Protective Life Dynamic Allocation Series - Growth Portfolio
Schedule of Investments (unaudited)
March 31, 2020
Shares or | Value | ||||||
Investment Companies – 73.1% | |||||||
Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) – 73.1% | |||||||
Franklin FTSE Asia ex Japan | 39,770 | $726,228 | |||||
Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1# | 25,184 | 4,795,034 | |||||
iShares Core S&P 500# | 22,336 | 5,771,622 | |||||
Janus Henderson Short Duration Income£ | 566,353 | 27,892,885 | |||||
Vanguard Small-Cap | 16,200 | 1,870,128 | |||||
Total Investment Companies (cost $41,818,510) | 41,055,897 | ||||||
Investments Purchased with Cash Collateral from Securities Lending – 9.6% | |||||||
Investment Companies – 7.7% | |||||||
Janus Henderson Cash Collateral Fund LLC, 0.5667%ºº,£ | 4,291,459 | 4,291,459 | |||||
Time Deposits – 1.9% | |||||||
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, 0.0200%, 4/1/20 | $1,072,865 | 1,072,865 | |||||
Total Investments Purchased with Cash Collateral from Securities Lending (cost $5,364,324) | 5,364,324 | ||||||
Total Investments (total cost $47,182,834) – 82.7% | 46,420,221 | ||||||
Cash, Receivables and Other Assets, net of Liabilities – 17.3% | 9,713,445 | ||||||
Net Assets – 100% | $56,133,666 |
Schedules of Affiliated Investments – (% of Net Assets)
Dividend Income(1) | Realized Gain/(Loss)(1) | Change in Unrealized Appreciation/ Depreciation(1) | Value at 3/31/20 | |||||||
Investment Companies - 49.7% | ||||||||||
Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) - 49.7% | ||||||||||
Janus Henderson Short Duration Income | $ | - | $ | - | $ | (151,557) | $ | 27,892,885 | ||
Investments Purchased with Cash Collateral from Securities Lending - 7.7% | ||||||||||
Investment Companies - 7.7% | ||||||||||
Janus Henderson Cash Collateral Fund LLC, 0.5667%ºº | 6,926∆ | - | - | 4,291,459 | ||||||
Total Affiliated Investments - 57.4% | $ | 6,926 | $ | - | $ | (151,557) | $ | 32,184,344 |
(1) For securities that were affiliated for a portion of the period ended March 31, 2020, this column reflects amounts for the entire period ended March 31, 2020 and not just the period in which the security was affiliated.
Value at 12/31/19 | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Value at 3/31/20 | |||||||
Investment Companies - 49.7% | ||||||||||
Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) - 49.7% | ||||||||||
Janus Henderson Short Duration Income | 496 | 28,043,946 | - | 27,892,885 | ||||||
Investments Purchased with Cash Collateral from Securities Lending - 7.7% | ||||||||||
Investment Companies - 7.7% | ||||||||||
Janus Henderson Cash Collateral Fund LLC, 0.5667%ºº | - | 50,813,778 | (46,522,319) | 4,291,459 |
Notes to Schedule of Investments (unaudited)
LLC | Limited Liability Company |
ºº | Rate shown is the 7-day yield as of March 31, 2020. |
# | Loaned security; a portion of the security is on loan at March 31, 2020. |
£ | The Portfolio may invest in certain securities that are considered affiliated companies. As defined by the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, an affiliated company is one in which the Portfolio owns 5% or more of the outstanding voting securities, or a company which is under common ownership or control. |
∆ | Net of income paid to the securities lending agent and rebates paid to the borrowing counterparties. |
The following is a summary of the inputs that were used to value the Portfolio’s investments in securities and other financial instruments as of March 31, 2020. | ||||||||||||
Valuation Inputs Summary | ||||||||||||
Level 2 - | Level 3 - | |||||||||||
Level 1 - | Other Significant | Significant | ||||||||||
Quoted Prices | Observable Inputs | Unobservable Inputs | ||||||||||
Assets | ||||||||||||
Investments In Securities: | ||||||||||||
Investment Companies | $ | 41,055,897 | $ | - | $ | - | ||||||
Investments Purchased with Cash Collateral from Securities Lending | - | 5,364,324 | - | |||||||||
Total Assets | $ | 41,055,897 | $ | 5,364,324 | $ | - | ||||||
Investment Valuation
Securities held by the Portfolio, including the underlying funds, are valued in accordance with policies and procedures established by and under the supervision of the Trustees (the “Valuation Procedures”). The values of the Portfolio's investments in the underlying funds are based upon the closing price of such underlying funds on the applicable exchange. Most debt securities are valued in accordance with the evaluated bid price supplied by the pricing service that is intended to reflect market value. The evaluated bid price supplied by the pricing service is an evaluation that may consider factors such as security prices, yields, maturities, and ratings. Certain short-term securities maturing within 60 days or less may be evaluated and valued on an amortized cost basis provided that the amortized cost determined approximates market value. Securities for which market quotations or evaluated prices are not readily available or are deemed by Janus Capital Management LLC (“Janus Capital”) to be unreliable are valued at fair value determined in good faith under the Valuation Procedures. Circumstances in which fair value pricing may be utilized include, but are not limited to: (i) a significant event that may affect the securities of a single issuer, such as a merger, bankruptcy, or significant issuer-specific development; (ii) an event that may affect an entire market, such as a natural disaster or significant governmental action; (iii) a nonsignificant event such as a market closing early or not opening, or a security trading halt; and (iv) pricing of a nonvalued security and a restricted or nonpublic security. Special valuation considerations may apply with respect to “odd-lot” fixed-income transactions which, due to their small size, may receive evaluated prices by pricing services which reflect a large block trade and not what actually could be obtained for the odd-lot position.
Valuation Inputs Summary
FASB ASC 820, Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures (“ASC 820”), defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value, and expands disclosure requirements regarding fair value measurements. This standard emphasizes that fair value is a market-based measurement that should be determined based on the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset or liability and establishes a hierarchy that prioritizes inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value. These inputs are summarized into three broad levels:
Level 1 – Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets the Portfolio has the ability to access for identical assets or liabilities.
Level 2 – Observable inputs other than unadjusted quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability either directly or indirectly. These inputs may include quoted prices for the identical instrument on an inactive market, prices for similar instruments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, yield curves, default rates and similar data.
Assets or liabilities categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy generally include: debt securities fair valued in accordance with the evaluated bid or ask prices supplied by a pricing service; securities traded on OTC markets and listed securities for which no sales are reported that are fair valued at the latest bid price (or yield equivalent thereof) obtained from one or more dealers transacting in a market for such securities or by a pricing service approved by the Portfolio’s Trustees; and certain short-term debt securities with maturities of 60 days or less that are fair valued at amortized cost. Other securities that may be categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy include, but
are not limited to, preferred stocks, bank loans, swaps, investments in unregistered investment companies, options, and forward contracts.
Level 3 – Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability to the extent that relevant observable inputs are not available, representing the Portfolio’s own assumptions about the assumptions that a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability, and that would be based on the best information available.
The Portfolio classifies each of its investments in underlying funds as Level 1, without consideration as to the classification level of the specific investments held by the underlying funds. There have been no significant changes in valuation techniques used in valuing any such positions held by the Portfolio since the beginning of the fiscal year.
The inputs or methodology used for fair valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. The summary of inputs used as of March 31, 2020 to fair value the Portfolio’s investments in securities and other financial instruments is included in the “Valuation Inputs Summary” in the Notes to Schedule of Investments.
For additional information on the Portfolio, please refer to the Portfolio’s most recent semiannual or annual shareholder report.