Fund overview & performance

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Canada Life Mutual Funds

CAN Canadian Focused Value 100/100 (PS1)

January 31, 2026

This segregated fund invests primarily in Canadian stocks with exposure to foreign stocks.

Is this fund right for you?

  • A person who is investing for the longer term, seeking the growth potential of stocks which includes moderate exposure to foreign stocks and is comfortable with moderate risk.
  • Since the fund invests in stocks its value is affected by stock prices, which can rise and fall in a short period of time.

RISK RATING

Risk Rating: Moderate

How is the fund invested? (as of January 31, 2026)

Asset allocation (%)
Name Percent
Canadian Equity 67.0
US Equity 24.9
Cash and Equivalents 3.4
International Equity 3.1
Income Trust Units 1.7
Other -0.1
Geographic allocation (%)
Name Percent
Canada 72.0
United States 25.0
Ireland 1.5
Switzerland 1.5
Sector allocation (%)
Name Percent
Financial Services 26.5
Consumer Services 12.8
Industrial Services 10.1
Technology 9.0
Energy 7.2
Basic Materials 6.9
Healthcare 5.7
Telecommunications 5.3
Consumer Goods 4.4
Other 12.1

Growth of $10,000 (since inception)

Period:

For the period 11/04/2019 through 01/31/2026 tr.with $10,000 CAD investment, The value of the investment would be $15,560

Fund details (as of January 31, 2026)

Top holdings (%)
Top holdings Percent (%)
Toronto-Dominion Bank 4.7
Bank of Montreal 4.5
Royal Bank of Canada 4.0
Manulife Financial Corp 2.8
Nutrien Ltd 2.8
Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc 2.6
Rogers Communications Inc Cl B 2.6
Restaurant Brands International Inc 2.4
CGI Inc Cl A 2.4
TC Energy Corp 2.3
Total allocation in top holdings 31.1
Portfolio characteristics
Portfolio characteristics Value
Standard deviation 9.81%
Dividend yield 2.34%
Yield to maturity -
Duration (years) -
Coupon -
Average credit rating Not rated
Average market cap (million) $89,910.2

Understanding returns

Annual compound returns (%)

Short term
1 MO 3 MO YTD 1 YR
0.44 6.97 0.44 6.51
Long term
3 YR 5 YR 10 YR INCEPTION
7.27 9.24 - 7.34

Calendar year returns (%)

2025 - 2022
2025 2024 2023 2022
8.37 12.73 6.19 -1.05
2021 - 2018
2021 2020 2019 2018
18.97 1.10 - -

Range of returns over five years (December 01, 2019 - January 31, 2026)

Best return / Worst return
Best return Best period end date Worst return
Worst period end date
11.90% Mar 2025 7.34% Dec 2024
Summary
Average return % of periods with positive returns Number of positive periods Number of negative periods
9.75% 100 15 0

Q4 2025 Fund Commentary

Commentary and opinions are provided by Beutel, Goodman & Company Ltd..

Market commentary

During the fourth quarter of 2025, the Bank of Canada (BoC) reduced interest rates by 25 basis points at its October meeting but kept rates steady at its December meeting. In total, the BoC lowered interest rates four times in 2025, which was supportive for equity markets. Commodity prices were volatile, with gold and precious metals prices sharply higher, while oil prices declined.

The S&P 500 Index was driven by strength in the communication services and information technology sectors and, to a lesser extent, the industrials sector. The consumer staples and consumer discretionary sectors lagged through 2025, while the health care sector had a reversal of fortune in the fourth quarter of 2025, but not enough to offset weakness in the first three quarters of the year. Small- and mid-capitalization stocks fared far worse than their large-capitalization counterparts.

Performance

The Fund’s relative exposures to The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD Bank), Royal Bank of Canada and Merck & Co. Inc. contributed to performance. TD Bank reported better-than-expected results and announced an additional $6 to $7 billion share buyback program. Royal Bank of Canada delivered strong quarterly earnings driven by capital markets and wealth management strength. Merck reported better-than-expected third-quarter 2025 results, with sales increasing 3%.

Relative exposures to Kimberly-Clark Corp., GFL Environmental Inc., and Harley-Davidson Inc. detracted from the Fund’s performance. Kimberly-Clark’s announcement to purchase Kenvue Inc., formerly the consumer health division of Johnson & Johnson, was not well received by the market. This led to a significant share price decline for the company early in November. GFL Environmental underperformed its peers as the market questioned the company’s ability to improve its free cash flow conversion. Harley-Davidson’s earnings forecast was pulled mid-year, leaving expectations for the company uncertain.

In Canadian equities, underweight exposure to the energy sector and stock selection in the communication services sector contributed to the Fund’s performance. In the U.S., overweight exposure to the health care sector contributed to performance. Stock selection in the industrials, financials and health care sectors also contributed to performance.

Within Canadian equities, stock selection in the materials, financials and industrials sectors detracted from the Fund’s performance. Underweight exposures to the materials and financials sectors and overweight exposure to the industrials sector also detracted from performance. In U.S. equities, stock selection in the consumer staples, consumer discretionary and communication services sectors detracted from performance. Overweight exposure to the consumer staples sector also detracted from performance.

Portfolio activity

The sub-advisor added to the Fund a holding in Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. for the company’s large and diverse portfolio of low-cost and long-life crude oil and natural gas assets. Existing holdings in AltaGas Ltd., Boyd Group Services Inc., Canadian Apartment Properties REIT, Canadian Pacific Railway Co. and CGI Inc., among others, were increased.

The Fund’s holding in The Interpublic Group of Cos. Inc. was sold after the company was acquired by Omnicom Group Inc. Holdings in Fortis Inc., Quebecor Inc., Suncor Energy Inc., TD Bank, Amgen Inc. and Merck were reduced.

Outlook

Despite an uncertain macroeconomic environment, the Canadian financials sector was up in the fourth quarter of 2025. Credit provisions taken in the first quarter eased and valuations expanded, reflecting expectations for economic improvement in 2026.

Materials sector stocks rose with gold prices but, in the sub-advisor’s view, this pricing was driven by speculative buying in exchange-traded funds. Energy sector stocks rose, but this may be due to a more positive stance on energy investment and increasing oil and gas production by the federal government. The sub-advisor looks favourably on the federal government’s initiatives aimed at strengthening Canada’s economic growth.

The thematic concentration around artificial intelligence (AI) that has characterized U.S. markets adds to general concentration and valuation concerns. Twelve of the top 20 S&P 500 Index contributors in 2025 were related to AI, accounting for nearly three-quarters of the index’s returns. AI-related gains extended far beyond the top 20. The narrowness of these gains worsens risks for the index.

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CAN Canadian Focused Value 100/100 (PS1)

CAN Canadian Focused Value 100/100 (PS1)

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ID Effective date Price ($) Income Capital gain Total distribution