A growth fund is a mutual fund or exchange-traded fund (ETF) that includes companies that aim to grow revenue or earnings faster than competitors in the industry or the market as a whole.
Growth funds are divided by market capitalization into small, medium and large capitalization funds.
Most growth funds carry high risk and high rewards and are therefore best suited to market participants with a long-term investment horizon and healthy risk tolerance.
Exception 3(c)(7) pertains to a section of the Investment Company Act of the 1940s allowing qualifying private funds to be exempt from certain SEC rules.
3C1 refers to the part of the Investment Company Act of 1940 that exempts certain private equity firms from regulation.
– A firm to be defined as an investment company must comply with certain regulatory and reporting requirements set by the SEC.
Attribution analysis is an evaluation tool used to explain and analyze the performance of a portfolio (or portfolio manager), especially when compared to a certain benchmark.
in the master-feeder structure, investment funds are formed from the capital of investors; these feeder funds in turn invest in a centralized master fund.