04/29/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/29/2024 06:44
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
(Expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment) |
|
Class A
|
|
Management Fee
|
0.75%
|
Distribution and/or Service (12b-1) Fees
|
0.30%
|
Other Expenses1
|
0.16%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
|
1.21%
|
1
|
"Other Expenses" include an Administrative Fee of 0.15% which is payable to Jackson National Asset Management, LLC ("JNAM" or "Adviser").
|
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
(Expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment) |
|
Class I
|
|
Management Fee
|
0.75%
|
Distribution and/or Service (12b-1) Fees
|
0.00%
|
Other Expenses1
|
0.16%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
|
0.91%
|
1
|
"Other Expenses" include an Administrative Fee of 0.15% which is payable to Jackson National Asset Management, LLC ("JNAM" or "Adviser").
|
JNL Multi-Manager International Small Cap Fund Class A
|
|||
1 year
|
3 years
|
5 years
|
10 years
|
$123
|
$384
|
$665
|
$1,466
|
JNL Multi-Manager International Small Cap Fund Class I
|
|||
1 year
|
3 years
|
5 years
|
10 years
|
$93
|
$290
|
$504
|
$1,120
|
Period
|
||
1/1/2023 - 12/31/2023
|
70
|
%
|
•
|
Market risk - Portfolio securities may decline in value due to factors affecting securities markets generally, such as real or perceived adverse economic, political, or regulatory conditions, inflation, changes in interest or currency rates or adverse investor sentiment, public health issues, including widespread disease and virus epidemics or pandemics, war, terrorism or natural disasters, among others. Adverse market conditions may be prolonged and may not have the same impact on all types of securities. The values of securities may fall due to factors affecting a particular issuer, industry or the securities market as a whole.
|
•
|
Equity securities risk - Common and preferred stocks represent equity ownership in a company. Stock markets are volatile, and equity securities generally have greater price volatility than fixed-income securities. The price of equity or equity-related securities will fluctuate and can decline and reduce the value of a portfolio investing in equity or equity-related securities. The value of equity or equity-related securities purchased or held by the Fund could decline if the financial condition of the companies the Fund invests in decline or if overall market and economic conditions deteriorate. They may also decline due to factors that affect a particular industry or industries, such as labor shortages or an increase in production costs and competitive conditions within an industry. In addition, they may decline due to general market conditions that are not specifically related to a company or industry, such as real or perceived adverse economic conditions, changes in the general outlook for corporate earnings, changes in interest or currency rates or generally adverse investor sentiment.
|
•
|
Managed portfolio risk - As an actively managed portfolio, the Fund's portfolio manager(s) make decisions to buy and sell holdings in the Fund's portfolio. Because of this, the value of the Fund's investments could decline because the financial condition of an issuer may change (due to such factors as management performance, reduced demand or overall market changes), financial markets may fluctuate or overall prices may decline, the Sub-Adviser's investment techniques could fail to achieve the Fund's investment objective or negatively affect the Fund's investment performance, or legislative, regulatory, or tax developments may affect the investment techniques available to the Sub-Adviser of the Fund. There is no guarantee that the investment objective of the Fund will be achieved.
|
•
|
Small-capitalization investing risk - Investing in smaller companies, some of which may be newer companies or start-ups, generally involves greater risks than investing in larger, more established ones. The securities of companies with smaller market capitalizations often are less widely held and trade less frequently and in lesser quantities, and their market prices often fluctuate more, than the securities of companies with larger market capitalizations.
|
•
|
Investment style risk - The returns from a certain investment style may be lower than the returns from the overall stock market. Value stocks may not increase in price if other investors fail to recognize the company's value or the factors that are expected to increase the price of the security do not occur. Growth stock prices frequently reflect projections of future earnings or revenues, and if earnings growth expectations are not met, their stock prices will likely fall, which may reduce the value of a Fund's investment in those stocks. Over market cycles, different investment styles may sometimes outperform other investment styles (for example, growth investing may outperform value investing).
|
•
|
Emerging markets and less developed countries risk - Emerging market and less developed countries generally are located in Asia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Central and South America and Africa.Investments in, or exposure to, securities that are tied economically to emerging market and less developed countries are subject to all of the risks of investments in, or exposure to, foreign securities, generally to a greater extent than in developed markets, among other risks. Investments in securities that are tied economically to emerging markets involve greater risk from economic and political systems that typically are less developed, and likely to be less stable, than those in more advanced countries. The Fund also will be subject to the risk of adverse foreign currency rate fluctuations. Emerging market and less developed countries may also have economies that are predominantly based on only a few industries or dependent on revenues from particular commodities. The risks of nationalization, expropriation or other confiscation of assets of non-U.S. issuers is also greater in emerging and less developed countries. As a result of these risks, investments in securities tied economically to emerging markets tend to be more volatile than investments in securities of developed countries.
|
•
|
Frontier market countries risk - Frontier market countries generally have smaller economies and even less developed capital markets than traditional developing markets, and, as a result, the risks of investing in developing market countries are magnified in frontier market countries. The magnification of risks is the result of: potential for extreme price volatility and illiquidity in frontier markets; government ownership or control of parts of private sector and of certain companies; trade barriers, exchange controls, managed adjustments in relative currency values and other protectionist measures imposed or negotiated by the countries with which frontier market countries trade; and the relatively new and unsettled securities laws in many frontier market countries.
|
•
|
Foreign securities risk - Investments in, or exposure to, foreign securities involve risks not typically associated with U.S. investments. These risks include, among others, adverse fluctuations in foreign currency values, possible imposition of foreign withholding or other taxes on income payable on the securities, as well as adverse political, social and economic developments, such as political upheaval, acts of terrorism, financial troubles, sanctions or the threat of new or modified sanctions, or natural disasters. Many foreign securities markets, especially those in emerging market countries, are less stable, smaller, less liquid, and less regulated than U.S. securities markets, and the costs of trading in those markets is often higher than in U.S. securities markets. There may also be less publicly available information about issuers of foreign securities compared to issuers of U.S. securities. In addition, the economies of certain foreign markets may not compare favorably with the economy of the United States with respect to issues such as growth of gross national product, reinvestment of capital, resources and balance of payments position.
|
•
|
Allocation risk - The Fund's ability to achieve its investment objective depends upon the investment manager's analysis of such factors as macroeconomic trends, outlooks for various industries and asset class valuations, and its ability to select an appropriate mix of asset classes based on its analysis of such factors. TheFund is subject to the risk of changes in market, investment, and economic conditions in the selection and percentages of allocations.
|
•
|
Depositary receipts risk - Depositary receipts, such as American depositary receipts ("ADRs"), global depositary receipts ("GDRs"), and European depositary receipts ("EDRs"), may be issued in sponsored or un-sponsored programs. They may be traded in the over-the-counter ("OTC") market or on a regional exchange, or may otherwise have limited liquidity. The prices of depositary receipts may differ from the prices of securities upon which they are based. In a sponsored program, a security issuer has made arrangements to have its securities traded in the form of depositary receipts. In an un-sponsored program, the issuer may not be directly involved in the creation of the program. Holders of un-sponsored depositary receipts generally bear all the costs of the facility. The depository usually charges fees upon deposit and withdrawal of the underlying securities, the conversion of dividends into U.S. dollars or other currency, the disposition of non-cash distributions, and the performance of other services. Depositary receipts involve many of the same risks as direct investments in foreign securities. These risks include: fluctuations in currency exchange rates, which are affected by international balances of payments and other economic and financial conditions; government intervention; and speculation. With respect to certain foreign countries, there is the possibility of expropriation or nationalization of assets, confiscatory taxation, political and social upheaval, and economic instability. Investments in depositary receipts that are exchange traded or OTC may also subject the Fund to liquidity risk. This risk is enhanced in connection with OTC depositary receipts.
|
•
|
Investments in IPOs risk - IPOs issued by unseasoned companies with little or no operating history are risky and highly volatile.
|
•
|
Rule 144A securities risk - Rule 144A securities are securities offered as exempt from registration with the SEC, but may be treated as liquid securities because there is a market for such securities. Rule 144A securities may have an active trading market, but carry the risk that the active trading market may not continue. To the extent that institutional buyers become, for a time, uninterested in purchasing Rule 144A securities, investing in such securities could increase the Fund's level of illiquidity.
|
•
|
Regulation S securities risk - Regulation S securities may be less liquid than publicly traded securities and may not be subject to the disclosure and other investor protection requirements that would be applicable if they were publicly traded. Accordingly, Regulation S securities may involve a high degree of business and financial risk and may result in substantial losses.
|
•
|
Currency risk - Investments in foreign currencies, securities that trade in or receive revenues in foreign currencies, or derivatives that provide exposure to foreign currencies are subject to the risk that those currencies may decline in value or, in the case of hedging positions, that the currency may decline in value relative to the currency being hedged. Currency exchange rates can be volatile and may be affected by a number of factors, such as the general economics of a country, the actions (or inaction) of U.S. and foreign governments or central banks, the imposition of currency controls, and speculation. A decline in the value of a foreign currency versus the U.S. dollar reduces the value in U.S. dollars of investments denominated in that foreign currency.
|
•
|
Portfolio turnover risk - Frequent changes in the securities held by the Fund, including investments made on a shorter-term basis or in derivative instruments or in instruments with a maturity of one year or less at the time of acquisition, may increase transaction costs, which may reduce performance.
|
•
|
Securities lending risk - Securities lending involves the risk of loss or delays in recovery of the loaned securities or loss of rights in the collateral if the borrower fails to return the security loaned or becomes insolvent.
|
Average Annual Total Returns as of 12/31/2023
|
||||||
1 year
|
5 year
|
Life of Fund (August 13, 2018)
|
||||
JNL Multi-Manager International Small Cap Fund (Class A)
|
22.47
|
%
|
11.39
|
%
|
6.24
|
%
|
Morningstar Global ex-US Target Market Exposure Index (Net) (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
15.64
|
%
|
7.36
|
%
|
4.68
|
%
|
Morningstar Global ex-US Small Cap Target Market Exposure Index (Net) (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
15.16
|
%
|
6.64
|
%
|
3.16
|
%
|
Average Annual Total Returns as of 12/31/2023
|
||||||
1 year
|
5 year
|
Life of Class (August 13, 2018)
|
||||
JNL Multi-Manager International Small Cap Fund (Class I)
|
22.84
|
%
|
11.72
|
%
|
6.56
|
%
|
Morningstar Global ex-US Target Market Exposure Index (Net) (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
15.64
|
%
|
7.36
|
%
|
4.68
|
%
|
Morningstar Global ex-US Small Cap Target Market Exposure Index (Net) (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
15.16
|
%
|
6.64
|
%
|
3.16
|
%
|
Name:
|
Joined Fund Management Team In:
|
Title:
|
William Harding, CFA
|
August 2018
|
Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Officer and Portfolio Manager, JNAM
|
Sean Hynes, CFA, CAIA
|
August 2018
|
Vice President and Portfolio Manager, JNAM
|
Mark Pliska, CFA
|
August 2018
|
Vice President and Portfolio Manager, JNAM
|
Brian Lum, CFA
|
April 2021
|
Portfolio Manager, Baillie Gifford & Co.*
|
Charlie Broughton, CFA
|
October 2021
|
Portfolio Manager, Baillie Gifford & Co.*
|
Remya Nair
|
July 2022
|
Portfolio Manager, Baillie Gifford & Co.*
|
Arjun Jayaraman, Ph.D., CFA
|
August 2018
|
Head of Quantitative Research and Portfolio Manager, Causeway
|
MacDuff Kuhnert
|
August 2018
|
Director and Portfolio Manager, Causeway
|
Joe Gubler, CFA
|
August 2018
|
Director and Portfolio Manager, Causeway
|
Ryan Myers
|
January 2021
|
Director and Portfolio Manager, Causeway
|
Gregory S. Ise, CFA
|
August 2018
|
Portfolio Manager and Business Analyst, WCM
|
Sanjay Ayer, CFA
|
August 2018
|
Portfolio Manager, WCM
|