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A U.S. all-cap growth equity strategy that seeks to invest in the common stocks of growth companies.
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Overview
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Performance
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Composition
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Attribution
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Availability
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Key Differentiators
- One Team, One Process
- In-depth Capital Structure Analysis
- Rigorous Top-Down and Fundamental Analysis
- Opportunistic, Flexible Approach
Strategy Summary
Strategy: U.S. All-cap growth Benchmark: Russell 3000 Growth Index Inception: January 1991 Strategy AUM: $11.5 billion* As of 3/31/12
*Strategy AUM reflects all assets that are currently being managed (collectively) under the Calamos Growth Strategy.
Investment Team
Chief Investment Officers
John P. Calamos, Sr. Chairman, CEO, Co-CIO
Nick P. Calamos President of Investments, Co-CIO
Research Team*
2 Co-Heads of Research & Investments
5 Senior Strategy Sector Analysts
3 Senior Sector Analysts
8 Intermediate Analysts
13 Junior Analysts
Portfolio Analytics*
7 Portfolio Specialists
Infrastructure & Execution*
9 Trading
4 Risk Management Specialists
14 Investment IT
*Information is as of 3/31/12.
Characteristics |
Since Inception
Risk/Reward Statistics* |
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Representative Portfolio
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Russell 3000 Growth Index
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Assets in Strategy^
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$11.5 billion
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N/A
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# of Holdings
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71
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1,728
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Portfolio Turnover % (5-Year)
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67.7%
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N/A
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Median Market Cap ($bil)
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$21.3
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$1.2
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Weighted Average Market Cap ($bil)
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$76.4
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$110.4
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ROIC %
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28.7%
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21.8%
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Debt/Capital %
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14.7%
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31.3%
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PEG Ratio (1 year forward)
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1.3x
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1.4x
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^ Strategy AUM reflects all assets that are currently being managed (collectively) under the Calamos Growth Strategy.
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Calamos Growth Composite
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Russell 3000 Growth Index
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Alpha
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6.89%
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N/A
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Beta
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1.04
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1.00
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Std. Deviation
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22.66%
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17.50%
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Upside Semivariance
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30.87%
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14.42%
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Downside Semivariance
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13.91%
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11.78%
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Sharpe Ratio
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0.53
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0.30
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Info Ratio
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0.53
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N/A
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* All risk-adjusted statistics are relative to the Russell 3000 Growth Index on an annualized basis, versus the Calamos Growth Composite. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Source: Russell/Mellon Analytical Services LLC and Calamos Advisors LLC
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Representative Portfolio Ten Largest Holdings‡
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% of Portfolio Weighting |
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Sector |
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| Apple, Inc. |
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5.0 |
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Information Technology |
| Google, Inc. |
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4.4 |
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Information Technology |
| QUALCOMM, Inc. |
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3.8 |
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Information Technology |
| Intuitive Surgical, Inc. |
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3.3 |
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Health Care |
| Priceline.com, Inc. |
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3.2 |
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Consumer Discretionary |
| Oracle Corp. |
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3.1 |
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Information Technology |
| Check Point Software Technologies, Ltd. |
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2.5 |
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Information Technology |
| EMC Corp. |
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2.4 |
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Information Technology |
| National Oilwell Varco, Inc. |
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2.3 |
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Energy |
| Amazon.com, Inc. |
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2.2 |
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Consumer Discretionary |
‡The portfolio is actively managed. Holdings and weightings are subject to change daily. The holdings listed should not be considered a recommendation to purchase or sell any particular security. Ten Largest Holdings exclude any government/sovereign bonds or options on broad market indexes the portfolio may hold.
Sector Allocation
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Sector
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Representative Portfolio %
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Russell 3000 Growth Index
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Under/Overweight%
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Info. Technology
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43.7%
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29.7%
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| Consumer Disc. | |
11.0 |
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14.5 |
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Energy
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9.9
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9.9
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| Health Care |
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9.9 |
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11.2 |
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Industrials
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8.7
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12.8
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Materials
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7.3
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5.2
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Consumer Staples
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5.7
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11.3
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Financials
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3.2
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4.5
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Telecom. Services
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0.6
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0.8
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Utilities
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0.0
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0.1
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1Top 10 Holdings and Sector Weightings are calculated as a percentage of Net Assets. The tables exclude cash or cash equivalents, any government / sovereign bonds or broad based index hedging securities the portfolio may hold. You can obtain a complete listing of holdings by visiting www.calamos.com.
First Quarter 2012 vs. Russell 3000 Growth Index
Consumer staples. Security selection and an underweight to the consumer staples sector added value, with holdings within soft drinks and personal products industries contributing to returns. Within the sector, we are favoring companies with growing niche brands and those with strong global operations.
Information technology. Security selection and an overweight to information technology was the most significant contributor to relative returns. Holdings within the application software and computer storage industries outperformed. We continue to favor this sector due to its generally higher growth potential, higher cash flows and lower debt levels, as well as valuations we view as attractive. Moreover, information technology companies are actively participating in many of long-term global secular growth themes, including consumer demand for products and services that provide access to information and entertainment, and businesses’ drive to enhance productivity in a competitive global economy.
Consumer discretionary. Security selection within the consumer discretionary sector was additive to performance. The portfolio’s top holdings within the sector are in the Internet retail industry. After detracting last quarter, these names bounced back and performed particularly well. We maintain conviction in these companies and believe they are well positioned to capitalize upon global secular trends. Broadly within the sector, we are attracted to global businesses with strong brands and diversified revenues, as well as those servicing a growing and maturing consumer base within the emerging markets.
Materials. Security selection within materials detracted value. Holdings within the gold industry were negative for relative performance as these firms incurred rising extraction costs. Gold was the outlier within the metals and mining industry as other metal-related companies generated positive returns during the period. We continue to believe the materials sector will be supported by increased demand for resources from emerging market regions, as well as by reflation efforts and accommodative central bank policies. We are focused on long-term opportunities within the diversified metals and mining, fertilizers and agricultural chemicals, and gold industries.
Strategy Vehicles
Separately Managed Accounts |
Institutional Mutual Fund Minimum |
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| Minimum: $5 million |
$1 million |
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Growth Equity | |
Low-Volatility Equity | |
Convertible | |
High Yield | |
Alternatives | |
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