NPORT-EX 2 motleyglobaloppv2.htm NPORT-EX

MOTLEY FOOL GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES ETF
 
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS
 
NOVEMBER 30, 2022 (UNAUDITED)
 

      
NUMBER OF
       
      
SHARES
   
VALUE
 
Common Stocks — 96.8%
           
Aerospace & Defense — 3.9%
           
Axon Enterprise, Inc. (United States)(a)*
   
88,294
   
$
16,248,745
 
Banks — 7.0%
               
Bank of Georgia Group PLC (Georgia)
   
250,076
     
7,625,555
 
HDFC Bank., Ltd., ADR (India)(a)
   
179,812
     
12,689,333
 
Signature Bank (United States)
   
50,634
     
7,063,443
 
SVB Financial Group (United States)(a)*
   
8,292
     
1,921,919
 
               
29,300,250
 
Capital Markets — 3.4%
               
Brookfield Asset Management, Inc., Class A (Canada)
   
253,877
     
11,970,301
 
Georgia Capital PLC (Georgia)*
   
265,187
     
2,413,115
 
               
14,383,416
 
Commercial Services & Supplies — 4.6%
               
Waste Connections, Inc. (Canada)
   
132,302
     
19,117,639
 
Diversified Telecommunication Services — 3.2%
               
Cellnex Telecom SA (Spain)(d)*
   
400,940
     
13,601,369
 
Entertainment — 2.5%
               
Universal Music Group NV (Netherlands)
   
452,520
     
10,595,122
 
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) — 7.0%
               
American Tower Corp. (United States)
   
38,448
     
8,506,620
 
Equinix, Inc. (United States)
   
17,075
     
11,792,849
 
SBA Communications Corp. (United States)
   
30,352
     
9,084,353
 
               
29,383,822
 
Food & Staples Retailing — 2.5%
               
Costco Wholesale Corp. (United States)
   
19,693
     
10,619,450
 
Health Care Equipment & Supplies — 3.9%
               
Medtronic PLC (Ireland)
   
125,651
     
9,931,455
 
ResMed, Inc. (United States)
   
27,320
     
6,289,064
 
               
16,220,519
 
Health Care Providers & Services — 0.0%
               
NMC Health PLC (United Arab Emirates)(b)*
   
485,482
     
11,703
 
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 6.7%
               
Starbucks Corp. (United States)
   
132,302
     
13,521,264
 
Yum China Holdings, Inc. (China)(a)
   
264,132
     
14,558,956
 
               
28,080,220
 
Insurance — 2.7%
               
Aon PLC, Class A (United Kingdom)
   
36,814
     
11,349,020
 
Interactive Media & Services — 3.7%
               
Alphabet, Inc., Class C (United States)*
   
154,537
     
15,677,779
 
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail — 7.2%
               
Amazon.com, Inc. (United States)*
   
194,953
     
18,820,762
 
MercadoLibre, Inc. (Argentina)*
   
12,281
     
11,433,427
 
               
30,254,189
 
IT Services — 7.7%
               
Mastercard, Inc., Class A (United States)
   
73,364
     
26,146,930
 
PayPal Holdings, Inc. (United States)*
   
75,030
     
5,883,102
 
               
32,030,032
 
Life Sciences Tools & Services — 3.5%
               
ICON PLC (Ireland)*
   
68,300
     
14,714,552
 
Machinery — 0.5%
               
Fanuc Corp. (Japan)
   
13,660
     
2,014,526
 
Media — 2.0%
               
Comcast Corp., Class A (United States)
   
200,485
     
7,345,770
 
System1 Group PLC (United Kingdom)*
   
550,230
     
961,593
 
               
8,307,363
 
Real Estate Management & Development — 1.3%
               
Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. (United States)(a)*
   
31,236
     
5,252,958
 
Road & Rail — 2.1%
               
Canadian National Railway Co. (Canada)
   
69,258
     
8,894,805
 
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment — 3.1%
               
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd., SP ADR (Taiwan)
   
156,873
     
13,017,322
 
Software — 8.6%
               
Atlassian Corp., Class A (United States)*
   
80,194
     
10,549,521
 
Everbridge, Inc. (United States)*
   
96,886
     
3,162,359
 
Paycom Software, Inc. (United States)*
   
31,618
     
10,721,664
 
Salesforce.com, Inc. (United States)*
   
49,064
     
7,862,506
 
Splunk, Inc. (United States)*
   
44,395
     
3,448,603
 
               
35,744,653
 
Trading Companies & Distributors — 5.9%
               
Fastenal Co. (United States)
   
156,392
     
8,055,752
 
Watsco, Inc. (United States)(a)
   
62,065
     
16,694,244
 
               
24,749,996
 
Transportation Infrastructure — 3.7%
               
International Container Terminal Services, Inc. (Philippines)
   
4,318,971
     
15,653,979
 
Wireless Telecommunication Services — 0.2%
               
Safaricom Ltd., PLC (Kenya)
   
4,000,000
     
795,427
 
Total Common Stocks (Cost $252,600,831)
           
406,018,856
 
                   
Investments Purchased with Proceeds from Securities Lending Collateral — 7.9%
               
Mount Vernon Liquid Assets Portfolio, LLC, 4.01%
   
33,098,789
     
33,098,789
 
Total Investments Purchased with Proceeds from Securities Lending Collateral (Cost $33,098,789)
           
33,098,789
 
                   
Short-Term Investments — 3.1%
               
U.S. Bank Money Market Deposit Account, 3.50% (United States)(c)
   
12,842,335
     
12,842,335
 
Total Short-Term Investments (Cost $12,842,335)
           
12,842,335
 
                   
Total Investments (Cost $298,541,955) — 107.7%
           
451,959,980
 
Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets — (7.7)%
           
(32,378,399
)
NET ASSETS — 100.0%
               
(Applicable to 16,981,770 shares outstanding)
         
$
419,581,581
 

*
Non-income producing security.
               
ADR
American Depositary Receipt
               
PLC
Public Limited Company
               
SP ADR
Sponsored ADR
               
(a)
All or a portion of the security is on loan. At November 30, 2022, the market value of securities on loan was $33,219,980
 
(b)
Security has been valued at fair market value using significant unobservable inputs as determined in good faith by or under the direction of
The RBB Fund, Inc.’s Board of Directors. As of November 30, 2021, these securities amounted to $11,703 or 0.0% of net assets.
 
(c)
The rate shown is as of November 30, 2022.
               
(d)
Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration to
qualified institutional buyers. As of November 30, 2022, total market value of Rule 144A securities is $13,601,369 and represents 3.2% of net assets.
 



MOTLEY FOOL GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES ETF
NOTES TO THE SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS
November 30, 2022
(UNAUDITED)

PORTFOLIO VALUATION — Each 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 Funds 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. The Funds may use fair value pricing more frequently for securities traded primarily in non-U.S. markets because, among other things, most foreign markets close well before the Funds value their securities, generally as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. The earlier close of these foreign markets gives rise to the possibility that significant events, including broad market moves, government actions or pronouncements, aftermarket trading, or news events may have occurred in the interim. To account for this, the Funds may value foreign securities using fair value prices based on third-party vendor modeling tools (international fair value pricing).
                     
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
   
INVESTMENTS MEASURED AT NET ASSET VALUE^
 
GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES ETF
                             
Common Stocks
 
$
406,018,856
   
$
406,007,153
   
$
-
   
$
11,703
   
$
-
 
Investments Purchased with Proceeds From Securities Lending Collateral
   
33,098,789
     
-
     
-
     
-
     
33,098,789
 
Short-Term Investments
   
12,842,335
     
12,842,335
     
-
     
-
     
-
 
Total Investments*
 
$
451,959,980
   
$
418,849,488
   
$
-
   
$
11,703
   
$
33,098,789
 
                                         

* Please refer to Schedule of Investments for further details.
               
^ Certain investments that are measured at fair value using the net asset value per share (or its equivalent) practical expedient have not been categorized in the fair value hierarchy. The fair value amounts presented in the table are intended to permit reconciliation of the fair value hierarchy to the amounts presented in the Schedule of Investments.
                     
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.
                     
For the period ended November 30, 2022, the Fund had no significant Level 3 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.