Global Equity ETF Strategy

Macro Insight. High Conviction. Global Opportunity.

The RBA Global Equity Strategy, offered through iM Global Partner, brings a distinctive approach to global equity investing—combining disciplined macroeconomic analysis with high-conviction, bottom-up stock selection. Managed by Richard Bernstein Advisors (RBA), a firm renowned for its top-down insights and risk-aware philosophy, the strategy targets long-term capital appreciation across global markets. It is designed for institutional investors seeking a differentiated source of global equity exposure, rooted in deep economic research, disciplined processes, and an entrepreneurial mindset that aligns with long-term partnerships.

Richard Bernstein Advisors

Manager

November 2010

Inception of Strategy

USD

Base Currency

Investment Philosophy

At the core of RBA’s investment philosophy is a conviction that capital markets are shaped more by profit cycles than by traditional economic narratives. The team believes that sustainable long-term returns are driven by investing where capital is scarce and fear or over-enthusiasm dominates sentiment—often in areas overlooked by consensus thinking. By focusing on long-term secular themes and aligning portfolios with enduring structural shifts, RBA seeks to uncover meaningful, underappreciated opportunities. This disciplined, contrarian mindset is anchored in the belief that risk is best managed through diversification, liquidity, and patience—not short-term events and predictions.

RBA’s research is distinguished by its rigorous “top-down” framework, which prioritizes profit cycle analysis over conventional economic cycle forecasting. While most asset managers adopt a “bottom-up” lens centered on individual securities, RBA starts at the macro level—assessing earnings trends, liquidity, valuation signals and investor sentiment across regions, sectors, and market caps. The team integrates long-term secular insights with dynamic cyclical views, constructing portfolios that are both forward-looking and adaptable. This methodology enables RBA to identify broad market inefficiencies and tilt exposures decisively when conviction is high—offering clients a truly differentiated, global and flexible equity solution.

The Team

Richard Bernstein

Richard Bernstein Asset Management
Chief Executive Officer &
Chief Investment Officer

Michael Contopoulos

Richard Bernstein Asset Management
Deputy Chief Investment
Officer

Lisa Kirschner

Richard Bernstein Asset Management
Director of Research &
IC Chairperson

Matthew Griswold

Richard Bernstein Asset Management
Director of Investments &
Risk Management

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Disclosure:

Investments in foreign instruments or currencies can involve greater risk and volatility than U.S. investments because of adverse market, economic, political, regulatory, geopolitical or other conditions. In emerging countries, these risks may be more significant.

The value of commodities investments will generally be affected by overall market movements and factors specific to a particular industry or commodity, including weather, embargoes, tariffs, or health, political, international and regulatory developments. An imbalance in supply and demand in the income market may result in valuation uncertainties and greater volatility, less liquidity, widening credit spreads and a lack of price transparency in the market. As interest rates rise, the value of certain income investments is likely to decline. Investments in income securities may be affected by changes in the creditworthiness of the issuer and are subject to the risk of non-payment of principal and interest.

The value of income securities also may decline because of real or perceived concerns about the issuer’s ability to make principal and interest payments. Smaller companies are generally subject to greater price fluctuations, limited liquidity, higher transaction costs and higher investment risk than larger, established companies. Derivatives instruments can be used to take both long and short positions, be highly volatile, result in economic leverage (which can magnify losses), and involve risks in addition to the risks of the underlying instrument on which the derivative is based, such as counterparty, correlation and liquidity risk. If a counterparty is unable to honor its commitments, the value may decline and/or the portfolio could experience delays in the return of collateral or other assets held by the counterparty. The views expressed in this presentation are those of (portfolio manager/team) and are current only through the date stated and are not intended as investment advice or a recommendation to purchase or sell specific securities.

These opinions may change at any time without notice, and there is no assurance that any securities discussed herein will remain in an account at the time you receive this report. While every effort has been made to verify the information contained herein, we make no representations as to its accuracy. It should not be assumed that any of the securities or transactions listed were or will be profitable. Actual portfolio holdings will vary for each client, and there is no guarantee that a particular client’s account will hold any or all of the securities mentioned. It is not possible to invest directly in an Index. This material may contain statements that are not historical facts, referred to as forward-looking statements.

Future results may differ significantly from those stated in forward-looking statements, depending on factors such as changes in securities or financial markets or general economic conditions.