and outflows of capital to and from the Fund in connection with (i) investor subscriptions and repurchases/withdrawals, (ii) the Fund and the Master Fund’s investment activities; and (iii) the payment of fees, expenses and other obligations of the Fund and the Master Fund in the ordinary course of business. The Fund and the Master Fund may not borrow for longer-term, strategic investment purposes or to generate out-sized returns. All interest and other fees charged under any line of credit or other borrowing arrangements will be paid by the Fund or the Master Fund, as applicable. If the cash flows of the Master Fund are insufficient to meet required payments on a line of credit or other borrowing arrangements, the Master Fund could be forced to liquidate investments in Investment Funds at times or in amounts that are not advantageous to the Master Fund. | |
Investment Manager Performance-Based Compensation |
Each Investment Manager generally will receive performance-based compensation, expected to range from 15% to 25% of net profits. The performance-based compensation that will be received by an Investment Manager may create an incentive for the Investment Manager to make investments that are riskier or more speculative than those that might have been made in the absence of the performance-based compensation. In addition, because the performance-based compensation will be calculated on a basis that includes realized and unrealized appreciation of an Investment Fund’s assets, the performance-based compensation may be greater than if it were based solely on realized gains. The fees and other expenses borne by the Master Fund, including the performance-based compensation indirectly payable by the Master Fund as a result of its investments in Investment Funds, are higher than those of other registered investment companies. | |
Increase or Decrease in Assets under Management |
As the Master Fund’s assets increase or as an Investment Fund’s assets increase, more capital may be allocated to any particular Investment Fund. It is not known what effect, if any, this will have on an Investment Fund’s trading strategies or its investment results. Conversely, in the event the Master Fund’s assets decrease, the Fund’s expense ratio may increase and the investment opportunities available to the Master Fund may be reduced. In addition, in such event, the Master Fund may have a larger relative investment in a particular Investment Fund than is desirable. This may have the effect of substantially increasing the Master Fund’s ratio of illiquid to liquid investments and negatively impact the Fund’s and Master Fund’s performance. In addition, the Fund is subject to the risk that a large shareholder could request that the Fund repurchase a large percentage of Shares and/or that the Selling Agents could do so on behalf of several Members in the Fund. Such repurchase |
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requests may be very substantial relative to the size of the Fund and the Master Fund and carry potentially adverse effects. For example, such repurchase requests may cause the Master Fund to make investment decisions at inopportune times, including liquidating certain of its investments more rapidly than otherwise desirable, or miss attractive investment opportunities. While it is not possible to predict the overall effect of such repurchase requests, such transactions may adversely affect the Fund’s and the Master Fund’s performance. | ||
Liquidity Risks |
Shares are not traded on any securities exchange or other market and are subject to substantial restrictions on transfer. Although the Fund may offer to repurchase Shares from time to time, a Member may not be able to liquidate its Shares of the Fund for an extended period of time. The Adviser expects that it will recommend to the Board of Directors that the Fund offer to repurchase Shares from Members four times each year, effective at the end of each calendar quarter. ( See Distributions of proceeds upon the repurchase of a Member’s Shares may be delayed as a result of restrictions on withdrawals imposed by the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund’s, and indirectly, the Fund’s assets are invested. The ability of the Master Fund to withdraw any amount invested in an Investment Fund may be subject to certain restrictions and conditions, including restrictions on the withdrawal of interests for a specified period (a “lock-up”), restrictions on the amount of withdrawals and the frequency with which withdrawals can be made, and investment minimums which must be maintained. Additionally, Investment Managers typically reserve the right to suspend withdrawals and to satisfy withdrawals by making distributions in-kind of securities which may not be marketable, under certain circumstances. During past financial market crises, private investment funds have suspended withdrawals or redemptions, allocated substantial portions of their portfolios to “special purpose vehicles” with delayed liquidity and/or “side-pocketed” or “designated” portions of their portfolios, due to what the investment managers of such funds believed to be an inability to effect portfolio transactions at reasonable price levels. In addition, although the Investment Managers generally invest in marketable securities, an Investment Manager may invest in securities or other investments which are illiquid or have limited liquidity, including, but not limited to, restricted securities which may have terms that limit their resale to other investors or may require registration under applicable securities laws before they may be sold publicly. The extent (if at all) to which a security may be sold or a derivative position closed without negatively impacting its market value, may be impaired by reduced market activity or participation, legal restrictions, or other economic and market impediments. Liquidity risk may be magnified in rising interest rate environments due to the potential for higher than normal redemption rates. Widespread selling of fixed-income securities to satisfy redemptions during periods of reduced demand may adversely impact the price or salability of such securities. Redemption risk is heightened during periods of declining or illiquid markets. For these reasons, it is possible that a significant portion of the Master Fund may become illiquid or have limited liquidity, which would adversely affect the ability of the Fund to make offers to repurchase Shares or to deploy and re-deploy its capital. In addition, if the Master Fund makes a substantial redemption from an Investment Fund in order to satisfy Fund repurchases or for any other reason, the Investment Fund may be required to liquidate its portfolio more rapidly than the Investment Manager would otherwise deem advisable, potentially resulting in losses. | |
Distributions to Members and Dividend Reinvestment |
Distributions will be paid at least annually on the Shares in an amount representing substantially all of the net investment income and net capital gains, if any, earned each year. The Fund is not a suitable investment for any investor requiring routine distributions of income. |
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Each Member will automatically be a participant under the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (“ DRP | ||
Counterparty Credit Risk |
Many of the markets in which the Investment Managers effect their transactions are “over-the-counter” over-the-counter marking-to-market | |
Investment Funds could experience situations with counterparties, banks and other financial institutions that adversely impact the performance of the Master Fund, such as the failure of counterparties to perform their contractual commitments, the financial difficulties, fraud or misrepresentation of brokerage firms, banks or other financial institutions that hold assets of Investment Funds, the failure of exchanges and clearinghouses, suspensions of trading, or counterparties holding assets in unregulated rather than regulated accounts, natural disasters, epidemics and terrorist attacks, and cybersecurity breaches. | ||
Cybersecurity, Operational and Data Protection Risk |
With the increased use of technologies, such as mobile devices and “cloud”-based service offerings and the dependence on the Internet and computer systems to perform necessary business functions, the Master Fund, the Fund and the Investment Funds’ service providers are susceptible to operational and information or cybersecurity risks that could result in losses to the Master Fund, the Fund and the Investment Funds’. Information and technology systems relied upon by the Investment Funds, the Master Fund, GCMLP, any service providers (including, but not limited to, accountants, custodians, transfer agents, administrators, distributors and other financial intermediaries) and/or the issuers of securities in which the Investment Funds or Master Fund invest may be vulnerable to damage or interruption from computer viruses, network failures, computer and telecommunication failures, infiltration by unauthorized persons, security breaches, usage errors, power outages and catastrophic events such as fires, tornadoes, floods, hurricanes and earthquakes. Cyber-attacks can |
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also be carried out in a manner that does not require gaining unauthorized access, such as causing denial-of-service attacks on service providers’ systems or websites rendering them unavailable to intended users or via “ransomware” that renders the systems inoperable until appropriate actions are taken. Although measures to manage risks relating to these types of events have been implemented, if these systems are compromised, become inoperable for extended periods of time or cease to function properly, significant investment may be required to fix or replace them. The failure of these systems and/or of disaster recovery plans could cause significant interruptions in the operations of the Master Fund, the Investment Funds, the Fund, GCMLP, service providers and/or issuers of securities in which the Investment Funds or Master Fund invest and may result in a failure to maintain the security, confidentiality or privacy of sensitive data, including personal information relating to investors (and the beneficial owners of investors), misuse of confidential or proprietary information, and theft of assets. The failure of these systems, including cyber-events, have the potential to affect materially the Fund and the Adviser’s relationships with accounts, Members, clients, customers, employees, products, and service providers. The Fund has established risk management systems reasonably designed to seek to reduce the risks associated with such system failures and cyber-events. Such a failure could cause reputational harm subjecting such entities and their respective affiliates to legal claims or otherwise affect their business and financial performance. There is no guarantee that the Fund will be able to prevent or mitigate the impact of system failures or cyber-events.In addition, other disruptive events, including (but not limited to) natural disasters and public health crises, may adversely affect the Master Fund, the Fund or an Investment Fund’s ability to conduct business, in particular if the Master Fund, the Fund or the Investment Funds’ employees or the employees of their service providers are unable or unwilling to perform their responsibilities as a result of any such event. Even if the Master Fund, the Fund or the Investment Funds’ employees and the employees of their service providers are able to work remotely, those remote work arrangements could result in the Master Fund, the Fund or the Investment Funds’ business operations being less efficient than under normal circumstances, could lead to delays in its processing of transactions, and could increase the risk of cyber-events. The Fund, the Master Fund and the Investment Funds are exposed to operational risk arising from a number of factors, including, but not limited to human error, processing and communication errors, errors of the fund’s service providers, counterparties, or other third parties, failure or inadequate processes and technology or system failures. | ||
Manager Risks |
Generally, the risks associated with the Master Fund’s investments with Investment Managers includes: • an Investment Manager’s dependence on a strictly limited number of key professionals; • significant structural changes in an Investment Manager’s operations; • fraud or misrepresentation on the part of an Investment Manager or its personnel; • an Investment Manager’s failure to comply with applicable legal, registration, tax or regulatory requirements; • human error and poor judgment on the part of an Investment Manager’s personnel; and • systems malfunctions and other operational failures. | |
Regulatory Risks |
Generally, the risks associated with: |
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• investing both in unregulated entities and in securities sold in unregistered offerings; • the Adviser, the Distributor, the Fund, the Master Fund, the Investment Managers and the Investment Funds operating in a changing regulatory environment, including the risks of regulatory inquiries, new legislation, new regulations and government intervention; • recent regulatory changes and developments affecting global markets; and • the Fund and the Master Fund needing to comply with numerous regulations restricting their offering procedures. | ||
Special Risks of Multi-Manager Structure |
The Investment Funds generally will not be registered as investment companies under the 1940 Act and, therefore, the Fund, as an indirect investor in these Investment Funds, will not have the benefit of the protections afforded by the 1940 Act to investors in registered investment companies, such as mutual funds. Although GCMLP receives detailed information from each Investment Manager regarding its investment performance and investment strategy, GCMLP may have little or no means of independently verifying this information. An Investment Manager may use proprietary investment strategies that are not fully disclosed to GCMLP, which may involve risks that are not anticipated by GCMLP. The Master Fund relies primarily on information provided by Investment Managers in valuing its investments in Investment Funds. There is a risk that inaccurate valuations provided by Investment Managers could indirectly adversely affect the value of Shares and the amounts Members receive upon the repurchase of Shares. For the Fund to complete its tax reporting requirements and to provide an audited annual report to Members, it must receive information on a timely basis from the Master Fund, which, in turn, receives such information from the Investment Managers. An investor who meets the conditions imposed by the Investment Managers, including minimum initial investment requirements that may be substantially higher than those imposed by the Fund, could invest directly with the Investment Managers. By investing in the Investment Funds indirectly through the Fund, a Member bears a pro rata pro rata pro rata Each Investment Manager receives any performance-based compensation to which it is entitled irrespective of the performance of the other Investment Managers and the Master Fund generally. Accordingly, an Investment Manager with positive performance may receive performance-based compensation from the Master Fund, and thus indirectly from the investors in the Fund, even if the Master Fund’s overall returns are negative. Investment decisions for the Investment Funds are made by the Investment Managers independently of each other. As a result, at any particular time, one Investment Fund may be purchasing shares of an issuer whose shares are being sold by another Investment Fund. Consequently, the Master Fund could directly or indirectly incur certain transaction costs without accomplishing any net investment result. The Master Fund may make additional investments in or effect withdrawals from Investment Funds only at certain times pursuant to limitations set forth in the governing documents of the Investment Funds. Therefore, the Master Fund may not be able to withdraw its investment in an Investment Fund promptly after it has made a decision to do so, which may result in a loss to the Master Fund and |
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adversely affect the Fund’s investment return. Additionally, the Master Fund from time to time may have to invest some of its assets temporarily in money market securities or, subject to the limitations of the 1940 Act, money market funds, due to these limitations. The Master Fund expects it may purchase non-voting securities of an Investment Fund or waive some or all of its right to vote its securities with respect to Investment Funds. Consequently, in that situation, it may not be able to vote (or would have its vote limited) on matters that require the approval of the investors in the Investment Fund, including matters that could adversely affect the Master Fund’s investment in the Investment Fund.Investment Funds may be permitted to redeem their interests in-kind. Thus, upon the Master Fund’s withdrawal of all or a portion of its interest in an Investment Fund, the Master Fund may receive securities that are illiquid or difficult to value. In the event the Fund were to receive such securities from the Master Fund, it would be required to dispose of such securities either through liquidation or by distributing such securities to Members in connection with a repurchase by the Fund of all or a portion of Shares of Members.The Master Fund may, as a condition of investment in an Investment Fund, agree to indemnify such Investment Fund and/or its Investment Manager from any liability, damage, cost or expense arising out of various matters where the Investment Fund or Investment Manager has been adversely affected by the actions of the Master Fund. | ||
Strategy Risk and Risk of Total Loss |
GCMLP’s methodology for selecting investment strategies and Investment Managers, developing portfolios of multiple Investment Managers and allocating the Master Fund’s assets among them, may prove unsuccessful in generating profits or avoiding losses. To the extent GCMLP engages in the active allocation of the assets of the Master Fund among different Investment Funds, there can be no assurance that: the strategy will not be more volatile than, or will not underperform, either or both an investment in a single Investment Fund or a static allocation among a fixed group of Investment Funds; an investment strategy that has been profitable in the past will not incur material losses in the future; or GCMLP will not allocate assets to Investment Funds that are entering into unprofitable cycles and away from those entering into profitable cycles. Because the Master Fund invests in Investment Funds, it is subject to the risks associated with the investment strategies and investment techniques employed by the Investment Managers. The Investment Managers are not always successful in attempting to generate profits or avoid losses. The governing documents of Investment Funds typically do not impose any meaningful restrictions on the way the Investment Managers of such Investment Funds may invest and trade, and often permit the Investment Managers to invest and trade in essentially an unrestricted range of strategies, financial instruments, and capital markets. Investment Funds employing alternative investment strategies are subject to a risk of total loss—the risk that a previously low volatility and comparatively low risk strategy will incur sudden and dramatic losses—at a level of severity to which investment funds employing traditional strategies (which may be less dependent on the availability of financing or market liquidity) may not be subject. Investments in Investment Funds are subject to the possible failure of the investment strategies, techniques and practices employed by one or more Investment Managers, possible inefficient or inaccurate trade execution by Investment Funds, and GCMLP’s inability to gauge and/or react (due to limited position-level transparency and the Investment Funds’ restrictive withdrawal/redemption provisions) on a real-time basis to specific strategy-related and/or position-level risks associated with positions held by the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests. GCMLP often will not be given |
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access to specific information regarding the actual investments made by Investment Funds. When such information is provided, it can be incomplete and/or out-of-date. Strategy-specific losses may result from any number of factors, including excessive concentration by multiple Investment Managers in the same investment and/or market sector, general market events or conditions that adversely affect particular strategies (e.g., illiquidity within a given market), faulty assumptions or analysis concerning market events or conditions and faulty or incomplete due diligence regarding markets or investments. | ||
Quantitative Mathematical Models, Machine Learning Techniques and Artificial Intelligence |
To the extent an Investment Manager relies on quantitative mathematical models, artificial intelligence selection models, or machine learning techniques, to manage an Investment Fund’s portfolio, investments in the Investment Fund are subject to the limitations of the design of the model as well as the risk of potential failure of the Investment Manager to construct a portfolio consistent with the model’s outputs. The Investment Fund may also be subject to the risks of errors in coding the model and inaccuracies in data supporting the model. Some of the machine learning techniques and artificial intelligence selection models used by the Investment Manager are predictive in nature. The use of predictive models has inherent risks. For example, such models may incorrectly forecast future behavior, leading to potential losses. In addition, in unforeseen or certain low-probability scenarios (often involving a market disruption of some kind), such models may produce unexpected results, which can result in losses for an Investment Fund. Furthermore, because predictive models are constructed based on historical data supplied by third parties, the success of relying on such models may depend heavily on the accuracy and reliability of the supplied historical data.All models rely on correct market data inputs. If incorrect market data is entered into even a well-founded model, the resulting information will be incorrect. However, even if market data is input correctly, “model prices” will often differ substantially from market prices, especially for instruments with complex characteristics, such as derivative instruments. | |
Global Macro Strategy |
GCMLP incorporates an element of its own analysis of macroeconomic conditions and economic variables into its determination of the strategies selected for the Master Fund. GCMLP’s inclusion of an element of its own market judgment into its |
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Investment Manager selection process adds an additional dimension of risk, as GCMLP’s economic analysis may be materially incorrect as well as variable and inconsistent over time. | ||
Portfolio Hedging Strategy |
GCMLP may invest Master Fund capital in this defensive strategy intended (although there can be no assurance that it will be effective) to mitigate losses in the Master Fund in the event of major market disruptions. Disruptions of such magnitude historically have been rare and, as a result, the cost of hedging this risk may be excessive over time. An allocation to the portfolio hedging strategy is expected to perform poorly (and could potentially lose all or substantially all capital allocated to it) when global capital markets are stable or upward-trending. There can be no assurance that the Master Fund will, in fact, mitigate losses or that a “tail event” will occur during a period in which the Fund makes portfolio hedging investments. | |
Event-Driven Investing |
Event-driven investing is characterized by relatively small profits on most investments when an event is consummated as expected and relatively large losses when an event is not consummated as expected, either because the anticipated event does not happen or the terms are adversely changed. Successful event-driven investing requires Investment Managers to analyze and evaluate the unique set of facts and circumstances of each event and to make judgments on the: (i) expected price to be realized; (ii) time to completion; (iii) probability of success; and (iv) loss if the investment goes wrong. There can be no assurance that Investment Managers will correctly evaluate these factors. The effectuation of mergers or other restructurings, tender offers, exchange offers or other event-driven transactions may be adversely affected by a number of factors, which include but are not limited to (i) regulatory and antitrust restrictions; (ii) political concerns; (iii) industry weakness; (iv) stock specific events; (v) financing limitations; and (vi) general market declines. | |
Relative-Value Hedging Strategies |
The use by certain Investment Managers of “relative-value” hedging or arbitrage strategies does not necessarily mean that those strategies are without risk or substantial cost. Substantial losses may be recognized on “hedge” or “arbitrage” positions, and illiquidity and default on one side of a “relative-value” position can effectively result in the position being transformed into an outright speculation. “Relative-value” strategies typically are dependent on market liquidity. In 1994, 1998 and again in 2008-2009 when market liquidity was sharply reduced, a number of investment funds pursuing “relative-value” strategies incurred total losses. | |
Credit Strategies |
Credit strategies are designed to isolate attractive opportunities in various fixed income securities, typically focused on corporate. Credit strategies are typically subject to many of the same risks as traditional fixed income strategies, including but not limited to interest rate risk, credit risk, and prepayment risk. Such risks may be exacerbated by the fact that Investment Manager’s may engage in the use of credit derivatives in order to gain exposure to a certain position. Recent and potential future changes in government monetary policy may affect the level of interest rates. Finally, while credit strategies are diverse, they can exhibit highly correlated losses during certain market periods. | |
Multi-Strategy |
Multi-strategy portfolios seek to obtain a broad range of the various strategies discussed herein. As such, multi-strategy portfolios are subject to the risks and limitations of the various underlying strategies that they use. While a multi-strategy portfolio seeks to limit the losses due to any particular underlying strategy via diversification, certain underlying strategies can exhibit highly correlated losses during certain market periods. | |
Equity Strategies |
Equity strategies involve the purchase and/or short sale of equity and/or equity-linked instruments in global markets. Most Investment Managers that engage in equity strategies tend to engage in “stock picking” rather than investing in broad- |
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based indices. Investment Managers tend to rely on fundamental analysis in order to identify overvalued and/or undervalued securities. A failure by the Investment Manager to properly value securities or a market environment where fundamental analysis struggles (e.g., highly correlated markets) may result in losses. | ||
Commodities Strategies |
Commodity strategies typically involve the purchase and/or sale of derivative instruments linked to various commodities including, but not limited to, energy, agriculture, resources and metals. Commodities strategies rely on the ability of the Investment Managers to properly identify attractive opportunities and to express those ideas via the appropriate instruments. There is no assurance that the Investment Managers will achieve both of those requirements. In addition, the use of derivative instruments, including the inherent leverage of derivative investments, adds an additional layer of risk to commodity strategies. Commodities markets generally, and the energy sector specifically, had been adversely impacted by the reduced demand for oil and other commodities as a result of the slowdown in economic activity resulting from the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic in 2020. Global oil prices declined significantly at the beginning of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and have experienced significant price volatility, including a period where an oil-price futures contract fell into negative territory for the first time in history, as demand for oil had slowed and oil storage facilities had reached their storage capacities. The impact on such commodities markets from varying levels of demand may continue to be volatile for an extended period of time. | |
Capital Call Structure Risk |
Certain Investment Funds require the Master Fund to commit to fund future investments in the Investment Funds (“Unfunded Commitments”). These Investment Funds may, at their sole discretion, require the Master Fund to fund all or a portion of the Master Fund’s Unfunded Commitment amount at any time during a commitment period, which generally extends for multiple years from the date of the Master Fund’s initial commitment to such Investment Fund. Such an obligation may have the effect of requiring the Master Fund to increase its investment in a company at a time when it might not be desirable to do so. There is no assurance that the Master Fund will fund, or will have sufficient assets to fund, Unfunded Commitments. If the Master Fund defaults on its commitment to an Investment Fund or fails to satisfy capital calls to an Investment Fund in a timely manner then, generally, it will be subject to significant penalties, potentially including the complete forfeiture of the Master Fund’s investment in the Investment Fund. Any failure by the Master Fund to make timely capital contributions in respect of its Unfunded Commitments may also: (i) impair the ability of the Master Fund to pursue its investment strategy, (ii) force the Master Fund to borrow, or (iii) cause the Master Fund to be subject to certain penalties from the Investment Fund (including the complete forfeiture of the Master Fund’s investment in an Investment Fund). In addition, funding Unfunded Commitments could require the Master Fund to liquidate other positions at inopportune times and may prevent the Fund or the Master Fund from achieving its investment objectives. | |
Legal and Regulatory Change |
The U.S. Government and the Federal Reserve, as well as certain foreign governments and their central banks, have taken various steps designed to support and stabilize credit and financial markets since 2008. Reduction or withdrawal of this support, including increases in interest rates, failure of efforts to stabilize the markets, or investor perception that such efforts are not succeeding could negatively affect financial markets generally, as well as have an adverse impact on the liquidity and value of certain securities. In addition, policy and legislative changes in the United States and in other countries are affecting many aspects of financial regulation. For example, the Dodd-Frank Act was enacted in the United States, reflecting a significant revision of the U.S. financial |
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regulatory framework. The Dodd-Frank Act established a comprehensive framework for the regulation of markets, market participants and financial instruments that were previously have been unregulated and substantially altered the regulation of many other markets, market participants and financial instruments. The Dodd-Frank Act and regulations adopted pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Act could have a material adverse impact on the profit potential of the Fund and the Investment Funds. The impact of these changes and any future changes on the markets, and the practical implications for market participants, may not be fully known for some time. During periods of heightened market volatility or reduced liquidity, governments, their agencies, or other regulatory bodies, both within the United States and abroad, may take steps to intervene. These actions, which could include legislative, regulatory, or economic initiatives, might have unforeseeable consequences and could adversely affect the performance of an Investment Fund (and indirectly, the Master Fund) or otherwise constrain the Investment Manager’s ability to achieve such Investment Fund’s investment objectives. In addition, recent decisions by the Federal Reserve to adjust the target Fed funds rate, among other factors, could cause markets to experience continuing high volatility. A significant increase in interest rates may cause a decline in the market for equity securities. (See also the discussion of the U.S. response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, among other factors, under “Additional Risk Factors - Uncertain Economic, Social and Political Environment.”)Political turmoil within the United States and abroad may also impact the Fund and the Investment Funds. Although the U.S. government has honored its credit obligations, it remains possible that the United States could default on its obligations. While it is impossible to predict the consequences of such an unprecedented event, it is likely that a default by the United States would be highly disruptive to the U.S. and global securities markets and could significantly impair the value of the Fund’s and Investment Funds’ investments. Similarly, political events within the United States at times have resulted, and may in the future result, in a shutdown of government services, which could negatively affect the U.S. economy, decrease the value of many fund investments, and increase uncertainty in or impair the operation of the U.S. or other securities markets. In recent years, the U.S. renegotiated many of its global trade relationships and imposed or threatened to impose significant import tariffs. These actions could lead to price volatility and overall declines in U.S. and global investment markets. There can be no assurance that these changes will not have a material adverse effect on the investments and investment strategies pursued by the Master Fund and Investment Funds. | ||
Natural Disasters, Epidemics and Pandemics, and Terrorist Attacks |
The Fund, the Master Fund, the Investment Funds, GCMLP and the Investment Managers are subject to risks associated with the consequences of natural disasters (e.g., fire, flood, earthquake, storm and hurricane), epidemics, pandemics and other outbreaks of serious contagious diseases, terrorist attacks (or the fear of or the precautions taken in anticipation of such attacks), and other acts of war (e.g., war, invasion, acts of foreign enemies, hostilities and insurrection, regardless of whether war is declared). Since 2003, the world has seen a number of outbreaks of new viral illnesses of varying severity, including but not limited to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), the H1N1 Flu (Swine Flu), and COVID-19 caused by the Coronavirus known as SARS–CoV-2 (Coronavirus). The responses to these outbreaks have varied as has their impact on human health, local economies and the global economy, and it is impossible at the outset of any such outbreak to estimate accurately what the ultimate impact of any such outbreak will be. The occurrence of a natural disaster, epidemic, terrorist attacks or other acts of war |
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have the potential to cause severe disruptions in the economies and financial markets of many industries, countries and regions (even beyond the site of the natural disaster, epidemic or attack) in which the Master Fund and the Investment Funds invest, leading to or extending regional or global economic downturns. The impact of such events, including coronavirus (COVID-19) may be short term or may last for an extended period time, could result in a substantial economic downturn, or exacerbate other pre-existing economic, social, and political risks, including the worldwide economy as well as economies of individual countries, or could result in significant breakdowns, delays and other disruptions to important global, local and regional supply chains affected, resulting in substantial or total losses investment and illiquidity, as well as interrupting the business continuity and operations of GCMLP and the Investment Managers. A climate of uncertainty, including the contagion of infectious viruses or diseases, may also reduce the availability of potential investment opportunities, impair the ability to monitor and evaluate existing investments, cause substantial illiquidity in the marketplace, and reduce the accuracy of financial projections and valuations of the Master Fund’s and the Investment Funds’ portfolios. Protective measures taken by governments and the private sector to mitigate the spread of such illness, including travel restrictions and outright bans, quarantines, and work-at-home arrangements, and the spread of any such illness within the offices of the Fund’s service providers could severely impair the Fund’s activities. | ||
Russian Invasion of Ukraine |
As a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine commencing in February of 2022, the United States and the European Union, along with the regulatory bodies of a number of countries, have imposed economic sanctions on certain Russian corporate entities and individuals, and certain sectors of Russia’s economy. Economic sanctions and other actions against Russian institutions, companies, and individuals, as well as impacts from Russia’s invasion on Ukrainian exports, may also have a substantial negative impact on other economies and commodity and security markets both regionally and globally, as well as on companies with operations in the conflict region, the extent to which is unknown at this time. The United States and the E.U. have also imposed similar sanctions on Belarus for its support of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Additional sanctions may be imposed on Belarus and other countries that support Russia. Any such sanctions could present substantially similar risks as those resulting from the sanctions imposed on Russia, including substantial negative impacts on the regional and global economies and securities markets. | |
Sanctions Against China |
The U.S. has taken a series of trade, international treaty, and tax sanctions actions against China. These actions have in many cases triggered, or are expected to trigger, countersanctions or countermeasures from the Chinese government. The ultimate impact of these sanctions and their impact on global economic and commercial activity and conditions, and on the operations, financial condition, and performance of the Fund is impossible to predict. Additionally, in recent years, tensions between mainland China and Taiwan have increased. In the event of an outbreak of hostilities between China and Taiwan, global manufacturers would likely lose access to advanced semiconductor chips that are sourced from Taiwan, and there could be significant disruption for industries that rely on supply chains in China. The impact of these and related events is highly uncertain and could have a negative impact on the Fund’s performance. | |
Israel and Hamas |
In October 2023, Hamas launched an attack on Israel, which led to a strong military response from Israel that closed borders and airspace, damaged infrastructure and resulted in significant civilian and military casualties in Israel and the Gaza Strip. The conflict has reignited regional tensions that threaten to involve other countries and factions. The extent and duration of the conflict are impossible to predict. The continuing conflict and its escalation have had a |
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significant adverse effect on the regional economy, currency, and companies. These events may negatively impact other regional and global economic markets of the world. Accordingly, the hostilities may have a negative effect on the Investment Funds beyond any direct or indirect exposure the Investment Funds may have in Israel or adjoining geographic regions. These and any related events could have a significant negative impact on investments made by the Investment Funds and the Master Fund. | ||
Uncertain Economic, Social, and Political Environment |
Some of the results of elections and referenda in the US, the UK, Spain, Italy, and other developed market countries in recent years have been unexpected and resulted in material market changes and increases in market uncertainty. Given recent changes in administrations and applicable laws and regulations following these votes, the future of current regulations, or the adoption of new regulations, is also uncertain. These uncertainties could have adverse impacts on the capital markets in certain geographic regions or the global markets generally, as well as on the Master Fund and the Investment Funds in which it invests. In addition, consumer, corporate and financial confidence may be adversely affected by political and social tensions around the world, fear of terrorist activity, the potential for the escalation of military conflict and future military conflicts, localized, regional or global financial or health crises or other sources of political, social, or economic unrest. Such erosion of confidence and/or the occurrence of one or more of such events could result in significant breakdowns, delays and other disruptions to important global, local, and regional supply chains, market distress or general economic downturn. A climate of uncertainty could reduce the availability of potential investment opportunities, and increases the difficulty of modeling market conditions, potentially reducing the accuracy of financial projections. In addition, limited availability of credit for consumers, homeowners, and businesses, including credit used to acquire businesses, in an uncertain environment or economic downturn could have an adverse effect on the economy generally and on the ability of GCMLP and the Fund to execute their respective strategies and to achieve attractive returns. This could slow the rate of future investments by the Master Fund and in some cases result in longer holding periods for investments. Such uncertainties, events and circumstances could result in new government regulation or interventions impacting markets, and adversely affecting the Investment Funds and the Fund. Additionally, some of the results of recent elections and referenda in the US, the UK, Spain, Italy and other developed market countries have been unexpected and resulted in material market changes and increases in market uncertainty. Given recent changes in administrations and applicable law following these votes, the future of current regulations, or the adoption of new regulations, is also uncertain. These uncertainties may have adverse impacts on, or alternatively create investment opportunities for, the Investment Funds. Furthermore, such confidence may be adversely affected by local, regional or global health crises including but not limited to the rapid and pandemic spread of viruses such as coronavirus (COVID-19). The impact of a health crises like coronavirus (COVID-19) or other such global health crises that may arise in the future could exacerbate political, social, and economic risks previously mentioned, and result in significant breakdowns, delays and other disruptions to important global, local and regional supply chains affected, with potential corresponding results on the operating performance of affected portfolio companies. A climate of uncertainty, including the contagion of infectious viruses or diseases, may reduce the availability of potential investment opportunities, and increase the difficulty of modeling market conditions, potentially reducing the accuracy of financial projections. Interconnected global economies and financial markets increase the possibility that conditions in one country or region might adversely impact issuers in a |
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different country or region. Both domestic and foreign equity markets have experienced increased volatility and turmoil, with issuers that have exposure to the real estate, mortgage, and credit markets particularly affected. Banks and financial services companies could suffer losses if interest rates rise or economic conditions deteriorate. Additionally, relatively high market volatility and reduced liquidity in credit and fixed-income markets may adversely affect many issuers worldwide. Actions taken by the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) or foreign central banks to stimulate or stabilize economic growth, such as interventions in currency markets, may cause high volatility in the equity and fixed-income markets. Reduced liquidity could result in less money being available to purchase raw materials, goods, and services from emerging markets, which may, in turn, bring down the prices of these economic staples. Reduced liquidity could also result in emerging-market issuers having more difficulty obtaining financing, which may, in turn, cause a decline in their securities prices. (See also the discussion of the U.S. and global response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, above.)Further, while interest rates have been historically low in recent years in the United States and abroad, recent decisions by the Fed to adjust the target Fed funds rate, among other factors, could cause markets to experience continuing high volatility. A significant increase in interest rates may cause a decline in the market for equity securities. Also, regulators have expressed concern that rate increases may contribute to price volatility. (See also the discussion of the U.S. response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, above.) These events and the possible resulting market volatility may have an adverse effect on the Fund.Political turmoil within the United States and abroad may also impact the Fund. Although the U.S. government has honored its credit obligations, it remains possible that the United States could default on its obligations. While it is impossible to predict the consequences of such an unprecedented event, it is likely that a default by the United States would be highly disruptive to the United States and global securities markets and could significantly impair the value of the Fund’s investments. Similarly, political events within the United States at times have resulted, and may in the future result, in a shutdown of government services, which could negatively affect the U.S. economy, decrease the value of many Investment Fund and Fund investments, and increase uncertainty in or impair the operation of the United States or other securities markets. Significant changes also have occurred to U.S. policy regarding matters of international relations and trade policies, and is also considering significant new investments in infrastructure which, coupled with lower federal taxes, could lead to increased government borrowing and higher interest rates. The United States continues to renegotiate many of its international relations and trade policies, including by imposing or threatening to impose significant import tariffs, which could lead to price volatility and overall declines in U.S. and global investment markets. While these proposed policies are going through the political process, the equity and debt markets may react strongly to expectations, which could increase volatility, especially if the market’s expectations for changes in government policies are not borne out. Uncertainties surrounding the sovereign debt of a number of European Union (E.U.) countries and the viability of the E.U. have disrupted, and may in the future disrupt, markets in the United States and globally. If one or more countries leave the E.U. or the E.U. dissolves, the world’s securities markets likely will be significantly disrupted. These events and the resulting market volatility may have an adverse effect on the performance of Investment Funds and the Fund. When the Fed “tapers” or reduces the amount of securities it purchases pursuant to quantitative easing, and/or raises the federal funds rate, there is a risk that |
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interest rates will rise, which could expose fixed-income and related markets to heightened volatility and could cause the value of a fund’s investments, and the fund’s net asset value (NAV), to decline, potentially suddenly and significantly. As a result, the Master Fund may experience high redemptions and, as a result, increased portfolio turnover, which could increase the costs that the fund incurs and may negatively impact the fund’s performance. Political and military events, including in Ukraine, North Korea, Russia, Venezuela, Iran, Syria, and other areas of the Middle East, and nationalist unrest in Europe and South America, also could cause market disruptions. In addition, there is a risk that the prices of goods and services in the United States and many foreign economies may decline over time, known as deflation. Deflation may have an adverse effect on stock prices and creditworthiness and may make defaults on debt more likely. If a country’s economy slips into a deflationary pattern, it could last for a prolonged period and may be difficult to reverse. Further, there is a risk that the present value of assets or income from investments will be less in the future, known as inflation. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of various factors, including unexpected shifts in the domestic or global economy, and a fund’s investments may be affected, which may reduce a fund’s performance. Further, inflation may lead to the rise in interest rates, which may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the fund, resulting in a negative impact on a fund’s performance. Generally, securities issued in emerging markets are subject to a greater risk of inflationary or deflationary forces, and more developed markets are better able to use monetary policy to normalize markets. | ||
Brexit |
Uncertainties surrounding the sovereign debt of a number of European Union (E.U.) countries and the viability of the E.U. have disrupted and may in the future disrupt markets in the United States and around the world. If one or more countries leave the E.U. or the E.U. dissolves, the world’s securities markets likely will be significantly disrupted. On January 31, 2020, the United Kingdom (UK) left the E.U., commonly referred to as “Brexit,” the UK ceased to be a member of the EU, and the UK and EU entered into a Trade and Cooperation Agreement. This agreement became effective on a provisional basis on January 1, 2021 and formally entered into force on May 1, 2021. While the full impact of Brexit is unknown, Brexit has already resulted in volatility in European and global markets. Further, despite the influence of the lockdowns, and the economic bounce back, Brexit has had a material impact on the UK’s economy. Additionally, trade between the UK and the E.U. did not benefit from the global rebound in trade in 2021, and remained at the very low levels experienced at the start of 2020, highlighting Brexit’s potential long-term effects on the UK economy. For these reasons, Brexit could have materially adverse consequences on the Fund, the Investment Funds, and the performance of their investments or investment strategies and Investment Managers’ ability to source, identify and invest in a sufficient number of opportunities to permit the Fund to sufficiently diversify its portfolio or to otherwise fulfill its investment objectives. Political events, including the possibility of expropriation or nationalization in Europe, uncertainties surrounding the sovereign debt of a number of E.U. countries as well as the viability of the E.U. and the Euro may also cause market disruption. As a result, the potential return on an investment in the Fund could be materially adversely affected. | |
Global Climate Change Considerations |
Global climate change could have an adverse effect on property and security values. A rise in sea levels, an increase in powerful windstorms and/or a storm-driven increase in flooding could cause coastal properties to lose value or become unmarketable altogether. Economists warn that affected coastal properties may not ever recover their value, unlike previous declines in the real estate market. Further, large wildfires driven by high winds and prolonged |
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drought may devastate entire communities and may be significantly expensive to any business found responsible for the fire. These losses could adversely affect corporate borrowers and mortgage lenders, the value of mortgage-backed securities, the bonds of municipalities that depend on tax revenues and tourist dollars generated by such properties, and insurers of the property and/or of corporate, municipal or mortgage-backed securities. The time period over which these consequences might unfold is difficult to predict. Regulatory changes and divestment movements tied to concerns about climate change could adversely affect the value of certain land and the viability of industries whose activities or products are seen as accelerating climate change. | ||
Large Shareholder Risk |
A significant percentage of an Investment Fund’s shares may be owned or controlled by a large shareholder, such as other funds or accounts. Accordingly, the Investment Funds can be subject to the potential for large scale inflows and outflows as a result of purchases and redemptions made by significant shareholders, such as the Fund. These inflows and outflows could be significant and, if frequently occurring, could negatively affect the Investment Fund’s net asset value and performance and could cause the Investment Fund to sell securities at inopportune times in order to meet redemption requests. | |
Other Considerations |
Other investors in the Master Fund may alone or collectively acquire sufficient voting interests in the Master Fund to control matters relating to the operation of the Master Fund. If other investors control the Master Fund, it could adversely affect the Fund’s ability to meet repurchase requests, which requires the cooperation of the Master Fund’s board of directors, could result in a change to the Master Fund’s investment objectives, or could have other adverse consequences to the Fund. As a result, the Fund could be required to withdraw its investment in the Master Fund or take other appropriate action. Any such withdrawal could result in an in-kind distribution of securities (as opposed to a cash distribution from the Master Fund). If securities and other non-cash assets are distributed, the Fund would incur brokerage, tax, or other charges in converting those assets to cash. | |
Distributions to Members |
Distributions will be paid at least annually on the Shares in an amount representing substantially all of the net investment income and net capital gains, if any, earned each year. The Fund is not a suitable investment for any investor requiring routine distributions of income. Each Member will automatically be a participant under the Fund’s DRP and have all income dividends and/or capital gains distributions automatically reinvested in Shares. Election not to participate in the DRP and to receive all income dividends and/or capital gain distributions, if any, in cash may be made by notice to the Fund or to a Member’s broker or other intermediary (who should be directed to inform the Fund). | |
Public Company |
As a consequence of GCM Grosvenor Inc. (“ GCMG GCM-Managed Accounts and their investors (including the Fund, Master Fund and its Members). Any such conflicts would not necessarily need to be taken into account if GCMG were not publicly traded. | |
Master/Feeder Structures |
The Fund will not invest directly in Investment Funds. Instead, it will invest substantially all of its investable assets in the Master Fund. The Master Fund, in turn, purchases, holds and sells investments in accordance with its investment objectives and policies. The Fund does not have the right to withdraw its investment in the Master Fund. Instead, it may do so only through periodic repurchases by the Master Fund of the Fund’s interests in the Master Fund. This may limit the ability of the Fund to make offers to repurchase Shares. In addition, |
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the Fund may receive securities and other investments from the Master Fund in lieu of cash when it withdraws capital from the Master Fund. The Fund will incur expenses in liquidating investments received in connection with any “in-kind” distributions. A change in the investment objectives, policies or restrictions of the Master Fund may cause the Fund to seek to have repurchased its interests in the Master Fund. Alternatively, the Fund could seek to change its investment objectives, policies or restrictions to conform to those of the Master Fund. The investment objectives and policies of the Master Fund are not fundamental and may be changed without the approval of investors in the Master Fund (including the Fund). These investors may include other investment funds, including investment companies that, like the Fund, are registered under the 1940 Act (including, without limitation, Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC, a parallel entity that invests directly in the Master Fund), and other types of pooled investment vehicles that may or may not be investment companies registered under the 1940 Act. Investors in the Master Fund and the Fund will be notified if the Master Fund or the Fund changes its investment objectives.Each member of the Master Fund, including the Fund, has the right to cast a number of votes based on the value of the member’s respective Shares at meetings of members called by the Master Fund Board. Except for the exercise of their voting privileges, members of the Master Fund are not entitled to participate in the management or control of the Master Fund’s business, and may not act for or bind the Master Fund. |
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NAME, AGE, AND POSITION WITH THE FUND |
TERM OF OFFICE* AND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED |
PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING PAST 5 YEARS AND OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD |
NUMBER OF FUNDS IN FUND COMPLEX OVERSEEN BY DIRECTOR** | |||
Independent Directors | ||||||
Henry S. Bienen (Born 1939) Director |
Since March 21, 2011 |
President Emeritus (since 2009) and President (1995 to 2009) of Northwestern University. Mr. Bienen currently serves on the boards of directors of Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, Rasmussen University, and Ryan Specialty Group. He is a Chair of the education section of the Advisory Board of Vistria Private Equity Fund, a member of the Qatar Foundation Advisory Board, a Presidential Councilor of Cornell University, a consultant to Academic Partnerships, and a board member emeritus of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and of MetroSquash. Mr. Bienen previously served as Interim President (2015) and President and board member of the Poetry Foundation (2015 to 2020), and board member of Bear Stearns (2004 to 2008). He also previously served on the boards of Chicago Public Schools (2011 to 2015), Steppenwolf Theater, Ithaka Harbors, Onconova Therapeutics, Inc. (2012 to 2018), UI Labs, Gleacher and Company, and Council on Foreign Relations (Chair of Nominating and Governance Committee), and as a consultant and advisor to the Hindustan Times. |
4 | |||
Alan Brott (Born 1942) Director |
Since November 30, 2009 |
Former Partner of Ernst & Young. Mr. Brott serves as a Manager of Neuberger Berman Funds (21 funds). Mr. Brott also served as Associate Professor, Columbia University (2000-2017), as a Manager of Man FRM Alternative Multi-Strategy Fund (2009-2020), and as a Trustee of Stone Harbor Partners Funds (2012-2022). |
4 | |||
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NAME, AGE, AND POSITION WITH THE FUND |
TERM OF OFFICE* AND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED |
PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING PAST 5 YEARS AND OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS HELD |
NUMBER OF FUNDS IN FUND COMPLEX OVERSEEN BY DIRECTOR** | |||
Independent Directors | ||||||
Brian P. Gallagher (Born 1967) Director |
Since March 21, 2011 |
Partner, Twin Bridge Capital Partners (since 2005); Principal, UIB Capital, Inc. (Investment Bank) (2005); and Partner, PPM America Capital Partners, LLC (Private Equity) (1997-2005). Mr. Gallagher serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of Twin Bridge Capital Partners and HFS Chicago Scholars. |
4 | |||
Victor J. Raskin (Born 1944) Director |
Since March 21, 2011 |
Chief Investment Officer, YMCA Retirement Fund (2000-2010); Consultant, YMCA Retirement Fund (2011-2019); and Independent Board Member, Q India Equity Fund (2013-2018). |
4 | |||
Thomas G. Yellin (Born 1953) Director |
Since November 30, 2009 |
President, The Documentary Group (since 2005); President, PJ Productions (2002-2006); and Executive Producer, ABC News (1989-2002). Mr. Yellin currently serves as a Manager of Neuberger Berman Funds (21 funds). Mr. Yellin previously served on the board of directors of Animoto (2008-2023) and as a Manager of Man FRM Alternative Multi-Strategy Fund (2009-2020). |
4 | |||
Interested Directors | ||||||
Scott J. Lederman (Born 1956) Director, Chief Executive Officer and President |
Since April 1, 2011 |
Managing Director (2000-Present), Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P. Mr. Lederman also serves on the board of directors of GCM Grosvenor Alternative Funds ICAV and GCM Grosvenor Alternative Funds Master ICAV. |
4 | |||
NAME, AGE, AND POSITION WITH THE FUND |
TERM OF OFFICE* AND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED |
PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING PAST 5 YEARS | ||||
Officers who are not Directors | ||||||
Kathleen P. Sullivan (Born 1974) Chief Financial Officer |
Since September 12, 2016 |
Managing Director, Finance (2019-Present), Senior Vice President, Finance (2015-2019), Vice President, Finance (2005-2015), Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P. Ms. Sullivan also serves as the Financial and Operations Principal for the Distributor and as the Statutory Auditor of GCM Investments Japan KK. Ms. Sullivan served as Treasurer of the Fund from 2018-2020. | ||||
Christopher Jasper (Born 1981) Treasurer |
Since June 20, 2023 |
Executive Director, Finance (2021-Present), Principal, Finance (2019-2021), Vice President, Finance (2014-2019), Associate, Finance (2006-2014), Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P. | ||||
Faelyn Sheridan (Born 1994) Assistant Treasurer |
Since September 20, 2023 |
Associate, Finance (2021-Present), Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P.; Senior Tax Associate (2020-2021) and Tax Associate (2018-2020), KPMG LLP. | ||||
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NAME, AGE, AND POSITION WITH THE FUND |
TERM OF OFFICE* AND LENGTH OF TIME SERVED |
PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING PAST 5 YEARS | ||||
Officers who are not Directors | ||||||
Girish S. Kashyap (Born 1981) Chief Legal Officer, Vice President and Secretary |
Since April 1, 2011 |
Managing Director, Legal (2018-Present), Senior Vice President, Legal (2014-2018), Vice President, Legal (2010-2014) and Associate, Legal (2008-2010), Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P.; and Associate, Investment Management Group of K&L Gates LLP (2005-2008). Mr. Kashyap also serves on the Board of Directors of GCM Grosvenor Alternative Funds ICAV and GCM Grosvenor Alternative Funds Master ICAV. Mr. Kashyap is a member of the board of directors of Chicago Scholars. | ||||
Dawna L. Daniel (Born 1971) Chief Compliance Officer |
Since October 23, 2023 |
Executive Director, Compliance (2023-Present), Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P.; Deputy Chief Compliance Officer (2010-2023) and Compliance Associate (2006-2010), Salient Partners, L.P. | ||||
| * | Each Director and officer serves for an indefinite term, until his/her successor is elected or in each case until he/she sooner dies, resigns, is removed or becomes disqualified. |
| ** | As of the date of this Prospectus, the “Fund Complex” included the Master Fund, the Fund, Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC, and Hedge Fund Guided Portfolio Solution. |
Additional Information About the Directors |
The Board believes that each of the Directors has the qualifications, experience, attributes and skills (“ Director Attributes In addition to the information provided in the chart above, below is certain additional information concerning each particular Director and certain of his Director Attributes. The information provided below, and in the chart above, is not all-inclusive. The Director Attributes encompass a variety of factors, including, but not limited to, their financial and investment experience, academic background, willingness to devote the time and attention needed to serve, and past experience as a Director of the Fund, other investment companies, operating companies or other types of entities. No one factor is controlling, either with respect to the group or any individual. As discussed further below, the evaluation of the qualities and ultimate selection of persons to serve as Independent Director is the responsibility of the Fund’s Nominating and Governance Committee, consisting solely of Independent Directors. The inclusion of a particular factor below does not constitute an assertion by the Board of Directors |
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or any individual Director that a Director has any special expertise that would impose any greater responsibility or liability on such Director than would exist otherwise. Henry S. Bienen. Alan Brott. Brian P. Gallagher. Scott J. Lederman. Victor J. Raskin. Thomas G. Yellin. | ||
Board Leadership Structure |
The business and affairs of the Fund shall be managed by or under the direction of the Directors. The Directors have delegated day-to-day The Independent Directors have determined that they can act independently and effectively without having a Chairman of the Board and without designating a lead Independent Director. Only Independent Directors have been designated to chair the Audit Committee and the Nominating and Governance Committee, and from time to time one or more Independent Directors may be designated, formally or informally, to take the lead in addressing with management or their independent legal counsel matters or issues of concern to the Board of Directors. The Fund’s Independent Directors interact directly with senior management of the Adviser at scheduled meetings and between meetings as appropriate. The Board has structured itself in a manner that it believes allows it to perform its oversight function effectively. As further described below, the Board has established two standing committees: an Audit Committee and a Nominating and Governance Committee. The Independent Directors have engaged their own independent legal counsel to advise them on matters relating to their responsibilities in connection with the Fund. The Board has determined that its structure is appropriate in view of |
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the specific characteristics and circumstances of the Fund, including, but not limited to: (i) the significant advisory and management services that the Adviser provides to the Funds and potential conflicts of interest that may arise from the Funds’ relationship with the Adviser; (ii) the extent to which the day-to-day | ||
Board Committees |
The Board has established two standing committees, the Audit Committee and the Nominating and Governance Committee, and may establish ad hoc committees or working groups from time to time, to assist the Board in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities. The Board does not have a compensation committee. During the most recently completed fiscal year for the Fund, the Board of Directors held four meetings, the Audit Committee held five meetings and the Nominating and Governance Committee held one meeting. Audit Committee. In addition, the Board of Directors has delegated to the Adviser, subject to the oversight of the Audit Committee and the Board, general responsibility for determining, in accordance with the “Valuation of Portfolio Securities” policy and procedures established by the Fund, the value of the assets held by the Fund as of any day on which the net asset value is determined. Nominating and Governance Committee. |
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• the character and integrity of the person; • whether or not the person is qualified under applicable laws and regulations to serve as a Director of the Fund; • whether or not the person has any relationships that might impair their service on the Board; • whether nomination of the person would be consistent with the Fund’s policies and applicable laws and regulations regarding the number and percentage of Independent Directors on the Board; • whether or not the person serves on boards of, or is otherwise affiliated with, competing financial service organizations or their related fund complexes; • whether or not the person is willing and able to serve and commit the time necessary for the performance of the duties and responsibilities of a Director of the Fund; • for nomination of a current Director, whether or not the Director has demonstrated a commitment to discharging the oversight responsibilities of a Director; and • a demonstrated record of professional accomplishment. | ||
Risk Oversight |
The Board considers its role with respect to risk management to be one of oversight rather than active management. The Fund faces a number of types of risks, including investment risk, legal and compliance risk, operational risk (including business continuity risk), reputational and business risk. The Board recognizes that not all risks potentially affecting the Fund can be identified in advance, and that it may not be possible or practicable to eliminate certain identifiable risks. As is the case with virtually all investment companies (as distinguished from operating companies), service providers to the Fund, primarily the investment adviser, have responsibility for the day-to-day day-to-day | |
Independent Director Compensation |
Each Independent Director will receive an annual retainer in the total amount of $60,000. Half of the retainer will be paid by the Master Fund and allocated pro-rata to the Fund and Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC. The remaining half will be paid by Hedge Fund Guided Portfolio Solution. All Independent Directors may be reimbursed for out-of-pocket |
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service or activity they perform or engage in as Independent Directors. The Directors do not receive any pension or retirement benefits from the Fund. |
COMPENSATION TABLE FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDED MARCH 31, 2024 | ||||||||
Name of Person |
Compensation from Fund |
Pension or Retirement Benefits Accrued as Part of Fund Expenses |
Estimated Annual Benefits Upon Retirement |
Total Compensation from Fund Complex* | ||||
Henry S. Bienen |
$9,930 |
$0 |
$0 |
$60,000 (4) | ||||
Alan Brott |
$9,930 |
$0 |
$0 |
$60,000 (4) | ||||
Brian P. Gallagher |
$9,930 |
$0 |
$0 |
$60,000 (4) | ||||
Scott J. Lederman |
$0 |
$0 |
$0 |
$0 (4) | ||||
Victor J. Raskin |
$9,930 |
$0 |
$0 |
$60,000 (4) | ||||
Thomas G. Yellin |
$9,930 |
$0 |
$0 |
$60,000 (4) | ||||
| * | The parenthetical number represents the number of affiliated investment companies (including the Fund and the Master Fund) from which such person received compensation. During the period shown, the “Fund Complex” included Hedge Fund Guided Portfolio Solution, the Master Fund, the Fund, and Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC. |
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Name of Director |
Dollar Range of Equity Securities of the Fund |
Aggregate Dollar Range of Equity Securities of All Registered Investment Companies Overseen by Director in Family of Investment Companies | ||
Henry S. Bienen |
None |
None | ||
Alan Brott |
None |
None | ||
Brian P. Gallagher |
None |
None | ||
Scott J. Lederman |
None |
None | ||
Victor J. Raskin |
None |
None | ||
Thomas G. Yellin |
None |
None | ||
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89 |
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Current Fee as a % of Net Assets |
Fees Paid for Year Ended March 31 |
|||||||||||||
2024 |
2023 |
2022 |
||||||||||||
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC |
||||||||||||||
Advisory Fee |
1.00% |
$1,764,036 |
$2,014,946 |
$2,545,718 |
||||||||||
Management Fee |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
||||||||||
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 2), LLC |
||||||||||||||
Advisory Fee |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
||||||||||
Management Fee |
0.50% |
$316,844 |
$343,173 |
$402,496 |
||||||||||
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# of Accounts Managed 1 |
Total Assets Managed* |
# of Accounts Managed for Which Advisory Fee is Performance Based 2 |
Assets Managed for Which Advisory Fee is Performance Based 3 * |
|||||||||||||
DAVID S. RICHTER |
||||||||||||||||
Registered investment companies |
1 |
$154.0 million |
0 |
N/A |
||||||||||||
Other pooled investment vehicles |
127 |
$23.9 billion |
58 |
$11.9 billion |
||||||||||||
Other accounts |
6 |
$687.4 million |
1 |
$565.9 million |
||||||||||||
BRADLEY H. MEYERS |
||||||||||||||||
Registered investment companies |
1 |
$154.0 million |
0 |
N/A |
||||||||||||
Other pooled investment vehicles |
127 |
$23.9 billion |
58 |
$11.9 billion |
||||||||||||
Other accounts |
6 |
$687.4 million |
1 |
$565.9 million |
||||||||||||
ANDREW T. PREDA |
||||||||||||||||
Registered investment companies |
1 |
$154.0 million |
0 |
N/A |
||||||||||||
Other pooled investment vehicles |
38 |
$8.6 billion |
8 |
$2.5 billion |
||||||||||||
Other accounts |
1 |
$565.9 million |
1 |
$565.9 million |
||||||||||||
Compensation Structure |
Messrs. Richter, Meyers and Preda each receive a fixed base salary, an annual bonus based upon individual performance as well as the success of the firm and have been granted restricted stock units in GCM Grosvenor Inc., the parent entity. Messrs. Richter, Meyers and Preda may participate from time to time in certain performance-related economics (e.g., incentive fees or carried interest) that the firm receives for managing certain investment funds, but not directly from the Fund. In addition, each of Messrs. Richter and Meyers holds profit participation interests in a management holding company. | |
Ownership by Portfolio Managers |
As of March 31, 2024, none of the individuals responsible for the day-to-day investment management of the Master Fund owns any interests in the Master Fund or the Fund. | |
Conflicts of Interest |
As an investment adviser, GCMLP has a fiduciary duty to its advisory clients, including the Fund and the Master Fund. GCMLP recognizes that conflicts of interest are inherent in its business and accordingly has developed policies and procedures (including oversight monitoring) reasonably designed to detect, manage and mitigate the effects of actual or potential conflicts of interest in the |
1 |
For purposes of this column, “master-feeder” structures, which may include multiple “feeder” funds, are counted as one account. |
2 |
For purposes of this column, “feeders” into a “master fund” are counted as individual accounts where they have performance-based fees. |
3 |
Total AUM for each account is included. Note, however, that in some accounts, some investors may not be subject to performance-based fees. |
| * | Assets under management as of the end of a particular period include all subscriptions to, and are reduced by all withdrawals from, GCMLP funds effected in conjunction with the close of business the last day of such period. Data for 2024 are estimated and unaudited. |
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area of employee personal trading, managing multiple accounts for multiple clients, including the Fund and the Master Fund, and allocating investment opportunities. Investment professionals, including the Portfolio Managers and research analysts, are subject to the above-mentioned policies and oversight monitoring to ensure that all clients are treated equitably. GCMLP places the interests of its clients first and expects all of its employees to meet their fiduciary duties. ( See |
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Introduction |
The terms of the Fund Agreement (including, without limitation, terms relating to fees, liquidity and transparency) were not the result of “arm’s length” negotiation between (i) GCMLP, on the one hand, and (ii) the Fund, the Master Fund and/or you, on the other hand. GCMLP and its related persons, including GCM Customized Fund Investment Group, L.P. (“ GCM Grosvenor GCMLP has fiduciary duties to the Fund and the Master Fund to act in good faith and with fairness in all of GCMLP’s dealings with them, and GCMLP will take such duties into account in dealing with all actual and potential conflicts of interest. Certain investment funds and accounts, including the Fund and the Master Fund, that are managed or advised by GCMLP or its related persons are referred to herein as “ GCM-Managed Accounts | |
Other GCM Grosvenor Business Activities |
GCM Grosvenor and its related persons may engage in any activities, including, without limitation, a broad range of advisory, capital markets and other businesses or ventures. GCM Grosvenor has no obligation to make investment or other opportunities in any such businesses or ventures available to the Fund, the Master Fund or any other GCM-Managed Account (or to the investors in the Fund or any other GCM-Managed Account). Except to the extent GCM Grosvenor determines otherwise, in connection with its other businesses and ventures, GCM Grosvenor may enter into agreements related to clients or potential investments, restricting the ability of the GCM-Managed Accounts to make certain investments or engage in certain activities, which would otherwise be of benefit to the GCM-Managed Accounts. In addition, from time to time, GCM Grosvenor will provide services beyond those currently provided. GCM-Managed Accounts will not participate in the risks or rewards of such businesses or ventures and the investors in the GCM-Managed Accounts will not receive a benefit from fees generated by such activities. Further, such businesses and ventures: (i) compete with the GCM-Managed Accounts for GCM Grosvenor’s time and attention (as well as the time and attention of GCM Grosvenor’s related persons); and (ii) potentially create additional conflicts of interest or raise other special considerations.Conflicts of interest resulting from the foregoing include the allocation of management time among GCM-Managed Accounts and other clients of GCM Grosvenor. Nothing in the governing documents of any GCM-Managed Account (including the Fund and the Master Fund) generally (i) requires GCM Grosvenor and its affiliates to devote their full business time to the business and affairs of any particular GCM-Managed Account or to the business and affairs of the GCM-Managed Accounts in general; (ii) limits or restricts GCM Grosvenor or its related persons from engaging in and devoting time and attention to other businesses or ventures or from rendering services of whatever kind or nature; or (iii) restricts GCM Grosvenor or its related persons from forming additional investment funds, from entering into investment advisory relationships or from engaging in other business activities. As GCM Grosvenor sponsors, advises and/or manages numerous GCM-Managed Accounts, the officers and employees of GCMLP may not |
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spend a significant portion of their time on matters related to any particular GCM-Managed Account, and GCM Grosvenor or its personnel may have financial or other incentives to favor certain GCM-Managed Accounts over other GCM-Managed Accounts. Additionally, potential investments by GCM-Managed Accounts are subject to approval by a GCM Grosvenor investment, operations or other committee, whose professionals serve this function for all or certain GCM-Managed Accounts. It is expected that an investment, operations or other committee and its professionals will face additional conflicts of interest in allocating their time, attention and potential investment opportunities among GCM-Managed Accounts. In addition, to the extent permitted by applicable law, GCM Grosvenor and its related persons, in investing and trading for their proprietary accounts may make use of information obtained by GCM Grosvenor in the course of investing for the GCM-Managed Accounts. GCM Grosvenor does not generally establish information barriers between internal investment teams. GCM Grosvenor and its related persons will have no obligation to compensate any GCM-Managed Account (or any investor therein) in any respect for their receipt of such information or to account to any GCM-Managed Account (or any investor therein) for any profits earned from GCM Grosvenor’s or its related persons’ use of such information. Additionally, neither GCM Grosvenor nor GCM CFIG is under any obligation to share with the other business unit (or the clients of other business unit) any investment opportunities it identifies. While GCM Grosvenor maintains compliance policies and procedures, including personal trading policies, which seek to reduce actual and potential conflicts of interest, GCM Grosvenor employees in certain circumstances may be permitted to invest in alternative investment funds and other investment vehicles, including GCM-Managed Accounts and potential competitors of GCM-Managed Accounts. Members will not receive any benefit from any such investments. The records of any such investments by GCM Grosvenor’s employees generally will not be open to inspection by the investors. GCM Grosvenor and its employees give advice or take action for their own accounts that may differ from, conflict with or be adverse to advice given or action taken for a GCM-Managed Account. These activities may create conflicts of interest for the employees in providing services with respect to the GCM-Managed Accounts and may further adversely affect the prices and availability of other investments held by or potentially considered for purchase by such GCM-Managed Account. | ||
Differences in GCM-Managed Accounts |
GCMLP and its related persons currently manage or advise numerous GCM-Managed Accounts in addition to the Fund and the Master Fund, and expect to manage or advise additional GCM-Managed Accounts in the future. Certain GCM-Managed Accounts have or will have investment objectives that are identical or substantially similar to the investment objectives of the Fund and the Master Fund. It is not anticipated, however, that the Master Fund and other GCM-Managed Accounts having identical or substantially similar investment objectives will have identical or substantially similar investment portfolios. Differing investment portfolios can be expected to result from several factors, including, without limitation, the following: • different investment proposals made by the different Portfolio Management Teams assigned to the different GCM-Managed Accounts, as outlined below; • regulatory and/or tax restrictions that apply to certain GCM-Managed Accounts but not to others, as outlined below; • investment constraints imposed by Investment Managers on certain GCM-Managed Accounts but not on others, as outlined below; |
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• the availability of particular Investment Funds for investment by GCM-Managed Accounts at certain times but not at others;• different risk/return characteristics (notwithstanding that such GCM-Managed Accounts generally have similar investment objectives);• client-imposed portfolio management restrictions and/or other client instructions; and • the amount of cash available for investment by different GCM-Managed Accounts at certain times.The Master Fund and other GCM-Managed Accounts may be assigned to different Portfolio Management Teams even though the Master Fund and such other GCM-Managed Accounts may have identical or substantially similar investment objectives. GCMLP’s Portfolio Management Teams are authorized to invest the assets of the GCM-Managed Accounts assigned to them in a wide range of Investment Funds (subject to final approval by Messrs. Richter and Meyers). As a result, it is expected that the Master Fund and other GCM-Managed Accounts will have different investment portfolios (and different performance results) resulting from different portfolio allocations proposed by their respective Portfolio Management Teams, even if the Master Fund and such other GCM-Managed Accounts have identical or substantially similar investment objectives. Further, the factors outlined above are likely to result in different portfolios for GCM-Managed Accounts assigned to the same Portfolio Management Team, even though such GCM-Managed Accounts have identical or substantially similar investment objectives.Regulatory and/or tax restrictions may prohibit the Master Fund from participating in investment opportunities that are available to one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts. Similarly, the Investment Managers of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund may wish to invest may impose investment restrictions on the Master Fund but not on other GCM-Managed Accounts. Such restrictions could render the Master Fund ineligible to invest, in whole or in part, in an Investment Fund in which one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts are free to invest, to the possible detriment of the Master Fund.As a result of certain restrictions imposed by the 1940 Act on investments by the Master Fund in “affiliated persons” (as that term is defined in the 1940 Act) of the Master Fund, it is possible that if a GCM-Managed Account invests in an Investment Fund in which the Master Fund is also an investor, such GCM-Managed Account’s investment (including the Master Fund’s) in such Investment Fund may be required to forego some or all of its voting rights associated with such investment.In addition, in situations where the Master Fund and other GCM-Managed Accounts own, in the aggregate, 25% or more of the interest in a particular Investment Fund, the 1940 Act will effectively preclude the Master Fund and the other GCM-Managed Accounts from making additional investments in such Investment Fund, even though the relevant Portfolio Management Team may determine that it would be appropriate for the GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) assigned to them to make additional investments in such Investment Fund. Because GCMLP believes that GCM-Managed Accounts other than the Master Fund should not be compelled to forego investment opportunities that otherwise would be available to them but for the restrictions imposed by the 1940 Act (which restrictions would not apply to such GCM-Managed Accounts in the absence of the Master Fund’s participation in such investments), GCMLP may, in certain circumstances, determine not to invest assets of the Master Fund in, or to cause the Master Fund to redeem or withdraw from, a particular Investment Fund so that other GCM-Managed Accounts may invest in such Investment Fund. If GCMLP causes the Master Fund to redeem or withdraw from an Investment |
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Fund, the Master Fund may, in addition to losing the opportunity to invest in such Investment Fund, suffer economic detriment arising from such redemption or withdrawal (e.g., losing a performance/incentive compensation “loss carryforward”, incurring redemption or withdrawal charges, etc.) As a result of these and other factors: • the Master Fund may have a different investment portfolio (and, as a result, different performance results) from other GCM-Managed Accounts even though the Master Fund and such other GCM-Managed Accounts may have identical or substantially similar investment objectives; and• no assurance can be given that: › the Master Fund will participate in all investment opportunities in which one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP’s proprietary accounts and/or the proprietary accounts of GCMLP’s related persons participate;› particular investment opportunities allocated to one or more GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP’s proprietary accounts and/or the proprietary accounts of GCMLP’s related persons will not outperform investment opportunities allocated to the Master Fund; or› the Master Fund, on the one hand, and one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP’s proprietary accounts and/or the proprietary accounts of GCMLP’s related persons, on the other hand, will receive equal or similar treatment. | ||
Possible Incentive to Favor One or More GCM-Managed Accounts Over One or More Other GCM-Managed Accounts |
GCMLP’s Portfolio Management Teams might have an incentive to favor one or more GCM-Managed Accounts over the Master Fund (for example, with regard to the selection of Investment Funds for those GCM-Managed Accounts or the allocation of investment opportunities in Investment Funds that have limited investment capacity), because the “favored” GCM-Managed Account(s) might pay GCMLP more for its services than the Master Fund or other GCM-Managed Accounts that invest in the Master Fund (such as the Fund). For example, a Portfolio Management Team may have an incentive to propose investments in what it considers to be the best investment opportunities for GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) from which GCMLP receives performance-based compensation—in preference to GCM-Managed Accounts from which GCMLP does not receive performance-based compensation—because GCMLP may stand to gain greater compensation from the former types of accounts if the best investment opportunities are allocated to them.Similarly, a member of one of GCMLP’s Portfolio Management Teams may have an incentive to favor one or more GCM-Managed Accounts over the Master Fund if such person has personal investments in such “favored” GCM-Managed Accounts.As outlined below under “GCMLP’s Ability To Invest in the Same Securities in which the Master Fund Invests,” GCMLP has adopted portfolio opportunity allocation policies and procedures that are designed to ensure that investment opportunities are fairly allocated to all GCM-Managed Accounts (as well as the proprietary accounts of GCMLP and its related persons) for which such opportunities are appropriate and that have the funds available to take advantage of such opportunities. | |
GCMLP’s Ability to Invest in the Same Securities in |
GCMLP and/or its related persons invest in GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Fund and the Master Fund) for their own accounts alongside investors who are not related to them. When they do so, GCMLP and/or its related persons participate in |
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which the Master Fund Invests |
the investment opportunities in which such GCM-Managed Accounts participate, alongside the other investors in such GCM-Managed Accounts.In addition, GCMLP and/or its related persons may place assets under the management of (or otherwise procure investment advisory or investment management services from) any Investment Manager directly or indirectly used by one or more of GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund). For example, GCMLP and/or its related persons may invest in an Investment Fund in which one or more GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) invest. Further, GCMLP and/or its related persons may invest in an Investment Fund at or about the same time one or more GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) invest in such Investment Fund.GCMLP, its related persons and one or more GCM-Managed Accounts that place assets under the management of, or otherwise procure investment advisory or investment management services from, any Investment Manager directly or indirectly used by the Master Fund and/or one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts may do so on terms (including terms relating to fees, liquidity and transparency) that are the same as or more advantageous than those applicable to the investments that may be made by the Master Fund and/or such other GCM-Managed Account(s) with such Investment Manager. To the extent that GCMLP and/or its related persons invest with a given Investment Manager on terms that are more advantageous than those on which the Master Fund and/or one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts may invest with such Investment Manager, GCMLP and/or its related persons may have an incentive to maintain or increase the investment by the Master Fund and such other GCM-Managed Accounts with such Investment Manager in order to obtain and/or maintain such advantageous terms for the benefit of GCMLP and/or its related persons.In certain cases, an Investment Fund may have what GCMLP refers to as “limited capacity.” An Investment Fund has “limited capacity” when it is not willing to accept all capital that GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP and/or GCMLP’s related persons wish to invest in such Investment Fund. If GCMLP and/or its related persons wish to invest in such an Investment Fund at a time when an investment in such Investment Fund is appropriate for the Master Fund, GCMLP has a conflict of interest because it has a financial incentive to allocate the opportunity to the greatest extent possible to GCMLP and/or its related persons. In order to avoid this conflict, GCMLP may determine in certain cases that it and/or its related persons will not directly participate in an Investment Fund that has “limited capacity” unless and until all GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) that wish to invest in such Investment Fund (including, for this purpose, GCM-Managed Accounts in which GCMLP and/or its related persons participate) have invested the full amount of capital they wish to invest in such Investment Fund.In other cases, GCMLP employs policies and procedures for allocating limited investment opportunities in a manner that it believes to be equitable to the GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP and GCMLP’s related persons. Under these policies and procedures, to the extent that one or more GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Fund and the Master Fund), GCMLP and/or GCMLP’s related persons (each of the foregoing, a “Participating Account |
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investment guidelines and constraints applicable to such Participating Account and to certain limited exceptions set forth in such policies and procedures. (Similarly, if interests in an Investment Fund are available in the “secondary market” but such interests are not available in an amount sufficient to satisfy the aggregate amount that Participating Accounts wish to invest in such interests, such interests generally are allocated to each Participating Account that has funds available to make such investment in the proportion that the amount such Participating Account wishes to invest in such interests bears to the aggregate amount that all Participating Accounts wish to invest in such interests, subject to the investment guidelines and constraints applicable to such Participating Account and to certain limited exceptions set forth in such policies and procedures). GCMLP frequently seeks to obtain agreements from Investment Managers under which Investment Funds managed by such Investment Managers agree to accept specified dollar amounts of capital from GCM-Managed Accounts (considered in the aggregate) at specified investment dates and/or over specified time periods. In cases where GCMLP is able to negotiate “capacity” of this type for the GCM-Managed Accounts with respect to a particular Investment Fund, such capacity is not reserved solely for those GCM-Managed Accounts that are in existence on the date that GCMLP negotiated such capacity. Similarly, to the extent such capacity is allocated to a GCM-Managed Account that was in existence on the date that GCMLP negotiated such capacity; such allocation is not reserved solely for persons who were investors or participants in such GCM-Managed Account on that date. Instead, such capacity is made available to all GCM-Managed Accounts that want to invest in such Investment Fund, based on the allocation decisions of their respective Portfolio Management Teams and the application of GCMLP’s capacity allocation guidelines, regardless of whether such GCM-Managed Accounts were in existence on the date that GCMLP negotiated such capacity. Similarly, to the extent that any such capacity is allocated to a GCM-Managed Account that existed on that date, all investors or participants in such GCM-Managed Account participate in such capacity in accordance with their respective economic interests in such GCM-Managed Account, even if such investors or participants invested in such GCM-Managed Account subsequent to that date.As outlined in greater detail below in “Different Reporting Packages,” in certain cases, GCMLP provides information relating to Investment Funds (including GCMLP’s opinions and investment decisions in respect of such Investment Funds) to: (i) investors or participants in GCM-Managed Accounts; and (ii) clients to whom GCMLP provides hedge fund program advisory services, for the purpose of assisting them in making their own determinations as to whether they wish to invest directly in such Investment Funds or withdraw or redeem their direct investments in such Investment Funds. In these cases, it can be expected that the recipients of such information will from time to time use such information to determine to:• invest directly in Investment Funds in which one or more GCM-Managed Accounts are invested (or in which they are contemplating investments), potentially in competition with other GCM-Managed Accounts if such Investment Funds have “limited capacity;” and/or• withdraw or redeem from Investment Funds in which one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts are invested (or from which they are contemplating withdrawing or redeeming their investments), potentially to the detriment of such other GCM-Managed Accounts if such Investment Funds subject their investors to “gates” or other withdrawal or redemption restrictions that create “limited capacity” to withdraw or redeem from such Investment Funds. |
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GCMLP’s Ability To Withdraw or Redeem from Investments in which GCM-Managed Accounts Invest |
Certain GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) could want to withdraw or redeem from an Investment Fund at the same time that other GCM-Managed Accounts (and/or GCMLP and/or its related persons) want to withdraw or redeem from such Investment Fund. The ability to withdraw or redeem from any Investment Fund could differ materially from investor to investor due to the timing of their respective investments in the Investment Fund, the different classes of interests in such Investment Fund in which they invest, special arrangements negotiated with the Investment Manager of such Investment Fund and/or other factors. The reasons why certain GCM-Managed Accounts may wish to (or be compelled to) withdraw or redeem from a particular Investment Fund as of a particular date also may differ materially from the reasons why other GCM-Managed Accounts (and/or GCMLP and its related persons) may wish to (or be compelled to) withdraw or redeem from such Investment Fund as of such date. Withdrawals or redemptions or subscriptions by GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP and/or GCMLP’s related persons from or to a particular Investment Fund could in certain cases adversely affect other GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) that are invested in such Investment Fund. Significant withdrawals or redemptions or subscriptions could, for example, cause portfolio damage, portfolio dilution, depletion of liquidity, costly portfolio rebalancing, imposition of withdrawal “gates” and under-allocation to certain positions. It could also cause an Investment Fund to make “in-kind” (as opposed to cash) distributions. In cases such as these, GCMLP has a conflict of interest in making withdrawals or redemptions or subscriptions for the GCM-Managed Accounts. This conflict of interest could be exacerbated in situations where one or more GCM-Managed Accounts (and/or GCMLP and its related persons) withdraw or redeem from a particular Investment Fund on a date as of which one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) are not able to do so. For example, certain GCM-Managed Accounts (and/or GCMLP and its related persons) could have invested in a particular Investment Fund pursuant to a “lock-up” that has expired, where as one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) may still be subject to “lock-ups” in connection with their investments in such Investment Fund because they either (i) purchased their interests in such Investment Fund after the time that other GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP and GCMLP’s related persons purchased their interests in such Investment Fund or (ii) opted for liquidity classes in such Investment Fund that are different from the liquidity classes owned by such other GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP and GCMLP’s related persons.In addition, certain withdrawal or redemption “gates” are, for example, calculated based on withdrawals or redemptions during an entire quarter or other period, so that if certain GCM-Managed Accounts (and/or GCMLP and/or its related persons) withdraw or redeem during a quarter, this could prevent one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) from withdrawing or redeeming at quarter-end, whereas the earlier withdrawals or redemptions are unaffected.In sum, because the ability to withdraw or redeem from any Investment Fund may differ materially from investor to investor due to the timing of their respective investments in such Investment Fund, the different classes of interests in such Investment Fund in which they invest, special arrangements negotiated with the Investment Manager of such Investment Fund and/or other factors, certain GCM-Managed Accounts (and/or GCMLP and/or its related persons) may have withdrawal or redemption rights that differ from those of the Master Fund, and that the exercise of such rights could have a materially adverse effect on the Master Fund. | |
Investment in Different Parts of the Capital Structure |
At times, GCM-Managed Accounts and funds managed by GCMLP’s affiliates (together “GCM Grosvenor Funds |
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indirectly through an Investment Fund. Investments in a company by certain GCM Grosvenor Funds may be made prior to the investment by other GCM Grosvenor Funds, concurrently, including as part of the same financing plan or subsequent to the investments by such other GCM Grosvenor Funds. Any such investment by a GCM Grosvenor Fund may consist of securities or other instruments of a different class or type from those in which other GCM Grosvenor Funds are invested, and may entitle the holder of such securities or other instruments to greater control or to rights that otherwise differ from those to which such other GCM Grosvenor Funds are entitled. In connection with any such investments, including as they relate to acquisition, owning and disposition of such investments, the GCM Grosvenor Funds have conflicting interests and investment objectives, and any difference in the terms of the securities or other instruments held by such parties may raise additional conflicts of interest for GCM Grosvenor Funds and GCMLP and its affiliates. For example, certain GCM Grosvenor Funds may invest in the common equity of a company that subsequently issues debt that is held, directly or indirectly, by one or more other GCM Grosvenor Funds; the interests of these two groups of investors in the company under certain circumstances can be unaligned or adverse, particularly in times of stress for the company. This conflict may be exacerbated to the extent that representatives of GCMLP or its affiliates serve on an advisory or other board or committee related to such company or GCM Grosvenor Funds’ investment in such company. In certain instances, GCM Grosvenor Funds and/or GCM Grosvenor and its affiliates invest as a minority investor as part of a larger investing group or syndicate. In such cases, the financial sponsor, and not GCMLP or its affiliates, will be in the position to negotiate and potentially make decisions on behalf of the holders of the relevant class of equity or debt holders. GCMLP recognizes that conflicts arise under such circumstances and will endeavor to treat all GCM Grosvenor Funds fairly and equitably. | ||
Treatment as an Investment Group for Certain Transactions by GCM-Managed Accounts |
In certain cases, although each investment in an Investment Fund by a GCM-Managed Account is a distinct transaction, Investment Funds agree to treat all investments made by GCM-Managed Accounts as if they had been made by the same investor for purposes of applying certain business terms such as “gates.” GCMLP enters into these types of arrangements because it believes that in most cases they can be expected to benefit all participating GCM-Managed Accounts. However, under arrangements such as these, certain GCM-Managed Accounts could make complete withdrawals or redemptions provided that other GCM-Managed Accounts do not withdraw or redeem, as the former GCM-Managed Accounts could make use of the withdrawal or redemption capacity allocable to the entire “investment group.” For example, if a GCM-Managed Account that is part of an “investment group” were to withdraw or redeem from an Investment Fund because such GCM-Managed Account either itself has received significant withdrawal/redemption requests, wishes to rebalance its portfolio, or otherwise requires liquidity, its withdrawal or redemption could reduce withdrawal or redemption capacity for other members of the “investment group.” However, these arrangements also have certain drawbacks. In this example, depending on the actual terms of the applicable “gate,” a particular GCM-Managed Account that participates in an “investment group” may be entitled to receive less withdrawal or redemption proceeds in respect of a particular withdrawal or redemption than would be the case had such GCM-Managed Account not participated in such “investment group.”In certain cases, GCMLP is able to negotiate favorable investment terms with the Investment Managers of Investment Funds, but often on the condition that the GCM-Managed Accounts (which, in certain cases, could include proprietary accounts of GCMLP or its related persons) collectively maintain an aggregate minimum level of invested capital in a given Investment Fund or group of Investment Funds managed by the same Investment Manager. The need to maintain an aggregate minimum investment by GCM-Managed Accounts in a |
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particular Investment Fund or group of Investment Funds managed by the same Investment Manager in order to retain favorable investment terms for all GCM-Managed Accounts that invest in such Investment Funds creates a conflict of interest in that it creates an incentive for GCMLP to cause a GCM-Managed Account to invest in or not to withdraw or redeem from a given Investment Fund in order to maintain the minimum threshold investment. Proprietary capital of GCMLP and its related persons – whether invested directly in an Investment Fund or through a GCM-Managed Account in which GCMLP or its related persons invest – may be among the capital that benefits from the minimum investment threshold being maintained, creating an additional conflict of interest.Although GCMLP enters into the types of arrangements outlined above because it believes that they generally can be expected to benefit all GCM-Managed Accounts, there may be particular facts and circumstances under which particular GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) would receive more favorable treatment had they not participated in such arrangements. | ||
Investments in “Early Stage” Investment Funds |
GCMLP and its related persons may from time to time invest, for their respective proprietary accounts, in early-stage Investment Funds (including GCMLP-Administered Funds, discussed below), at times when investments in such Investment Funds would not be appropriate for the Master Fund or other GCM-Managed Accounts. If GCMLP should subsequently determine, in accordance with its then-current criteria applicable to the selection of Investment Funds for the GCM-Managed Accounts, that such an Investment Fund is an appropriate investment for the GCM-Managed Accounts, GCMLP and its related persons will not be required to restructure the terms on which they invest in such Investment Fund in order to make investments in such Investment Fund available to the Master Fund if, for regulatory or other reasons, the Master Fund would be (or, in GCMLP’s reasonable determination, could be) precluded from investing in such Investment Fund in the absence of such restructuring. | |
Investments by Investment Funds in Securities Issued by GCMLP |
Certain of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests also invest in various parts of GCMLP’s or its affiliates’ capital structures, including in GCM Grosvenor Inc.’s (its parent company) notes or other debt or equity securities issued from time to time by GCMLP or an affiliate, and GCMLP may be aware that such Investment Funds do so. Transactions entered into and/or investments made by such Investment Funds may, directly or indirectly, affect the performance of the Master Fund and the value of the debt or equity securities issued by GCMLP or its affiliates, including GCM Grosvenor Inc.’s public shares. The fact that certain Investment Funds may hold notes or other securities issued by GCMLP, its affiliates, or its parent company could, under certain facts and circumstances, potentially alter GCMLP’s objectivity in determining whether or not to invest in such Investment Funds and/or whether or not to withdraw or redeem from such Investment Funds. GCMLP does not expect, however, that it would ever make portfolio management decisions for the Master Fund that would be different from the decisions it would make for the Master Fund if such potential conflict did not exist. | |
Investments in Investment Funds Managed by Clients |
Certain of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests may be managed by investment management firms owned in whole or in part by GCMLP’s or its affiliates’ clients, or may hold notes or other securities issued by GCMLP’s or its affiliates’ clients, and GCMLP may be aware of such investments. The fact that certain of the Investment Funds may be managed by investment management firms owned in whole or in part by GCMLP’s or its affiliates’ clients, or may hold notes or other securities issued by GCMLP’s or its affiliates’ clients, could, under certain facts and circumstances, potentially alter GCMLP’s objectivity in determining whether or not to invest in such Investment Funds and/or whether or not to withdraw or redeem from such Investment Funds. GCMLP does not expect, however, that it would ever make portfolio management decisions for the |
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Master Fund that would be different from the decisions it would make for the Master Fund if such potential conflict did not exist. | ||
Different Reporting Packages |
Different investors or participants in GCM-Managed Accounts, (including different investors or participants in the Fund and the Master Fund), as well as certain other persons (including (i) persons to whom GCMLP provides investment advisory services on a non-discretionary basis and (ii) persons who currently have, or who previously have had, an interest in GCMLP or who otherwise currently are, or who previously have been, associated with GCMLP), receive oral and/or written reports from GCMLP that differ in form, substance, level of detail, timing and/or frequency, based on factors such as:• the types of services GCMLP provides to such investors or participants; • the size of their investments with GCMLP; • requests for specific types of information made by such investors or participants or persons acting on their behalf; • negotiations between GCMLP and such investors or participants or other persons acting on their behalf; and/or • GCMLP’s internal assessment of the likely reporting needs of such investors or participants or of persons acting on their behalf. In particular, certain reports may include information relating to Investment Funds in which the GCM-Managed Accounts, including the Master Fund, invest (or in which they are contemplating an investment).In certain cases, GCMLP provides information to investors or recipients in the GCM-Managed Accounts, including Members, for purposes of enabling them to monitor their investments in the GCM-Managed Accounts. In these cases, GCMLP cannot effectively prevent an investor/recipient who has received information that has not been provided to other recipients from using such information to determine whether to:• withdraw or redeem from a GCM-Managed Account or increase its investment in a GCM-Managed Account (including the Fund);• invest directly in Investment Funds in which GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) are invested (or in which they are contemplating investments), potentially in competition with the GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund); or• withdraw or redeem from Investment Funds in which GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund) are invested (or from which they are contemplating withdrawing or redeeming their investments), potentially to the detriment of the GCM-Managed Accounts (including the Master Fund).In other cases, GCMLP provides information relating to Investment Funds to investors or participants in GCM-Managed Accounts for the purpose of assisting them in making their own determinations as to whether they wish to invest in such Investment Funds or withdraw or redeem their investments in such Investment Funds. In these cases, it can be expected that such investors or participants will use such information to determine whether to engage in any one or more of the actions described above.Any of these actions could have a material adverse effect on investors or participants who do not receive the same information provided to other investors or participants. Notwithstanding the foregoing, recipients of GCMLP’s oral and written reports should be aware that: |
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• GCMLP does not permit such recipients to copy, transmit or distribute such reports, or any data or other information contained therein, in whole or in part, or authorize such actions by others, without GCMLP’s express prior written consent, and any such action taken without GCMLP’s express prior written consent may constitute a breach of contract and applicable copyright laws; and • by their receipt of such reports, such recipients will be deemed to have acknowledged that: (i) the data and/or other information contained therein may include data and/or information that, under applicable law, may be deemed to be material, non-public information regarding particular securities and/or the issuers thereof; (ii) under certain circumstances, United States securities laws prohibit the purchase and sale of securities by persons or entities who are in possession of material, non-public information relating to such securities and/or the issuers thereof; (iii) securities laws of other jurisdictions may contain a similar prohibition; and (iv) as a result, it is possible that trading in securities that are the subject of data and/or information contained in such reports may be prohibited by law.GCMLP strongly encourages all recipients of its oral or written reports to review their own policies and procedures relating to the possible receipt of material, non-public information to ensure that any information that they receive from GCMLP relating to particular securities and/or the issuers thereof will not be used in any manner that conflicts with applicable law. | ||
Transfers of Interests in Investment Funds |
From time to time, GCMLP determines that it is appropriate for one or more GCM-Managed Accounts to dispose of, or decrease, their investments in a particular Investment Fund as of a particular date (each, a “Divesting Account GCM-Managed Accounts to invest, or increase their investments, in such Investment Fund as of the same date (each, an “Investing Account In certain cases, GCMLP will implement decisions such as these by causing a Divesting Account to withdraw or redeem its interest in an Investment Fund at the net asset value (as calculated and reported by the Investment Manager of such Investment Fund), while simultaneously causing an Investing Account to invest in an interest in such Investment Fund at the same net asset value. In other cases, GCMLP will implement such decisions by causing a Divesting Account to assign its interest in an Investment Fund to an Investing Account in exchange for a cash payment from the Investing Account equal to the net asset value of the interest being assigned to the Investing Account (as calculated and reported by the Investment Manager of such Investment Fund). For purposes of convenience: • GCMLP refers to transactions of the types outlined above as “transfers” (even though the first type of transaction outlined above does not involve any transfer between the affected GCM-Managed Accounts, but only a divestment from an Investment Fund by one or more GCM-Managed Accounts and a substantially simultaneous investment in such Investment Fund by one or more other GCM-Managed Accounts);• GCMLP refers to a transaction in which a Divesting Account withdraws or redeems its interest from an Investment Fund (in whole or in part) at the net asset value thereof, while an Investing Account substantially simultaneously invests (or increases its investment) in such Investment Fund, as a “cash transfer”; and |
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• GCMLP refers to a transaction in which a Divesting Account assigns its interest in an Investment Fund (in whole or in part) at the net asset value thereof to an Investing Account, as a “book entry transfer.” In certain cases, GCMLP is able to negotiate arrangements with Investment Managers—either at the inception of GCMLP’s relationship with an Investment Manager or on a case-by-case GCM-Managed Account that is the “cash transferee” or “book entry transferee” of an interest in such Investment Manager’s Investment Fund to “stand in the shoes” of the transferor GCM-Managed Account for purposes of determining such business terms as the duration of any “lock-up period,” the continuation of any performance/incentive fee or other performance/incentive compensation “loss carryforwards,” the applicability of withdrawal charges, etc. GCMLP generally intends to take advantage, to the fullest extent permitted by law, of the ability of transferee GCM-Managed Accounts to receive “carryover” business terms. In certain cases, however, regulatory considerations prohibit GCMLP from effecting transactions in which business terms are carried over from the transferor GCM-Managed Account to the transferee GCM-Managed Account. For example, ERISA does not permit any such “carryover” business terms to apply in the case of transfers of interests in Investment Funds by GCM-Managed Accounts that are subject to ERISA to any other GCM-Managed Accounts, regardless of whether the transferee GCM-Managed Account is subject to ERISA. ERISA, however, does not appear to prohibit “carryover” business terms applying in the case of transfers from GCM-Managed Accounts that are not subject to ERISA to GCM-Managed Accounts that are subject to ERISA. Accordingly, GCM-Managed Accounts that are not subject to ERISA (such as the Master Fund) may not always be able to take advantage of arrangements of the type discussed above even though GCM-Managed Accounts that are subject to ERISA (including certain GCM-Managed Accounts in which persons employed by or otherwise associated with GCMLP invest) may.GCMLP’s general policy is not to transfer interests in “designated” or “side-pocket” investments related to an investment in an Investment Fund when transferring interests in such particular Investment Fund from one GCM-Managed Account to another GCM-Managed Account, regardless of whether such transfer takes the form of a “cash transfer” or a “book entry transfer.” If a Portfolio Management Team decides, in any particular case, to over-ride this general policy, such Portfolio Management Team is responsible for documenting (in writing) the reasons for such over-ride.The Master Fund will not participate in “book entry transfers” because of potential restrictions imposed by the 1940 Act. To the extent the Master Fund participates in “cash transfers,” in no instance will any party, including GCMLP or the Investment Manager of any affected Investment Fund, receive any additional compensation specifically as a result of any such cash transfer. | ||
Trade and Clerical Errors |
Subject to the considerations set forth below, GCMLP is under no obligation to reimburse the Fund or the Master Fund for any errors or mistakes made by GCMLP, its employees or its agents with respect to GCMLP’s placing or executing trades for the Fund or the Master Fund, as the case may be, or for any other administrative or clerical errors or mistakes made by the foregoing (collectively, “ Trade or Clerical Errors |
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Clerical Error is required to be reimbursed in accordance with the applicable standard of care provisions and with respect to determining the extent of the loss that has been incurred by the Fund or the Master Fund, as the case may be. If a Trade or Clerical Error occurs other than because of GCMLP’s failure to adhere to the applicable standard of care, GCMLP, in its sole discretion, reserves the right to reimburse the Fund or the Master Fund, as the case may be, for any losses sustained by the Fund or the Master Fund because of such Trade or Clerical Error. GCMLP’s reimbursement of the Fund or the Master Fund, as the case may be, for a Trade or Clerical Error in such a situation will not constitute a waiver of GCMLP’s general policy to cause the Fund or the Master Fund, as the case may be, to bear the losses associated with other Trade or Clerical Errors that occur other than because of GCMLP’s failure to adhere to the applicable standard of care. Any net gain resulting from Trade or Clerical Errors will be for the benefit of the Fund or the Master Fund, as the case may be, and will not be retained by GCMLP. | ||
Receipt of Sensitive Information |
From time to time, GCMLP receives, from Investment Managers of the Investment Funds in which the GCM-Managed Accounts invest, information that is not generally known to other investors in such Investment Funds. In these cases, legal or regulatory constraints and GCMLP’s policies designed to address such constraints could prevent GCMLP from acting in the manner in which it otherwise would act on behalf of one or more GCM-Managed Accounts, including the Fund or the Master Fund. | |
Proxy Voting |
GCMLP has developed certain policies and procedures to manage the conflicts of interest that may arise in connection with voting proxies on behalf of the Fund, the Master Fund and the other GCM-Managed Accounts. (See | |
GRV Securities LLC and Other Distribution Agents |
GRV Securities LLC (the “ Distributor GCM-Managed Accounts, including the Fund and the Master Fund. Pursuant to a Master Placement Agent Agreement, GCMLP and its affiliates compensate the Distributor on a flat annual fee basis for placement agent/distribution services provided by the Distributor, regardless of the success of the Distributor’s services. The Distributor does not receive compensation from the Fund or the Master Fund for the distribution of Shares and/or placement of interests. You should understand that:• in connection with acting as distributor on behalf of the Fund, the Distributor acts as an agent of the Fund, not as an agent of or a broker for you; and • the Distributor’s distribution activities on behalf of the Fund should not be construed as a recommendation to purchase Shares, as the Distributor makes no such recommendations. The Distributor has an incentive to introduce the Fund to prospective Members, since additional investments in the Fund will result in additional investment management/advisory fees for GCMLP. |
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If you acquire Shares as a result of a recommendation made by any other distribution or similar agent retained by GCMLP to assist it in marketing Shares, you should not view such recommendation as being disinterested, as GCMLP generally will pay the agent for the introduction. Also, you should regard such an agent as having an incentive to recommend that you retain its Shares, as GCMLP may pay such agent a portion of GCMLP’s fees for all periods during which you hold such Shares. | ||
Brokerage Expenses |
Except in the very limited case of “secondary market” transactions in interests in Investment Funds, the Master Fund invests in Investment Funds without the involvement of any financial intermediary such as a broker-dealer, and commissions are not payable in connection with such investments. To the extent that the Master Fund purchases or sells investments other than investments in Investment Funds, GCMLP has the authority to determine the financial intermediaries to be used in connection with such purchases/sales and to negotiate the amount of commissions or other transactional compensation to be paid to such intermediaries in connection with such purchases/sales—which commissions or other compensation are borne by the Master Fund. In determining which intermediaries to use, GCMLP focuses on the quality of the execution-related services provided by the intermediaries (including factors such as the ability of the intermediaries to execute transactions efficiently, their responsiveness to instructions, their facilities, their reliability and their financial stability), and does not necessarily select those that charge the lowest commissions or other transactional costs. Typically, GCMLP does not separately compensate financial intermediaries for the provision of non-execution related services and does not believe that it “pays up” for such services. However, GCMLP may from time to time use financial intermediaries that provide research-related products or services to most or all of their customers, and—although GCMLP does not request research-related products or services from such financial intermediaries—GCMLP may on occasion receive and use research provided by such intermediaries. In this situation, GCMLP receives a benefit because it does not have to produce or pay for the research. Accordingly, GCMLP may have an incentive to select financial intermediaries based on its interest in receiving the research or other products or services rather than on its clients’ interest in receiving the most favorable execution. However, since the research provided is not material in nature and quantity and is provided without GCMLP’s request, GCMLP believes that its receipt of such research does not have a material effect on its selection of financial intermediaries.To the extent that the Master Fund engages in “secondary market” transactions in interests in Investment Funds, GCMLP generally has limited opportunity to select the financial intermediaries involved in connection with any proposed transaction or to negotiate the amount of commissions or other transactional compensation to be paid to such intermediaries in connection with such transactions. In general, the number of financial intermediaries active in the hedge fund “secondary market” is limited and the commissions charged by such intermediaries, which typically are borne by the purchasing party in such a transaction, may vary significantly from intermediary-to-intermediary, transaction-by-transaction. | |
Redemption and Illiquid Investments |
GCMLP may have a conflict of interest in processing redemptions. As an example, GCMLP must determine whether to cause the Master Fund to pay out the redemption proceeds attributable to Investment Funds from which the Master Fund cannot withdraw or redeem (or cannot withdraw or redeem without incurring a withdrawal or redemption charge) as of the applicable redemption date or to require that the redeeming Member continue to participate in such |
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Investment Funds until the Master Fund can withdraw or redeem capital from them. Paying out such redemption proceeds may reduce the liquidity and increase the concentration of the Master Fund’s continuing portfolio, while not doing so exposes the redeeming Member to incremental risk. | ||
Relationships with Consulting Firms |
Persons employed by or otherwise associated with GCMLP may be related by blood or marriage to, or otherwise have personal relationships with, persons employed by or otherwise associated with consulting firms. In certain cases, such persons employed by or otherwise associated with consulting firms may be responsible for: • analyzing and/or monitoring “fund of funds” investment managers on behalf of such consulting firms; • recommending “fund of funds” investment managers to the investment committees or similar governing committees of such consulting firms; • selecting the “funds of funds” investment managers that such consulting firms will present to their clients as potential managers of such clients’ assets; • recommending particular “fund of funds” investment managers to clients of such consulting firms; • recommending that clients of such consulting firms continue to retain the services of, or terminate, “fund of funds” investment managers; and/or • otherwise playing an instrumental role in the process whereby clients of such consulting firms select, and/or retain or terminate, “fund of funds” investment managers. In cases where persons employed by or otherwise associated with consulting firms have one or more responsibilities of the types outlined above and are related by blood or marriage to, or otherwise have personal relationships with, persons employed by or otherwise associated with GCMLP, such persons may have an incentive to select GCMLP as a potential manager of the assets of clients of such consulting firms, to recommend GCMLP to clients of such consulting firms and/or to recommend that clients of such consulting firms continue to utilize GCMLP’s services. GCMLP believes that it is the responsibility of consulting firms to recuse interested individuals or take other appropriate steps to protect the integrity of their decision-making processes, and to make appropriate disclosures of actual or potential conflicts of interest to their clients. If you utilize the services of a consulting firm, GCMLP urges you to inquire of such consulting firm whether it is subject to such a conflict of interest. GCMLP from time to time enters into arrangements with consulting firms that represent existing and prospective clients, pursuant to which such consulting firms provide GCMLP certain performance or other data on the “fund of funds” industry. GCMLP may compensate such a consulting firm for such services on an annual flat-fee or other basis. In no event will GCMLP enter into any such arrangement unless it first determines to its reasonable satisfaction that the firm that provides services to GCMLP for compensation from GCMLP discloses that fact to all clients to whom it recommends GCMLP. | |
Relationships with Investment Managers and Other Service Providers |
Persons employed by or otherwise associated with GCMLP or its affiliates may be related by blood or marriage to, or otherwise have personal relationships with, persons employed by or otherwise associated with the Investment Managers of existing or prospective Investment Funds or with other third-parties that provide or contemplate providing services to GCMLP and/or one or more GCM-Managed |
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Accounts. In certain cases, such persons employed by or otherwise associated with GCMLP may be responsible for: • analyzing and/or monitoring existing or prospective Investment Funds managed by such Investment Managers, or analyzing and/or monitoring other third-parties that provide or contemplate providing services to GCMLP and/or one or more GCM-Managed Accounts;• recommending that GCMLP approve Investment Funds managed by such Investment Managers as eligible investments for GCM-Managed Accounts;• recommending that one or more GCM-Managed Accounts add capital to, or withdraw or redeem their capital (in whole or in part) from, Investment Funds managed by such Investment Managers;• making the final decision to approve Investment Funds managed by such Investment Managers as eligible investments for GCM-Managed Accounts;• making the final decision to cause one or more GCM-Managed Accounts to add capital to, or withdraw or redeem their capital (in whole or in part) from, Investment Funds managed by such Investment Managers;• recommending that GCMLP retain other third-parties that wish to provide services to GCMLP and/or one or more GCM-Managed Accounts; and/or• recommending that GCMLP terminate third-parties that provide services to one or more GCM-Managed Accounts.In cases where persons employed by or otherwise associated with GCMLP have one or more responsibilities of the types outlined above and are related by blood or marriage to, or otherwise have personal relationships with, persons employed by or otherwise associated with Investment Managers of existing or prospective Investment Funds or other third-parties that provide or contemplate providing services to GCMLP and/or one or more GCM-Managed Accounts, such persons have an incentive to base their decisions on personal considerations rather than on the best interests of the affected GCM-Managed Accounts. GCMLP, however, monitors relationships of these types with a view to determining whether there is a reasonable likelihood that such persons will base their decisions on personal considerations rather than on the best interests of the affected GCM-Managed Accounts, and will take appropriate action if it determines that such a reasonable likelihood exists. | ||
Gifts, Meals and Entertainment |
GCMLP personnel sometimes receive gifts, meals and/or entertainment from service providers doing business with GCMLP and/or one or more GCM-Managed Accounts, or from prospective service providers, including existing and prospective Investment Managers. GCMLP maintains policies and procedures that it believes are reasonably designed to preserve GCMLP’s objectivity with respect to the selection, retention and termination of service providers, notwithstanding the receipt of gifts, meals and/or entertainment by GCMLP personnel from such service providers. However, notwithstanding these policies and procedures, to the extent that GCMLP’s employees receive gifts, meals or entertainment from a service provider or prospective service provider, such employees have an incentive to seek to cause GCMLP and/or one or more GCM-Managed Accounts to enter into a business relationship with, or to sustain or expand an existing business relationship with, such service provider even if doing so is not in the best interests of such GCM-Managed Account(s).GCMLP from time to time provides meals and entertainment to persons employed by or otherwise associated with existing or potential Investment Managers, consultants, financial advisors, clients and prospective clients (which sometimes include Members and prospective Members). In certain cases, GCMLP provides |
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such meals and entertainment to clients or prospective clients at the request of consultants, financial planners or other third-parties. It is possible that providing meals and entertainment to such persons could affect their decision-making responsibilities. GCMLP from time to time contributes to events sponsored by clients and prospective clients, including Members and prospective investors in the Fund, or by organizations in which clients or prospective clients participate, such as picnics, annual meetings, dinners and other events honoring retiring employees. It is possible that contributing to such events could affect the clients or prospective clients in connection with their decisions whether to retain GCMLP as their investment manager/adviser or to maintain existing investment management/advisory relationships with GCMLP. | ||
Charitable and Philanthropic Activities |
GCMLP and its principals, and Investment Managers of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests and their principals, may engage in philanthropic activities through contributions of their time and/or financial resources to charitable organizations. GCMLP and its principals, on the one hand, and such Investment Managers and their principals, on the other hand, from time to time ask each other to participate in their respective philanthropic activities. GCMLP and its principals, and such Investment Managers and their principals, are free to participate in philanthropic opportunities brought to their attention by one another. Such participation or lack thereof will not be a factor in GCMLP’s investment management process. Similarly, GCMLP and its principals, and investors or participants in GCM-Managed Accounts and their principals, may engage in philanthropic activities through contributions of their time and/or financial resources to charitable organizations. GCMLP and its principals, on the one hand, and investors or participants in GCM-Managed Accounts and their principals, on the other hand, may from time to time ask each other to participate in their respective philanthropic activities. GCMLP and its principals, and investors or participants in GCM-Managed Accounts and their principals, are free to participate in philanthropic opportunities brought to their attention by one another. Such participation or lack thereof will not be a factor in GCMLP’s investment management process.GCMLP has frequent interaction with consultants and financial advisors who represent prospective and existing investors or participants in the GCM-Managed Accounts. GCMLP does not pay these consultants or financial advisors to recommend GCMLP or any GCM-Managed Account to their clients. However, consultants and financial advisors have from time to time invited GCMLP and its principals to participate in particular philanthropic activities, and can be expected to continue to do so in the future. GCMLP has participated in such philanthropic activities in the past and can be expected to continue to do so in the future. Such participation or lack thereof will not be a factor in GCMLP’s investment management process. | |
The Investment Managers |
The Investment Managers of the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests are likely to be subject to many of the same types of conflicts of interest to which GCMLP is subject. For example, the Investment Managers may be involved in other business ventures, including the management and/or administration of other investment funds and accounts whose investment objectives are identical or substantially similar to those of the Investment Funds they manage. Neither the Fund nor the Master Fund will share in the risks or rewards of such other ventures. In addition, such other ventures will compete with the relevant Investment Funds for the time and attention of the relevant Investment Managers, and might create additional conflicts of interest or raise other special considerations. The Investment Managers have responsibility for investing the capital allocated to them. The Investment Managers also manage other accounts (including other |
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accounts in which they may have an interest) and may have financial and other incentives to favor such accounts over the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests. In investing on behalf of other clients, as well as the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests, the Investment Managers must allocate their resources, as well as limited market opportunities. Doing so could increase the level of competition for the same trades that otherwise might be made for the Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests, including the priorities of order entry, as well as make it difficult or impossible to take or liquidate a particular position at a price indicated by an Investment Manager’s strategy. In addition, in connection with investing and trading for other accounts, including their proprietary accounts, the Investment Managers may make use of information obtained by them in the course of investing and trading for the Investment Funds. They will have no obligation to compensate the Investment Funds for their receipt of such information or to account to any such Investment Fund for any profits earned from their use of such information. The Investment Managers and their principals, in managing investment accounts other than the Investment Funds, may employ trading methods, policies and strategies which differ from those which they employ on behalf of such Investment Funds. Therefore, the results of the Master Fund’s investments in such Investment Funds may differ from the results of other accounts managed by such Investment Managers. The Investment Managers determine the valuation of the illiquid, longer-term investments held by their Investment Funds in a variety of different ways, and have considerable discretion in doing so. The Investment Managers have a conflict of interest in arriving at such valuations, which affect both the performance of their Investment Funds and the advisory compensation received by the Investment Managers. The Investment Managers select the financial intermediaries that execute transactions for their respective Investment Funds and negotiate the related brokerage commissions and other transactional costs paid to such intermediaries. In selecting financial intermediaries and/or in negotiating commissions and other compensation with them, such Investment Managers (subject to their overall duty to obtain “best execution” of all transactions for the Investment Funds they manage): • have authority to and may consider the full range and quality of the services and products provided by the intermediaries (including factors such as the ability of the intermediaries to execute transactions efficiently, their responsiveness to instructions, their facilities, reliability and financial responsibility, and the value of any research or other services or products they provide); and • do not necessarily select intermediaries that charge the lowest transaction costs. In this regard, Investment Managers may engage in the practice known as “paying up,” whereby the Investment Managers cause their Investment Funds to pay higher transaction costs than they would otherwise pay so that the Investment Managers may receive certain non-execution related products and services provided by or through the intermediaries (so-called “soft dollar” benefits), which may or may not benefit certain Investment Funds which “pay up” so that the Investment Manager may receive such services (see below).The practices discussed above create conflicts between the interests of an Investment Manager and the interests of the Investment Funds managed by such Investment Manager. This is because an Investment Manager that receives “soft dollar” benefits receives a benefit that it does not have to purchase out of its own |
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resources. This benefit, in turn, may create an incentive to utilize particular intermediaries based not on the interest of the Investment Funds in achieving “best execution” of their transactions, but on the Investment Manager’s interest in receiving benefits for which it does not have to pay out of its own resources. Further, an Investment Manager may cause an Investment Fund managed by such Investment Manager to pay transaction costs to a financial intermediary even though such Investment Manager and/or clients of such Investment Manager other than such Investment Fund are the exclusive beneficiaries of “soft dollar” benefits provided by the intermediary. Under the EU’s Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (“ MiFID II GCMLP generally is authorized to consent on behalf of the Master Fund to the Investment Managers engaging in “soft dollar” practices, regardless of whether such practices conform to the requirements of Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act. The Investment Managers have a conflict of interest in allocating capital to longer-term and/or illiquid investments. While such positions may hold significant profit potential (and, therefore, the potential to generate substantial performance/incentive fees or other performance/incentive compensation), they can create material valuation and illiquidity risks for investors. In addition, performance/incentive fees or other performance/incentive compensation may be calculated separately in respect of certain longer-term and/or illiquid investments irrespective of the overall performance of an Investment Fund. | ||
Certain Disclosure Issues |
GCMLP and its related persons have a conflict of interest in determining whether to disclose certain information — not otherwise required to be disclosed by applicable laws or regulations to — concerning GCMLP and its related persons to existing or prospective investors. In certain cases, GCMLP may conclude that such disclosure could be damaging to GCMLP’s business, which may give GCMLP incentives to determine that such information is not material and need not be disclosed to investors and/or prospective investors even though it might be of interest to them. GCMLP and its related persons also have a conflict of interest in determining whether to disclose certain information — not otherwise required to be disclosed by applicable laws or regulations — to certain but not other investors and/or prospective investors. GCMLP has policies in place which address the issue of “disparate reporting” to different investors but will be subject to conflicts of interest in applying such policies due to GCMLP’s interest in meeting the informational requirements of larger investors which may request additional disclosures (see “—Different Reporting Packages,” above). In determining what disclosures to make, GCMLP gives careful consideration to their fiduciary obligations of disclosure and their responsibility to treat all investors and/or prospective investors fairly. | |
Reputational Matters |
In certain cases, GCMLP and its related persons may have a conflict of interest between acting in what might be the best interest of a GCM-Managed Account and ensuring that GCMLP avoids publicity or any reputational harm. For example, there may be certain tax positions which other market participants take and which would benefit the GCM-Managed Accounts but which GCMLP does not take out of |
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concern for not being seen to be “aggressive” in the tax planning for GCM-Managed Accounts. Similar issues may arise in other regulatory contexts. GCMLP attempts to resolve these issues in the best interests of the GCM-Managed Accounts within the constraints of what it believes to be “best practices” in the alternative investment industry. | ||
Other Matters |
The Adviser, its affiliates (including the Distributor) and their directors, officers and employees, may buy and sell securities or other investments for their own accounts and may have actual or potential conflicts of interest with respect to investments made by the Adviser on behalf of the Master Fund. As a result of differing trading and investment strategies or constraints, positions may be taken by directors, officers and employees of the Adviser and its affiliates, and those of any other selling agents, that are the same, different or made at a different time than positions taken for the Master Fund. In order to mitigate the possibility that the Master Fund or the Fund will be adversely affected by this personal trading, the Master Fund, the Fund, the Adviser and the Distributor have adopted codes of ethics (each, a “ Code of Ethics e-mail at [email protected] or by writing the SEC’s Public Reference Room, Washington, D.C. 20549-1520.The Adviser and its affiliates will not purchase securities or other property from, or sell securities or other property to, the Fund or the Master Fund, except that the Fund may engage in transactions with accounts which are affiliated with the Fund or the Master Fund solely because they are advised by the Adviser or one of its affiliates or because they have common officers, directors or managing members or as otherwise allowed by rule or SEC Staff interpretation. All such purchases and sales would be made pursuant to procedures that would be adopted by the Fund or the Master Fund pursuant to Rule 17a-7 under the 1940 Act or as otherwise allowed by rule or SEC Staff interpretation. Among other things, those procedures would be intended to ensure that (i) each such transaction will be effected for cash consideration at the current market price of the particular securities, (ii) no such transaction will involve restricted securities or securities for which market quotations are not readily available and (iii) no brokerage commissions, fees (except for customary transfer fees) or other remuneration will be paid in connection with any such transaction. Affiliated broker-dealers of the Adviser may act as broker for the Fund, the Master Fund or the Investment Funds in effecting securities transactions.Future investment activities of the Adviser and its affiliates and their principals, partners, directors, officers or employees may give rise to additional conflicts of interest. |
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By Members |
Each Member has the right to cast a number of votes based on the number of Shares owned by the Member at a meeting of Members called by the Board of Directors or by Members holding 25% or more of the total number of votes eligible to be cast. Members will be entitled to vote on any matter on which shareholders of a registered investment company organized as a corporation would normally be entitled to vote, including election of Directors, approval of the agreement with the investment adviser of the Fund, and approval of the Fund’s auditors, and on certain other matters. Except for the exercise of their voting privileges, Members in their capacity as such are not entitled to participate in the management or control of the Fund’s business, and may not act for or bind the Fund or the Master Fund. In addition, pursuant to a master/feeder agreement between the Fund and the Master Fund, approval by members of the Master Fund requires the affirmative vote of a “majority of the outstanding voting securities” of the Master Fund, which, for this purpose, means the affirmative vote of the lesser of (1) Master Fund members representing more than 50% in interest of the outstanding interests in the Master Fund or (2) Master Fund members representing 67% or more in interest of the outstanding interests in the Master Fund present at a meeting called for the purpose of approving a proposal, if Master Fund members holding more than 50% in interest of the outstanding interests in the Master Fund are represented at such meeting in person or by proxy. In connection with the vote of members of the Master Fund, the Fund will vote its interest in the Master Fund proportionately for and against approval in accordance with the votes of Members for and against a proposal. | |
By the Master Fund and/or the Fund |
The Master Fund has delegated to GCMLP the responsibility to vote proxies related to portfolio securities, including Investment Funds. Information regarding how the Master Fund and the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available without charge, upon request, by calling (855) 426-9321, and on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. Background Rule 206(4)-6 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended, requires an SEC-registered investment adviser like GCMLP to implement proxy voting policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to ensure that the adviser votes requests to vote securities (“ Proxy Requests ”) in the best interests of its clients. Pursuant to Rule 206(4)-6, GCMLP has adopted Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures (“ Proxy Policies ”) that have been designed to ensure that GCMLP votes Proxy Requests in the best interests of its clients. The following subsections describe provisions of GCMLP’s Proxy Policies that are relevant to the Master Fund. General Voting Standards GCMLP seeks to take action on Proxy Requests in the best interests of GCMLP-Managed Accounts consistent with their investment objectives and constraints. Unless GCMLP has agreed to do otherwise, we do not vote for or make voting recommendations for Proxy Requests on behalf of GCMLP-Managed Accounts that involve a potential sacrifice of investment returns from the investment or assumption of greater investment risks for the purpose of promoting | |
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environmental, social, or governance goals. However, when evaluating whether voting on or making a voting recommendation on a Proxy Request will be in the best interests of a GCMLP-Managed Account, GCMLP may treat environmental, social, or governance goals as economic factors when GCMLP believes that the goals present material business risks or opportunities that investment professionals, in general, would treat as economic considerations under generally accepted investment theories. A belief that advancing environmental, social, or governance goals will promote positive general market trends or industry growth that might benefit a particular issuer does not qualify as an economic factor. When GCMLP determines that voting on or making a voting recommendation on a Proxy Request is in the best interests of a GCMLP-Managed Account, we may take such action even though doing so might also advance environmental, social, or governance goals that are not economic factors. Reasonable Best Efforts to Vote and Abstentions GCMLP uses reasonable best efforts to vote on or make voting recommendations on Proxy Requests in a timely manner. However, GCMLP may abstain from acting on Proxy requests under certain circumstances such as the following. Timeliness of Receipt of Materials • GCMLP may abstain from voting on or making voting recommendations on a Proxy Request when GCMLP does not receive the Proxy Request with sufficient time prior to the voting cut-off date to consider the impact of the proposals and complete its evaluation procedures. Lack of Adequate Information • GCMLP may abstain from voting on or making voting recommendations on a Proxy Request when GCMLP does not believe that the Proxy Request provides sufficient detail to support a decision. Abstentions Where Cost of Consideration Outweighs Benefit • GCMLP may abstain from voting on or making voting recommendations on a Proxy Request when GCMLP believes that the expected cost or administrative burden of giving due consideration to the proposal does not justify the potential benefits to the affected GCMLP-Managed Account that might result from adopting or rejecting the proposal in question. Public Companies – Share Blocking and Re-Registration • In certain countries, shareholders that vote on an issuer’s proxy must deposit their shares with a designated depositary prior to the date of the meeting. The owner may not sell its shares until after the meeting when the shares are returned to the custodian. In countries that require shares to be blocked, GCMLP will consider the potential benefit of taking action on Proxy Requests and the resulting share blocking of the security to determine if we will consider voting. • In certain countries, an owner of a company’s shares must re-register the shares in order to take action on a proxy. Similar to share blocking, re-registration temporarily prevents a shareholder from selling shares. In countries that require re-registration, GCMLP will consider the potential benefit of taking action on Proxy Requests to determine if GCMLP will consider voting and re-registering the security. In-Kind Distributions |
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• When GCMLP-Managed Accounts receive publicly traded securities from underlying funds as in-kind distributions, GCMLP generally disposes of such securities as promptly as practicable under the circumstances. In these cases, GCMLP generally does not act on a related Proxy Request because GCMLP has no intention to hold such investments for long-term investment purposes. In circumstances where the Investment Committee elects to retain such securities, GCMLP would generally act on a Proxy Request. Conflicts of Interest GCMLP takes measures to identify and address conflicts of interest with respect to Proxy Requests. Generally, the proxy voting coordinator notifies the Investment Committee, the Operations Committee, and the Global CCO when it identifies a potential conflict of interest. In addition, an Investment Committee may identify conflicts of interest and notify the Global CCO or the proxy voting coordinator. Lastly, individuals that make decisions on how to vote proxies whether in their own capacity or as part of a committee, escalate to the Global CCO or the proxy voting coordinator any potential conflicts of interest they have with respect to a Proxy Request on which they are considering action. The proxy voting coordinator, together with the Global CCO, determines the actions to be taken to address any conflicts of interest, which may include: • excluding a conflicted party from the decision-making process • for GCMLP-Managed Accounts for which GCMLP makes voting recommendations on Proxy Requests, disclosing the conflicts to the appropriate parties. • for GCMLP-Managed Accounts for which GCMLP has the authority to take action on Proxy Requests, disclosing the conflict to the appropriate parties and obtaining consent to take specific action on the proposals. • engaging an independent third party to recommend or determine the actions to be taken in response to the Proxy Request. |
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| • | have authority to and may consider the full range and quality of the services and products provided by various brokers and dealers (including factors such as the ability of the brokers and dealers to execute transactions efficiently, their responsiveness to instructions, their facilities, reliability and financial responsibility, and the value of any research or other services or products they provide); and |
| • | do not necessarily select brokers and dealers that charge the lowest transaction costs. |
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Fees Accrued for Year Ended March 31 | |||||||||||||||
2024 |
2023 |
2022 | |||||||||||||
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC |
$98,648 |
$110,779 |
$134,749 | ||||||||||||
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 2), LLC |
$21,775 |
$25,075 |
$21,284 | ||||||||||||
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Purchase Terms |
The Board of Directors may accept initial and additional purchases of Shares as of the first day of each month. The Board of Directors has authorized the Adviser to offer Shares more or less frequently. All purchases are subject to the receipt of cleared funds prior to the applicable purchase date in the full amount of the purchase, although the Adviser may accept, in its sole discretion, a purchase prior to receipt of cleared funds. The investor must also submit a completed investor application document in good order before the applicable purchase date. The Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase of Shares and may, in its sole discretion, suspend sales of Shares at any time. The minimum initial investment in the Fund from each investor is $25,000, and the minimum additional investment in the Fund is $5,000. The minimum additional investments may be reduced by the Board of Directors. In connection with initial and additional investments, investors may be charged a maximum sales load (the “ Sales Load Except as otherwise permitted by the Board of Directors, initial and any additional purchases of Shares by any Member are payable in cash, and all purchases must be transmitted by the time and in the manner that is specified in the investor application documents of the Fund. Initial and any additional purchases of Shares are payable in one installment. Although the Fund may accept in-kind purchases with securities in the sole discretion of the Board of Directors, the Fund has no present intention of accepting purchases with securities. If the Fund were to accept an in-kind purchase, the securities would be valued in the same manner as the Fund values its other assets. (See Each investor must also represent and warrant in an investor application, among other things, that the investor is purchasing Shares for its own account, and not with a view to the distribution, assignment, transfer or other disposition of the Shares. Financial intermediaries may also impose fees (subject to compliance with applicable FINRA rules), terms and conditions on investor accounts and investments in the Fund that are in addition to the fees, terms and conditions set forth in this Prospectus. Such terms and conditions are not imposed by the Fund, the Distributor or any other service provider of the Fund. Any terms and conditions imposed by a financial intermediary, or operational limitations applicable to such parties, may affect or limit a shareholder’s ability to subscribe for Shares, or otherwise transact business with the Fund. Investors should direct |
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any questions regarding terms and conditions applicable to their accounts or relevant operational limitations to the financial intermediary. | ||
Eligible Investors |
Each investor is required to certify that the Shares purchased are being acquired for the account of an “accredited investor” as defined in Regulation D under the 1933 Act. To qualify as an “accredited investor,” an individual investor must have: (i) a net worth (or joint net worth with the investor’s spouse) immediately prior to the time of purchase in excess of $1 million; or (ii) had an income in excess of $200,000 (or joint income with the investor’s spouse in excess of $300,000) in each of the two preceding years and has a reasonable expectation of reaching the same income level in the current year. For purposes of determining net worth, an investor’s primary residence shall be excluded from both total assets and total liabilities, except that liabilities attached to such residence should be included in total liabilities to the extent that: (i) such liabilities exceed fair market value of such residence; or (ii) any such liability was incurred within 60 days of the purchase date of your Fund investment (e.g., as a result of a second mortgage or a home equity loan), unless such indebtedness was incurred in connection with the purchase of such residence. Corporations, partnerships, trusts and other entities are generally required to have total assets in excess of $5 million. Existing Members who purchase additional Shares are required to meet the foregoing eligibility criteria at the time of the additional purchase. The relevant investor qualifications are set forth in the investor application documents that must be completed by each prospective investor. Shares may not be purchased by non-resident aliens, foreign corporations, foreign partnerships, foreign trusts or foreign estates, all as defined in the U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code The Fund is not expected to generate “unrelated business taxable income” (“ UBTI tax-exempt investors unless an investor incurs acquisition indebtedness in connection with its investment in the Fund. | |
The Distributor |
The Distributor, which is an affiliate of the Adviser, is a securities broker-dealer registered with the SEC and is a member of FINRA. The principal offices of the Distributor are located at 900 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1100, Chicago, IL 60611. The Distributor is not compensated by the Fund for such services and bears its own costs associated with its activities as Distributor, except that the Fund may reimburse the Distributor for the costs associated with the filing of sales material with FINRA. The Distributor will, subject to the approval of the Board of Directors, retain unaffiliated broker-dealers to act as selling agents and retain, or arrange for the Fund’s retention of, broker-dealers to include the Fund on their Intermediary Platforms and may compensate them for their services. The Fund will not bear any of the costs of these compensation arrangements. The Adviser (or one of its affiliates) pays from its own resources (which may include revenue from advisory and management services) additional compensation or commissions, either at the time of sale or on an ongoing basis, to certain intermediaries for sales of Fund Shares by such intermediaries and for ongoing investor servicing. Such payments, sometimes referred to as “revenue sharing,” may be made for the provision of sales training, product education and access to sales staff, the support and conduct of due diligence, balance maintenance, the provision of information and support services to clients, inclusion on preferred provider lists and the provision of other services. The receipt of such payments could create an incentive for the third party to offer or recommend a Fund instead of similar investments where such payments are not received. Such payments may be different for different intermediaries. | |
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The Servicing Agent may retain certain parties to act as sub-servicing agents to assist with investor servicing and administration. When the Servicing Agent employs sub-servicing agents, the Servicing Agent compensates such sub-servicing agents out of its own resources.The Adviser hopes to benefit from revenue sharing by maintaining and increasing the Fund’s net assets, which, as well as benefiting the Fund, would result in additional management and other fees for the Adviser and its affiliates. In consideration for revenue sharing, the Distributor, selling agent or broker-dealer that manages an Intermediary Platform may feature a certain fund in its sales platform or give the Adviser preferential access to members of its sales force or management. An intermediary may earn a profit on revenue sharing payments, and such payments may provide your intermediary with an incentive to favor the Fund. An investor may inquire of its intermediary regarding any payments received from the Adviser or the Fund, as well as about fees and/or commissions of the intermediary. The Fund agrees to indemnify, defend and hold the Distributor, its officers and members and any person who controls the Distributor free and harmless from and against all claims, demand, liabilities and expenses. Likewise, the Distributor agrees to indemnify, defend and hold the Fund, its officers and Directors and any person who controls the Fund free and harmless from and against all claims, demand, liabilities and expenses. |
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No Right of Redemption |
No Member or other person holding Shares acquired from a Member has the right to require the Fund to redeem those Shares. There is no public market for Shares, and none is expected to develop. Consequently, investors may not be able to liquidate their investment other than as a result of repurchases of Shares by the Fund, as described below. | |
Repurchases of Shares |
The Fund will from time to time offer to repurchase Shares pursuant to written tenders by Members. Repurchase offers will be made at such times and on such terms as may be determined by the Board of Directors, in its sole discretion. In determining whether the Fund should offer to repurchase Shares from Members, the Board of Directors will consider the recommendation of the Adviser. The Adviser expects that generally it will recommend to the Board of Directors that the Fund offer to repurchase Shares from Members four times each year, effective as of the last day of each calendar quarter. The Board of Directors will also consider the following factors, among others, in making this determination: • whether any Members have requested that the Fund repurchase their Shares; • the liquidity of the Fund’s assets; • the investment plans and working capital requirements of the Fund; • the relative economies of scale with respect to the size of the Fund; • the history of the Fund in repurchasing Shares; and • the economic condition of the securities markets. The Fund will repurchase Shares from Members pursuant to written tenders on terms and conditions that the Board of Directors determines to be fair to the Fund and to all Members or persons holding Shares acquired from Members, or to one or more classes of Members, as applicable. When the Board of Directors determines that the Fund shall repurchase Shares, notice will be provided to Members describing the terms thereof, containing information Members should consider in deciding whether to participate in the repurchase opportunity and containing information on how to participate. Members who are deciding whether to tender their Shares during the period that a repurchase offer is open may ascertain the net asset value of their Shares by contacting the Adviser during the period. The Fund Agreement provides that the Board of Directors will call a meeting of Members for the purpose of determining whether the Fund should be dissolved in the event that the Fund does not at least once during any 24-month period repurchase any of the Shares tendered in accordance with the procedures determined by the Board of Directors from time to time.Repurchases of Shares from Members by the Fund may be made, in the discretion of the Fund, and may be paid in cash or by the distribution of securities in-kind or partly in cash and partly in-kind. However, the Fund does not expect to distribute securities in-kind except in the unlikely event that making a cash payment would result in a material adverse effect on the Fund or on Members not tendering Shares for repurchase. Repurchases will be effective after receipt and acceptance by the Fund of all eligible written tenders of Shares from Members. Any in-kind distribution of securities will consist of marketable securities traded on an established securities exchange (valued in accordance with the Fund Agreement), which will be distributed to all tendering Members | |
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on a pari passu The Fund’s assets will be reduced by the amount of the tendered Shares that are purchased by the Fund. Thus, income relative to assets may be affected by the repurchase. The purchase of Shares pursuant to the offer to repurchase will have the effect of increasing the proportionate interest in the Fund of Members who do not tender Shares. Members who retain their Shares may be subject to increased risks due to the reduction in the Fund’s aggregate assets resulting from payment for the Shares tendered. These risks include the potential for greater volatility due to decreased diversification. However, this result is unlikely given the nature of the Fund’s investment program. A reduction in the aggregate assets of the Fund may result in Members who do not tender Shares bearing higher costs to the extent that certain expenses borne by the Fund are relatively fixed and may not decrease if assets decline. These effects may be reduced or eliminated to the extent that new and existing Members make additional purchases of Shares from time to time, although there can be no assurance that such additional purchases will occur. Payment for Shares purchased pursuant to an offer to repurchase may also require the Fund to liquidate portfolio holdings earlier than the Adviser would otherwise have caused these holdings to be liquidated, potentially resulting in losses or increased investment related expenses. To any extent the Master Fund incurs debt to finance a repurchase of shares, although not expected, the Fund would bear interest costs until such funds were repaid. The Fund is authorized to borrow. The Fund may borrow money for certain purposes, such as making payments to Investment Funds in accordance with the Fund’s investment commitments, repurchasing Shares and paying fees and expenses of the Fund, subject to any limitations imposed by applicable law. Although the Fund does not anticipate borrowing at such levels, in all cases the Fund will maintain continuous asset coverage for borrowings of 300% in compliance with the requirements of the 1940 Act. Due to liquidity restraints associated with the Master Fund’s investments in Investment Funds and the fact that the Master Fund may have to effect withdrawals from those Investment Funds to pay for Shares being repurchased, the Fund presently expects to employ the following repurchase procedures: 1. A Member choosing to tender Shares for repurchase must do so by the date specified in the notice describing the terms of the offer (the “ Expiration Date Valuation Date 2. Promptly after the Expiration Date, each Member whose Shares have been accepted for repurchase by the Fund will receive a promissory note from the Fund (to be held by the Administrator and Transfer Agent on behalf of such Member) (the “ Promissory Note 3. The Promissory Note, which will be non-interest bearing and non-transferable, is expected to contain terms providing for payment at two separate times.The first payment (the “ Initial Payment |
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of the Valuation Date. The Initial Payment will be made as of the later of (a) within 35 days after the Valuation Date, or (b) if the Master Fund has requested withdrawals of its capital from any Investment Funds in order to fund the repurchase of interests, within 10 business days after the Master Fund has received at least 90% of the aggregate amount withdrawn by the Master Fund from such Investment Funds. The second and final payment (the “ Contingent Payment 4. Although the amounts required to be paid by the Fund under the Promissory Note will generally be paid in cash, the Fund may under certain limited circumstances noted above, pay all or a portion of the amounts due by the in-kind distribution of marketable securities.Under these procedures, Members will have to decide whether to tender their Shares for repurchase without the benefit of having current information regarding the value of Shares as of a date proximate to the Valuation Date. In addition, there will be a substantial period of time between the date as of which Members must tender Shares and the date they can expect to receive payment for their Shares from the Fund. However, promptly after the expiration of a repurchase offer, Members whose Shares are accepted for repurchase by the Fund will be given the above-described non-interest bearing, non-transferable promissory notes by the Fund representing the Fund’s obligation to pay for repurchased Shares. Payments for repurchased Shares may be delayed under circumstances where the Fund has determined to redeem its interests in the Master Fund to make such payments, but has experienced delays in receiving payments from the Master Fund.Repurchases of Shares at the Fund level are subject to the availability of funds at the Master Fund level and/or the ability of the Master Fund to repurchase sufficient interests held by the Fund. Repurchases of Shares by the Master Fund and the Fund are subject to certain regulatory requirements imposed by SEC rules. The Fund believes that the repurchase procedures described above comply with these requirements. However, if modification of the Fund’s repurchase procedures is deemed necessary to comply with regulatory requirements, the Board of Directors will adopt revised procedures designed to provide Members substantially the same liquidity for Shares as would be available under the procedures described above. Upon its acceptance of tendered Shares for repurchase, the Fund will maintain daily on its books a segregated account consisting of: (i) cash; (ii) liquid securities; or (iii) interests in the Master Fund that the Fund has requested be withdrawn (or any combination of the foregoing), in an amount equal to the aggregate estimated unpaid dollar amount of the Promissory Notes issued to Members tendering Shares. Neither the Initial Payment nor the Contingent Payment is insured or guaranteed by any bank or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal Reserve Board, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency or any other government agency. If a repurchase offer is oversubscribed by Members who tender their Shares for repurchase (in other words, if the amount of Shares tendered exceeds the amount that the Fund has offered to repurchase), the Fund will repurchase only a pro rata |
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will repurchase only a pro rata pro rata 13e-4 of the Securities Exchange Act. Mandatory redemptions will not discriminate unfairly against any Member and, in the event that less than all of the Shares are redeemed, the redemptions will occur on a pro-rata basis, or in such other manner as it will not discriminate unfairly against any Member.The Fund may repurchase, by means of redemption, Shares of a Member or any person acquiring Shares from or through a Member in the event that: • the Shares have been transferred or the Shares have been vested in any person by operation of law as the result of the death, divorce, disability, dissolution, bankruptcy or incompetency of a Member; • ownership of the Shares by a Member or other person is likely to cause the Fund to be in violation of, or require registration of any Shares under, or subject the Fund to additional registration or regulation under, the securities, commodities or other laws of the United States or any other relevant jurisdiction, or may subject the Fund or any Member to an undue risk of adverse tax risk or other fiscal or regulatory consequences; • continued ownership of the Shares may be harmful or injurious to the business or reputation of the Fund, the Board of Directors or the Adviser; • any of the representations and warranties made by a Member in connection with the acquisition of Shares was not true when made or has ceased to be true; • the value of a Member’s Shares is less than an amount that the Board determines to be a minimum investment in the Fund, or more than an amount that the Board determines to be a maximum investment in the Fund; or • it would be in the best interests of the Fund for the Fund to repurchase the Shares. In the event that the Adviser or one of its affiliates holds Shares in its capacity as a Member, such Shares may be tendered for repurchase in connection with any repurchase offer made by the Fund. | ||
Transfers of Shares |
Shares held by Members may be transferred only under certain limited circumstances, with the written consent of the Board of Directors or its delegatee (which may be withheld in its sole discretion and is expected to be granted, if at all, only under extenuating circumstances). Notice to the Fund of any proposed transfer must include evidence satisfactory to the Board of Directors that the proposed transferee meets any requirements imposed by the Fund with respect to investor eligibility and suitability, and must be accompanied by transfer and other documentation that the Board of Directors or its delegatee may reasonably request. The Board of Directors may not consent to a transfer of Shares by a Member unless such transfer is to a single transferee | |
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or after the transfer of a portion of the Shares, the balance of the account of each of the transferee and transferor is not less than $25,000. A Member who transfers Shares may be charged reasonable expenses, including attorneys’ and accountants’ fees, incurred by the Fund in connection with the transfer. Any transferee that acquires Shares in the Fund by operation of law as the result of the death, divorce, dissolution, bankruptcy or incompetency of a Member or otherwise, shall be entitled to the allocations and distributions allocable to the Shares so acquired, to transfer the Shares in accordance with the terms of the Fund Agreement and to tender the Shares for repurchase by the Fund. By purchasing Shares, each Member agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Fund, the Board of Directors, the Adviser, each other Member and any affiliate of the foregoing against all losses, claims, damages, liabilities, costs and expenses (including legal or other expenses incurred in investigating or defending against any losses, claims, damages, liabilities, costs and expenses or any judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement), joint or several, to which such persons may become subject by reason of or arising from any transfer made by that Member in violation of these provisions or any misrepresentation made by that Member in connection with any such transfer. |
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Taxation of the Fund |
The Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company (a “ RIC First, at least 90% of the annual gross income of a RIC must consist of dividends, interest, payments with respect to certain securities loans, and gains from the sale or other disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies, or other income (including but not limited to gain from options, futures and forward contracts) derived with respect to its business of investing in such stock, securities or foreign currencies, or net income derived from interests in qualified publicly traded partnerships. Income allocated to the Fund by the Master Fund will retain its original tax character for purposes of the annual gross income test. Income realized by the Fund as a result of the Fund electing mark-to-market non-U.S. corporate subsidiaries. The net income of a U.S. corporate subsidiary will generally be subject to federal income tax at a rate of 21%, in addition to potential state and local income and excise taxes. With respect to the Master Fund’s investments in a partnership, the Fund will be treated as receiving its share of the Master Fund’s proportionate share of each item of gross income earned by the partnership and |
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must look through to the character of such items of gross income earned by the partnership. | ||
Second, at the close of each quarter of its taxable year, (a) at least 50% of the value of a RIC’s total assets must consist of (i) cash and cash items, U.S. government securities, the securities of other RICs and (ii) other securities, with such other securities limited, in respect to any one issuer, to an amount not greater than 5% of the value of the RIC’s total assets and not more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer; and (b) not more than 25% of the value of the RIC’s total assets can be invested in the securities (other than U.S. government securities and the securities of other RICs) of (i) any one issuer, (ii) any two or more issuers that the RIC controls and that are determined to be engaged in the same or similar trades or businesses or related trades or businesses or (iii) any one or more qualified publicly traded partnerships. The Fund will be deemed to satisfy the diversification requirements if the Master Fund’s assets meet these requirements. Third, a RIC must distribute annually at least the sum of 90% of its investment company taxable income (net investment income and the excess of net short-term capital gain over net long-term capital loss) and 90% of its net tax-exempt income, if any. The Board has approved a dividend reinvestment plan (“DRP In order to avoid incurring a nondeductible 4% federal excise tax obligation, a RIC must distribute (or be deemed to have distributed) by December 31 of each calendar year an amount at least equal to the sum of (i) 98% of its ordinary income for such year, (ii) 98.2% of its capital gain net income (which is the excess of its realized capital gains over its realized capital losses), generally computed on the basis of the one-year period ending on October 31 of such year, after reduction by any available capital loss carryforwards and (iii) 100% of any ordinary income and capital gain net income from the prior year (as previously computed) that were not paid out during such year and on which the Fund paid no federal income tax. The Fund intends to make sufficient distributions or deemed distributions each year to avoid liability for this excise tax. With respect to PFIC stock held by the Fund, if a mark-to-market In general, for purposes of the 90% gross income requirement described above, income derived from a partnership will be treated as qualifying income only to the extent such income is attributable to items of income of the partnership which would be qualifying income if realized by the Fund. However, 100% of the net income derived from an interest in a “qualified publicly traded partnership” will be treated as qualifying income. A “qualified publicly traded partnership” is a publicly traded partnership that satisfies certain requirements with respect to the type of income it produces. The Investment Fund partnerships in which the Master Fund will invest are not expected to be qualified publicly traded partnerships, so the Fund and the Master Fund will need to rely on the | ||
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Investment Managers to provide the Fund and the Master Fund with timely information regarding the amount and character of Investment Fund income and gain being allocated to the Master Fund in order for the Fund to satisfy both the gross income and the distribution requirements described above. The Fund and the Master Fund will also need to monitor the assets of the Investment Fund partnerships for purposes of satisfying the asset diversification requirement described above. The Fund intends to comply with these requirements. If the Fund were to fail to make sufficient distributions, it could be liable for corporate income tax and for excise tax in respect of the shortfall or, if the shortfall were large enough, be disqualified as a RIC. If for any taxable year the Fund were to fail to qualify as a RIC due to the failure to meet any of the requirements above, (i) all of its taxable income would be subject to tax at regular corporate rates without any deduction for distributions to Members and (ii) Members would recognize dividend income on distributions to the extent of the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, although such dividends could be qualified dividend income taxable at long-term capital gain rates for individual Members who meet certain holding period requirements, and corporate Members could be eligible for the dividends-received deduction. In addition, in order to re-qualify as a RIC, the Fund may be required to recognize unrealized gains, pay substantial taxes and interest, and make substantial distributions. | ||
Distributions to Members |
The Fund contemplates declaring and distributing to Members all or substantially all of its taxable income in the form of annual dividends. In general, distributions will be taxable to Members for federal, state and local income tax purposes to the extent of the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits. Such distributions are taxable whether they are received in cash or reinvested in Fund Shares. The Fund expects that its distributions will generally be taxable to Members at ordinary income rates, although any capital gain dividends paid by the Fund will be taxable to Members as long-term capital gain. Although not anticipated, distributions by the Fund in excess of the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits will be treated as a tax-free return of capital to the extent of (and in reduction of) each Member’s tax basis in its Shares and any such amount in excess of such basis will be treated as gain from the sale of Shares, as discussed below.As described below under “Investments in Passive Foreign Investment Companies,” the Fund expects that gains, if any, from the foreign Investment Funds in which the Master Fund invests will be treated as ordinary income for U.S. federal income tax purposes. The Fund may realize long-term capital gains in connection with the Master Fund’s investment in direct investments, mutual funds and exchange traded funds, and in Investment Fund partnerships, in which case a portion of its distributions to Members may qualify for lower tax rates applicable to long-term capital gains. Likewise, a portion of the Fund’s dividends paid to Members that are corporations may be eligible for the “dividends received” deduction. Distributions of net capital gain, if any, designated as capital gains dividends will be taxable to a Member as long-term capital gains, regardless of how long the Member has held Fund Shares. Distributions of the Fund’s net realized short-term gains would be taxable as ordinary income. The Fund may elect to retain its net capital gain or a portion thereof for investment and be taxed at corporate rates on the amount retained. In such case, it may designate the retained amount as undistributed capital gains in a notice to Members, who will be treated as if each received a distribution of his pro rata share of such gain, with the result that each Member will (i) be required to report | |
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his pro rata share of such gain on his tax return as long-term capital gain, (ii) receive a refundable tax credit for his pro rata share of tax paid by the Fund on the gain and (iii) increase the tax basis for his Shares by an amount equal to the deemed distribution less the tax credit. | ||
If, for any calendar year, the Fund’s total distributions exceed the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, the excess will be treated as a tax-free return of capital to each Member (up to the amount of the Member’s basis in his or her Shares) and thereafter as gain from the sale of such Shares (assuming the Shares are held as capital assets). The amount treated as a tax-free return of capital will reduce the Member’s adjusted basis in his or her Shares, thereby increasing his or her potential gain or reducing his or her potential loss on the subsequent sale or other disposition of his or her Shares. A return of capital is a return to Members of a portion of their original investment in the Fund and does not represent income or capital gains.With respect to a tax-exempt organization investing in the Fund, if the Fund qualifies as a RIC, dividends and other distributions paid by the Fund will not constitute unrelated business taxable income (“UBTI tax-exempt organization has not borrowed money in connection with its investment in the Fund.Certain net investment income received by an individual having adjusted gross income in excess of $200,000 (or $250,000 for married individuals filing jointly) will be subject to a tax of 3.8 percent. Undistributed net investment income of trusts and estates in excess of a specified amount also will be subject to this tax. Dividends and capital gains distributed by the Fund, and gain realized on sale of Fund Shares, will constitute investment income of the type subject to this tax. Dividends and distributions on the Fund’s Shares are generally subject to federal income tax as described herein, even though such dividends and distributions may economically represent a return of a particular Member’s investment. Such distributions are likely to occur in respect of Shares purchased at a time when a Fund’s net asset value reflects gains that are either unrealized, or realized but not distributed. Such realized gains may be required to be distributed even when the Fund’s net asset value also reflects unrealized losses. Certain distributions declared in October, November or December to Members of record of such month and paid in the following January will be taxed to Members as if received on December 31 of the year in which they were declared. In addition, certain other distributions made after the close of a taxable year of the Fund may be “spilled back” and treated as paid by the Fund (except for purposes of the non-deductible 4% federal excise tax) during such taxable year, but in such case, Members will be treated as having received such dividends in the taxable year in which the distributions were actually made.Members who are not citizens or residents of the United States generally will be subject to a 30% U.S. federal withholding tax, or U.S. federal withholding tax at such lower rate as prescribed by applicable treaty, on dividend distributions by the Fund. By contrast, if a non-U.S. Member invested directly in the non-U.S. Investment Funds in which the Fund will invest, distributions that the non-U.S. investor received from such Investment Funds would generally not be subject to U.S. withholding tax. Accordingly, the Fund may not be an appropriate investment for non-U.S. investors. Each non-U.S. Member must provide documentation to the Fund certifying the Member’s non-United States status. In addition, under legislation known as FATCA, a 30% U.S. withholding tax may apply to any U.S.-source “withholdable payments” made to a non-U.S. entity unless the non-U.S. entity enters into an agreement with the Internal Revenue Service (the “Service | ||
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applicable, to collect and provide substantial information regarding its “United States accounts,” or such non-U.S. entity otherwise demonstrates compliance with or exemption from FATCA. For this purpose, a United States account is any “financial account” held by one or more “specified United States persons” or “United States owned foreign entities.” The withholding tax began in 2014 with respect to U.S.-source income. Proposed regulations (having current effect) eliminate the application of the withholding tax that was scheduled to begin in 2019 with respect to U.S.-source investment sale proceeds. Non-U.S. investors should consult their own tax advisors regarding the impact of this legislation on their investment in the Fund.The Fund will inform its Members of the source and status of each distribution made in a given calendar year after the close of such calendar year. | ||
Gains from Repurchases and Transfers of Shares |
The repurchase or transfer of the Fund’s Shares may result in a taxable gain or loss to the tendering Member. Different tax consequences may apply for tendering and non-tendering Members in connection with a repurchase offer. For example, if a Member does not tender all of his or her Shares, such repurchase might not be treated as an exchange for U.S. federal income tax purposes and might result in deemed distributions to non-tendering Members. On the other hand, Members who tender all of their Shares (including Shares deemed owned by Members under constructive ownership rules) will be treated as having sold their Shares and generally will realize a capital gain or loss. Such gain or loss will be measured by the difference between the Member’s amount received and his or her adjusted tax basis of the Shares. For non-corporate Members, gain or loss from the transfer or repurchase of Shares generally will be taxable at a U.S. federal income tax rate dependent upon the length of time the Shares were held. Shares held for a period of one year or less at the time of such repurchase or transfer will, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, generally result in short-term capital gains or losses, and those held for more than one year will generally result in long-term capital gains or losses.The maximum tax rate applicable to capital gains recognized by individuals and other non-corporate taxpayers is (i) the same as the maximum ordinary income tax rate for gains recognized on the sale of capital assets held for one year or less, or (ii) 20% for gains recognized on the sale of capital assets held for more than one year (as well as certain capital gain distributions) (15% or 0% for individuals in certain tax brackets).Any loss realized upon the sale or exchange of Shares with a holding period of six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital loss to the extent of any capital gain distributions received with respect to such Shares. In addition, all or a portion of a loss realized on a sale or other disposition of Shares may be disallowed under “wash sale” rules to the extent the Member acquires other Shares of the Fund (whether through the reinvestment of distributions or otherwise) within a period of 61 days beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after the date of disposition of the Shares. Any disallowed loss will result in an adjustment to the Member’s tax basis in some or all of the other Shares acquired. Sales charges paid upon a purchase of Shares cannot be taken into account for purposes of determining gain or loss on a sale of the Shares before the 91st day after their purchase to the extent a sales charge is reduced or eliminated in a subsequent acquisition of Shares of the Fund (or of another fund), during the period beginning on the date of such sale and ending on January 31 of the calendar year following the calendar year in which such sale was made, pursuant to the reinvestment or exchange privilege. Any disregarded amounts will result | |
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in an adjustment to the Member’s tax basis in some or all of any other Shares acquired. | ||
Pursuant to Treasury Regulations directed at tax shelter activity, taxpayers are required to disclose to the Service certain information on Form 8886 if they participate in a “reportable transaction.” A transaction may be a “reportable transaction” based upon any of several indicia with respect to a Member, including the recognition of a loss in excess of certain thresholds (for individuals, $2 million in one year or $4 million in any combination of years). Investors should consult their own tax advisers concerning any possible disclosure obligation with respect to their investment in Fund Shares. | ||
Investments in Passive Foreign Investment Companies |
The Master Fund intends to acquire interests in Investment Funds organized outside the United States that are treated as corporations for U.S. tax purposes and that will generally be treated as PFICs for federal income tax purposes. The Master Fund may, to the extent possible under certain circumstances, elect to treat a PFIC as a qualified electing fund (a “ QEF To the extent the Master Fund cannot elect QEF treatment or to the extent such treatment is not optimal, the Fund may elect to “mark to market” shares that the Master Fund holds in PFICs at the end of each taxable year. By making this election, the Fund will recognize as ordinary income any increase in the value of those PFIC shares as of the close of the taxable year over their adjusted basis and as ordinary loss any decrease in that value unless the loss is required to be deferred. The Fund’s basis in PFIC shares will be increased by the amount of mark-to-market mark-to-market mark-to-market mark-to-market mark-to-market mark-to-market By making the mark-to-market If neither a “mark to market” nor a QEF election is made with respect to an interest in a PFIC, the ownership of the PFIC interest may have significantly adverse tax consequences. In such a case, the Fund would be subject to tax and an interest charge (at the rate applicable to tax underpayments) on tax liability treated as having been deferred with respect to certain distributions and on gain from the disposition of the shares of a PFIC (collectively referred to as “excess distributions”), even if those excess distributions are paid by the Fund as a | |
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dividend to Members, and such excess distributions must be taken into account for purposes of the RIC qualification and excise tax distribution requirements. | ||
As described above, a RIC must distribute annually at least 90% of its investment company taxable income and tax-exempt income. For purposes of this distribution requirement, the mark-to-market The PFIC provisions generally do not apply to any investment in the stock of a foreign corporation that qualifies as a “controlled foreign corporation” (“ CFC low-taxed income” (GILTI) may be tax to U.S. shareholders in a manner similar to the taxation of Subpart F income. A “U.S. shareholder” is generally defined as any U.S. person (including a U.S. partnership) that owns (or, after the application of certain constructive stock ownership rules, is deemed to own) on any day of the taxable year 10% or more of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote of the foreign corporation or 10% or more of the total value of the stock of the foreign corporation. A foreign corporation will be treated as a CFC if more than 50% of the stock of such foreign corporation, determined by reference to either vote or value, is owned (or, after the application of certain constructive stock ownership rules, is deemed to be owned) by “U.S. shareholders.” “Subpart F income” of a CFC that is currently taxed to a “U.S. shareholder” is not subject to tax again in its hands when actually distributed to such shareholder. Where there is an overlap of income inclusion under the Subpart F rules, on the one hand, and the PFIC rules, on the other, the Subpart F rules take precedence and such income is in any event taxed only once. In addition, a corporation will not be treated with respect to a shareholder as a PFIC during the “qualified portion” of such shareholder’s holding period with respect to stock in such corporation. Generally, the term “qualified portion” means the portion of the shareholder’s holding period during which the shareholder is a “U.S. shareholder” (as defined above) and the corporation is a CFC.If the Master Fund owns 10% or more of either the combining voting power or value of the outstanding shares of a foreign Investment Fund in which it invests, and together with other U.S. shareholders satisfies the 50% ownership test with respect to such Investment Fund, the Fund will not be able to make a mark-to-market | ||
Partnerships |
The Master Fund may also invest in other investment funds treated as partnerships for U.S. federal income tax purposes. In such cases, the Fund will be treated as receiving its proportionate share of each item of gross income earned by the partnership and allocated to it by the Master Fund, and must look through to the character of such items of gross income earned by the partnership in applying the RIC qualifying income test. Income derived by the Fund from an investment in a partnership (other than a qualified publicly traded partnership) | |
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is treated as qualifying income for RIC purposes only to the extent such income is attributable to items of partnership income that would be qualifying income if received directly by the Fund. Although some Investment Fund strategies (e.g., long-short equity funds) generate income that would be qualifying income for RIC purposes, other strategies (e.g., commodity funds, energy funds and real estate funds) produce income that would not be “good” income for RIC qualification purposes. Similarly, the Fund would look through the partnership to the partnership’s underlying assets for purposes of analyzing the Fund’s asset diversification. The Fund will closely monitor its investments in funds that are treated as partnerships, if any, in order to assure the Fund’s compliance with Subchapter M requirements. The Fund also will need to rely upon information reported to it by partnership Investment Funds for purposes of determining income required to be distributed by the Fund for RIC qualification purposes, for purposes of avoiding corporate income tax and for purposes of avoiding the nondeductible 4% excise tax, and such Investment Funds may not provide the necessary information within the time period needed by the Fund for such purposes. Gains or losses attributable to fluctuations in exchange rates between the time the Fund accrues income or receivables or expenses or other liabilities denominated in a foreign currency and the time the Master Fund actually collects such income or receivables or pays such liabilities are generally treated as ordinary income or loss. Similarly, gains or losses on the disposition of debt securities denominated in a foreign currency, foreign currency forward contracts and certain other positions in foreign currency, to the extent attributable to fluctuations in exchange rates generally between the acquisition and disposition dates, are also treated as ordinary income or loss. Such fluctuations may affect the timing, amount and character of distributions to Members. The Master Fund may also make and/or hold investments in Investment Funds treated as partnerships for U.S. federal income tax purposes through subsidiaries, including U.S. and non-U.S. corporate subsidiaries. The net income of a U.S. corporate subsidiary would generally be subject to federal income tax at a rate of 21%, in addition to potential state and local income and excise taxes. A foreign corporation, such as a non-U.S. corporate subsidiary, generally is not subject to federal income tax unless it is engaged in the conduct of a trade or business in the United States. The Master Fund’s non-U.S. corporate subsidiary would operate in a manner expected to meet the requirements of a safe harbor under section 864(b)(2) of the Code, under which it may trade in stocks or securities or certain commodities for its own account without being deemed to be engaged in a U.S. trade or business. If, however, certain of the subsidiary’s activities did not meet those safe harbor requirements, it might be considered as engaging in such a trade or business. Even if the subsidiary is not so engaged, it may be subject to a withholding tax at a rate of 30% on all or a portion of its U.S.-source gross income that is not effectively connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business.A non-U.S. corporate subsidiary would be treated as a controlled foreign corporation (a “CFC”), and the Master Fund would be a “United States shareholder” thereof. As a result, the Master Fund would be required to include in its gross income each taxable year all of the non-U.S. subsidiary’s “subpart F income,” which generally is treated as ordinary income, and the Fund would need to similarly include its portion of such income allocated to it by the Master Fund. Such income will be qualifying income for purposes of the 90% gross income test for RIC qualification purposes. It is expected that virtually all of the non-U.S. subsidiary’s income would be “subpart F income.” If the non-U.S. |
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subsidiary realizes a net loss, that loss generally would not be available to offset the Fund’s income. The Master Fund’s inclusion of the non-U.S. subsidiary’s “subpart F income” in its gross income would increase the Master Fund’s tax basis in its shares of the subsidiary. Distributions by the non-U.S. subsidiary to the Master Fund would not be taxable to the extent of its previously taxed undistributed “subpart F income” and would reduce the Master Fund’s tax basis in those shares. | ||
Certain Withholding Taxes |
The Investment Funds may be subject to foreign taxes, including withholding taxes, attributable to investments of the Investment Funds. U.S. investors in the Fund will not be entitled to a foreign tax credit with respect to any of those taxes. | |
Consequences of Failure to Satisfy RIC Requirements |
If the Fund does not qualify as a RIC for any taxable year, the Fund’s taxable income will be subject to corporate income taxes, and all distributions from earnings and profits, including distributions of net capital gain (if any), will be taxable to Members as ordinary income. Such distributions will be eligible to be treated as qualified dividend income with respect to Members who are individuals and will be eligible for the dividends received deduction in the case of Members taxed as corporations, provided certain holding period requirements are met. In order to requalify for taxation as a RIC, the Fund may be required to recognize unrealized gains, pay substantial taxes and interest, and make substantial distributions. | |
State and Local Taxes |
In addition to the U.S. federal income tax consequences summarized above, prospective investors should consider the potential state and local tax consequences of an investment in the Fund. Members are generally taxable in their state of residence on dividend and capital gain distributions they receive from the Fund. The Fund may become subject to taxes in states and localities if it is deemed to conduct business in those jurisdictions. | |
Information Reporting and Backup Withholding |
After the end of each calendar year, Members will be sent information regarding the amount and character of distributions received from the Fund during the year. The Fund may need to rely upon estimates of its income from Investment Fund partnerships in which it invests for purposes of providing Members with such information about the tax status of the Fund’s distributions to Members. The Fund (or its administrative agent) is required to report to the Internal Revenue Service and furnish to Members the cost basis information and holding period for Fund Shares purchased on or after January 1, 2012, and repurchased by the Fund on or after that date. The Fund will permit Members to elect from among several permitted cost basis methods. In the absence of an election, the Fund will use average cost as its default cost basis method. The cost basis method a Member elects may not be changed with respect to a repurchase of Shares after the settlement date of the repurchase. Members should consult with their tax advisors to determine the best permitted cost basis method for their tax situation and to obtain more information about how the new cost basis reporting rules apply to them. Information returns generally will be filed with the Service in connection with distributions with respect to the Shares unless Members establish that they are exempt from the information reporting rules, for example by properly establishing that they are corporations. The Fund generally is required to withhold and remit to the U.S. Treasury a percentage of the taxable dividends and other distributions paid to and proceeds of share sales, exchanges, or redemptions made by any individual shareholder (including foreign individuals) who fails to furnish the Fund with a correct taxpayer identification number, who has under-reported dividends or interest income, or who fails to certify to the Fund that he or she is a United States person and is not subject to such | |
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withholding. The backup withholding tax rate is 24%. Distributions will not be subject to backup withholding to the extent they are subject to the withholding tax on foreign persons described in the next paragraph. Any tax withheld as a result of backup withholding does not constitute an additional tax imposed on the record owner of the account and may be claimed as a credit on the record owner’s federal income tax return. A non-U.S. Member generally will be subject to U.S. withholding tax at a 30% rate (or at a lower rate if a tax treaty applies) on dividends from the Fund (other than capital gain and certain other designated dividends, if any) that are not “effectively connected” with a United States trade or business carried on by such Member. To claim tax treaty benefits and/or to avoid back-up withholding as described in the preceding paragraph, a non-U.S. Member will be required to provide the Fund with a properly completed IRS Form W-8BEN or other applicable W-8 Form. Non-U.S. entities considering an investment should also be aware of the requirements for avoiding withholding tax under FATCA, as discussed above. | ||
Other Taxes |
The foregoing is a summary of some of the tax rules and considerations affecting Members and the Fund’s operations, and does not purport to be a complete analysis of all relevant tax rules and considerations, nor does it purport to be a complete listing of all potential tax risks inherent in making an investment in the Fund. All investors are urged to consult with their own tax advisers regarding any proposed investment in the Fund. A Member may be subject to other taxes, including but not limited to, state and local taxes, estate and inheritance taxes, and intangible taxes that may be imposed by various jurisdictions. The Fund also may be subject to state, local, and foreign taxes that could reduce cash distributions to Members. It is the responsibility of each Member to file all appropriate tax returns that may be required. Each prospective investor is urged to consult with his or her tax adviser with respect to any investment in the Fund. In addition to the particular matters set forth in this section, tax-exempt entities should review carefully those sections of this Memorandum regarding liquidity and other financial matters to ascertain whether the investment objective of the Fund is consistent with their overall investment plans. | |
Certain Issues Pertaining to Specific Exempt Organizations |
Private Foundations. In order to avoid the imposition of an excise tax, a private foundation may be required to distribute on an annual basis its “distributable amount,” which includes, among other things, the private foundation’s “minimum investment return,” defined as 5% of the excess of the fair market value of its non-functionally related assets (assets not used or held for use in carrying out the foundation’s exempt purposes), over certain indebtedness incurred by the foundation in connection with such assets. It appears that a foundation’s investment in the Fund would most probably be classified as a non-functionally related asset. A determination that an interest in the Fund is a non-functionally | |
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related asset could conceivably cause cash flow problems for a prospective Member which is a private foundation. Such an organization could be required to make distributions in an amount determined by reference to unrealized appreciation in the value of its interest in the Fund. Of course, this factor would create less of a problem to the extent that the value of the investment in the Fund is not significant in relation to the value of other assets held by a foundation. In some instances, an investment in the Fund by a private foundation may be prohibited by the “excess business holdings” provisions of the Code. For example, if a private foundation (either directly or together with a “disqualified person”) acquires more than 20% of the capital interest or profits interest of the Fund, the private foundation may be considered to have “excess business holdings.” If this occurs, such foundation may be required to divest itself of its interest in the Fund in order to avoid the imposition of an excise tax. However, the excise tax will not apply if at least 95% of the gross income from the Fund is “passive” within the applicable provisions of the Code and Regulations. There can be no assurance that the Fund will meet such 95% gross income test. A substantial percentage of investments of certain “private operating foundations” may be restricted to assets directly devoted to their tax-exempt purposes. Otherwise, generally, rules similar to those discussed above govern their operations.Qualified Retirement Plans. IRA Endowment Funds. |
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General |
Persons who are fiduciaries with respect to a U.S. employee benefit plan or trust within the meaning of, and subject to, the provisions of ERISA (an “ ERISA Plan 4 (an “Individual Retirement Fund ERISA imposes certain general and specific responsibilities on persons who are fiduciaries with respect to an ERISA Plan, including prudence, diversification, avoidance of prohibited transactions and compliance with other standards. In determining whether a particular investment is appropriate for an ERISA Plan, U.S. Department of Labor (“ DOL | |
Plan Asset Consequences |
Because the Fund is registered as an investment company under the 1940 Act, the assets of the Fund should not be treated as “plan assets” of the ERISA Plans investing in the Fund for purposes of ERISA’s fiduciary responsibility and ERISA’s and the Code’s prohibited transaction rules. Thus, neither the Board of Directors nor the Adviser will be a fiduciary within the meaning of ERISA by reason of its authority with respect to the Fund. Similar rules apply with respect to the Master Fund. | |
4 |
References hereinafter made to ERISA include parallel references to the Code. |
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Representations by Plans |
An ERISA Plan proposing to invest in the Fund (and thus the Master Fund) will be required to represent that it is, and any fiduciaries responsible for the ERISA Plan’s investments are, aware of, and understand, both the Fund’s and the Master Fund’s investment objectives, policies and strategies, and that the decision to invest plan assets in the Fund, and thus the Master Fund, was made with appropriate consideration of relevant investment factors with regard to the ERISA Plan and is consistent with the duties and responsibilities imposed upon fiduciaries with regard to their investment decisions under ERISA. WHETHER OR NOT THE ASSETS OF THE FUND AND/OR THE MASTER FUND ARE TREATED AS “PLAN ASSETS” FOR PURPOSES OF ERISA, AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUND (AND THUS THE MASTER FUND) BY AN ERISA PLAN IS SUBJECT TO ERISA. ACCORDINGLY, FIDUCIARIES OF ERISA PLANS SHOULD CONSULT WITH THEIR OWN COUNSEL AS TO THE CONSEQUENCES UNDER ERISA OF AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUND (AND THUS THE MASTER FUND). | |
ERISA Plans and Individual Retirement Funds Having Prior Relationships with the members of the Board of Directors and/or any of their Affiliates |
Certain prospective ERISA Plan and Individual Retirement Fund investors may currently maintain relationships with the members of the Board of Directors and/or their affiliates. Each of such persons may be deemed to be a party in interest to, and/or a fiduciary of, any ERISA Plan or Individual Retirement Fund to which any of them provide investment management, investment advisory or other services. ERISA prohibits ERISA Plan assets to be used for the benefit of a party in interest and also prohibits an ERISA Plan fiduciary from using its position to cause the ERISA Plan to make an investment from which it or certain third parties in which such fiduciary has an interest would receive a fee or other consideration. Similar provisions are imposed by the Code with respect to Individual Retirement Funds. ERISA Plan and Individual Retirement Fund investors should consult with counsel to determine if participation in the Fund, and thus the Master Fund, is a transaction which is prohibited by ERISA or the Code. The provisions of ERISA and the Code are subject to extensive and continuing administrative and judicial interpretation and review. The discussion of ERISA and the Code contained in this Prospectus is general and may be affected by future publication of regulations and rulings. Potential benefit plan investors should consult their legal advisers regarding the consequences under ERISA and the Code relevant to the acquisition and ownership of Shares. | |
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Member Shares |
Persons who purchase Shares in the offering being made hereby will be Members. The Adviser and its affiliates may purchase Shares and maintain an investment in the Fund, and to that extent will be Members of the Fund. | |
Liability of Members |
Under Delaware law and the Fund Agreement, each Member will be liable for the debts and obligations of the Fund only to the extent of the net asset value from time to time of the Member’s Shares and a Member, in the sole discretion of the Board of Directors, may be obligated to return to the Fund amounts distributed to the Member in accordance with the Fund Agreement in certain circumstances where after giving effect to the distribution, certain liabilities of the Fund exceed the fair market value of the Fund’s assets. | |
Duty of Care of the Directors |
The Fund Agreement provides that a Director shall not be personally liable to the Fund or any Member for any loss or damage occasioned by any act or omission in the performance of the Director’s services unless it shall be determined that such loss is due to an act or omission of such Director constituting willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of the Director’s office. The Fund Agreement also contains provisions for the indemnification, to the extent permitted by law, of a Director by the Fund (but not by Members individually) against any liability and expense to which the Director may be liable which arise in connection with the performance of the Director’s activities on behalf of the Fund, except to the extent such liability or expense was incurred by such Director by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of such Director’s office. Directors shall not be personally liable to any Member for any repayment by reason of any change in the Federal or state income tax laws applicable to the Fund or its investors. The rights of indemnification and exculpation provided under the Fund Agreement shall not be construed so as to provide for indemnification of a Director for any liability (including liability under Federal securities laws which, under certain circumstances, impose liability even on persons that act in good faith), to the extent (but only to the extent) that such indemnification would be in violation of applicable law, but shall be construed so as to effectuate the applicable provisions of the Fund Agreement to the fullest extent permitted by law. | |
Amendment of the Fund Agreement |
The Fund Agreement may generally be amended, in whole or in part, with the approval of the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Independent Directors, if required by the 1940 Act) and without the approval of Members unless the approval of Members is required by the 1940 Act. | |
Term, Dissolution and Liquidation |
The Fund will be dissolved: (i) upon the affirmative vote to dissolve the Fund by the Board of Directors; (ii) upon the affirmative vote of a “majority of the outstanding voting securities” of the Fund, as such term is defined in the 1940 Act, at a meeting of Members called by the Board of Directors for the purpose of determining whether the Fund should be dissolved in the event that the Fund does not at least once during any 24-month period repurchase any of the Shares tendered in accordance with the procedures determined by the Board of Directors from time to time; (iii) upon the failure of Members to elect successor Directors at a meeting called by the management services provider when no Director remains to continue the business of the Fund; or (iv) as required by operation of law. | |
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Upon the occurrence of any event of dissolution, the Board of Directors or the Adviser, acting as liquidator under appointment by the Board of Directors (or another liquidator, if the Board of Directors does not appoint the Adviser to act as liquidator or is unable to perform this function), is charged with winding up the affairs of the Fund and liquidating its assets. Upon the liquidation of the Fund, its assets will be distributed (i) first to satisfy the debts, liabilities and obligations of the Fund (other than debts to Members) including actual or anticipated liquidation expenses, (ii) next to repay debts owing to Members, and (iii) finally to Members proportionately in accordance with their ownership of Shares. Assets may be distributed in kind on a pro rata |
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Reports to Members |
The Fund furnishes to Members as soon as practicable after the end of each calendar year, information on IRS Form 1099 as is required by law to assist the Members in preparing their tax returns. Information regarding the performance of the Fund is available in the Fund’s annual and semi-annual reports. The Fund anticipates sending to Members unaudited semi-annual and audited annual reports within 60 days after the close of the period for which the report is being made, or as otherwise required by the 1940 Act. Quarterly reporting regarding the Fund’s operations is also available through the respective Selling Agent or Intermediary Platform, as applicable, or by contacting the Adviser. Any Member may request from the Adviser an estimate, based on unaudited data, of the net asset value of the Fund as of the end of any calendar month. The Fund’s semi-annual and annual reports contain financial statements that provide important information regarding the operations of the Fund, its investments and its investment performance. Prospective investors should obtain and review the Fund’s most recent annual report and, if more recent, the Fund’s latest semi-annual report, before investing. | |
Fiscal Year |
For accounting purposes, the Fund’s fiscal year is the 12-month period ending March 31. The 12-month period ending October 31 of each year is the taxable year of the Fund. | |
Financial Statements |
The Fund’s and Master Fund’s audited financial statements and PwC’s related reports are included in the Fund’s Annual Report for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024. The Annual Report, including the Fund’s audited financial statements, for the period ended March 31, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 7, 2024, on Form N-CSR is incorporated herein by reference. | |
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and Legal Counsel |
The Board of Directors has selected PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (“ PwC ”) as the independent registered public accounting firm of the Fund. PwC performs certain audit services for the Fund. PwC’s principal business address is located at One North Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60606. K&L Gates LLP, Boston, Massachusetts, serves as legal counsel to the Fund. The firm also acts as legal counsel to the Adviser and its affiliates with respect to certain other matters. In connection with the Fund’s offering of Shares and subsequent advice to the Fund, the Master Fund, the Adviser and their affiliates, K&L Gates LLP will not be representing Members of the Fund. No independent counsel has been retained to represent Members of the Fund. K&L Gates LLP’s representation of the Fund, the Master Fund, the Adviser and their respective affiliates is limited to specific matters as to which it has been consulted by the Fund, the Master Fund, the Adviser and/or their respective affiliates. There may exist other matters which could have a bearing on the Fund, the Master Fund, the Adviser or their respective affiliates as to which it has not been consulted. In addition, K&L Gates LLP does not undertake to monitor the compliance of the Adviser and its affiliates with the investment program, valuation procedures and other guidelines set forth in this Prospectus, nor does it monitor compliance with applicable laws. Proskauer Rose LLP, New York, New York, acts as legal counsel to the Independent Directors. | |
Custodian |
The Bank of New York Mellon (the “ Custodian ”) serves as the custodian of the assets of the Fund, Master Fund and Sub-Fund, and may maintain custody of such assets with domestic and foreign sub-custodians (which may be banks, trust companies, securities depositories and clearing agencies), approved by the Board | |
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of Directors in accordance with the requirements set forth in Section 17(f) of the 1940 Act and the rules adopted thereunder. Assets of the Fund are not held by the Adviser or commingled with the assets of other accounts, except to the extent that securities may be held in the name of the Custodian or a sub-custodian in a securities depository, clearing agency or omnibus customer account. The Custodian is a multinational banking and financial services corporation and its principal address is 240 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10286.The Administrator and Transfer Agent serves as escrow agent for the Fund. Subscription funds from prospective investors are held in a non-interest-bearing escrow account at the Bank of New York Mellon. On the purchase date, the subscription funds are released to the Fund. In the event that a subscription is not accepted, the Administrator and Transfer Agent will return the subscription funds to the prospective investor. | ||
Inquiries |
Inquiries concerning the Fund and Shares (including information concerning purchase and repurchase procedures) should be directed to: Grosvenor Capital Management, L.P. 900 North Michigan Avenue Suite 1100 Chicago, IL 60611 Telephone: (312) 506-6500 Facsimile: (312) 506-6888 * * * * * All potential investors in the Fund are encouraged to consult appropriate legal and tax counsel. | |
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GROSVENOR REGISTERED MULTI-STRATEGY FUND (TI 1), LLC
GROSVENOR REGISTERED MULTI-STRATEGY FUND (TI 2), LLC
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
July 26, 2024
This Statement of Additional Information (“SAI”) is not a prospectus. This SAI relates to and should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus of each of the above funds dated, July 26, 2024 (the “Prospectus”). Capitalized terms are as defined herein or in the Prospectus. The Prospectus and each of the above funds’ annual and semi-annual reports and the financial statements contained therein are available upon request and without charge by visiting the SEC’s website (http://www.sec.gov) or by writing to the funds at 900 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1100, Chicago, Illinois 60611 or by calling the funds at (877) 355-1469. The Prospectus, SAI and shareholder reports are available at gcmregfunddocs.com, however, access to these documents on the website is limited to investors eligible to invest in the funds and their financial representatives. Investors may also make written or telephonic inquiries or request other information about the funds at this address and telephone number. The funds file their registration statement, Form N-CEN, Form N-CSR, Form N-PORT, Form N-PX, and Schedule TO-I and make 40-17G (fidelity bond) filings and any amendments to these filings with the SEC. The SEC maintains an internet site that contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding issuers that file electronically with the SEC (http://www.sec.gov).
Shares of limited liability company interests (“Shares”) in the Funds have not been approved or disapproved by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) or any other Federal or state governmental agency or regulatory authority or any national securities exchange. No agency, authority or exchange has passed upon the accuracy or adequacy of this Prospectus or the merits of an investment in the Shares offered hereby. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
Table of Contents
Statement of Additional Information
| Page | ||
| 1 | ||
| 2 |
Outstanding Record Ownership
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC (“TI 1 Fund”)
As of May 31, 2024, the TI 1 Fund owns of record 66.90% of the Master Fund’s Interests.
As of May 31, 2024, the following person(s) own of record 5% or more of the TI 1 Fund’s Shares:
| TUW FAY M SLOVER | Bank of America Private Bank – 999 Waterside Drive, Norfolk, VA 23510 | 21.07% | ||
| TUW LLOYD G BALFOUR | 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110 | 10.13% | ||
| CHARLES SCHWAB & CO., INC. FBO CUSTOMERS | Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. - 3000 Schwab Way, Westlake, TX 76262 | 9.14% | ||
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 2), LLC (“TI 2 Fund”)
As of May 31, 2024, the TI 2 Fund owns of record 33.09% of the Master Fund’s Interests.
As of May 31, 2024, the following person(s) own of record 5% or more of the TI 2 Fund’s Shares:
| ONE GAS, INC. RETIREMENT PLAN TRUST | U.S. Bank National Association – 800 Nicollet Mall, Minneapolis, MN 55402 | 65.13% | ||
| MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER & SMITH INCORPORATED AS CUSTODIAN FOR CUSTOMERS |
Merrill Lynch – One Bryant Park, New York, NY 10036 | 12.53% | ||
1
Outstanding Securities
The following outstanding securities information is as of May 31, 2024.
TI 1 Fund
| Title of Class | Amount Authorized | Amounts Held by Registrant or for its Account |
Amount of Outstanding Exclusive of Amount Shown Under Amounts Held by Registrant or for its Account | |||||
| Shares of limited liability company interests |
Unlimited | 0 | $93,879,459 | |||||
TI 2 Fund
| Title of Class | Amount Authorized | Amounts Held by Registrant or for its Account |
Amount of Outstanding Exclusive of Amount Shown Under Amounts Held by Registrant or for its Account | |||||
| Shares of limited liability company interests |
Unlimited | 0 | $46,462,057 | |||||
2
PART C—OTHER INFORMATION
| Item 25. | Financial Statements and Exhibits |
| (1) |
Financial Statements:
| |||||
| The Fund’s and Master Fund’s audited financial statements and PwC’s related reports are included in the Fund’s Annual Report for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024. The Annual Report, including the Fund’s audited financial statements, for the period ended March 31, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 7, 2024, on Form N-CSR (Accession No. 0001193125-24-156868) is incorporated herein by reference. The Fund’s Financial Highlights from the Annual Report for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2024, are included in Part A. | ||||||
| (2) |
Exhibits: | |||||
| (a) |
(i) |
|||||
| (ii) |
||||||
| (b) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (c) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (d) |
See (2)(a). | |||||
| (e) |
||||||
| (f) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (g) |
||||||
| (h) |
(i) |
|||||
| (ii) |
||||||
| (i) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (j) |
||||||
| (k) |
(i) |
|||||
| (ii) |
||||||
| (iii) |
||||||
| (iv) |
||||||
| (v) |
||||||
| (vi) |
||||||
| (vii) |
||||||
| (l) |
||||||
| (m) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (n) |
||||||
| (o) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (p) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (q) |
Not applicable. | |||||
| (r) |
(i) |
Code of Ethics of the Registrant, dated February 7, 2024, filed herewith. | ||||
| (ii) |
Joint Code of Ethics of the Adviser and Distributor, dated February 7, 2024, filed herewith. | |||||
| (s) |
||||||
| (t) |
(i) |
Power of Attorney for the Registrant dated June 18, 2024, filed herewith. | ||||
| (ii) |
||||||
| Item 26. | Marketing Arrangements |
Contained in exhibit (h)(i).
| Item 27. | Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution |
The following table identifies certain estimated annual expenses to be paid by Registrant in connection with the issuance and distribution of the shares of beneficial interest of the Registrant.
| Description |
Amount |
|||
| State Blue-Sky fees and expenses and FINRA Marketing Material Filing Fees | $29,000 | |||
| Trustees and Transfer Agent’s Fees | $22,000 | |||
| Costs of Printing | $2,000 | |||
| Item 28. | Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control |
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC (“Master Fund”)
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC (“TI 1 Fund”)
Registrant and TI 1 Fund are feeder funds of Master Fund, which invest substantially all of their assets in Master Fund.
GRF Domestic Sub-Fund, LLC (“Sub-Fund”) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Master Fund.
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Subsidiary, LLC (“Master Subsidiary”) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Master Fund.
Master Fund, TI 1 Fund, Sub-Fund and Master Subsidiary each are a Delaware limited liability company.
Hedge Fund Guided Portfolio Solution, a Delaware statutory trust that is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a closed-end, management investment company, has the same board members as the Fund, Master Fund, and TI 1 Fund.
| Item 29. | Number of Holders of Securities |
Set forth below is the number of record holders as of May 31, 2024, of each class of securities of the Fund:
| Title of Class |
Number of Record Holders | |
| Units of Beneficial Interest |
124 | |
| Item 30. | Indemnification |
The Fund’s Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement contains provisions limiting the liability of the Fund’s Board of Directors and officers and providing for indemnification of the Fund’s Board of Directors, officers and employees (including their respective executors, heirs, assigns, successors, or other legal representatives) under certain circumstances. The Fund hereby undertakes that it will apply the indemnification provision of the Limited Liability Company Agreement in a manner consistent with Release 40-11330 of the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”), so long as the interpretation therein of Sections 17(h) and 17(i) of such Act remains in effect.
The Fund’s Distribution Agreement, Custody Agreement and Administrative Services Agreement contain standard provisions limiting the liability of, and providing for indemnification of, GRV Securities LLC, The Bank of New York Mellon, and BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc., respectively. The Master Feeder Agreement also contains a provision limiting the liability of, and providing for indemnification of, the Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC (the “Master Fund”) and the Adviser, as defined below, in the Adviser’s capacity as investment manager to the Master Fund. Each of these agreements, as well as the Fund’s Limited Liability Company Agreement are on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Fund, in conjunction with the Adviser and the Fund’s Board of Directors, maintains insurance on behalf of any person who is an Independent Director, officer, employee, or agent of the Fund, against certain liability asserted against him or her and incurred by him or her or arising out of his or her position. The Fund will not pay that portion of the premium, if any, for insurance to indemnify any such person for any act for which the Fund itself is not permitted to indemnify.
Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the Securities Act of 1933 (the “Act”) may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the Fund pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the Fund has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Fund of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the Fund in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, the Fund will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
| Item 31. | Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser |
Grosvenor Capital Management L.P. (the “Adviser”), is an Illinois limited partnership that offers investment management services and is a registered investment adviser. The Adviser is investment adviser to the Master Fund and the management services provider of the Registrant and Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Fund (TI 1), LLC. The Adviser’s offices are located at 900 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1100, Chicago, Illinois 60611. Information as to the officers and directors of the Adviser is included in its current Form ADV (CRD No: 108654) filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Adviser is also registered with the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) as a commodity pool operator and commodities trading advisor and is a member of the National Futures Association.
| Item 32. | Location of Accounts and Records |
The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation and BNY Mellon Investment Servicing (US) Inc., maintain certain required accounting related and financial books and records of the Registrant at 103 Bellevue Parkway, Wilmington, DE 19809. The other required books and records are maintained by the Adviser at 900 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1100, Chicago, Illinois 60611.
| Item 33. | Management Services |
Not applicable.
| Item 34. | Undertakings |
| 1. | Not applicable. |
| 2. | Not applicable. |
| 3. | The undersigned Registrant undertakes: |
| a. | to file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made, a post-effective amendment to the registration statement: |
| (1) | to include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act; |
| (2) | to reflect in the prospectus any facts or events after the effective date of the registration statement (or the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in the registration statement. |
| (3) | to include any material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the registration statement or any material change to such information in the registration statement. |
| b. | that, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of those securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof; |
| c. | to remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the offering; |
| d. | that, for the purpose of determining liability under the Securities Act to any purchaser: |
| (1) | each prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act as part of a registration statement relating to an offering, other than registration statements relying on Rule 430B or other than prospectuses filed in reliance on Rule 430A, shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement as of the date it is first used after effectiveness. Provided, however, that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such first use, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such date of first use. |
| e. | that for the purpose of determining liability of the Registrant under the Securities Act to any purchaser in the initial distribution of securities: |
| The undersigned Registrant undertakes that in a primary offering of securities of the undersigned Registrant pursuant to this registration statement, regardless of the underwriting method used to sell the securities to the purchaser, if the securities are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the following communications, the undersigned Registrant will be a seller to the purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell such securities to the purchaser: |
| (1) | any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the undersigned Registrant relating to the offering required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424 under the Securities Act; |
| (2) | free writing prospectus relating to the offering prepared by or on behalf of the undersigned Registrant or used or referred to by the undersigned Registrants; |
| (3) | the portion of any other free writing prospectus or advertisement pursuant to Rule 482 under the Securities Act 17 CFR 230.482 relating to the offering containing material information about the undersigned Registrant or its securities provided by or on behalf of the undersigned Registrant; and |
| (4) | any other communication that is an offer in the offering made by the undersigned Registrant to the purchaser. |
| 4. | Not applicable. |
| 5. | Not applicable. |
| 6. | Not applicable. |
| 7. | The undersigned Registrant undertakes to send by first class mail or other means designed to ensure equally prompt delivery, within two business days of receipt of a written or oral request, any prospectus or Statement of Additional Information. |
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized in the City of Chicago in the State of Illinois this 26th day of July, 2024.
| GROSVENOR REGISTERED MULTI-STRATEGY FUND (TI 2), LLC
| ||
| By: | /s/ Scott J. Lederman | |
| Scott J. Lederman Director, Chief Executive Officer and President | ||
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
| By: | /s/ Scott J. Lederman |
Director, Chief Executive Officer and President | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Scott J. Lederman |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Kathleen P. Sullivan |
Chief Financial Officer | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Kathleen P. Sullivan |
(Principal Accounting Officer) | |||||
| By: | /s/ Alan Brott* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Alan Brott |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Henry S. Bienen* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Henry S. Bienen |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Brian P. Gallagher* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Brian P. Gallagher |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Victor J. Raskin* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Victor J. Raskin |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Thomas G. Yellin* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Thomas G. Yellin |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Scott J. Lederman |
*Attorney-in-Fact | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Scott J. Lederman |
||||||
*As Attorney-in-Fact pursuant to Powers of Attorney filed on July 26, 2024.
SIGNATURES
Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC has duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized in the City of Chicago in the State of Illinois this 26th day of July, 2024.
| GROSVENOR REGISTERED MULTI-STRATEGY MASTER FUND, LLC
| ||
| By: | /s/ Scott J. Lederman | |
| Scott J. Lederman Director, Chief Executive Officer and President | ||
This Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
| By: | /s/ Scott J. Lederman |
Director, Chief Executive Officer and President | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Scott J. Lederman |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Kathleen P. Sullivan |
Chief Financial Officer | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Kathleen P. Sullivan |
(Principal Accounting Officer) | |||||
| By: | /s/ Alan Brott* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Alan Brott |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Henry S. Bienen* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Henry S. Bienen |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Brian P. Gallagher* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Brian P. Gallagher |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Victor J. Raskin* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Victor J. Raskin |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Thomas G. Yellin* |
Director | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Thomas G. Yellin |
||||||
| By: | /s/ Scott J. Lederman |
*Attorney-in-Fact | July 26, 2024 | |||
| Scott J. Lederman |
||||||
*As Attorney-in-Fact pursuant to Powers of Attorney filed on July 26, 2024.
INDEX TO EXHIBITS
(t)(i) Power of Attorney for the Registrant
(t)(ii) Power of Attorney for Grosvenor Registered Multi-Strategy Master Fund, LLC
ATTACHMENTS / EXHIBITS
CODE OF ETHICS OF THE REGISTRANT
JOINT CODE OF ETHICS OF THE ADVISER AND DISTRIBUTOR
POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR THE REGISTRANT
POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR GROSVENOR REGISTERED MULTI-STRATEGY MASTER FUND, LLC
XBRL TAXONOMY EXTENSION SCHEMA
XBRL TAXONOMY EXTENSION DEFINITION LINKBASE
XBRL TAXONOMY EXTENSION LABEL LINKBASE
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