SGI U.S. SMALL CAP EQUITY FUND
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
 
NOVEMBER 30, 2022 (UNAUDITED)
 
             
   
NUMBER OF
       
   
SHARES
   
VALUE
 
COMMON STOCKS - 97.2%
           
Auto Parts & Equipment — 2.0%
           
Dorman Products, Inc.*
   
6,475
   
$
580,419
 
Standard Motor Products, Inc.
   
4,961
     
190,552
 
             
770,971
 
Banks — 13.3%
               
Bank of Marin Bancorp
   
2,000
     
71,780
 
Bankwell Financial Group, Inc.
   
2,900
     
85,811
 
BayCom Corp.
   
3,500
     
66,360
 
BCB Bancorp, Inc.
   
6,300
     
118,755
 
City Holding Co.
   
2,300
     
234,416
 
CrossFirst Bankshares, Inc.*
   
10,900
     
151,183
 
Equity Bancshares, Inc., Class A
   
6,625
     
242,210
 
Esquire Financial Holdings, Inc.
   
4,100
     
183,844
 
Farmers National Banc Corp.
   
8,700
     
132,327
 
First Bancshares, Inc., (The)
   
5,200
     
177,788
 
First Financial Corp.
   
9,404
     
452,051
 
Great Southern Bancorp, Inc.
   
4,500
     
281,925
 
HarborOne Bancorp, Inc.
   
11,000
     
160,930
 
Lakeland Financial Corp.
   
4,000
     
315,840
 
Merchants Bancorp
   
6,875
     
175,931
 
Nicolet Bankshares, Inc.*
   
4,575
     
378,444
 
Old Second Bancorp, Inc.
   
18,600
     
324,756
 
Origin Bancorp, Inc.
   
5,300
     
216,876
 
Peapack-Gladstone Financial Corp.
   
6,035
     
248,763
 
Stellar Bancorp, Inc.
   
5,200
     
175,812
 
Unity Bancorp, Inc.
   
4,200
     
119,742
 
Westamerica BanCorp
   
11,100
     
685,425
 
             
5,000,969
 
Biotechnology — 1.9%
               
Innoviva, Inc.*
   
55,700
     
731,341
 
Building Materials — 0.9%
               
AAON, Inc.
   
4,350
     
344,781
 
Chemicals — 3.8%
               
American Vanguard Corp.
   
15,848
     
364,504
 
Balchem Corp.
   
5,450
     
767,360
 
Hawkins, Inc.
   
7,300
     
303,680
 
             
1,435,544
 
Commercial Services — 7.1%
               
CorVel Corp.*
   
3,275
     
500,977
 
Forrester Research, Inc.*
   
5,400
     
189,972
 
Franklin Covey Co.*
   
4,700
     
244,212
 
FTI Consulting, Inc.*
   
4,700
     
812,254
 
ICF International, Inc.
   
5,050
     
547,268
 
Kforce, Inc.
   
3,370
     
199,066
 
Laureate Education, Inc.
   
18,388
     
192,706
 
             
2,686,455
 
Computers — 2.3%
               
ExlService Holdings, Inc.*
   
4,600
     
861,120
 
Distribution/Wholesale — 0.9%
               
Titan Machinery, Inc.*
   
8,025
     
353,341
 
Diversified Financial Services — 7.7%
               
AssetMark Financial Holdings, Inc.*
   
6,500
     
161,590
 
First Western Financial, Inc.*
   
2,600
     
79,040
 
Houlihan Lokey, Inc.
   
10,275
     
1,010,546
 
International Money Express, Inc.*
   
25,528
     
554,468
 
Nelnet, Inc., Class A
   
800
     
78,832
 
PJT Partners, Inc., Class A
   
13,200
     
1,016,532
 
             
2,901,008
 
Electric — 0.6%
               
Avangrid, Inc.
   
5,400
     
230,958
 
Electronics — 1.6%
               
OSI Systems, Inc.*
   
6,825
     
603,876
 
Engineering & Construction — 1.5%
               
NV5 Global, Inc.*
   
3,950
     
570,814
 
Environmental Control — 0.7%
               
Heritage-Crystal Clean, Inc.*
   
8,600
     
271,760
 
Food — 8.7%
               
John B Sanfilippo & Son, Inc.
   
5,100
     
431,919
 
Lancaster Colony Corp.
   
1,800
     
372,852
 
Seaboard Corp.
   
30
     
118,586
 
Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc.*
   
30,000
     
1,029,900
 
Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc.
   
15,158
     
681,352
 
Weis Markets, Inc.
   
7,300
     
636,633
 
             
3,271,242
 
Gas — 2.1%
               
ONE Gas, Inc.
   
9,183
     
798,462
 
Healthcare-Products — 0.3%
               
Atrion Corp.
   
200
     
120,960
 
Healthcare-Services — 0.3%
               
National HealthCare Corp.
   
1,700
     
104,788
 
Insurance — 1.6%
               
Hanover Insurance Group Inc., (The)
   
1,500
     
220,950
 
National Western Life Group, Inc., Class A
   
400
     
84,320
 
RLI Corp.
   
1,700
     
221,119
 
Safety Insurance Group, Inc.
   
800
     
73,392
 
             
599,781
 
Machinery-Diversified — 1.2%
               
Alamo Group, Inc.
   
2,425
     
364,962
 
Tennant Co.
   
1,200
     
76,236
 
             
441,198
 
Miscellaneous Manufacturing — 0.5%
               
Chase Corp.
   
2,100
     
199,500
 
Oil & Gas — 1.7%
               
Chord Energy Corp.
   
2,275
     
347,006
 
Kimbell Royalty Partners LP
   
16,400
     
283,228
 
             
630,234
 
Packaging & Containers — 4.2%
               
Silgan Holdings, Inc.
   
22,725
     
1,202,152
 
UFP Technologies, Inc.*
   
3,100
     
372,155
 
             
1,574,307
 
Pharmaceuticals — 7.6%
               
Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc.*
   
14,400
     
424,656
 
Collegium Pharmaceutical, Inc.*
   
28,403
     
621,174
 
Ironwood Pharmaceuticals Inc., Class A*
   
6,400
     
77,504
 
Pacira BioSciences, Inc.*
   
7,150
     
344,987
 
Premier, Inc., Class A
   
3,400
     
113,390
 
Prestige Brands Holdings, Inc.*
   
15,382
     
945,378
 
Supernus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.*
   
9,000
     
330,480
 
             
2,857,569
 
Pipelines — 1.4%
               
DT Midstream, Inc.
   
8,600
     
518,838
 
Real Estate — 0.5%
               
McGrath RentCorp
   
1,800
     
176,616
 
REITS — 2.6%
               
City Office REIT, Inc.
   
19,500
     
192,855
 
Easterly Government Properties, Inc.
   
16,200
     
256,608
 
Rexford Industrial Realty, Inc.
   
9,700
     
536,313
 
             
985,776
 
Retail — 5.0%
               
AutoNation, Inc.*
   
3,300
     
408,903
 
Murphy USA, Inc.
   
3,600
     
1,064,916
 
PC Connection, Inc.
   
1,700
     
94,435
 
Winmark Corp.
   
1,400
     
336,000
 
             
1,904,254
 
Savings & Loans — 1.3%
               
Hingham Institution For Savings, (The)
   
525
     
154,077
 
HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc.
   
4,900
     
125,440
 
Southern Missouri Bancorp, Inc.
   
4,200
     
217,812
 
             
497,329
 
Software — 3.1%
               
CSG Systems International, Inc.
   
10,700
     
661,688
 
SPS Commerce, Inc.*
   
1,300
     
184,938
 
Verra Mobility Corp.*
   
18,000
     
285,300
 
             
1,131,926
 
Transportation — 6.3%
               
Heartland Express, Inc.
   
25,440
     
425,866
 
Landstar System, Inc.
   
6,000
     
1,037,880
 
Werner Enterprises, Inc.
   
20,822
     
915,752
 
             
2,379,498
 
Water — 4.5%
               
American States Water Co.
   
11,000
     
1,077,890
 
California Water Service Group
   
9,745
     
632,743
 
             
1,710,633
 
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS
               
(Cost $31,783,582)
           
36,665,849
 
EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS - 0.8%
               
Exchange-Traded Funds — 0.8%
               
iShares MSCI USA Small-Cap Min Vol Factor ETF
   
8,400
     
303,996
 
TOTAL EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS
               
(Cost $289,078)
           
303,996
 
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS - 2.1%
               
U.S. Bank Money Market Deposit Account, 3.50%(a)
   
796,696
     
796,696
 
TOTAL SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
               
(Cost $796,696)
           
796,696
 
TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100.1%
               
(Cost $32,869,356)
           
37,766,541
 
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS - (0.1)%
           
(27,350
)
NET ASSETS - 100.0%
         
$
37,739,191
 

*
Non-income producing security.
               
(a)
The rate shown is as of November 30, 2022.
               
REIT
Real Estate Investment Trust
               
                   
 The accompanying notes are an integral part of the consolidated portfolio of investments.
 



SGI U.S. SMALL CAP EQUITY FUND
 
NOTES TO THE PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
 
NOVEMBER 30, 2022 (UNAUDITED)
 
                   
PORTFOLIO VALUATION — The Fund’s net asset value (“NAV”) is calculated once daily at the close of regular trading hours on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) (generally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on each day the NYSE is open. Securities held by the Fund are valued using the closing price or the last sale price on a national securities exchange or the National Association of Securities Dealers Automatic Quotation System (“NASDAQ”) market system where they are primarily traded. Equity securities traded in the over-the-counter (“OTC”) market are valued at their closing prices. If there were no transactions on that day, securities traded principally on an exchange or on NASDAQ will be valued at the mean of the last bid and ask prices prior to the market close. Fixed income securities are valued using an independent pricing service, which considers such factors as security prices, yields, maturities and ratings, and are deemed representative of market values at the close of the market. Foreign securities are valued based on prices from the primary market in which they are traded, and are translated from the local currency into U.S. dollars using current exchange rates. If market quotations are unavailable or deemed unreliable, securities will be valued in accordance with procedures adopted by the Company’s Board of Directors (the “Board”). Relying on prices supplied by pricing services or dealers or using fair valuation may result in values that are higher or lower than the values used by other investment companies and investors to price the same investments. Such procedures use fundamental valuation methods, which may include, but are not limited to, an analysis of the effect of any restrictions on the resale of the security, industry analysis and trends, significant changes in the issuer’s financial position, and any other event which could have a significant impact on the value of the security. Determination of fair value involves subjective judgment as the actual market value of a particular security can be established only by negotiations between the parties in a sales transaction, and the difference between the recorded fair value and the value that would be received in a sale could be significant.
 
                   
FAIR VALUE  MEASUREMENTS – The inputs and valuation techniques used to measure the fair value of the Fund's investments are summarized into three levels as described in the hierarchy below:
 
                   
•  Level 1 — Prices are determined using quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
 
                   
•  Level 2 — Prices are determined using other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
 
                   
• Level 3 — Prices are determined using significant unobservable inputs (including the Fund's own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments).
 
                   
The inputs or methodologies used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.
 
                   
The following is a summary of the inputs used, as of  November 30, 2022, in valuing the Fund’s investments carried at fair value:
 

   
TOTAL
   
LEVEL 1
   
LEVEL 2
   
LEVEL 3
 
SGI U.S. SMALL CAP EQUITY FUND
                       
Common Stocks
 
$
36,665,849
   
$
36,665,849
   
$
-
   
$
-
 
Exchange Traded-Funds
   
303,996
     
303,996
     
-
     
-
 
Short-Term Investments
   
796,696
     
796,696
     
-
     
-
 
Total Investments*
 
$
37,766,541
   
$
37,766,541
   
$
-
   
$
-
 
                                 
* Please refer to Portfolio of Investments for further details.
 

At the end of each quarter, management evaluates the classification of Levels 1, 2 and 3 assets and liabilities. Various factors are considered, such as changes in liquidity from the prior reporting period; whether or not a broker is willing to execute at the quoted price; the depth and consistency of prices from third party pricing services; and the existence of contemporaneous, observable trades in the market. Additionally, management evaluates the classification of Levels 1, 2 and 3 assets and liabilities on a quarterly basis for changes in listings or delistings on national exchanges.
 
                   
Due to the inherent uncertainty of determining the fair value of investments that do not have a readily available market value, the fair value of the Fund's investments may fluctuate from period to period. Additionally, the fair value of investments may differ significantly from the values that would have been used had a ready market existed for such investments and may differ materially from the values the Fund may ultimately realize. Further, such investments may be subject to legal and other restrictions on resale or otherwise less liquid than publicly traded securities.
 
                   
For fair valuations using significant unobservable inputs, U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“U.S. GAAP”) requires the Fund to present a reconciliation of the beginning to ending balances for reported market values that presents changes attributable to total realized and unrealized gains or losses, purchase and sales, and transfers in and out of Level 3 during the period. Transfers in and out between levels are based on values at the end of the period.  A reconciliation of Level 3 investments is presented only if the Fund had an amount of Level 3 investments at the end of the reporting period that was meaningful in relation to its net assets. The amounts and reasons for Level 3 transfers in and out of each level is disclosed when the Fund had an amount of total Level 3 transfers during the reporting period that was meaningful in relation to its net assets as of the end of the reporting period.
 
 
                   
During the current fiscal period, the Fund had no Level 3 purchases, sales, or transfers.
               
                   
For more information with regard to significant accounting policies, see the most recent semi-annual or annual report filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.