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American Beacon Funds – ‘N-CSR/A’ for 8/31/14

On:  Tuesday, 11/25/14, at 5:22pm ET   ·   Effective:  11/25/14   ·   For:  8/31/14   ·   Accession #:  1193125-14-425445   ·   File #:  811-04984

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  As Of                Filer                Filing    For·On·As Docs:Size              Issuer               Agent

11/25/14  American Beacon Funds             N-CSR/A     8/31/14    4:6.1M                                   RR Donnelley/FAAmerican Beacon Flexible Bond Fund A Class (AFXAX) — C Class (AFXCX) — Institutional Class (AFXIX) — Investor Class (AFXPX) — Y Class (AFXYX)American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund A Class (SHOAX) — C Class (SHOCX) — Investor Class (SHYPX) — R5 Class (SHOIX) — Y Class (SHOYX)American Beacon The London Co. Income Equity Fund A Class (ABCAX) — C Class (ABECX) — Investor Class (ABCVX) — R5 Class (ABCIX) — Y Class (ABCYX)American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund A Class (AZLAX) — C Class (AZLCX) — Institutional Class (AZLIX) — Investor Class (AZLPX) — Y Class (AZLYX)American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund A Class (AZSAX) — C Class (AZSCX) — Investor Class (AZSPX) — R5 Class (AZSIX) — Y Class (AZSYX)

Amendment to Certified Annual Shareholder Report of a Management Investment Company   —   Form N-CSR
Filing Table of Contents

Document/Exhibit                   Description                      Pages   Size 

 1: N-CSR/A     Amendment to Certified Annual Shareholder Report    HTML   3.61M 
                          of a Management Investment Company                     
 4: EX-99.906CERT  Miscellaneous Exhibit                            HTML      7K 
 3: EX-99.CERT  Miscellaneous Exhibit                               HTML     13K 
 2: EX-99.CODE ETH  Miscellaneous Exhibit                           HTML     23K 


N-CSR/A   —   Amendment to Certified Annual Shareholder Report of a Management Investment Company
Document Table of Contents

Page (sequential) | (alphabetic) Top
 
11st Page   -   Filing Submission
"Table of Contents
"President's Message
"Market and Performance Overview
"Market and Performance Overviews
"Schedule of Investments
"Schedules of Investments
"Financial Statements
"The London Company Income Equity Fund
"Notes to the Financial Statements
"Zebra Global Equity Fund
"Financial Highlights
"Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund
"Additional Information
"SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

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  N-CSR/A  
Table of Contents

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

FORM N-CSR/A

 

 

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED

MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Investment Company Act file number: 811-4984

 

 

AMERICAN BEACON FUNDS

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

 

 

4151 Amon Carter Boulevard, MD 2450

Fort Worth, Texas 76155

(Address of principal executive offices)-(Zip code)

 

 

Gene L. Needles, Jr., PRESIDENT

4151 Amon Carter Boulevard, MD 2450

Fort Worth, Texas 76155

(Name and address of agent for service)

 

 

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (817) 391-6100

Date of fiscal year end: August 31, 2014

Date of reporting period: August 31, 2014

 

 

 


Table of Contents
ITEM 1. REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS.


Table of Contents

LOGO


Table of Contents

About American Beacon Advisors

 

Since 1986, American Beacon Advisors has offered a variety of products and investment advisory services to numerous institutional and retail clients, including a variety of mutual funds, corporate cash management, and separate account management.

Our clients include defined benefit plans, defined contribution plans, foundations, endowments, corporations, financial planners, and other institutional investors. With American Beacon Advisors, you can put the experience of a multi-billion dollar asset management firm to work for your company.

Contents

 

 

President’s Message

     1   

Market and Performance Overview

     2-4   
Schedule of Investments      7   
Financial Statements      42   
Notes to the Financial Statements      46   
Financial Highlights      72   
Additional Information      Back Cover   
 

 

Important Information: Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot invest directly in an index. Because the Fund has a flexible approach to investing, the risks of the Fund are likewise varied. The primary risks fall into one of several broad categories including high yield securities risk, credit risk, foreign investment risk, derivatives risk, interest rate risk and non-diversification risk. Investing in foreign denominated and/or domiciled securities may involve heightened risk due to currency fluctuations, and economic and political risks, which may be enhanced in emerging markets. Mortgage and asset-backed securities may be sensitive to changes in interest rates, subject to early repayment risk and their value may fluctuate in response to the market’s perception of issuer creditworthiness; while generally supported by some form of government or private guarantee, there is no assurance that private guarantors will meet their obligations. Income from municipal bonds may be subject to state and local taxes and at times the alternative minimum tax. Derivatives may involve certain costs and risks such as liquidity, interest rate, market, credit, management and the risk that a position could not be closed when more advantageous. Investing in derivatives could result in losing more than the amount invested. Diversification does not ensure against loss. Investing in debt securities entails interest rate risk, which is the risk that debt securities will decrease in value with increases in market interest rates. Bonds and bond funds with longer durations tend to be more sensitive and more volatile than securities with shorter durations; bond prices generally fall as interest rates rise. Please see the prospectus for a complete discussion of the Fund’s risks. There can be no assurances that the investment objectives of this Fund will be met.

 

Any opinions herein, including forecasts, reflect our judgment as of the end of the reporting period and are subject to change. Each advisor’s strategies and the Fund’s portfolio composition will change depending on economic and market conditions. This report is not a complete analysis of market conditions and therefore, should not be relied upon as investment advice. Although economic and market information has been compiled from reliable sources, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. makes no representation as to the completeness or accuracy of the statements contained herein.

 

American Beacon Funds

   August 31, 2014


Table of Contents
LOGO   

Dear Shareholders,

 

The global markets have continued the process of building on the early signs of the economic recovery over the past year. Both in the U.S. and abroad, government and political leaders have continued to be mindful of the fragile nature of the recovery and have proved willing and able to provide the necessary monetary stimulus to keep their economies on track. The Eurozone finally broke out of its recession during the reporting period and as seen in the U.S., the European Central Bank quickly reacted to the first signs of the recovery faltering by announcing their own form of quantitative easing in June 2014.

We believe it takes an experienced investor to navigate the complexities of an ever-changing global economy. That is just one reason that we at American Beacon Advisors believe in actively managed funds and work diligently to bring you the most respected asset managers as sub-advisors for our funds.

For the 12-month period ended August 31, 2014, the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund (Investor Class) returned 3.23%.

Thank you for your continued interest in American Beacon Funds. We are pleased to have a broad range of products that cover the global equity and fixed income markets. For additional information about the Funds or to access your account information, please visit our website www.americanbeaconfunds.com.

 

Best Regards,
LOGO
Gene L. Needles, Jr.
President
American Beacon Funds

 

1


Table of Contents

Global Bond Market Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The bond market drifted lower in price to begin the reporting period, with the U.S. Treasury 10-year yield ultimately topping out at 2.98% on September 5, 2013. From this point, bonds staged a two-month rally that was fueled in part by the Federal Reserve Bank’s (the “Fed”) surprising September 18, 2013 announcement that it would not taper the size of its quantitative easing (“QE”) program for the time being. The rally proved to be short-lived as yields again moved higher in November and December as better economic and employment data made a near-term tapering more likely. The Fed announced its first reduction of asset purchases in December, when it shrank the monthly size of QE by $10 billion. The combination of QE tapering and a stronger domestic economy pushed the yield on the 10-year note close to 3% by the end of 2013.

Bonds began to rally globally in early 2014. Severe winter weather and weak gross domestic product prints combined with unrest in the Middle East and the Russia-Ukraine conflict pulled investors to the relative safety of fixed income. Investment grade, high yield debt, and mortgages also rallied during this time. Despite the relatively low default rate, there were some notable issues during the year. Puerto Rico and Argentina both worked through high-profile debt restructurings and the city of Detroit filed for bankruptcy. Toward the end of summer, liquidity concerns caused investors to redeem their holdings of muni and high yield mutual funds, sending yields higher in these areas.

In Europe, sovereign debt staged an impressive rally due to deflationary concerns, with the German 10-year bund rallying to 0.89% on August 29, 2014 and the French 10-year closing at 1.25% versus the U.S. 10-year yielding 2.35%. In an attempt to spur lending and jumpstart Europe’s idling economy, European Central Bank (“ECB”) officials implemented several monetary easing measures including targeted long-term refinancing operations to provide banks with low-interest rate loans. Additionally, the ECB moved the deposit rate on excess reserves to below zero. Elsewhere, other countries attempted to devalue their currency in an attempt to increase exports, notably in Japan where the Bank of Japan has continued its massive QE program.

 

 

2


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund SM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The Investor Class of the Flexible Bond Fund (the “Fund”) returned 3.23% for the twelve months ended August 31, 2014. The Fund outperformed the BofA Merrill Lynch 3-Month LIBOR Index (the “Index”) return of 0.25%. The performance objective of the Fund is to generate positive total returns over a full market cycle and it successfully achieved positive absolute returns during the twelve-month period.

Comparison of Change in Value of a $10,000 Investment

For the period from 7/5/11 through 8/31/14

 

LOGO

Total Returns for the Period ended 8/31/14

 

    1 Year     3 Years     Since
Inception

(7/5/2011)
    Value of
$10,000
7/5/11-
8/31/14
 

Institutional Class (1,2,4)

    3.50     3.50     3.55   $ 11,164   

Y Class (1,2,4)

    3.41     3.40     3.46     11,133   

Investor Class(1,2,4)

    3.23     3.17     3.31     11,081   

A Class with sales charge(1,2,4)

    -1.81     1.35     1.53     10,490   

A Class without sales charge(1,2,4)

    3.12     3.00     3.11     11,014   

C Class with sales charge (1,2,4)

    1.26     2.30     2.54     10,825   

C Class without sales charge (1,2,4)

    2.26     2.30     2.54     10,825   

BofA Merrill Lynch 3-Month LIBOR
Index(3)

    0.25     0.35     0.33     10,106   

Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Index (3)

    5.66     2.91     3.81     11,253   

 

1. Performance shown is historical and is not indicative of future returns. Investment returns and principal value will vary, and shares may be worth more or less at redemption than at original purchase. Performance shown is calculated based on the published end of day net asset values as of date indicated, and current performance may be lower or higher than the
  performance data quoted. To obtain performance as of the most recent month end, please visit www.americanbeaconfunds.com or call 1-800-967-9009. Fund performance in the table above does not reflect the deduction of taxes a shareholder would pay on distributions or the redemption of shares. A Class shares have a maximum sales charge of 4.75%. The maximum contingent deferred sales charge for the C Class is 1.00% for shares redeemed within one year of the date of purchase.
2. A portion of the fees charged to each Class of the Fund was waived since inception. Performance prior to waiving fees was lower than the actual returns shown since inception.
3. The BofA Merrill Lynch U.S. Dollar 3-Month LIBOR Index represents the London interbank offered rate (LIBOR) with a constant 3-month average maturity. LIBOR is a composite of the rates of interest at which banks borrow from one another in the London market, and it is a widely used benchmark for short-term interest rates. The Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Index is a market weighted index of government, corporate, mortgage-backed and asset-backed fixed-rate debt securities of all maturities.
4. The total annual Fund operating expense ratio set forth in the most recent Fund prospectus for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A and C Class shares was 1.24%, 1.28%, 1.56%, 1.59%, and 2.35%, respectively. The expense ratios above may vary from the expense ratios presented in other sections of this report that are based on expenses incurred during the period covered by this report.

The Fund’s focus on investing in higher-quality fixed income securities proved overall to be beneficial in achieving its return objective. Greater than 80% of the assets are invested in investment grade securities, which generally were positive during the period. However, the Fund’s AAA-rated holdings generated slight negative returns during the period, declining 1.2%. This underperformance was more than offset by the below investment grade holdings, as the BB-rated bucket returned 11.8% during the fiscal year.

The Fund’s sizeable investment in Foreign Sovereign debt was a positive during the year, returning 15.1%. The Fund also realized double-digit returns in the ABS and TIPS sectors (14.5% and 10.0%, respectively), which helped offset the low Cash return of 0.1%.

The Fund’s Corporate fixed income exposure provided a positive contribution to the return generated over the period. Among the Corporate holdings, positioning in the Finance sector had the most significant impact. At 21.6% of assets, the Finance sector is the second largest

 

 

3


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund SM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

allocation of the Fund behind Foreign Sovereign debt and returned 5.6% during the year.

In anticipation of rising interest rates, the Fund maintained a bias toward securities with shorter durations and realized positive total returns on holdings with durations of less than three years. However, during the Fund’s fiscal year, the U.S. Treasury yield curve experienced a large rally in longer dated maturities, which resulted in a return of 18.9% on the Fund’s holdings in the 10-30 year duration bucket.

The Fund has the flexibility to utilize derivative instruments and will do so to enhance return, hedge risk, gain efficient exposure to an asset class, or to manage liquidity. When considering the Fund’s use of derivatives, it is important to note that the Fund does not use derivatives for the purpose of creating financial leverage. During the period, the Fund realized losses from investments made in futures and options.

Looking forward, the Fund’s investment managers will continue to allocate investments across a wide range of global investment opportunities, seeking to achieve the Fund’s goal of positive total returns regardless of market conditions over a full market cycle.

Top Ten Holdings (% Net Assets)

 

U.S. Treasury Note/Bond, 1.625%,
Due 7/31/2019

        7.9   

U.S. Treasury Note/Bond, 2.500%,
Due 5/15/2024

        4.4   

Brazil, Letra Tesouro Nacional, 0.010%,
Due 1/1/2018

        2.5   

U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, 0.125%, Due 7/15/2024

        2.4   

Mexican Bonos Desarr, 7.750%,
Due 11/13/2042

        2.0   

Spain, Bonos Y Obligaciones del Estado, 2.750%, Due 10/31/2024, 144A

        1.9   

U.S. Treasury Note/Bond, 0.875%,
Due 7/15/2017

        1.8   

Ginnie Mae REMIC Trust, 0.974%,
Due 7/20/2062

        1.8   

Brazil Government Bond, 10.000%,
Due 1/1/2023

        1.6   

U.S. Treasury Floating Rate Note, 0.100%,
Due 7/31/2016

        1.5   

Total Fund Holdings

     467      

Sector Allocation (% Investments)

 

Sovereign

     28.0

Treasuries

     22.8

Finance

     18.3

Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

     6.2

Short-Term Investments

     5.5

Asset-Backed Obligations

     4.8

Service

     4.7

Manufacturing

     3.1

Foreign Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

     1.4

Energy

     1.1

Consumer

     0.9

Telecommunications

     0.7

Agency Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

     0.7

Commercial Mortgage-Backed Obligations

     0.6

Banks

     0.5

Utilities

     0.4

Transportation

     0.2

U.S. Agency Obligations

     0.1

Country Allocation (% Investments)

 

United States

     49.5   

United Kingdom

     7.4   

Brazil

     6.4   

Mexico

     5.4   

Spain

     5.1   

Italy

     2.7   

Netherlands

     2.5   

South Korea

     2.4   

South Africa

     1.9   

Portugal

     1.5   

Poland

     1.5   

Hungary

     1.4   

Indonesia

     1.4   

Slovenia

     1.3   

New Zealand

     1.0   

Cayman Islands

     0.8   

Malaysia

     0.8   

France

     0.5   

Singapore

     0.5   

Chile

     0.4   

Ireland

     0.4   

Switzerland

     0.4   

Norway

     0.3   

Denmark

     0.3   

Canada

     0.3   

Luxembourg

     0.2   

Virgin Islands British

     0.2   

Japan

     0.1   

China

     0.1   

Hong Kong

     0.1   

European Union

     0.1   

Bulgaria

     0.1   

Finland

     0.1   

Egypt

     0.1   

Austria

     0.1   

Turkey

     0.1   

Namibia

     0.1   

Marshall Islands

     0.1   

Thailand

     0.1   

United Arab Emirates

     0.1   

Kazakhstan

     0.1   

Jersey

     0.1   
 

 

4


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund SM

Fund Expenses

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

Fund Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, including sales charges (loads) on shares purchased and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees, administrative service fees, distribution (12b-1) fees, and other Fund expenses. The examples below are intended to help you understand the ongoing cost (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period in each Class and held for the entire period from March 1, 2014 through August 31, 2014.

Actual Expenses

The “Actual” lines of the table provide information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period” to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. Shareholders of the Investor and Institutional Classes that invest in the Fund through an IRA or Roth IRA may be subject to a custodial IRA fee of $15 that is typically deducted each December. If your account was subject to a custodial IRA fee during the period, your costs would have been $15 higher.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The “Hypothetical” lines of the table provide information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund’s actual expense ratio and an assumed 5% per year rate of return before expenses (not the Fund’s actual return). You may compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund with other funds by contrasting this 5% hypothetical example and the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period.

Shareholders of the Investor and Institutional Classes that invest in the Fund through an IRA or Roth IRA may be subject to a custodial IRA fee of $15 that is typically deducted each December. If your account was subject to a custodial IRA fee during the period, your costs would have been $15 higher.

You should also be aware that the expenses shown in the table highlight only your ongoing costs and do not reflect any transaction costs charged by the Fund, such as sales charges (loads). Similarly, the expense examples for other funds do not reflect any transaction costs charged by those funds, such as sales charges (loads), redemption fees or exchange fees. Therefore, the “Hypothetical” lines of the table are useful in comparing ongoing costs only and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. If you were subject to any transaction costs during the period, your costs would have been higher.

 

     Beginning
Account
Value
3/1/14
     Ending
Account
Value
8/31/14
     Expenses Paid
During Period*
3/1/14 - 8/31/14
 

Institutional Class

        

Actual

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,021.67       $ 4.59   

Hypothetical **

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,020.67       $ 4.58   

Y Class

        

Actual

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,021.18       $ 5.04   

Hypothetical **

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,020.21       $ 5.04   

Investor Class

        

Actual

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,020.95       $ 6.47   

Hypothetical **

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,018.80       $ 6.46   

A Class

        

Actual

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,020.36       $ 6.93   

Hypothetical **

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,018.35       $ 6.92   

C Class

        

Actual

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,016.65       $ 10.73   

Hypothetical **

   $ 1,000.00       $ 1,014.57       $ 10.71   

 

* Expenses are equal to the Fund’s annualized expense ratios for the six-month period of 0.90%, 0.99%, 1.27%, 1.36%, and 2.11% for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A, and C Classes, respectively, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number derived by dividing the number of days in the most recent fiscal half-year (184) by days in the year (365) to reflect the half-year period.
** 5% return before expenses.
 

 

5


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund SM

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

 

To the Shareholders and the Board of Trustees of

American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund:

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, of the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund (one of the funds constituting the American Beacon Funds) (the “Fund”), as of August 31, 2014, and the related statement of operations for the year then ended, the statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for the periods indicated therein. These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement. We were not engaged to perform an audit of the Funds’ internal control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Fund’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements and financial highlights, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of August 31, 2014, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers or by other appropriate auditing procedures where replies from brokers were not received. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund at August 31, 2014, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for the periods indicated therein, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

 

LOGO

Dallas, Texas

October 30, 2014

 

6


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Shares      Fair Value  
            (000’s)  

PREFERRED STOCK - 0.60%

     

FINANCE- 0.60%

     

Banks - 0.60%

     

HSBC USA, Inc., 1.00%, Due 12/31/49 B

     7,850       $ 181   

Lloyds Banking Group PLC,

     

6.413%, Due 1/29/2049B C D E

     470,000         510   

6.657%, Due 12/31/2049B C D E

     540,000         590   

RBS Capital Funding Trust VII, 6.08%, Due 12/31/2049

     3,900         95   

UBS Preferred Funding Trust IV, 1.00%, Due 12/31/2049A B

     4,000         81   

US Bancorp, 1.00%, Due 12/31/49 B

     10,000         221   
     

 

 

 

Total Finance

        1,678   
     

 

 

 

Total Preferred Stock (Cost $1,570)

        1,678   
     

 

 

 
    

 

Par AmountA

        
     (000’s)         

DOMESTIC BANK LOAN OBLIGATIONS - 0.59%

     

Consumer - 0.07%

     

H.J. Heinz Co., 3.50%, Due 6/5/2020 F

   $ 198         198   
     

 

 

 

Service - 0.52%

     

Grifols Worldwide Operations USA, Inc., 1.00%, Due 2/27/2021B F

     399         397   

Hilton Worldwide Finance LLC, 1.00%, Due 10/26/2020B F G

     1,042         1,036   
     

 

 

 
        1,433   
     

 

 

 

Total Domestic Bank Loan Obligations (Cost $1,635)

        1,631   
     

 

 

 

DOMESTIC CONVERTIBLE OBLIGATIONS - 0.94%

     

Finance - 0.11%

     

DDR Corp., 1.75%, Due 11/15/2040

     135         166   

WellPoint, Inc., 2.75%, Due 10/15/2042

     90         146   
     

 

 

 
        312   
     

 

 

 

Manufacturing - 0.53%

     

Electronic Arts, Inc., 0.75%, Due 7/15/2016

     79         102   

Ford Motor Co., 4.25%, Due 11/15/2016

     40         81   

Intel Corp.,

     

2.95%, Due 12/15/2035

     95         123   

3.25%, Due 8/1/2039

     110         186   

Novellus Systems, Inc., 2.625%, Due 5/15/2041

     16         34   

SanDisk Corp., 0.50%, Due 10/15/2020E

     189         229   

Siemens AG, 1.05%, Due 8/16/2017

     500         555   

Workday, Inc., 0.75%, Due 7/15/2018

     113         145   
     

 

 

 
        1,455   
     

 

 

 

Service - 0.30%

     

CP Foods Holdings Ltd., 0.50%, Due 1/15/2019

     200         211   

Hologic, Inc., 2.00%, Due 12/15/2037B

     46         56   

Illumina, Inc.,

     

0.01%, Due 6/15/2019E

     104         112   

0.50%, Due 6/15/2021E

     47         52   

Liberty Interactive LLC, 1.00%, Due 9/30/2043E G

     108         112   

Priceline Group, Inc.,

     

1.00%, Due 3/15/2018

     114         163   

0.90%, Due 9/15/2021E

     124         121   
     

 

 

 
        827   
     

 

 

 

Transportation - 0.00%

     

Ship Finance International Ltd., 3.25%, Due 2/1/2018

     8         9   
     

 

 

 

Total Domestic Convertible Obligations (Cost $2,349)

        2,603   
     

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

7


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountA      Fair Value  
     (000’s)      (000’s)  

DOMESTIC OBLIGATIONS - 29.70%

     

Consumer - 0.44%

     

BAT International Finance PLC, 1.125%, Due 3/29/2016C

   $ 300       $ 301   

BRF - Brasil Foods S.A., 5.875%, Due 6/6/2022E

     200         221   

Constellation Brands, Inc., 3.75%, Due 5/1/2021

     240         240   

Grupo Famsa SAB de CV, 7.25%, Due 6/1/2020E

     140         142   

Land O’Lakes Capital Trust I, 7.45%, Due 3/15/2028E

     100         104   

Reynolds Group Issuer Inc.,

     

7.125%, Due 4/15/2019

     100         104   

7.875%, Due 8/15/2019

     100         108   
     

 

 

 
        1,220   
     

 

 

 

Energy - 1.03%

     

Basic Energy Services, Inc., 7.75%, Due 2/15/2019

     100         106   

Chesapeake Energy Corp., 3.484%, Due 4/15/2019B

     100         101   

Denbury Resources, Inc., 5.50%, Due 5/1/2022

     100         103   

Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP, 3.50%, Due 9/1/2023H

     100         97   

Millennium Offshore Services Superholdings LLC, 9.50%, Due 2/15/2018G

     200         214   

Petrobras International Finance Co., 5.375%, Due 1/27/2021

     254         268   

Plains Exploration & Production Co., 6.875%, Due 2/15/2023

     88         102   

Regency Energy Partners LP / Regency Energy Finance Corp., 5.75%, Due 9/1/2020H

     150         161   

Reliance Holding USA, Inc., 4.50%, Due 10/19/2020

     250         263   

Sabine Pass Liquefaction LLC, 5.75%, Due 5/15/2024E G

     800         833   

Sabine Pass LNG LP, 7.50%, Due 11/30/2016H

     100         109   

Sinopec Group Overseas Development 2012 Ltd.,

     

2.75%, Due 5/17/2017

     200         205   

3.90%, Due 5/17/2022

     200         204   

Trinidad Drilling Ltd., 7.875%, Due 1/15/2019E

     100         105   
     

 

 

 
        2,871   
     

 

 

 

Finance - 18.49%

     

2013-2 Aviation Loan Trust, 2.341%, Due 12/15/2022B E I

     89         83   

ABN AMRO Bank N.V., 1.035%, Due 10/28/2016B E

     1,400         1,413   

AGFC Capital Trust I Limited, 6.00%, Due 1/15/2067B E

     300         254   

Agile Property Holdings Ltd., 8.875%, Due 4/28/2017

     300         312   

Albaraka Turk Katilim Bankasi AS, 6.25%, Due 6/30/2019

     200         200   

Ally Financial, Inc.,

     

6.75%, Due 12/1/2014

     100         101   

4.625%, Due 6/26/2015

     1,100         1,129   

3.50%, Due 7/18/2016

     200         205   

Ambank M BHD, 3.125%, Due 7/3/2019

     200         202   

American International Group, Inc.,

     

8.25%, Due 8/15/2018B

     35         43   

8.175%, Due 5/15/2068B

     100         138   

ANZ New Zealand Int’l Ltd., 0.755%, Due 4/27/2017B E

     430         431   

ARC Properties Operating Partnership LP/Clark Acquisition LLC,
3.00%, Due 2/6/2019E G H

     325         326   

Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria S.A., 9.00%, Due 5/29/2049B

     600         666   

Banco do Brasil S.A., Cayman, 4.50%, Due 1/22/2015E

     250         253   

Banco Santander Brasil S.A., 4.25%, Due 1/14/2016E

     400         415   

Banco Santander Chile S.A., 1.134%, Due 4/11/2017B E

     880         883   

Bank of America Corp.,

     

5.75%, Due 12/1/2017

     60         67   

5.65%, Due 5/1/2018

     700         787   

1.105%, Due 4/1/2019B

     1,115         1,123   

7.625%, Due 6/1/2019

     100         122   

Bank of America NA, 5.30%, Due 3/15/2017

     250         273   

Banque Federative du Credit Mutuel S.A.,

     

1.70%, Due 1/20/2017E

     700         704   

2.50%, Due 10/29/2018E

     350         355   

Barclays Bank PLC,

     

0.771%, Due 12/9/2016B C

     1,900         1,902   

3.75%, Due 5/15/2024C

     500         511   

Bear Stearns Cos. LLC, 0.624%, Due 11/21/2016B G

     800         801   

Carrington Holding Co. LLC, 1.00%, Due 1/15/2026G

     168         65   

CB Richard Ellis Services, Inc., 6.625%, Due 10/15/2020

     100         105   

 

See accompanying notes

 

8


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountA      Fair Value  
     (000’s)      (000’s)  

China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd., 6.375%, Due 10/29/2043

   $ 200       $ 201   

CIT Group, Inc.,

     

4.75%, Due 2/15/2015E

     100         101   

5.00%, Due 5/15/2017

     100         106   

Citigroup, Inc.,

     

1.25%, Due 1/15/2016

     100         101   

0.770%, Due 3/10/2017B

     1,845         1,848   

6.125%, Due 5/15/2018

     760         872   

Commonwealth Bank of Australia, 0.731%, Due 9/20/2016B E

     590         593   

Country Garden Holdings Co. Ltd, 10.50%, Due 8/11/2015

     100         106   

DBS Bank Ltd., 0.844%, Due 7/15/2021B E

     945         926   

Deutsche Bank AG, 0.705%, Due 5/30/2017B

     200         200   

Development Bank of Kaza, 5.50%, Due 12/20/2015

     200         207   

Digital Realty Trust LP,

     

5.875%, Due 2/1/2020H

     140         157   

3.625%, Due 10/1/2022H

     235         229   

Dresdner Bank AG, 7.25%, Due 9/15/2015

     180         189   

Dresdner Funding Trust I, 8.151%, Due 6/30/2031E

     430         511   

EPR Properties, 5.75%, Due 8/15/2022

     225         248   

Evergrande Real Estate Group Ltd., 13.00%, Due 1/27/2015

     100         102   

Fifth Third Bancorp, 0.651%, Due 12/20/2016B

     435         434   

Goldman Sachs Capital II, 4.00%, Due 12/31/2049B

     625         494   

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.,

     

1.334%, Due 11/15/2018B

     1,645         1,676   

7.50%, Due 2/15/2019

     332         401   

HBOS PLC, 0.930%, Due 9/6/2017B C

     995         988   

ING Bank N.V.,

     

1.375%, Due 3/7/2016E

     1,000         1,008   

0.934%, Due 11/21/2016B

     600         593   

International Lease Finance Corp.,

     

6.50%, Due 9/1/2014E

     200         200   

4.875%, Due 4/1/2015

     300         306   

6.75%, Due 9/1/2016E

     600         655   

7.125%, Due 9/1/2018E

     130         149   

Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc., 4.40%, Due 11/15/2022

     30         31   

JPMorgan Chase & Co.,

     

0.947%, Due 3/31/2016B

     2,000         1,995   

4.40%, Due 7/22/2020

     10         11   

JPMorgan Chase Bank NA,

     

0.647%, Due 6/2/2017B

     900         901   

6.00%, Due 10/1/2017

     300         339   

JPMorgan Chase Capital XXI, 1.189%, Due 1/15/2087B

     400         346   

Lloyds Bank PLC,

     

6.375%, Due 1/21/2021C

     500         607   

0.563%, Due 6/29/2049B C

     110         74   

0.438%, Due 11/29/2049B C

     350         237   

Macquarie Bank Ltd.,

     

5.00%, Due 2/22/2017

     500         542   

1.021%, Due 3/24/2017B E

     500         505   

Macquarie Group Ltd., 1.237%, Due 1/31/2017B E

     1,070         1,078   

Morgan Stanley,

     

1.75%, Due 2/25/2016B

     250         253   

0.684%, Due 10/18/2016B

     600         601   

1.514%, Due 4/25/2018B

     2,695         2,768   

7.30%, Due 5/13/2019

     300         363   

3.875%, Due 4/29/2024

     500         513   

MPT Operating Partnership LP / MPT Finance Corp., 6.875%, Due 5/1/2021H

     200         215   

NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc.,

     

5.55%, Due 1/15/2020

     140         156   

4.25%, Due 6/1/2024

     100         102   

Nationwide Building Society, 4.65%, Due 2/25/2015E

     500         510   

Navient LLC,

     

5.00%, Due 4/15/2015G

     600         613   

3.875%, Due 9/10/2015G

     100         102   

 

See accompanying notes

 

9


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountA      Fair Value  
     (000’s)      (000’s)  

6.25%, Due 1/25/2016G

   $ 500       $ 530   

6.00%, Due 1/25/2017G

     200         215   

Nomura Holdings, Inc., 2.00%, Due 9/13/2016

     300         304   

Royal Bank of Canada, 1.20%, Due 9/19/2018

     160         159   

Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC,

     

2.55%, Due 9/18/2015C

     850         865   

1.174%, Due 3/31/2017B C

     910         915   

7.648%, Due 12/31/2049B C

     560         661   

Royal Bank of Scotland PLC, 9.50%, Due 3/16/2022A C

     300         347   

Santander US Debt S.A. Unipersonal, 3.724%, Due 1/20/2015E

     700         707   

Shinhan Bank, 0.883%, Due 4/8/2017B E

     1,430         1,434   

Springleaf Finance Corp., 5.75%, Due 9/15/2016

     100         106   

Standard Bank PLC, 8.125%, Due 12/2/2019C

     200         229   

Standard Chartered PLC,

     

5.50%, Due 11/18/2014C E

     300         303   

3.85%, Due 4/27/2015C E

     576         588   

State Street Capital Trust IV, 1.231%, Due 6/1/2077B

     60         53   

Swire Properties MTN Financing Ltd., 4.375%, Due 6/18/2022

     200         213   

Temasek Financial I Ltd., 3.375%, Due 7/23/2042

     250         226   

U.S. Dept of Transportation Asset Backed, 6.001%, Due 12/7/2021B E I

     300         339   

UBS AG,

     

5.875%, Due 12/20/2017

     175         199   

5.125%, Due 5/15/2024

     900         898   

UBS AG/Stamford CT, 0.873%, Due 8/14/2019B

     1,000         1,007   

USB Realty Corp., 1.381%, Due 12/29/2049B E

     300         276   

Wachovia Capital Trust III, 5.570%, Due 3/29/2049B

     500         490   
     

 

 

 
        51,396   
     

 

 

 

Manufacturing - 2.49%

     

Ainsworth Lumber Co. Ltd, 7.50%, Due 12/15/2017E

     100         105   

ArcelorMittal,

     

9.50%, Due 2/15/2015

     190         197   

4.25%, Due 8/5/2015

     210         214   

Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC / Ardagh Holdings USA, Inc.,
3.232%, Due 12/15/2019B C E

     200         199   

Ball Corp., 5.00%, Due 3/15/2022

     100         104   

Barminco Finance Property Ltd., 9.00%, Due 6/1/2018E

     100         90   

D.R. Horton, Inc., 3.75%, Due 3/1/2019

     120         120   

Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.,

     

5.00%, Due 3/15/2022

     150         159   

3.50%, Due 4/15/2023

     125         125   

First Data Corp., 7.375%, Due 6/15/2019E

     100         107   

Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC,

     

2.75%, Due 5/15/2015G

     200         203   

1.013%, Due 1/17/2017B G

     1,860         1,871   

General Motors Co., 3.50%, Due 10/2/2018

     130         133   

General Motors Financial Co. Inc., 2.75%, Due 5/15/2016

     400         404   

Glencore Funding, LLC, 1.398%, Due 5/27/2016B G

     500         505   

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 8.25%, Due 8/15/2020

     100         109   

Heathrow Funding Ltd., 2.50%, Due 6/25/2017E

     200         202   

Levi Strauss & Co., 7.625%, Due 5/15/2020

     100         107   

Montell Finance Co., 8.10%, Due 3/15/2027E

     150         204   

Nitrogenmuvek Vegyipari Zrt, 7.875%, Due 5/21/2020E

     200         205   

Oracle Corp., 3.625%, Due 7/15/2023

     200         208   

Schaeffler Holding Finance BV, 6.875%, Due 8/15/2018E O

     800         843   

Seagate HDD Cayman, 3.75%, Due 11/15/2018E

     125         128   

Tech Data Corp., 3.75%, Due 9/21/2017

     100         105   

Toll Brothers Finance Corp., 4.00%, Due 12/31/2018

     150         153   

Vale S.A., 5.625%, Due 9/11/2042

     100         103   
     

 

 

 
        6,903   
     

 

 

 

Service - 2.89%

     

ADT Corp., 6.25%, Due 10/15/2021

     320         338   

AutoNation, Inc., 6.75%, Due 4/15/2018

     160         184   

Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc., 3.749%, Due 8/1/2024

     200         204   

Best Buy Co. Inc, 5.00%, Due 8/1/2018

     120         124   

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

10


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountA      Fair Value  
     (000’s)      (000’s)  

Biomet, Inc., 6.50%, Due 8/1/2020

   $ 100       $ 108   

DISH DBS Corp.,

     

7.75%, Due 5/31/2015

     1,200         1,256   

7.125%, Due 2/1/2016

     100         107   

Forest Laboratories, Inc., 4.375%, Due 2/1/2019E

     240         259   

FTI Consulting, Inc., 6.75%, Due 10/1/2020

     190         200   

HCA, Inc.,

     

6.50%, Due 2/15/2016

     100         106   

3.75%, Due 3/15/2019

     115         116   

6.50%, Due 2/15/2020

     800         895   

HealthSouth Corp., 7.25%, Due 10/1/2018

     1,193         1,240   

Host Hotels & Resorts LP, 3.75%, Due 10/15/2023H

     200         201   

IAC/InterActiveCorp, 4.875%, Due 11/30/2018

     365         379   

International Game Technology, Inc., 5.35%, Due 10/15/2023

     105         110   

MGM Resorts International,

     

6.625%, Due 7/15/2015

     1,200         1,248   

7.50%, Due 6/1/2016

     100         109   

Sirius XM Radio, Inc., 5.25%, Due 8/15/2022E

     100         107   

Stonemor Partners LP, 7.875%, Due 6/1/2021E H

     50         53   

Suburban Propane Partners LP/Suburban Energy Finance Corp., 7.375%, Due 3/15/2020H

     100         105   

Total System Services, Inc., 3.75%, Due 6/1/2023

     100         99   

United Rentals North America, Inc., 8.25%, Due 2/1/2021

     100         110   

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, 6.875%, Due 12/1/2018E

     100         104   

Wyndham Worldwide Corp., 4.25%, Due 3/1/2022

     170         175   

Wynn Las Vegas LLC / Wynn Las Vegas Capital Corp., 7.75%, Due 8/15/2020G

     100         108   
     

 

 

 
        8,045   
     

 

 

 

Sovereign - 2.91%

     

Cayman Island, RAK Capital, 3.297%, Due 10/21/2018

     200         209   

France, Dexia Credit Local S.A.,

     

1.25%, Due 10/18/2016E

     350         353   

2.25%, Due 1/30/2019E

     600         609   

Hungary, Magyar Export Import Bank, 5.50%, Due 2/12/2018

     240         257   

Namibia, Republic of Namibia, 5.50%, Due 11/3/2021

     200         217   

Norway, Eksportfinans ASA,

     

3.00%, Due 11/17/2014

     50         50   

2.375%, Due 5/25/2016

     100         100   

5.50%, Due 5/25/2016

     100         105   

5.50%, Due 6/26/2017

     600         645   

Norway, KommunalBanken AS, 1.375%, Due 6/8/2017

     200         202   

Petrobras Global Finance BV, 2.592%, Due 3/17/2017B

     1,695         1,716   

Slovenia Government Bond,

     

4.75%, Due 5/10/2018

     1,100         1,184   

4.125%, Due 2/18/2019

     200         212   

5.50%, Due 10/26/2022

     200         221   

5.85%, Due 5/10/2023

     600         679   

South Africa, Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd., 6.75%, Due 8/6/2023

     356         382   

South Korea, Export-Import Bank of Korea, 5.00%, Due 4/11/2022

     200         226   

South Korea, Korea Housing Finance Corp., 1.625%, Due 9/15/2018

     350         343   

Supranational, African Export Import Bank, 5.75%, Due 7/27/2016

     347         362   
     

 

 

 
        8,072   
     

 

 

 

Telecommunications - 0.82%

     

British Telecommunications PLC, 1.25%, Due 2/14/2017C

     500         501   

Sprint Nextel Corp., 7.00%, Due 8/15/2020

     100         107   

Verizon Communications, Inc.,

     

1.761%, Due 9/15/2016B

     300         308   

2.50%, Due 9/15/2016

     200         206   

1.981%, Due 9/14/2018B

     200         210   

3.65%, Due 9/14/2018

     300         320   

1.002%, Due 6/17/2019B

     340         344   

5.15%, Due 9/15/2023

     103         117   

West Corp., 5.375%, Due 7/15/2022E

     170         165   
     

 

 

 
        2,278   
     

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

11


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

            Par AmountA      Fair Value  
            (000’s)      (000’s)  

Transportation - 0.16%

        

Kansas City Southern de Mexico SA de CV, 2.35%, Due 5/15/2020

      $ 240       $ 231   

Transnet Soc Ltd., 4.50%, Due 2/10/2016

        210         219   
        

 

 

 
           450   
        

 

 

 

Utilities - 0.47%

        

Electricite de France S.A., 1.15%, Due 1/20/2017E

        500         501   

Meiya Power Co. Ltd., 4.00%, Due 8/19/2018

        200         206   

SP PowerAssets Ltd., 2.70%, Due 9/14/2022

        200         195   

Star Energy Geothermal Wayang Windu Ltd., 6.125%, Due 3/27/2020

        200         207   

State Grid Overseas Investment 2014 Ltd., 4.125%, Due 5/7/2024

        200         208   
        

 

 

 
           1,317   
        

 

 

 

Total Domestic Obligations (Cost $81,697)

           82,552   
        

 

 

 

FOREIGN CONVERTIBLE OBLIGATIONS - 0.97%

        

Energy - 0.15%

        

Eni S.p.A., 0.25%, Due 11/30/2015

     EUR         300         405   
        

 

 

 

Finance - 0.10%

        

Great Portland Estates Capital Jersey Ltd., 1.00%, Due 9/10/2018C

     GBP         100         178   

Immofinanz AG, 4.25%, Due 3/8/2018

     EUR         1,711         102   
        

 

 

 
           280   
        

 

 

 

Manufacturing - 0.55%

        

Aabar Investments PJSC, 4.00%, Due 5/27/2016

     EUR         300         455   

Balfour Beatty PLC, 1.875%, Due 12/3/2018C

     GBP         100         163   

Camfin 2012 SPA, 5.625%, Due 10/26/2017

     EUR         100         159   

Faurecia, 3.25%, Due 1/1/2018J

     EUR         605         228   

Indra Sistemas S.A., 1.75%, Due 10/17/2018

     EUR         100         140   

Ingenico, 2.75%, Due 1/1/2017

     EUR         66         64   

Volkswagen International Finance N.V., 5.50%, Due 11/9/2015

     EUR         200         279   

Yaskawa Electric Corp., 0.01%, Due 3/16/2017

     JPY         5,000         61   
        

 

 

 
           1,549   
        

 

 

 

Service - 0.11%

        

China Water Affairs Group Ltd., 2.50%, Due 4/15/2015

     HKD         100         14   

OHL Investments S.A., 4.00%, Due 4/25/2018

     EUR         200         287   
        

 

 

 
           301   
        

 

 

 

Transportation - 0.06%

        

International Consolidated Airlines Group S.A., 1.75%, Due 5/31/2018

     EUR         100         169   
        

 

 

 

Total Foreign Convertible Obligations (Cost $2,729)

           2,704   
        

 

 

 

FOREIGN OBLIGATIONS - 33.72%

        

Consumer - 0.55%

        

Carlsberg Breweries A/S, 7.25%, Due 11/28/2016

     GBP         400         741   

Heineken N.V., 7.25%, Due 3/10/2015

     GBP         250         428   

Imperial Tobacco Group PLC, 8.375%, Due 2/17/2016C

     EUR         250         365   
        

 

 

 
           1,534   
        

 

 

 

Energy - 0.05%

        

Gazprom OAO Via Gaz Capital S.A., 3.755%, Due 3/15/2017

     EUR         100         130   
        

 

 

 

Finance - 2.31%

        

AIB Mortgage Bank, 2.625%, Due 7/28/2017

     EUR         100         136   

ARLO XIV Ltd., 0.01%, Due 12/24/2019I

     JPY         10,000         5   

Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria S.A., 7.00%, Due 12/29/2049B

     EUR         200         276   

Banco Espirito Santo LDN,

        

5.00%, Due 4/23/2019

     EUR         200         258   

5.00%, Due 5/23/2019

     EUR         100         130   

Banco Popolare SC, 3.50%, Due 3/14/2019

     EUR         100         136   

Banco Popular Español S.A., 11.50%, Due 10/29/2049B

     EUR         500         775   

Bank of America Corp., 3.929%, Due 10/21/2025B K I

     MXN         3,000         254   

Bankia S.A., 3.50%, Due 1/17/2019

     EUR         100         141   

Barclays Bank PLC, 4.875%, Due 12/31/2049B C

     EUR         380         489   

BPE Financiaciones S.A., 2.50%, Due 2/1/2017

     EUR         100         134   

Credit Logement S.A., 1.392%, Due 3/29/2049B

     EUR         100         114   

Henderson UK Finance PLC, 7.25%, Due 3/24/2016C

     GBP         100         174   

 

See accompanying notes

 

12


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

            Par AmountA      Fair Value  
            (000’s)      (000’s)  

JP Morgan Chase Bank NA, 0.829%, Due 5/31/2017B

     EUR       $ 1,150       $ 1,509   

LCR Finance PLC, 4.50%, Due 12/7/2028C

     GBP         200         392   

Lloyds Bank PLC, 10.375%, Due 2/12/2024B C

     EUR         150         256   

Lloyds Banking Group PLC, 4.875%, Due 10/1/2014A C

     AUS         100         94   

Morgan Stanley, 7.60%, Due 8/8/2017

     NZD         430         381   

RBS Capital Trust D, 5.646%, Due 6/29/2049B

     GBP         60         97   

Realkredit Danmark, 2.00%, Due 4/1/2016

     DKK         500         91   

Royal Bank of Scotland PLC,

        

6.934%, Due 4/9/2018B C

     EUR         100         152   

1.595%, Due 6/14/2022B C

     EUR         100         116   

Santander International, 3.16%, Due 12/1/2015

     GBP         200         338   
        

 

 

 
           6,448   
        

 

 

 

Service - 1.56%

        

Next PLC, 5.875%, Due 10/12/2016C

     GBP         450         811   

Reed Elsevier N.V., 5.625%, Due 10/20/2016

     GBP         550         986   

Tesco Property Finance 2 PLC, 6.052%, Due 10/13/2039C

     GBP         47         90   

Tesco Property Finance 3 PLC, 5.744%, Due 4/13/2040C

     GBP         173         321   

Tesco Property Finance 4 PLC, 5.801%, Due 10/13/2040C

     GBP         297         559   

Tesco Property Finance 5 PLC, 5.661%, Due 10/13/2041C

     GBP         199         366   

Tesco Property Finance 6 PLC, 5.411%, Due 7/13/2044C

     GBP         100         179   

WPP PLC, 6.00%, Due 4/4/2017C

     GBP         250         458   

Ziggo Bond Co. BV, 8.00%, Due 5/15/2018

     EUR         400         547   
        

 

 

 
           4,317   
        

 

 

 

Sovereign - 29.25%

        

Australia, Queensland Treasury Corp., 5.75%, Due 7/22/2024

     AUS         2,685         2,911   

Austria, Hypo Alpe Adria International AG,

        

2.75%, Due 8/12/2015

     CHF         100         105   

2.375%, Due 12/13/2022

     EUR         100         138   

Brazil, Letra Tesouro Nacional, 0.01%, Due 1/1/2018

     BRL         22,400         6,987   

Brazil, Nota Do Tesouro Nacional,

        

10.00%, Due 1/1/2017J

     BRL         2,500         1,106   

10.00%, Due 1/1/2021J

     BRL         3,790         1,632   

6.00%, Due 8/15/2022J

     BRL         1,800         2,050   

10.00%, Due 1/1/2023J

     BRL         10,485         4,474   

Bulgaria Government Bond, 2.95%, Due 9/3/2024

     EUR         313         413   

Chile, Republic of Chile,

        

3.00%, Due 1/1/2017

     CLP         228,982         411   

3.00%, Due 7/1/2017

     CLP         192,827         349   

Finland Government Bond, 1.50%, Due 4/15/2023E

     EUR         250         345   

Hungary Government Bond,

        

7.00%, Due 6/24/2022

     HUF         290,000         1,436   

6.00%, Due 11/24/2023

     HUF         440,000         2,066   

Indonesia Government Bond,

        

8.375%, Due 3/15/2024

     IDR         9,800,000         852   

9.00%, Due 3/15/2029

     IDR         16,800,000         1,481   

8.75%, Due 2/15/2044

     IDR         14,500,000         1,218   

Irish Treasury Bond,

        

3.40%, Due 3/18/2024

     EUR         160         240   

5.40%, Due 3/13/2025

     EUR         300         522   

Italy, Buoni Poliennali Del Tesoro,

        

2.55%, Due 10/22/2016

     EUR         701         959   

2.25%, Due 4/22/2017

     EUR         100         137   

4.75%, Due 5/1/2017

     EUR         1,040         1,515   

2.15%, Due 11/12/2017

     EUR         501         686   

5.00%, Due 8/1/2039

     EUR         2,395         3,930   

Malaysia Government Bond,

        

4.048%, Due 9/30/2021

     MYR         2,195         706   

3.48%, Due 3/15/2023

     MYR         4,080         1,256   

Mexican Bonos Desarr,

        

8.50%, Due 5/31/2029J, Series M 20

     MXN         43,540         4,051   

8.50%, Due 11/18/2038J, Series M 30

     MXN         44,360         4,165   

7.75%, Due 11/13/2042J, Series M

     MXN         62,820         5,485   

Mexico, United Mexican States, 2.375%, Due 4/9/2021

     EUR         100         136   

 

See accompanying notes

 

13


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

            Par AmountA      Fair Value  
            (000’s)      (000’s)  

New Zealand Government Bond, 6.00%, Due 5/15/2021

     NZD       $ 3,170       $ 2,956   

Poland Government Bond,

        

5.25%, Due 10/25/2020

     PLN         5,785         2,063   

4.00%, Due 10/25/2023

     PLN         5,825         1,944   

Portugal, Obrigacoes do Tesouro,

        

4.75%, Due 6/14/2019E

     EUR         500         744   

3.85%, Due 4/15/2021E

     EUR         105         150   

4.95%, Due 10/25/2023E

     EUR         1,885         2,835   

Slovenia Government Bond, 4.70%, Due 11/1/2016E

     EUR         800         1,133   

South Africa Government Bond,

        

8.00%, Due 12/21/2018

     ZAR         10,000         969   

6.75%, Due 3/31/2021

     ZAR         9,745         878   

6.50%, Due 2/28/2041

     ZAR         35,310         2,576   

South Korea Treasury Bond,

        

5.75%, Due 9/10/2018

     KRW         3,105,000         3,417   

3.375%, Due 9/10/2023

     KRW         1,084,700         1,100   

Spain, Bonos Y Obligaciones del Estado,

        

2.10%, Due 4/30/2017

     EUR         687         941   

2.75%, Due 10/31/2024E

     EUR         3,900         5,363   

Supranational, Asian Development Bank, 2.00%, Due 8/29/2017

     NOR         400         65   

Supranational, European Investment Bank, 6.00%, Due 12/7/2028

     GBP         37         83   

Supranational, Nordic Investment Bank, 2.125%, Due 8/9/2017

     NOR         400         65   

UK Treasury Bond,

        

2.25%, Due 9/7/2023

     GBP         370         613   

3.25%, Due 1/22/2044

     GBP         933         1,637   
        

 

 

 
           81,294   
        

 

 

 

Total Foreign Obligations (Cost $90,800)

           93,723   
        

 

 

 

ASSET-BACKED OBLIGATIONS - 5.48%

        

ACE Securities Corp Home Equity Loan Trust, 0.31%, Due 8/25/2036, 2006 OP2 A1B

        1,012         876   

Argent Securities Trust, 0.425%, Due 5/25/2036, 2006 W4 A2D

        2,161         909   

Carrington Mortgage Loan Trust, 0.415%, Due 2/25/2037, 2007 FRE1 AC3B

        500         356   

Chase Funding Trust, 5.323%, Due 2/26/2035, 2004-2 1A4

        221         223   

Citibank Omni Master Trust, 4.90%, Due 11/15/2018, 2009 A17E

        900         908   

Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.,

        

0.525%, Due 1/25/2036, 2006 WFH1 M2

        100         89   

0.235%, Due 1/25/2037, 2007 AMC2 A3A

        198         125   

Countrywide Asset-Backed Certificates Trust,

        

0.335%, Due 6/25/2036, 2006 3 2A2

        38         36   

0.305%, Due 1/25/2037, 2006 13 3AV2B

        258         243   

0.315%, Due 3/25/2037, 2006 18 2A2

        412         360   

0.295%, Due 7/25/2037, 2007 1 2A3B

        2,800         2,185   

Fremont Home Loan Trust, 0.325%, Due 2/25/2036, 2006 2 2A3B

        370         319   

GSAMP Trust, 0.275%, Due 12/25/2036, 2007 FM1 A2B

        1,702         941   

Kingsland I Ltd., CDO, 0.630%, Due 6/13/2019, 2005 1A A2B E

        165         165   

Madison Park Funding Ltd., CLO, 0.450%, Due 3/22/2021, 2007 4A A1AB E

        1,490         1,478   

Master Specialized Loan Trust, 0.415%, Due 2/25/2036, 2006 2 AB E

        1,027         939   

Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Inc. Trust,

        

0.205%, Due 7/25/2036, 2006 A2FPB

        83         40   

0.305%, Due 11/25/2036, 2007 HE1 A2CB

        558         373   

Nomura Home Equity Loan Inc Home Equity Loan Trust, 0.485%, Due 10/25/2036, 2006 AF1 A4

        1,170         489   

Oakwood Mortgage Investors, Inc., 6.61%, Due 6/15/2031, 2001 C A3

        325         186   

RAAC Series Trust, 0.555%, Due 9/25/2045, 2006 SP1 M1B

        800         646   

Residential Asset Securities Corp.Trust,

        

0.735%, Due 7/25/2033, 2003 KS5 AIIBB

        8         7   

0.555%, Due 12/25/2035, 2005 KS11 M1B

        900         813   

0.595%, Due 1/25/2036, 2005 KS12 M1B

        175         162   

Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust,

        

0.315%, Due 5/25/2036, 2006 BNC2 A5

        1,005         741   

0.305%, Due 9/25/2036, 2006 BNC3 A3

        621         496   

Structured Asset Securities Corp. Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates,
0.325%, Due 12/25/2036, 2006 BC5 A4B

        1,348         1,115   
        

 

 

 

Total Asset-Backed Obligations (Cost $14,512)

           15,220   
        

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

14


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountA      Fair Value  
     (000’s)      (000’s)  

COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS - 7.16%

     

Adjustable Rate Mortgage Trust, 2.735%, Due 9/25/2035, 2005 5 2A1

   $ 87       $ 78   

American Home Mortgage Investment Trust,

     

2.069%, Due 10/25/2034, 2004 3 5AB

     62         63   

1.833%, Due 9/25/2045, 2005 2 4A1B

     8         8   

Banc of America Alternative Loan Trust, 0.555%, Due 5/25/2035, 2005 4 CB6B

     64         49   

Banc of America Funding Corporation,

     

5.774%, Due 5/25/2037, 2007 4 TA1B

     1,311         1,105   

0.366%, Due 4/20/2047, 2007 B A1

     716         533   

0.456%, Due 5/20/2047, 2007 C 7A5B

     338         279   

Banc of America Mortgage Securities, Inc., 3.321%, Due 7/20/2032, 2002 G1A3B

     22         22   

Bear Stearns Adjustable Rate Mortgage Trust,

     

2.745%, Due 11/25/2030, 2000 2 A1

     38         39   

2.437%, Due 8/25/2033, 2003 5 2A1B

     97         99   

2.712%, Due 8/25/2033, 2003 5 1A1B

     55         54   

2.625%, Due 4/25/2034, 2004 1 22A1B

     52         52   

3.121%, Due 11/25/2034, 2004 9 22A1B

     25         26   

2.43%, Due 10/25/2035, 2005 9 A1B

     58         58   

Bear Stearns Alt-A Trust,

     

2.466%, Due 9/25/2034, 2004 9 2A1B

     184         167   

2.627%, Due 11/25/2036, 2006 6 32A1

     130         90   

5.360%, Due 12/25/2046, 2006 7 23A1

     1,234         934   

Chase Mortgage Finance Corp.,

     

5.50%, Due 11/25/2035, 2005 S3 A10

     200         199   

2.445%, Due 2/25/2037, 2007 A1 7A1

     311         313   

2.570%, Due 2/25/2037, 2007 A1 1A5

     46         45   

2.642%, Due 3/25/2037, 2007 A1 12M3B

     296         248   

Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.,

     

2.564%, Due 8/25/2035, 2005 3 2A2A

     51         50   

1.93%, Due 9/25/2035, 2005 6 A3B

     43         43   

Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust,

     

0.605%, Due 8/25/2033, 2003 15T2 A2B

     2         2   

5.50%, Due 10/25/2033, 2003 20CB 1A4

     181         190   

6.00%, Due 10/25/2033, 2003 J2 A1

     24         25   

0.655%, Due 5/25/2035, 2005 10CB 1A1B

     1,180         1,012   

0.435%, Due 2/25/2037, 2005 81 A1B

     19         15   

0.366%, Due 7/20/2046, 2006 OA9 2A1AB

     13         9   

0.345%, Due 9/25/2046, 2006 OA11 A1BB

     18         15   

Countrywide Home Loan Mortgage Pass Through Trust,

     

2.519%, Due 6/25/2033, 2003 27 A1B

     44         44   

0.915%, Due 9/25/2034, 2004 16 1A4AB

     49         48   

0.445%, Due 4/25/2035, 2005 3 2A1B

     226         185   

0.385%, Due 5/25/2035, 2005 9 1A3B

     150         128   

5.75%, Due 5/25/2037, 2007 5 A51

     88         86   

Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., 2.452%, Due 9/25/2034,
2004 AR8 2A1

     36         36   

Credit Suisse Mortgage-Backed Trust, 6.00%, Due 7/25/2036, 2006 6 1A4

     602         466   

Deutsche Alt-A Securities Mortgage Loan Trust, 0.305%, Due 3/25/2037,
2007 AR2 A1

     823         567   

Fannie Mae Grantor Trust, 6.00%, Due 2/25/2044, 2004 T3 CL 1A1

     14         16   

Fannie Mae REMIC, 0.355%, Due 10/27/2037, 2007-114 A6

     600         599   

First Horizon Asset Securities, Inc., 2.534%, Due 2/25/2034, 2004 AR1 2A1B

     58         58   

Ginnie Mae REMIC Trust,

     

0.81%, Due 10/20/2061, 2011 H21 FTB

     1,805         1,813   

0.856%, Due 10/20/2061, 2011 H23 FAB

     810         816   

0.974%, Due 7/20/2062, 2012 H20 PT

     4,867         4,927   

GSR Mortgage Loan Trust,

     

6.00%, Due 3/25/2032, 2003 2F 3A1

     3         3   

2.085%, Due 6/25/2034, 2004 7 3A1

     42         42   

5.005%, Due 11/25/2035, 2005 AR7 6A1B

     38         38   

JP Morgan Alternative Loan Trust, 5.694%, Due 5/26/2037, 2008 R3 3A1E

     299         247   

Morgan Stanley Mortgage Loan Trust,

     

1.055%, Due 2/25/2036, 2006 2 2A1

     547         471   

2.178%, Due 6/25/2036, 2006 8AR 5A4B

     28         27   

New Century Alternative Mortgage Loan Trust, 5.909%, Due 7/25/2036,
2006 ALT1 AF2

     11         8   

 

See accompanying notes

 

15


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

            Par AmountA      Fair Value  
            (000’s)      (000’s)  

Nomura Asset Acceptance Corp., 7.50%, Due 3/25/2034, 2004 R1 A2E

      $ 118       $ 126   

Prime Mortgage Trust, 0.655%, Due 2/25/2035, 2006 CL1 A1B

        97         91   

Residential Accredit Loans, Inc., 0.255%, Due 5/25/2037, 2007 QA3 A1B

        353         256   

Residential Asset Securitization Trust, 2.462%, Due 12/25/2034, 2004 IP2 4A

        91         91   

Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust,

        

2.417%, Due 5/25/2034, 2004 5 3A2

        66         66   

2.436%, Due 7/25/2034, 2004 8 3AB

        67         68   

Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Trust,

        

1.614%, Due 2/25/2036, 2005 ARB A2B

        973         878   

0.385%, Due 5/25/2045, 2005 AR2 2A1B

        105         95   

Structured Asset Securities Corp. Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates,
5.50%, Due 5/25/2035, 2005 6 2A14

        131         135   

WaMu Mortgage Pass Through Certificates,

        

2.027%, Due 2/25/2033, 2003 AR1 2AB

        4         4   

2.408%, Due 3/25/2035, 2005 AR3 A1

        46         46   

5.50%, Due 11/25/2035, 2005 9 2A2

        299         280   

0.315%, Due 2/25/2037, 2007 HY1 A2AB

        336         234   

2.359%, Due 3/25/2037, 2007 HY3 4A1B

        196         187   

1.868%, Due 12/19/2039, 2001 AR5 1A

        94         93   

0.385%, Due 4/25/2045, 2005 AR6 2A1AB

        150         143   

0.475%, Due 7/25/2045, 2005 AR9 A1AB

        87         83   

0.445%, Due 10/25/2045, 2005 AR13 A1A1

        352         335   

0.425%, Due 12/25/2045, 2005 AR17 A1A1B

        152         143   

Wells Fargo Mortgage Backed Securities Trust, 2.603%, Due 3/25/2035,
2005 AR3 2A1B

        88         89   
        

 

 

 

Total Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (Cost $19,167)

           19,890   
        

 

 

 

FOREIGN COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATION- 1.62%

        

Fondo de Titulizacion de Activos, 0.392%, Due 6/16/2049, 16 A2

     EUR         1,109         1,297   

IM Pastor 4 Fondo de Titulizacion de Activos, 0.356%, Due 3/22/2044, 4 A

     EUR         1,265         1,488   

Rural Hipotecario IX Fondo de Titulizacion de Activos,
0.339%, Due 2/17/2050, 9 A2

     EUR         509         643   

TDA CAM Fondo de Titulizacion de Activos, 0.313%, Due 2/26/2049, 8 A

     EUR         887         1,076   
        

 

 

 

Total Foreign Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (Cost $4,606)

           4,504   
        

 

 

 

COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED OBLIGATIONS - 0.67%

        

Cobalt CMBS Commercial Mortgage Trust, 5.969%, Due 5/15/2046,
2007 C3 A1A

        862         942   

DBRR Trust, 0.853%, Due 2/25/2045, 2013 EZ2 AE I

        893         893   

LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust, 0.403%, Due 9/15/2045, 2007 C7 XW

        1,254         11   
        

 

 

 

Total Commercial Mortgage-Backed Obligations (Cost $1,862)

           1,846   
        

 

 

 

U.S. AGENCY MORTGAGE-BACKED OBLIGATIONS - 0.78% (Cost $2,160)

        

Fannie Mae TBA, 4.50%, Due 9/1/2041 L

        2,000         2,160   
        

 

 

 

U.S. AGENCY OBLIGATIONS - 0.10% (Cost $272)

        

Fannie Mae Notes, 3.15%, Due 12/27/2027 B M

        300         290   
        

 

 

 

U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS - 26.09%

        

U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities - 4.33%

        

1.625%, Due 1/15/2015 K

        125         125   

0.125%, Due 7/15/2022 K N

        1,555         1,558   

0.125%, Due 7/15/2024 K

        6,724         6,661   

2.375%, Due 1/15/2025 K N

        1,176         1,425   

2.00%, Due 1/15/2026 K

        60         71   

2.375%, Due 1/15/2027 K

        449         554   

3.875%, Due 4/15/2029 K N

        490         723   

0.625%, Due 2/15/2043 K

        972         918   
        

 

 

 
           12,035   
        

 

 

 

U.S. Treasury Floating Rate Note - 2.43%

        

0.075%, Due 1/31/2016, B

        2,525         2,525   

0.100%, Due 7/31/2016, B

        4,220         4,221   
        

 

 

 
           6,746   
        

 

 

 

U.S. Treasury Notes/Bonds - 19.33%

        

2.00%, Due 4/30/2016

        400         411   

 

See accompanying notes

 

16


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountA      Fair Value  
     (000’s)      (000’s)  

0.875%, Due 7/15/2017

   $  5,000       $  4,995   

1.625%, Due 7/31/2019

     21,900         21,902   

1.25%, Due 10/31/2019

     2,500         2,446   

1.875%, Due 6/30/2020

     3,000         3,008   

3.625%, Due 2/15/2021N

     3,000         3,308   

2.00%, Due 11/15/2021

     700         697   

2.50%, Due 5/15/2024

     12,100         12,273   

5.50%, Due 8/15/2028

     2,000         2,672   

3.125%, Due 8/15/2044

     2,000         2,016   
     

 

 

 
        53,728   
     

 

 

 

Total U.S. Treasury Obligations (Cost $72,028)

        72,509   
     

 

 

 
     Shares         

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS - 6.29%

     

Short-Term Investments - 4.13%

     

JPMorgan U.S. Government Money Market Fund, Capital Class

     11,463,456         11,463   
     

 

 

 
     Par AmountA         
     (000’s)         

Banks - 0.32%

     

Itau Unibanco S.A./ New York , 0.01%, Due 5/31/2016

   $  900         900   
     

 

 

 

U.S. Treasury Bills - 0.04%

     

0.102%, Due 10/16/2014N

     86         86   

0.138%, Due 11/6/2014N

     37         37   
     

 

 

 
        123   
     

 

 

 

U.S. Treasury Notes - 1.80%

     

0.25%, Due 10/31/2014

     2,000         2,001   

2.375%, Due 10/31/2014

     1,000         1,004   

0.25%, Due 11/30/2014

     2,000         2,001   
     

 

 

 
        5,006   
     

 

 

 

Total Short-Term Investments (Cost $17,492)

        17,492   
     

 

 

 

TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 114.71% (Cost $312,879)

        318,802   

PURCHASED OPTIONS - 1.36% (Cost $5,165)

        3,776   

WRITTEN OPTIONS - (0.89%)(Premiums $3,775)

        (2,462

LIABILITIES, NET OF OTHER ASSETS - (15.18%)

        (42,197
     

 

 

 

TOTAL NET ASSETS - 100.00%

      $ 277,919   
     

 

 

 

Percentages are stated as a percent of net assets.

 

A In U.S. Dollars unless otherwise noted.
B The coupon rate shown on floating or adjustable rate securities represents the rate at period end. The due date on these types of securities reflects the final maturity date.
C PLC - Public Limited Company.
D  Non-income producing security.
E Security exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A. At the period end, the value of these securities amounted to $37,691 or 13.57% of net assets. The Fund has no right to demand registration of these securities.
F Term Loan.
G LLC - Limited Liability Company.
H LP - Limited Partnership.
I Fair valued pursuant to procedures approved by the Board of Trustees. At the period end, the amount of fair valued securities was $1,574 or 0.57% of net assets.
J Par value represents units rather than shares.
K Inflation-Indexed Note.
L TBA - To Be Announced.
M Step Up/Down - A scheduled increase in the exercise or conversion price at which a warrant, an option, or a convertible security may be used to acquire shares of common stock.
N This security or a piece thereof is held as segregated collateral for interest rate and credit default swaps.
O Pay-In-Kind Security.

 

See accompanying notes

 

17


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Futures Contracts Open on August 31, 2014:

 

Description

   Type    Number of
Contracts
   Expiration Date      Contract Value     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

10-Year Japanese Bond September Futures

   Short    6      September, 2014       $ (8,432,697   $ (69,928

Canadian 10-Year Bond December Futures

   Short    14      December, 2014         (1,768,252     (14,323

Euro 3-Month EURIBOR December Futures

   Long    32      December, 2015         10,481,641        14,222   

Euro 3-Month EURIBOR December Futures

   Short    32      December, 2016         (10,453,260     (29,495

Euro BOBL September Futures

   Short    3      September, 2014         (509,405     (7,269

Euro BTP September Futures

   Short    13      September, 2014         (2,229,458     (111,440

Euro BUND September Futures

   Short    19      September, 2014         (3,783,203     (63,548

Euro BUND September Futures

   Short    84      September, 2014         16,725,742        (742,495

Euro OAT September Futures

   Short    7      September, 2014         (1,338,626     (41,018

Euro OAT September Futures

   Short    49      September, 2014         (9,370,381     (495,709

Euro SCHATZ December Futures

   Short    80      December, 2014         (11,658,941     (1,580

Long GILT December Futures

   Short    8      December, 2014         (1,507,948     (11,979

U.S. Long Bond December Futures

   Short    1      December, 2014         (140,094     (814

U.S. Treasury 10-Year Note December Futures

   Short    81      December, 2014         (10,188,281     (34,880

U.S. Treasury 2-Year Note December Futures

   Short    49      December, 2014         (10,733,297     (9,333

U.S. Treasury 5-Year Note December Futures

   Short    86      December, 2014         (10,219,891     (30,973

U.S. Ultra Bond December Futures

   Short    26      December, 2014         (4,043,000     (36,949

U.S. Ultra Bond December Futures

   Short    8      December, 2014         (1,244,000     (11,336
           

 

 

   

 

 

 
            $ (60,413,351   $ (1,698,847
           

 

 

   

 

 

 

Centrally cleared swap agreements outstanding on August 31, 2014:

Interest Rate Swaps

 

Pay/Receive
Floating Rate

   Floating Rate Index    Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair Value  

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/3/2016       USD      2,599       $ —        $ (3,276   $ (3,276

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/7/2016       USD      2,595         —          (3,932     (3,932

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/11/2016       USD      3,553         —          (2,596     (2,596

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/22/2016       USD      2,679         —          20        20   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/22/2016       USD      2,679         —          (788     (788

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      0.3325         8/22/2016       JPY      166,139         —          4,865        4,865   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/17/2016       USD      3,000         267        (4,303     (4,036

Receive

   3-Month AUD-BBSW      3.5000         3/16/2017       AUD      49,200         (8,295     245,077        236,782   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      0.5270         7/11/2017       EUR      5,184         —          8,739        8,739   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      0.2336         7/15/2017       USD      12,100         2,451        12,239        14,690   

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR      2.9300         9/16/2017       SEK      15,949         —          95,682        95,682   

Receive

   3-Month AUD-BBSW      3.2500         9/21/2017       AUD      26,400         5,888        19,805        25,693   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/17/2017       USD      26,200         (56,011     (49,191     (105,202

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.3200         3/24/2018       USD      746         —          4,246        4,246   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.3330         3/29/2018       USD      738         —          4,268        4,268   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.4000         3/29/2018       USD      723         —          5,120        5,120   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.3120         4/11/2018       EUR      9,025         —          90,190        90,190   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.2100         6/9/2018       USD      707         —          383        383   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.2775         6/13/2018       USD      734         —          1,269        1,269   

Receive

   3-Month AUD-BBSW      4.0000         6/18/2018       AUD      31,900         (52,905     496,331        443,426   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.8475         6/19/2018       GBP      1,797         —          12,745        12,745   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.8440         7/10/2018       GBP      1,861         —          12,681        12,681   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.8018         7/10/2018       GBP      3,676         —          22,612        22,612   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/5/2018       GBP      1,818         —          (19,032     (19,032

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/8/2018       GBP      1,834         —          (17,880     (17,880

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.4020         8/8/2018       USD      1,797         —          3,931        3,931   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.3813         8/8/2018       USD      2,709         —          4,844        4,844   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/11/2018       GBP      1,786         —          (14,813     (14,813

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/15/2018       GBP      1,749         —          (6,319     (6,319

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/15/2018       GBP      1,805         —          (6,378     (6,378

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.3420         8/15/2018       USD      2,656         —          2,146        2,146   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.2550         8/18/2018       USD      2,644         —          (2,623     (2,623

 

See accompanying notes

 

18


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/Receive
Floating Rate

   Floating Rate Index    Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair Value  

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.2625         8/19/2018       USD      2,677       $ —        $ (2,323   $ (2,323

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/20/2018       GBP      881         —          (3,326     (3,326

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.0000         8/22/2018       JPY      335,681         —          (23,797     (23,797

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.2950         8/22/2018       USD      1,311         —          (415     (415

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/26/2018       GBP      1,809         —          (4,351     (4,351

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/26/2018       GBP      1,809         —          (3,778     (3,778

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.3563         8/30/2018       USD      2,707         —          1,651        1,651   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.3630         8/30/2018       USD      2,714         —          2,007        2,007   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.9300         12/19/2018       USD      2,721         —          23,026        23,026   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.9700         12/20/2018       USD      1,752         —          16,120        16,120   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.9800         12/20/2018       USD      1,720         —          16,149        16,149   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.1250         12/23/2018       USD      1,745         —          21,070        21,070   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.1250         12/23/2018       USD      1,745         —          21,070        21,070   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.1050         12/23/2018       USD      1,757         —          20,545        20,545   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.1063         12/28/2018       USD      1,873         —          21,712        21,712   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      0.2349         2/26/2019       USD      972         —          97        97   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         3/9/2019       USD      975         —          (3,413     (3,413

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.6400         3/27/2019       EUR      1,817         —          46,374        46,374   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.5670         4/3/2019       EUR      885         —          20,789        20,789   

Receive

   6-Month AUD-BBSW      2.9675         6/16/2019       AUD      443         —          (4,431     (4,431

Receive

   6-Month AUD-BBSW      4.0000         6/18/2019       AUD      10,600         55,344        314,664        370,008   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/19/2019       GBP      1,832         —          (12,615     (12,615

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.9910         6/28/2019       USD      821         —          10,217        10,217   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.9900         7/3/2019       USD      1,504         —          18,450        18,450   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.0215         7/7/2019       USD      1,501         —          20,475        20,475   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         7/9/2019       GBP      2,105         —          (13,795     (13,795

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         7/10/2019       GBP      4,149         —          (24,780     (24,780

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         7/11/2019       EUR      1,728         —          (13,112     (13,112

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.9465         7/11/2019       USD      2,061         —          20,703        20,703   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.8950         7/22/2019       USD      1,542         —          11,313        11,313   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.9257         7/22/2019       USD      1,542         —          13,554        13,554   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.8430         8/14/2019       USD      1,820         —          3,652        3,652   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.8403         8/14/2019       USD      3,615         —          7,067        7,067   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.7500         8/21/2019       USD      1,818         —          271        271   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/17/2019       USD      5,500         (53,982     (30,327     (84,309

Receive

   6-Month AUD-BBSW      3.7500         12/17/2019       AUD      7,900         134,211        32,216        166,427   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         4/11/2020       EUR      5,076         —          (182,823     (182,823

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.0250         5/14/2020       GBP      887         —          19,280        19,280   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.0500         5/15/2020       GBP      1,773         —          40,601        40,601   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.1300         5/21/2020       GBP      947         —          13,823        13,823   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.1500         5/22/2020       GBP      1,871         —          28,424        28,424   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.0300         5/29/2020       GBP      893         —          10,227        10,227   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         6/5/2020       EUR      1,421         —          (38,633     (38,633

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         6/9/2020       EUR      704         —          (19,195     (19,195

Receive

   3-Month CAN-CDOR      3.2000         6/14/2020       CAD      470         —          5,263        5,263   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.1730         6/18/2020       GBP      1,070         —          16,628        16,628   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.2150         6/20/2020       GBP      463         —          7,788        7,788   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.1490         6/25/2020       GBP      783         —          11,517        11,517   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.0750         6/27/2020       GBP      584         —          7,276        7,276   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.1030         7/9/2020       GBP      384         —          5,048        5,048   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.0450         7/10/2020       GBP      575         —          6,540        6,540   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.5762         8/5/2020       GBP      726         —          17,136        17,136   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.5760         8/5/2020       GBP      736         —          17,358        17,358   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.5700         8/6/2020       GBP      735         —          16,919        16,919   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.5348         8/6/2020       GBP      1,469         —          29,791        29,791   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.5225         8/7/2020       GBP      726         —          13,978        13,978   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.5310         8/7/2020       GBP      743         —          14,800        14,800   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.5280         8/7/2020       GBP      743         —          14,625        14,625   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.4500         8/10/2020       GBP      362         —          4,828        4,828   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.4626         8/10/2020       GBP      362         —          5,192        5,192   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      2.4555         8/10/2020       GBP      1,466         —          20,205        20,205   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.3040         8/19/2020       USD      1,008         —          138        138   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.2960         8/20/2020       USD      1,005         —          (317     (317

 

See accompanying notes

 

19


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/Receive

Floating Rate

   Floating Rate Index    Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair Value  

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      2.2912         8/21/2020       USD      1,005       $ —        $ (604   $ (604

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.1200         8/22/2020       JPY      169,543         —          20,450        20,450   

Pay

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR      1.0000         9/16/2020       SEK      6,727         —          (92,978     (92,978

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.0900         11/26/2020       USD      4,271         —          82,068        82,068   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.0600         11/27/2020       USD      2,095         —          39,049        39,049   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.0610         11/27/2020       USD      1,922         —          35,859        35,859   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.1100         11/27/2020       USD      2,920         —          57,062        57,062   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.0620         11/29/2020       USD      1,915         —          35,755        35,755   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.1075         11/29/2020       USD      1,915         —          37,329        37,329   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.0570         11/29/2020       USD      1,915         —          35,584        35,584   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.1225         12/3/2020       USD      1,816         —          35,769        35,769   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         3/25/2021       EUR      3,772         —          (115,844     (115,844

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         4/3/2021       EUR      1,832         —          (52,363     (52,363

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      0.9200         5/13/2021       JPY      348,425         —          19,780        19,780   

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      0.8800         5/20/2021       JPY      345,408         —          16,675        16,675   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         6/9/2021       EUR      2,648         —          (58,913     (58,913

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE      5.6100         7/7/2021       MXN      19,200         (7,779     12,617        4,838   

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      0.6925         8/19/2021       JPY      353,217         —          945        945   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         9/3/2021       USD      7,832         —          —          —     

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         9/22/2021       USD      4,575         —          (102,767     (102,767

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/17/2021       USD      3,200         (41,120     (7,188     (48,308

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         3/26/2022       EUR      2,535         —          (120,107     (120,107

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         3/26/2022       EUR      2,495         —          (118,235     (118,235

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/13/2022       GBP      4,081         —          (71,546     (71,546

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/14/2022       GBP      2,034         —          (34,829     (34,829

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.8025         9/13/2022       GBP      294         —          23,254        23,254   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.5463         10/7/2022       GBP      741         —          43,912        43,912   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.1650         12/11/2022       USD      769         —          37,029        37,029   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.1410         12/12/2022       USD      1,153         —          54,244        54,244   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      0.3910         2/10/2023       EUR      232         —          (22,044     (22,044

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      0.3910         2/10/2023       EUR      1,375         —          (131,699     (131,699

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.9400         3/25/2023       EUR      1,976         —          57,768        57,768   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.8690         4/6/2023       EUR      961         —          26,119        26,119   

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.0000         5/12/2023       JPY      709,679         —          (47,305     (47,305

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.0000         5/20/2023       JPY      700,224         —          (39,969     (39,969

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.3140         5/21/2023       GBP      538         —          19,213        19,213   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.7262         6/9/2023       EUR      5,538         —          124,725        124,725   

Receive

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR      4.0000         7/1/2023       NOK      8,368         —          62,921        62,921   

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.0000         8/19/2023       JPY      713,949         —          (6,345     (6,345

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      0.6303         9/7/2023       GBP      343         —          (15,481     (15,481

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.9962         9/17/2023       GBP      317         —          26,090        26,090   

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR      1.0000         9/25/2023       NOK      3,182         —          (28,680     (28,680

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR      3.6250         9/25/2023       SEK      3,357         —          8,125        8,125   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         10/15/2023       GBP      554         —          (39,204     (39,204

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/26/2023       USD      5,080         —          (103,558     (103,558

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      0.2306         12/18/2023       USD      2,000         (32,547     (65,532     (98,079

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         1/10/2024       GBP      273         —          (19,164     (19,164

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         2/29/2024       USD      653         —          (24,868     (24,868

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         3/9/2024       USD      721         —          (36,602     (36,602

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         3/28/2024       EUR      1,591         —          (109,512     (109,512

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.3340         4/11/2024       EUR      910         —          80,951        80,951   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.9700         5/1/2024       USD      1,315         —          38,206        38,206   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/22/2024       GBP      2,111         —          (36,516     (36,516

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/22/2024       GBP      1,057         —          18,279        18,279   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/23/2024       GBP      1,072         —          (18,281     (18,281

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/23/2024       GBP      533         —          (9,050     (9,050

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/31/2024       GBP      968         —          (14,008     (14,008

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/31/2024       GBP      525         —          (7,339     (7,339

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/31/2024       GBP      840         —          (11,855     (11,855

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/3/2024       GBP      1,053         —          (17,663     (17,663

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.4600         6/3/2024       GBP      177         —          6,638        6,638   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.5500         6/5/2024       GBP      148         —          6,470        6,470   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.8250         6/6/2024       EUR      958         —          18,797        18,797   

 

See accompanying notes

 

20


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/Receive

Floating Rate

   Floating Rate Index    Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair Value  

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.5400         6/12/2024       GBP      154       $ —        $ 6,623      $ 6,623   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/13/2024       GBP      877         —          (14,533     (14,533

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/13/2024       GBP      631         —          (9,945     (9,945

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/16/2024       GBP      430         —          (6,827     (6,827

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.8925         6/17/2024       EUR      591         —          12,481        12,481   

Pay

   6-Month AUD-BBSW      0.0000         6/18/2024       AUD      12,200         (116,167     (934,769     (1,050,936

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      0.2306         6/18/2024       USD      9,900         (125,218     (338,328     (463,546

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/18/2024       GBP      1,817         —          (30,771     (30,771

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.5120         6/19/2024       GBP      211         —          8,601        8,601   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/20/2024       GBP      1,086         —          (17,397     (17,397

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/20/2024       GBP      588         —          (8,834     (8,834

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/20/2024       GBP      788         —          (13,679     (13,679

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.8840         6/20/2024       EUR      972         —          20,301        20,301   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.5320         6/20/2024       GBP      211         —          8,896        8,896   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.8060         6/23/2024       EUR      581         —          11,020        11,020   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/27/2024       GBP      885         —          (13,818     (13,818

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/27/2024       GBP      443         —          (7,102     (7,102

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/27/2024       GBP      317         —          (4,486     (4,486

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/27/2024       GBP      660         —          (9,258     (9,258

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/3/2024       USD      581         —          (26,113     (26,113

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/7/2024       USD      580         —          (27,075     (27,075

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/11/2024       USD      796         —          (31,453     (31,453

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         7/11/2024       GBP      650         —          (9,350     (9,350

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         7/11/2024       GBP      968         —          (11,664     (11,664

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/22/2024       USD      597         —          (20,707     (20,707

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/22/2024       USD      597         —          (20,796     (20,796

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/8/2024       GBP      637         —          (5,149     (5,149

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/8/2024       GBP      636         —          (4,725     (4,725

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/8/2024       GBP      637         —          (3,155     (3,155

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         8/12/2024       EUR      362         —          (6,740     (6,740

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         8/13/2024       USD      934         —          (7,913     (7,913

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         8/13/2024       USD      1,849         —          (14,885     (14,885

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         8/20/2024       USD      929         —          (3,725     (3,725

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.1300         9/5/2024       USD      2,274         —          —          —     

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.2500         9/18/2024       EUR      9,800         47,823        291,192        339,015   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/17/2024       USD      4,000         (44,231     (101,502     (145,733

Pay

   6-Month AUD-BBSW      1.0000         12/17/2024       AUD      2,900         (71,865     (49,172     (121,037

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR      1.0000         7/1/2025       NOK      6,276         —          (57,813     (57,813

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/5/2025       GBP      463         —          (22,133     (22,133

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/5/2025       GBP      472         —          (22,563     (22,563

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/6/2025       GBP      470         —          (21,988     (21,988

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/6/2025       GBP      940         —          (37,611     (37,611

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/7/2025       GBP      463         —          (17,579     (17,579

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/7/2025       GBP      479         —          (18,495     (18,495

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/7/2025       GBP      479         —          (18,143     (18,143

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/10/2025       GBP      231         —          (6,087     (6,087

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/10/2025       GBP      231         —          (6,406     (6,406

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/10/2025       GBP      945         —          (25,093     (25,093

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/17/2025       GBP      383         —          (10,554     (10,554

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/18/2025       GBP      384         —          (8,941     (8,941

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/19/2025       GBP      383         —          (7,688     (7,688

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.5000         10/29/2025       USD      674         —          21,507        21,507   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.5000         10/31/2025       USD      372         —          11,870        11,870   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.5000         10/31/2025       USD      372         —          11,870        11,870   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.4750         11/1/2025       USD      674         —          20,912        20,912   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.8200         11/15/2025       USD      784         —          32,785        32,785   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.9180         3/26/2026       EUR      2,297         —          227,589        227,589   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.9200         3/26/2026       EUR      2,262         —          224,511        224,511   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.5600         4/23/2026       USD      628         —          29,216        29,216   

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.8640         5/12/2026       JPY      243,762         —          25,716        25,716   

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.8190         5/22/2026       JPY      241,248         —          21,933        21,933   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         6/9/2026       EUR      1,976         —          (63,451     (63,451

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.4750         6/20/2026       USD      634         —          22,666        22,666   

 

See accompanying notes

 

21


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/Receive

Floating Rate

   Floating Rate Index    Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair Value  

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.6210         8/21/2026       JPY      244,587       $ —         $ 4,836      $ 4,836   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/19/2026       USD      688         —           (61,807     (61,807

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/20/2026       USD      459         —           (40,941     (40,941

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/20/2026       USD      423         —           (38,884     (38,884

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/23/2026       USD      460         —           (43,325     (43,325

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/23/2026       USD      454         —           (43,524     (43,524

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/23/2026       USD      454         —           (43,524     (43,524

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/28/2026       USD      468         —           (43,428     (43,428

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/5/2027       GBP      850         —           (19,840     (19,840

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/26/2027       GBP      880         —           (7,377     (7,377

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      3.3300         7/3/2028       EUR      140         —           8,675        8,675   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      3.3600         7/3/2028       EUR      276         —           17,578        17,578   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      3.3600         7/3/2028       EUR      276         —           17,578        17,578   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      3.3350         7/3/2028       EUR      274         —           17,057        17,057   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      3.4650         7/11/2028       EUR      431         —           30,005        30,005   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         9/13/2028       GBP      611         —           (40,066     (40,066

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         10/9/2028       GBP      949         —           (50,476     (50,476

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         10/9/2028       GBP      525         —           (27,659     (27,659

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         10/31/2028       USD      1,976         —           (38,913     (38,913

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         10/31/2028       USD      1,976         —           (38,913     (38,913

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         10/31/2028       USD      3,423         —           (66,805     (66,805

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/3/2028       USD      3,446         —           (66,004     (66,004

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/5/2028       USD      4,038         —           (81,582     (81,582

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/14/2028       USD      4,000         —           (100,779     (100,779

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/27/2028       USD      492         —           (44,758     (44,758

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/27/2028       USD      745         —           (70,035     (70,035

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/27/2028       USD      542         —           (48,971     (48,971

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/29/2028       USD      496         —           (44,911     (44,911

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/29/2028       USD      496         —           (46,264     (46,264

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         11/29/2028       USD      496         —           (44,745     (44,745

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/3/2028       USD      454         —           (42,923     (42,923

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      4.0000         3/23/2029       GBP      1,340         —           37,960        37,960   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         3/26/2029       EUR      841         —           (119,745     (119,745

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         3/26/2029       EUR      827         —           (111,007     (111,007

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         4/27/2029       USD      5,109         —           (62,549     (62,549

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         5/1/2029       USD      1,555         —           (35,634     (35,634

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         5/1/2029       USD      1,256         —           (28,769     (28,769

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         5/1/2029       USD      1,052         —           (23,647     (23,647

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         5/20/2029       GBP      941         —           (34,190     (34,190

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/3/2029       GBP      566         —           (21,861     (21,861

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR      1.0000         6/5/2029       NZD      471         —           13,400        13,400   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/12/2029       GBP      491         —           (20,065     (20,065

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/19/2029       GBP      502         —           (19,336     (19,336

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         6/20/2029       GBP      502         —           (19,352     (19,352

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/12/2029       GBP      216         —           (7,123     (7,123

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/12/2029       GBP      216         —           (7,479     (7,479

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.6625         8/13/2029       USD      262         —           3,994        3,994   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.6700         8/13/2029       USD      265         —           4,193        4,193   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         3/23/2031       GBP      1,282         —           (55,143     (55,143

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      2.7200         6/14/2032       JPY      47,517         —           7,516        7,516   

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      2.6800         6/14/2032       JPY      48,655         —           6,823        6,823   

Receive

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      2.7050         6/19/2032       JPY      45,786         —           6,893        6,893   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         7/3/2033       EUR      320         —           (9,949     (9,949

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         7/3/2033       EUR      640         —           (20,912     (20,912

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         7/3/2033       EUR      640         —           (20,912     (20,912

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         7/3/2033       EUR      638         —           (20,329     (20,329

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         7/11/2033       EUR      1,006         —           (36,957     (36,957

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.4300         10/31/2033       USD      988         —           24,455        24,455   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.4300         10/31/2033       USD      988         —           24,455        24,455   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.4200         10/31/2033       USD      1,696         —           41,488        41,488   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.4100         11/1/2033       USD      1,708         —           41,131        41,131   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.4400         11/5/2033       USD      2,026         —           50,663        50,663   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.6800         11/14/2033       USD      2,066         —           66,594        66,594   

 

See accompanying notes

 

22


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/Receive

Floating Rate

   Floating Rate Index    Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair Value  

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/11/2033       USD      629       $ —        $ (45,894   $ (45,894

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         12/12/2033       USD      946         —          (67,863     (67,863

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.8590         3/23/2034       GBP      212         —          12,630        12,630   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.1500         5/1/2034       USD      1,544         —          25,044        25,044   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.1350         5/1/2034       USD      1,292         —          20,387        20,387   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         5/27/2034       EUR      171         —          (13,163     (13,163

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         5/30/2034       EUR      331         —          (24,361     (24,361

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         5/30/2034       EUR      331         —          (24,538     (24,538

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         5/30/2034       EUR      333         —          (24,099     (24,099

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.7900         6/4/2034       GBP      423         —          13,912        13,912   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.8000         6/5/2034       GBP      350         —          11,688        11,688   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.8100         6/12/2034       GBP      372         —          12,627        12,627   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.7910         6/19/2034       GBP      302         —          9,962        9,962   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.7800         6/20/2034       GBP      303         —          9,801        9,801   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         7/3/2034       EUR      148         —          (9,960     (9,960

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.4425         8/5/2034       GBP      302         —          19,329        19,329   

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.2175         8/27/2034       GBP      310         —          834        834   

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.0000         6/14/2037       JPY      54,732         —          (3,094     (3,094

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.0000         6/14/2037       JPY      56,015         —          (1,920     (1,920

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR      1.0000         6/19/2037       JPY      53,144         —          (1,719     (1,719

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.6000         7/3/2038       EUR      186         —          3,745        3,745   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.6300         7/3/2038       EUR      365         —          7,855        7,855   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.6300         7/3/2038       EUR      365         —          7,855        7,855   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.6150         7/3/2038       EUR      363         —          7,560        7,560   

Receive

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      2.6800         7/11/2038       EUR      577         —          13,750        13,750   

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      4.0885         4/27/2039       USD      4,782         —          187,638        187,638   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         7/28/2039       GBP      653         —          (13,745     (13,745

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      3.6190         7/30/2039       USD      1,111         —          4,901        4,901   

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         8/23/2043       GBP      183         —          (10,810     (10,810

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      1.0000         1/22/2044       GBP      318         —          (60,623     (60,623

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      0.6009         1/22/2044       GBP      335         —          (62,984     (62,984

Pay

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      0.3441         1/22/2044       GBP      161         —          (32,404     (32,404

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         4/27/2044       USD      2,650         —          (128,588     (128,588

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      0.2306         6/18/2044       USD      400         (5,958     (49,686     (55,644

Receive

   6-Month GBP-LIBOR      3.2123         7/28/2044       GBP      736         —          13,258        13,258   

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         7/30/2044       USD      1,313         —          (4,104     (4,104

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         8/7/2044       EUR      132         —          (5,645     (5,645

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         9/17/2044       EUR      4,900         (661,626     (923,740     (1,585,366

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR      1.0000         3/18/2045       EUR      600         (21,483     (19,519     (41,002

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         4/23/2046       USD      324         —          (30,769     (30,769

Pay

   3-Month USD-LIBOR      1.0000         6/20/2046       USD      322         —          (25,689     (25,689
                 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                  $ (1,053,203   $ (2,710,145   $ (3,763,349
                 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

OTC Swap Agreements Outstanding on August 31, 2014:

Credit Default Swaps on Corporate and Sovereign Securities - Buy Protection (1) 

 

Reference Entity

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Implied
Credit
Spread at
8/31/2014 (3)
(%)
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)

(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value
 

J.C. Penny Corporation, Inc.

   BNP      1.0000         12/20/2015         2.5687       USD      75       $ 4,616      $ (7,333   $ (2,717

Radioshack Corporation

   CBK      1.0000         6/20/2016         91.8377       USD      30         16,724        (1,138     15,586   

Astaldi SPA

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2016         1.7689       EUR      340         4,226        2,090        6,316   

Radioshack Corporation

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2016         95.3963       USD      60         34,363        (2,299     32,064   

Radioshack Corporation

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2016         1.5708       USD      110         63,800        (5,015     58,785   

Federal Republic of Brazil

   BRC      1.0000         12/20/2016         0.6798       USD      800         10,344        (17,401     (7,057

Royal Bank of Scotland

   DUB      1.0000         12/20/2016         0.6272       EUR      300         (18,534     (22,341     (40,875

Rallye S.A.

   BNP      1.0000         3/20/2017         1.0163       EUR      15         (539     (1,418     (1,957

 

See accompanying notes

 

23


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Reference Entity

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Implied
Credit
Spread at
8/31/2014 (3)
(%)
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)

(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value
 

Rallye S.A.

   BNP      1.0000         3/20/2017         0.6272       EUR      25       $ (946   $ (2,316   $ (3,262

Darden Restaurants, Inc.

   BRC      1.0000         6/20/2017         0.7382       USD      105         (1,167     181        (986

Unisys Corporation

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2017         1.5982       USD      130         (12,784     (784     (13,568

Safeway, Inc.

   BRC      1.0000         3/20/2018         3.1494       USD      375         3,046        11,469        14,515   

Renault, S.A.

   BRC      1.0000         3/20/2018         0.9343       EUR      320         (302     (1,708     (2,010

Sainsbury, PLC

   DUB      1.0000         3/20/2018         0.8402       EUR      650         (1,568     (5,899     (7,467

Volvo Treasury

   UAG      0.0000         3/20/2018         0.6607       EUR      50         1,599        (2,547     (948

Credit Agricole, S.A.

   CBK      1.0000         6/20/2018         0.4612       EUR      800         (30,555     (70,294     (100,849

J.C. Penny Corporation, Inc.

   BRC      1.0000         6/20/2018         5.4605       USD      25         2,939        (2,898     41   

J.C Penny Corporation, Inc.

   BNP      1.0000         6/20/2018         0.5996       USD      100         8,191        (8,025     166   

Electricite de France

   FBF      1.0000         9/20/2018         0.4659       EUR      200         (2,914     (3,398     (6,312

J.C. Penny Corporation, Inc.

   BRC      1.0000         9/20/2018         5.6259       USD      100         8,194        (7,407     787   

Nationwide Building Society

   BNP      1.0000         9/20/2018         0.4260       EUR      200         1,940        (8,058     (6,118

Nationwide Building Society

   BNP      1.0000         9/20/2018         0.4758       EUR      500         3,711        (19,006     (15,295

Turkey Government International Bond

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2018         1.5250       USD      500         14,872        (5,477     9,395   

Turkey Government International Bond

   JPM      1.0000         9/20/2018         1.5250       USD      500         14,689        (5,294     9,395   

Staples, Inc.

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2018         2.3051       USD      270         6,162        184        6,346   

Credit Agricole, S.A.

   BOA      1.0000         12/20/2018         0.5147       EUR      500         (48,511     (21,114     (69,625

Daimler AG

   BNP      1.0000         12/20/2018         0.3253       EUR      100         157        (4,117     (3,960

Intesa Sanpaolo SPA

   BRC      1.0000         12/20/2018         0.6769       EUR      300         (12,763     (27,024     (39,787

Kingfisher, PLC

   FBF      1.0000         12/20/2018         0.5754       EUR      150         (1,085     (2,949     (4,034

Kingfisher, PLC

   BNP      1.0000         12/20/2018         0.5754       EUR      100         (807     (1,882     (2,689

Kingfisher, PLC

   BNP      1.0000         12/20/2018         0.5754       EUR      150         (1,295     (2,739     (4,034

Nomura Holdings

   JPM      1.0000         12/20/2018         0.7207       JPY      30,000         (2,172     (1,982     (4,154

Rite Aid Corportation

   DUB      1.0000         12/20/2018         2.2762       USD      50         (4,467     (1,033     (5,500

Rite Aid Corportation

   DUB      1.0000         12/20/2018         2.2762       USD      125         (10,958     (2,792     (13,750

Turkey EM BP

   CBK      1.0000         12/20/2018         1.5719       USD      3,100         116,363        (44,896     71,467   

General Motor

   BRC      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.7158       USD      120         (19,793     (2,885     (22,678

Goldman Sachs Group

   BNP      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.7394       USD      400         686        (5,864     (5,178

Intesa Sanpaolo SPA

   BNP      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.6989       EUR      150         (12,140     (8,483     (20,623

J.C. Penny Corporation, Inc.

   DUB      1.0000         3/20/2019         5.8951       USD      75         16,149        (14,331     1,818   

Nomura Holdings

   DUB      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.7629       JPY      30,000         (309     (3,512     (3,821

Reed Elsevier, PLC

   DUB      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.4260       EUR      250         (7,419     (1,391     (8,810

Reed Elsevier, PLC

   BRC      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.4260       EUR      250         (7,443     (1,367     (8,810

South Africa Government International Bond

   BRC      1.0000         3/20/2019         1.5708       USD      1,000         58,002        (34,201     23,801   

Korea Government International Bond

   JPM      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.5200       USD      200         (2,692     (2,245     (4,937

Aegon NV

   BNP      1.0000         6/20/2019         0.7053       EUR      150         (191     (2,868     (3,059

Ford Motor Credit

   BRC      1.0000         6/20/2019         0.7158       USD      120         (22,703     (886     (23,589

HCA, Inc.

   JPM      1.0000         6/20/2019         1.8666       USD      115         (15,525     (777     (16,302

HSBC Bank, PLC

   BNP      1.0000         9/20/2019         0.4700       EUR      300         (9,248     (1,493     (10,741

Lloyds Bank

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2019         0.5996       EUR      400         (105,714     (3,833     (109,547

Indonesia Government International Bond

   JPM      1.0000         9/20/2019         1.3901       USD      300         7,650        (3,050     4,600   

Korea Government International Bond

   BNP      1.0000         9/20/2019         0.5200       USD      250         (5,269     (782     (6,051

Korea Government International Bond

   BRC      1.0000         9/20/2019         0.5200       USD      250         (5,208     (844     (6,052

Royal Bank of Scotland

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2019         1.0367       EUR      300         (73,982     (3,925     (77,907

United Mexican States Government International Bond

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2019         0.6984       USD      263         (4,217     287        (3,930

 

See accompanying notes

 

24


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Reference Entity

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Implied
Credit
Spread at
8/31/2014 (3)
(%)
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)

(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value
 

Illinois State Municipal Bank

   CBK      1.0000         3/20/2023         2.0311       USD      300       $ 17,699       $ 331      $ 8,030   

Illinois State Municipal Bank

   CBK      1.0000         6/20/2023         2.0583       USD      200         10,492         2,017        12,509   

Republic of South Africa

   JPM      1.0000         9/20/2023         2.2349       USD      200         25,021         (7,317     17,704   

Illinois State Municipal Bank

   CBK      1.0000         12/20/2023         2.1115       USD      1,600         118,565         (11,011     107,554   
                    

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 
                     $ 126,980       $ (405,090   $ (278,110
                    

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 

Credit Default Swaps on Corporate and Sovereign Securities - Sell Protection (2) 

 

Reference Entity

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate

(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Implied
Credit
Spread at
8/31/2014 (3)

(%)
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)

(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair Value  

Citigroup, Inc.

   FBF      1.0000         9/20/2014         0.1815       USD      100       $ (31   $ 82      $ 51   

Radioshack Corporation

   CBK      5.0000         6/20/2015         117.9982       USD      30         (13,992     1,205        (12,787

Radioshack Corporation

   DUB      5.0000         6/20/2015         1.5250       USD      60         (29,546     3,971        (25,575

Radioshack Corporation

   DUB      5.0000         6/20/2015         2.2762       USD      110         (55,000     8,113        (46,887

Community Health Systems

   GST      5.0000         12/20/2016         0.8330       USD      700         60,313        6,587        66,900   

Italy Government International Bond

   FBF      1.0000         6/20/2017         0.6359       USD      200         (15,161     17,183        2,022   

Rallye S.A.

   BNP      1.0000         3/20/2018         4.0440       EUR      25         (3,251     2,642        (609

Rallye S.A.

   BNP      1.0000         3/20/2018         1.4631       EUR      15         (1,956     1,591        (365

Safeway, Inc.

   BRC      1.0000         3/20/2019         3.1494       USD      375         (11,230     (20,571     (31,801

Indonesia AS

   BOA      1.0000         3/20/2019         1.1815       USD      100         (4,686     3,831        (855

Indonesia AS

   BCC      1.0000         3/20/2019         1.1815       USD      200         (9,450     7,741        (1,709

Indonesia AS

   GST      1.0000         3/20/2019         1.1815       USD      700         (36,926     31,443        (5,483

Lafarge SA

   CBK      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.8445       EUR      300         (18,007     20,558        2,551   

Sainsbury, PLC

   DUB      1.0000         3/20/2019         1.0605       EUR      700         (6,764     7,156        392   

UBS AG London

   JPM      1.0000         3/20/2019         0.4111       EUR      300         4,589        6,268        10,857   

Darden Restaurants, Inc.

   BRC      1.0000         6/20/2019         0.7382       USD      105         (1,783     (382     (2,165

General Motors Co.

   BRC      5.0000         6/20/2019         1.3918       USD      120         18,627        1,074        19,701   

Italy Government International Bond

   CBK      1.0000         6/20/2019         0.9561       USD      1,800         (18,903     22,872        3,969   

Italy Government International Bond

   MSC      1.0000         6/20/2019         0.9561       USD      600         (6,434     7,757        1,323   

Munich Re

   BNP      1.0000         6/20/2019         0.7616       EUR      150         482        2,337        2,819   

Astaldi SPA

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2019         4.0440       EUR      340         (42,696     (17,871     (60,567

Credit Suisse

   BRC      1.0000         9/20/2019         0.5400       EUR      150         3,179        1,490        4,669   

Darden Restaurants, Inc.

   JPM      1.0000         9/20/2019         1.6101       USD      50         (1,973     677        (1,296

Darden Restaurants, Inc.

   BRC      1.0000         9/20/2019         1.6101       USD      25         (942     294        (648

Staples, Inc.

   DUB      1.0000         9/20/2019         2.3051       USD      270         (14,848     (552     (15,400

Unisys Corporation

   DUB      5.0000         9/20/2019         3.1221       USD      130         12,300        (990     11,310   

Renault, S.A.

   BRC      1.0000         12/20/2020         1.4749       EUR      320         (15,350     3,672        (11,678
                    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                     $ (209,439   $ 118,178      $ (91,261
                    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

25


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Credit Default Swaps on Credit Indices - Buy Protection (1) 

 

Index/Tranches

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Pay Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)
(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value (5)
 

Markit ITRX EUR

   BNP      5.00         12/20/2018       EUR      1,400       $ (264,490   $ (70,403   $ (334,893

Markit ITRX EUR

   DUB      5.00         12/20/2018       EUR      729         (55,995     (59,484     (115,479

Markit ITRX EUR

   DUB      5.00         12/20/2018       EUR      1,095         (101,860     (71,399     (173,259

MARKIT ABX

   GST      0.11         5/25/2046       USD      1,272         316,213        (53,283     262,930   

MARKIT ABX

   FBF      0.11         5/25/2046       USD      636         186,859        (55,395     131,464   

Markit CMBX

   BRC      1.47         12/13/2049       USD      400         119,574        (46,138     73,436   

Markit CMBX

   DUB      3.00         5/11/2063       USD      375         34,077        (37,253     (3,176
                 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                  $ 234,378      $ (393,355   $ (158,977
                 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
Credit Default Swaps on Credit Indices - Sell Protection (2)           

Index/Tranches

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Pay Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)
(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value (5)
 

Markit CDX IG

   FOB      1.00         6/20/2019       USD      3,050       $ 46,298      $ 14,626      $ 60,924   
                 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                  $ 46,298      $ 14,626      $ 60,924   
                 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

(1) If the Fund is a buyer of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) receive from the seller of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and deliver the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) receive a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index.
(2) If the Fund is a seller of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) pay to the buyer of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and take delivery of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) pay a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index.
(3) Implied credit spreads, represented in absolute terms, utilized in determining the fair value of credit default swaps agreements on corporate issues and sovereign issues of an emerging country as of period end serve as an indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk and represent the likelihood or risk of default for the credit derivative. The implied credit spread of a particular referenced entity reflects the cost of buying/selling protection and may include upfront payments required to be made to enter into the agreement. Wider credit spreads represent a deterioration of the referenced entity’s credit soundness and a greater likelihood or risk of default or other credit event occurring as defined under the terms of the agreement.
(4) The maximum potential amount the Fund could be required to pay as a seller of credit protection or receive as a buyer of credit protection if a credit event occurs as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement.
(5) The quoted market prices and resulting values for credit default swaps on asset-backed securities and credit indices serve as an indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk and represent the likelihood of an expected liability (or profit) for the credit derivative should the notional amount of the swap agreement be closed/ sold as of the period end. Increasing fair values, in absolute terms when compared to the notional amount of the swap, represent a deterioration of the referenced entity’s credit soundness and greater likelihood or risk of default or other credit event occurring as defined under the terms of the agreement.

Interest Rate Swaps

 

Pay/

Receive

Floating Rate

  

Floating Rate Index

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate

(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)
(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value
 

Receive

   3- Month NZD - BBR    DUB      4.5450         3/19/2016       NZD      3,017       $ —         $ 10,219      $ 10,219   

Receive

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      4.5450         3/19/2016       NZD      3,017         —           10,219        10,219   

Receive

   3-Month AUD-BBSW    UAG      3.0000         6/17/2016       AUD      3,894         —           7,505        7,505   

Receive

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      4.5375         6/22/2016       NZD      2,217         —           5,430        5,430   

Receive

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      4.4250         6/22/2016       NZD      5,169         —           8,016        8,016   

Receive

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      4.2400         9/1/2016       NZD      3,748         —           (1,491     (1,491

Receive

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    DUB      7.5200         11/12/2016       ZAR      4,196         —           5,624        5,624   

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR    FBF      1.9100         1/24/2017       SEK      2,390         —           8,744        8,744   

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR    FBF      1.9100         1/26/2017       SEK      2,380         —           8,708        8,708   

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR    UAG      1.0000         3/21/2017       EUR      475         —           (6,581     (6,581

 

See accompanying notes

 

26


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/

Receive

Floating Rate

 

Floating Rate

Index

   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate

(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount (4)

(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value
 

Pay

  6-Month EUR-LIBOR    BNP      1.0000         3/21/2017       EUR      2,351       $ —         $ (32,606   $ (32,606

Pay

  6-Month EUR-LIBOR    DUB      1.0000         3/25/2017       EUR      764         —           (10,902     (10,902

Receive

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      4.7000         4/13/2017       NZD      2,060         —           14,249        14,249   

Receive

  3-Month SEK-LIBOR    BRC      2.9300         9/16/2017       SEK      15,949         —           96,119        96,119   

Pay

  3-Month KRW-CD    BRC      1.0000         10/17/2017       KRW      1,095,269         —           (13,075     (13,075

Pay

  3-Month KRW-CD    UAG      1.0000         10/19/2017       KRW      1,042,394         —           (11,496     (11,496

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    BRC      5.8300         11/1/2017       MXN      7,632         —           9,260        9,260   

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    HUB      5.9400         11/1/2017       MXN      5,441         —           7,434        7,434   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    DUB      7.7623         11/2/2017       ZAR      10,944         —           9,030        9,030   

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    BRC      5.9000         11/6/2017       MXN      7,661         —           9,917        9,917   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    HUB      8.0550         11/9/2017       ZAR      4,685         —           5,987        5,987   

Pay

  6-Month AUD-BBSW    DUB      1.0000         12/16/2017       AUD      786         —           (16,732     (16,732

Pay

  6-Month AUD-BBSW    CBK      1.0000         12/16/2017       AUD      796         —           (17,167     (17,167

Receive

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      4.8100         12/17/2017       NZD      778         —           9,499        9,499   

Receive

  3-Month NZD-BBR    CBK      4.8050         12/17/2017       NZD      900         —           10,886        10,886   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      8.1867         1/22/2018       ZAR      7,300         —           9,712        9,712   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      8.5950         1/29/2018       ZAR      5,241         —           10,296        10,296   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    JPM      8.5650         2/19/2018       ZAR      10,079         —           18,885        18,885   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    JPM      8.7200         2/20/2018       ZAR      10,338         —           21,794        21,794   

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         3/19/2018       NZD      1,067         —           (10,455     (10,455

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         3/19/2018       NZD      1,067         —           (78,554     (78,554

Pay

  6-Month EUR-LIBOR    UAG      1.0000         3/21/2018       EUR      712         —           (12,951     (12,951

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         3/24/2018       NZD      1,193         —           (8,743     (8,743

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         3/29/2018       NZD      1,206         —           9,594        9,594   

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    BNP      1.0000         3/29/2018       NZD      1,206         —           9,505        9,505   

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         6/9/2018       NZD      1,160         —           (2,808     (2,808

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    BNP      1.0000         6/13/2018       NZD      1,195         —           3,571        3,571   

Receive

  3-Month CAD-LIBOR    GLM      2.2050         6/13/2018       CAD      1,976         —           7,404        7,404   

Receive

  3-Month CAD-LIBOR    FBF      2.1913         6/13/2018       CAD      1,991         —           6,976        6,976   

Receive

  3-Month CAD-LIBOR    DUB      2.2075         6/13/2018       CAD      1,837         —           6,963        6,963   

Pay

  3-Month SEK-LIBOR    BRC      1.0000         6/16/2018       SEK      40,658         —           (61,993     (61,993

Pay

  3-Month AUD-BBSW    UAG      1.0000         6/17/2018       AUD      3,965         —           9,706        9,706   

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         6/22/2018       NZD      890         —           (6,626     (6,626

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         6/22/2018       NZD      2,070         —           (10,757     (10,757

Receive

  USA-CPI-U    BRC      2.3200         8/7/2018       USD      677         —           1,371        1,371   

Receive

  USA-CPI-U    BRC      2.3200         8/7/2018       USD      677         —           1,371        1,371   

Receive

  USA-CPI-U    JPM      2.3150         8/21/2018       USD      666         —           5,653        5,653   

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         9/1/2018       NZD      1,501         —           376        376   

Receive

  USA-CPI-U    BRC      2.7150         3/21/2019       USD      287         —           7,406        7,406   

Pay

  6-Month EUR-LIBOR    GST      1.0000         5/26/2019       EUR      762         —           (12,684     (12,684

Pay

  6-Month EUR-LIBOR    GST      1.0000         5/26/2019       EUR      381         —           (6,346     (6,346

Pay

  3-Month SEK-LIBOR    BRC      1.0000         9/16/2020       SEK      6,727         —           (93,678     (93,678

Receive

  6-Month AUD-BBSW    DUB      5.2900         12/16/2020       AUD      917         —           32,483        32,483   

Receive

  6-Month AUD-BBSW    CBK      5.2825         12/16/2020       AUD      919         —           32,389        32,389   

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    CBK      1.0000         12/17/2020       NZD      1,047         —           (25,026     (25,026

Pay

  3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         12/17/2020       NZD      924         —           (22,086     (22,086

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      7.3650         3/31/2021       ZAR      474         —           (1,193     (1,193

Pay

  USA-CPI-U    BRC      1.0000         8/7/2021       USD      741         —           (2,831     (2,831

Pay

  USA-CPI-U    BRC      1.0000         8/7/2021       USD      741         —           (2,559     (2,559

Pay

  USA-CPI-U    JPM      1.0000         8/21/2021       USD      722         —           (17,949     (17,949

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      9.3100         2/4/2022       ZAR      638         —           2,314        2,314   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      9.2550         2/4/2022       ZAR      638         —           2,200        2,200   

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      7.5850         2/17/2022       MXN      3,759         —           11,220        11,220   

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      7.5500         2/18/2022       MXN      765         —           2,195        2,195   

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      7.5675         2/21/2022       MXN      1,581         —           4,615        4,615   

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    MYC      7.4650         2/24/2022       MXN      1,379         —           3,556        3,556   

Pay

  6-Month EUR-LIBOR    DUB      1.0000         2/11/2023       EUR      232         —           (21,476     (21,476

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    BRC      6.9000         5/18/2023       MXN      2,953         —           (1,330     (1,330

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    GLM      7.0700         5/19/2023       MXN      3,488         —           170        170   

Receive

  1-Month MXN-TIIE    BRC      7.0400         5/19/2023       MXN      3,188         —           (127     (127

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      8.5600         5/29/2023       ZAR      2,847         —           (101     (101

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      8.5900         5/30/2023       ZAR      3,324         —           167        167   

Receive

  3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      9.1100         6/7/2023       ZAR      3,422         —           5,300        5,300   

 

See accompanying notes

 

27


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/

Receive

Floating Rate

   Floating Rate
Index
   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value
 

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    JPM      6.1050         8/14/2023       MXN      1,461       $ —         $ 1,994      $ 1,994   

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    BRC      6.1300         8/15/2023       MXN      1,518         —           2,253        2,253   

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR    BRC      1.0000         9/19/2023       NOK      3,190         —           (27,853     (27,853

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR    GLM      1.0000         9/20/2023       NOK      2,744         —           (23,568     (23,568

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR    JPM      3.1100         9/20/2023       SEK      3,310         —           20,740        20,740   

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    DUB      3.8250         10/23/2023       CAD      921         —           34,344        34,344   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         10/25/2023       NZD      1,195         2,067         27,068        29,135   

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR    BRC      1.0000         11/11/2023       NOK      2,743         —           (22,108     (22,108

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR    BRC      1.0000         11/13/2023       NOK      8,427         —           (76,142     (76,142

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR    BRC      1.0000         11/19/2023       NOK      5,822         —           (43,873     (43,873

Receive

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      9.4000         11/19/2023       ZAR      9,805         —           19,685        19,685   

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR    FBF      3.1015         11/19/2023       SEK      2,835         —           16,945        16,945   

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR    BNP      3.1150         11/19/2023       SEK      2,873         —           17,428        17,428   

Receive

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      9.4300         11/20/2023       ZAR      3,421         —           7,146        7,146   

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      8.7470         11/22/2023       MXN      5,103         —           23,162        23,162   

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      8.7531         11/23/2023       MXN      7,355         —           33,499        33,499   

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      8.4600         11/28/2023       MXN      4,707         —           17,437        17,437   

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      8.5980         11/29/2023       MXN      596         —           2,442        2,442   

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      8.6000         12/1/2023       MXN      421         —           1,725        1,725   

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    GLM      4.0695         1/10/2024       CAD      477         —           21,461        21,461   

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    GST      3.8450         4/2/2024       CAD      768         —           26,057        26,057   

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    DEU      3.8300         4/3/2024       CAD      430         —           14,307        14,307   

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    DEU      3.8300         4/3/2024       CAD      430         —           14,307        14,307   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    BNP      1.0000         4/4/2024       NZD      971         —           (23,716     (23,716

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DEU      1.0000         4/8/2024       NZD      623         —           (14,707     (14,707

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DEU      1.0000         4/8/2024       NZD      623         —           (14,707     (14,707

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    DEU      3.7050         4/29/2024       CAD      936         —           (24,896     (24,896

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    GST      3.7100         4/29/2024       CAD      459         —           12,118        12,118   

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    HUB      3.6775         4/30/2024       CAD      391         —           10,430        10,430   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         5/1/2024       NZD      1,155         —           21,485        21,485   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    GST      1.0000         5/1/2024       NZD      580         —           11,007        11,007   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    BNP      1.0000         5/2/2024       NZD      575         —           (10,872     (10,872

Receive

   3-Month CAD-LIBOR    GST      3.4840         5/16/2024       CAD      448         —           7,716        7,716   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    JPM      1.0000         5/20/2024       NZD      572         —           (5,851     (5,851

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR    BRC      1.0000         6/10/2024       NOK      4,802         —           (18,744     (18,744

Pay

   6-Month NOK-NIBOR    JPM      1.0000         6/10/2024       NOK      5,008         —           (50,445     (50,445

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR    GLM      3.0225         6/10/2024       SEK      5,376         —           25,576        25,576   

Receive

   3-Month SEK-LIBOR    FBF      3.0362         6/10/2024       SEK      5,276         —           25,569        25,569   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    DUB      1.0000         4/13/2025       NZD      562         —           (22,612     (22,612

Receive

   3-Month USD-LIBOR    GLM      4.5700         11/5/2025       USD      777         —           27,312        27,312   

Pay

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    JPM      1.0000         2/19/2026       ZAR      3,138         —           (15,826     (15,826

Pay

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    JPM      1.0000         2/20/2026       ZAR      3,175         —           (18,456     (18,456

Receive

   1-Month MXN-TIIE    DUB      9.8100         9/20/2028       MXN      1,095         —           4,785        4,785   

Receive

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      10.6500         11/25/2028       ZAR      9,624         —           20,255        20,255   

Receive

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      10.8500         1/23/2029       ZAR      7,799         —           18,563        18,563   

Receive

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    DUB      10.9100         1/24/2029       ZAR      2,652         —           (39,472     (39,472

Receive

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    HUB      9.9000         3/11/2029       ZAR      8,386         —           5,464        5,464   

Receive

   3-Month NZD-BBR    FBF      2.6060         11/1/2032       JPY      160,835         —           13,786        13,786   

Pay

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    BRC      1.0000         11/14/2033       ZAR      2,663         —           (7,373     (7,373

Pay

   3-Month ZAR-JIBAR    DUB      1.0000         11/15/2033       ZAR      1,277         —           (3,535     (3,535

Receive

   6-Month CHF-LIBOR    FBF      2.3600         5/27/2034       CHF      188         —           8,166        8,166   

Receive

   6-Month CHF-LIBOR    BRC      2.3300         6/2/2034       CHF      375         —           15,193        15,193   

Receive

   6-Month CHF-LIBOR    UAG      2.3275         6/3/2034       CHF      375         —           15,115        15,115   

Receive

   6-Month CHF-LIBOR    UAG      2.3400         6/3/2034       CHF      377         —           15,639        15,639   

Receive

   6-Month CHF-LIBOR    FBF      2.3525         7/3/2034       CHF      191         —           8,140        8,140   

Pay

   3-Month NZD-BBR    FBF      1.0000         11/1/2037       JPY      179,314         —           (934     (934

 

See accompanying notes

 

28


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Pay/

Receive

Floating Rate

   Floating Rate
Index
   Counter-
Party
   Fixed
Rate

(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Curr    Notional
Amount(4)

(000s)
     Premiums
Paid
(Received)
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
    Fair
Value
 

Pay

   6-Month JPY-LIBOR    BRC      0.1786         7/4/2043       JPY      8,910       $ —         $ (1,002   $ (1,002

Pay

   6-Month EUR-LIBOR    BRC      1.0000         1/22/2044       GBP      161         —           (32,793     (32,793

Receive

   6-Month CHF-LIBOR    FBF      2.0400         8/7/2044       CHF      163         —           5,799        5,799   
                    

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 
                     $ 2,067       $ 28,348      $ 30,415   
                    

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Return Swap

 

Pay/

Receive Total

Returns

   Index    Number of
Shares of
Units
    Rate Paid/
Received
by the
Fund (%)
     Maturity
Date
     Counterparty    Payments
Received

(000s)
    Unrealized Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Receive

   3-Month Euribor      250,000        1.0000         9/22/2014       JPM    $ 336,688      $ (8,200

Pay

   iBoxx EUR Liquid HY      (1,475     1.0000         9/22/2014       JPM      (336,688     8,200   
                

 

 

   

 

 

 
                 $ 0      $ 0   
                

 

 

   

 

 

 

Purchased options outstanding on August 31, 2014:

Interest Rate Swaptions

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Floating Rate
Index
   Pay /
Receive
Floating
Rate
     Exercise
Rate

(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
     Fair
Value
     Premiums
Paid
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Put - OTC
30-Year IRS

   BOA    3-Month USD-LIBOR      Receive         4.2100         4/25/2016         1,800       $ 33,934       $ 72,000       $ (38,066

Put - OTC
30-Year IRS

   CBK    3-Month USD-LIBOR      Receive         5.2000         7/29/2016         1,200         6,422         51,868         (45,446
                    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
                     $ 40,356       $ 123,868       $ (83,512
                    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

European Interest Rate Swaptions

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Floating Rate
Index
   Pay /
Receive
Floating
Rate
   Exercise
Rate (%)
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
     Fair Value      Premiums
Paid
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call- IRS ZAR

   GLM    3M ZAR-JIBAR    Receive      5.6000         9/12/2014         18,518       $ —         $ 4,337       $ (4,337

Put- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      1.7800         9/23/2014         2,826         7,367         9,183         (1,816

Call- IRS ZAR

   GLM    3M ZAR-JIBAR    Receive      5.6000         9/25/2014         18,518         —           4,337         (4,337

Call- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      3.3900         9/29/2014         1,386         3,291         3,222         69   

Call- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      1.9200         9/30/2014         1,037         1         23,154         (23,153

Put- IRS KRW

   DEU    3M KRW-KSDA    Pay      3.0500         10/13/2014         1,838,154         —           5,018         (5,018

Call- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.0500         10/24/2014         3,567         43         44,365         (44,322

Call- IRS EUR

   BRC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.0500         10/24/2014         3,567         42         46,829         (46,787

Call- IRS EUR

   JPM    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      1.8400         10/28/2014         685         51         15,487         (15,436

Call- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Pay      0.8600         11/7/2014         65,936         305         5,964         (5,659

Put- IRS GBP

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      2.1000         11/12/2014         1,363         19,509         8,475         11,034   

Put- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      1.7500         11/20/2014         2,733         7,941         8,199         (258

Call- IRS EUR

   MSC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.8800         12/3/2014         1,712         587         10,464         (9,877

Call- IRS EUR

   CBK    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.8800         12/3/2014         1,838         630         11,234         (10,604

Call- IRS EUR

   CBK    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.8800         12/3/2014         1,864         639         6,202         (5,563

Call- IRS EUR

   MSC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.8800         12/3/2014         1,737         595         5,743         (5,148

Put- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Pay      0.8200         12/10/2014         109,500         230         9,541         (9,311

Call- IRS EUR

   GLM    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      1.7000         12/10/2014         1,037         1,066         16,680         (15,614

Call- IRS EUR

   BNP    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.5800         12/10/2014         691         376         7,114         (6,738

Call- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      2.2800         12/19/2014         4,167         9,788         23,598         (13,810

Call- IRS EUR

   FBF    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.5500         12/29/2014         707         650         7,031         (6,381

Call- IRS EUR

   GLM    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Receive      2.5000         1/12/2015         348         475         3,261         (2,786

Call- IRS EUR

   BRC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Receive      2.5000         1/12/2015         695         951         5,761         (4,810

Call- IRS GBP

   BRC    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      3.5000         2/9/2015         692         3,859         6,027         (2,168

Put- IRS USD

   GST    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      2.3000         3/30/2015         882         14,894         11,003         3,891   

 

See accompanying notes

 

29


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Floating Rate
Index
   Pay /
Receive
Floating
Rate
   Exercise
Rate (%)
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
     Fair Value      Premiums
Paid
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.0800         4/1/2015         691       $ 1,052       $ 21,924       $ (20,872

Call- IRS EUR

   JPM    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.0800         4/2/2015         696         1,077         22,982         (21,905

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      1.4000         5/18/2015         6,752         25,029         29,034         (4,005

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      1.4500         6/3/2015         5,112         19,734         22,356         (2,622

Call- IRS GBP

   DUB    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      2.1000         6/15/2015         1,752         6,612         19,017         (12,405

Call- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive      1.4800         7/6/2015         2,187         8,649         21,644         (12,995

Put- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      1.2500         8/14/2015         6,048         17,901         21,504         (3,603

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      1.2500         8/17/2015         3,075         9,154         10,453         (1,299

Call- IRS EUR

   BRC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.2500         8/20/2015         684         7,332         9,990         (2,658

Call- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      2.4500         12/21/2015         3,190         11,766         14,532         (2,766

Put- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      1.6000         12/21/2015         10,634         52,588         50,157         2,431   

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.2600         1/19/2016         423         5,468         28,210         (22,742

Put- IRS GBP

   FBF    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      2.4300         2/18/2016         3,662         30,245         66,642         (36,397

Put- IRS GBP

   FBF    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      2.3700         2/19/2016         3,662         32,633         65,480         (32,847

Call- IRS EUR

   HUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.3000         4/15/2016         1,917         19,339         88,114         (68,775

Call- IRS GBP

   BRC    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive      1.3500         4/18/2016         1,094         3,577         5,313         (1,736

Call- IRS GBP

   GLM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive      1.5600         5/16/2016         950         4,863         12,982         (8,119

Put- IRS GBP

   JPM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive      2.0000         5/31/2016         3,408         35,670         30,864         4,806   

Put- IRS GBP

   MSC    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive      2.0000         6/2/2016         3,408         35,667         30,837         4,830   

Call- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      2.0000         6/20/2016         10,368         42,761         51,840         (9,079

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      2.1100         6/20/2016         3,473         41,944         21,274         20,670   

Call- IRS GBP

   MSC    3M ZAR-JIBAR    Pay      3.5500         6/24/2016         707         15,525         31,774         (16,249

Put- IRS GBP

   GLM    3M ZAR-JIBAR    Receive      2.5000         6/27/2016         3,532         68,351         46,184         22,167   

Put- IRS GBP

   JPM    3M ZAR-JIBAR    Receive      2.5000         7/11/2016         3,600         69,304         48,049         21,255   

Put- IRS GBP

   GLM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.6300         11/21/2016         2,639         68,789         199,943         (131,154

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      4.2500         1/23/2017         1,503         20,990         65,717         (44,727

Put- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.3000         3/27/2017         691         21,758         45,606         (23,848

Call- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.3000         3/27/2017         346         10,879         21,767         (10,888

Call- IRS GBP

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      3.6500         6/16/2017         701         23,193         41,198         (18,005

Call- IRS GBP

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      3.6500         6/16/2017         1,051         34,773         62,303         (27,530

Call- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive      0.8000         4/10/2018         490,429         44,555         35,881         8,674   

Call- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive      0.8000         4/11/2018         247,525         22,486         18,400         4,086   

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.4500         5/1/2018         1,370         32,809         52,897         (20,088

Call- IRS USD

   BNP    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.4000         5/8/2018         675         16,886         25,542         (8,656

Call- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive      0.7500         5/29/2018         190,000         15,299         5,940         9,359   

Put- IRS USD

   DUB    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.6000         2/12/2019         1,098         46,145         98,820         (52,675

Put- IRS JPY

   BRC    6M JPY-LIBOR    Pay      1.7000         2/13/2019         122,211         7,676         33,390         (25,714

Put- IRS JPY

   BRC    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive      1.7000         2/13/2019         124,690         18,201         34,274         (16,073

Put- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.6000         3/5/2019         1,440         61,354         118,080         (56,726

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.1000         5/9/2019         1,351         52,862         74,953         (22,091

Call- IRS USD

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.1000         5/13/2019         1,013         39,724         56,728         (17,004

Call- IRS GBP

   DUB    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      3.6000         8/7/2019         519         29,986         36,941         (6,955

Call-INT USD*

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      1.6300         8/15/2019         21,500         135,049         137,600         (2,551

Put- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      3.0000         12/16/2020         452         39,965         79,494         (39,529

Put- IRS USD

   DUB    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      5.5900         1/7/2021         742         20,425         38,558         (18,133

Put- IRS EUR

   FBF    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      3.1200         1/21/2021         752         61,621         121,259         (59,638

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.5000         6/6/2023         583         32,340         44,599         (12,259

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.5000         6/7/2023         399         22,135         30,524         (8,389

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.6000         7/3/2023         419         21,943         27,621         (5,678

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.5000         9/25/2023         701         39,042         59,613         (20,571

Put- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      3.0000         12/18/2023         452         49,150         76,436         (27,286

Put- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      3.0000         12/18/2023         452         49,151         75,492         (26,341

Call- IRS USD

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.1900         5/7/2024         2,809         82,842         99,570         (16,728

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.8000         9/26/2028         2,103         171,456         208,614         (37,158

Put- IRS GBP

   BRC    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.8200         9/26/2028         2,803         225,926         279,464         (53,538

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.8000         9/26/2028         701         57,165         66,902         (9,737

Put - IRS USD

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.7500         5/30/2034         1,023         71,247         70,862         385   
                    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
                     $ 2,287,353       $ 3,518,373       $ (1,231,020
                    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

30


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Options on Exchange-Traded Futures Contracts

 

Description

   Curr    Exercise
Price
     Expiration
Date
     Number of
Contracts
     Cost      Fair
Value
     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call 10-year - U.S. Treasury Future Option

   USD    $ 126.0000         9/26/2014         18       $ 10,125       $ 10,125       $ —     

Call 10-year - U.S. Treasury Future Option

   USD      128.0000         9/26/2014         34         3,188         3,188         —     

Put - Euro Bund Future Option

   EUR      148.5000         9/26/2014         48         30,457         20,182         (10,275

Put - Euro Bund Future Option

   EUR      149.0000         11/21/2014         28         38,262         36,423         (1,839

Call - Eurodollar Future Option

   USD      99.7500         12/15/2014         135         12,044         6,750         (5,294

Put - 3-Month Euribor Interest Rate Future Option

   EUR      98.8750         6/15/2015         60         49,273         —           (49,273

Put - Eurodollar Future Option

   USD      99.2500         9/14/2015         40         33,000         20,500         (12,500

Put - 3-Month Euribor Interest Rate Future Option

   EUR      99.6250         3/14/2016         160         84,093         30,221         (53,872
              

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
               $ 260,442       $ 127,389       $ (133,053
              

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

OTC European Foreign Currency Options

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Exercise
Price
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount
(000s)
     Cost      Fair Value      Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call - OTC USD versus JPY

   BRC      101.7500         9/1/2014         1,020       $ 12,209       $ 23,071       $ 10,862   

Put - OTC USD versus JPY

   BRC      101.7500         9/1/2014         1,020         13,107         —           (13,107

Call - OTC EUR versus NOK

   UAG      8.6000         9/2/2014         1,718         2,313         —           (2,313

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   BRC      8.2700         9/2/2014         1,718         39,745         34,095         (5,650

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   UAG      8.0800         9/2/2014         1,718         21,667         413         (21,254

Put - OTC EUR versus USD***

   DUB      1.3035         9/3/2014         20         3,635         5,410         1,775   

Call - OTC EUR versus GBP

   MSC      0.7970         9/4/2014         879         6,273         1,358         (4,915

Call - OTC GBP versus JPY

   FBF      174.6000         9/4/2014         703         11,749         128         (11,621

Call - OTC NZD versus USD

   BRC      0.8425         9/4/2014         864         5,011         540         (4,471

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   MSC      0.7970         9/4/2014         879         6,273         7,260         987   

Put - OTC GBP versus JPY

   FBF      174.6000         9/4/2014         703         11,601         14,729         3,128   

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   BRC      0.8425         9/4/2014         864         6,180         6,754         574   

Put - OTC EUR versus CZK

   JPM      27.4500         9/5/2014         767         16,853         126         (16,727

Put - OTC EUR versus CZK

   UAG      27.4500         9/5/2014         767         16,932         126         (16,806

Call - OTC NZD versus USD

   DUB      0.8900         9/12/2014         463         671         —           (671

Call - OTC NZD versus USD

   UAG      0.8593         9/12/2014         1,051         13,262         85         (13,177

Call - OTC NZD versus USD

   UAG      0.8900         9/12/2014         920         620         —           (620

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   DUB      0.8100         9/12/2014         346         1,673         77         (1,596

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   BRC      0.8500         9/12/2014         1,037         21,818         16,412         (5,406

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   UAG      0.8593         9/12/2014         1,051         12,628         25,987         13,359   

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   UAG      0.8100         9/12/2014         692         3,932         154         (3,778

Put - OTC AUD versus CAD***

   HUB      0.9801         9/23/2014         39         5,407         906         (4,501

Call - OTC EUR versus GBP

   JPM      0.8550         9/25/2014         2,880         6,070         4         (6,066

Call - OTC EUR versus USD

   DUB      1.4300         9/25/2014         1,440         12,777         —           (12,777

Call - OTC EUR versus USD

   BRC      1.4700         9/25/2014         2,160         7,291         —           (7,291

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   JPM      0.8050         9/25/2014         2,880         38,378         61,258         22,880   

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   BRC      0.8300         9/25/2014         2,880         56,940         175,832         118,892   

Put - OTC NZD versus JPY**

   GLM      86.0000         10/9/2014         48         6,038         12,037         5,999   

Call - OTC GBP versus USD

   BRC      1.6730         10/16/2014         672         9,362         3,599         (5,763

Call - OTC GBP versus USD

   DUB      1.6720         10/16/2014         672         9,362         3,793         (5,569

Put - OTC GBP versus USD

   BRC      1.6730         10/16/2014         672         10,103         15,117         5,014   

Put - OTC GBP versus USD

   DUB      1.6720         10/16/2014         672         9,924         14,638         4,714   

Call - EUR versus USD / USD versus JPY***

   GLM      0.0000         10/21/2014         40         6,638         20,283         13,645   

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP**

   HUB      0.8150         10/23/2014         60         7,761         1,444         (6,317

Call - OTC EUR versus USD

   BRC      1.3875         10/27/2014         1,027         22,454         136         (22,318

Put - OTC EUR versus MXN

   DUB      17.4000         10/27/2014         25         4,827         22,230         17,403   

Put - OTC EUR versus USD**

   BRC      1.3875         10/27/2014         1,027         27,172         75,728         48,556   

Call - OTC AUD versus NZD***

   DUB      1.1190         10/29/2014         38         3,726         16,911         13,185   

 

See accompanying notes

 

31


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Exercise
Price
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
     Cost      Fair Value      Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call - USD versus JPY / AUD versus USD***

   FBF      0.0100         10/30/2014         77       $ 6,289       $ 6,289       $ —     

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP***

   BRC      0.7902         10/30/2014         38         7,666         20,495         12,829   

Put - OTC USD versus MXN***

   DUB      12.9500         10/31/2014         25         2,413         8,317         5,904   

Call - OTC ECAL USD**

   BRC      115.5000         11/6/2014         8,000         313         —           (313

Call - OTC ECAL USD

   BRC      116.0000         11/6/2014         8,000         313         —           (313

Put - OTC EUR versus PLN

   UAG      4.1400         11/6/2014         38         9,483         7,589         (1,894

Call - OTC USD versus JPY**

   DUB      109.7000         11/10/2014         41         3,929         40,431         36,502   

Call - OTC EUR versus PLN****

   JPM      4.2325         11/13/2014         32         5,204         158         (5,046

Call - OTC EUR versus PLN****

   GLM      4.2344         11/13/2014         32         5,356         127         (5,229

Call - OTC NZD versus USD****

   GLM      0.0100         11/20/2014         58         6,322         8,149         1,827   

Call - OTC USD versus MXN***

   UAG      13.2500         11/20/2014         582         4,710         705         (4,005

Call - OTC NZD versus USD versus CAD***

   DUB      0.0100         11/21/2014         60         10,204         17,985         7,781   

Put - OTC USD versus JPY

   BRC      98.0000         11/24/2014         2,826         14,071         2,879         (11,192

Call - OTC NZD versus MXN

   JPM      0.0100         11/26/2014         40         5,431         7,362         1,931   

Call - OTC USD versus JPY

   JPM      105.4000         11/26/2014         2,812         12,795         20,252         7,457   

Call - OTC USD versus NZD versus USD

   HUB      0.0100         11/26/2014         16         2,573         5,072         2,499   

Put - OTC USD versus JPY***

   DUB      97.9000         11/26/2014         2,109         12,633         2,179         (10,454

Put - OTC USD versus MXN***

   JPM      12.8500         11/26/2014         1,055         8,937         4,255         (4,682

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP****

   HUB      0.7790         11/28/2014         39         6,361         12,070         5,709   

Put - OTC BRL versus JPY***

   GLM      1.0000         12/2/2014         20         2,080         415         (1,665

Call - OTC USD versus JPY****

   BNP      105.4000         12/11/2014         31         4,619         865         (3,754

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP****

   UAG      0.7900         12/11/2014         39         8,049         2,078         (5,971

Put - OTC EUR versus CZK

   UAG      27.4500         12/12/2014         767         19,450         3,251         (16,199

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP****

   MSC      0.7890         12/12/2014         40         8,510         2,466         (6,044

Put - OTC EUR versus CZK

   UAG      27.4500         12/15/2014         686         16,465         2,988         (13,477

Call - OTC EUR versus NOK***

   DUB      8.4853         12/19/2014         2,894         74,847         13,607         (61,240

Put - OTC AUD versus USD

   HUB      0.9235         12/19/2014         79         8,672         28,641         19,969   

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   DUB      7.9300         12/19/2014         2,894         3,919         12,923         9,004   

Put - OTC EUR versus TRY***

   UAG      2.7550         12/19/2014         39         6,645         7,129         484   

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   GLM      8.1800         12/23/2014         2,894         41,614         51,425         9,811   

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK**

   GLM      8.3000         1/5/2015         83         16,759         21,320         4,561   

Put - OTC USD versus MXN**

   BRC      12.5010         1/9/2015         62         9,133         4,679         (4,454

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP**

   UAG      0.7870         1/12/2015         39         7,507         430         (7,077

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   DUB      8.3180         1/12/2015         93         16,798         21,838         5,040   

Call - USD versus MXN / USD versus KRW***

   UAG      0.0100         1/14/2015         43         6,248         337         (5,911

Put - OTC USD versus MXN

   BRC      12.4750         1/19/2015         60         8,925         96         (8,829

Put - OTC USD versus MXN**

   FBF      12.9010         2/5/2015         25         3,434         7,402         3,968   

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP***

   HUB      0.7890         2/9/2015         40         7,977         310         (7,667

Call - OTC NOK versus SEK

   UAG      1.0700         3/20/2015         7,238         20,442         56,343         35,901   

Call - OTC NOK versus SEK

   UAG      1.0800         3/23/2015         7,279         16,577         48,128         31,551   

Put - OTC EUR versus SEK**

   DUB      9.2385         4/1/2015         47         9,115         4,541         (4,574

Call - OTC NZD versus CAD

   GLM      0.9210         4/9/2015         1,488         45,818         12,553         (33,265

Call - OTC NZD versus CAD

   GLM      0.9210         4/9/2015         1,488         41,096         48,934         7,838   

Call - OTC EUR versus USD

   BRC      1.4945         4/22/2015         3,228         22,044         1,289         (20,755

Call - OTC EUR versus TRY***

   UAG      2.7600         5/25/2015         39         5,476         8,130         2,654   

Put - OTC AUD versus USD

   BRC      0.9000         6/29/2015         1,435         31,433         30,355         (1,078

Put - OTC AUD versus USD

   GLM      0.9000         6/29/2015         1,435         30,920         30,355         (565

Put - OTC EUR versus USD

   DUB      1.4250         3/19/2019         900         98,945         96,443         (2,502

Put - OTC EUR versus USD

   GLM      1.4250         4/17/2019         714         71,887         76,452         4,565   
              

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
               $ 1,262,789       $ 1,320,678       $ 57,889   
              

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

32


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Written options outstanding on August 31, 2014:

Interest Rate Swaptions

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Floating Rate
Index
   Pay /
Receive

Floating
Rate
   Exercise
Rate
(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
    Fair
Value
    Premiums     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Put - OTC 10-Year IRS

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      2.920         11/20/2014         (4,500   $ (10,557   $ (20,250   $ 9,693   

Call - OTC 10-Year IRS

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      2.420         11/20/2014         (4,500     (23,823     (17,325     (6,498

Put - OTC 5-Year IRS

   BOA    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.000         4/25/2016         (7,200     (29,729     (72,402     42,673   

Put - OTC 5-Year IRS

   CBK    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      5.200         7/29/2016         4,600,000        (7,130     (57,480     50,350   
                   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                    $ (71,239   $ (167,457   $ 96,218   
                   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

European Style Interest Rate Swaptions

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Floating Rate
Index
   Pay /
Receive

Floating
Rate
   Exercise
Rate

(%)
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
    Fair Value     Premiums     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call- IRS MXN

   BRC    1M MXN-TIIE    Receive      6.100         9/12/2014         (1,912   $ (1,117   $ (1,850   $ 733   

Call- IRS ZAR

   GLM    3M ZAR-JIBAR    Receive      5.100         9/12/2014         (37,036     —          (3,731     3,731   

Put- IRS EUR

   FBF    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Receive      0.700         9/17/2014         (5,000     (2,147     (1,980     (167

Put- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      3.300         9/23/2014         (707     (33,126     (9,185     (23,941

Call- IRS ZAR

   GLM    3M ZAR-JIBAR    Receive      5.100         9/25/2014         (37,036     —          (3,731     3,731   

Call- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.600         9/30/2014         (9,331     (17     (23,149     23,132   

Call- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.350         10/24/2014         (3,567     (5     (14,788     14,783   

Call- IRS EUR

   BRC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      2.350         10/24/2014         (3,567     (6     (17,130     17,124   

Call- IRS EUR

   JPM    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.600         10/28/2014         (6,164     (140     (15,483     15,343   

Put- IRS GBP

   JPM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive      2.970         11/12/2014         (341     (27,099     (8,481     (18,618

Put- IRS GBP

   GLM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.030         11/19/2014         (2,639     (3,690     (116,013     112,323   

Put- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive      3.070         11/20/2014         (684     (14,992     (8,202     (6,790

Call- IRS EUR

   BNP    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      3.080         12/10/2014         (691     (53     (1,217     1,164   

Call- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      2.060         12/19/2014         (2,084     (10,382     (20,002     9,620   

Call- IRS GBP

   MSC    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.200         12/24/2014         (707     (1,036     (9,832     8,796   

Call- IRS EUR

   FBF    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      3.050         12/29/2014         (707     (121     (1,686     1,565   

Call- IRS EUR

   GLM    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Receive      3.000         1/12/2015         (348     (102     (851     749   

Call- IRS EUR

   BRC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Receive      3.000         1/12/2015         (695     (204     (1,298     1,094   

Put- IRS GBP

   BRC    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.500         1/23/2015         (751     (583     (20,864     20,281   

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.500         1/30/2015         (751     (680     (15,433     14,753   

Put- IRS GBP

   FBF    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      2.370         2/19/2015         (3,662     (32,633     (46,815     14,182   

Put- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Receive      2.300         3/30/2015         (1,667     (1,033     (10,145     9,112   

Call- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.750         4/1/2015         (4,666     (770     (21,929     21,159   

Call- IRS EUR

   JPM    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay      0.750         4/2/2015         (4,696     (786     (22,988     22,202   

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      3.200         5/11/2015         (1,351     (11,389     (30,791     19,402   

Call- IRS USD

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      3.200         5/12/2015         (1,013     (8,600     (23,603     15,003   

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      1.900         5/18/2015         (13,504     (20,075     (26,703     6,628   

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      1.950         6/3/2015         (10,224     (16,501     (20,857     4,356   

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.500         6/8/2015         (583     (2,175     (18,364     16,189   

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.500         6/8/2015         (399     (1,489     (12,768     11,279   

Call- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      2.580         6/15/2015         (3,504     (4,690     (19,018     14,328   

Call- IRS GBP

   JPM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.250         6/16/2015         (701     (6,798     (21,611     14,813   

Call- IRS GBP

   JPM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay      3.250         6/16/2015         (1,051     (10,191     (33,561     23,370   

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay      4.600         7/1/2015         (419     (1,400     (11,927     10,527   

 

See accompanying notes

 

33


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Floating Rate
Index
   Pay /
Receive

Floating
Rate
  Exercise
Rate

(%)
    Expiration
Date
    Notional
Amount
(000s)
    Fair Value     Premiums     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call-IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay     3.100        8/7/2015        (519   $ (9,137   $ (14,410   $ 5,273   

Put-IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive     2.630        8/14/2015        (1,344     (25,075     (21,504     (3,571

Put-IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive     2.590        8/17/2015        (683     (11,718     (10,450     (1,268

Call-IRS EUR

   BRC    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay     2.750        8/20/2015        (684     (3,163     (4,291     1,128   

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     5.050        8/24/2015        (2,020     (455     (16,659     16,204   

Call- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay     3.200        8/28/2015        (1,503     (23,697     (23,705     8   

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     4.500        9/25/2015        (701     (4,534     (31,943     27,409   

Put- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive     1.100        12/21/2015        (10,634     (16,687     (15,242     (1,445

Put- IRS USD

   DUB    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     5.270        1/7/2016        (742     (1,397     (16,313     14,916   

Put- IRS USD

   FBF    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     2.750        1/19/2016        (3,806     (10,958     (28,199     17,241   

Put- IRS GBP

   FBF    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay     2.430        2/18/2016        (3,662     (10,698     (47,995     37,297   

Call- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay     2.400        4/15/2016        (4,355     (44,203     (73,035     28,832   

Call- IRS GBP

   BRC    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive     1.000        4/18/2016        (1,094     (1,569     (2,373     804   

Put- IRS GBP

   JPM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive     2.930        5/31/2016        (757     (52,662     (30,866     (21,796

Put- IRS GBP

   MSC    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive     2.930        6/2/2016        (757     (52,351     (30,834     (21,517

Call- IRS USD

   MSC    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     2.790        6/20/2016        (20,736     (41,615     (51,840     10,225   

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive     2.850        6/20/2016        (771     (48,587     (21,277     (27,310

Call- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     4.390        3/27/2017        (2,696     (21,188     (45,616     24,428   

Call- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     4.420        3/27/2017        (1,348     (10,397     (21,775     11,378   

Put- IRS GBP

   GLM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive     2.500        6/26/2017        (3,532     (63,728     (42,735     (20,993

Put- IRS GBP

   JPM    6M GBP-LIBOR    Receive     2.500        7/10/2017        (3,600     (64,839     (43,737     (21,102

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay     4.000        9/26/2017        (2,803     (42,282     (103,173     60,891   

Put- IRS GBP

   DUB    6M GBP-LIBOR    Pay     4.000        9/26/2017        (701     (10,574     (26,125     15,551   

Call- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive     0.400        4/10/2018        (980,858     (29,063     (23,066     (5,997

Call- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive     0.400        4/11/2018        (495,050     (14,672     (11,985     (2,687

Call- IRS USD

   JPM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     4.310        5/1/2018        (5,890     (34,033     (52,903     18,870   

Call- IRS USD

   BNP    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     4.290        5/8/2018        (2,904     (17,140     (25,551     8,411   

Call- IRS JPY

   FBF    6M JPY-LIBOR    Receive     0.350        5/29/2018        (380,000     (8,787     (3,342     (5,445

Put- IRS USD

   DUB    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     5.050        2/12/2019        (4,152     (47,166     (98,857     51,691   

Put- IRS JPY

   BRC    6M JPY-LIBOR    Pay     5.000        2/13/2019        (244,422     (12,130     (33,300     21,170   

Put- IRS JPY

   BRC    6M JPY-LIBOR    Pay     5.000        2/13/2019        (249,379     (834     (34,029     33,195   

Put- IRS USD

   DEU    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     5.140        3/5/2019        (5,515     (60,475     (118,065     57,590   

Call- IRS USD

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Pay     4.020        5/7/2019        (1,013     (49,068     (74,287     25,219   

Call- INT FLR USD*

   GLM    3M USD-LIBOR    Receive     1.000        8/15/2019        (43,000     (131,856     (137,600     5,744   

Put- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay     3.760        12/16/2020        (1,905     (32,257     (79,522     47,265   

Put- IRS EUR

   FBF    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay     3.820        1/21/2021        (3,141     (52,809     (121,229     68,420   

Put- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay     4.180        12/18/2023        (1,957     (43,050     (76,467     33,417   

Put- IRS EUR

   DUB    6M EUR-EURIBOR    Pay     4.190        12/18/2023        (1,957     (42,883     (75,523     32,640   
                

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                 $ (1,361,767   $ (2,305,809   $ 944,042   
                

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

European Foreign Currency Options

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Exercise
Price
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
    Cost     Fair Value     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call - OTC EUR versus NOK

   BRC      8.600         9/2/2014         (1,718   $ (21,806   $ —        $ 21,806   

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   BRC      8.080         9/2/2014         (1,718     (19,196     (413     18,783   

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   UAG      8.270         9/2/2014         (1,718     (53,355     (34,095     19,260   

Call - OTC EUR versus GBP

   FBF      0.800         9/4/2014         (879     (9,773     (1,358     8,415   

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   FBF      0.800         9/4/2014         (879     (9,655     (7,260     2,395   

Put - OTC EUR versus CZK

   UAG      27.050         9/5/2014         (1,763     (15,710     (21     15,689   

Put - OTC EUR versus CZK

   JPM      27.050         9/5/2014         (1,717     (16,853     (20     16,833   

Call - OTC AUD versus USD

   GLM      0.930         9/10/2014         (4,065     (32,393     (22,973     9,420   

Call - OTC NZD versus USD

   BRC      0.890         9/12/2014         (1,383     (12,361     —          12,361   

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   BRC      0.810         9/12/2014         (1,037     (9,101     (231     8,870   

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   DUB      0.850         9/12/2014         (346     (6,206     (5,468     738   

Put - OTC NZD versus USD

   UAG      0.850         9/12/2014         (692     (15,820     (10,944     4,876   

 

See accompanying notes

 

34


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Exercise
Price
     Expiration
Date
     Notional
Amount

(000s)
    Cost     Fair Value     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Call - OTC EUR versus GBP

   BRC      0.860         9/25/2014         (2,880   $ (36,981   $ (4   $ 36,977   

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   JPM      0.830         9/25/2014         (2,880     (101,916     (175,832     (73,916

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   BRC      0.810         9/25/2014         (2,880     (20,197     (61,258     (41,061

Call - OTC EUR versus NOK

   BRC      8.470         10/1/2014         (1,143     (16,328     (580     15,748   

Call - OTC EUR versus GBP

   BRC      0.800         10/16/2014         (840     (9,250     (4,897     4,353   

Call - OTC EUR versus GBP

   DUB      0.800         10/16/2014         (840     (9,991     (5,446     4,545   

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   BRC      0.800         10/16/2014         (840     (9,755     (15,466     (5,711

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP

   DUB      0.800         10/16/2014         (840     (9,093     (14,345     (5,252

Put - OTC EUR versus GBP**

   BRC      0.820         10/23/2014         (24     (16,535     (22,582     (6,047

Put - OTC EUR versus MXN**

   DUB      17.400         10/27/2014         (25     (13,552     (22,230     (8,678

Call - OTC AUD versus NZD***

   JPM      1.120         10/29/2014         (38     (9,404     (17,317     (7,913

Put - OTC EUR versus PLN**

   DUB      4.140         11/6/2014         (38     (18,342     (7,589     10,753   

Call - OTC USD versus BRL

   BOA      2.440         11/21/2014         (1,875     (17,925     (10,802     7,123   

Call - OTC USD versus INR

   BOA      63.500         11/21/2014         (908     (6,048     (4,188     1,860   

Put - OTC USD versus JPY

   BRC      100.000         11/24/2014         (1,413     (13,438     (3,302     10,136   

Call - OTC USD versus JPY

   JPM      103.500         11/26/2014         (1,406     (12,689     (21,808     (9,119

Put - OTC USD versus AUD

   DUB      0.950         11/26/2014         (1,055     (7,746     (3,048     4,698   

Put - OTC USD versus JPY

   DUB      99.900         11/26/2014         (1,055     (11,631     (2,464     9,167   

Put - OTC EUR versus CZK

   UAG      27.120         12/12/2014         (1,916     (18,396     (2,541     15,855   

Call- OTC CZK versus EUR

   UAG      27.000         12/15/2014         (1,577     (15,642     (2,181     13,461   

Call - OTC EUR versus NOK

   GLM      8.490         12/19/2014         (2,894     (30,569     (13,607     16,962   

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   GLM      7.930         12/19/2014         (2,894     (11,045     (12,923     (1,878

Put - OTC EUR versus NOK

   DUB      8.180         12/19/2014         (2,894     (14,764     (51,425     (36,661

Call - OTC NOK versus SEK

   UAG      1.120         3/20/2015         (7,238     (8,535     (23,466     (14,931

Put - OTC NOK versus SEK

   UAG      1.010         3/20/2015         (7,238     (11,907     (745     11,162   

Call - OTC NOK versus SEK

   UAG      1.120         3/23/2015         (7,279     (7,484     (48,128     (40,644

Put - OTC NOK versus SEK

   UAG      0.990         3/23/2015         (7,279     (9,093     (553     8,540   

Call - OTC EUR versus USD

   BRC      1.450         4/22/2015         (1,614     (22,045     (1,733     20,312   

Call - OTC USD versus BRL

   GLM      2.650         5/29/2015         (2,464     (75,152     (41,479     33,673   

Put - OTC AUD versus NZD

   UAG      1.050         6/29/2015         (1,435     (12,162     (4,224     7,938   

Put - OTC AUD versus NZD

   HUB      1.050         6/29/2015         (1,435     (12,298     (4,224     8,074   

Put - OTC AUD versus USD

   BRC      0.860         6/29/2015         (1,435     (17,176     (15,552     1,624   

Put - OTC AUD versus USD

   GLM      0.860         6/29/2015         (1,435     (16,730     (15,552     1,178   

Call - OTC EUR versus USD

   DUB      1.530         3/19/2019         (900     (65,799     (42,487     23,312   

Put - OTC EUR versus USD

   DUB      1.200         3/19/2019         (900     (33,147     (28,501     4,646   

Put - OTC EUR versus USD

   GLM      1.200         4/17/2019         (714     (24,053     (23,048     1,005   

Call - OTC EUR versus USD

   GLM      1.560         4/19/2019         (714     (47,835     (30,743     17,092   
             

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
              $ (1,016,882   $ (839,053   $ 177,829   
             

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Options on Exchange-Traded Futures Contracts

 

Description

   Curr    Exercise
Price
     Expiration
Date
     Number
Of
Contracts
     Cost     Fair
Value
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Put - 3-Mo Euribor Interest Rate Future Option

   EUR      150.000         9/26/2014         34       $ (16,976   $ (24,124   $ (7,148

Put - 3-Mo Euribor Interest Rate Future Option

   EUR      147.000         9/26/2014         34         (7,595     (4,021     3,574   

Call - 3-Mo Euribor Interest Rate Future Option

   EUR      147.500         9/26/2014         14         (2,391     (2,575     (184

Call - Euro Bund December Future Option

   EUR      127.000         9/26/2014         52         (12,187     (12,187     —     

Put - Euro Bund December Future Option

   EUR      151.000         11/21/2014         28         (22,626     (24,650     (2,024

Call - Euro Bund October Future Option

   EUR      147.000         11/21/2014         28         (16,188     (15,084     1,104   

Put - Euro Bund October Future Option

   EUR      99.000         12/15/2014         135         (14,583     (844     13,739   

Put - Euro Bund October Future Option

   EUR      99.630         3/16/2015         18         (5,716     (15,817     (10,101

Call - 10-year US Treasury Future Option

   USD      99.630         6/15/2015         60         (38,433     —           38,433   

Put - 1-month Eurodollar Future Option

   USD      99.630         9/14/2015         52         (9,650     (5,200     4,450   

Call - 1-month Eurodollar Future Option

   USD      99.000         9/14/2015         40         (25,000     (12,000     13,000   

Put - Eurodollar Future Option

   USD      99.380         3/14/2016         160         (55,186     (18,395     36,791   
              

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
               $ (226,531   $ (134,897   $ 91,634   
              

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

35


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Options on Equity Indices

 

Description

   Counter-
party
   Exercise Rate      Maturity Date      Shares/Par Value
(000’s)
   Base Market
Value
    Base Total Cost     Prior Accumulated Base
Unrealized Gain/Loss
 

CALL- OTC SPX

   BOA    $ 2,000.000         11/21/2014       BOA    $ (38,100   $ (17,376   $ (20,724

PUT- OTC SPX

   BOA      1,890.000         11/21/2014       BOA      (16,513     (40,996     24,483   
              

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
               $ (54,613   $ (58,372   $ 3,759   
              

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

* Floor Transaction - A transaction in which one party pays a single or periodic amount and the other party pays periodic amounts of the same currency based on the excess, if any, of a specific per annum rate (in the case of an interest rate floor) or a specific price (in the case of a commodity floor) over a specific floating rate (in the case of an interest rate floor) or commodity price (in the case of a commodity floor).
** Knockout FX Options - An option with a built in mechanism to expire worthless, should a specified price level be exceeded. A knock-out option sets a cap to the level an option can reach, in favor of the holder. As knock-out options limit the profit potential for the option buyer, they can be purchased for a smaller premium than an equivalent option without a knock-out stipulation.
*** Digital Option - An option whose payout is fixed after the underlying stock exceeds the predetermined threshold or strike price.
**** Knock-In Option - A latent option contract that begins to function as a normal option (“knocks in”) only once a certain price level is reached before expiration

Forward Currency Contracts Open at August 31, 2014

 

Type

   Currency    Principal Amount
Covered by Contract
     Settlement
Date
     Counterparty    Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
(Depreciation)
    Net Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)
 

Buy

   GBP      2,682,635         9/11/2014       BOA    $ —         $ (70,088   $ (70,088

Buy

   BRL      1,849,836         9/3/2014       BOA      31,836         —          31,836   

Buy

   TRY      1,779,688         10/15/2014       BOA      5,688         —          5,688   

Buy

   BRL      917,434         9/3/2014       BOA      9,130         —          9,130   

Buy

   AUD      1,344,888         9/3/2014       BOA      9,347         —          9,347   

Buy

   BRL      2,594,378         9/3/2014       BOA      52,796         —          52,796   

Sell

   BRL      3,010,851         9/3/2014       BOA      —           (63,850     (63,850

Sell

   EUR      2,111,518         9/3/2014       BOA      34,427         —          34,427   

Sell

   GBP      903,065         9/11/2014       BOA      4,022         —          4,022   

Sell

   BRL      1,908,063         9/3/2014       BOA      —           (26,063     (26,063

Sell

   BRL      909,714         10/2/2014       BOA      —           (8,762     (8,762

Sell

   BRL      2,572,548         10/2/2014       BOA      —           (51,269     (51,269

Sell

   BRL      442,734         9/3/2014       BOA      —           (217     (217

Buy

   NOK      867,666         10/3/2014       BRC      —           (3,273     (3,273

Buy

   NOK      867,666         10/3/2014       BRC      —           (3,273     (3,273

Buy

   EUR      180,096         11/14/2014       BRC      —           (784     (784

Buy

   GBP      292,175         9/8/2014       BRC      —           (4,755     (4,755

Buy

   CZK      935,571         11/14/2014       BRC      —           (12,500     (12,500

Buy

   GBP      292,175         9/8/2014       BRC      —           (4,262     (4,262

Buy

   EUR      448,270         11/14/2014       BRC      —           (7,016     (7,016

Buy

   GBP      290,515         9/8/2014       BRC      —           (3,564     (3,564

Buy

   EUR      228,748         11/21/2014       BRC      —           (3,777     (3,777

Buy

   BRL      156,316         9/2/2014       BRC      792         —          792   

Buy

   BRL      180,126         9/2/2014       BRC      913         —          913   

Buy

   BRL      180,126         9/2/2014       BRC      913         —          913   

Buy

   BRL      156,316         9/2/2014       BRC      792         —          792   

Buy

   BRL      188,126         9/3/2014       BRC      93         —          93   

Buy

   EUR      3,080,047         9/4/2014       BRC      —           (49,057     (49,057

Buy

   EUR      131,396         9/4/2014       BRC      —           (2,093     (2,093

Buy

   EUR      225,422         10/29/2014       BRC      —           (12,167     (12,167

Buy

   PLN      214,945         9/4/2014       BRC      —           (12,635     (12,635

Buy

   EUR      231,126         9/4/2014       BRC      —           (8,467     (8,467

Buy

   EUR      216,803         9/4/2014       BRC      —           (8,112     (8,112

Buy

   EUR      443,570         10/15/2014       BRC      —           (16,828     (16,828

Buy

   BRL      114,729         10/2/2014       BRC      883         —          883   

Buy

   BRL      183,528         9/2/2014       BRC      6,828         —          6,828   

Buy

   EUR      180,075         10/29/2014       BRC      —           (6,789     (6,789

Buy

   EUR      266,076         9/4/2014       BRC      —           (8,459     (8,459

Buy

   NZD      146,195         9/16/2014       BRC      —           (826     (826

Buy

   BRL      153,633         9/2/2014       BRC      3,133         —          3,133   

Buy

   NZD      477,180         11/14/2014       BRC      —           (4,918     (4,918

Buy

   JPY      337,794         9/3/2014       BRC      —           (2,206     (2,206

Buy

   JPY      170,079         9/3/2014       BRC      80         —          80   

Buy

   NZD      144,636         9/8/2014       BRC      677         —          677   

 

See accompanying notes

 

36


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Type

   Currency    Principal Amount
Covered by Contract
     Settlement
Date
     Counterparty    Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
(Depreciation)
    Net Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)
 

Buy

   NZD      292,808         9/16/2014       BRC      1,477       $ —        $ 1,477   

Buy

   NZD      146,195         9/16/2014       BRC      808         —          808   

Sell

   GBP      2,695,916         9/11/2014       BRC      29,983         —          29,983   

Sell

   EUR      866,695         10/3/2014       BRC      4,245         —          4,245   

Sell

   EUR      866,695         10/3/2014       BRC      4,245         —          4,245   

Sell

   CZK      179,803         11/14/2014       BRC      1,078         —          1,078   

Sell

   JPY      291,551         9/8/2014       BRC      5,379         —          5,379   

Sell

   EUR      932,033         11/14/2014       BRC      16,039         —          16,039   

Sell

   JPY      289,080         9/8/2014       BRC      7,357         —          7,357   

Sell

   CAD      460,554         11/14/2014       BRC      —           (5,268     (5,268

Sell

   JPY      287,968         9/8/2014       BRC      6,111         —          6,111   

Sell

   HUF      228,148         11/21/2014       BRC      4,377         —          4,377   

Sell

   BRL      183,528         9/2/2014       BRC      —           (930     (930

Sell

   BRL      153,633         9/2/2014       BRC      —           (778     (778

Sell

   BRL      153,633         9/2/2014       BRC      —           (778     (778

Sell

   BRL      183,528         9/2/2014       BRC      —           (930     (930

Sell

   BRL      3,507,206         10/2/2014       BRC      —           (4,972     (4,972

Sell

   EUR      245,710         9/4/2014       BRC      8,750         —          8,750   

Sell

   NZD      1,221,398         11/14/2014       BRC      58,626         —          58,626   

Sell

   EUR      511,842         2/20/2019       BRC      11,313         —          11,313   

Sell

   EUR      458,571         9/4/2014       BRC      20,213         —          20,213   

Sell

   EUR      691,142         9/4/2014       BRC      30,066         —          30,066   

Sell

   EUR      406,767         10/14/2014       BRC      16,822         —          16,822   

Sell

   CLP      740,216         10/14/2014       BRC      43,055         —          43,055   

Sell

   ZAR      964,561         10/14/2014       BRC      —           (18,498     (18,498

Sell

   BRL      156,316         9/2/2014       BRC      —           (5,816     (5,816

Sell

   BRL      188,126         9/3/2014       BRC      —           (3,627     (3,627

Sell

   BRL      180,126         9/2/2014       BRC      —           (3,426     (3,426

Sell

   AUD      869,132         11/14/2014       BRC      —           (7,132     (7,132

Sell

   AUD      515,228         11/14/2014       BRC      —           (4,228     (4,228

Sell

   EUR      3,173,147         12/1/2014       BRC      50,207         —          50,207   

Sell

   EUR      131,475         12/1/2014       BRC      2,080         —          2,080   

Sell

   PLN      428,125         11/14/2014       BRC      7,875         —          7,875   

Sell

   EUR      2,631,199         9/4/2014       BRC      99,235         —          99,235   

Sell

   GBP      1,470,721         9/18/2014       BRC      14,132         —          14,132   

Sell

   JPY      206,298         9/3/2014       BRC      4,702         —          4,702   

Sell

   NZD      146,195         9/16/2014       BRC      5,449         —          5,449   

Buy

   BRL      442,734         9/3/2014       BCC      218         —          218   

Sell

   CNY      133,913         4/7/2016       BCC      —           (2,793     (2,793

Sell

   BRL      442,734         9/3/2014       BCC      —           (3,064     (3,064

Sell

   KRW      144,777         10/15/2014       BCC      —           (2,394     (2,394

Buy

   CLP      168,427         9/12/2014       BNP      —           (7,573     (7,573

Sell

   BRL      438,658         3/12/2015       BNP      —           (14,950     (14,950

Buy

   BRL      401,837         9/3/2014       CBK      49,087         —          49,087   

Buy

   CNY      133,913         4/7/2016       CBK      —           (6,086     (6,086

Buy

   BRL      2,610,995         1/5/2015       CBK      45,088         —          45,088   

Sell

   EUR      19,283,734         11/7/2014       CBK      409,216         —          409,216   

Sell

   PLN      3,615,879         10/27/2014       CBK      142,632         —          142,632   

Sell

   CHF      13,066,742         10/24/2014       CBK      300,036         —          300,036   

Sell

   NZD      12,243,407         9/19/2014       CBK      378,853         —          378,853   

Sell

   JPY      25,182,581         9/9/2014       CBK      378,395         —          378,395   

Sell

   KRW      1,147,725         10/15/2014       CBK      —           (7,725     (7,725

Sell

   CAD      1,816,677         9/18/2014       CBK      —           (1,809     (1,809

Sell

   BRL      6,531,296         1/5/2015       CBK      —           (112,787     (112,787

Sell

   EUR      14,073,718         9/3/2014       CBK      322,669         —          322,669   

Sell

   MXN      22,484         12/18/2014       CBK      —           (406     (406

Sell

   AUD      366,108         9/3/2014       CBK      —           (3,188     (3,188

Sell

   EUR      375,790         9/3/2014       CBK      7,213         —          7,213   

Sell

   BRL      401,837         9/3/2014       CBK      —           (197     (197

Buy

   EUR      2,438,691         9/3/2014       FBF      —           (52,985     (52,985

Buy

   JPY      1,794,416         9/3/2014       FBF      —           (595     (595

Buy

   CAD      190,606         4/13/2015       FBF      546         —          546   

Buy

   CAD      31,856         10/20/2014       FBF      —           (381     (381

Buy

   NZD      182,917         4/13/2015       FBF      —           (10,265     (10,265

 

See accompanying notes

 

37


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Type

   Currency    Principal Amount
Covered by Contract
     Settlement
Date
     Counterparty    Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
(Depreciation)
    Net Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)
 

Buy

   ZAR      230,939         11/14/2014       FBF    $ —         $ (1,433   $ (1,433

Buy

   CZK      182,631         11/14/2014       FBF      —           (2,440     (2,440

Buy

   EUR      304,603         11/21/2014       FBF      —           (5,029     (5,029

Buy

   DKK      91,464         9/4/2014       FBF      —           (1,369     (1,369

Buy

   NZD      409,346         9/16/2014       FBF      —           (9,303     (9,303

Buy

   NZD      349,267         11/14/2014       FBF      —           (8,071     (8,071

Buy

   EUR      180,075         10/29/2014       FBF      —           (9,056     (9,056

Buy

   NZD      394,950         11/14/2014       FBF      —           (6,376     (6,376

Buy

   MXN      518,789         11/14/2014       FBF      7,789         —          7,789   

Buy

   EUR      117,608         9/18/2014       FBF      —           (2,279     (2,279

Buy

   EUR      162,997         11/6/2014       FBF      —           (1,769     (1,769

Buy

   GBP      211,558         11/6/2014       FBF      —           (580     (580

Buy

   EUR      130,749         9/18/2014       FBF      —           (1,985     (1,985

Buy

   EUR      38,765         9/18/2014       FBF      —           (731     (731

Buy

   NZD      144,636         9/8/2014       FBF      659         —          659   

Buy

   BRL      185,123         9/3/2014       FBF      91         —          91   

Sell

   KRW      10,068         10/15/2014       FBF      —           (68     (68

Sell

   NZD      182,917         4/13/2015       FBF      7,143         —          7,143   

Sell

   NZD      30,807         10/20/2014       FBF      1,430         —          1,430   

Sell

   CAD      186,973         4/13/2015       FBF      6,209         —          6,209   

Sell

   NZD      226,339         11/14/2014       FBF      6,034         —          6,034   

Sell

   EUR      182,068         11/14/2014       FBF      3,002         —          3,002   

Sell

   PLN      303,326         11/21/2014       FBF      6,306         —          6,306   

Sell

   EUR      180,075         10/29/2014       FBF      10,097         —          10,097   

Sell

   GBP      3,893,829         10/2/2014       FBF      96,626         —          96,626   

Sell

   EUR      2,413,460         10/2/2014       FBF      87,293         —          87,293   

Sell

   EUR      788,564         10/14/2014       FBF      33,038         —          33,038   

Sell

   EUR      862,163         10/14/2014       FBF      31,485         —          31,485   

Sell

   GBP      459,710         10/14/2014       FBF      14,217         —          14,217   

Sell

   NOK      64,444         10/14/2014       FBF      —           (424     (424

Sell

   GBP      176,748         10/14/2014       FBF      5,466         —          5,466   

Sell

   DKK      91,465         9/4/2014       FBF      3,275         —          3,275   

Sell

   EUR      149,195         11/6/2014       FBF      2,868         —          2,868   

Sell

   GBP      2,185,937         11/14/2014       FBF      26,074         —          26,074   

Sell

   NZD      118,785         11/21/2014       FBF      915         —          915   

Sell

   AUD      135,299         11/21/2014       FBF      —           (299     (299

Sell

   ZAR      165,462         11/21/2014       FBF      138         —          138   

Sell

   DKK      91,520         12/1/2014       FBF      1,367         —          1,367   

Sell

   MXN      298,042         11/21/2014       FBF      458         —          458   

Sell

   EUR      533,352         11/21/2014       FBF      8,536         —          8,536   

Sell

   TRY      179,893         11/21/2014       FBF      —           (1,093     (1,093

Sell

   EUR      114,326         9/22/2014       FBF      1,249         —          1,249   

Sell

   BRL      185,123         9/3/2014       FBF      —           (2,823     (2,823

Buy

   KRW      2,744,347         10/15/2014       DUB      1,846         —          1,846   

Buy

   AUD      381,052         9/3/2014       DUB      1,903         —          1,903   

Buy

   EUR      228,146         12/23/2014       DUB      —           (3,607     (3,607

Buy

   CAD      558,131         2/25/2019       DUB      9,514         —          9,514   

Buy

   CAD      322,559         11/14/2014       DUB      1,857         —          1,857   

Buy

   CZK      182,612         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (2,606     (2,606

Buy

   AUD      321,052         11/14/2014       DUB      549         —          549   

Buy

   GBP      452,145         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (5,640     (5,640

Buy

   EUR      460,758         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (7,212     (7,212

Buy

   GBP      515,323         3/12/2019       DUB      —           (1,574     (1,574

Buy

   CAD      265,309         3/12/2019       DUB      4,034         —          4,034   

Buy

   GBP      503,446         3/14/2019       DUB      —           (710     (710

Buy

   EUR      466,587         10/20/2014       DUB      —           (8,421     (8,421

Buy

   EUR      448,270         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (7,221     (7,221

Buy

   EUR      214,210         10/3/2014       DUB      —           (926     (926

Buy

   NOK      228,434         12/23/2014       DUB      —           (1,551     (1,551

Buy

   EUR      228,008         10/3/2014       DUB      —           (587     (587

Buy

   CLP      171,526         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (2,474     (2,474

Buy

   EUR      448,270         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (8,425     (8,425

Buy

   CLP      164,068         9/12/2014       DUB      —           (8,932     (8,932

Buy

   JPY      190,385         12/15/2014       DUB      —           (3,615     (3,615

 

See accompanying notes

 

38


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Type

   Currency    Principal Amount
Covered by Contract
     Settlement
Date
     Counterparty    Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
(Depreciation)
    Net Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)
 

Buy

   EUR      450,187         10/29/2014       DUB    $ —         $ (15,836   $ (15,836

Buy

   JPY      167,591         9/3/2014       DUB      —           (2,409     (2,409

Buy

   EUR      450,187         10/29/2014       DUB      —           (9,726     (9,726

Buy

   NZD      592,824         10/20/2014       DUB      —           (1,959     (1,959

Buy

   JPY      107,114         9/3/2014       DUB      —           (1,886     (1,886

Buy

   EUR      224,765         10/29/2014       DUB      —           (7,130     (7,130

Buy

   EUR      180,075         10/29/2014       DUB      —           (5,106     (5,106

Buy

   JPY      100,587         9/3/2014       DUB      —           (1,413     (1,413

Buy

   EUR      941,892         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (17,676     (17,676

Buy

   EUR      479,819         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (9,005     (9,005

Buy

   CLP      611,945         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (9,894     (9,894

Buy

   CLP      848,285         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (13,715     (13,715

Buy

   EUR      448,270         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (6,986     (6,986

Buy

   JPY      334,923         9/3/2014       DUB      —           (5,077     (5,077

Buy

   JPY      167,541         9/3/2014       DUB      —           (2,459     (2,459

Buy

   CLP      330,632         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (4,768     (4,768

Buy

   NZD      144,636         9/8/2014       DUB      634         —          634   

Sell

   KRW      1,419,415         10/15/2014       DUB      —           (9,415     (9,415

Sell

   EUR      508,499         9/3/2014       DUB      11,592         —          11,592   

Sell

   TRY      1,793,640         10/15/2014       DUB      5,199         —          5,199   

Sell

   CHF      109,006         11/13/2014       DUB      1,502         —          1,502   

Sell

   AUD      677,114         9/3/2014       DUB      —           (4,384     (4,384

Sell

   JPY      893,844         9/3/2014       DUB      13,979         —          13,979   

Sell

   EUR      1,710,763         9/3/2014       DUB      23,953         —          23,953   

Sell

   JPY      1,799,221         9/3/2014       DUB      3,875         —          3,875   

Sell

   NOK      231,372         12/23/2014       DUB      381         —          381   

Sell

   EUR      535,836         2/25/2019       DUB      12,781         —          12,781   

Sell

   AUD      321,052         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (350     (350

Sell

   EUR      182,068         11/14/2014       DUB      3,149         —          3,149   

Sell

   CAD      319,883         11/14/2014       DUB      620         —          620   

Sell

   EUR      448,270         11/14/2014       DUB      9,515         —          9,515   

Sell

   GBP      463,991         11/14/2014       DUB      3,978         —          3,978   

Sell

   EUR      498,397         3/12/2019       DUB      18,500         —          18,500   

Sell

   EUR      249,199         3/12/2019       DUB      12,077         —          12,077   

Sell

   EUR      485,116         3/14/2019       DUB      19,040         —          19,040   

Sell

   NOK      472,734         10/20/2014       DUB      2,274         —          2,274   

Sell

   GBP      451,611         11/14/2014       DUB      3,880         —          3,880   

Sell

   NOK      214,166         10/3/2014       DUB      970         —          970   

Sell

   EUR      228,146         12/23/2014       DUB      1,839         —          1,839   

Sell

   NOK      228,316         10/3/2014       DUB      279         —          279   

Sell

   AUD      170,384         9/12/2014       DUB      116         —          116   

Sell

   AUD      174,901         9/12/2014       DUB      99         —          99   

Sell

   EUR      180,075         10/29/2014       DUB      5,841         —          5,841   

Sell

   NZD      116,956         9/16/2014       DUB      4,824         —          4,824   

Sell

   AUD      156,112         11/14/2014       DUB      —           (665     (665

Sell

   JPY      188,792         12/15/2014       DUB      5,208         —          5,208   

Sell

   JPY      165,511         9/3/2014       DUB      4,489         —          4,489   

Sell

   BRL      381,018         3/13/2015       DUB      —           (32,880     (32,880

Sell

   NZD      146,195         9/16/2014       DUB      7,140         —          7,140   

Sell

   EUR      448,270         11/14/2014       DUB      2,181         —          2,181   

Sell

   CAD      340,784         11/14/2014       DUB      216         —          216   

Sell

   EUR      448,270         11/14/2014       DUB      7,223         —          7,223   

Sell

   CLP      251,180         11/21/2014       DUB      3,520         —          3,520   

Sell

   JPY      673,752         10/14/2014       DUB      1,248         —          1,248   

Sell

   NZD      296,412         10/20/2014       DUB      574         —          574   

Sell

   NZD      296,412         10/20/2014       DUB      211         —          211   

Sell

   NZD      144,636         9/8/2014       DUB      2,028         —          2,028   

Sell

   EUR      131,396         9/4/2014       DUB      4,917         —          4,917   

Sell

   PLN      214,945         9/4/2014       DUB      9,219         —          9,219   

Sell

   AUD      173,419         9/12/2014       DUB      —           (419     (419

Buy

   EUR      16,341,595         9/3/2014       GSC      —           (72,757     (72,757

Buy

   JPY      898,650         9/3/2014       GSC      647         —          647   

Buy

   BRL      867,635         9/3/2014       GSC      37,635         —          37,635   

Sell

   MXN      64,640         10/22/2014       GSC      —           (100     (100

 

See accompanying notes

 

39


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Type

   Currency    Principal Amount
Covered by Contract
     Settlement
Date
     Counterparty    Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
(Depreciation)
    Net Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)
 

Sell

   MXN      230,933         9/23/2014       GSC    $ 936       $ —        $ 936   

Sell

   BRL      401,837         9/3/2014       GSC      —           (49,087     (49,087

Sell

   JPY      898,851         10/2/2014       GSC      —           (664     (664

Sell

   EUR      16,344,240         10/2/2014       GSC      72,500         —          72,500   

Sell

   BRL      465,797         9/3/2014       GSC      —           (229     (229

Sell

   BRL      26,334         12/4/2014       GST      —           (334     (334

Sell

   AUD      175,875         9/12/2014       GST      125         —          125   

Sell

   EUR      225,422         10/29/2014       GST      13,338         —          13,338   

Buy

   EUR      515,487         11/28/2014       HUB      —           (14,794     (14,794

Buy

   BRL      381,018         3/13/2015       HUB      156         —          156   

Buy

   BRL      438,658         3/12/2015       HUB      110         —          110   

Buy

   BRL      12,494         11/10/2014       HUB      —           —          —     

Buy

   BRL      393,455         11/10/2014       HUB      —           (549     (549

Buy

   AUD      233,629         9/23/2014       HUB      —           (271     (271

Sell

   BGN      517,413         11/28/2014       HUB      12,868         —          12,868   

Sell

   BRL      405,949         11/10/2014       HUB      —           (32,185     (32,185

Sell

   AUD      328,759         9/23/2014       HUB      —           (190     (190

Buy

   CLP      4,859,916         10/24/2014       HUS      —           (179,738     (179,738

Buy

   CLP      1,161,440         9/26/2014       HUS      —           (63,014     (63,014

Buy

   CLP      995,266         10/10/2014       HUS      —           (54,443     (54,443

Buy

   CLP      1,754,217         9/10/2014       HUS      —           (96,138     (96,138

Buy

   AUD      6,288,086         11/12/2014       HUS      52,811         —          52,811   

Buy

   INR      4,762,162         11/17/2014       HUS      29,006         —          29,006   

Sell

   CZK      4,038,783         11/6/2014       HUS      97,160         —          97,160   

Sell

   PLN      233,383         10/27/2014       HUS      5,068         —          5,068   

Sell

   EUR      368,060         11/7/2014       HUS      6,585         —          6,585   

Buy

   GBP      292,175         9/8/2014       JPM      —           (4,262     (4,262

Buy

   EUR      214,210         10/3/2014       JPM      —           (1,007     (1,007

Buy

   EUR      210,267         10/3/2014       JPM      —           (541     (541

Buy

   EUR      250,985         9/18/2014       JPM      —           (9,145     (9,145

Buy

   GBP      69,718         9/18/2014       JPM      —           (2,209     (2,209

Buy

   EUR      98,555         9/18/2014       JPM      —           (3,038     (3,038

Buy

   GBP      283,852         9/18/2014       JPM      —           (9,102     (9,102

Buy

   EUR      232,570         9/4/2014       JPM      —           (5,738     (5,738

Buy

   BRL      26,334         12/4/2014       JPM      334         —          334   

Buy

   EUR      52,562         9/18/2014       JPM      —           (1,618     (1,618

Buy

   EUR      52,562         9/18/2014       JPM      —           (1,750     (1,750

Buy

   NZD      146,195         9/16/2014       JPM      —           (893     (893

Buy

   CLP      167,619         9/12/2014       JPM      —           (7,381     (7,381

Buy

   CLP      162,147         9/12/2014       JPM      —           (8,353     (8,353

Sell

   JPY      289,247         9/8/2014       JPM      7,190         —          7,190   

Sell

   NOK      214,061         10/3/2014       JPM      1,156         —          1,156   

Sell

   NOK      210,418         10/3/2014       JPM      390         —          390   

Sell

   EUR      2,312,847         11/6/2014       JPM      50,700         —          50,700   

Sell

   GBP      564,154         11/6/2014       JPM      7,686         —          7,686   

Sell

   JPY      68,868         11/6/2014       JPM      1,076         —          1,076   

Sell

   EUR      1,250,985         9/18/2014       JPM      39,043         —          39,043   

Sell

   GBP      449,848         9/18/2014       JPM      4,358         —          4,358   

Buy

   BRL      183,318         9/3/2014       MSC      1,018         —          1,018   

Buy

   BRL      383,588         9/3/2014       MSC      7,888         —          7,888   

Buy

   BRL      394,080         9/3/2014       MSC      194         —          194   

Buy

   BRL      185,517         9/3/2014       MSC      91         —          91   

Sell

   BRL      383,588         9/3/2014       MSC      —           (188     (188

Sell

   MXN      335,885         11/14/2014       MSC      115         —          115   

Sell

   BRL      394,080         9/3/2014       MSC      —           (11,680     (11,680

Sell

   BRL      183,308         12/2/2014       MSC      —           (1,008     (1,008

Sell

   KRW      377,868         11/21/2014       MSC      —           (1,468     (1,468

Sell

   JPY      723,608         10/14/2014       MSC      1,392         —          1,392   

Sell

   BRL      185,517         9/3/2014       MSC      —           (3,217     (3,217

Buy

   CAD      322,747         11/14/2014       UAG      1,858         —          1,858   

Buy

   AUD      321,052         11/14/2014       UAG      —           (1,144     (1,144

Buy

   EUR      131,428         10/15/2014       UAG      —           (4,028     (4,028

Buy

   INR      175,618         11/14/2014       UAG      2,118         —          2,118   

Buy

   BRL      381,676         9/3/2014       UAG      8,176         —          8,176   

 

See accompanying notes

 

40


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Type

   Currency    Principal Amount
Covered by Contract
     Settlement
Date
     Counterparty    Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
(Depreciation)
    Net Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)
 

Sell

   AUD      321,052         11/14/2014       UAG    $ —         $ (163   $ (163

Sell

   CAD      319,854         11/14/2014       UAG      2,341         —          2,341   

Sell

   BRL      381,676         9/3/2014       UAG      —           (187     (187

Sell

   CAD      340,761         11/14/2014       UAG      239         —          239   

Sell

   INR      253,425         11/21/2014       UAG      576         —          576   

Sell

   INR      172,891         11/14/2014       UAG      609         —          609   
              

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 
               $ 3,707,959       $ (1,603,991   $ 2,103,968   
              

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 

Borrowing and Other Financing Transactions

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

 

Counterparty

   Borrowing Rate     Borrowing Date      Maturity Date      Amount Borrowed (1)      Payable for Reverse
Repurchase Agreements
 

Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. (2)

     0.0600     8/21/2014         9/3/2014       $ 12,281,500       $ 12,281,500   
          

 

 

    

 

 

 
        $ 12,281,500       $ 12,281,500   
          

 

 

    

 

 

 

Short Sales

 

Type of Investment

   Description    Coupon
(%)
     Maturity
Date
     Principal Amount
(000s)
    Proceeds     Fair Value  

U.S. Agency CMO

   Fannie Mae TBA      4.000         10/1/2041       $ (13,000   $ (13,654,063   $ (13,731,758

U.S. Agency CMO

   Fannie Mae TBA      4.500         10/1/2041         (5,000     (5,385,156     (5,386,816

U.S. Agency CMO

   Fannie Mae TBA      4.500         9/1/2041         (5,000     (5,387,656     (5,400,000

U.S. Agency CMO

   Fannie Mae TBA      5.500         9/1/2014         (6,000     (6,653,438     (6,671,437

U.S. Agency CMO

   Fannie Mae TBA      6.000         9/1/2041         (1,000     (1,125,000     (1,127,812
             

 

 

   

 

 

 
           $ (32,205,313   $ (32,317,823
             

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

1) The average amount of borrowing during the Period ended August 31, 2014 was $369,149 at a weighted average interest rate of 0.0069%.
2) Collateralized by a U.S. Government Agency Obligation valued at $12,281,500, 2.50%, 5/15/2024.

Glossary

Counterparty Abbreviations:

 

BCC    Barclays Capital   DUB    Deutsche Bank AG   JPM    JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.
BNP    BNP Paribas, N.A.   FBF    Credit Suisse International   MSC    Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc.
BOA    Bank of America, N.A.   FOB    Credit Suisse Securities USA, LLC   MYC    Morgan Stanley Capital Services
BRC    Barclays Bank PLC   GLM    Goldman Sachs Bank USA   RBS    Royal Bank of Scotland PLC
CBK    Citibank, N.A.   GST    Goldman Sachs International   UAG    UBS AG
DEU    Deutsche Bank AG, New York   HUB    HSBC BANK PLC     
Currency Abbreviations:   
AUD    Australian Dollar   GBP    Sterling   NZD    New Zealand Dollar
BRL    Brazilian Real   INR    Indian Rupee   PLN    Polish Zolty
CAD    Canadian Dollar   JPY    Japanese Yen   SEK    Swedish Krona
CHF    Swiss Franc   KRW    South Korean Won   TRY    Turkish New Lira
CZK    Czech Republic Koruna   MXN    Mexican Peso   USD    United States Dollar
EUR    Euro   NOK    Norwegian Krone   ZAR    South African Rand
Index Abbreviations:     
ABX    Asset Backed Securities Index   CMBX    Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities Index   USA-CPI-U    Consumer Price All Urban Non-Seasonally Adjusted Index
CDX.IG    Credit Derivatives Index - Investment Grade   iTrax    Markit iTraxx Europe     
Exchange Abbreviations:     
CME    Chicago Mercantile Exchange   OTC    Over-the-Counter     
Other Abbreviations:     
BBR    Bank Bill Rate   ECAL    European-style Call   LIBOR    London Interbank Offer Rate
BBSW    Bank Bill Swap Reference Rate   EPUT    European-style Put   NIBOR    Norwegian Interbank Offer Rate
CD    Certificate of Deposit   EURIBOR    Euro Interbank Offer Rate   TELBOR    TelAviv Interbank Offer Rate
CDOR    Canadian Dealer Offered Rate   IRS    Interest Rate Swap   TIIE    Tasa de Intere’s Interbancaria de Equilibrio
CDS    Credit Default Swap   JIBAR    Johannesburg Interbank Agreed Rate     

 

See accompanying notes

 

41


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

August 31, 2014 (in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

 

 

Assets:

  

Investments in unaffiliated securities, at fair valueA

   $ 318,802   

Purchased options and swaptions outstandingC

     3,776   

Foreign currency, at fair valueB

     717   

Swap premium paid

     1,957   

Swap Income receivable

     133   

Deposit with brokers for futures contracts

     7,923   

Receivable for investments sold

     39,252   

Receivable for fund shares sold

     289   

Dividends and interest receivable

     2,318   

Receivable for tax reclaims

     44   

Receivable for expense reimbursement (Note 2)

     124   

Unrealized appreciation of swap agreements

     6,165   

Unrealized appreciation from foreign currency contracts

     3,708   

Prepaid expenses

     39   

Other assets

     3   
  

 

 

 

Total assets

     385,250   
  

 

 

 

Liabilities:

  

Payable for investments purchased

     43,530   

Payable for fund shares redeemed

     62   

Payable for reverse repurchase agreements

     12,282   

Payable for securities sold short, at fair value (proceeds $32,205)

     32,318   

Swap premium received

     2,810   

Swap income payable

     419   

Written options , at fair value (premiums received $3,775)

     2,462   

Management and investment advisory fees payable

     137   

Administrative service and service fees payable

     97   

Transfer agent fees payable

     11   

Custody and fund accounting fees payable

     26   

Professional fees payable

     189   

Prospectus and shareholder reports fees payable

     6   

Trustee fees payable

     4   

Due to Brokers

     115   

Payable for variation margin from open futures contracts

     1,736   

Unrealized depreciation of swap agreements

     9,512   

Unrealized depreciation from foreign currency contracts

     1,604   

Other liabilities

     11   
  

 

 

 

Total liabilities

     107,331   
  

 

 

 

Net assets

   $ 277,919   
  

 

 

 

Analysis of Net Assets:

  

Paid-in-capital

     280,752   

Over distribution of net investment income

     (832

Accumulated net realized (loss)

     (4,748

Unrealized appreciation of investments

     6,777   

Unrealized appreciation of foreign currency contracts

     1,205   

Unrealized depreciation of futures contracts

     (1,699

Unrealized depreciation of swap agreements

     (3,347

Unrealized depreciation of options and swaptions contracts

     (76

Unrealized depreciation of short sales

     (113
  

 

 

 

Net assets

   $ 277,919   
  

 

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

42


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

August 31, 2014 (in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

 

 

Shares outstanding at no par value (unlimited shares authorized):

  

Institutional Class

     17,160,344   
  

 

 

 

Y Class

     3,683,453   
  

 

 

 

Investor Class

     2,367,024   
  

 

 

 

A Class

     2,643,258   
  

 

 

 

C Class

     1,088,687   
  

 

 

 

Net assets (not in thousands):

  

Institutional Class

   $ 177,201,454   
  

 

 

 

Y Class

   $ 38,033,706   
  

 

 

 

Investor Class

   $ 24,410,567   
  

 

 

 

A Class

   $ 27,146,489   
  

 

 

 

C Class

   $ 11,126,819   
  

 

 

 

Net asset value, offering and redemption price per share:

  

Institutional Class

   $ 10.33   
  

 

 

 

Y Class

   $ 10.33   
  

 

 

 

Investor Class

   $ 10.31   
  

 

 

 

A Class

   $ 10.27   
  

 

 

 

A Class (offering price)

   $ 10.78   
  

 

 

 

C Class

   $ 10.22   
  

 

 

 

A Cost of investments in unaffiliated securities

   $ 312,879   

B Cost of foreign currency

   $ 718   

C Cost of purchased options outstanding

   $ 5,165   

 

See accompanying notes

 

43


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Statement of Operations

For the year ended August 31, 2014 (in thousands)

 

 

Investment Income:

  

Dividend income from unaffiliated securities (net of foreign taxes) A

   $ 13   

Interest income

     8,108   
  

 

 

 

Total investment income

     8,121   
  

 

 

 

Expenses:

  

Management and investment advisory fees (Note 2)

     1,705   

Administrative service fees (Note 2):

  

Institutional Class

     477   

Y Class

     109   

Investor Class

     135   

A Class

     136   

C Class

     49   

Transfer agent fees:

  

Institutional Class

     59   

Y Class

     3   

Investor Class

     8   

A Class

     9   

C Class

     2   

Custody and fund accounting fees

     302   

Professional fees

     360   

Registration fees and expenses

     103   

Service fees (Note 2):

  

Y Class

     36   

Investor Class

     112   

A Class

     53   

C Class

     19   

Distribution fees (Note 2):

  

A Class

     88   

C Class

     127   

Prospectus and shareholder report expenses

     42   

Trustee fees

     17   

Other expenses

     27   
  

 

 

 

Total expenses

     3,978   
  

 

 

 

Net fees waived and expenses reimbursed (Note 2)

     (855
  

 

 

 

Net expenses

     3,123   
  

 

 

 

Net investment income

     4,998   
  

 

 

 

Realized and unrealized gain (loss) from investments:

  

Net realized gain (loss) from:

  

Investments

     785   

Foreign currency transactions

     (1,574

Futures contracts

     (4,262

Swap agreements

     326   

Options and swaptions contracts

     (728

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of:

  

Investments

     11,035   

Foreign currency transactions

     4,307   

Futures contracts

     (2,017

Swap agreements

     (3,087

Options and swaption contracts

     (123

Short sales

     (113
  

 

 

 

Net gain from investments

     4,549   
  

 

 

 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations

   $ 9,547   
  

 

 

 

A Foreign taxes

   $ 60   

 

See accompanying notes

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Statement of Changes of Net Assets (in thousands)

 

 

     Year Ended
August 31,
2014
    Year Ended
August 31,
2013
 

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets:

    

Operations:

    

Net investment income

   $ 4,998      $ 1,221   

Net realized gain (loss) from investments, foreign currency, futures contracts, swap agreements, option and swaptions contracts, and short sales

     (5,453     2,507   

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from investments, foreign currency, futures contracts, swap agreements, option and swaptions contracts, and short sales

     10,002        (8,566
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

     9,547        (4,838 ) 
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Distributions to Shareholders:

    

Net investment income:

    

Institutional Class

     (2,789     (699

Y Class

     (621     (454

Investor Class

     (652     (826

A Class

     (457     (463

C Class

     (72     (156

Net realized gain from investments:

    

Institutional Class

     (1,025     (91

Y Class

     (253     (196

Investor Class

     (349     (411

A Class

     (275     (210

C Class

     (92     (93
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net distributions to shareholders

     (6,585 )      (3,599 ) 
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Capital Share Transactions:

    

Proceeds from sales of shares

     114,770        280,548   

Reinvestment of dividends and distributions

     6,267        (58,848

Cost of shares redeemed

     (125,983     3,140   
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets from capital share transactions

     (4,946 )      224,840   
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets

     (1,984     216,403   
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net Assets:

    

Beginning of period

     279,903        63,500   
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

End of Period *

   $ 277,919      $ 279,903   
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

*Includes undistributed (or distribution in excess of) net investment income

   $ (832   $ 1,008   
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

45


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

1. Organization and Significant Accounting Policies

American Beacon Funds (the “Trust”), which is comprised of thirty-one Funds, is organized as a Massachusetts business trust and is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Act”), as a diversified, open-end management investment company. These financial statements and notes to the financial statements relate to the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund (the “Fund”), a series of the Trust.

American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (the “Manager”) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lighthouse Holdings, Inc. and was organized in 1986 to provide business management, advisory, administrative and asset management consulting services to the Trust and other investors.

The Flexible Bond Fund is a commodity pool, as defined in the regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the “CFTC”) and operated by the Manager, a commodity pool operator registered with the CFTC.

Class Disclosure

The Fund has multiple classes of shares designed to meet the needs of different groups of investors. The following table sets forth the differences amongst the classes:

 

Class:

  

Offered to:

Institutional Class    Investors making an initial investment of $250,000
Y Class    Investors making an initial investment of $100,000
Investor Class    General public and investors investing directly or through an intermediary
A Class    General public and investors investing through an intermediary with applicable sales charges, which may include a front-end sales charge and a contingent deferred sales charge (“CDSC”)
C Class    General public and investors investing through an intermediary with applicable sales charges, which may include a CDSC

Each class offered by the Trust has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Income and non-class specific expenses are allocated daily to each class on the basis of the relative net assets. Realized and unrealized capital gains and losses of each class are allocated daily based on the relative net assets of each class of the Fund. Class specific expenses, where applicable, currently include administrative service fees, service fees, and distribution fees and vary amongst the classes as described more fully in Note 2.

2. Transactions with Affiliates

Management Agreement

The Trust and the Manager are parties to a Management Agreement that obligates the Manager to provide or oversee the provision of all investment advisory and fund management services. Investment assets of the Fund are managed by multiple investment advisors which have entered into separate investment advisory agreements with the Manager and the Trust. As compensation for performing the duties required under the Management Agreement, the Manager receives from the Fund 0.05% of the average daily net assets. The Fund pays the unaffiliated investment advisors hired to direct investment activities of the Fund. Management fees paid by the Fund during the year ended August 31, 2014 were as follows (dollars in thousands):

 

Management Fee Rate

    Management Fee      Amounts paid to
Investment Advisors
     Amounts
Paid to Manager
 
  0.59   $ 1,705       $ 1,561       $ 144   

 

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Administrative Services Agreement

The Manager and the Trust entered into an Administrative Services Agreement which obligates the Manager to provide or oversee administrative services to the Fund. As compensation for performing the duties required under the Administrative Services Agreement, the Manager receives an annualized fee of 0.30% of the average daily net assets of the Institutional, Y, and Investor Classes of the Fund. Prior to June 30, 2014, the Manager received an annualized fee of 0.40% of the average daily net assets of the A and C Classes of the Fund. Beginning July 1, 2014, the Manager received an annualized fee of 0.30% of the average daily net assets of the A and C Classes of the Fund.

Distribution Plans

The Fund, except for the A and C Classes of the Fund, has adopted a “defensive” Distribution Plan (the “Plan”) in accordance with Rule 12b-1 under the Act, pursuant to which no fees may be charged to the Fund for distribution purposes. However, the Plan authorizes the management and administrative service fees received by the Manager and the investment advisor hired by the Manager to be used for distribution purposes. Under this Plan, the Fund does not intend to compensate the Manager or any other party, either directly or indirectly, for the distribution of Fund shares.

Separate Distribution Plans (the “Distribution Plans”) have been adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act for the A and C Classes of the Fund. Under the Distribution Plans, as compensation for distribution assistance, the Manager receives an annual fee of 0.25% of the average daily net assets of the A Class and 1.00% of the average daily net assets of the C Class of the Fund. The fee will be payable without regard to whether the amount of the fee is more or less than the actual expenses incurred in a particular month by the Manager for distribution assistance.

Service Plans

The Manager and the Trust entered into Service Plans that obligate the Manager to oversee additional shareholder servicing of the Y, Investor, A, and C Classes. As compensation for performing the duties required under the Service Plans, the Manager receives 0.10% of the average daily net assets of Y Class, 0.15% of the average daily net assets of the A and C Classes, and up to 0.375% of the average daily net assets of the Investor Class of the Fund.

Interfund Lending Program

Pursuant to an exemptive order issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), the Fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with the Manager, may participate in an interfund lending program as a borrower. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the Fund to borrow from other participating Funds. During the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund did not utilize the credit facility.

Expense Reimbursement Plan

The Manager contractually agreed to reimburse the classes of the Fund to the extent that total annual fund operating expenses exceeded the Fund’s expense cap. During the year ended August 31, 2014, the Manager reimbursed expenses as follows:

 

    

Expense Cap

         

Class

  

9/1/13 - 6/30/14

  

7/1/14 - 8/31/14

  

Reimbursed Expenses

  

Expiration of Reimbursements

Institutional    0.90%    0.90%    $530,451    2017
Y    0.99%    0.99%    107,654    2017
Investor    1.27%    1.27%    71,668    2017
A    1.39%    1.29%    106,230    2017
C    2.14%    2.04%    38,830    2017

 

 

47


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Of these amounts, $124,270 is receivable from the Manager, as of August 31, 2014. The Fund has adopted an Expense Reimbursement Plan whereby the Manager may seek repayment of expenses reimbursed for a period of up to three years. However, reimbursement will occur only if the Class’s average net assets have grown or expenses have declined sufficiently to allow reimbursement without causing its expense ratio to exceed the previously agreed upon contractual expense limit. The reimbursed expenses listed above will expire in 2017. The carryover of excess expenses potentially reimbursable to the Manager but not recorded as a liability is $274,377 and $378,404 expiring in 2015 and 2016, respectively. The Fund did not record a liability for potential reimbursements, due to the current assessment that a reimbursement is unlikely.

Sales Commissions

The Fund’s distributor, Foreside Fund Services, LLC (“Foreside”) may receive a portion of A Class sales charges from broker dealers and it may be used to offset distribution related expenses. For the year ended August 31, 2014 Foreside collected $4,707 from the sale of A Class Shares.

A contingent deferred sales charge (“CDSC”) of 0.50% will be deducted with respect to Class A Shares on certain purchases of $1,000,000 or more that are redeemed in whole or part within 12 months of purchase, unless waived as discussed in the Prospectus. Any applicable CDSC will be 0.50% of the lesser of the original purchase price or the value of the redemption of the Class A Shares redeemed. During the year ended August 31, 2014, there were no CDSC fees collected for the Fund.

A CDSC of 1.00% will be deducted with respect to Class C Shares redeemed within 12 months of purchase, unless waived as discussed in the Prospectus. Any applicable CDSC will be 1.00% of the lesser of the original purchase price or the value of the redemption of the Class C Shares redeemed. During the year ended August 31, 2014 CDSC charges of $8,413 were collected.

3. Security Valuation and Fair Value Measurements

Investments are valued at the close of the New York Stock Exchange (the “Exchange”), normally 4 p.m. ET, each day that the Exchange is open for business. Equity securities including exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”) for which market quotations are available are valued at the last sale price or official closing price (closing bid price or last evaluated quote if no sale has occurred) on the primary market or exchange on which they trade.

Debt securities (other than short-term securities) normally are valued on the basis of prices provided by an independent pricing service and may take into account appropriate factors such as institution-size trading in similar groups of securities, yield, quality, coupon rate, maturity, type of issue, trading characteristics, and other market data. The prices of debt securities may be determined using quotes obtained from brokers.

Investments in open-end mutual funds are valued at the closing net asset value (“NAV”) per share of the mutual fund on the day of valuation. Investment grade short-term obligations with 60 days or less to maturity are valued using the amortized cost method, which approximates market value.

Securities for which the market prices are not readily available or are not reflective of the fair value of the security, as determined by the Manager, will be priced at fair value following procedures approved by the Trust’s Board of Trustees (the “Board”).

Futures contracts are valued based upon their quoted daily settlement prices. Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to deposit with its futures broker, an amount of cash or U.S. Government and Agency Obligations in accordance with the initial margin requirements of the broker or exchange. Futures contracts are marked to market daily and an appropriate payable or receivable for the change in value (“variation margin”) is recorded by the Fund. Gains or losses are recognized, but not considered realized until

 

 

48


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

the contracts expire or are closed. Futures contracts involve, to varying degrees, risk of loss in excess of the variation margin disclosed on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

For valuation purposes, the last quoted prices of non-U.S. equity securities may be adjusted under the circumstances described below. If a Manager determines that developments between the close of a foreign market and the close of the Exchange will, in its judgment, materially affect the value of some or all of a fund’s portfolio securities, the Manager will adjust the previous closing prices to reflect what it believes to be the fair value of the securities as of the close of the Exchange. In deciding whether it is necessary to adjust closing prices to reflect fair value, the Manager reviews a variety of factors, including developments in foreign markets, the performance of U.S. securities markets, and the performance of instruments trading in U.S. markets that represent foreign securities and baskets of foreign securities. The Valuation Committee may also fair value securities in other situations, such as when a particular foreign market is closed but a Fund is open. The Fund uses outside pricing services to provide closing prices and information to evaluate and/or adjust those prices. As a means of evaluating its security valuation process, the Valuation Committee routinely compares closing prices, the next day’s opening prices in the same markets, and adjusted prices.

Other investments, including restricted securities, and those financial instruments for which the above valuation procedures are inappropriate or are deemed not to reflect fair value are stated at fair value as determined in good faith by the Valuation Committee, established by the Fund’s Board.

Valuation Inputs

Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the Fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

 

 

Level 1

  -    Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
 

Level 2

  -    Prices determined using other significant observable inputs. These may include quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, and others. Level 2 securities are fixed-income securities that are valued using observable inputs as stated above.
 

Level 3

  -    Prices determined using other significant unobservable inputs. Unobservable inputs reflect the Fund’s own assumptions about the factors market participants would use in pricing an investment, and would be based on the best information available.

Level 1 and Level 2 trading assets and trading liabilities, at fair value.

Fixed income securities including corporate, convertible and municipal bonds and notes, U.S. government agencies, U.S. treasury obligations, sovereign issues, bank loans, convertible preferred securities and non-U.S. bonds are normally valued by pricing service providers that use broker dealer quotations, reported trades or valuation estimates from their internal pricing models. The service providers’ internal models use inputs that are observable such as issuer details, interest rates, yield curves, prepayment speeds, credit risks/spreads, default rates and quoted prices for similar assets. Securities that use similar valuation techniques and inputs as described above are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Fixed income securities purchased on a delayed-delivery basis are marked to market daily until settlement at the forward settlement date and categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Mortgage-related and asset-backed securities are usually issued as separate tranches, or classes, of securities within each deal. These securities are also normally valued by pricing service providers that use broker dealer quotations or valuation estimates from their internal pricing models. The pricing models for these securities usually consider tranche-level attributes, current market data, estimated cash flows and market-based yield spreads for each tranche, and incorporates deal collateral performance, as available.

 

 

49


Table of Contents

American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Mortgage-related and asset-backed securities that use similar valuation techniques and inputs as described above are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Common stocks, ETFs and financial derivative instruments, such as futures contracts or options contracts that are traded on a national securities exchange, are stated at the last reported sale or settlement price on the day of valuation. To the extent these securities are actively traded and valuation adjustments are not applied, they are categorized as Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy. Valuation adjustments may be applied to certain securities that are solely traded on a foreign exchange to account for the market movement between the close of the foreign market and the close of the Exchange. These securities are valued using pricing service providers that consider the correlation of the trading patterns of the foreign security to the intraday trading in the U.S. markets for investments. Securities using these valuation adjustments are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. Preferred securities and other equities traded on inactive markets or valued by reference to similar instruments are also categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Investments in registered open-end investment management companies will be valued based upon the NAVs of such investments and are categorized as Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy. Investments in privately held investment funds which are redeemable within 90 days of the measurement date, will be valued based upon the NAVs of such investments and are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. Short-term investments having a maturity of 60 days or less are generally valued at amortized cost which approximates fair value. These investments are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Over-the-counter (“OTC”) financial derivative instruments, such as foreign currency contracts, options contracts, or swaps agreements, derive their value from underlying asset prices, indices, reference rates, and other inputs or a combination of these factors. These contracts are normally valued on the basis of broker dealer quotations or pricing service providers. Depending on the product and the terms of the transaction, the value of the financial derivative contracts can be estimated by a pricing service provider using a series of techniques, including simulation pricing models. The pricing models use inputs that are observed from actively quoted markets such as issuer details, indices, spreads, interest rates, curves, dividends and exchange rates. Financial derivatives that use similar valuation techniques and inputs as described above are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

The Fund’s investments are summarized by level based on the inputs used to determine their values. U.S. GAAP also requires all transfers between any levels to be disclosed. The end of the period timing recognition has been adopted for transfers between levels of the Fund’s assets and liabilities. As of August 31, 2014, the investments were classified as described below (in thousands):

 

Flexible Bond Fund (1)

   Level 1      Level 2      Level 3      Total  

Preferred Stock

   $ 578       $ 1,100       $ —         $ 1,678   

Domestic Bank Loan

     —           1,631         —           1,631   

Domestic Convertible Obligations

     —           2,603         —           2,603   

Domestic Obligations

     —           82,213         339         82,552   

Foreign Convertible Obligations

     —           2,704         —           2,704   

Foreign Obligations

     —           93,718         5         93,723   

Asset-Backed Obligations

     —           15,220         —           15,220   

Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

        19,890         —           19,890   

Foreign Collateralized Mortgage-Backed Obligations

     —           4,504         —           4,504   

Commercial Mortgage-Backed Obligations

     —           1,846         —           1,846   

U.S. Agency Mortgage-Backed Obligations

     —           2,160         —           2,160   

U.S. Agency Obligations

     —           290         —           290   

U.S. Treasury Obligations

     —           72,509         —           72,509   

Short-Term Investments

           

Other Investment Companies

     11,463         —           —           11,463   

Certificate of Deposits

     —           900         —           900   

U.S. Treasury Bills & Notes

     —           5,129         —           5,129   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total Investments in Securities

   $ 12,041       $ 306,417       $ 344       $ 318,802   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

     Level 1     Level 2     Level 3      Total  

Other Financial Instruments - Assets

         

Purchased options outstanding

   $ —        $ 3,776      $ —         $ 3,776   

Futures contracts

     14        —          —           14   

Interest Rate Swap agreements

     —          6,154        —           6,154   

Credit Default Swap agreements

     —          1,066        —           1,066   

Total Return Swap agreements

     —          8        —           8   

Forward currency contracts

     —          3,708        —           3,708   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ 14      $ 14,712      $ —         $ 14,726   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 
     Level 1     Level 2     Level 3      Total  

Other Financial Instruments - Liabilities

         

Short Sales

   $ —        $ (32,318   $ —         $ (32,318

Reverse repurchase agreement

     —          (12,282     —           (12,282

Written options outstanding

     —          (2,462     —           (2,462

Futures contracts

     (1,713     —          —           (1,713

Interest Rate Swap agreements

     —          (9,887     —           (9,887

Credit Default Swap agreements

     —          (1,533     —           (1,533

Total Return Swap agreements

     —          (8     —           (8

Forward currency contracts

     —          (1,604     —           (1,604
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ (1,713   $ (60,094   $ —         $ (61,807
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

(1)  Refer to the Schedule of Investments for Industry Information

The following is a reconciliation of Level 3 assets of the Fund for which significant unobservable inputs were used to determine fair value. Transfers in or out of Level 3 represent the ending value of any security or instrument where a change in the level has occurred from the beginning to the end of the period.

 

     Asset-Backed
Obligations
    Domestic
Obligations
    Foreign
Obligations
     Totals  

Beginning Balance as of 8/31/2013

   $ 221      $ —        $ —         $ 221   

Net Purchases

     —          336        —           336   

Net Sales

     (170     —          —           (170

Accrued Discounts/(Premiums)

     (4     (3     —           (7

Realized Gain/(Loss)

     (17     —          —           (17

Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation)

     (30     6        5         (19

Transfers into Level 3

     —          —          —           —     

Transfers out of Level 3

     —          —          —           —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Ending Balance 8/31/2014

   $ —        $ 339      $ 5       $ 344   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) on Investments Held at 8/31/2014(2)

   $ —          6        5       $ 11   

 

2  Change in unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) attributable to Level 3 securities held at period end. This balance is included in the change in unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) on the Statement of Operations.

The domestic obligation and foreign convertible obligation classified as Level 3 were valued using single broker quotes of $112.86 and $0.05, respectively. However, these securities are included in the Level 3 category due to limited market transparency and or a lack of corroboration to support the quoted prices.

Security Transactions and Investment Income

Security transactions are recorded on the trade date of the security purchase or sale. The Fund may purchase securities with delivery or payment to occur at a later date. At the time the Fund enters into a commitment to purchase a security, the transaction is recorded and the value of the security is reflected in the NAV. The value of the security may vary with market fluctuations.

Dividend income, net of foreign taxes, is recorded on the ex-dividend date except certain dividends from foreign securities which are recorded as soon as the information is available to the Fund. Interest income is earned from settlement date, recorded on the accrual basis, and adjusted, if necessary, for accretion of discounts and amortization of premiums. For financial and tax reporting purposes, realized gains and losses are determined on the basis of specific lot identification.

 

 

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Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Currency Translation

All assets and liabilities initially expressed in foreign currency values are converted into U.S. dollar values at the mean of the bid and ask prices of such currencies against U.S. dollars as last quoted by a recognized dealer. Income, expenses and purchases and sales of investments are translated into U.S. dollars at the rate of exchange prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions. The effect of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on investments is separately identified from the fluctuations arising from changes in market values of securities held and is reported with all other foreign currency gains and losses in the Fund’s Statement of Operations.

Dividends to Shareholders

Dividends from net investment income of the Fund normally will be declared and paid at least annually. Distributions, if any, of net realized capital gains are generally paid at least annually and recorded on the ex-dividend date.

Commission Recapture

The Fund has established brokerage commission recapture arrangements with certain brokers or dealers. If a Fund’s investment advisor chooses to execute a transaction through a participating broker, the broker rebates a portion of the commission back to the Fund. Any collateral benefit received through participation in the commission recapture program is directed exclusively to the Fund. This amount is reported with the net realized gain in the Fund’s Statement of Operations, if applicable. For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund did not have any commission recapture.

Allocation of Income, Expenses, Gains, and Losses

Income, expenses (other than those attributable to a specific class), gains, and losses are allocated daily to each class of shares based upon the relative proportion of net assets represented by such class. Operating expenses directly attributable to a specific class are charged against the operations of that class.

Use of Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Actual results may differ from those estimated.

Other

Under the Trust’s organizational documents, its officers and trustees are indemnified against certain liability arising out of the performance of their duties to the Trust. In the normal course of business, the Trust enters into contracts that provide indemnification to the other party or parties against potential costs or liabilities. The Trust’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is dependent on claims that may be made in the future and, therefore, cannot be estimated. The Trust has had no prior claims or losses pursuant to any such agreement.

4. Securities and other Investments

Emerging Markets Debt

The Fund may invest in emerging markets debt The Fund’s emerging markets debt securities may include obligations of government and corporations. As with any fixed income securities, emerging markets debt securities are subject to the risk of being downgraded in credit rating and to the risk of default. In the

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

event of a default on any investments in foreign debt obligations, it may be more difficult for the Fund to obtain or to enforce a judgment against the issuers of such securities. With respect to debt issued by emerging markets governments, such issues may be unwilling to pay interest and repay principal when due, either due to inability to pay or submission to political pressure not to pay, and as a result my default, declare temporary suspensions of interest payments or require that the conditions of payments be renegotiated.

Repurchase Agreements

A repurchase agreement is a fixed income security in the form of an agreement between a Fund as purchaser and an approved counterparty as seller. The agreement is backed by collateral in the form of securities and/or cash transferred by the seller to the buyer to be held by an eligible third-party custodian. Under the agreement a Fund acquires securities from the seller and the seller simultaneously commits to repurchase the securities at an agreed upon price and date, normally within a week. The price for the seller to repurchase the securities is greater than a Fund’s purchase price, reflecting an agreed upon “interest rate” that is effective for the period of time the purchaser’s money is invested in the security. During the term of the repurchase agreement, a Fund monitors on a daily basis the market value of the collateral subject to the agreement and, if the market value of the securities falls below the seller’s repurchase amount provided under the repurchase agreement, the seller is required to transfer additional securities or cash collateral equal to the amount by which the market value of the securities falls below the repurchase amount. Repurchase agreements may exhibit the economic characteristics of loans by a Fund.

The obligation of the seller under the repurchase agreement is not guaranteed, and there is a risk that the seller may fail to repurchase the underlying securities, whether because of the seller’s bankruptcy or otherwise. In such event, a Fund would attempt to exercise its rights with respect to the underlying collateral, including possible sale of the securities. A Fund may incur various expenses in connection with the exercise of its rights and may be subject to various delays and risks of loss, including (a) possible declines in the value of the underlying collateral, (b) possible reduction in levels of income and (c) lack of access to the collateral held through a third-party custodian and possible inability to enforce the Fund’s rights. The Board has established procedures pursuant to which the Manager monitors the creditworthiness of the counterparties with which the Fund enters into repurchase agreement transactions.

The Funds may enter into repurchase agreements with member banks of the Federal Reserve System or registered broker-dealers who, in the opinion of the Manager, present a minimal risk of default during the term of the agreement. The underlying securities which serve as collateral for repurchase agreements may include fixed income and equity securities such as U.S. government and agency securities, municipal obligations, corporate obligations, asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities, common and preferred stock, American Depositary Receipts, exchange-traded funds and convertible securities. There is no percentage restriction on each Fund’s ability to enter into repurchase agreements with terms of seven days or less.

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

Under a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund sells securities and agrees to repurchase them at a mutually agreed upon date and price. At the time the Fund enters into a reverse repurchase agreement, it will establish a segregated account with the custodian containing liquid assets having at least equal value to the repurchase price.

Certificate of Deposit

A savings certificate entitling the bearer to receive interest. A Certificate of Deposit (“CD”) bears a fixed maturity date, has a specified fixed interest rate, and can be issued in any denomination. CDs are generally issued by commercial banks and are currently insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) up to a maximum of $250,000. CDs are generally offered at terms ranging from one month to five years.

 

 

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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Inflation-Indexed Bonds

The Fund may invest in inflation-indexed bonds. Inflation-indexed bonds are fixed-income securities whose principal value is periodically adjusted based on the rate of inflation. The interest rate on these bonds is generally fixed at issuance at a rate lower than typical bonds. Over the life of an inflation-indexed bond, however, interest will be paid based on a principal value, which is adjusted for inflation. Any increase or decrease in the principal amount of an inflation-indexed bond will be included as interest income on the Statement of Operations, even though investors do not receive their principal until maturity.

Pay-In-Kind Securities

The Fund may invest in payment in-kind securities. Payment in-kind securities (“PIKs”) give the issuer the option at each interest payment date of making interest payments in either cash or additional debt securities. Those additional debt securities usually have the same terms, including maturity dates and interest rates, and associated risks as the original bonds. The daily market quotations of the original bonds may include the accrued interest (referred to as a dirty price) and require a pro rata adjustment from the unrealized appreciation or depreciation on investment to interest receivable in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

Restricted Securities

The Fund may invest in securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These securities may be sold privately, but are required to be registered or exempted from such registration before being sold to the public. Private placement securities are generally considered to be restricted except for those securities traded between qualified institutional investors under the provisions of Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. Disposal of restricted securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expenses, and prompt sale at an acceptable price may be difficult to achieve. Restricted securities outstanding as of August 31, 2014 are disclosed in the Notes to the Schedule of Investments.

High-Yield Securities

Non-investment-grade securities are rated below the four highest credit grades by at least one of the public rating agencies (or are unrated if not publicly rated). Participation in high-yielding securities transactions generally involves greater returns in the form of higher average yields. However, participation in such transactions involves greater risks, including sensitivity to economic changes, solvency, and relative liquidity in the secondary trading market. Lower ratings may reflect a greater possibility that the financial condition of the issuer, or adverse changes in general economic conditions, or both, may impair the ability of the issuer to make payments of interest and principal. The prices and yields of lower-rated securities generally fluctuate more than higher-quality securities, and such prices may decline significantly in periods of general economic difficulty or rising interest rates.

Real Estate Investment Trusts

The Fund may own shares of real estate investment trusts (“REITs”) which report information on the source of their distributions annually. The Fund re-characterizes distributions received from REIT investments based on information provided by the REITs into the following categories: ordinary income, long-term capital gains, and return of capital. If information is not available on a timely basis from the REITs, the re-characterization will be estimated based on available information, which may include the previous year allocation. If new or additional information becomes available from the REITs at a later date, a re-characterization will be made the following year. These re-characterizations are not recorded for financial statement purposes, but as an adjustment to the calculation of taxable income.

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

Other Investment Company Securities and Other Exchange Traded Products

The Fund may invest in shares of other investment companies, including open-end funds, closed-end funds, business development companies, ETFs, exchange-traded notes (“ETNs”), unit investment trusts, and other investment companies of the Trust. The Funds may invest in investment company securities advised by the Manager or a sub-advisor. Investments in the securities of other investment companies may involve duplication of advisory fees and certain other expenses. By investing in another investment company, a Fund becomes a shareholder of that investment company. As a result, Fund shareholders indirectly will bear a Fund’s proportionate share of the fees and expenses paid by shareholders of the other investment company, in addition to the fees and expenses Fund shareholders directly bear in connection with the Fund’s own operations. These other fees and expenses are reflected as Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses and are included in the Fees and Expenses Table for the Fund in its Prospectus, if applicable. Investments in other investment companies may involve the payment of substantial premiums above the value of such issuer’s portfolio securities.

Mortgage-Related and Other Asset-Backed Securities

The Fund may invest in mortgage or other asset-backed securities (“ABS”). These securities may include mortgage instruments issued by U.S. government agencies (“agency mortgages”) or those issued by private entities (“non-agency mortgages”). Specific types of instruments may include mortgage pass-through securities, collateralized mortgage obligations (“CMOs”), commercial mortgage-backed securities, mortgage dollar rolls, CMO residuals, stripped mortgage-backed securities and other securities that directly or indirectly represent a participation in, or are secured by a payable from, mortgage loans on real property. The value of the Fund’s mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”) may be affected by, among other things, changes or perceived changes in interest rates, factors concerning the interests in and structure of the issuer or the originator of the mortgage, or the quality of the underlying assets. The mortgages underlying the securities may default or decline in quality or value. Through its investments in MBS, a Fund has exposure to subprime loans, Alt-A loans and non-conforming loans as well as to the mortgage and credit markets generally. Underlying collateral related to subprime, Alt-A and non-conforming mortgage loans has become increasingly susceptible to defaults and declines in quality or value, especially in a declining residential real estate market. In addition, regulatory or tax changes may adversely affect the mortgage securities markets as a whole.

Mortgage-Backed Securities

MBS often have stated maturities of up to thirty years when they are issued, depending upon the length of the mortgages underlying the securities. In practice however, unscheduled or early payments of principal and interest on the underlying mortgages may make the securities’ effective maturity shorter than this, and the prevailing interest rates may be higher or lower than the current yield of the Fund’s portfolio at the time resulting in reinvestment risk.

Rising or high interest rates may result in slower than expected principal payments which may tend to extend the duration of MBS, making them more volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates. This is known as extension risk.

MBS may have less potential for capital appreciation than comparable fixed income securities due to the likelihood of increased prepayments of mortgages resulting from foreclosures or declining interest rates. These foreclosed or refinanced mortgages are paid off at face value (par) or less, causing a loss, particularly for any investor who may have purchased the security at a premium or a price above par. In such an environment, this risk limits the potential price appreciation of these securities.

Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities

Certain MBS may be issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or a government sponsored entity, such as Fannie Mae (the Federal National Mortgage Association) or Freddie Mac (the Federal Home Loan

 

 

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Mortgage Corporation). Although these instruments may be guaranteed by the U.S. government or a government sponsored entity, many such MBS are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States and are still exposed to the risk of non-payment.

Privately Issued Mortgage-Backed Securities

MBS held by a Fund may be issued by private issuers including commercial banks, savings associations, mortgage companies, investment banking firms, finance companies and special purpose finance entities (called special purpose vehicles or SPVs) and other entities that acquire and package mortgage loans for resale as MBS. These privately issued non-agency MBS may offer higher yields than those issued by government agencies, but also may be subject to greater price changes than governmental issues. Subprime loans refer to loans made to borrowers with weakened credit histories or with a lower capacity to make timely payments on their loans. Alt-A loans refer to loans extended to borrowers who have incomplete documentation of income, assets, or other variables that are important to the credit underwriting processes. Non-conforming mortgages are loans that do not meet the standards that allow purchase by government-sponsored enterprises. MBS with exposure to subprime loans, Alt-A loans or non-conforming loans have had in many cases higher default rates than those loans that meet government underwriting requirements. The risk of non-payment is greater for MBS that are backed by mortgage pools that contain subprime, Alt-A and non-conforming loans, but a level of risk exists for all loans.

Unlike agency MBS issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or a government-sponsored entity (e.g., Fannie Mae (the Federal National Mortgage Association) and Freddie Mac (the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation), MBS issued by private issuers do not have a government or government-sponsored entity guarantee, but may have credit enhancements provided by external entities such as banks or financial institutions or achieved through the structuring of the transaction itself. Examples of such credit support arising out of the structure of the transaction include the issue of senior and subordinated securities (e.g., the issuance of securities by an SPV in multiple classes or “tranches,” with one or more classes being senior to other subordinated classes as to the payment of principal and interest, with the result that defaults on the underlying mortgage loans are borne first by the holders of the subordinated class); creation of “reserve funds” (in which case cash or investments, sometimes funded from a portion of the payments on the underlying mortgage loans, are held in reserve against future losses); and “overcollateralization” (in which case the scheduled payments on, or the principal amount of, the underlying mortgage loans exceeds that required to make payment on the securities and pay any servicing or other fees). However, there can be no guarantee that credit enhancements, if any, will be sufficient to prevent losses in the event of defaults on the underlying mortgage loans. In addition, MBS that are issued by private issuers are not subject to the underwriting requirements for the underlying mortgages that are applicable to those MBS that have a government or government-sponsored entity guarantee. As a result, the mortgage loans underlying private MBS may, and frequently do, have less favorable collateral, credit risk or other underwriting characteristics than government or government-sponsored MBS and have wider variances in a number of terms including interest rate, term, size, purpose and borrower characteristics. Privately issued pools more frequently include second mortgages, high loan-to-value mortgages and manufactured housing loans. The coupon rates and maturities of the underlying mortgage loans in a private-label MBS pool may vary to a greater extent than those included in a government guaranteed pool, and the pool may include subprime mortgage loans.

Privately issued MBS are not traded on an exchange and there may be a limited market for the securities, especially when there is a perceived weakness in the mortgage and real estate market sectors. Without an active trading market, MBS held in the Fund’s portfolio may be particularly difficult to value because of the complexities involved in assessing the value of the underlying mortgage loans.

Asset-Backed Securities

ABS may include MBS, loans, receivables or other assets. The value of the Fund’s ABS may be affected by, among other things, actual or perceived changes in interest rates, factors concerning the interests in and

 

 

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Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

structure of the issuer or the originator of the receivables, the market’s assessment of the quality of underlying assets or actual or perceived changes in the credit worthiness of the individual borrowers, the originator, the servicing agent or the financial institution providing the credit support.

Payment of principal and interest may be largely dependent upon the cash flows generated by the assets backing the securities.

Rising or high interest rates tend to extend the duration of ABS, making them more volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates. The underlying assets are sometimes subject to prepayments which can shorten the security’s weighted average life and may lower its return. Defaults on loans underlying ABS have become an increasing risk for ABS that are secured by home equity loans related to sub-prime, Alt-A or non-conforming mortgage loans, especially in a declining residential real estate market.

ABS (other than MBS) present certain risks that are not presented by MBS. Primarily, these securities may not have the benefit of any security interest in the related assets. Credit card receivables are generally unsecured and the debtors are entitled to the protection of a number of state and federal consumer credit laws, many of which give such debtors the right to set off certain amounts owed on the credit cards, thereby reducing the balance due. There is the possibility that recoveries on repossessed collateral may not, in some cases, be available to support payments on these securities. ABS are often backed by a pool of assets representing the obligations of a number of different parties. To lessen the effect of failures by obligors on underlying assets to make payments, the securities may contain elements of credit support which fall into two categories: (i) liquidity protection, and (ii) protection against losses resulting from ultimate default by an obligor on the underlying assets. Liquidity protection refers to the provision of advances, generally by the entity administering the pool of assets, to ensure that the receipt of payments on the underlying pool occurs in a timely fashion. Protection against losses results from payment of the insurance obligations on at least a portion of the assets in the pool. This protection may be provided through guarantees, policies or letters of credit obtained by the issuer or sponsor from third parties, through various means of structuring the transaction or through a combination of such approaches. The Fund will not pay any additional or separate fees for credit support. The degree of credit support provided for each issue is generally based on historical information respecting the level of credit risk associated with the underlying assets.

Delinquency or loss in excess of that anticipated or failure of the credit support could adversely affect the return on an investment in such a security. The availability of ABS may be affected by legislative or regulatory developments. It is possible that such developments may require the Fund to dispose of any then existing holdings of such securities.

Short Sales

The Fund may enter into short sale transactions. A short sale is a transaction in which a Fund sells a security it does not own in anticipation of a decline in the market price of the security. Securities sold in short sale transactions and the interest payable on such securities, if any, are reflected as a liability on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. A Fund is obligated to deliver the security at the market price at the time the short position is closed. The risk of loss on a short sale transaction is theoretically unlimited, because there is no limit to the cost of replacing the security sold short, whereas losses from purchase transactions cannot exceed the total amount invested. As of August 31, 2014, short positions were held by the Fund.

Master Agreements

The Fund is a party to International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreements (“ISDA Master Agreements”) with counterparties that govern transactions in over-the-counter derivative and foreign exchange contracts entered into by the Fund and those counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreements contain provisions for general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral and events of default or termination. Events of termination include conditions that may entitle counterparties to elect to terminate early and cause settlement of all outstanding transactions under the applicable ISDA Master Agreement. Any

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

election to terminate early could be material to the financial statements. Since different types of forward and OTC financial derivative transactions have different mechanics and are sometimes traded out of different legal entities of particular counterparty organization, each type of transaction may be covered by a different Master Agreement, resulting in the need for multiple agreements with a single counterparty. As the Master Agreements are specific to unique operations of different asset types, they allow a Fund to net its total exposure to a counterparty in the event of a default with respect to all the transactions governed under a single agreement with a counterparty.

Master Repurchase Agreements (“Master Repo Agreements”) govern transactions between a Fund and select counterparties. The Master Repo Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation, income payments, events of default, and maintenance of collateral for Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Agreements.

Master Securities Forward Transaction Agreements (“Master Forward Agreements”) govern the considerations and factors surrounding the settlement of certain forward settling transactions, such as delayed delivery or sale-buyback financing transactions by and between a Fund and select counterparties. The Master Forward Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation and confirmation, payment and transfer, events of default, termination, and maintenance of collateral.

5. Financial Derivative Instruments

The Fund may utilize derivative instruments to enhance return, hedge risk, gain efficient exposure to an asset class or to manage liquidity. When considering the Fund’s use of derivatives, it is important to note that the Fund does not use derivatives for the purpose of creating financial leverage.

Options Contracts

The Fund may write (1) call and put options on futures, swaps (“swaptions”), securities, commodities or currencies it owns or in which it may invest and (2) inflation-capped options. Writing put options tends to increase the Fund’s exposure to unfavorable movements of the underlying instrument in exchange for an upfront premium. Writing call options tends to decrease the Fund’s exposure to favorable movements of the underlying instrument in exchange for an upfront premium. When the Fund writes a call, put, or inflation-capped option, an amount equal to the premium received is recorded as a liability and subsequently marked to market to reflect the current value of the option written. The purpose of inflation-capped options is to protect the buyer from inflation erosion above a certain rate on a given notional exposure. A floor can be used to give downside protection to investments in inflation-linked products. These liabilities are reflected as written options outstanding on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Certain options may be written with premiums to be determined on a future date. Premiums received from writing options which expire are treated as realized gains. Premiums received from writing options which are exercised or closed are added to the proceeds or offset against amounts paid on the underlying futures, swap, security or currency transaction to determine the realized gain or loss when the underlying transaction is sold. The Fund as a writer of an option has no control over whether the underlying instrument may be sold (call) or purchased (put) and as a result bears the market risk of an unfavorable change in the price of the instrument underlying the written option. There is the risk the Fund may not be able to enter into a closing transaction because of an illiquid market.

The Fund may also purchase put and call options. Purchasing call options tends to increase the Fund’s exposure to favorable movements of the underlying instrument in exchange for paying an upfront premium. Purchasing put options tends to decrease the Fund’s exposure to unfavorable movements of the underlying instrument. The Fund pays a premium which is included on the Fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities as an investment and subsequently marked to market to reflect the current value of the option. Premiums paid for purchasing options which expire are treated as realized losses. Certain options may be purchased with premiums to be determined on a future date. The premiums for these options are based upon implied volatility parameters at specified terms. The risk associated with purchasing put and call options is limited to the

 

 

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premium paid. Premiums paid for purchasing options which are exercised or closed are added to the amounts paid or offset against the proceeds on the underlying investment transaction to determine the realized gain or loss when the underlying transaction is sold.

Options

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund purchased/sold options primarily for return enhancement, hedging and exposing cash to markets.

The Fund’s option and swaption contracts outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet strategic requirements. The following table illustrates the average quarterly volume of options contracts. For purpose of this disclosure, volume is measured by contracts outstanding at period end (in thousands).

 

Average Purchased Option and Swaption Notional Amounts Outstanding

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

   $ 4,130,289   

Average Written Option and Swaption Notional Amounts Outstanding

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

   $ 3,167,699   

Straddle Options

The Fund may enter into differing forms of straddle options. A straddle is an investment strategy that uses combinations of options that allow a Fund to profit based on the future price movements of the underlying security, regardless of the direction of those movements. A written straddle involves simultaneously writing a call option and a put option on the same security with the same strike price and expiration date. The written straddle increases in value when the underlying security price has little volatility before the expiration date. A purchased straddle involves simultaneously purchasing a call option and a put option on the same security with the same strike price and expiration date. The purchased straddle increases in value when the underlying security price has high volatility, regardless of direction, before the expiration date.

Swap Agreements

The Fund may invest in swap agreements. Swap agreements are privately negotiated agreements between the Fund and a counterparty to exchange at specified, future intervals. The Fund may enter into credit default, cross-currency, interest rate and other forms of swap agreements to manage its exposure to credit, currency, interest rate, and inflation risk. In connection with these agreements, securities or cash may be identified as collateral in accordance with the terms of the respective swap agreements to provide assets of value and recourse in the event of default or bankruptcy/insolvency.

Swaps are marked to market daily based upon values from third party vendors or quotations from market makers to the extent available and the change in value, if any, is recorded as an unrealized gain or loss on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. In the event that market quotes are not readily available and the swap cannot be valued pursuant to one of the valuation methods, the value of the swap will be determined in good faith by the Valuation Committee pursuant to procedures approved by the Board.

Payments received or made at the beginning of the measurement period are reflected as such on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities and represent payments made or received upon entering into the swap agreement to compensate for differences between the stated terms of the swap agreement and prevailing market conditions (credit spreads, currency exchange rates, interest rates, and other relevant factors). These upfront payments are recorded as realized gains or losses on the Statement of Operations upon termination or maturity of the swap. A liquidation payment received or made at the termination of the swap is recorded as realized gain or loss on the Statement of Operations. Net periodic payments received or paid by the Fund are included as part of realized gains or losses on the Statement of Operations.

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

Entering into these agreements involves, to varying degrees, elements of credit, market and documentation risk in excess of the amounts recognized on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Such risks involve the possibility that there will be no liquid market for these agreements, that the counterparty to the agreements may default on its obligation to perform or disagree as to the meaning of contractual terms in the agreements and that there may be unfavorable changes in interest rates.

The Fund’s maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk is the discounted net value of the cash flows to be received from the counterparty over the contract’s remaining life, to the extent that amount is positive. The risk is mitigated by having a master netting arrangement between the Fund and the counterparty and by the posting of collateral to the Fund to cover the Fund’s exposure to the counterparty.

Credit Default Swap Agreements

Credit default swap agreements involve one party making a stream of payments (referred to as the buyer of protection) to another party (the seller of protection) in exchange for the right to receive a specified return in the event of a default or other credit event for the referenced entity, obligation or index. As a seller of protection on credit default swap agreements, the Fund will generally receive from the buyer of protection a fixed rate of periodic premium throughout the term of the swap provided that there is no credit event. As the seller, the Fund would effectively add leverage to its portfolio because, in addition to its total net assets, the Fund would be subject to investment exposure up to the notional amount of the swap.

If the Fund is a seller of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) pay to the buyer of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and take delivery of the referenced obligation, other deliverable obligations or underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) pay a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index. If the Fund is a buyer of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) receive from the seller of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and deliver the referenced obligation, other deliverable obligations or underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) receive a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index. Recovery values are estimated by market makers considering either industry standard recovery rates or entity specific factors and considerations until a credit event occurs. If a credit event has occurred, the recovery value is determined by a facilitated auction whereby a minimum number of allowable broker bids, together with a specified valuation method, are used to calculate the settlement value.

Credit default swap agreements on corporate issues, sovereign issues of an emerging country or U.S. municipal issues involve one party making a stream of payments to another party in exchange for the right to receive a specified return in the event of a default or other credit event. If a credit event occurs and cash settlement is not elected, a variety of other deliverable obligations may be delivered in lieu of the specific referenced obligation. The ability to deliver other obligations may result in a cheapest-to-deliver option (the buyer of protection’s right to choose the deliverable obligation with the lowest value following a credit event). The Fund may use credit default swaps on corporate issues, sovereign issues of an emerging country or U.S. municipal issues to provide a measure of protection against defaults of the issuers (i.e., to reduce risk where the Fund owns or has exposure to the referenced obligation) or to take an active long or short position with respect to the likelihood of a particular issuer’s default.

Credit default swap agreements on asset-backed securities involve one party making a stream of payments to another party in exchange for the right to receive a specified return in the event of a default or other credit event. Unlike credit default swaps on corporate issues, sovereign issues of an emerging country or U.S. municipal issues, deliverable obligations in most instances would be limited to the specific referenced

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

obligation as performance for asset-backed securities can vary across deals. Prepayments, principal paydowns, and other writedown or loss events on the underlying mortgage loans will reduce the outstanding principal balance of the referenced obligation. These reductions may be temporary or permanent as defined under the terms of the swap agreement and the notional amount for the swap agreement will be adjusted by corresponding amounts. The Fund may use credit default swaps on asset-backed securities to provide a measure of protection against defaults of the referenced obligation that the Fund owns or to take an active long or short position with respect to the likelihood of a particular referenced obligation’s default that the Fund does not own.

Credit default swap agreements on credit indices involve one party making a stream of payments to another party in exchange for the right to receive a specified return in the event of a write-down, principal shortfall, interest shortfall or default of all or part of the referenced entities comprising the credit index. A credit index is a basket of credit instruments or exposures designed to be representative of some part of the credit market as a whole. These indices are made up of reference credits that are judged by a poll of dealers to be the most liquid entities in the credit default swap market based on the sector of the index. Components of the indices may include, but are not limited to, investment grade securities, high yield securities, asset-backed securities, emerging markets, and/or various credit ratings within each sector. Credit indices are traded using credit default swaps with standardized terms including a fixed spread and standard maturity dates. An index credit default swap references all the names in the index, and if there is a default, the credit event is settled based on that name’s weight in the index. The composition of the indices changes periodically, usually every six months, and for most indices, each name has an equal weight in the index. The Fund may use credit default swaps on credit indices to hedge a portfolio of credit default swaps or bonds, which is less expensive than it would be to buy many credit default swaps to achieve a similar effect. Credit default swaps on indices are benchmarks for protecting investors owning bonds against default, and traders use them to speculate on changes in credit quality.

Implied credit spreads, represented in absolute terms, utilized in determining the market value of credit default swap agreements on corporate issues, sovereign issues of an emerging country or U.S. municipal issues as of period end are disclosed in the Notes to the Schedule of Investments and serve as an indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk and represent a market participant view of the likelihood or risk of default for the underlying referent security to credit derivative. The implied credit spread of a particular referenced entity reflects the cost of buying/selling protection and may include upfront payments required to be made to enter into the agreement. For credit default swap agreements on asset-backed securities and credit indices, the quoted market prices and resulting values serve as the indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk. Wider credit spreads represent a deterioration of the referenced entity’s credit soundness and a greater likelihood or risk of default or other credit event occurring as defined under the terms of the agreement.

The maximum potential amount of future payments (undiscounted) that the Fund as a seller of protection could be required to make under a credit default swap agreement would be an amount equal to the notional amount of the agreement. Notional amounts of each individual credit default swap agreements outstanding as of August 31, 2014 for which the Fund is the seller of protection is disclosed in the Notes to the Schedule of Investments. These potential amounts would be partially offset by any recovery values of the respective referenced obligations, upfront payments received upon entering into the agreement, or net amounts received from the settlement of buy protection credit default swap agreements entered into by the Fund for the same referenced entity or entities.

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund entered into credit default swaps primarily for return enhancement hedging and exposing cash to markets.

The Fund’s credit default swap contract notional amounts outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet the strategic requirements. The following table illustrates the average quarterly volume of credit default swap contracts. For the purpose of this disclosure, the volume is measured by the notional amounts outstanding at each quarter end (in thousands).

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

Average Credit Default Swap Notional Amounts Outstanding

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

   $ 106,443   

Interest Rate Swap Agreements

The Fund is subject to interest rate risk exposure in the normal course of pursuing its investment objectives. Because the Fund holds fixed rate bonds, the value of these bonds may decrease if interest rates rise. To help hedge against this risk and to maintain its ability to generate income at prevailing market rates, the Fund may enter into interest rate swap agreements. Interest rate swap agreements involve the exchange by the Fund with another party of their respective commitments to pay or receive interest with respect to the notional amount of principal.

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund entered into interest rate swaps primarily for return enhancement, hedging and exposing cash to markets.

The Fund’s interest rate swap contract notional amounts outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet the strategic requirements. The following table illustrates the average quarterly volume of interest rate swap contracts. For the purpose of this disclosure, the volume is measured by the notional amounts outstanding at each quarter end (in thousands).

 

Average Interest Rate Swap Notional Amounts Outstanding

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

   $ 10,068,739   

Over-the-Counter Swap Agreements

OTC financial derivative instruments such as forward currency contracts, options contracts, interest rate, and credit default swap agreements derive their value from underlying asset prices, indices, reference rates and other inputs or a combination of these factors. These instruments are valued using evaluated prices furnished by a pricing service selected by the Board. In certain cases, when a valuation is not readily available from a pricing service, the Fund’s Manager may provide a valuation. Depending on the instrument and the terms of the transaction, the value of the derivative instrument can be determined by a pricing service or Manager using a series of techniques, including simulation pricing models. The pricing models use inputs, such as issuer details, indices, spreads, interest rates, yield curves, dividends, and exchange rates, that are observed from actively quoted markets. Derivative instruments that use valuation techniques and inputs similar to those described above are normally categorized as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy.

Total Return Swap Agreements

The Fund may enter into total return swaps in order to take a “long” or “short” position with respect to an underlying referenced asset. The Fund is subject to market price volatility of the underlying referenced asset. A total return swap involves commitments to pay interest in exchange for a market linked return based on a notional amount. To the extent that the total return of the security, group of securities or index underlying the transaction exceeds or falls short of the offsetting interest obligation, the Fund will receive a payment from or make a payment to the counterparty. During the period ended August 31, 2014, the Fund held total return swaps for hedging and non-hedging purposes.

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund entered into total return swaps primarily for return enhancement, hedging and exposing cash to markets.

The Fund’s total return swap contract notional amounts outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet the strategic requirements. The following table illustrates the average quarterly

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

volume of total return swap contracts. For the purpose of this disclosure, the volume is measured by the notional amounts outstanding at each quarter end (in thousands).

 

Average Total Return Swap Notional Amounts Outstanding

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

   $ 2,214   

Inflation Swap Agreements

An inflation swap involves the use of inflation derivatives (or inflation-indexed derivatives) to transfer inflation risk from one party to another. The derivatives used may be over-the-counter or exchange-traded derivatives. Inflation swaps frequently include real rate swaps, such as asset swaps of inflation-indexed bonds. Inflation swaps are simply a linear form of such derivatives. Real rate swaps consist of the nominal interest swap rate minus the corresponding inflation swap.

In an inflation swap, one party pays a fixed rate on a notional principal amount, while the other party pays a floating rate linked to an inflation index, such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI). The party paying the floating rate pays the inflation adjusted rate multiplied by the notional principal amount.

There are three main types of inflation swap. In a standard interbank inflation-linked swap, or zero-coupon inflation-linked swap, cash flow is exchanged on the maturity date. This swap pays out the exact value of the cumulative inflation for a fixed capital sum over a determined period.

In a year-on-year inflation-linked swap, inflation is used on an annual basis rather than a cumulative one. Typically, an inflation swap is priced on a zero-coupon basis, with payment exchanged upon maturity. One party pays the compound fixed rate, while the other pays the actual inflation rate for the term of the swap. In Europe, inflation swaps are typically paid on a year-on-year basis where the year-on-year rate of change of the price index is paid. In the United States, payment is more typically on a month-on-month basis, although the inflation rate used is still the year-on-year rate.

In an inflation-linked income swap two cash flows are exchanged, each of which follows the inflation index. One party pays a fixed inflation increase annually over the period of the contract. The other party pays the actual inflation over the period of the contract. The swap itself consists of a series of zero-coupon swaps. Other traded inflation derivatives include caps, floors, and straddles, which are usually priced against year-on-year swaps.

Forward Foreign Currency Contracts

The Fund may enter into forward foreign currency contracts to hedge the exchange rate risk on investment transactions or to hedge the value of the Fund’s securities denominated in foreign currencies. Forward foreign currency contracts are valued at the forward exchange rate prevailing on the day of valuation. The Fund bears the market risk that arises from changes in foreign exchange rates, and accordingly, the unrealized gain (loss) on these contracts is reflected in the accompanying financial statements. The Fund also bears the credit risk if the counterparty fails to perform under the contract.

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund entered into foreign currency exchange contracts primarily for return enhancement and hedging.

The Fund’s foreign currency contract notional dollar values outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet strategic requirements. The following tables illustrate the average quarterly volume of foreign currency contracts. For the purpose of this disclosure, volume is measured by the amounts bought and sold in USD (in thousands).

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

Average Forward Foreign Currency Notional Amount Outstanding - Purchased Contracts

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

   $ 79,791   

Average Forward Foreign Currency Notional Amount Outstanding - Sold Contracts

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

   $ 178,825   

Futures Contracts

Futures contracts are contracts to buy or sell a standard quantity of securities at a specified price on a future date. The Fund may enter into financial futures contracts as a method for keeping assets readily convertible to cash if needed to meet shareholder redemptions or for other needs while maintaining exposure to the stock or bond market, as applicable. The primary risks associated with the use of futures contracts are the possibility of illiquid markets or imperfect correlation between the values of the contracts and the underlying securities, or that the counterparty will fail to perform its obligations.

Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to set aside or deposit with a broker an amount, termed the initial margin, which typically represents a portion of the face value of the futures contract. The Fund usually reflects this amount on the Schedule of Investments as a U.S. Treasury Bill held as collateral for futures contracts or as Cash deposited with broker on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Payments to and from the broker, known as variation margin, are required to be made on a daily basis as the price of the futures contract fluctuates. Changes in initial settlement values are accounted for as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) until the contracts are terminated, at which time realized gains and losses are recognized. Futures contracts are valued at the most recent settlement price established each day by the exchange on which they are traded.

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Fund entered into future contracts primarily for return enhancement, hedging and exposing cash to markets.

The Fund’s futures contracts outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet strategic requirements. The following table illustrates the average quarterly volume of futures contracts. For purpose of this disclosure, volume is measured by contracts outstanding at period end.

 

Average Futures Contracts Outstanding

 

Fund

   Year ended August 31, 2014  

Flexible Bond

     1,287   

The following is a summary of the fair valuations of the Fund’s derivative instruments categorized by risk exposure(1)(3):

Fair values of financial instruments on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as of August 31, 2014 (in thousands):

 

     Derivatives not accounted for as hedging instruments  
     Credit
contracts
    Foreign
exchange
contracts
    Interest
rate
contracts
    Equity
contracts
    Total  

Assets:

          

Unrealized appreciation of foreign currency contracts

   $ —        $ 3,708      $ —        $ —        $ 3,708   

Receivable for variation margin from open futures contracts(2)

     —          —          —          —          —     

Unrealized appreciation from swap agreements

     190        —          5,975        —          6,165   

Purchased options and swaptions outstanding

     —          1,448        2,328        —          3,776   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
   $ 190      $ 5,156      $ 8,303      $ —        $ 13,649   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Liabilities:

          

Unrealized depreciation of foreign currency contracts

   $ —        $ (1,604   $ —        $ —        $ (1,604

Payable for variation margin from open futures contracts(2)

     —          —          (1,736     —          (1,736

Unrealized depreciation from swap agreements

     (855     —          (8,657     —          (9,512

Written options and swaptions outstanding

     —          (974     (1,433     (55     (2,462
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
   $ (855   $ (2,578   $ (11,826   $ (55   $ (15,314
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

The effect of financial derivative instruments on the Statement of Operations for the year ended August 31, 2014 (in thousands):

 

     Derivatives not accounted for as hedging instruments  
     Credit
contracts
    Foreign
exchange
contracts
    Interest
rate
contracts
    Equity
contracts
     Total  

Realized gain (loss) of derivatives recognized as a result from operations:

           

Net realized gain (loss) from foreign currency transactions

   $ —        $ (1,416   $ —        $ —         $ (1,416

Net realized gain (loss) from futures contracts

     (3,842     (246     (174     —           (4,262

Net realized gain (loss) from swap agreements

     (442     38        730        —           326   

Net realized gain (loss) from option and swaption contracts

     —          (210     (518     —           (728
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ (4,284   $ (1,834   $ 38      $ —         $ (6,080
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Net change in unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of derivatives recognized as a result from operations:

           

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from foreign currency contracts

   $ —        $ 3,121      $ —        $ —         $ 3,121   

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from futures contracts

     (2,002     —          (15     —           (2,017

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from swap agreements

     (574     —          (2,513     —           (3,087

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from option and swaption contracts

     27        237        (391     4         (123

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from short sale

     (113     —          —          —           (113
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ (2,662   $ 3,358      $ (2,919   $ 4       $ (2,219
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

(1) See Note 3 in the Notes to Financial Statements for additional information.
(2) Includes cumulative appreciation or (depreciation) of futures contracts as reported in the Schedule of Investment footnotes. Only current day’s variation margin in reported within the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
(3) The volume of derivative activity described above is reflective of the derivative activity through the current period of operations.

6. Principal Risks

In the normal course of business the Fund trades financial instruments and enters into financial transactions where risk of potential loss exists. Security values fluctuate (market risk) and may decline due to factors affecting securities markets in general, particular industries represented in the securities markets or conditions specifically related to a particular company. Failure of the other party to a transaction to perform (credit risk), for example by not making principal and interest payments when due, reduces the value of the issuer’s debt and could reduce the Fund’s income. Similar to credit risk, the Fund may be exposed to counterparty risk, or the risk that an institution or other entity with which the Fund has unsettled or open transactions will fail to make required payments or otherwise comply with the terms of the instrument, transaction or contract. The potential loss could exceed the value of the financial assets recorded in the financial statements. Some of the Fund’s investments may be illiquid and the Fund may not be able to vary the portfolio investments in response to changes in economic and other conditions. If the Fund is required to liquidate all or a portion of its investments quickly, the Fund may realize significantly less than the value at which it previously recorded those investments.

Market Risks

The Fund’s investments in financial derivatives and other financial instruments expose the Fund to various risks such as, but not limited to, interest rate, foreign currency and equity risks.

Interest rate risk is the risk that fixed income securities will decline in value because of changes in interest rates. As nominal interest rates rise, the value of certain fixed income securities held by the Fund is likely to decrease. A nominal interest rate can be described as the sum of a real interest rate and an expected inflation rate. Fixed income securities with longer durations tend to be more sensitive to changes in interest rates, usually making them more volatile than securities with shorter durations. Duration is useful primarily as a measure of the sensitivity of a fixed income’s market price to interest rate (i.e. yield) movements.

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

If the Fund invests directly in foreign currencies or in securities that trade in, and receive revenues in, foreign currencies, or in financial derivatives that provide exposure to foreign currencies, it will be subject to the risk that those currencies will decline in value relative to the base currency of the Fund, or, in the case of hedging positions, that the Fund’s base currency will decline in value relative to the currency being hedged. Currency rates in foreign countries may fluctuate significantly over short periods of time for a number of reasons, including changes in interest rates, intervention (or the failure to intervene) by U.S. or foreign governments, central banks or supranational entities such as the International Monetary Fund, or by the imposition of currency controls or other political developments in the United States or abroad. As a result, the Fund’s investments in foreign currency denominated securities may reduce the returns of the Fund.

The fair values of equities, such as common stocks and preferred securities or equity related investments such as futures and options, may decline due to general market conditions which are not specifically related to a particular company, such as real or perceived adverse economic conditions, changes in the general outlook for corporate earnings, changes in interest or currency rates or adverse investor sentiment generally. They may also decline due to factors which affect a particular industry or industries, such as labor shortages or increased production costs and competitive conditions within an industry. Equity securities and equity related investments generally have greater market price volatility than fixed income securities.

Credit and Counterparty Risks

The Fund will be exposed to credit risk on parties with whom it trades and will also bear the risk of settlement default. The Fund minimizes concentrations of credit risk by undertaking transactions with a large number of customers and counterparties on recognized and reputable exchanges. The Fund could lose money if the issuer or guarantor of a fixed income security, or the counterparty to a financial derivatives contract, repurchase agreement or a loan of portfolio securities, is unable or unwilling to make timely principal and/or interest payments, or to otherwise honor its obligations. Securities are subject to varying degrees of credit risk, which are often reflected in credit ratings.

Similar to credit risk, the Fund may be exposed to counterparty risk, or the risk that an institution or other entity with which the Fund has unsettled or open transactions will default. Financial assets, which potentially expose the Fund to counterparty risk, consist principally of cash due from counterparties and investments. Furthermore, to the extent that unpaid amounts owed to the Fund exceed a predetermined threshold agreed to with the counterparty, such counterparty shall advance collateral to the Fund in the form of cash or cash equivalents equal in value to the unpaid amount owed to the Fund. The Fund may invest such collateral in securities or other instruments and will typically pay interest to the counterparty on the collateral received. If the unpaid amount owed to the Fund subsequently falls, the Fund would be required to return to the counterparty all or a portion of the collateral previously advanced to the Fund.

All transactions in listed securities are settled/paid for upon delivery using approved counterparties. The risk of default is considered minimal, as delivery of securities sold is only made once the Fund has received payment. Payment is made on a purchase once the securities have been delivered by the counterparty. The trade will fail if either party fails to meet its obligation.

The Fund is subject to various Master Agreements, which govern the terms of certain transactions with select counterparties. These Master Agreements reduce the counterparty risk associated with relevant transactions by specifying credit protection mechanisms and providing standardization that improves legal certainty. Since different types of forward and OTC derivative transactions have different mechanics and are sometimes traded out of different legal entities of a particular counterparty organization, each type of transaction may be covered by a different Master Agreement and result in the need for multiple agreements with a single counterparty. Therefore, exposure cannot be netted and collateralized across all types of transactions. Exposures can only be netted across transactions governed under the same Master Agreement with the same legal entity.

 

 

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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Master Agreements can also help limit counterparty risk by specifying collateral posting arrangements at pre-arranged exposure levels. Under the Master Agreements, collateral is routinely transferred if the total net exposure to certain transactions (net of existing collateral already in place) governed under the relevant master agreement with a counterparty in a given account exceeds a specified threshold, which typically rangesfrom zero to $250,000 depending on the counterparty and the type of Master Agreement. United States Treasury bills and US dollar cash are generally the preferred forms of collateral, although other forms of AAA rated paper may be used. The Fund’s overall exposure to counterparty risk can change substantially within a short period, as it is affected by each transaction subject to the relevant Master Agreement. Master Repurchase Agreements (“Master Repo Agreements”) govern transactions between the Fund and select counterparties. The Master Repo Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation, income payments, events of default, and maintenance of collateral for Repurchase Agreements.

Master Securities Forward Transaction Agreements (“Master Forward Agreements”) govern the considerations and factors surrounding the settlement of certain purchases and sales made on a delayed-delivery basis by and between the Fund and select counterparties. The Master Forward Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation and confirmation, payment and transfer, events of default, termination, and maintenance of collateral.

International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreements (“ISDA Master Agreements”) govern OTC financial derivative transactions entered into by the Fund and those counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreements maintain provisions for general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral and events of default or termination. Events of termination include conditions that may entitle counterparties to elect to terminate early and cause settlement of all outstanding transactions under the applicable ISDA Master Agreement. Any election to early terminate could be material to the financial statements. The fair value of OTC financial derivative transactions net of collateral received in or pledged by counterparty as of period end is disclosed in the Notes to the Schedule of Investments.

Offsetting Assets and Liabilities

The Fund is party to enforceable master netting agreements between brokers and counterparties, such as ISDA, Master Repo Agreements and Master Forward Agreements which provide for the right to offset under certain circumstances. The Fund employs multiple money managers and counterparties and has elected not to offset qualifying financial and derivative instruments on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities, as such all financial and derivative instruments are presented on a gross basis. The impacts of netting arrangements that provide the right to offset are detailed below. The net amount represents the net receivable or payable that would be due from or to the counterparty in the event of default. Exposure from borrowings and other financing agreements such as repurchase agreements can only be netted across transactions governed by the same Master Agreement with the same legal entity. All amounts reported below represent the balance as of the report date, August 31, 2014 (in thousands).

Flexible Bond Fund

Offsetting of Financial Assets and Derivative Assets as of August 31, 2014

 

Description

   Gross Amounts of
Recognized Assets
     Gross Amounts
Offset in the
Statement of Assets
and Liabilities
     Net Amounts of Assets
Presented in the Statement of
Assets and Liabilities
 
Swap Agreements    $ 2,434         —         $ 2,434   

Purchased Options and SwaptionsOutstanding

     3,776         —           3,776   

Foreign Currency Contracts

     3,708         —           3,708   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ 9,918       $ —         $ 9,918   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

 

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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Offsetting of Financial Liabilities and Derivative Liabilities as of August 31, 2014

 

Description

   Gross Amounts of
Recognized
Liabilities
    Gross Amounts
Offset in the
Statement of Assets
and Liabilities
     Net Amounts of Liabilities
Presented in the Statement of
Assets and Liabilities
 

Reverse Repurchase Agreement

   $ (12,282   $ —         $ (12,282

Swap Agreements

     (2,871     —           (2,871

Written Options and Swaptions Outstanding

     (2,462     —           (2,462

Foreign Currency Contracts

     (1,604     —           (1,604
  

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ (19,219   $ —         $ (19,219
  

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Financial Assets, Derivative Assets, and Collateral Pledged by Counterparty as of August 31, 2014

 

     Net amount of Assets
Presented in the Statement
of Assets and Liabilities
    Gross Amounts Not Offset in the
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
    Net
Amount
 

Counterparty

     Financial
Instruments
     Cash Collateral
Received
   

Bank of America, N.A.

   $ (209   $ —         $ —        $ (209

Barclays Bank PLC

     581        —           —          581   

Barclays Capital

     (9          (9

BNP Paribas, N.A.

     (477     —           330        (147

CitiBank, N.A

     2,021        —           (120     1,901   

Credit Suisse International

     643        —           36        607   

Credit Suisse Securities USA LLC

     61        —           —          61   

Deutsche Bank AG New York

     (122     —           8        (114

Deutsche Bank AG

     (12,380     12,282         —          (98

Goldman Sachs Bank USA

     290        —           —          290   

Goldman Sachs Capital Market LP

     (11     —           —          (11

Goldman Sachs International

     389        —           (350     39   

HSBC Bank PLC

     58        —           —          58   

HSBC Bank USA

     (203     —           —          (203

JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.

     (49     —           10        (39

Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc.

     43        —           6        37   

Morgan Stanley Capital

     10        —           (10     —     

Royal Bank of Scotland

     (1     —           —          (1

UBS AG

     64        —           —          64   
  

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 
   $ (9,301   $ 12,282       $ (90   $ 2,807   
  

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

 

7. Federal Income and Excise Taxes

It is the policy of the Fund to qualify as a regulated investment company (“RIC”), by complying with all applicable provisions of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, and to make distribution of taxable income sufficient to relieve it from substantially all federal income and excise taxes. For federal income tax purposes, the Fund is treated as a single entity for the purpose of determining such qualification.

The Fund does not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. The tax years for the periods ended August 31, 2012, 2013, and 2014, remain subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. If applicable, the Fund recognizes interest accrued related to unrecognized tax benefits in interest expense and penalties in “Other expense” on the Statement of Operations.

Dividends are categorized in accordance with income tax regulations which may treat certain transactions differently than U.S. GAAP. Accordingly, the character of distributions and composition of net assets for tax purposes may differ from those reflected in the accompanying financial statements.

The Fund may be subject to taxes imposed by countries in which it invests. Such taxes are generally based on returns of income earned or gains realized or repatriated. Taxes are accrued and applied to net investment income, net realized capital gains and net unrealized appreciation or depreciation, as applicable, as the income is earned or capital gains are recorded.

 

 

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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows (in thousands):

 

     Year ended
August 31, 2014
     Year ended
August 31, 2013
 

Distributions paid from:

     

Ordinary income*:

     

Institutional Class

   $ 3,409       $ 790   

Y Class

     766         650   

Investor Class

     834         1,237   

A Class

     600         673   

C Class

     123         249   

Long-Term Capital Gain:

     

Institutional Class

     405         —     

Y Class

     108         —     

Investor Class

     167         —     

A Class

     132         —     

C Class

     41         —     
  

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total distributions paid

   $ 6,585       $ 3,599   
  

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

* For tax purposes, short-term capital gains are considered ordinary income distributed.

As of August 31, 2014, the components of distributable earnings (deficit) on a tax basis were as follows (in thousands):

 

Cost basis of investments for federal income tax purposes

   $ 317,528   

Unrealized appreciation

     28,128   

Unrealized depreciation

     (27,279
  

 

 

 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

     849   

Undistributed ordinary income

     1,044   

Accumulated capital gain (loss)

     (6,171

Other temporary differences

     1,445   
  

 

 

 

Distributable earnings (deficit)

   $ (2,833
  

 

 

 

Financial reporting records are adjusted for permanent book/tax differences to reflect tax character. Financial records are not adjusted for temporary differences. The temporary differences between financial reporting and tax-basis reporting of unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) are attributable to the tax deferral of losses from wash sales and the realization for tax purposes of unrealized gain (losses) on certain derivative instruments.

Due to inherent differences in the recognition of income and expenses and realized gains(losses) under U.S. GAAP and federal tax regulations, permanent differences between book and tax reporting have been identified and appropriately reclassed on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

Accordingly, the following amounts represent current year permanent differences derived from foreign currency, paydowns, swap income, and distributions that have been reclassified as of August 31, 2014 (in thousands):

 

Paid-in-capital

   $ —     

Undistributed net investment income

     (2,247

Accumulated net realized gain(loss)

     2,247   

Unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of investments, futures contracts, option and swaption contracts and foreign currency translations

     —     

On December 22, 2010, the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010 (the “RIC MOD”) was enacted, which changed various technical rules governing the tax treatment of regulated investment companies. The changes are generally effective for taxable years beginning after the date of enactment. One of the more prominent changes addresses capital loss carryforwards. Under the RIC MOD, each Fund will be permitted to carry forward capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning after the date of enactment for

 

 

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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

an unlimited period. However, any losses incurred during those future taxable years will be required to be utilized prior to the losses incurred in pre-enactment taxable years, which carry an expiration date. As a result of this ordering rule, pre-enactment capital loss carryforwards may be more likely to expire unused. Additionally, post-enactment capital loss carryforwards will retain their character as either short-term or long-term capital losses rather than being considered all short-term as permitted under previous regulation.

Finally, the RIC MOD contains several provisions aimed at preserving the character of distributions made by a fiscal year registered investment company (“RIC”) during the portion of its taxable year ending after October 31 or December 31, reducing the circumstances under which a RIC might be required to file amended Forms 1099 to restate previously reported distributions. Except for the simplification provisions related to RIC qualification, the RIC MOD is effective for taxable years beginning after December 22, 2010. The provisions related to RIC qualification are effective for taxable years for which the extended due date of the tax return is after December 22, 2010.

The Fund has $2,704 short-term and $3,467 long term post RIC MOD capital loss carryforwards as of August 31, 2014 (in thousands).

8. Investment Transactions

The aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments other than short-term obligations for the year ended August 31, 2014 were (in thousands)

 

     Purchases      Sales  

Securities

   $ 1,070,539       $ 992,662   

U.S. Treasury Obligations

     608,533         550,823   

9. Option Contracts Written

The premium amount and number of option contracts written during the year ended August 31, 2014 were as follows (shown in thousands):

 

     Number of
Contracts
    Notional Amount     Amount of Premiums  

Outstanding at August 31, 2013

     (3,833,566   $ (3,834,428   $ (888

Options written

     (2,491,551     (2,578,517     (6,688

Options expired

     393,958        400,393        1,964   

Options exercised

     12,700        12,700        62   

Options closed

     3,151,125        3,159,075        1,775   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Outstanding at August 31, 2014

     (2,768,750   $ (2,840,777   $ (3,775
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

10. Capital Share Transactions

The tables below summarize the activity in capital shares for each Class of the Fund (dollars and shares in thousands):

For the Year ended August 31, 2014

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

Flexible Bond Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     6,045      $ 62,069        2,678      $ 27,490        1,370      $ 14,002   

Reinvestment of dividends

     368        3,757        81        827        96        979   

Shares redeemed

     (1,719     (17,671     (2,978     (30,607     (4,588     (46,957
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in shares outstanding

     4,694      $ 48,155        (219   $ (2,290     (3,122   $ (31,976
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

     A Class     C Class  

Flexible Bond Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     900      $ 9,161        202      $ 2,048   

Reinvestment of dividends

     56        565        14        139   

Shares redeemed

     (2,384     (24,266     (639     (6,482
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net (decrease) in shares outstanding

     (1,428   $ (14,540     (423   $ (4,295
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

For the Year ended August 31, 2013

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  
     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     12,251      $ 127,889        3,671      $ 38,660        5,973      $ 63,335   

Reinvestment of dividends

     73        763        58        607        105        1,102   

Shares redeemed

     (1,108     (11,726     (1,076     (11,315     (2,611     (27,311
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     11,216      $ 116,926        2,653      $ 27,952        3,467      $ 37,126   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     A Class     C Class  
     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     3,693      $ 38,967        1,113      $ 11,697   

Reinvestment of dividends

     48        500        16        168   

Shares redeemed

     (660     (6,891     (155     (1,605
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     3,081      $ 32,576        974      $ 10,260   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

71


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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class  
                       July 5 to
Aug. 31,
2011
                      July 5 to
Aug. 31,
2011
 
     Year Ended August 31,       Year Ended August 31,    
     2014     2013     2012       2014     2013     2012    

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 10.21      $ 10.48      $ 10.05      $ 10.00      $ 10.22      $ 10.51      $ 10.05      $ 10.00   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Income from investment operations:

                

Net investment income

     0.21        0.34        0.02        0.02        0.18        0.22        0.10        0.02   

Net gains (losses) from investments (both realized and unrealized)

     0.16        (0.24     0.59        0.05        0.17        (0.15     0.53        0.05   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total income (loss) from investment operations

     0.37        0.10        0.61        0.07        0.35        0.07        0.63        0.07   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions:

                

Dividends from net investment income

     (0.18     (0.23     (0.18     (0.02     (0.17     (0.22     (0.17     (0.02

Distributions from net realized gains

     (0.07     (0.14     —          —          (0.07     (0.14     —          —     

Return of capital

     —          —          —          0.00 A      —          —          —          —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total distributions

     (0.25     (0.37     (0.18     (0.02     (0.24     (0.36     (0.17     (0.02
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 10.33      $ 10.21      $ 10 .48      $ 10.05      $ 10.33      $ 10.22      $ 10.51      $ 10.05   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return B

     3.70     0.83     6.34     0.70 %C      3.51     0.58     6.20     0.69 %C 
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Ratios and supplemental data:

                

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

   $ 177,201      $ 127,322      $ 13,095      $ 28,105      $ 38,034      $ 39,898      $ 13,132      $ 144   

Ratios to average net assets:

                

Expenses, before reimbursements

     1.24     1.22     1.42     3.58 %D      1.29     1.26     1.49     18.27 %D 

Expenses, net of reimbursements

     0.90     0.90     0.90     —   %D      0.99     0.99     0.99     —   %D 

Net investment income (loss), before reimbursements

     1.61     0.84     0.44     (2.37 )%D      1.51     0.91     0.54     (17.04 )%D 

Net investment income (loss), net of reimbursements

     1.94     1.15     0.96     1.20 %D      1.81     1.19     1.04     1.23 %D 

Portfolio turnover rate

     387     112     88     44 %E      387     112     88     44 %E 

 

A Amount represents less than $0.01 per share.
B Based on net asset value, which does not reflect the sales charge, redemption fee, or contingent deferred sales charge, if applicable. May include adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions.
C Not annualized.
D Annualized.
E Portfolio turnover rate is for the period from July 5, 2011, the inception date, through August 31, 2011.

 

 

 

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American Beacon Flexible Bond FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

    Investor Class     A Class     C Class  
                      July 5 to                       July 5 to                       July 5 to  
    Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,     Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,     Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,  
    2014     2013     2012     2011     2014     2013     2012     2011     2014     2013     2012     2011  
  $ 10.21      $ 10.51      $ 10.07      $ 10.00      $ 10.16      $ 10 .49      $ 10.06      $ 10.00      $ 10.11      $ 10.49      $ 10.09      $ 10.00   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                       
    0.02        0.18        0.09        0.02        0.10        0.21        0.07        0.02        0.02        0.14        0.04        0.02   
    0.30        (0.13     0.52        0.07        0.21        (0.18     0.51        0.06        0.22        (0.19     0.48        0.09   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
    0.32        0.05        0.61        0.09        0.31        0.03        0.58        0.08        0.24        (0.05     0.52        0.11   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                       
    (0.15     (0.21     (0.17     (0.02     (0.13     (0.22     (0.15     (0.02     (0.06     (0.19     (0.12     (0.02
    (0.07     (0.14     —          —          (0.07     (0.14     —          —          (0.07     (0.14     —          —     
    —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —     
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
    (0.22     (0.35     (0.17     (0.02     (0.20     (0.36     (0.15     (0.02     (0.13     (0.33     (0.12     (0.02)   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  $ 10.31      $ 10.21      $ 10.51      $ 10.07      $ 10.27      $ 10.16      $ 10.49      $ 10.06      $ 10.22      $ 10.11      $ 10.49      $ 10.09   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
    3.13     0.38     5.99     0.90 %C      3.12     0.16     5.70     0.80 %C      2.37     (0.54 )%      5.15     1.11 %C 
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                       
  $ 24,411      $ 56,015      $ 21,245      $ 277      $ 27,146      $ 41,376      $ 10,387      $ 2,064      $ 11,127      $ 15,292      $ 5,641      $ 380   
                       
    1.43     1.54     1.76     8.22 %D      1.68     1.67     1.93     4.49 %D      2.43     2.43     2.74     9.66 %D 
    1.27     1.27     1.27     —   %D      1.38     1.39     1.39     —   %D      2.13     2.14     2.14     —   %D 
    1.34     0.65     0.30     (6.93 )%D      1.10     0.50     0.05     (3.25 )%D      0.35     (0.24 )%      (0.73 )%      (8.48 )%D 
    1.50     0.92     0.79     1.29 %D      1.40     0.79     0.59     1.24 %D      0.66     0.04     (0.13 )%      1.18 %D 
    387     112     88     44 %E      387     112     88     44 %E      387     112     88     44 %E 

 

 

 

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American Beacon Funds

Privacy Policy

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

Privacy Policy

The American Beacon Funds recognizes and respects the privacy of our shareholders. We are providing this notice to you so you will understand how shareholder information may be collected and used.

We may collect nonpublic personal information about you from one or more of the following sources:

 

    information we receive from you on applications or other forms;

 

    information about your transactions with us or our service providers; and

 

    information we receive from third parties.

We do not disclose any nonpublic personal information about our customers or former customers to anyone, except as permitted by law.

We restrict access to your nonpublic personal information to those employees or service providers who need to know that information to provide products or services to you. To ensure the confidentiality of your nonpublic personal information, we maintain safeguards that comply with federal standards.

Federal Tax Information

Certain tax information regarding the Fund is required to be provided to shareholders based upon the Fund’s income and distribution for the taxable year ended August 31, 2014. The information and distributions reported herein may differ from information and distribution taxable to the shareholders for the calendar year ended December 31, 2014.

The Fund designated the following items with regard to distributions paid during the fiscal year ended August 31, 2014. All designations are based on financial information available as of this annual report and, accordingly, are subject to change. For each item, it is the intention of the Fund to designate the maximum amount permitted under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and the regulations there under.

 

Corporate Dividends Received Deduction

     0

Qualified Dividend Income

     0

Long Term Capital Gain Distributions

   $ 852,001   

Short-Term Capital Gain Distributions

   $ 263,590   

Shareholders will receive notification in January 2015 of the applicable tax information necessary to prepare their 2014 income tax returns.

 

 

 

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Disclosure Regarding the Board of Trustees’ Approval of the Management

Agreement and Investment Advisory Agreements of the Funds (Unaudited)

 

 

At in-person meetings held on May 15, 2014 and June 5, 2014 (collectively, the “Meetings”), the Board of Trustees (“Board”) considered and then, at its June 5 meeting, approved: (1) the renewal of the Management Agreement between American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (“Manager”) and the American Beacon Funds (“Beacon Trust”) and American Beacon Select Funds (“Select Trust”) on behalf of each of their series that had been operational for at least one year (collectively, the “Funds”); and (2) the renewal of the investment advisory agreements (each an “Investment Advisory Agreement”) among the Manager, each subadvisor and, as applicable, the Beacon Trust, other than the Investment Advisory Agreements with subadvisors with respect to which the Board approved a new Investment Advisory Agreement within the past year (each a “subadvisor”). The Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreements are collectively referred to herein as the “Agreements.” In preparation for the Board to consider the renewal of these Agreements, the Board undertook steps to gather and consider information furnished by the Manager, the subadvisors, Lipper, Inc. (“Lipper”), Morningstar, Inc. (“Morningstar”), Bobroff Consulting, Inc. and Callan Associates, Inc. (“Callan”). The Board, with the assistance of independent legal counsel, requested and received certain relevant information from the Manager and each subadvisor.

In advance of the Meetings, the Board’s Investment Committee coordinated the production of information from Lipper and Morningstar regarding the performance, fees and expenses of the Funds as well as information from the Manager and the subadvisors. At the Meetings, the Board considered the information provided. Further, the Board took into consideration information furnished for the Board’s review and consideration throughout the year at regular meetings of the Board and its committees, as well as information specifically prepared in connection with the renewal process.

In connection with the Board’s consideration of the Management Agreement and each Investment Advisory Agreement, the Trustees received and evaluated such information as they deemed necessary. The information requested on behalf of the Board included, among other information, the following materials. References herein to the “firm” refer to the Manager and/or each applicable subadvisor.

 

    comparisons of the performance of an appropriate share class of each Fund to comparable investment companies and appropriate benchmark indices, including peer group averages and performance analyses provided by Lipper and Morningstar, and to the performance of any similar accounts managed by the firm;

 

    for Funds having multiple firms managing assets, information regarding the performance of the individual firms with respect to their allocated portions of a Fund’s portfolio, and the performance of certain relevant benchmarks and other similar accounts managed by the firm;

 

    comparisons of each Fund’s management and subadvisory fee rates and expense ratio with those of comparable mutual funds, including peer group averages and fee and expense analyses provided by Lipper and Morningstar, and the advisory fee rates charged to other clients for which similar services are provided;

 

    a description of any applicable fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements in place for each Fund during the past year, and any proposed changes to the expense caps;

 

    the Manager’s profitability with respect to the services that it provided to each Fund;

 

    any actual or anticipated economies of scale in relation to the services the firm provides or will provide to each Fund and whether the current fee rates charged or to be charged to each Fund reflect these economies of scale for the benefit of the Fund’s investors;

 

    an evaluation of any other benefits to the firm or Funds as a result of their relationship, if any;

 

    information regarding the securities lending, cash management, administrative and accounting-related services that the Manager provides to certain Funds and the fees that the Manager receives for such services, including Callan’s review of the Funds’ securities lending program; and

 

    information regarding a firm’s financial condition, the personnel who are or will be assigned primary responsibility for managing the Funds, staffing levels, portfolio managers’ compensation, disaster recovery plans, insurance coverage, material pending litigation, code of ethics, compliance matters, trading activities, and actual or potential conflicts of interest that the firm experiences, or anticipates that it will experience, in providing services to the Funds.

The Board considered that the Manager provides management and administrative services to the Funds pursuant to separate agreements. The Board noted, in this regard, that many mutual funds have a single contract governing both types of services, and observed that the actual management fee rates provided by Lipper for peer group funds reflect the combined advisory and administrative expenses, reduced by any fee waivers and/or reimbursements.

Certain firms may not have been able to, or opted not to, provide information in response to certain information requests, in which case the Board conducted its evaluation of those firms based on information that was provided. For each Fund with more than one class of shares, the class of shares used for comparative performance purposes was the share class with the lowest expenses available for purchase by the general public, which, in most cases, was the Institutional Class. For the American Beacon Holland Large Cap Growth Fund, the comparison was made using the Investor Class of shares due to the short period of time that its Institutional Class of shares has been in existence. The Board also considered that the use of Institutional Class performance generally facilitates a meaningful comparison for expense and performance purposes.

Provided below is an overview of certain factors the Board considered in connection with its renewal and approval of the Management Agreement and Investment Advisory Agreements. The Board did not identify any particular information that was most relevant to its consideration to renew or approve each Agreement, and each Trustee may have afforded different weight to the various factors. Legal counsel to the independent Trustees provided the Board with a memorandum regarding its responsibilities pertaining to the renewal and approval of each Agreement. The memorandum explained the regulatory requirements surrounding the Trustees’ process for evaluating investment advisors and the terms of the contracts. Based on its evaluation, the Board unanimously concluded that the terms of

 

 

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Disclosure Regarding the Board of Trustees’ Approval of the Management

Agreement and Investment Advisory Agreements of the Funds (Unaudited)

 

 

each Agreement were reasonable and fair and that the renewal and approval of each Agreement was in the best interests of the Funds and their shareholders.

Considerations With Respect to the Renewal of the Management Agreement and Each Investment Advisory Agreement

In determining whether to renew the Management Agreement and each Investment Advisory Agreement on behalf of the Funds, the Trustees considered the best interests of each Fund separately. While the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreements for all of the Funds were considered at the Meetings, the Board considered each Fund’s investment management and subadvisory relationships separately.

In each instance, the Board considered, among other things, the following factors: (1) the nature, extent and quality of the services provided; (2) the investment performance of a Fund and, as applicable, each subadvisor for a Fund; (3) the costs incurred by the Manager in rendering services to the Funds and its resulting profits or losses; (4) comparisons of services and fee rates with contracts entered into by the Manager or a subadvisor or their affiliates with other clients (such as pension funds and other institutional clients); (5) the extent to which economies of scale have been taken into account in setting each fee rate schedule; (6) whether fee rate levels reflect these economies of scale for the benefit of Fund investors; and (7) any other benefits derived or anticipated to be derived by the Manager or a subadvisor from their relationship with a Fund. The Trustees posed questions to various management personnel of the Manager regarding certain key aspects of the materials submitted in support of the renewal.

Nature, Extent and Quality of Services. With respect to the renewal of the Management Agreement, the Board considered, among other factors: each Fund’s long-term performance and the background and experience of key investment personnel at the Manager; the cost structure of the Funds; the Manager’s culture of compliance and support for compliance operations that reduce risks to the Funds; the Manager’s commitment to enhance the Funds’ product line and increase assets in the Funds; the Manager’s quality of services; the Manager’s active role in monitoring and, as appropriate, recommending additional or replacement subadvisors; the Manager’s commitment to training employees; and the Manager’s efforts to retain key employees and maintain staffing levels.

With respect to the renewal of each Investment Advisory Agreement, the Trustees considered the level of staffing, quality, background and experience of each subadvisor’s investment personnel responsible for managing the Funds, the size of the subadvisor and the subadvisor’s ability to continue to attract and retain qualified investment personnel. The Board also considered the adequacy of the resources committed to the Funds by each subadvisor, and whether those resources were commensurate with the needs of the Funds and are sufficient to sustain appropriate levels of performance and compliance needs. In this regard, the Board considered the financial stability of each subadvisor. The Board also considered the subadvisors’ representations regarding their compliance programs and codes of ethics. Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the nature, extent and quality of the management and advisory services provided by the Manager and each subadvisor were appropriate for each Fund and, thus, determined to renew the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreement for each Fund.

Investment Performance. The Board evaluated the comparative information provided by Lipper and the Manager regarding each Fund’s investment performance relative to its Lipper performance universe, Lipper performance group, and/or benchmark index(es) as well as the Fund’s Morningstar rating. The Board considered the information provided by Lipper regarding its independent peer selection methodology to select all performance groups and universes. The Board also considered that the performance groups and universes selected by Lipper may not provide appropriate comparisons for certain Funds. In addition, the Board considered the performance reports and discussions with management at Board and Committee meetings throughout the year. The Board also considered in each instance the Manager’s recommendation to continue to retain each subadvisor. A discussion regarding the Board’s considerations with respect to each Fund’s performance appears below under “Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to Each Fund.”

Costs of the Services Provided to the Funds and the Profits Realized by the Manager from its Relationship with the Funds. In analyzing the cost of services and profitability of the Manager, the Board considered the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by the Manager. The profits or losses were noted at both an aggregate level for all Funds and at an individual Fund level, with some Funds being profitable for the Manager and with the Manager sustaining losses with respect to other Funds. Although the Board noted that, in certain cases, the fee rates paid by other clients of the Manager are lower than the fee rates paid by the Funds, the Manager represented that the difference reflects the greater level of responsibility and regulatory requirements associated with managing the Funds.

The Board also noted that the Manager proposed to continue the expense waivers and reimbursements for certain Funds and share classes that were in place during the last fiscal year. The Board further considered that, with respect to each Fund, the Management Agreement provides for the Manager to receive a management fee comprised of an annualized fee that is retained by the Manager and, in some instances, the amount payable by the Manager to a subadvisor. The Board also considered that the Manager receives service and administrative fees to compensate the Manager for providing administrative services to the Funds and to compensate third-party administrators and broker-dealers for services to Fund shareholders. In addition, the Board considered that the Manager receives management fees for overseeing the securities lending program on behalf of certain Funds. In considering the management fees for overseeing the securities lending program, the Board reviewed the analysis of the securities lending program prepared by Callan. The Board also noted that certain share classes of the Funds maintain higher expense ratios in order to compensate third-party distributors.

In analyzing the fee rates charged by each subadvisor in connection with its investment advisory services to the Fund, the Board considered that, in many cases, the Manager has negotiated the lowest fee rate a subadvisor charges for any comparable client accounts. The Board did not request profitability data from the subadvisors because the Board did not view this data as imperative to its deliberations given the arm’s-length nature of the relationship between the Manager and the subadvisors with respect to the negotiation of

 

 

 

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Disclosure Regarding the Board of Trustees’ Approval of the Management

Agreement and Investment Advisory Agreements of the Funds (Unaudited)

 

 

subadvisory fee rates. In addition, the Board noted that subadvisors may not account for their profits on an account-by-account basis and those that do likely employ different methodologies in connection with these calculations.

Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the profitability levels of the Manager were reasonable in light of the services performed by the Manager. A discussion regarding the Board’s considerations with respect to each Fund’s fee rates is set forth below under “Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to Each Fund.”

Economies of Scale. In considering the reasonableness of the management and investment advisory fees rates, the Board considered whether economies of scale will be realized as the Funds grow and whether fee rate levels reflect these economies of scale for the benefit of Fund shareholders. In this regard, the Board considered that the Manager has negotiated breakpoints in many subadvisory fee rates. The Board also noted that, for purposes of determining the fee rates chargeable to the Funds, certain subadvisors have agreed to take into account assets of American Airlines Group and its pension plans that are managed by the subadvisors. Thus, the Funds are able to receive lower effective fee rates.

In addition, the Board noted the Manager’s representation that many of the Funds benefit from economies of scale because comparably low fee rate levels are reflected in the current fee rates the Manager charges. The Board further noted the Manager’s representation that many of the Funds benefit from these comparably low fee rate levels despite not having yet reached an asset size at which economies of scale would traditionally be considered to exist, and the Manager’s belief that breakpoints are not appropriate at this time. Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the Manager and subadvisor fee rate schedules for each Fund provide for a reasonable sharing of benefits from any economies of scale with the Funds.

Benefits Derived from the Relationship with the Funds. The Board considered the “fall-out” or ancillary benefits that accrue to the Manager and/or the subadvisors as a result of the advisory relationships with the Funds, including greater exposure in the marketplace with respect to the Manager’s or subadvisor’s investment process and expanding the level of assets under management by the Manager and the subadvisors. In addition, the Board noted that certain subadvisors benefit from soft dollar arrangements for third party and proprietary research.

In addition, the Manager noted that the Funds also derive benefits from their association with the Manager. Specifically, the Board noted the Manager’s representation that it provides services to most Funds at a lower than industry average cost. The Board considered that certain subadvisors reimburse the Manager for certain costs relating to distribution activities for the Funds, as well as representations by all such subadvisors that they would not reduce their fee rates in lieu of providing such reimbursements. Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the potential benefits accruing to the Manager and the subadvisors by virtue of their relationships with the Funds appear to be fair and reasonable

Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to Each Fund

The performance comparisons below were made versus each Fund’s Lipper performance universe and Lipper performance group, with the 1st Quintile representing the top twenty percent of the universe or group based on performance and the 5th Quintile representing the bottom twenty percent of the universe or group based on performance. References below to each Fund’s Lipper performance group and Lipper performance universe are to the respective group or universe of comparable mutual funds included in the analysis provided by Lipper. A Lipper performance group consists of the Fund and a representative sample of funds with similar investment classifications and objectives as the Fund, as selected by Lipper. A Lipper performance universe is an expansion of the performance group, providing a broader view of performance across the Fund’s investment classification/objective and allowing for a more extensive comparison. In reviewing the performance, the Trustees viewed longer-term performance over a full market cycle, typically five years or longer, as the most important consideration, because relative performance over shorter periods may be significantly impacted by market or economic events that do not reflect manager skill.

The expense comparisons below were made versus each Fund’s Lipper expense universe and Lipper expense group, with the 1st Quintile representing the top twenty percent of the universe or group based on lowest total expense and the 5th Quintile representing the bottom twenty percent of the universe or group based on highest total expense. References below to each Fund’s expense group and expense universe are to the respective group or universe of comparable mutual funds included in the analysis by Lipper. A Lipper expense group consists of the Fund and a representative sample of funds with similar operating structures, as selected by Lipper. A Lipper expense universe includes all funds in the investment classification/objective with a similar load type to the share class of the Fund included in the Lipper comparative information and provides a broader view of expenses across the Fund’s investment classification/objective. For all Funds, other than for the American Beacon Money Market Select Fund and American Beacon U.S. Government Money Market Select Fund for which information was not available, the Trustees also considered a Fund’s Morningstar fee level category. In reviewing expenses, the Trustees considered the positive impact of fee waivers where applicable and the Manager’s agreement to continue the fee waivers. In addition, information regarding the use of soft dollars was requested from the Manager and all subadvisors and was considered by the Trustees.

Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund

In considering the renewal of the Management Agreement for the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund, the Trustees considered the following additional factors:

Lipper Total Expense Analysis and Morningstar Fee Level Ranking

 

 

 

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Disclosure Regarding the Board of Trustees’ Approval of the Management

Agreement and Investment Advisory Agreements of the Funds (Unaudited)

 

 

Compared to Lipper Expense Universe    3rd Quintile
Compared to Lipper Expense Group    4th Quintile
Morningstar Fee Level Ranking – Institutional Class    Average Expense Ratio

Lipper Fund Performance Analysis (one-year period ended March 31, 2014)

 

Compared to Lipper Performance Universe   5th Quintile
Compared to Lipper Performance Group   5th Quintile

In considering the renewal of the Investment Advisory Agreements with Brandywine Global Investment Management, LLC (“Brandywine”), GAM International Management LTD. (“GAM”) and Pacific Investment Management Company, LLC (“PIMCO”), the Trustees considered the following additional factors:

Subadvisor Performance (compared to Lipper Performance Universe for period indicated, ending March 31, 2014)

 

Brandywine    1 Year    4th Quintile
GAM    1 Year    2nd Quintile
PIMCO    1 Year    5th Quintile

(1) Information provided by each subadvisor regarding fee rates charged for managing accounts in the same strategy as the subadvisor manages its allocation of the Fund; and (2) explanations from AmBeacon and the subadvisors regarding the subadvisors’ underperformance relative to their benchmarks and comparable accounts, as applicable; and (3) the Manager’s recommendation to continue to retain each subadvisor, based upon, among other factors, the relatively brief period that this Fund has been in operation and its performance record since inception.

Based on these and other considerations, the Trustees: (1) concluded that the fees paid to the Manager and the subadvisors under the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements are fair and reasonable; (2) the Fund’s performance since inception has met the Manager’s performance objectives; (3) determined that the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund and its shareholders would benefit from the Manager’s and subadvisors’ continued management of the Fund; and (4) approved the renewal of the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements with respect to the American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund.

 

 

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Trustees and Officers of the American Beacon FundsSM

(Unaudited)

 

 

The Trustees and officers of the American Beacon Funds (the “Trust”) are listed below, together with their principal occupations during the past five years. Unless otherwise indicated, the address of each person listed below is 4151 Amon Carter Boulevard, MD 2450, Fort Worth, Texas 76155. Each Trustee oversees thirty-two funds in the fund complex that includes the Trust and the American Beacon Select Funds. The Trust’s Statement of Additional Information contains additional information about the Trustees and is available without charge by calling 1-800-658-5811.

 

Name, Age and Address

  

Position, Term of

Office and Length

of Time Served

with the Trust

  

Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years

and Current Directorships

INTERESTED TRUSTEES

   Term   
  

Lifetime of Trust

until removal,

resignation or

retirement*

  
Gerard J. Arpey** (56)    Trustee since 2012    Partner, Emerald Creek Group (private equity firm) (2011-Present); Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, AMR Corp. and American Airlines; Inc. (2003-2011); Director, S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. (privately held company) (2008-present); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2012-Present).
Alan D. Feld** (77)    Trustee since 1996    Sole Shareholder of a professional corporation which is a Partner in the law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, LLP (law firm) (1960-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (1996-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (1999-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (1996-2012).

NON-INTERESTED TRUSTEES

   Term   
  

Lifetime of Trust

until removal,

resignation or

retirement*

  
W. Humphrey Bogart (70)    Trustee since 2004    Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2004-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2004-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2004-2012).
Brenda A. Cline (53)    Trustee since 2004    Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary, Kimbell Art Foundation (1993-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2004-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2004-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2004-2012).
Eugene J. Duffy (60)    Trustee since 2008    Principal and Executive Vice President, Paradigm Asset Management (1994-Present); Director, Sunrise Bank of Atlanta (2008-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2008-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2008-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2008-2012).
Thomas M. Dunning (71)    Trustee since 2008    Chairman Emeritus (2008-Present) and Chairman (1998-2008), Lockton Dunning Benefits (consulting firm in employee benefits); Lead Director, Oncor Electric Delivery Company LLC (2007-Present); Board Member, BancTec (2010-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2008-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2008-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2008-2012).
Richard A. Massman (71)   

Trustee since 2004

Chairman since 2008

   Chairman Emeritus (2008-Present) and Chairman (1998-2008), Lockton Dunning Benefits (consulting firm in employee benefits); Lead Director, Oncor Electric Delivery Company LLC (2007-Present); Board Member, BancTec (2010-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2008-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2008-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2008-2012).
Barbara J. McKenna, CFA (51)    Trustee since 2012    Managing Principal, Longfellow Investment Management Company (2005-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2012-Present).

R. Gerald Turner (68)

225 Perkins Admin. Bldg.

Southern Methodist Univ.

Dallas, Texas 75275

   Trustee since 2001    President, Southern Methodist University (1995-Present); Director, J.C. Penney Company, Inc. (1996-Present); Director, Kronus Worldwide Inc. (chemical manufacturing) (2003-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2001-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2001-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2001-2012).

 

 

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Trustees and Officers of the American Beacon FundsSM

(Unaudited)

 

 

Name, Age and Address

  

Position, Term of

Office and Length

of Time Served

with the Trust

  

Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years

and Current Directorships

OFFICERS

   Term   
   One Year   
Gene L. Needles, Jr. (59)   

President since 2009

Executive Vice President

since 2009

   President, CEO and Director (2009-Present), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; President, CEO and Director (2009-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; President and CEO (2009-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.; President (2009-Present), American Beacon Select Funds; President (2009-2012), American Beacon Mileage Funds; President (2008-2009), Touchstone Investments; President (2003-2007), CEO (2004-2007), AIM Distributors.
Rosemary K. Behan (55)   

VP, Secretary and

Chief Legal

Officer since 2006

   General Counsel, Vice President, Legal and Compliance, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (2006-Present); Secretary (2008-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; Secretary (2008-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.
Brian E. Brett (54)    VP since 2004    Vice President, Director of Sales, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (2004-Present).
Wyatt Crumpler (48)    VP since 2007    Chief Investment Officer (2012-Present), Vice President, Asset Management (2009-2012), and Vice President, Trust Investments (2007-2009), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.
Erica Duncan (44)    VP Since 2011    Vice President, Marketing and Client Services (2011-Present), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; Supervisor, Brand Marketing (2010-2011), Invesco; Supervisor, Marketing Communications (2009-2010) and Senior Financial Writer (2004-2009), Invesco AIM.
Michael W. Fields (60)    VP since 1989    Chief Fixed Income Officer (2011-Present) and Vice President, Fixed Income Investments, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (1988-2011); Director, American Beacon Global Funds SPC (2002-2011); Director, American Beacon Global Funds plc (2007-2009).
Melinda G. Heika (53)    Treasurer since 2010    Treasurer (2010-Present), and Controller (2005-2009), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; Treasurer (2010-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; Treasurer (2010-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.
Terri L. McKinney (50)    VP since 2010    Vice President, Enterprise Services (2009-Present) and Managing Director (2003-2009), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.
Jeffrey K. Ringdahl (39)    VP since 2010    Chief Operating Officer, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (2010-Present); Vice President, Product Management, Touchstone Advisors, Inc. (2007-2010); Senior Director, Business Integration, Fidelity Investments (2005-2007).
Samuel J. Silver (51)    VP Since 2011    Vice President, Fixed Income Investments (2011-Present) and Senior Portfolio Manager, Fixed Income Investments (1999-2011), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.
Christina E. Sears (42)   

Chief Compliance

Officer since 2004

and Asst. Secretary since 1999

   Vice President, Fixed Income Investments (2011-Present) and Senior Portfolio Manager, Fixed Income Investments (1999-2011), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.
Sonia L. Bates (57)    Asst. Treasurer since 2011    Director, Tax and Financial Reporting (2011-Present) and Manager, Tax and Financial Reporting (2005-2010), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; Asst. Treasurer (2011-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; Asst. Treasurer (2011-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.

 

* The Board has adopted a retirement plan that requires Trustees to retire no later than the last day of the calendar year in which they reach the age of 72, provided, however, that the board may determine to grant one or more annual exemptions to this requirement.
** Mr. Arpey is deemed to be an “interested person” of the Trust, as defined by the 1940 Act. Mr. Arpey previously served as CEO of AMR Corp., which has a material relationship with the Manager.
*** Mr. Feld is deemed to be an “interested person” of the Trust, as defined by the 1940 Act. Mr. Feld’s law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld LLP has provided legal services within the past two years to the Manager and one or more of the Trust’s sub-advisors.

 

 

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If you invest in the Fund through a financial institution, you may be able to receive the Fund’s regulatory mailings, such as the Summary Prospectus, Annual Report and Semi-Annual Report, by e-mail. If you are interested in this option, please go to www.icsdelivery.com and search for your financial institution’s name or contact your financial institution directly.

To obtain more information about the Fund:

 

    
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american_beacon.funds@ambeacon.com

  

On the Internet:

Visit our website at www.americanbeaconfunds.com

      
  
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By Telephone:

Institutional, Y, and Investor Classes

Call (800) 658-5811

  

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P.O. Box 219643

Kansas City, MO 64121-9643

    
      
  
 

Availability of Quarterly Portfolio Schedules

 

In addition to the Schedule of Investments provided in each semi-annual and annual report, the Fund files a complete schedule of its portfolio holdings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on Form N-Q as of the first and third fiscal quarters. The Fund’s Forms N-Q are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Section, 100 F Street, NE, Washington, D.C. 20549-1520. Information regarding the operation of the SEC’s Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling (202) 551-8090. A complete schedule of the Fund’s portfolio holdings is also made available on www.americanbeaconfunds.com, the Funds’ website approximately sixty days after the end of each quarter.

  

Availability of Proxy Voting Policy and Records

 

A description of the policies and procedures the Fund uses to determine how to vote proxies relating to portfolio securities is available in the Fund’s Statement of Additional Information, which is available free of charge on the Fund’s website www.americanbeaconfunds.com and by calling 1-800-967-9009 or by accessing the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Fund’s proxy voting record for the most recent year ended August 31 is filed annually with the SEC on Form N-PX. The Fund’s Forms N-PX are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Fund’s proxy voting record may also be obtained by calling 1-800-967-9009.

Fund Service Providers:

 

CUSTODIAN

State Street Bank and Trust

Boston, Massachusetts

     

TRANSFER AGENT

Boston Financial Data Services

Kansas City, Missouri

     

INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

Ernst & Young LLP

Dallas, Texas

     

DISTRIBUTOR

Foreside Fund Services, LLC

Portland, Maine

This report is prepared for shareholders of the American Beacon Funds and may be distributed to others only if preceded or accompanied by a current Prospectus or Summary Prospectus.

 

American Beacon Flexible Bond Fund and American Beacon Funds are service marks of American Beacon Advisors, Inc.

AR 8/14


Table of Contents

LOGO


Table of Contents

About American Beacon Advisors

 

Since 1986, American Beacon Advisors has offered a variety of products and investment advisory services to numerous institutional and retail clients, including a variety of mutual funds, corporate cash management, and separate account management.

Our clients include defined benefit plans, defined contribution plans, foundations, endowments, corporations, financial planners, and other institutional investors. With American Beacon Advisors, you can put the experience of a multi-billion dollar asset management firm to work for your company.

 

Contents

 

 

President’s Message

  1

Market and Performance Overviews

  2-13

Schedules of Investments:

 

The London Company Income Equity Fund

  17

Zebra Global Equity Fund

  19

Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund

  23

SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

  27

Financial Statements

  32

Notes to the Financial Statements

  37

Financial Highlights

  61

Additional Information

  Back Cover
 

 

Zebra Global Equity and Zebra Small Cap Equity Funds

The Funds may invest in futures contracts, which are a type of derivative investment. Investing in derivatives could result in losing more than the amount invested. Investing in foreign securities entails additional risk not associated with domestic securities, such as currency fluctuations, economic and political instability and differences in accounting standards. At times, certain securities may have limited marketability and may be difficult to sell. The Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund invests in small and/or mid-sized companies, which involves additional risks such as limited liquidity and greater volatility than larger companies. The Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund may participate in a securities lending program. The Zebra Global Equity Fund’s investments in equity securities may include large and mid-cap U.S. and non-U.S. common stocks, preferred stocks, securities convertible into or exchangeable for common stocks, REITs, ADRs and MLPs.

The London Company Income Equity Fund

The Fund may invest in futures contracts, which are a type of derivative investment. Investing in derivatives could result in losing more than the amount invested. Investing in foreign securities entails additional risk not associated with domestic securities, such as currency fluctuations, economic and political instability and differences in accounting standards. The Fund invests in small and/or mid-sized companies, which involves additional risks such as limited liquidity and greater volatility than larger companies. Credit risk is the risk that the issuer of a bond will fail to make timely payment of interest or principal; and the decline in an issuer’s credit rating can cause the price of its bonds to go down. Investing in fixed-income securities entails interest rate risk, which is the risk that fixed-income securities will decrease in value with increases in market interest rates. Because the Fund may invest in fewer issues than a more diversified portfolio, the fluctuating value of a single holding may have a greater impact on the value of the Fund. Investing in dividend-paying stocks entails dividend risk, which is the risk that a stock may not experience the same level of earnings growth or capital appreciation as non-dividend paying stocks.

SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

This Fund typically invests in a variety of domestic and foreign high-yield, high risk securities. Investing in high-yield securities involves additional risks when compared to investing in investment-grade securities. These include a greater risk of default or bankruptcy and an increased sensitivity to financial difficulties or changes in interest rates. These risks are enhanced through the use of derivative securities, foreign and emerging markets securities.

Please see the prospectus for a more complete discussion of the risks of investing in these Funds. There can be no assurances that the investment objectives of the Funds will be met.

 

Any opinions herein, including forecasts, reflect our judgment as of the end of the reporting period and are subject to change. Each advisor’s strategies and the Fund’s portfolio composition will change depending on economic and market conditions. This report is not a complete analysis of market conditions and therefore, should not be relied upon as investment advice. Although economic and market information has been compiled from reliable sources, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. makes no representation as to the completeness or accuracy of the statements contained herein.

 

American Beacon Funds

   August 31, 2014


Table of Contents
LOGO   

Dear Shareholders,

 

The global markets have continued the process of building on the early signs of the economic recovery over the past year. Both in the U.S. and abroad, government and political leaders have continued to be mindful of the fragile nature of the recovery and have proved willing and able to provide the necessary monetary stimulus to keep their economies on track. The Eurozone finally broke out of its recession during the reporting period and as seen in the U.S., the European Central Bank quickly reacted to the first signs of the recovery faltering by announcing their own form of quantitative easing in June 2014.

We believe it takes an experienced investor to navigate the complexities of an ever-changing global economy. That is just one reason that we at American Beacon Advisors believe in actively managed funds and work diligently to bring you the most respected asset managers as sub-advisors.

For the 12-month period ended August 31, 2014:

The American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund (Investor Class) returned 22.83%.

The American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund (Investor Class) returned 18.71%.

The American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund (Investor Class) returned 16.27%.

The American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund (Investor Class) returned 11.08%.

Thank you for your continued interest in American Beacon Funds. We are pleased to have a broad range of products that cover the global equity and fixed income markets. For additional information about the Funds or to access your account information, please visit our website at www.americanbeaconfunds.com.

 

Best Regards,
LOGO
Gene L. Needles, Jr.
President
American Beacon Funds

 

1


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Domestic Equity Market Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The U.S. equity markets posted strong results for the one-year period ending August 31, 2014 despite weakness during the early months of the period. The Federal Reserve Bank’s (the “Fed”) decision in September 2013 to not taper its quantitative easing program reflected lowered U.S. economic growth estimates for 2013 and 2014. That news, combined with the 16-day government shutdown in October 2013 and political rancor surrounding the raising of the debt ceiling provided a minor setback in the stock markets. In December, however, the Fed announced it would reduce the rate of its asset purchases beginning in January 2014 and the equity markets broadly rallied in response.

In the early months of 2014, unusually cold weather in the Midwest and East played a significant role in reducing revenues and increasing costs for many U.S. companies. This created a unique dynamic in the marketplace as certain sectors, such as Utilities, benefitted from cold weather while others, such as Auto and Retail, suffered as consumers stayed indoors. These trends proved to be short-lived as consumer spending picked up during late March and April.

Heading into the spring, investors received a variety of signals that the U.S. economy was picking up steam for the second half of 2014. Labor market data was especially strong with payroll statistics reaching their most favorable levels since the late 1990s. The Manufacturing sector remained robust, while a better job market and rising consumer spending appeared to drive healthy growth in the much larger Service sector. The Housing sector demonstrated signs of improvement as homebuyers reconciled themselves to somewhat higher home prices and mortgage rates than previous years.

Improving economic indicators, particularly falling unemployment and rising consumer prices, spurred continued debate among Fed officials as to the next phase of the quantitative easing program. In July, new Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen indicated that an abundance of part-time workers and long-term unemployed suggested that the broader market still had room to grow before ending the program.

Overall for the one-year period ending August 31, 2014, the market rally was broad as the Russell 3000 Value Index gained 23.9% while the Russell 3000 Growth Index increased by 25.6%. Top sectors included Healthcare (up 31.8%) and Technology (up 33.4%) while Consumer Cyclical (up 19.4%) and Consumer Defensive (up 18.2%) lagged the overall market. For the period, the S&P 500 Index posted a 25.3% increase.

 

 

2


Table of Contents

American Beacon The London Company Income Equity FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The Investor Class of the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund (the “Fund”) returned 22.83% for the twelve-month period ended August 31, 2014, trailing the Russell 1000 Value Index (the “Index”) return of 24.43%.

Comparison of Change in Value of a $10,000 Investment

For the Period from 5/29/12 through 8/31/14

 

LOGO

Total Returns for the Period ended 8/31/14

 

    1 Year     2 Years     Since
Incep.

(5/29/12)
    Value of
$10,000
5/29/12-

8/31/14
 

Institutional Class (1,2,4)

    23.13     19.28     19.62   $ 14,983   

Y Class (1,2,4)

    23.05     19.19     19.53   $ 14,960   

Investor Class(1,2,4)

    22.83     18.92     19.25   $ 14,879   

A Class with sales charge(1,2,4)

    15.57     15.21     15.94   $ 13,964   

A Class without sales charge(1,2,4)

    22.58     18.67     19.02   $ 14,816   

C Class with sales charge(1,2,4)

    20.69     17.81     18.16   $ 14,574   

C Class without sales charge(1,2,4)

    21.69     17.81     18.16   $ 14,574   

Russell 1000 Value Index (3)

    24.43     24.02     24.32   $ 16,347   

 

1. Please note that the recent growth in the stock market has helped to produce short-term returns that are not typical and may not continue in the future. Performance shown is historical and is not indicative of future returns. Investment returns and principal value will vary, and shares may be worth more or less at redemption than at original purchase. Performance shown is calculated based on the published end of day net asset values as of date indicated, and current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. To obtain performance as of
  the most recent month end, please visit www.americanbeaconfunds.com or call 1-800-967-9009. Fund performance in the table above does not reflect the deduction of taxes a shareholder would pay on distributions or the redemption of shares. A Class shares have a maximum sales charge of 5.75%. The maximum contingent deferred sales charge for the C Class is 1.00% for shares redeemed within one year of the date of purchase.
2. A portion of the fees charged to each Class of the Fund was waived since inception. Performance prior to waiving fees was lower than the actual returns shown since inception.
3. The Russell 1000 Value Index is an unmanaged index of those stocks in the Russell 1000 Index with lower price-to-book ratios and lower forecasted growth values. Russell 1000® Value Index and Russell 1000 Index are registered trademarks of the Frank Russell Company. One cannot directly invest in an index.
4. The total annual Fund operating expense ratio set forth in the most recent Fund prospectus for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A, and C Class shares was 1.14%, 1.10%, 1.55%, 1.50%, and 2.17%, respectively. The expense ratios above may vary from the expense ratios presented in other sections of this report that are based on expenses incurred during the period covered by this report.

The Fund’s underperformance relative to the benchmark was primarily driven by Fund expenses, as weak security selection was moderated by positive sector allocation. During the year, returns were positive across all sectors for both the Fund and the Index. Notably, all sectors generated double-digit returns as well.

Outside of fund expenses, weak stock selection within the Materials, Information Technology and Consumer Discretionary sectors was the largest detractor from relative returns. Within the Materials sector, the Fund’s position in Albemarle (up 3.0%) detracted from relative returns. Paychex (up 11.3%), International Business Machines (up 7.7%) and Cisco (up 9.7%) significantly underperformed the overall Information Technology sector, which gained 40.1% over the same period. This underperformance was partially offset by the Fund’s holdings of Intel (up 61.6%) and Corning (up 49.6%). Carnival Corporation detracted from performance for the Consumer Discretionary sector, returning only 6.5% for the year.

Given the Fund’s portfolio construction approach and high conviction weightings across securities, the Fund’s over- or underweight positioning relative to the economic sectors will

 

 

3


Table of Contents

American Beacon The London Company Income Equity FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

typically have less of an impact on relative returns. However, the Fund benefitted from its sector positioning during the year. The Fund maintained an overweight to the Information Technology and Materials sectors, the two best performing sectors in the Index. This benefit was partially offset by an overweight allocation in Consumer Staples, which trailed the overall Index return.

The sub-advisor’s investment process focuses on downside protection, current income and total return appreciation.

Top Ten Holdings (% Net Assets)

 

Kinder Morgan Management LLC

        4.7   

General Dynamics Corp.

        4.1   

Wells Fargo & Co.

        4.0   

Lorillard, Inc.

        4.0   

Hasbro, Inc.

        3.7   

Intel Corp.

        3.7   

Altria Group, Inc.

        3.5   

BlackRock, Inc.

        3.5   

Albemarle Corp.

        3.4   

Corning, Inc.

        3.4   

Total Fund Holdings

     37      

Sector Allocation (% Equities)

 

Financials

     18.4   

Information Technology

     16.3   

Consumer Staples

     13.2   

Consumer Discretionary

     9.5   

Utilities

     9.5   

Health Care

     8.9   

Materials

     8.5   

Energy

     5.8   

Telecommunication Services

     5.6   

Industrials

     4.3   
 

 

4


Table of Contents

Global Equity Market Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

Global equity markets continued their steady ascent in the reporting period as the global economy shifted toward recovery. The rally continued through the fourth quarter of 2013 with investor sentiment lifted by the improving and global economic outlook and the U.S. Federal Reserve’s announcement to reduce the rate of its asset purchases beginning in January 2014. The U.S. market rally paused in February and March of 2014 as the positive flow of economic data was reversed due to weather-affected January figures. A focus on the potential for deflation in Europe, questions about Japan’s ability to reignite their economy and the weather-plagued U.S. economy all contributed to mixed returns to start 2014. Toward the end of the reporting period however, many equity markets around the world reached fresh highs thanks to an improving global economic outlook and the still very accommodative monetary policy in the U.S. and abroad.

The MSCI World Index rose by over 21% during the 12 months ended August 31, 2014. Of the four largest geographic markets that make up MSCI World (U.S., Europe, Japan and U.K.), Japan has been the laggard over the past year. The U.S. outperformed as the U.S. economy’s strength became more apparent. For the full 12-month period there was not a sizeable performance difference between global large- and small-cap stocks. However, over the second half of the period (March - August) small underperformed large by approximately 4%.

After six quarters of negative growth, the Eurozone economy broke out of its longest ever recession in September 2013. The economic expansion continued in the fourth quarter despite geopolitical events such as the crisis in Ukraine. The low level of Eurozone inflation proved to be a growing concern during the first quarter of 2014. However, the European Central Bank (ECB) proved ready to do its part by announcing monetary easing measures including the announcement of targeted long-term refinancing operations as well as pushing the deposit rate below zero. Through the end of the reporting period, inflation continued to be fragile with prices only increasing by 0.5% in June despite the ECB’s policy changes. The MSCI EAFE Index increased by 16.4% during the 12-month reporting period.

Emerging markets reversed the losses of early 2013 as fears of a market crisis faded, and the Chinese economy showed signs of stabilization as manufacturing and trade figures improved. These early gains by China proved not to be longer term trends as falling exports and lower retail figures again raised concern in the early months of 2014. In response, the Chinese government introduced a mini-stimulus plan in the second quarter focused on reinvigorating the housing market and railway infrastructure. The plan set the stage for a modest turnaround, and the situation continues to evolve as the Chinese government stood ready to provide the necessary policy adjustments to support the world’s second largest economy. During the 12-month period ending August 31, 2014, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose by 20%.

In other global markets, the global trend of government monetary policy was also seen in Japan and India. Geopolitical events in the Middle East, particularly Iraq, proved to have a ripple effect as instability in the oil markets benefitted producers in both Russia and Brazil. The Japanese government continued its efforts to stimulate its struggling equity markets by unveiling in June a second set of economic reforms. The latest reforms focused on cutting corporate taxes and reversing existing regulations in areas such as employment rules, agriculture and health care.

 

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The Investor Class of the American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund (the “Fund”) returned 18.71% for the twelve-month period ended August 31, 2014, underperforming the MSCI World Index (the “Index”) return of 21.10% for the same period.

Comparison of Change in Value of a $10,000 Investment

for the Period from 6/1/10 through 8/31/14

 

LOGO

Total Returns for the Period ended 8/31/14

 

    1 Year     3 Years     Since
Incep.

(6/1/10)
    Value of
$10,000
6/1/10-
8/31/14
 

Institutional Class (1,3,5)

    19.17     15.54     14.98   $ 18,099   

Y Class (1,3,5)

    18.90     15.37     14.87   $ 18,020   

Investor Class(1,3,5)

    18.71     15.11     14.56   $ 17,815   

A Class with sales charge(1,3,5)

    11.73     12.72     12.83   $ 16,704   

A Class without sales charge (1,3,5)

    18.53     14.96     14.42   $ 17,723   

C Class with sales charge (1,2,3,5)

    16.67     14.11     13.63   $ 17,212   

C Class without sales charge (1,2,3,5)

    17.67     14.11     13.63   $ 17,212   

MSCI World Index (4)

    21.10     15.48     14.65   $ 17,887   

Russell 1000/MSCI World Linked Index (4)

    21.10     17.69     16.40   $ 19,071   

Russell 1000 Index (4)

    25.36     20.80     18.05   $ 20,248   

 

1. Please note that the recent growth in the stock market has helped to produce short-term returns that are not typical and may not continue in the future. Performance shown is historical and is not indicative of future returns. Investment returns and principal value will vary, and shares may be worth more or less at redemption than at original purchase. Performance shown is calculated based on the published end of day net asset values as of date indicated, and current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. To obtain performance as of the most recent month end, please call 1-800-967-9009 or visit www.americanbeaconfunds.com. Fund performance in the table above does not reflect the deduction of taxes a shareholder would pay on distributions or the redemption of shares. A Class shares have a maximum sales charge of 5.75%.
2. Fund performance represents the total returns achieved by the Investor Class from 6/1/10 up to 9/1/10, the inception date of the C Class, and the returns of the C Class since its inception. Expenses of the C Class are higher than those of the Investor Class. As a result, total returns shown may be higher than they would have been had the C Class been in existence since 6/1/10. The maximum contingent deferred sales charge is 1.00% for shares redeemed within one year of the date of purchase.
3. A portion of the fees charged to each Class of the Fund was waived since inception. Performance prior to waiving fees was lower than the actual returns shown since inception.
4. Prior to December 31, 2012, the Fund’s primary benchmark was the Russell 1000 Index, an index that measures the performance of the large-cap segment of the U.S. equity universe. The Fund changed its primary benchmark to the MSCI World Index, because the Fund changed its name and investment strategy. The Russell 1000/MSCI World Linked Index represents returns of the Russell 1000 Index up to December 31, 2012, and the MSCI World Index thereafter. The Russell 1000 Index is a registered trademark of the Frank Russell Company. The MSCI World Index is designed to measure the equity market performance of large- and mid-capitalization companies across 24 developed markets countries. The MSCI® information contained herein: (1) is provided “as is”, (2) is proprietary to MSCI and/or its content providers, (3) may not be used to create any financial instruments or products or any indexes and (4) may not be copied or distributed without MSCI’s express written consent. MSCI disclaims all warranties with respect to the information. Neither MSCI nor its content providers are responsible for any damages or losses arising from any use of this information. One cannot directly invest in an index.
5. The total annual Fund operating expense ratio set forth in the most recent Fund prospectus for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A and C Class shares was 2.57%, 2.59%, 2.91%, 2.84%, and 3.65% respectively. The expense ratios above may vary from the expense ratios presented in other sections of this report that are based on expenses incurred during the period covered by this report.

The Fund underperformed the Index from a stock selection standpoint as holdings in the Consumer Discretionary, Information Technology and Consumer Staples sectors detracted from performance. In the Consumer Discretionary sector, LQK (down 3.4%), LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton (up 1.2%) and Mattel (down 11.8%) detracted from the Fund’s relative returns. Not owning Apple, Facebook or Google, which were up 50.6%, 81.3% and 37.3%, respectively, in the Index, negatively impacted performance in the Information Technology sector. In the Consumer Staples sector, Wesfarmers (down 76.9%) and Japan Tobacco (down 12.0%) were the largest detractors. The aforementioned poor performance was somewhat offset by good stock selection in the Energy and

 

 

6


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

Financials sectors. Continental Resources (up 73.8%), Phillips 66 (up 57.1%) and Suncor (up 23.7%) added the most value relative to the Index in the Energy sector. In the Financials sector, Moody’s (up 48.9%), Natixis (up 62.0%) and Prudential (up 36.9%) were the largest contributors.

From a country allocation perspective, Italy and Japan were the largest contributors to performance. The Fund’s allocation to France, and its lack of exposure to Denmark, detracted relative value.

The sub-advisor continues to focus on uncovering opportunities by investing in a portfolio of securities that are generally less popular with investors but nevertheless have strong fundamental characteristics. At the same time, the portfolio will be underweight stocks that are heavily followed but have weak fundamentals. This contrarian style has tended to result in a portfolio with very good risk-adjusted returns over time. This emphasis on companies with good fundamentals can be observed through traditional measures of value. For example, the portfolio consistently exhibits lower price-earnings ratios (both forward and trailing) than the Index.

Although the predicted beta for the portfolio remains relatively low (0.92 as of August 29, 2014), the realized beta has been somewhat higher. Beta is a measure of the Fund’s systematic risk compared to the Index. For example, a beta of 0.90 would indicate that the Fund is expected to provide a 10% less return when the Index increases and a 10% better return when the Index decreases. Over the past 12 months, the daily realized beta has been 1.01. The portfolio continues to have exposure to factors that the sub-advisor actively seeks. For example, the portfolio has negative exposure to stocks that are traded more frequently and positive exposure to stocks with good value characteristics. The sub-advisor believes the Fund’s beta should be lower going forward and that the strategy, and its resulting characteristics, should benefit the Fund’s performance over the longer term.

Top Ten Holdings (% Net Assets)

 

Royal Dutch Shell PLC

        1.8   

Microsoft Corp.

        1.7   

Exxon Mobil Corp.

        1.6   

Johnson & Johnson

        1.4   

Suncor Energy, Inc.

        1.4   

Chevron Corp.

        1.3   

Wells Fargo & Co.

        1.3   

Nestle S.A.

        1.2   

Procter & Gamble Co.

        1.1   

Intel Corp.

        1.1   

Total Fund Holdings

     240      

Sector Allocation (% Equities)

 

Financials

     16.1   

Energy

     13.3   

Information Technology

     12.7   

Consumer Discretionary

     12.3   

Industrials

     11.4   

Health Care

     9.6   

Consumer Staples

     8.9   

Materials

     8.2   

Utilities

     4.3   

Telecommunication Services

     3.2   

Country Allocation (% Equities)

 

United States

     54.7   

United Kingdom

     8.7   

Japan

     8.4   

France

     5.0   

Switzerland

     4.5   

Canada

     4.3   

Germany

     3.2   

Australia

     2.8   

Netherlands

     1.7   

Sweden

     1.2   

Hong Kong/China

     1.1   

Spain

     0.8   

Italy

     0.7   

Denmark

     0.6   

Singapore

     0.5   

Ireland

     0.5   

Belgium

     0.4   

Finland

     0.4   

Luxembourg

     0.3   

Portugal

     0.1   

Austria

     0.1   
 

 

7


Table of Contents

Domestic Equity Market Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The U.S. equity markets posted strong results for the one-year period ending August 31, 2014 despite weakness during the early months of the period. The Federal Reserve Bank’s (the “Fed”) decision in September 2013 to not taper its quantitative easing program reflected lowered U.S. economic growth estimates for 2013 and 2014. That news, combined with the 16-day government shutdown in October 2013 and political rancor surrounding the raising of the debt ceiling provided a minor setback in the stock markets. In December, however, the Fed announced it would reduce the rate of its asset purchases beginning in January 2014 and the equity markets broadly rallied in response.

In the early months of 2014, unusually cold weather in the Midwest and East played a significant role in reducing revenues and increasing costs for many U.S. companies. This created a unique dynamic in the marketplace as certain sectors, such as Utilities, benefitted from cold weather while others, such as Auto and Retail, suffered as consumers stayed indoors. These trends proved to be short-lived as consumer spending picked up during late March and April.

Heading into the spring, investors received a variety of signals that the U.S. economy was picking up steam for the second half of 2014. Labor market data was especially strong with payroll statistics reaching their most favorable levels since the late 1990s. The Manufacturing sector remained robust, while a better job market and rising consumer spending appeared to drive healthy growth in the much larger service sector. The Housing sector demonstrated signs of improvement as homebuyers reconciled themselves to somewhat higher home prices and mortgage rates than previous years.

Improving economic indicators, particularly falling unemployment and rising consumer prices, spurred continued debate among Fed officials as to the next phase of the quantitative easing program. In July, new Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen indicated that an abundance of part-time workers and long-term unemployed suggested that the broader market still had room to grow before ending the program.

Overall for the one-year period ending August 31, 2014, the market rally was broad as the Russell 3000 Value Index gained 23.9% while the Russell 3000 Growth Index increased by 25.6%. Top sectors included Healthcare (up 31.8%) and Technology (up 33.4%) while Consumer Cyclical (up 19.4%) and Consumer Defensive (up 18.2%) lagged the overall market. For the period, the S&P 500 Index posted a 25.3% increase.

 

 

8


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The Investor Class of the American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund (the “Fund”) returned 16.27% for the twelve-month period ended August 31, 2014, underperforming the Russell 2000® Index (the “Index”) return of 17.68% for the same period.

Comparison of Change in Value of a $10,000 Investment

For the Period from 6/1/10 through 8/31/14

 

 

LOGO

Total Returns for the Period ended 8/31/14

     1 Year     3 Years     Since
Incep.

(6/1/10)
    Value of
$10,000

6/1/10-
8/31/14
 

Institutional Class (1,3,5)

     16.67     19.54     17.11   $ 19,562   

Y Class (1,3,5)

     16.59     19.46     17.00   $ 19,484   

Investor Class (1,3,5)

     16.27     19.13     16.66   $ 19,246   

A Class with sales charge (1,3,5)

     9.48     16.64     14.93   $ 18,066   

A Class without sales charge (1,3,5)

     16.17     18.96     16.55   $ 19,169   

C Class with sales charge (1,2,3,5)

     14.29     18.07     15.71   $ 18,591   

C Class without sales charge (1,2,3,5)

     15.29     18.07     15.71   $ 18,591   

Russell 2000 Index (4)

     17.68     19.00     16.00   $ 18,797   

 

1. Please note that the recent growth in the stock market has helped to produce short-term returns that are not typical and may not continue in the future. Performance shown is historical and is not indicative of future returns. Investment returns and principal value will vary, and shares may be worth more or less at redemption than at original purchase. Performance shown is calculated based on the published end of day net asset values as of date indicated, and current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. To obtain performance as of the most recent month end, please visit www.americanbeaconfunds.com or call 1-800-967-9009. Fund performance in the table above does not reflect the deduction of taxes a shareholder would pay on distributions or the redemption of shares. A Class shares have a maximum sales charge of 5.75%.  
2. Fund performance represents the total returns achieved by the Investor Class from 6/1/10 up to 9/1/10, the inception date of the C Class, and the returns of the C Class since its inception. Expenses of the C Class are higher than those of the Investor Class. As a result, total returns shown may be higher than they would have been had the C Class been in existence since 6/1/10. The maximum contingent deferred sales charge is 1.00% for shares redeemed within one year of the date of purchase.
3. A portion of the fees charged to each Class of the Fund was waived since inception. Performance prior to waiving fees was lower than the actual returns shown since inception.
4. The Russell 2000 Index is an unmanaged index comprised of approximately 2,000 smaller-capitalization stocks from various industrial sectors. Russell 2000 Index is a registered trademark of the Frank Russell Company. One cannot directly invest in an index.
5. The total annual Fund operating expense ratio set forth in the most recent Fund prospectus for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A and C Class shares was 2.78%, 2.80%, 3.08%, 3.13%, and 3.86% respectively. The expense ratios above may vary from the expense ratios presented in other sections of this report that are based on expenses incurred during the period covered by this report.

Prior to the deduction of expenses, the Fund outperformed the Index through good stock selection, as sector allocation detracted minimal value relative to the Index. From a stock selection standpoint, holdings in the Information Technology and Consumer Discretionary sectors contributed more than 80 basis points (0.80%) each to performance. Amkor Technology (up 68.3%), iGate (up 53.8%) and Mitel Networks Group (up 127.1%) were the largest contributors to performance in the Information Technology sector. In the Consumer Discretionary sector, Columbia Sportswear (up 33.2%), Helen of Troy (up 43.5%) and Lancaster Colony (up 21.6%) added the most value relative to the Index. The aforementioned good performance was somewhat offset by poor stock selection in the Utilities, Energy and Consumer Staples sectors. In the Utilities sector, Consolidated Water Company (down 13.1%) was the largest detractor. Not owning Targa Resources also hurt performance. In the Energy sector, Calumet Specialty Products (down 9.4%) and owning a much larger position in Renewable Energy Group (down 1.0%) detracted the most relative value. Not owning Kodiak Oil & Gas, which was up 62.9% in the Index, also negatively impacted performance. Steiner Leisure (down 25.3%) detracted from performance in the Consumer Staples sector.

 

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The Fund’s overweight position in the Consumer Discretionary and Industrials sectors, detracted approximately 25 (0.25%) and 20 (0.20%) basis points, respectively, from performance through sector allocation. This was mostly offset by underweights in the Information Technology and Utilities sectors, which contributed to the Fund’s returns.

The sub-advisor continues to focus on uncovering opportunities by investing in a portfolio of securities that are generally less popular with investors but nevertheless have strong fundamental characteristics. At the same time the portfolio will be underweight stocks that are heavily followed but have weak fundamentals. This contrarian style has tended to result in a portfolio with very good risk-adjusted returns over time. This emphasis on companies with good fundamentals can be observed through traditional measures of value. For example, the portfolio consistently exhibits lower price-earnings ratios (both forward and trailing) than the Index.

Both the predicted and realized beta for the portfolio remains relatively low. Beta is a measure of the Fund’s systematic risk compared to the Index. For example, a beta of 0.90 would indicate that the Fund is expected to provide a 10% less return when the Index increases and a 10% better return when the Index decreases. As of August 29, 2014, the predicted beta was 0.95. Over the past 12-months, the daily realized beta has been 0.89. The portfolio continues to have exposure to factors that the sub-advisor actively seeks. For example, the portfolio has negative exposure to stocks that are traded more frequently and positive exposure to stocks with good value characteristics. The sub-advisor’s strategy, and its resulting characteristics, should benefit the Fund’s performance over the longer term.

Top Ten Holdings (% Net Assets)

 

Syntel, Inc.

        1.8   

Enstar Group Ltd.

        1.5   

PDL BioPharma, Inc.

        1.4   

Deluxe Corp.

        1.4   

Amerco, Inc.

        1.3   

Ubiquiti Networks, Inc.

        1.3   

Delek US Holdings, Inc.

        1.3   

HSN, Inc.

        1.3   

Team Health Holdings, Inc.

        1.2   

Mentor Graphics Corp.

        1.1   

Total Fund Holdings

     317      

Sector Allocation (% Equities)

 

Financials

     26.4   

Industrials

     17.8   

Consumer Discretionary

     15.1   

Information Technology

     14.9   

Health Care

     11.6   

Energy

     5.4   

Consumer Staples

     3.8   

Materials

     2.4   

Utilities

     1.7   

Telecommunication Services

     0.9   
 

 

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High Yield Bond Market Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

High yield, equities, long Treasuries and most financial asset classes produced solid returns during the one-year period ending August 31, 2014. A gradually improving U.S. economy, benign inflation, lower long-term rates and an accommodative Federal Reserve combined to produce double-digit returns for a number of asset classes. The Merrill Lynch/Bank of America US High Yield Master II Index produced a 10.62% return for the period and spreads tightened 85 (0.85%) basis points (bps).

Five-year Treasuries ended the period unchanged in yield, trading within a range of 50 bps (0.50%). High-yield spreads contracted steadily for most of the period and in June hit a post-recession low of 350 bps (3.5%) while the absolute yield hit an all-time low of 4.85%. During the second quarter of 2014, the yield curve started to quicken its pace of flattening with shorter rates (two-year) moving up 30 bps (0.30%) and longer rates moving down 30 bps (0.30%). For the period, two-year rates were up 10 bps (0.10%) and 10-year rates were down 45 bps (0.45%). Due to concerns about valuation and the timing of potential Fed rate hikes, high yield spreads ended the period at 400 bps (4.0%) – 50 bps (0.50%) above the low.

 

The combination of rates falling and spreads tightening produced about equal results across the quality spectrum of high yield. Lower rates help higher quality bonds because they tend to have longer duration and spread tightening typically occurs more forcefully in lower rated bonds.

Sector performance was relatively even with a few exceptions worth mentioning. The Gaming sector underperformed by more than 5% while the Retail sector underperformed by 3% due to certain companies facing declining sales. The Retail sector faces structural headwinds from excess capacity, a fickle consumer and poor demographics trends. Banking and Utilities both outperformed mainly due to the longer duration of the sector.

High-yield funds had approximate inflows of $17 billion from August 2013 through May 2014. For the last three months of the period outflows totaled $14.5 billion with the majority ($11.5 billion) occurring in July. The sell off occurred in conjunction with the spread widening mentioned previously.

 

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The Investor Class of the American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund (the “Fund”) returned 11.08% for the twelve months ended August 31, 2014. The Fund outperformed the BofA Merrill Lynch U.S. High Yield Master II Index (the “Index”) return of 10.62% for the same period.

Comparison of Change in Value of a $10,000 Investment

For the Period from 2/14/11 through 8/31/14

 

 

LOGO

Total Returns for the Period ended 8/31/14

 

     1 Year     3 Years     Since
Incep.

(2/14/11)
    Value of
$10,000
2/14/11-
8/31/14
 

Institutional Class (1,2,4)

     11.45     11.93     9.32   $ 13,709   

Y Class (1,2,4)

     11.33     11.82     9.16   $ 13,641   

Investor Class(1,2,4)

     11.08     11.60     8.85   $ 13,503   

A Class with sales charge (1,2,4)

     5.57     9.61     7.28   $ 12,825   

A Class without sales charge(1,2,4)

     10.87     11.40     8.76   $ 13,466   

C Class with sales charge(1,2,4)

     9.12     10.60     8.01   $ 13,138   

C Class without sales charge(1,2,4)

     10.12     10.60     8.01   $ 13,138   

BofA Merrill Lynch US High Yield Master II Index(3)

     10.62     10.38     8.41   $ 13,318   

 

1. Performance shown is historical and is not indicative of future returns. Investment returns and principal value will vary, and shares may be worth more or less at redemption than at original purchase. Performance shown is calculated based on the published end of day net asset values as of date indicated, and current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. To obtain performance as of the most recent month end, please visit www.americanbeaconfunds.com or call 1-800-967-9009. Fund performance in the table above does not reflect the deduction of taxes a shareholder would pay on distributions or the redemption of shares. A Class shares have a maximum sales charge of 4.75%. The maximum contingent deferred sales charge for the C Class is 1.00% for shares redeemed within one year of the date of purchase.
2. A portion of the fees charged to each Class of the Fund was waived since inception. Performance prior to waiving
  fees was lower than the actual returns shown since inception.
3. The BofA Merrill Lynch US High Yield Master II Index tracks the performance of U.S. dollar denominated below investment grade corporate debt publicly issued in the U.S. domestic market. Qualifying securities must have a below investment grade rating and an investment grade rated country of risk. In addition, qualifying securities must have at least one year remaining term to final maturity, a fixed coupon schedule and a minimum amount outstanding of $100 million. Defaulted securities and securities eligible for the dividends-received deduction are excluded from the Index. One cannot directly invest in an index.
4. The total annual Fund operating expense ratio set forth in the most recent Fund prospectus for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A, and C Class shares was 0.93%, 0.99%, 1.15%, 1.31%, and 2.05%, respectively. The expense ratios above may vary from the expense ratios presented in other sections of this report that are based on expenses incurred during the period covered by this report.

The Fund’s outperformance relative to the Index was largely driven by its strong issue selection within the various credit quality and sector categories. Conversely, the Fund’s relative weightings among credit quality and sector categories versus the Index negatively impacted the Fund’s returns.

From a credit quality perspective, issue selection in the B-rated credit category was a major contributor to the Fund’s outperformance.

From a credit quality allocation perspective, the Fund’s relative weightings within the high yield credit rating categories (BB, B and CCC) proved beneficial during the period. On the other hand, the Fund’s small allocation to investment grade securities and cash equivalents detracted from relative returns.

From a sector standpoint, strong performance from issues in the Consumer, Service and Manufacturing sectors was a significant driver of the Fund’s excess returns versus the Index. However, some of those gains were modestly offset through trailing returns generated by the Fund’s holdings in the Electric and Energy sectors.

From a sector allocation perspective, the Fund’s relative returns were hampered by underweighting the Finance sector (up 12.4%) and maintaining an overweight allocation to the Service sector (up 9.4%). An allocation to Cash (2.4%) and Agency securities (2.1%) also detracted from relative returns.

 

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Performance Overview

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The Fund has the flexibility to utilize derivative instruments and will do so to enhance return, hedge risk, manage liquidity or to gain efficient exposure to an asset class. When considering the Fund’s use of derivatives, it is important to note that the Fund does not use derivatives for the purpose of creating financial leverage. During the period, the Fund experienced modest benefits from the use of derivatives having a minimal impact on performance.

The sub-advisor’s investment process of identifying long-term secular themes and seeking out of favor sectors through bottom-up fundamental research remains in place.

Top Ten Holdings (% Net Assets)

Continental Airlines Finance Trust II, 6.00%,
Due 11/15/2030

        2.3   

Virgin Media Finance PLC, 6.375%,
Due 4/15/2023, 144A

        2.0   

Tenet Healthcare Corp., 4.500%,
Due 4/1/2021

        2.0   

Alliant Techsystems, Inc., 5.250%,
Due 10/1/2021, 144A

        2.0   

DigitalGlobe, Inc., 5.250%,
Due 2/1/2021, 144A

        2.0   

Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., 7.000%,
Due 9/1/2020, 144A

        1.9   

LSB Industries, Inc., 7.750%,
Due 8/1/2019

        1.9   

Sensata Technologies BV, 4.875%,
Due 10/15/2023, 144A

        1.9   

LifePoint Hospitals, Inc., 5.500%,
Due 12/1/2021, 144A

        1.9   

Univision Communications, Inc., 6.75%,
Due 9/15/2022, 144A

        1.9   

Total Fund Holdings

     88      

Sector Allocation (% Investments)

Service

     36.3   

Manufacturing

     18.2   

Consumer

     9.8   

Transportation

     8.5   

Finance

     8.0   

Telecommunications

     7.8   

Utilities

     3.3   

Short-Term Investments

     1.9   

Sovereign

     1.9   

Financials

     1.7   

Agency

     1.6   

Materials

     0.8   

U.S. Treasury Notes/Bonds

     0.2   

 

 

S&P credit ratings for long-term obligations (or issuers thereof) are AAA, AA, A, BBB, BB, B, CCC, CC, C, and D in decreasing order. For example, obligations rated AAA are judged to be of the highest quality, BBB to be of medium grade, CCC are judged to be speculative and obligations rated D are in default. Obligations rated in one of the four highest categories are considered to be investment grade while all other ratings are considered non-investment grade.

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Fund Expenses

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

Fund Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs including sales charges (loads) on purchased shares and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees, administrative service fees, distribution (12b-1) fees, and other Fund expenses. The examples below are intended to help you understand the ongoing cost (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period in each Class and held for the entire period from March 1, 2014 through August 31, 2014.

Actual Expenses

The “Actual” lines of the table provide information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period” to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. Shareholders of the Investor and Institutional Classes that invest in the Fund through an IRA or Roth IRA may be subject to a custodial IRA fee of $15 that is typically deducted each December. If your account was subject to a custodial IRA fee during the period, your costs would have been $15 higher.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The “Hypothetical” lines of the table provide information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund’s actual expense ratio and an assumed 5% per year rate of return before expenses (not the Fund’s actual return). You may compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund with other funds by contrasting this 5% hypothetical example and the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. Shareholders of the Investor and Institutional Classes that invest in the Fund through an IRA or Roth IRA may be subject to a custodial IRA fee of $15 that is typically deducted each December. If your account was subject to a custodial IRA fee during the period, your costs would have been $15 higher.

You should also be aware that the expenses shown in the table highlight only your ongoing costs and do not reflect any transaction costs charged by the Fund. Similarly, the expense examples for other funds do not reflect any transaction costs charged by those funds, such as sales charges (loads), redemption fees or exchange fees. Therefore, the “Hypothetical” lines of the table are useful in comparing ongoing costs only and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. If you were subject to any transaction costs during the period, your costs would have been higher.

 

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Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Fund Expenses

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

The London Company Income Equity Fund

 

    Beginning
Account
Value
3/1/14
    Ending
Account
Value
8/31/14
    Expenses Paid
During Period*
3/1/14 - 8/31/14
 

Institutional Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,106.71      $ 4.19   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,021.22      $ 4.02   

Y Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,106.70      $ 4.73   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,020.72      $ 4.53   

Investor Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,106.21      $ 5.57   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,019.91      $ 5.35   

A Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,104.26      $ 6.63   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,018.90      $ 6.36   

C Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,100.53      $ 10.59   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,015.12      $ 10.16   

 

* Expenses are equal to the Fund’s annualized expense ratios for the six-month period of 0.79%, 0.89%, 1.05%, 1.25%, and 2.00% for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A, and C Classes respectively, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number derived by dividing the number of days in the most recent fiscal half-year (184) by days in the year (365) to reflect the half-year period.
** 5% return before expenses.

Zebra Global Equity Fund

 

    Beginning
Account
Value
3/1/14
    Ending
Account
Value
8/31/14
    Expenses Paid
During Period*
3/1/14 - 8/31/14
 

Institutional Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,061.82      $ 4.11   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,021.22      $ 4.02   

Y Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,059.65      $ 4.62   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,020.72      $ 4.53   

Investor Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,060.05      $ 6.08   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,019.31      $ 5.96   

A Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,058.73      $ 6.54   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,018.85      $ 6.41   

C Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,054.78      $ 10.36   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,015.12      $ 10.16   

 

* Expenses are equal to the Fund’s annualized expense ratios for the six-month period of 0.79%, 0.89%, 1.17%, 1.26%, and 2.00% for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A, and C Classes respectively, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number derived by dividing the number of days in the most recent fiscal half-year (184) by days in the year (365) to reflect the half-year period.
** 5% return before expenses.

Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund

 

    Beginning
Account
Value
3/1/14
    Ending
Account
Value
8/31/14
    Expenses Paid
During Period*
3/1/14 - 8/31/14
 

Institutional Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,029.40      $ 5.06   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,020.21      $ 5.04   

Y Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,029.09      $ 5.57   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,019.71      $ 5.55   

Investor Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,027.86      $ 7.00   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,018.30      $ 6.97   

A Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,027.84      $ 7.41   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,017.90      $ 7.38   

C Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,024.00      $ 11.22   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,014.12      $ 11.17   

 

* Expenses are equal to the Fund’s annualized expense ratios for the six-month period of 0.99%, 1.09%, 1.37%, 1.45%, and 2.20% for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A, and C Classes respectively, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number derived by dividing the number of days in the most recent fiscal half-year (184) by days in the year (365) to reflect the half-year period.
** 5% return before expenses.

SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

 

    Beginning
Account
Value
3/1/14
    Ending
Account
Value
8/31/14
    Expenses Paid
During Period*
3/1/14 - 8/31/14
 

Institutional Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,031.53      $ 4.30   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,020.97      $ 4.28   

Y Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,030.99      $ 4.81   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,020.47      $ 4.79   

Investor Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,030.27      $ 5.53   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,019.76      $ 5.50   

A Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,030.08      $ 6.65   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,018.65      $ 6.61   

C Class

     

Actual

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,026.18      $ 10.47   

Hypothetical **

  $ 1,000.00      $ 1,014.87      $ 10.41   

 

* Expenses are equal to the Fund’s annualized expense ratios for the six-month period of 0.84%, 0.94%, 1.08%, 1.30%, and 2.05% for the Institutional, Y, Investor, A, and C Classes respectively, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number derived by dividing the number of days in the most recent fiscal half-year (184) by days in the year (365) to reflect the half-year period.
** 5% return before expenses.
 

 

15


Table of Contents

American Beacon Funds

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

 

To the Shareholders and the Board of Trustees of

American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund, and American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund:

We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities, including the schedules of investments, of the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund, and American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund (four of the funds constituting the American Beacon Funds) (collectively, the “Funds”), as of August 31, 2014, and the related statements of operations for the year then ended, the statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for the periods indicated therein. These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Funds’ management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement. We were not engaged to perform an audit of the Funds’ internal control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of each Fund’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements and financial highlights, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of August 31, 2014, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers or by other appropriate auditing procedures where replies from brokers were not received. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund, and American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund at August 31, 2014, the results of their operations for the year then ended, the changes in their net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for the periods indicated therein, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

 

LOGO

Dallas, Texas

October 30, 2014

 

16


Table of Contents

American Beacon The London Company Income Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

PREFERRED STOCK - 1.91%

  

FINANCIALS - 1.91%

  

Diversified Financials - 0.49%

  

Aegon N.V., 8.00%, Due 2/15/2042

    23,582      $ 682   

Morgan Stanley Capital Trust VIII, 6.45%, Due 4/15/2067

    26,090        660   
   

 

 

 
      1,342   
   

 

 

 

Insurance - 0.26%

  

Montpelier Re Holdings Ltd., 8.875%, Due 5/10/2016

    24,820        706   
   

 

 

 

Real Estate - 1.16%

  

Vornado Realty Trust, 5.40%, Due 12/31/2049A

    134,500        3,213   
   

 

 

 

Total Financials

      5,261   
   

 

 

 

Total Preferred Stock
(Cost $4,809)

      5,261   
   

 

 

 

COMMON STOCK - 94.97%

  

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 9.21%

  

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 2.64%

  

Carnival Corp.

    191,970        7,272   
   

 

 

 

Leisure Equipment & Products - 3.71%

  

Hasbro, Inc.

    194,077        10,219   
   

 

 

 

Specialty Retail - 2.86%

   

Lowe’s Cos., Inc.

    150,443        7,900   
   

 

 

 

Total Consumer Discretionary

      25,391   
   

 

 

 

CONSUMER STAPLES - 12.77%

  

Beverages - 1.86%

  

Coca-Cola Co.

    123,210        5,140   
   

 

 

 

Tobacco - 10.91%

   

Altria Group, Inc.

    222,660        9,592   

Lorillard, Inc.

    184,271        11,002   

Philip Morris International, Inc.

    50,029        4,281   

Reynolds American, Inc.

    89,282        5,220   
   

 

 

 
      30,095   
   

 

 

 

Total Consumer Staples

      35,235   
   

 

 

 

ENERGY - 5.67%

  

Oil & Gas - 5.67%

  

Chevron Corp.

    51,486        6,665   

ConocoPhillips

    110,289        8,958   
   

 

 

 

Total Energy

      15,623   
   

 

 

 

FINANCIALS - 15.95%

  

Diversified Financials - 10.76%

  

BlackRock, Inc., Class A

    28,942        9,566   

Federated Investors, Inc., Class B

    292,340        8,972   

Wells Fargo & Co.

    216,966        11,161   
   

 

 

 
      29,699   
   

 

 

 

Insurance - 2.63%

   

Cincinnati Financial Corp.

    150,661        7,245   
   

 

 

 

Real Estate - 2.56%

   

Corrections Corp. of AmericaA

    197,910        7,054   
   

 

 

 

Total Financials

      43,998   
   

 

 

 
    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

HEALTH CARE - 8.63%

  

Pharmaceuticals - 8.63%

  

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

    138,865      $ 7,034   

Eli Lilly & Co.

    122,338        7,776   

Pfizer, Inc.

    305,383        8,975   
   

 

 

 

Total Health Care

      23,785   
   

 

 

 

INDUSTRIALS - 4.12%

  

Aerospace & Defense - 4.12%

  

General Dynamics Corp.

    92,135        11,356   
   

 

 

 

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 15.83%

  

Communications Equipment - 6.04%

  

Cisco Systems, Inc.

    292,710        7,315   

Corning, Inc.

    448,900        9,365   
   

 

 

 
      16,680   
   

 

 

 

Computers & Peripherals - 1.48%

  

International Business Machines Corp.

    21,157        4,068   
   

 

 

 

IT Consulting & Services - 2.07%

  

Paychex, Inc.

    136,911        5,702   
   

 

 

 

Semiconductor Equipment & Products - 3.67%

  

Intel Corp.

    290,271        10,136   
   

 

 

 

Software - 2.57%

   

Microsoft Corp.

    155,918        7,083   
   

 

 

 

Total Information Technology

      43,669   
   

 

 

 

MATERIALS - 8.23%

  

Chemicals - 8.23%

  

Albemarle Corp.

    147,405        9,372   

NewMarket Corp.

    18,251        7,426   

The Mosaic Co.

    123,490        5,898   
   

 

 

 

Total Materials

      22,696   
   

 

 

 

TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 5.38%

  

Diversified Telecommunication Services - 5.38%

  

Verizon Communications, Inc.

    110,804        5,520   

Windstream Holdings, Inc.

    824,950        9,322   
   

 

 

 

Total Telecommunication Services

      14,842   
   

 

 

 

UTILITIES - 9.18%

  

Electric - 4.44%

  

Dominion Resources, Inc.

    97,838        6,870   

Duke Energy Corp.

    72,641        5,375   
   

 

 

 
      12,245   
   

 

 

 

Gas - 4.74%

   

Kinder Morgan Management
LLCB C

    133,772        13,072   
   

 

 

 

Total Utilities

      25,317   
   

 

 

 

Total Common Stock (Cost $230,109)

      261,912   
   

 

 

 

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS - 3.53% (Cost $9,731)

  

JPMorgan U.S. Government Money Market Fund, Capital Class

    9,731,214        9,731   
   

 

 

 
 

 

See accompanying notes

 

17


Table of Contents

American Beacon The London Company Income Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

    Fair Value  
    (000’s)  

TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100.41%
(Cost $244,649)

  $ 276,904   

LIABILITIES, NET OF OTHER
ASSETS - (0.41%)

    (1,144
 

 

 

 

TOTAL NET ASSETS - 100.00%

  $ 275,760   
 

 

 

 

Percentages are stated as a percent of net assets.

 

A  REIT - Real Estate Investment Trust.
B  LLC - Limited Liability Company.
C  Non-income producing security.
 

 

Futures Contracts Open on August 31, 2014* (000’s):

 

Description

   Type    Number of
Contracts
   Expiration Date    Contract Value      Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

S&P 500 Mini E Index September Futures

   Long    60    September, 2014    $ 6,004       $ 86   
           

 

 

    

 

 

 
            $ 6,004       $ 86   
           

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

* The security presented here within is not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this table is for informational purposes only.

 

See accompanying notes

 

18


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

Australia - 2.65%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $193)

  

ALS Ltd.

    1,673      $ 12   

Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., ADRA

    832        26   

BHP Billiton Ltd., ADRA

    994        34   

Commonwealth Bank of Australia

    422        31   

CSL Ltd.

    215        15   

Insurance Australia Group Ltd.

    2,378        14   

Orica Ltd.

    523        10   

Westpac Banking Corp.

    854        28   

Woolworths Holdings Ltd.

    549        19   

WorleyParsons Ltd.

    622        10   
   

 

 

 

Total Australia

      199   
   

 

 

 

Austria - 0.09%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $8)

  

OMV AG

    89        3   

Voestalpine AG

    93        4   
   

 

 

 

Total Austria

      7   
   

 

 

 

Belgium - 0.36%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $33)

  

Ageas

    370        12   

Colruyt S.A.B

    304        15   
   

 

 

 

Total Belgium

      27   
   

 

 

 

Canada - 4.07%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $269)

  

Agrium, Inc.

    353        33   

BCE, Inc.

    573        26   

Imperial Oil Ltd.

    680        36   

Pacific Rubiales Energy Corp.

    1,057        22   

Potash Corp of Saskatchewan, Inc.

    1,631        58   

RioCan Real Estate Investment TrustC

    597        15   

Ritchie Bros Auctioneers, Inc.

    508        12   

Suncor Energy, Inc.

    2,522        104   
   

 

 

 

Total Canada

      306   
   

 

 

 

Denmark - 0.53%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $39)

  

AP Moeller - Maersk A.S.

    5        12   

DSV A.S.

    272        8   

Novo Nordisk A.S., Class B

    419        20   
   

 

 

 

Total Denmark

      40   
   

 

 

 

Finland - 0.37%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $24)

  

KoneOyj-BB

    226        10   

Orion Corp., Class BB

    287        11   

Wartsila OYJ Abp

    144        7   
   

 

 

 

Total Finland

      28   
   

 

 

 

France - 4.75%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $337)

  

Air Liquide S.A.

    262        33   

Christian Dior

    120        21   

CieGenerale des Etablissements Michelin

    204        23   
    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

CNP AssurancesB

    987      $ 20   

Dassault Systems S.A.B

    438        29   

Imerys S.A.B

    233        19   

LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis VuittonB

    343        60   

Safran S.A.

    317        20   

Scor SE, ADRA

    600        18   

Societe BIC S.A., ADRA B

    176        24   

Total S.A.

    1,051        69   

Zodiac Aerospace

    631        21   
   

 

 

 

Total France

      357   
   

 

 

 

Germany - 3.03%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $168)

  

BASF SEB

    416        43   

Bayer AG Reg

    327        44   

Brenntag AG

    312        17   

Hannover Rueckversicheru-RegB

    172        14   

Henkel AG & Co., KGaA

    194        18   

SAP AG

    480        37   
   

 

 

 

Total Common Stocks

      173   
   

 

 

 

Preferred Stocks - (Cost $57)

  

BayerischeMotorenWerke AG

    247        23   

Fuchs Petrolub SE

    237        10   

Porsche Automobil Holding SE

    238        22   
   

 

 

 

Total Preferred Stocks

      55   
   

 

 

 

Total Germany

      228   
   

 

 

 

Hong Kong/China - 1.09%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $75)

  

Bank of East Asia Ltd.

    1,600        7   

Hang Seng Bank Ltd.

    500        8   

Hopewell Holdings Ltd.

    2,500        9   

NWS Holdings Ltd.

    4,000        8   

PCCW Ltd.

    19,000        12   

Power Assets Holdings Ltd.

    1,000        9   

Sino Land Co., Ltd.

    4,000        7   

Wharf Holdings Ltd.

    2,000        16   

Yue Yuen Industrial Holdings Ltd.

    2,000        6   
   

 

 

 

Total Hong Kong/China

      82   
   

 

 

 

Ireland - 0.44%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $31)

  

Accenture, PLC, Class AD

    406        33   
   

 

 

 

Italy - 0.65%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $40)

  

ExorSpAB

    724        29   

Telecom Italia SpA

    21,879        20   
   

 

 

 

Total Italy

      49   
   

 

 

 

Japan - 8.00%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $563)

  

Air Water, Inc.

    1,000        16   

Asahi Kasei Corp.

    2,000        16   

Benesse Holdings, Inc.

    400        14   

Bridgestone Corp.

    700        24   

Brother Industries Ltd.

    1,400        27   

Canon, Inc.

    900        30   

Central Japan Railway Co.

    200        28   
 

 

See accompanying notes

 

19


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

Chugoku Bank Ltd.

    1,400      $ 21   

Gree Inc.

    1,900        15   

GungHo Online Entertainment Inc.

    3,000        16   

Hachijuni Bank Ltd.

    4,000        24   

Hiroshima Bank Ltd.

    5,000        24   

Hisamitsu Pharmaceutical Co.

    400        16   

Honda Motor Co., Ltd.

    800        27   

IYO Bank Ltd.

    2,200        22   

Kaneka Corp.

    3,000        17   

Nexon Co., Ltd.

    1,700        15   

Nishi-Nippon City Bank Ltd.

    8,000        21   

Omron Corp.

    500        22   

Osaka Gas Co., Ltd.

    5,000        21   

Otsuka Holdings Co., Ltd.

    700        26   

Ricoh Co., Ltd.

    1,500        16   

Shimamura Co., Ltd.B

    200        18   

Sumitomo Rubber Industries Ltd.

    1,100        16   

Toho Gas Co., Ltd.

    4,000        23   

Tokyo Gas Co., Ltd.

    5,000        28   

Toto Ltd.B

    2,000        24   

Tsumura & Co.

    600        15   

Yamaguchi FinancialB

    2,000        20   
   

 

 

 

Total Japan

      602   
   

 

 

 

Luxembourg - 0.25%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $18)

  

Tenaris S.A.,

    860        19   
   

 

 

 

Netherlands - 1.64%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $116)

  

Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.

    549        17   

Koninklijke Philips N.V.

    979        17   

LyondellBasell Industries N.V., Class A

    383        43   

Unilever N.V., CVA, GDRE F

    760        32   

Wolters Kluwer N.V.

    511        14   
   

 

 

 

Total Netherlands

      123   
   

 

 

 

Portugal - 0.08%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $5)

  

Energias de Portugal, S.A.,

    1,177        6   
   

 

 

 

Singapore - 0.44%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $28)

  

DBS Group Holdings Ltd.

    1,000        14   

United Overseas Bank Ltd.

    1,000        19   
   

 

 

 

Total Singapore

      33   
   

 

 

 

Spain - 0.72%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $54)

  

Zardoya Otis S.A.B

    3,739        54   
   

 

 

 

Total Spain

      54   
   

 

 

 

Sweden - 1.14%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $80)

  

Atlas Copco AB, Class BB

    524        14   

Ericsson LM, Class B

    1,263        16   

Hennes&Mauritz ABB

    727        30   

Investor AB, Class B

    421        16   

Securitas AB

    885        10   
   

 

 

 

Total Sweden

      86   
   

 

 

 
    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

Switzerland - 4.27%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $288)

  

ACE Ltd.

    321      $ 34   

CieFinanciereRichemont S.A.

    271        26   

Garmin Ltd.

    419        23   

Kuehne + Nagel International AG, Reg SB G

    100        13   

Nestle S.A.

    1,179        92   

Roche Holding AG Genusschein

    217        63   

Schindler Holding AG

    108        16   

Sika AG BRB

    5        19   

Swatch Groug AG

    138        14   

Syngenta AG

    59        21   
   

 

 

 

Total Switzerland

      321   
   

 

 

 

United Kingdom - 8.33%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $588)

  

3i Group PLCD

    2,116        14   

Aggreko PLCD

    552        16   

AstraZeneca PLC, ADRA B D

    457        35   

BHP Billiton PLCD

    867        27   

British American Tobacco PLCD

    634        37   

BT Group PLCD

    3,620        23   

Centrica PLCD

    3,602        19   

GKN PLCD

    2,391        14   

GlaxoSmithKline PLCD

    1,460        35   

HSBC Holdings PLCD

    5,003        55   

IMI PLCD

    612        14   

Kingfisher PLCD

    2,502        13   

Marks & Spencer Group PLCD

    1,966        14   

National Grid PLCD

    1,694        25   

Old Mutual PLCD

    5,253        17   

Reckitt Benckiser Group PLCD

    440        38   

Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Class AD

    1,164        47   

Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Class BD

    2,127        91   

Sage Group PLCB D

    2,139        14   

Smiths Group PLCD

    689        15   

Standard Chartered PLCD

    1,142        23   

Tate & Lyle PLCD

    1,355        15   

Unilever PLCD

    599        26   
   

 

 

 

Total United Kingdom

      627   
   

 

 

 

United States - 52.40%

  

Common Stocks - (Cost $3,386)

  

3M Co.

    354        51   

Activision Blizzard, Inc.

    1,089        26   

Alleghany Corp.

    64        28   

Alliant Energy Corp.

    382        22   

Amgen, Inc.

    372        52   

Arch Capital Group Ltd.B

    416        23   

AT&T, Inc.

    2,118        74   

Avnet, Inc.

    450        20   

Axis Capital Holdings Ltd.

    491        24   

Baxter International, Inc.

    460        34   

Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.B

    390        25   

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc., Class BB

    462        63   

C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc.

    537        37   

CA, Inc.

    754        21   

Chevron Corp.

    743        96   

Chubb Corp.

    283        26   

Cincinnati Financial Corp.

    420        20   

Cintas Corp.

    394        26   
 

 

See accompanying notes

 

20


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

Cisco Systems, Inc.

    2,448      $ 61   

Coach, Inc.

    449        17   

Coca-Cola Co.

    1,553        65   

Columbia Sportswear Co.

    232        17   

ConocoPhillips

    661        54   

Continental Resources, Inc.B

    397        64   

Crown Holdings, Inc.B

    433        21   

Danaher Corp.

    423        32   

Dentsply International, Inc.

    424        20   

Dollar General Corp.B

    401        26   

Dollar Tree, Inc.B

    464        25   

DTE Energy Co.

    580        46   

Dun & Bradstreet Corp.

    241        29   

Edison International

    425        25   

Eli Lilly & Co.

    604        38   

Emerson Electric Co.

    523        33   

Everest Re Group Ltd.

    144        24   

Exxon Mobil Corp.

    1,207        121   

Fastenal Co.

    531        24   

Franklin Resources, Inc.

    581        33   

Genuine Parts Co.

    289        25   

Henry Schein, Inc.B

    180        22   

Home Depot, Inc.

    640        60   

Honeywell International, Inc.

    412        39   

Intel Corp.

    2,337        81   

International Business Machines Corp.

    406        78   

International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.

    402        40   

Intuit, Inc.

    286        24   

Johnson & Johnson

    1,043        109   

Kellogg Co.

    414        27   

Leucadia National Corp.

    979        24   

LKQ Corp.B

    847        24   

Magnachip Semiconductor Corp.B

    4        0   

Marathon Oil Corp.

    771        32   

Marathon Petroleum Corp.

    303        28   

Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc.

    505        27   

Mattel, Inc.

    762        26   

Maxim Integrated Products, Inc.

    608        19   

McDonald’s Corp.

    491        46   

McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc.

    326        27   

Medtronic, Inc.

    667        43   

Microsoft Corp.

    2,825        129   

Monsanto Co.

    325        38   

Moody’s Corp.

    686        64   

Navient Corp.

    860        15   

Northrop Grumman Corp.

    197        25   

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

    456        47   

Oracle Corp.

    1,550        65   

Patterson Cos., Inc.

    565        23   

PepsiCo, Inc.

    686        63   

PetSmart, Inc.

    382        27   

Philip Morris International, Inc.

    738        64   

Phillips 66

    424        37   

Praxair, Inc.

    238        31   

Procter & Gamble Co.

    983        82   

Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.

    747        28   
    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

Qualcomm, Inc.

    735        56   

Reynolds American, Inc.

    469        27   

Ross Stores, Inc.

    372        28   

SCANA Corp.

    577        30   

Schlumberger Ltd.

    579        63   

SEI Investments Co.

    745        28   

Sigma-Aldrich Corp.

    266        28   

SLM Corp.

    862      $ 8   

Stryker Corp.

    289        24   

Symantec Corp.

    1,163        28   

Synopsys, Inc.B

    544        22   

T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.

    372        30   

Target Corp.

    446        26   

TJX Cos., Inc.

    859        51   

Travelers Cos., Inc.

    337        32   

U.S. Bancorp

    952        40   

United Technologies Corp.

    400        43   

UnitedHealth Group, Inc.

    545        47   

Verisk Analytics, Inc., Class AB

    319        20   

Verizon Communications, Inc.

    1,477        74   

Viacom, Inc., Class B

    313        25   

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

    771        58   

Wells Fargo & Co.

    1,831        94   

WR Berkley Corp.

    578        28   

WW Grainger, Inc.

    96        24   

Xcel Energy, Inc.

    821        26   
   

 

 

 

Total Common Stocks

  

    3,942   
   

 

 

 

Foreign Exchange Traded Funds -
(Cost $1)

   

iShares MSCI ACWI Index Fund

    12        1   
   

 

 

 

Total United States

  

    3,943   
   

 

 

 

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS - 4.29%
(Cost $323)

   

JPMorgan U.S. Government Money Market Fund, Capital Class

    323,480        323   
   

 

 

 

TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 99.59%
(Cost $6,724)

   

    7,493   

OTHER ASSETS, NET OF
LIABILITIES - 0.41%

      30   
   

 

 

 

TOTAL NET ASSETS - 100.00%

  

  $ 7,524   
   

 

 

 

Percentages are stated as a percent of net assets.

 

A  ADR - American Depositary Receipt.
B  Non-income producing security.
C  REIT - Real Estate Investment Trust.
D  PLC - Public Limited Company.
E  CVA - Dutch Certificate.
F  GDR - Global Depositary Receipt.
G  Reg S - Security purchased under the Securities Act of 1933, which exempts from registration securities offered and sold outside of the United States. Such a security cannot be sold in the United States without either an effective registration statement filed pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, or pursuant to an exemption from registration.
 

 

See accompanying notes

 

21


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Futures Contracts Open on August 31, 2014* (000’s):

 

Description

  Type   Number of
Contracts
  Expiration Date   Contract Value     Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Mini MSCI EAFE Emerging Markets September Futures

  Long   2   September, 2014   $ 192      $ 2   

S&P 500 Mini E Index September Futures

  Long   2   September, 2014     200        6   
       

 

 

   

 

 

 
        $ 392      $ 8   
       

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

* The securities presented here within are not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this table is for informational purposes only.

 

See accompanying notes

 

22


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Shares      Fair Value  
            (000’s)  

COMMON STOCK - 96.35%

     

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 14.60%

  

Auto Components - 1.63%

     

Argan, Inc.

     1,626       $ 65   

Dorman Products, Inc.

     2,781         125   

Remy International, Inc.

     4,096         91   

Shiloh Industries, Inc.

     1,878         31   
     

 

 

 
        312   
     

 

 

 

Distributors - 0.89%

     

Core-Mark Holding Co., Inc.

     1,786         86   

DXP Enterprises, Inc.A

     1,045         84   
     

 

 

 
        170   
     

 

 

 

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 0.39%

  

Einstein Noah Restaurant Group, Inc.

     2,010         29   

Monarch Casino & Resort, Inc.A

     1,806         23   

Nathan’s Famous, Inc.A

     396         22   
     

 

 

 
        74   
     

 

 

 

Household Durables - 2.80%

     

Bassett Furniture Industries, Inc.

     1,643         25   

CSS Industries, Inc.

     952         24   

Flexsteel Industries, Inc.

     673         24   

Haverty Furniture Companies, Inc.

     1,822         42   

Helen of Troy Ltd.A

     2,865         167   

Hooker Furniture Corp.

     1,290         19   

Kimball International, Inc.,
Class B

     2,653         42   

Lifetime Brands, Inc.

     1,424         24   

Matthews International Corp., Class A

     2,190         101   

Universal Electronics, Inc.A

     1,279         70   
     

 

 

 
        538   
     

 

 

 

Internet & Catalog Retail - 2.47%

  

1-800-Flowers.com, Inc.,
Class AA

     5,316         27   

Global Sources Ltd.A

     7,048         50   

HSN, Inc.

     3,972         241   

Insight Enterprises, Inc.A

     3,990         105   

Overstock.com, Inc.A

     2,856         50   
     

 

 

 
        473   
     

 

 

 

Leisure Equipment & Products - 0.42%

  

Johnson Outdoors, Inc., Class A

     1,261         33   

Nautilus, Inc.A

     3,989         48   
     

 

 

 
        81   
     

 

 

 

Media - 2.02%

     

Courier Corp.

     925         12   

CTC Media, Inc.

     17,896         162   

Journal Communications, Inc., Class AA

     5,121         51   

Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc., Class A

     3,520         161   
     

 

 

 
        386   
     

 

 

 

Multiline Retail - 0.25%

     

Stein Mart, Inc.

     3,811         47   
     

 

 

 

Specialty Retail - 2.48%

     

America’s Car-Mart, Inc.A

     924         39   

Big 5 Sporting Goods Corp.

     2,222         23   

Cato Corp., Class A

     2,487         86   

Destination Maternity Corp.

     1,439         28   

PC Connection, Inc.

     2,802         64   

Rent-A-Center, Inc.

     4,358         120   

Shoe Carnival, Inc.

     1,797         39   

Trans World Entertainment Corp.

     6,499         22   

West Marine, Inc.A

     1,747         19   

Winmark Corp.

     480         35   
     

 

 

 
        475   
     

 

 

 
     Shares      Fair Value  
            (000’s)  

Textiles & Apparel - 1.25%

     

Cherokee, Inc.

     1,337       $ 24   

Culp, Inc.

     1,329         24   

Unifirst Corp.

     1,562         152   

Weyco Group, Inc.

     1,456         39   
     

 

 

 
        239   
     

 

 

 

Total Consumer Discretionary

  

     2,795   
     

 

 

 

CONSUMER STAPLES - 3.68%

  

Beverages - 0.40%

     

National Beverage Corp.

     4,188         77   
     

 

 

 

Food & Drug Retailing - 0.97%

  

Ingles Markets, Inc., Class A

     1,960         49   

Village Super Market, Inc., Class A

     1,215         28   

Weis Markets, Inc.

     2,520         109   
     

 

 

 
        186   
     

 

 

 

Food Products - 0.21%

     

John B Sanfilippo & Son, Inc.

     1,307         40   
     

 

 

 

Household Products - 0.09%

     

Oil-Dri Corp of America

     583         17   
     

 

 

 

Personal Products - 2.01%

     

Female Health Co.

     2,634         10   

Inter Parfums, Inc.

     3,367         103   

National American University Holdings, Inc.

     4,231         13   

Nature’s Sunshine Products, Inc.

     1,871         31   

Revlon, Inc., Class AA

     4,826         164   

Steiner Leisure Ltd.A

     1,486         63   
     

 

 

 
        384   
     

 

 

 

Total Consumer Staples

        704   
     

 

 

 

ENERGY - 5.17%

     

Energy Equipment & Services - 1.92%

  

Blueknight Energy Partners LPB

     3,901         34   

Bolt Technology Corp.

     686         12   

Forum Energy Technologies, Inc.A

     6,122         207   

RigNet, Inc.A

     1,018         48   

Tesco Corp.

     3,108         66   
     

 

 

 
        367   
     

 

 

 

Oil & Gas - 3.25%

     

Adams Resources & Energy, Inc.

     660         43   

Apco Oil and Gas International, Inc.A

     1,799         26   

Delek US Holdings, Inc.

     6,960         244   

North European Oil Royalty TrustC

     1,312         30   

Panhandle Oil and Gas, Inc., Class A

     621         38   

Renewable Energy Group, Inc.A

     6,950         85   

Resource America, Inc., Class A

     1,959         18   

Sabine Royalty TrustC

     1,621         92   

Warren Resources, Inc.A

     7,315         47   
     

 

 

 
        623   
     

 

 

 

Total Energy

        990   
     

 

 

 

FINANCIALS - 25.45%

     

Banks - 7.67%

     

1st Source Corp.

     2,903         86   

Access National Corp.

     1,429         24   

American National Bankshares, Inc.

     1,067         24   

Ames National Corp.

     768         18   

Bank of Kentucky Financial Corp.

     659         24   

Bank of Marin Bancorp

     442         22   
 

 

See accompanying notes

 

23


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Shares      Fair Value  
            (000’s)  

Bar Harbor Bankshares

     718       $ 20   

Bryn Mawr Bank Corp.

     1,482         44   

C&F Financial Statutory Trust I

     395         14   

Camden National Corp.

     831         30   

Century Bancorp, Inc., Class A

     815         29   

Chemung Financial Corp.

     491         14   

Citizens & Northern Corp.

     1,213         24   

CNB Financial Corp.

     1,643         28   

Community Trust Bancorp, Inc.

     1,895         67   

CU BancorpA

     912         17   

Enterprise Bancorp, Inc.

     756         15   

Enterprise Financial Services Corp.

     2,551         44   

Farmers Capital Bank Corp.A

     921         20   

Fidelity Southern Corp.

     2,743         38   

First Bancorp, Inc.

     755         13   

First Community Bancshares, Inc.

     2,464         40   

First Defiance Financial Corp.

     972         27   

First Financial Corp.

     1,438         46   

First Financial Northwest, Inc.

     2,581         28   

German American Bancorp, Inc.

     1,197         32   

Great Southern Bancorp, Inc.

     1,562         49   

Hingham Institution for Savings

     295         24   

Home Bancorp, Inc.A

     752         17   

Horizon Bancorp

     1,255         28   

Intervest Bancshares Corp.

     2,906         28   

LCNB Corp.

     923         14   

Macatawa Bank Corp.

     4,954         25   

MainSource Financial Group, Inc.

     2,497         43   

Mercantile Bank Corp.

     977         19   

Merchants Bancshares, Inc.

     475         14   

MidSouth Bancorp, Inc.

     1,241         24   

NASB Financial, Inc.

     1,544         38   

National Bankshares, Inc.

     810         24   

NorthrimBanCorp, Inc.

     767         19   

Pacific Premier Bancorp, Inc.A

     1,544         23   

Penns Woods Bancorp, Inc.

     353         16   

Peoples Bancorp, Inc.

     1,356         33   

Republic Bancorp, Inc., Class A

     2,196         50   

Stock Yards Bancorp, Inc.

     1,510         45   

TowneBank

     4,063         60   

Trico Bancshares

     1,688         38   

Univest Corp of Pennsylvania

     1,457         28   

West Bancorporation, Inc.

     1,438         22   
     

 

 

 
        1,469   
     

 

 

 

Diversified Financials - 6.62%

  

Advent Software, Inc.

     3,060         99   

Cascade BancorpA

     8,578         44   

Cash America International, Inc.

     1,559         70   

Consumer Portfolio Services, Inc.A

     9,906         71   

Credit Acceptance Corp.A

     1,430         177   

Diamond Hill Investment Group, Inc.

     312         41   

Encore Capital Group, Inc.A

     2,636         117   

ExlService Holdings, Inc.A

     2,461         67   

EZCORP, Inc., Class AA

     5,563         59   

FBR & Co.A

     3,712         106   

Heartland Financial USA, Inc.

     2,334         56   

Meta Financial Group, Inc.

     640         24   

MicroFinancial, Inc.

     1,814         14   

MidWestOne Financial Group, Inc.

     1,108         26   

Pzena Investment Management, Inc., Class A

     915         9   

Texas Pacific Land TrustC

     638         129   

Tree.com, Inc.

     433         14   
     Shares      Fair Value  
            (000’s)  

Walker & Dunlop, Inc.A

     3,910       $ 55   

Waterstone Financial, Inc.

     4,662         53   

Westwood Holdings Group, Inc.

     612         36   
     

 

 

 
        1,267   
     

 

 

 

Insurance - 4.15%

  

Baldwin & Lyons, Inc.,
Class B

     1,721         45   

Crawford & Co., Class B

     5,796         52   

EMC Insurance Group, Inc.

     1,697         52   

Enstar Group Ltd.A

     1,972         279   

Fortegra Financial Corp.A

     2,919         29   

Independence Holding Co.

     2,480         35   

Investors Title Co.

     296         21   

National Western Life Insurance Co., Class A

     493         125   

Safety Insurance Group, Inc.

     1,617         89   

Universal Insurance Holdings, Inc.

     4,803         67   
     

 

 

 
        794   
     

 

 

 

Real Estate - 7.01%

  

Amerco, Inc.

     909         254   

American Assets Trust, Inc.D

     4,631         162   

Ashford Hospitality Trust, Inc.D

     6,980         81   

Excel Trust, Inc.D

     3,103         40   

Franklin Street Properties Corp.D

     6,406         78   

Geo Group, Inc.D

     3,981         149   

Getty Realty Corp.D

     2,431         46   

Gramercy Property Trust, Inc.D

     29,889         185   

Heritage Oaks Bancorp

     3,221         23   

Inland Real Estate Corp.D

     7,012         73   

National Health Investors, Inc.D

     1,659         107   

One Liberty Properties, Inc.D

     1,032         22   

Select Income REITD

     3,211         90   

Urstadt Biddle Properties, Inc., Class AD

     1,505         32   
     

 

 

 
        1,342   
     

 

 

 

Total Financials

  

     4,872   
     

 

 

 

HEALTH CARE - 11.17%

  

Biotechnology - 1.72%

  

MiMedx Group, Inc.A

     3,880         27   

PDL BioPharma, Inc.

     26,069         263   

RepligenCorp.A

     2,043         39   
     

 

 

 
        329   
     

 

 

 

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 3.15%

  

Atrion Corp.

     163         52   

Computer Programs and Systems, Inc.

     594         36   

CONMED Corp.

     1,806         72   

CryoLife, Inc.

     1,738         17   

Exactech, Inc.A

     1,173         28   

ICU Medical, Inc.A

     876         55   

Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corp.A

     1,409         70   

Masimo Corp.

     2,814         63   

Meridian Bioscience, Inc.

     2,635         52   

Mesa Laboratories, Inc.

     228         16   

Nutraceutical International Corp.

     935         23   

Orthofix International N.V.A E

     767         26   

PhotoMedex, Inc.A

     1,599         13   

Staar Surgical Co.A

     1,355         16   

SurModics, Inc.A

     929         19   

Utah Medical Products, Inc.

     354         18   

Vascular Solutions, Inc.A

     1,086         26   
     

 

 

 
        602   
     

 

 

 

Health Care Providers & Services - 4.75%

  

AddusHomeCareCorp.A

     888         19   
 

 

See accompanying notes

 

24


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

    Shares      Fair Value  
           (000’s)  

AMN Healthcare Services, Inc.A

    3,365       $ 51   

Bio-Reference Labs, Inc.A

    1,717         50   

Cantel Medical Corp.

    2,569         94   

CorvelCorp.A

    1,433         59   

LHC Group, Inc.A

    1,315         34   

National Healthcare Corp.

    1,709         98   

Omnicell, Inc.A

    2,067         58   

Select Medical Holdings Corp.

    13,292         186   

Team Health Holdings, Inc.A

    3,939         231   

U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc.

    892         32   
    

 

 

 
       912   
    

 

 

 

Pharmaceuticals - 1.55%

  

Insys Therapeutics, Inc.A

    1,925         68   

Lannett Co., Inc.A

    2,331         92   

MWI Veterinary Supply, Inc.A

    791         112   

Sucampo Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Class AA

    3,485         24   
    

 

 

 
       296   
    

 

 

 

Total Health Care

       2,139   
    

 

 

 

INDUSTRIALS - 17.13%

  

Aerospace & Defense - 0.44%

  

Kaman Corp.

    2,079         85   
    

 

 

 

Air Freight & Couriers - 0.18%

  

Echo Global Logistics, Inc.A

    1,359         35   
    

 

 

 

Building Products - 1.34%

  

AAON, Inc.

    4,135         77   

American WoodmarkCorp.A

    1,180         46   

Builders FirstSource, Inc.A

    6,056         42   

Omega Flex, Inc.

    617         11   

Patrick Industries, Inc.A

    976         41   

PGT, Inc.A

    3,802         40   
    

 

 

 
       257   
    

 

 

 

Commercial Services & Supplies - 7.87%

  

Aceto Corp.

    2,407         46   

American Public Education, Inc.A

    1,143         35   

CDI Corp.

    1,080         16   

Ceco Environmental Corp.

    1,989         28   

Collectors Universe, Inc.

    715         14   

CSG Systems International, Inc.

    2,999         83   

Deluxe Corp.

    4,370         261   

Electro Rent Corp.

    2,342         35   

Ennis, Inc.

    2,186         32   

Franklin Covey Co.A

    1,188         23   

G&K Services, Inc., Class A

    1,565         87   

Herman Miller, Inc.

    3,212         95   

Kelly Services, Inc., Class A

    2,647         44   

Kforce, Inc.

    2,000         40   

Marlin Business Services Corp.

    1,295         26   

MSA Safety, Inc.

    2,662         147   

Multi-Color Corp.

    1,508         70   

PHI, Inc.A E

    1,547         66   

TeleTech Holdings, Inc.A

    4,683         126   

TRC Co., Inc.A

    3,907         23   

United Stationers Supply Co.

    4,161         169   

VSE Corp.

    653         39   
    

 

 

 
       1,505   
    

 

 

 

Diversified Manufacturing - 0.11%

  

Myers Industries, Inc.

    1,137         22   
    

 

 

 

Electrical Equipment - 0.92%

  

Chase Corp.

    891         32   
    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

Geospace Technologies Corp.A

    1,193      $ 49   

Houston Wire & Cable Co.

    1,046        14   

Powell Industries, Inc.

    1,053        55   

Preformed Line Products Co.

    477        27   
   

 

 

 
      177   
   

 

 

 

Industrial Conglomerates - 2.67%

  

ICF International, Inc.A

    1,520        51   

Park-Ohio Industries, Inc.

    1,372        80   

Raven Industries, Inc.

    2,492        66   

RPX Corp.A

    3,775        57   

Standex International Corp.

    1,160        87   

Tredegar Corp.

    8,057        168   
   

 

 

 
      509   
   

 

 

 

Machinery - 2.65%

  

Alamo Group, Inc.

    1,043        51   

American Railcar Industries, Inc.

    2,053        163   

Columbus McKinnon Corp.

    2,831        71   

Hardinge, Inc.

    1,228        14   

Hurco Co., Inc.

    673        22   

Kadant, Inc.

    878        35   

L.B. Foster Co., Class A

    764        40   

Lydall, Inc.A

    1,295        36   

Sun Hydraulics Corp.

    1,840        74   
   

 

 

 
      506   
   

 

 

 

Marine - 0.16%

  

StealthGas, Inc.A

    3,216        31   
   

 

 

 

Road & Rail - 0.79%

  

Roadrunner Transportation Systems, Inc.A

    3,044        77   

Universal Truckload Services, Inc.

    2,976        74   
   

 

 

 
      151   
   

 

 

 

Total Industrials

      3,278   
   

 

 

 

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 14.36%

  

Communications Equipment - 3.60%

  

Alliance Fiber Optic Products, Inc.

    1,570        23   

Aware, Inc.

    2,587        11   

Black Box Corp.

    1,667        39   

CalAmpCorp.A

    2,730        53   

Extreme NetworksA

    6,018        32   

IxiaA

    3,957        38   

Mitel Networks Corp.A

    4,899        49   

Ubiquiti Networks, Inc.

    5,438        247   

Verint Systems, Inc.A

    3,911        196   
   

 

 

 
      688   
   

 

 

 

Electronic Equipment & Instruments - 1.83%

  

Analogic Corp.

    800        58   

Daktronics, Inc.

    3,215        42   

ePlus, Inc.

    937        55   

MTS Systems Corp.

    1,284        91   

Scansource, Inc.A

    2,225        86   

Tessco Technologies, Inc.

    587        19   
   

 

 

 
      351   
   

 

 

 

Internet Software & Services - 1.00%

  

AVG Technologies N.V.A

    3,428        60   

NIC, Inc.

    3,591        68   

Perficient, Inc.A

    2,699        46   

Reis, Inc.

    779        18   
   

 

 

 
      192   
   

 

 

 

IT Consulting & Services - 4.41%

  

Computer Task Group, Inc.

    1,487        19   

EPAM Systems, Inc.A

    2,728        103   
 

 

See accompanying notes

 

25


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

Hackett Group, Inc.

    3,181      $ 20   

iGATE Corp.A

    4,894        183   

LionbridgeTechnologiesA

    5,017        23   

Sykes Enterprises, Inc.A

    3,469        73   

Syntel, Inc.A

    3,932        352   

VirtusaCorp.A

    2,054        70   
   

 

 

 
      843   
   

 

 

 

Semiconductor Equipment & Products - 1.18%

  

GSI Group, Inc.A

    2,028        26   

IXYS Corp.

    1,969        24   

MA COM Technology Solutions Holdings, Inc.A

    4,132        98   

Nova Measuring Instruments Ltd.A

    1,466        16   

PDF Solutions, Inc.A

    3,111        62   
   

 

 

 
      226   
   

 

 

 

Software - 2.34%

  

Actuate Corp.A

    2,467        11   

American Software, Inc., Class A

    1,135        10   

EPIQ Systems, Inc.

    2,384        35   

Magic Software Enterprises Ltd.

    2,984        21   

Mentor Graphics Corp.

    9,625        210   

Pegasystems, Inc.

    4,048        90   

QAD, Inc.

    731        15   

Sapiens International Corp., N.V.

    3,509        29   

VASCO Data Security International, Inc.A

    1,837        27   
   

 

 

 
      448   
   

 

 

 

Total Information Technology

  

    2,748   
   

 

 

 

MATERIALS - 2.30%

  

Chemicals - 1.54%

  

FutureFuel Corp.

    2,715        38   

Hawkins, Inc.

    614        23   

Innospec, Inc.

    1,370        57   

KMG Chemicals, Inc.

    1,040        18   

LandecCorp.A

    2,504        33   

Stepan Co.

    1,122        54   

TrecoraResourcesA

    3,220        42   

Zep, Inc.

    1,914        30   
   

 

 

 
      295   
   

 

 

 

Construction Materials - 0.17%

  

United States Lime & Minerals, Inc.

    506        32   
   

 

 

 

Containers & Packaging - 0.11%

  

UFP Technologies, Inc.A

    930        22   
   

 

 

 

Metals & Mining - 0.48%

  

Hallador Energy Co.

    4,716        63   

Handy & Harman Ltd.A

    1,115        29   
   

 

 

 
      92   
   

 

 

 

Total Materials

  

    441   
   

 

 

 

TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.85%

  

Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.73%

  

Hawaiian Telcom Holdco, Inc.A

    2,331        65   

magicJackVocalTecLtd.A

    1,948        24   

Premiere Global Services, Inc.A

    3,890        51   
   

 

 

 
      140   
   

 

 

 

Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.12%

  

Spok Holdings, Inc.

    1,549        23   
   

 

 

 

Total Telecommunication Services

  

    163   
   

 

 

 
    Shares     Fair Value  
          (000’s)  

UTILITIES - 1.64%

  

Electric - 1.07%

  

MGE Energy, Inc.

    3,012      $ 120   

Otter Tail Corp.

    2,936        84   
   

 

 

 
      204   
   

 

 

 

Gas - 0.10%

  

Delta Natural Gas Co., Inc.

    922        19   
   

 

 

 

Water - 0.47%

  

Artesian Resources Corp., Class A

    679        14   

Connecticut Water Co.

    880        29   

Middlesex Water Co.

    1,351        28   

York Water Co.

    939        19   
   

 

 

 
      90   
   

 

 

 

Total Utilities

  

    313   
   

 

 

 

Total Common Stock (Cost $17,102)

  

    18,443   
   

 

 

 

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS - 3.55%
(Cost $680)

   

JPMorgan U.S. Government Money Market Fund, Capital Class

    680,110        680   
   

 

 

 

TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 99.90% (Cost $17,782)

  

    19,123   

OTHER ASSETS, NET OF
LIABILITIES - 0.10%

   

    18   
   

 

 

 

TOTAL NET ASSETS - 100.00%

  

  $ 19,141   
   

 

 

 

Percentages are stated as a percent of net assets.

 

A  Non-income producing security.
B  Master Limited Partnership.
C  Royalty Trust.
D  REIT - Real Estate Investment Trust.
E  Non-voting participating shares.
 

 

Futures Contracts Open on August 31, 2014* (000’s):

 

Description

   Type    Number of
Contracts
  

Expiration Date

   Contract Value      Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

Russell 2000 Mini Index September Futures

   Long    5    September, 2014    $ 587       $ 10   
           

 

 

    

 

 

 
            $ 587       $ 10   
           

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

* The security presented here within is not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this table is for informational purposes only.

 

See accompanying notes

 

26


Table of Contents

American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

 

     Shares      Fair Value  
            (000’s)  

COMMON STOCK - 2.68%

     

FINANCIALS- 1.63%

     

Banks - 0.37%

     

Alpha Bank A.E.A

     2,903,593       $ 2,541   
     

 

 

 

Diversfied Financials - 0.32%

     

Oslo Bors VPS Holdings ASA

     188,850         2,224   
     

 

 

 

Real Estate - 0.94%

     

Annaly Capital Management, Inc.B

     359,000         4,272   

Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc.B

     60,000         2,260   
     

 

 

 
        6,532   
     

 

 

 

MANUFACTURING- 0.26%

     

Basic Materials - 0.26%

     

CVR Partners LP, %, Due C D

     117,600         1,802   
     

 

 

 

MATERIALS- 0.79%

     

Basic Materials - 0.16%

     

OCI Partners LPC D

     55,070         1,137   
     

 

 

 

Chemicals - 0.32%

     

Terra Nitrogen Co. LPC D

     14,650         2,179   
     

 

 

 

Metals & Mining - 0.31%

     

OCI Resources LPC D

     91,000         2,118   
     

 

 

 

Total Common Stock (Cost $17,431)

        18,533   
     

 

 

 

PREFERRED STOCKS - 2.29% (Cost $10,835)

     

TRANSPORTATION- 2.29%

     

Airlines - 2.29%

     

Continental Airlines Finance Trust II, 6.00%, Due 11/15/2030

     314,250         15,830   
     

 

 

 
     Par AmountK         
     (000’s)         

DOMESTIC BANK LOAN OBLIGATIONS - 1.30%

     

Consumer - 1.30%

     

North Atlantic Trading Co. Inc., 1st Lien Term Loan, 1.00%, Due 12/30/2019

   $ 3,284         3,311   

North Atlantic Trading Co. Inc., 2nd Lien Term Loan, 1.00%, Due 6/30/2020

     5,600         5,684   
     

 

 

 

Total Domestic Bank Loan Obligations (Cost $8,753)

        8,995   
     

 

 

 

DOMESTIC CONVERTIBLE OBLIGATIONS - 1.71%

     

Finance - 0.76%

     

Annaly Capital Management, Inc., 5.00%, Due 5/15/2015 B

     5,173         5,254   
     

 

 

 

Telecommunications - 0.95%

     

JDS Uniphase Corp., 0.625%, Due 8/15/2033

     6,650         6,600   
     

 

 

 

Total Domestic Convertible Obligations (Cost $11,814)

        11,854   
     

 

 

 

DOMESTIC OBLIGATIONS - 71.45%

     

Consumer - 6.67%

     

Beverages & More, Inc., 10.00%, Due 11/15/2018E

     4,000         3,820   

Constellation Brands, Inc., 6.00%, Due 5/1/2022

     9,000         10,136   

HJ Heinz Co., 4.25%, Due 10/15/2020

     8,250         8,363   

Minerva Luxembourg S.A., 7.75%, Due 1/31/2023E

     10,600         11,236   

Simmons Foods, Inc., 10.50%, Due 11/1/2017E

     11,810         12,549   
     

 

 

 
        46,104   
     

 

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

27


Table of Contents

American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountK      Fair Value  
     (000’s)      (000’s)  

Finance - 4.16%

     

Carlson Travel Holdings, Inc., 7.50%, Due 8/15/2019E

   $ 5,800       $ 5,960   

DFC Finance Corp., 10.50%, Due 6/15/2020E

     9,400         9,529   

Fly Leasing Ltd., 6.75%, Due 12/15/2020

     9,500         10,094   

Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc., 5.875%, Due 3/15/2024

     3,000         3,150   
     

 

 

 
        28,733   
     

 

 

 

Manufacturing - 17.68%

     

AAR Corp., 7.25%, Due 1/15/2022

     4,850         5,287   

Activision Blizzard, Inc., 5.625%, Due 9/15/2021E

     7,950         8,596   

ADS Tactical, Inc., 11.00%, Due 4/1/2018E

     13,500         12,690   

Alliant Techsystems, Inc., 5.25%, Due 10/1/2021E

     13,413         13,681   

Crown Americas LLC / Crown Americas Capital Corp IV, 4.50%, Due 1/15/2023F

     6,850         6,722   

Ducommun, Inc., 9.75%, Due 7/15/2018

     7,450         8,139   

Kissner Milling Co., Ltd., 7.25%, Due 6/1/2019E

     4,800         4,950   

LSB Industries, Inc., 7.75%, Due 8/1/2019

     12,250         13,383   

Sealed Air Corp., 6.50%, Due 12/1/2020E

     11,756         12,932   

Sensata Technologies BV, 4.875%, Due 10/15/2023E

     13,500         13,365   

ServiciosCorporativosJaver SAPI de CV, 9.875%, Due 4/6/2021E

     8,925         9,884   

Southern Graphics, Inc., 8.375%, Due 10/15/2020E

     12,000         12,690   
     

 

 

 
        122,319   
     

 

 

 

Service - 29.10%

     

Ancestry.com, Inc.,

     

9.625%, Due 10/15/2018E

     4,750         4,857   

11.00%, Due 12/15/2020

     7,000         8,067   

Aviv Healthcare Properties LP / Aviv Healthcare Capital Corp., 6.00%, Due 10/15/2021C

     7,450         7,860   

Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc., 11.00%, Due 3/15/2021E

     10,200         11,654   

Churchill Downs, Inc., 5.375%, Due 12/15/2021E

     9,900         10,049   

DaVita, Inc., 5.75%, Due 8/15/2022

     11,500         12,262   

Getty Images, Inc., 7.00%, Due 10/15/2020E

     7,000         5,880   

HCA, Inc.,

     

3.75%, Due 3/15/2019

     2,000         2,015   

4.75%, Due 5/1/2023

     10,000         10,088   

Kindred Healthcare, Inc., 6.375%, Due 4/15/2022E

     9,100         9,191   

Lansing Trade Group LLC / Lansing Finance Co. Inc, 9.25%, Due 2/15/2019E F

     7,600         7,524   

LifePoint Hospitals, Inc., 5.50%, Due 12/1/2021E

     12,450         13,009   

Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., 7.00%, Due 9/1/2020E

     12,050         12,984   

MGM Resorts International, 7.75%, Due 3/15/2022

     11,000         12,871   

Numericable Group S.A., 4.875%, Due 5/15/2019E

     11,900         12,049   

Station Casinos LLC, 7.50%, Due 3/1/2021F

     9,990         10,789   

Tenet Healthcare Corp., 4.50%, Due 4/1/2021

     13,875         13,909   

Univision Communications, Inc., 6.75%, Due 9/15/2022E

     11,800         12,950   

Vantage Oncology LLC / Vantage Oncology Finance Co., 9.50%, Due 6/15/2017E F

     3,800         3,639   

Viking Cruises Ltd., 8.50%, Due 10/15/2022E

     8,275         9,144   

Wynn Las Vegas LLC / Wynn Las Vegas Capital Corp., 5.375%, Due 3/15/2022F

     10,000         10,500   
     

 

 

 
        201,291   
     

 

 

 

Telecommunications - 6.76%

     

DigitalGlobe, Inc., 5.25%, Due 2/1/2021E

     13,750         13,613   

NeuStar, Inc., 4.50%, Due 1/15/2023

     7,400         6,457   

Nokia Corp., 5.375%, Due 5/15/2019

     12,000         12,840   

Virgin Media Finance PLC, 6.375%, Due 4/15/2023E G

     13,000         13,844   
     

 

 

 
        46,754   
     

 

 

 

Transportation - 3.87%

     

Gol Finance, 9.25%, Due 7/20/2020E

     3,000         3,154   

Titan Machinery, Inc., 3.75%, Due 5/1/2019

     3,250         2,527   

United Continental Holdings, Inc.,

     

6.375%, Due 6/1/2018

     3,100         3,271   

6.00%, Due 12/1/2020

     1,300         1,344   

US Airways Group, Inc., 6.125%, Due 6/1/2018

     10,600         11,076   

VRG LinhasAereas S.A., 10.75%, Due 2/12/2023E

     5,000         5,344   
     

 

 

 
        26,716   
     

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

28


Table of Contents

American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

            Par AmountK      Fair Value  
            (000’s)      (000’s)  

Utilities - 3.21%

        

Calpine Corp., 7.875%, Due 1/15/2023E

      $ 9,857       $ 10,941   

GenOn Americas Generation LLC, 9.125%, Due 5/1/2031F

        11,600         11,281   
        

 

 

 
           22,222   
        

 

 

 

Total Domestic Obligations (Cost $487,229)

           494,139   
        

 

 

 

FOREIGN CONVERTIBLE OBLIGATIONS - 1.12%

        

Consumer - 0.72%

        

Marine Harvest ASA, 2.375%, Due 5/8/2018H

     EUR         2,000         3,301   

Pescanova S.A.,

        

5.125%, Due 4/20/2017I L

     EUR         7,450         881   

8.75%, Due 2/17/2019I L

     EUR         6,600         780   
        

 

 

 
           4,962   
        

 

 

 

Service - 0.40%

        

Rexlot Holdings Ltd., 6.00%, Due 9/28/2016

     HKD         13,800         2,732   
        

 

 

 

Total Foreign Convertible Obligations (Cost $14,957)

           7,694   
        

 

 

 

FOREIGN OBLIGATIONS - 14.20%

        

Consumer - 0.93%

        

Marine Harvest ASA, 5.31%, Due 3/12/2018 H

     NOK         39,000         6,450   
        

 

 

 

Finance - 2.91%

        

Emma Delta Finance,

        

8.50%, Due 10/15/2017E

     EUR         4,000         5,492   

12.00%, Due 10/15/2017

     EUR         4,000         6,517   

MPT Operating Partnership LP/MPT Finance Corp., 5.75%, Due 10/1/2020C

     EUR         5,850         8,186   
        

 

 

 
           20,195   
        

 

 

 

Service - 6.34%

        

Cirsa Funding Luxembourg S.A., 8.75%, Due 5/15/2018E

     EUR         7,650         10,403   

EuropcarGroupe S.A., 11.50%, Due 5/15/2017E

     EUR         6,000         9,084   

Gala Electric Casinos, 11.50%, Due 6/1/2019

     GBP         4,550         8,241   

Gamenet SPA, 7.25%, Due 8/1/2018E

     EUR         5,650         7,647   

Intralot Finance Luxemburg, 9.75%, Due 8/15/2018

     EUR         5,650         8,407   
        

 

 

 
           43,782   
        

 

 

 

Sovereign - 1.83%

        

Greece, Hellenic Republic, 2.00%, Due 2/24/2023H J

     EUR         3,025         3,355   

Mexican BonosDesarr, 5.00%, Due 6/15/2017

     MXN         117,500         9,258   
        

 

 

 
           12,613   
        

 

 

 

Transportation - 2.19%

        

CMA CGM S.A., 8.875%, Due 4/15/2019E

     EUR         5,350         7,469   

Moto Finance PLC, 10.25%, Due 3/15/2017E G

     GBP         4,350         7,709   
        

 

 

 
           15,178   
        

 

 

 

Total Foreign Obligations (Cost $92,812)

           98,218   
        

 

 

 

U.S. AGENCY OBLIGATIONS - 1.56%

        

Federal National Mortgage Association,

        

1.375%, Due 11/15/2016

        1,000         1,015   

1.25%, Due 1/30/2017

        7,750         7,832   

0.875%, Due 12/20/2017

        2,000         1,978   
        

 

 

 

Total U.S. Agency Obligations (Cost $10,814)

           10,825   
        

 

 

 

U.S. Treasury Obligations - 0.21% (Cost $1,452)

        

0.875%, Due 2/28/2017

        1,450         1,455   
        

 

 

 
            Shares         

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS - 1.89% (Cost $13,096)

        

JPMorgan U.S. Government Money Market Fund, Capital Class

        13,095,663         13,096   
        

 

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

29


Table of Contents

American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Par AmountK    Fair Value  
     (000’s)    (000’s)  

TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 98.41% (Cost $669,193)

      $ 680,639   

OTHER ASSETS, NET OF LIABILITIES - 1.60%

        11,060   
     

 

 

 

TOTAL NET ASSETS - 100.00%

      $ 691,699   
     

 

 

 

Percentages are stated as a percent of net assets.

 

A  Non-income producing security.
B  REIT - Real Estate Investment Trust.
C  LP - Limited Partnership.
D  Master Limited Partnership.
E  Security exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A. At the period end, the value of these securities amounted to $339,512 or 49.09% of net assets. The Fund has no right to demand registration of these securities.
F  LLC - Limited Liability Company.
G  PLC - Public Limited Company.
H  Variable rate.
I  Fair valued pursuant to procedures approved by the Board of Trustees. At the period end, the value of these securities amounted to $1,661 or 0.24% of net assets.
J  Step Up/Down - A scheduled increase in the exercise or conversion price at which a warrant, an option, or a convertible security may be used to acquire shares of common stock.
K  In U.S. Dollars unless otherwise noted.
L  Illiquid Security.

 

See accompanying notes

 

30


Table of Contents

American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Schedule of Investments

August 31, 2014

 

 

Futures Contracts Open on August 31, 2014* (000’s):

 

Description

   Type    Number of
Contracts
   Expiration Date    Contract Value      Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 

EURO Currency Unit Globex September Futures

   Short    458    September, 2014    $ 75,198       $ 2,293   

British Pound Globex September Futures

   Short    159    September, 2014      16,457         243   
           

 

 

    

 

 

 
            $ 91,655       $ 2,536   
           

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

* The securities presented here within are not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this table is for informational purposes only.

OTC swap agreements outstanding on August 31, 2014:

Credit Default Swaps on Corporate Issues- Sell Protection (1)(000’s)

 

Reference Entity

   Counterparty    Fixed Rate     Maturity
Date
   Implied
Credit
Spread at
8/31/2014 (2)
    Notional
Amount (3)
     Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation

(Depreciation)
     Fair
Value
 

Delta Airlines

   GLM      5.000   12/20/2016      1.2540     1,000       $ (99   $ 180       $ 81   

Delta Airlines

   GLM      5.000   3/20/2017      1.3702     1,000         (60     147         87   

Delta Airlines

   GLM      5.000   3/20/2017      1.3702     1,000         (71     158         87   

Delta Airlines

   JPM      5.000   6/20/2017      1.4663     2,000         (132     317         185   

Delta Airlines

   FBF      5.000   6/20/2017      1.4663     2,000         (137     322         185   

Delta Airlines

   GLM      5.000   6/20/2017      1.4663     1,000         (76     169         93   

Delta Airlines

   JPM      5.000   9/20/2017      1.5457     2,000         (143     340         197   

Delta Airlines

   FBF      5.000   12/20/2017      1.6674     2,000         (100     304         204   
               

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 
                $ (818   $ 1,937       $ 1,119   
               

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

(1)  If the Fund is a seller of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) pay to the buyer of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and take delivery of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) pay a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index.
(2)  Implied credit spreads, represented in absolute terms, utilized in determining the market value of credit default swaps agreements on corporate issues and sovereign issues of an emerging country as of period end serve as an indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk and represent the likelihood or risk of default for the credit derivative. The implied credit spread of a particular referenced entity reflects the cost of buying/selling protection and may include upfront payments required to be made to enter into the agreement. Wider credit spreads represent a deterioration of the referenced entity’s credit soundness and a greater likelihood or risk of default or other credit event occurring as defined under the terms of the agreement.
(3)  The maximum potential amount the Fund could be required to pay as a seller of credit protection or receive as a buyer of credit protection if a credit event occurs as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement.

Glossary:

 

Counterparty Abbreviations:

  
FBF    Credit Suisse   
GLM    Goldman Sachs Bank USA   
JPM    JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.   

Currency Abbreviations:

  
AUD    Australian Dollar   
EUR    Euro   
GBP    British Pound   
HKD    Hong Kong Dollar   
MXN    Mexican Peso   
NOK    Norwegian Krone   

Exchange Abbreviations:

  
Globex    Chicago Mercantile Exchange   
OTC    Over-the-Counter   

 

See accompanying notes

 

31


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Statements of Assets and Liabilities

August 31, 2014 (in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

 

 

     The London
Company
Income

Equity Fund
     Zebra
Global
Equity Fund
    Zebra Small
Cap Equity
Fund
     SiM High
Yield
Opportunities
Fund
 

Assets:

          

Investments in unaffiliated securities, at fair value A

   $ 276,904       $ 7,493      $ 19,123       $ 680,639   

Foreign currency, at fair valueB

     —           8        —           —     

Swap Income receivable

     —           —          —           122   

Deposit with brokers for futures contracts

     386         17        25         —     

Dividends and interest receivable

     828         19        17         12,025   

Receivable for investments sold

     —           —          —           928   

Receivable for fund shares sold

     1,323         —          14         1,704   

Receivable for tax reclaims

     —           3        —           69   

Receivable for expense reimbursement (Note 2)

     5         —          7         —     

Receivable for variation margin on open futures contracts

     18         —          3         2,539   

Unrealized appreciation from swap agreements

     —           —          —           1,937   

Prepaid expenses

     40         34        36         35   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total assets

     279,504         7,574        19,225         699,998   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Liabilities:

          

Swap premium received

     —           —          —           818   

Payable for investments purchased

     3,464         —          —           4,563   

Payable for fund shares redeemed

     15         —          27         1,031   

Payable for variation margin from open futures contracts

     —           —          —           786   

Payable under excess expense reimbursement plan

     —           —          —           14   

Dividends payable

     —           —          —           382   

Management and investment advisory fees payable

     88         2        9         261   

Administrative service and service fees payable

     130         4        9         323   

Transfer agent fees payable

     3         1        1         24   

Custody and fund accounting fees payable

     2         2        2         7   

Professional fees payable

     31         40        35         53   

Trustee fees payable

     3         —          —           7   

Payable for prospectus and shareholder reports

     7         1        1         26   

Other liabilities

     1         —          —           4   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total liabilities

     3,744         50        84         8,299   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Net Assets

   $ 275,760       $ 7,524      $ 19,141       $ 691,699   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Analysis of Net Assets:

          

Paid-in-capital

     239,969         6,143        17,505         671,984   

Undistributed (or over distribution of) net investment income

     564         64        67         (1,578

Accumulated net realized gain

     2,886         540        218         5,424   

Unrealized appreciation of investments

     32,255         825        1,341         12,342   

Unrealized (depreciation) of currency transactions

     —           (56     —           (946

Unrealized appreciation of futures contracts

     86         8        10         2,536   

Unrealized appreciation of swap agreements

     —           —          —           1,937   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Net assets

   $ 275,760       $ 7,524      $ 19,141       $ 691,699   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Shares outstanding at no par value (unlimited shares authorized):

          

Institutional Class

     4,126,658         55,582        111,836         7,281,018   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Y Class

     8,729,133         44,952        563,427         23,900,141   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Investor Class

     1,175,804         64,346        208,791         19,335,446   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

A Class

     2,255,291         344,362        339,876         8,984,086   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

C Class

     3,348,989         79,813        104,341         7,361,609   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Net assets (not in thousands):

          

Institutional Class

   $ 58,277,396       $ 706,514      $ 1,606,024       $ 75,388,828   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Y Class

   $ 122,714,756       $ 575,292      $ 8,168,361       $ 247,179,395   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Investor Class

   $ 16,549,654       $ 817,752      $ 3,003,670       $ 199,533,521   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

A Class

   $ 31,579,315       $ 4,410,016      $ 4,894,024       $ 93,060,715   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

C Class

   $ 46,638,516       $ 1,014,615      $ 1,468,876       $ 76,536,190   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

32


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Statements of Assets and Liabilities

August 31, 2014 (in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

 

 

     The London
Company
Income
Equity Fund
     Zebra
Global
Equity Fund
     Zebra Small
Cap Equity
Fund
     SiM High
Yield
Opportunities
Fund
 

Net asset value, offering and redemption price per share:

           

Institutional Class

   $ 14.12       $ 12.71       $ 14.36       $ 10.35   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Y Class

   $ 14.06       $ 12.80       $ 14.50       $ 10.34   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Investor Class

   $ 14.08       $ 12.71       $ 14.39       $ 10.32   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

A Class

   $ 14.00       $ 12.81       $ 14.40       $ 10.36   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

A Class (Offering price)

   $ 14.85       $ 13.59       $ 15.28       $ 10.88   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

C Class

   $ 13.93       $ 12.71       $ 14.08       $ 10.40   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

A Cost of investments in unaffiliated securities

   $ 244,649       $ 6,724       $ 17,782       $ 669,193   

B Cost of foreign currency

   $ —         $ 8       $ —         $ —     

 

See accompanying notes

 

33


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Statements of Operations

For the year ended August 31, 2014 (in thousands)

 

 

     The London
Company
Income
Equity Fund
    Zebra
Global
Equity Fund
    Zebra Small
Cap Equity
Fund
    SiM High
Yield
Opportunities
Fund
 

Investment Income:

        

Dividend income from unaffiliated securities (net of foreign
taxes) A

   $ 5,877      $ 172      $ 329      $ 1,575   

Interest income

     —          —          —          38,849   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total investment income

     5,877        172        329        40,424   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Expenses:

        

Management and investment advisory fees (Note 2)

     738        27        99        2,749   

Administrative service fees (Note 2):

        

Institutional Class

     145        2        5        155   

Y Class

     222        1        15        383   

Investor Class

     45        3        15        792   

A Class

     84        17        15        328   

C Class

     103        3        5        261   

Transfer agent fees:

        

Institutional Class

     9        —          1        14   

Y Class

     3        —          —          11   

Investor Class

     3        1        2        20   

A Class

     2        1        1        14   

C Class

     2        —          —          9   

Custody and fund accounting fees

     18        23        8        87   

Professional fees

     46        45        41        86   

Registration fees and expenses

     74        53        55        127   

Service fees (Note 2):

        

Y Class

     74        —          5        127   

Investor Class

     37        2        13        695   

A Class

     33        7        6        129   

C Class

     42        1        2        103   

Distribution fees (Note 2):

        

A Class

     55        11        10        215   

C Class

     277        8        12        685   

Prospectus and shareholder report expenses

     22        4        6        78   

Trustee fees

     12        —          —          33   

Other expenses

     19        6        6        29   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total expenses

     2,065        215        322        7,130   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net fees waived and expenses reimbursed (Note 2)

     (17     (124     (95     (24
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net expenses

     2,048        91        227        7,106   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net investment income

     3,829        81        102        33,318   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Realized and unrealized gain (loss) from investments:

        

Net realized gain (loss) from:

        

Investments

     2,076        569        1,457        10,435   

Commission recapture (Note 3)

     6        —          —          —     

Foreign currency transactions

     —          (11     —          (379

Futures contracts

     1,128        60        36        (2,008

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of:

        

Investments

     29,854        469        342        16,165   

Foreign currency transactions

     —          14        —          415   

Futures contracts

     179        18        18        1,668   

Swap agreements

     —          —          —          630   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net gain from investments

     33,243        1,119        1,853        26,926   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations

   $ 37,072      $ 1,200      $ 1,955      $ 60,244   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

A Foreign taxes

     —          7        —          —     

 

See accompanying notes

 

34


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Statements of Changes in Net Assets (in thousands)

 

 

     The London Company
Income Equity Fund
    Zebra Global Equity Fund  
     Year Ended
August 31,
2014
    Year Ended
August 31,
2013
    Year Ended
August 31,
2014
    Year Ended
August 31,
2013
 

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets:

        

Operations:

        

Net investment income

   $ 3,829      $ 1,109      $ 81      $ 190   

Net realized gain from investments, futures contracts, and foreign currency transactions

     3,210        712        617        1,727   

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from investments, futures contracts, and foreign currency transactions

     30,033        2,122        502        (441
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations

     37,072        3,943        1,200        1,476   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Distributions to Shareholders:

        

Net investment income:

        

Institutional Class

     (1,034     (555     (8     (21

Y Class

     (1,468     (156     (2     (6

Investor Class

     (278     (111     (13     (32

A Class

     (366     (103     (40     (137

C Class

     (299     (24     —          (3

Net realized gain from investments:

        

Institutional Class

     (276     (10     (175     (52

Y Class

     (389     (2     (40     (16

Investor Class

     (93     (2     (159     (107

A Class

     (137     (2     (805     (492

C Class

     (144     —          (118     (24
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net distributions to shareholders

     (4,484     (965     (1,360     (890
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Capital Share Transactions:

        

Proceeds from sales of shares

     191,341        95,667        3,248        665   

Reinvestment of dividends and distributions

     2,392        844        1,171        767   

Cost of shares redeemed

     (53,070     (10,856     (3,617     (8,872
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets from capital share transactions

     140,663        85,655        802        (7,440
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets

     173,251        88,633        642        (6,854
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net Assets:

        

Beginning of period

     102,509        13,876        6,882        13,736   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

End of Period *

   $ 275,760      $ 102,509      $ 7,524      $ 6,882   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

*Includes undistributed (or over distribution of) net investment income

   $ 564      $ 171      $ 64      $ 55   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

35


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Statements of Changes in Net Assets (in thousands)

 

 

     Zebra Small Cap Equity
Fund
    SiM High Yield
Opportunities Fund
 
     Year Ended
August 31,
2014
    Year Ended
August 31,
2013
    Year Ended
August 31,
2014
    Year Ended
August 31,
2013
 

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets:

        

Operations:

        

Net investment income

   $ 102      $ 84      $ 33,318      $ 29,689   

Net realized gain from investments, futures contracts, and foreign currency transactions

     1,493        792        8,048        11,776   

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) from investments, futures contracts, and foreign currency transactions

     360        845        18,878        (7,882
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations

     1,955        1,721        60,244        33,583   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Distributions to Shareholders:

        

Net investment income:

        

Institutional Class

     —          87        (3,357     (3,986

Y Class

     —          (107     (8,079     (3,986

Investor Class

     —          (144     (16,592     (14,641

A Class

     —          (163     (5,141     (4,225

C Class

     —          (39     (3,428     (2,850

Net realized gain from investments:

        

Institutional Class

     (164     (62     (972     (164

Y Class

     (294     80        (2,323     (127

Investor Class

     (633     (107     (5,955     (667

A Class

     (295     (124     (1,827     (178

C Class

     (104     (33     (1,418     (131
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net distributions to shareholders

     (1,490     (946     (49,092     (30,955
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Capital Share Transactions:

        

Proceeds from sales of shares

     17,920        3,473        375,899        378,915   

Redemption fees

     —          —          52        217   

Reinvestment of dividends and distributions

     1,393        853        43,082        25,146   

Cost of shares redeemed

     (9,930     (2,315     (256,624     (190,594
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in net assets from capital share transactions

     9,383        2,011        162,409        213,684   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in net assets

     9,848        2,786        173,561        216,312   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net Assets:

        

Beginning of period

     9,293        6,507        518,138        301,826   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

End of Period *

   $ 19,141      $ 9,293      $ 691,699      $ 518,138   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

*Includes undistributed (or over distribution of) net investment income

   $ 67      $ 9      $ (1,578   $ 1,034   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes

 

36


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

1. Organization and Significant Accounting Policies

American Beacon Funds (the “Trust”), which is comprised of thirty-one Funds, is organized as a Massachusetts business trust and is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Act”), as a diversified, open-end management investment company. These financial statements and notes to the financial statements relate to the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund, the American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund, the American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund, and the American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund (each a “Fund” and collectively, the “Funds”), each a series of the Trust.

American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (the “Manager”) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lighthouse Holdings, Inc. and was organized in 1986 to provide business management, advisory, administrative and asset management consulting services to the Trust and other investors.

Class Disclosure

Each Fund has multiple classes of shares designed to meet the needs of different groups of investors. The following table sets forth the differences amongst the classes:

 

Class:

  

Offered to:

Institutional Class    Investors making an initial investment of $250,000
Y Class    Investors making an initial investment of $100,000
Investor Class    Individual investors investing directly or through an intermediary
A Class    General public and investors investing through an intermediary with applicable sales charges, which may include a front-end sales charge and a contingent deferred sales charge (“CDSC”)
C Class    General public and investors investing through an intermediary with applicable sales charges, which may include a CDSC

Each class offered by the Trust has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Income and non-class specific expenses are allocated daily to each class on the basis of the relative net assets. Realized and unrealized capital gains and losses of each class are allocated daily based on the relative net assets of each class of the respective Fund. Class specific expenses, where applicable, currently include administrative service fees, service fees and distribution fees and vary amongst the classes as described more fully in Note 2.

2. Transactions with Affiliates

Management Agreement

The Trust and the Manager are parties to a Management Agreement that obligates the Manager to provide or oversee the provision of all investment advisory, fund management, and securities lending services. As compensation for performing the duties required under the Management Agreement, the Manager receives from the Funds an annualized fee equal to 0.05% of the average daily net assets. The Funds pay the unaffiliated investment advisors hired to direct investment activities of the Funds. Management fees paid by the Funds during the year ended August 31, 2014 were as follows (in thousands):

 

Fund

   Management
Fee Rate
    Management
Fee
     Amounts paid to
Investment Advisors
     Amounts Paid
to Manager
 

The London Company Income Equity

     0.39   $ 738       $ 644       $ 94   

Zebra Global Equity

     0.38     27         24         3   

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     0.58     99         90         9   

SiM High Yield Opportunities

     0.46     2,749         2,450         299   

 

 

 

37


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Administrative Services Agreement

The Manager and the Trust entered into an Administrative Services Agreement which obligates the Manager to provide or oversee administrative services to each Fund. As compensation for performing the duties required under the Administrative Services Agreement, the Manager receives an annualized fee of 0.30% of the average daily net assets of the Institutional, Y, and Investor Classes of the Funds. Prior to July 1, 2014, the Manager received an annualized fee of 0.40% of the average daily net assets of the A and C Classes of the Funds. Beginning July 1, 2014, the Manager received an annualized fee of 0.30% of the average daily net assets of the A and C Classes of the Funds.

Distribution Plans

The Funds, except for the A and C Classes of the Funds, have adopted a “defensive” Distribution Plan (the “Plan”) in accordance with Rule 12b-1 under the Act, pursuant to which no separate fees may be charged to the Funds for distribution purposes. However, the Plan authorizes the management and administrative service fees received by the Manager and the investment advisor hired by the Manager to be used for distribution purposes. Under this Plan, the Funds do not intend to compensate the Manager or any other party, either directly or indirectly, for the distribution of Fund shares.

Separate Distribution Plans (the “Distribution Plans”) have been adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act for the A and C Classes of the Funds. Under the Distribution Plans, as compensation for distribution assistance, the Manager receives an annual fee of 0.25% of the average daily net assets of the A Classes and 1.00% of the average daily net assets of the C Classes of each Fund. The fee will be payable without regard to whether the amount of the fee is more or less than the actual expenses incurred in a particular month by the Manager for distribution assistance.

Service Plans

The Manager and the Trust entered into Service Plans that obligate the Manager to oversee additional shareholder servicing of the Y, Investor, A, and C Classes. As compensation for performing the duties required under the Service Plans, the Manager receives 0.10% of the average daily net assets of Y Class, 0.15% of the average daily net assets of the A and C Classes, and up to 0.375% of the average daily net assets of the Investor Class of the Funds.

Interfund Lending Program

Pursuant to an exemptive order issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), the Funds, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with the Manager, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the Funds to borrow from other participating Funds. During the year ended August 31, 2014, the Zebra Global Equity Fund borrowed on average $75,403 for 4 days at an average equity rate of 0.70% with interest charges of $6, and the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund borrowed on average $2,213,105 for 3 days at an average rate of 0.70% with interest charges of $127.

Expense Reimbursement Plan

The Manager contractually agreed to reimburse the following Funds to the extent that total annual fund operating expenses exceeded the Funds’ expense cap. For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Manager waived or reimbursed expenses as follows:

 

 

 

38


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Fund

   Class    Expense Cap     Reimbursed or
(Recouped) Expenses
    Expiration of
Reimbursed
Expenses
      9/1/13 -
6/30/14
    7/1/14 -
8/31/14
     

The London Company Income Equity

   Institutional      0.79     0.79   $ 13,005      2017

The London Company Income Equity

   Y      0.89     0.89     4,686      2017

The London Company Income Equity

   Investor      1.17     1.17     (4,986   2017

The London Company Income Equity

   A      1.29     1.19     2,884      2017

The London Company Income Equity

   C      2.04     1.94     2,237      2017

Zebra Global Equity

   Institutional      0.79     0.79     13,883      2017

Zebra Global Equity

   Y      0.89     0.89     5,915      2017

Zebra Global Equity

   Investor      1.17     1.17     16,040      2017

Zebra Global Equity

   A      1.29     1.19     75,112      2017

Zebra Global Equity

   C      2.04     1.94     13,075      2017

Zebra Small Cap Equity

   Institutional      0.99     0.99     10,188      2017

Zebra Small Cap Equity

   Y      1.09     1.09     28,814      2017

Zebra Small Cap Equity

   Investor      1.37     1.37     25,651      2017

Zebra Small Cap Equity

   A      1.49     1.39     22,987      2017

Zebra Small Cap Equity

   C      2.24     2.14     7,282      2017

SiM High Yield Opportunities

   Institutional      0.84     0.84     9,305      2017

SiM High Yield Opportunities

   Y      0.94     0.94     806      2017

SiM High Yield Opportunities

   A      1.34     1.24     9,506      2017

SiM High Yield Opportunities

   C      2.09     1.99     4,879      2017

Of these amounts, $4,670, $14, and $6,910 were disclosed as a receivable from the Manager to The London Company Income Equity, Zebra Global Equity, and Zebra Small Cap Equity Funds, respectively and $14,443 was payable from the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund to the Manager at August 31, 2014. The Funds have adopted an Expense Reimbursement Plan whereby the Manager may seek repayment of fees waived or expenses reimbursed for a period of up to three years. However, reimbursement will occur only if the Class’s average net assets have grown or expenses have declined sufficiently to allow reimbursement without causing its expense ratio to exceed the previously agreed upon contractual expense limit. The reimbursed expenses listed above will expire in 2017. The carryover of excess expenses potentially reimbursable to the Manager are as follows:

 

Fund

   Recovered Expenses      Excess Expense Carryover      Expiration of
Reimbursed Expenses

The London Company Income Equity

   $ 4,986       $ 112,618       2015

The London Company Income Equity

     —           138,942       2016

Zebra Global Equity

     —           166,541       2015

Zebra Global Equity

     —           162,423       2016

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     —           155,632       2015

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     —           122,920       2016

SiM High Yield Opportunities

     —           131,807       2015

SiM High Yield Opportunities

     —           153,626       2016

The Manager recovered $4,986 from the Investor Class of The London Company Income Equity Fund during the year ended August 31, 2014 from reimbursed expenses that were set to expire August 31, 2015. The Manager intends to recover expenses throughout the coming fiscal year if the expense ratios remain under the previously agreed upon contractual limits. The other Funds have not recorded a liability for potential reimbursements, due to the current assessment that a reimbursement is unlikely.

Sales Commissions

The Funds’ distributor, Foreside Fund Services, LLC (“Foreside”) may receive a portion of A Class sales charges from broker dealers and it may be used to offset distribution related expenses. For the year ended August 31, 2014, Foreside collected $74,626, $358, $7,715, and $42,638 in sales commissions from the sale of A Class shares for The London Company Income Equity, Zebra Global Equity, Zebra Small Cap Equity, and SiM High Yield Opportunities Funds, respectively.

A CDSC of 0.50% will be deducted with respect to Class A Shares on certain purchases of $1,000,000 or more that are redeemed in whole or part within 18 months of purchase, unless waived as discussed in the

 

 

 

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Prospectus. Any applicable CDSC will be 0.50% of the lesser of the original purchase price or the value of the redemption of the Class A Shares redeemed. During the year ended August 31, 2014, there were no CDSC fees collected for Class A Shares.

A CDSC of 1.00% will be deducted with respect to Class C Shares redeemed within 12 months of purchase, unless waived as discussed in the Prospectus. Any applicable CDSC will be 1.00% of the lesser of the original purchase price or the value of the redemption of the Class C Shares redeemed. During the year ended August 31, 2014, CDSC fees of $8,851, $331, and $13,597 were collected for The London Company Income Equity, Zebra Small Cap Equity, and SiM High Yield Opportunities Funds, respectively.

3. Security Valuation and Fair Value Measurements

Investments are valued at the close of the New York Stock Exchange (the “Exchange”), normally 4 p.m. ET, each day that the Exchange is open for business. Equity securities, including exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”), for which market quotations are available are valued at the last sale price or official closing price (closing bid price or last evaluated quote if no sale has occurred) on the primary market or exchange on which they trade.

Debt securities (other than short-term securities) normally are valued on the basis of prices provided by an independent pricing service and may take into account appropriate factors such as institution-size trading in similar groups of securities, yield, quality, coupon rate, maturity, type of issue, trading characteristics, and other market data. The prices of debt securities may be determined using quotes obtained from brokers.

Investments in open-end mutual funds are valued at the closing net asset value (“NAV”) per share of the mutual fund on the day of valuation. Investment grade short-term obligations with 60 days or less to maturity are valued using the amortized cost method, which approximates market value.

Securities for which the market prices are not readily available or are not reflective of the fair value of the security, as determined by the Manager, will be priced at fair value following procedures approved by the Trust’s Board of Trustees (the “Board”).

Futures contracts are valued based upon their quoted daily settlement prices. Upon entering into a futures contract, a Fund is required to deposit with its futures broker, an amount of cash or U.S. Government and Agency Obligations in accordance with the initial margin requirements of the broker or exchange. Futures contracts are marked to market daily and an appropriate payable or receivable for the change in value (“variation margin”) is recorded by the Fund. Gains or losses are recognized but not considered realized until the contracts expire or are closed. Futures contracts involve, to varying degrees, risk of loss in excess of the variation margin disclosed on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

For valuation purposes, the last quoted prices of non-U.S. equity securities may be adjusted under the circumstances described below. If the Fund determines that developments between the close of a foreign market and the close of the Exchange will, in its judgment, materially affect the value of some or all of its portfolio securities, the Fund will adjust the previous closing prices to reflect what it believes to be the fair value of the securities as of the close of the Exchange. In deciding whether it is necessary to adjust closing prices to reflect fair value, the Fund reviews a variety of factors, including developments in foreign markets, the performance of U.S. securities markets, and the performance of instruments trading in U.S. markets that represent foreign securities and baskets of foreign securities. In addition, the Fund may use fair value pricing for securities primarily traded in non-U.S. markets because most foreign markets close well before the Funds’ pricing time of 4:00 p.m. ET. The earlier close of these foreign markets gives rise to the possibility that significant events, including broad market moves, may have occurred in the interim and may materially affect the value of those securities. These securities are fair valued using a pricing service and are categorized as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy. The pricing service, using methods approved by the Board, considers the

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

correlation of the trading patterns of the foreign security to intraday trading in the U.S. markets, based on indices of domestic securities and other appropriate indicators such as prices of relevant ADRs and futures contracts. The Valuation Committee may also fair value securities in other situations, such as when a particular foreign market is closed but a Fund is open. The Funds use outside pricing services to provide closing prices and information to evaluate and/or adjust those prices. As a means of evaluating its security valuation process, the Valuation Committee routinely compares closing prices, the next day’s opening prices in the same markets, and adjusted prices.

Other investments, including restricted securities, and those financial instruments for which the above valuation procedures are inappropriate or are deemed not to reflect fair value are stated at fair value as determined in good faith by the Manager in accordance with procedures approved by the Board.

Valuation Inputs

Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the Funds’ investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

 

Level 1 -

   Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.

Level 2 -

   Prices determined using other significant observable inputs. These may include quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, and others.

Level 3 -

   Prices determined using other significant unobservable inputs. Unobservable inputs reflect the Fund’s own assumptions about the factors market participants would use in pricing an investment, and would be based on the best information available.

Level 1 and Level 2 trading assets and trading liabilities, at fair value.

Fixed income securities including corporate, convertible and municipal bonds and notes, U.S. government agencies, U.S. treasury obligations, sovereign issues, bank loans, convertible preferred securities and non-U.S. bonds are normally valued by pricing service providers that use broker dealer quotations, reported trades or valuation estimates from their internal pricing models. The service providers’ internal models use inputs that are observable such as issuer details, interest rates, yield curves, prepayment speeds, credit risks/spreads, default rates and quoted prices for similar assets. Securities that use similar valuation techniques and inputs as described above are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Fixed income securities purchased on a delayed-delivery basis are marked to market daily until settlement at the forward settlement date and are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Mortgage-related and asset-backed securities are usually issued as separate tranches, or classes, of securities within each deal. These securities are also normally valued by pricing service providers that use broker dealer quotations or valuation estimates from their internal pricing models. The pricing models for these securities usually consider tranche-level attributes, current market data, estimated cash flows and market-based yield spreads for each tranche, and incorporate deal collateral performance, as available. Mortgage-related and asset-backed securities that use similar valuation techniques and inputs as described above are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Common stocks, ETFs and financial derivative instruments, such as futures contracts or options contracts that are traded on a national securities exchange, are stated at the last reported sale or settlement price on the day of valuation. To the extent these securities are actively traded and valuation adjustments are not applied, they are categorized as Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy. Valuation adjustments may be applied to certain securities that are solely traded on a foreign exchange to account for the market movement between the close of the foreign market and the close of the Exchange. These securities are valued using pricing service providers that consider the correlation of the trading patterns of the foreign security to the

 

 

 

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intraday trading in the U.S. markets for investments. Securities using these valuation adjustments are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. Preferred securities and other equities traded on inactive markets or valued by reference to similar instruments are also categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Investments in registered open-end investment management companies will be valued based upon the NAVs of such investments and are categorized as Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy. Investments in privately held investment funds which are redeemable within 90 days of the measurement date, will be valued based upon the NAVs of such investments and are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. Short-term investments having a maturity of 60 days or less are generally valued at amortized cost which approximates fair value. These investments are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Over-the-counter (“OTC”) financial derivative instruments, such as foreign currency contracts, options contracts, or swaps agreements, derive their value from underlying asset prices, indices, reference rates, and other inputs or a combination of these factors. These contracts are normally valued on the basis of broker dealer quotations or pricing service providers. Depending on the product and the terms of the transaction, the value of the financial derivative contracts can be estimated by a pricing service provider using a series of techniques, including simulation pricing models. The pricing models use inputs that are observed from actively quoted markets such as issuer details, indices, spreads, interest rates, curves, dividends and exchange rates. Financial derivatives that use similar valuation techniques and inputs as described above are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.

Level 3 trading assets and trading liabilities, at fair value

The valuation techniques and significant inputs used in determining the fair values of financial instruments classified as Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy are as follows:

Securities and other assets for which market quotes are not readily available are valued at fair value as determined in good faith by the Board or persons acting at their direction and may be categorized as Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

Market quotes are considered not readily available in circumstances where there is an absence of current or reliable market-based data (e.g., trade information or broker quotes), including where events occur after the close of the relevant market, but prior to the Exchange close, that materially affect the values of a Fund’s securities or assets. In addition, market quotes are considered not readily available when, due to extraordinary circumstances, the exchanges or markets on which the securities trade, do not open for trading for the entire day and no other market prices are available. The Board has delegated to the Manager the responsibility for monitoring significant events that may materially affect the fair values of a Fund’s securities or assets and for determining whether the value of the applicable securities or assets should be re-evaluated in light of such significant events.

The Board has adopted methods for valuing securities and other assets in circumstances where market quotes are not readily available, and has delegated the responsibility for applying the valuation methods to the Manager. For instances in which daily market quotes are not readily available, investments may be valued pursuant to guidelines established by the Board. In the event that the security or asset cannot be valued pursuant to one of the valuation methods established by the Board, the fair value of the security or asset will be determined in good faith by the Valuation Committee, generally based upon recommendations provided by the Manager.

When a Fund uses fair valuation methods applied by the Manager that use significant unobservable inputs to determine its NAV, the securities priced using this methodology are categorized as Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. These methods may require subjective determinations about the value of a security. While the Trust’s policy is intended to result in a calculation of a Fund’s NAV that fairly reflects security values as of the

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

time of pricing, the Trust cannot guarantee that values determined by the Board or persons acting at their direction would accurately reflect the price that a Fund could obtain for a security if it were to dispose of that security as of the time of pricing (for instance, in a forced or distressed sale). The prices used by a Fund may differ from the value that would be realized if the securities were sold.

For fair valuations using significant unobservable inputs, U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“U.S. GAAP”) requires a reconciliation of the beginning to ending balances for reported fair values that presents changes attributable to total realized and unrealized gains or losses, purchases and sales, and transfers in and out of the Level 3 category during the period. In accordance with the requirements of U.S. GAAP, a fair value hierarchy and Level 3 reconciliation, if any, have been included below.

The Funds’ investments are summarized by level based on the inputs used to determine their values. U.S. GAAP also requires all transfers between any levels to be disclosed. The end of the period timing recognition has been adopted for the transfers between levels of each Fund’s assets and liabilities. As of August 31, 2014, the investments were classified as described below (in thousands):

 

    Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total  

The London Company Income Equity(1)

       

Preferred Stock

  $ 5,261      $ —        $ —        $ 5,261   

Common Stock

    261,912        —          —          261,912   

Short-Term Investments - Money Markets

    9,731        —          —          9,731   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Investments in Securities

  $ 276,904      $ —        $ —        $ 276,904   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Financial Derivative Instruments-Assets

       

Futures Contracts

  $ 86      $ —        $ —        $ 86   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Financial Derivative Instruments

  $ 86      $ —        $ —        $ 86   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
    Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total  

Zebra Global Equity(1)

       

Domestic Common Stock

  $ 3,942      $ —        $ —        $ 3,942   

Foreign Common Stock

    3,172        —          —          3,172   

Foreign Preferred Stock

    55        —          —          55   

Foreign Exchange-Traded Funds

    1        —          —          1   

Short-Term Investments - Money Markets

    323        —          —          323   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Investments in Securities

  $ 7,493      $ —        $ —        $ 7,493   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Financial Derivative Instruments-Assets

       

Futures Contracts

  $ 8      $ —        $ —        $ 8   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Financial Derivative Instruments

  $ 8      $ —        $ —        $ 8   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
    Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total  

Zebra Small Cap Equity(1)

       

Common Stock

  $ 18,443      $ —        $ —        $ 18,443   

Short-Term Investments - Money Markets

    680        —          —          680   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Investments in Securities

  $ 19,123      $ —        $ —        $ 19,123   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Financial Derivative Instruments-Assets

       

Futures Contracts

  $ 10      $ —        $ —        $ 10   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Financial Derivative Instruments

  $ 10      $ —        $ —        $ 10   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
    Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total  

SiM High Yield Opportunites(1)

       

Common Stock

  $ 18,533      $ —        $ —        $ 18,533   

Preferred Stock

    15,830        —          —          15,830   

Domestic Bank Loan Obligations

    —          8,995        —          8,995   

Domestic Convertible Obligations

    —          11,854        —          11,854   

Domestic Obligations

    —          494,139        —          494,139   

Foreign Convertible Obligations

    —          6,033        1,661        7,694   

Foreign Obligations

    —          98,218        —          98,218   

U.S. Agency Obligations

    —          10,825        —          10,825   

U.S. Treasury Obligations

    —          1,455        —          1,455   

Short-Term Investments - Money Markets

    13,096        —          —          13,096   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Investments in Securities

  $ 47,459      $ 631,519      $ 1,661      $ 680,639   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

    Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total  

Other Financial instruments - Assets

       

Credit Default Swap Agreements

  $ —        $ 1,119      $ —        $ 1,119   

Future Contracts

    2,536        —          —          2,536   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total other Financial instruments - Assets

  $ 2,536      $ 1,119      $ —        $ 3,655   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

(1) Refer to the Schedule of Investments for Industry Information.

During the year ended August 31, 2014, the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund transferred Foreign Convertible Obligations with a value of $639 from Level 2 to Level 3 as of the end of period in accordance with fair value procedures established by the Board (in thousands). These transfers were the result of determinations made by the Valuation Committee as significant unobservable inputs were used to determine the value of the securities because of a halt in trading as a result of news from the company of a plan of restructuring.

The following is a reconciliation of Level 3 assets of the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund, for which significant unobservable inputs were used to determine fair value. Transfers in or out of Level 3 represent the ending value of any security or instrument where a change in the level has occurred from the beginning to the end of the period.

 

     Foreign Convertible
Obligations
 

Beginning Balance as of 8/31/2013

   $ —     

Net Purchases

     —     

Net Sales

     —     

Accrued Discounts/(Premiums)

     —     

Realized Gain/(Loss)

     —     

Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation)

     1,022   

Transfers into Level 3

     639   

Transfers out of Level 3

     —     
  

 

 

 

Ending Balance 8/31/2014

   $ 1,661   
  

 

 

 

Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) on Investments Held at 8/31/2014(2)

   $ 1,022   

The following is a summary of significant unobservable inputs used in the fair valuation of the asset categorized within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy:

 

Security

Type

  Fair Value
At
8/31/2014
   

Valuation

Technique

 

Unobservable

Inputs

 

Input

Assumptions(3)

  Fair
Value at
8/31/2014
per share
 

Foreign Convertible Obligations

  $ 1,661      Discounted Cash Flow Analysis   Cash Flows  

125mm of a 20 year Super Senior

Security with a 15% coupon

   

 

9.00 EUR/

$11.83

  

  

        400mm of a 10 year Senior Security with a 3% coupon  
        300mm of a 15 year Junior Security with a 1% coupon  
       

300mm of a 20 year Subordinated

Security zero coupon

 
      Discount Factor   Super Senior             8.00%  
        Senior                       10.00%  
        Junior                       12.00%  
        Subordinated            15.00%  
        Additional Timing Discount    25.00%   

 

(2) Change in unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) attributable to Level 3 securities held at period end. This balance is included in the change in unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) on the Statement of Operations.
(3)  The key assumptions used in the discounted cash flow analysis are the future expected payments to be received, timing of the expected cash flows, and the discount rates used to present value the expected cash flows. The valuation estimate will change if one of the key assumptions either increase or decrease, keeping all other assumptions constant. For example, if the expected cash flows increase/decrease, the valuation estimate will increase/decrease. If the discount rates used decrease / increase, the valuation estimate will increase /decrease.

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

Security Transactions and Investment Income

Security transactions are recorded on the trade date of the security purchase or sale. The Funds may purchase securities with delivery or payment to occur at a later date. At the time the Funds enter into a commitment to purchase a security, the transaction is recorded and the value of the security is reflected in the NAV. The value of the security may vary with market fluctuations.

Dividend income, net of foreign taxes, is recorded on the ex-dividend date except certain dividends from foreign securities which are recorded as soon as the information is available to the Funds. Interest income is earned from settlement date, recorded on the accrual basis, and adjusted, if necessary, for accretion of discounts and amortization of premiums. For financial and tax reporting purposes, realized gains and losses are determined on the basis of specific lot identification.

Currency Translation

All assets and liabilities initially expressed in foreign currency values are converted into U.S. dollar values at the mean of the bid and ask prices of such currencies against U.S. dollars as last quoted by a recognized dealer. Income, expenses, and purchases and sales of investments are translated into U.S. dollars at the rate of the exchange prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions. The effect of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on investments is separately identified from the fluctuations arising from changes in market values of securities held and is reported with all other foreign currency gains and losses in the Funds’ Statements of Operations.

Dividends to Shareholders

Dividends from net investment income of the Funds normally will be declared and paid at least annually. Distributions, if any, of net realized capital gains are generally paid at least annually and recorded on the ex-dividend date.

Commission Recapture

The Funds, except for the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund, have established brokerage commission recapture arrangements with certain brokers or dealers. If a Fund’s investment advisor chooses to execute a transaction through a participating broker, the broker rebates a portion of the commission back to the Fund. Any collateral benefit received through participation in the commission recapture program is directed exclusively to the Funds. This amount is reported with the net realized gain in the Funds’ Statements of Operations, if applicable.

Allocation of Income, Expenses, Gains, and Losses

Income, expenses (other than those attributable to a specific class), gains, and losses are allocated daily to each class of shares based upon the relative proportion of net assets represented by such class. Operating expenses directly attributable to a specific class are charged against the operations of that class.

Redemption Fees

The SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund imposes a 2% redemption fee on shares held for less than 90 days. The fee is deducted from the redemption proceeds and is intended to offset the trading costs, market impact, and other costs associated with short-term trading activity in the Fund. The “first-in, first-out” method is used to determine the holding period. The fee is allocated to all classes of the Fund pro rata based on their respective net assets.

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

Use of Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Actual results may differ from those estimated.

Other

Under the Trust’s organizational documents, its officers and trustees are indemnified against certain liability arising out of the performance of their duties to the Trust. In the normal course of business, the Trust enters into contracts that provide indemnification to the other party or parties against potential costs or liabilities. The Trust’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is dependent on claims that may be made in the future and, therefore, cannot be estimated. The Trust has had no prior claims or losses pursuant to any such agreement.

4. Securities and other Investments

Global Depositary Receipts (“GDRs”) and American Depositary Receipts (“ADRs”)

GDRs are in bearer form and traded in both the U.S. and European securities Markets. ADRs are depositary receipts for foreign issuers in registered form traded in U.S. securities markets. Depositary receipts may not be denominated in the same currency as the securities into which they may be converted. Investing in depositary receipts entails substantially the same risks as direct investment in foreign securities. There is generally less publicly available information about foreign companies and there may be less governmental regulation and supervision of foreign stock exchanges, brokers and listed companies. In addition, such companies may use different accounting and financial standards (and certain currencies may become unavailable for transfer from a foreign currency), resulting in the Fund’s possible inability to convert immediately into U.S. currency proceeds realized upon the sale of portfolio securities of the affected foreign companies. In addition, the Fund may invest in unsponsored depositary receipts, the issuers of which are not obligated to disclose material information about the underlying securities to investors in the United States. Ownership of unsponsored depositary receipts may not entitle the Fund to the same benefits and rights as ownership of a sponsored depositary receipt or the underlying security.

Inflation-Indexed Bonds

The SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund may invest in inflation-indexed bonds. Inflation-indexed bonds are fixed-income securities whose principal value is periodically adjusted based on the rate of inflation. The interest rate on these bonds is generally fixed at issuance at a rate lower than typical bonds. Over the life of an inflation-indexed bond, however, interest will be paid based on a principal value, which is adjusted for inflation. Any increase or decrease in the principal amount of an inflation-indexed bond will be included as interest income on the Statements of Operations, even though investors do not receive their principal until maturity.

Pay-In-Kind Securities

The SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund may invest in payment in-kind securities (“PIKs”). PIKs give the issuer the option at each interest payment date of making interest payments in either cash or additional debt securities. Those additional debt securities usually have the same terms, including maturity dates and interest rates, and associated risks as the original bonds. The daily market quotations of the original bonds may include the accrued interest (referred to as a dirty price) and require a pro rata adjustment from the unrealized appreciation or depreciation on investment to interest receivable in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

Restricted Securities

The Funds may invest in securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These securities may be sold privately, but are required to be registered or exempted from such registration before being sold to the public. Private placement securities are generally considered to be restricted except for those securities traded between qualified institutional investors under the provisions of Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. Reg S securities cannot be sold in the United States without either an effective registration statement filed pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, or pursuant to an exemption from registration. Disposal of restricted securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expenses, and prompt sale at an acceptable price may be difficult to achieve. Restricted securities outstanding at the year ended August 31, 2014 are disclosed in the Notes to the Schedules of Investments.

High-Yield Securities

Non-investment-grade securities are rated below the four highest credit grades by at least one of the public rating agencies (or are unrated if not publicly rated). Participation in high-yielding securities transactions generally involves greater returns in the form of higher average yields. However, participation in such transactions involves greater risks, including sensitivity to economic changes, solvency, and relative liquidity in the secondary trading market. Lower ratings may reflect a greater possibility that the financial condition of the issuer, or adverse changes in general economic conditions, or both, may impair the ability of the issuer to make payments of interest and principal. The prices and yields of lower-rated securities generally fluctuate more than higher-quality securities, and such prices may decline significantly in periods of general economic difficulty or rising interest rates.

Real Estate Investment Trusts

The Funds may own shares of real estate investment trusts (“REITs”) which report information on the source of their distributions annually. The Funds re-characterize distributions received from REIT investments based on information provided by the REITs into the following categories: ordinary income, long-term capital gains, and return of capital. If information is not available on a timely basis from the REITs, the re-characterization will be estimated based on available information which may include the previous year allocation. If new or additional information becomes available from the REITs at a later date, a re-characterization will be made the following year. These re-characterizations are not recorded for financial statement purposes, but as an adjustment to the calculation of taxable income.

Other Investment Company Securities and Other Exchange Traded Products

The Funds may invest in shares of other investment companies, including open-end funds, closed-end funds, business development companies, ETFs, exchange-traded notes (“ETNs”), unit investment trusts, and other investment companies of the Trust. The Funds may invest in investment company securities advised by the Manager or a sub-advisor. Investments in the securities of other investment companies may involve duplication of advisory fees and certain other expenses. By investing in another investment company, a Fund becomes a shareholder of that investment company. As a result, Fund shareholders indirectly will bear a Fund’s proportionate share of the fees and expenses paid by shareholders of the other investment company, in addition to the fees and expenses Fund shareholders directly bear in connection with the Fund’s own operations. These other fees and expenses are reflected as Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses and are included in the Fees and Expenses Table for the Fund in its Prospectus, if applicable. Investments in other investment companies may involve the payment of substantial premiums above the value of such issuer’s portfolio securities.

 

 

 

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Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Master Agreements

The SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund is a party to International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreements (“ISDA Master Agreements”) with counterparties that govern transactions in over-the-counter derivative and foreign exchange contracts entered into by the Fund and those counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreements contain provisions for general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral and events of default or termination. Events of termination include conditions that may entitle counterparties to elect to terminate early and cause settlement of all outstanding transactions under the applicable ISDA Master Agreement. Any election to terminate early could be material to the financial statements. Since different types of forward and OTC financial derivative transactions have different mechanics and are sometimes traded out of different legal entities of a particular counterparty organization, each type of transaction may be covered by a different Master Agreement, resulting in the need for multiple agreements with a single counterparty. As the Master Agreements are specific to unique operations of different asset types, they allow a Fund to net its total exposure to a counterparty in the event of a default with respect to all the transactions governed under a single agreement with a counterparty.

Master Repurchase Agreements (“Master Repo Agreements”) govern transactions between a Fund and select counterparties. The Master Repo Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation, income payments, events of default, and maintenance of collateral for Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Agreements.

Master Securities Forward Transaction Agreements (“Master Forward Agreements”) govern the considerations and factors surrounding the settlement of certain forward settling transactions, such as delayed delivery or sale-buyback financing transactions by and between a Fund and select counterparties. The Master Forward Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation and confirmation, payment and transfer, events of default, termination, and maintenance of collateral.

5. Financial Derivative Instruments

The Funds may utilize derivative instruments to enhance return, hedge risk, gain efficient exposure to an asset class or to manage liquidity. When considering the Fund’s use of derivatives, it is important to note that the Fund does not use derivatives for the purpose of creating financial leverage.

Swap Agreements

The SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund may invest in swap agreements. Swap agreements are privately negotiated agreements between the Fund and a counterparty to exchange or swap investment cash flows, assets, foreign currencies or market-linked returns at specified, future intervals. The Fund may enter into credit default, cross-currency, interest rate and other forms of swap agreements to manage its exposure to credit, currency, interest rate, and inflation risk. In connection with these agreements, securities or cash may be identified as collateral in accordance with the terms of the respective swap agreements to provide assets of value and recourse in the event of default or bankruptcy/insolvency.

Swaps are marked to market daily based upon values from third party vendors or quotations from market makers to the extent available and the change in value, if any, is recorded as an unrealized gain or loss on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. In the event that market quotes are not readily available and the swap cannot be valued pursuant to one of the valuation methods, the value of the swap will be determined in good faith by the Valuation Committee pursuant to procedures approved by the Board.

Payments received or made at the beginning of the measurement period are reflected as such on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities and represent payments made or received upon entering into the swap agreement to compensate for differences between the stated terms of the swap agreement and prevailing market conditions (credit spreads, currency exchange rates, interest rates, and other relevant factors). These

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

upfront payments are recorded as realized gains or losses on the Statements of Operations upon termination or maturity of the swap. A liquidation payment received or made at the termination of the swap is recorded as realized gain or loss on the Statements of Operations. Net periodic payments received or paid by a Fund are included as part of realized gains or losses on the Statements of Operations.

Entering into these agreements involves, to varying degrees, elements of credit, market and documentation risk in excess of the amounts recognized on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. Such risks involve the possibility that there will be no liquid market for these agreements, that the counterparty to the agreements may default on its obligation to perform or disagree as to the meaning of contractual terms in the agreements and that there may be unfavorable changes in interest rates.

A Fund’s maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk is the discounted net value of the cash flows to be received from the counterparty over the contract’s remaining life, to the extent that amount is positive. The risk is mitigated by having a master netting arrangement between a Fund and the counterparty and by the posting of collateral to a Fund to cover a Fund’s exposure to the counterparty.

Credit Default Swap Agreements

Credit default swap agreements involve one party making a stream of payments (referred to as the buyer of protection) to another party (the seller of protection) in exchange for the right to receive a specified return in the event of a default or other credit event for the referenced entity, obligation or index. As a seller of protection on credit default swap agreements, the Fund will generally receive from the buyer of protection a fixed rate of periodic premium throughout the term of the swap provided that there is no credit event. As the seller, the Fund would effectively add leverage to its portfolio because, in addition to its total net assets, the Fund would be subject to investment exposure up to the notional amount of the swap.

If the Fund is a seller of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) pay to the buyer of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and take delivery of the referenced obligation, other deliverable obligations or underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) pay a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index. If the Fund is a buyer of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) receive from the seller of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and deliver the referenced obligation, other deliverable obligations or underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) receive a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or underlying securities comprising the referenced index. Recovery values are estimated by market makers considering either industry standard recovery rates or entity specific factors and considerations until a credit event occurs. If a credit event has occurred, the recovery value is determined by a facilitated auction whereby a minimum number of allowable broker bids, together with a specified valuation method, are used to calculate the settlement value.

Credit default swap agreements on corporate issues, sovereign issues of an emerging country or U.S. municipal issues involve one party making a stream of payments to another party in exchange for the right to receive a specified return in the event of a default or other credit event. If a credit event occurs and cash settlement is not elected, a variety of other deliverable obligations may be delivered in lieu of the specific referenced obligation. The ability to deliver other obligations may result in a cheapest-to-deliver option (the buyer of protection’s right to choose the deliverable obligation with the lowest value following a credit event). The Fund may use credit default swaps on corporate issues, sovereign issues of an emerging country or U.S. municipal issues to provide a measure of protection against defaults of the issuers (i.e., to reduce risk where the Fund owns or has exposure to the referenced obligation) or to take an active long or short position with respect to the likelihood of a particular issuer’s default.

 

 

 

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Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Implied credit spreads, represented in absolute terms, utilized in determining the market value of credit default swap agreements on corporate issues, sovereign issues of an emerging country or U.S. municipal issues as of period end are disclosed in the Notes to the Schedule of Investments and serve as an indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk and represent a market participant view of the likelihood or risk of default for the underlying referent security to credit derivative. The implied credit spread of a particular referenced entity reflects the cost of buying/selling protection and may include upfront payments required to be made to enter into the agreement. For credit default swap agreements on asset-backed securities and credit indices, the quoted market prices and resulting values serve as the indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk. Wider credit spreads represent a deterioration of the referenced entity’s credit soundness and a greater likelihood or risk of default or other credit event occurring as defined under the terms of the agreement.

The maximum potential amount of future payments (undiscounted) that the Fund as a seller of protection could be required to make under a credit default swap agreement would be an amount equal to the notional amount of the agreement. Notional amounts of each individual credit default swap agreements outstanding as of August 31, 2014 for which the Fund is the seller of protection are disclosed in the Notes to the Schedules of Investments. These potential amounts would be partially offset by any recovery values of the respective referenced obligations, upfront payments received upon entering into the agreement, or net amounts received from the settlement of buy protection credit default swap agreements entered into by the Fund for the same referenced entity or entities.

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund entered into credit default swaps primarily for return enhancement, hedging, and exposing cash to markets.

The Fund’s credit default swap contract notional amounts outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet the strategic requirements. The following table illustrates the average quarterly volume of credit default swap contracts. For the purpose of this disclosure, the volume is measured by the notional amounts outstanding at each quarter end (000’s).

 

Credit Default Swap Notional Amounts Outstanding

 

Fund

   Year ended
August 31, 2014
 

SiM High Yield Opportunities

   $ 12,000   

Over-the-Counter Swap Agreements

OTC financial derivative instruments such as forward currency contracts, options contracts, interest rate, and credit default swap agreements derive their value from underlying asset prices, indices, reference rates, and other inputs or a combination of these factors. These instruments are valued using evaluated prices furnished by a pricing service selected by the Board. In certain cases, when a valuation is not readily available from a pricing service, the Fund’s Manager may provide a valuation pursuant to procedures approved by the Board. Depending on the instrument and the terms of the transaction, the value of the derivative instrument can be determined by a pricing service or the Manager using a series of techniques, including simulation pricing models. The pricing models are inputs, such as issuer details, indices, spreads, interest rates, yield curves, dividends, and exchange rates, that are observed from actively quoted markets. Derivative instruments that use valuation techniques and inputs similar to those described above are normally categorized as Level 2 in the fair valuation hierarchy.

Futures Contracts

Futures contracts are contracts to buy or sell a standard quantity of securities at a specified price on a future date. The Funds may enter into financial futures contracts as a method for keeping assets readily convertible to cash if needed to meet shareholder redemptions or for other needs while maintaining exposure to the stock or bond market, as applicable. The primary risks associated with the use of futures contracts are

 

 

 

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August 31, 2014

 

 

the possibility of illiquid markets or imperfect correlation between the values of the contracts and the underlying securities, or that the counterparty will fail to perform its obligations.

Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to set aside or deposit with a broker an amount, termed the initial margin, which typically represents a portion of the face value of the futures contract. The Funds usually reflects this amount on the Schedule of Investments as a U.S. Treasury Bill held as collateral for futures contracts or as Cash deposited with broker on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities. Payments to and from the broker, known as variation margin, are required to be made on a daily basis as the price of the futures contract fluctuates. Changes in initial settlement values are accounted for as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) until the contracts are terminated, at which time realized gains and losses are recognized. Futures contracts are valued at the most recent settlement price established each day by the exchange on which they are traded.

For the year ended August 31, 2014, the Funds entered into future contracts primarily for return enhancement, hedging and exposing cash to markets.

The Funds’ futures contracts outstanding fluctuate throughout the operating year as required to meet strategic requirements. The following table illustrates the average quarterly volume of futures contracts. For purpose of this disclosure, volume is measured by contracts outstanding at period end.

 

Number of Futures Contracts Outstanding

Fund

   Year ended
August 31, 2014

The London Company Income Equity

   68

Zebra Global Equity

   5

Zebra Small Cap Equity

   8

SiM High Yield Opportunities

   614

The following is a summary of the Funds’ derivative financial instruments categorized by risk exposure (in thousands) (1):

Fair Values of financial derivative instruments not accounted for as hedging instruments as of August 31, 2014 (000’s):

 

Statements of Assets and Liabilities

   Derivative    The London
Company
Income
Equity
     Zebra Global
Equity
     Zebra
Small Cap
Equity
 

Unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of futures contracts

   Equity Contracts    $ 86       $ 8       $ 10   

The effect of financial derivative instruments not accounted for as hedging instruments during the year ended August 31, 2014

(000’s):

  

  

Statements of Operations

           

Net realized gain or (loss) from futures contracts

   Equity Contracts    $ 1,128       $ 60       $ 36   

Change in net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of futures contracts

   Equity Contracts      179         18         18   

 

(1)  See Note 3 in the Notes to Financial Statements for additional information.

SiM High Yield Opportunities

The following is a summary of the Fund’s derivative financial instruments categorized by risk exposure(1):

Fair values of financial derivative instruments on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities as of August 31, 2014 (000’s):

 

     Derivatives not accounted for as hedging instruments  
     Credit
contracts
     Foreign
exchange
contracts
     Interest
rate
contracts
     Equity
contracts
     Total  

Assets:

              

Unrealized appreciation of futures contracts

   $ —         $ 2,536       $ —         $ —         $ 2,536   

Unrealized appreciation of swap agreements

     1,937         —           —           —           1,937   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total Assets

   $ 1,937       $ 2,536       $ —         $ —         $ 4,473   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

 

 

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American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

The effect of financial derivative instruments on the Statement of Operations for the year ended August 31, 2014 (000’s):

 

     Derivatives not accounted for as hedging instruments  
     Credit
contracts
     Foreign
exchange
contracts
    Equity
contracts
     Total  

Realized gain or (loss) from derivatives recognized as a result from operations:

          

Net realized gain or (loss) from futures contracts

   $ —         $ (2,008   $ —         $ (2,008

Net realized gain or (loss) from swap agreements

     —           —          —           —     
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total Realized losses on derivatives

   $ —         $ (2,008   $ —         $ (2,008
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Net change in unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of derivatives recognized as a result from operations:

          

Change in net unrealized appreciation of futures contracts

   $ —         $ 1,668      $ —         $ 1,668   

Change in net unrealized appreciation of swap agreements

     630         —          —           630   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total Net change in unrealized appreciation

   $ 630       $ 1,668      $ —         $ 2,298   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

(1)  See Note 3 in the Notes to Financial Statements for additional information.

6. Principal Risks

In the normal course of business the Funds trade financial instruments and enter into financial transactions where risk of potential loss exists. Security values fluctuate (market risk) and may decline due to factors affecting securities markets in general, particular industries represented in the securities markets or conditions specifically related to a particular company. Failure of the other party to a transaction to perform (credit risk), for example by not making principal and interest payments when due, reduces the value of the issuer’s debt and could reduce the Funds’ income. Similar to credit risk, the Funds may be exposed to counterparty risk, or the risk that an institution or other entity with which the Funds have unsettled or open transactions will fail to make required payments or otherwise comply with the terms of the instrument, transaction or contract. The potential loss could exceed the value of the financial assets recorded in the financial statements. Some of the Funds’ investments may be illiquid and the Funds may not be able to vary the portfolio investments in response to changes in economic and other conditions. If a Fund is required to liquidate all or a portion of its investments quickly, the Fund may realize significantly less than the value at which it previously recorded those investments.

In the normal course of business the Funds trade financial instruments and enter into financial transactions where risk of potential loss exists due to changes in the market (market risk), or failure or inability of the other party to a transaction to perform (credit and counterparty risk). See below for a detailed description of select principal risks.

Market Risks

The Funds’ investments in financial derivatives and other financial instruments expose the Funds to various risks such as, but not limited to, interest rate, foreign currency and equity risks.

Interest rate risk is the risk that fixed income securities will decline in value because of changes in interest rates. As nominal interest rates rise, the value of certain fixed income securities held by the Fund is likely to decrease. A nominal interest rate can be described as the sum of a real interest rate and an expected inflation rate. Fixed income securities with longer durations tend to be more sensitive to changes in interest rates, usually making them more volatile than securities with shorter durations. Duration is useful primarily as a measure of the sensitivity of a fixed income’s market price to interest rate (i.e. yield) movements.

If the Funds invest directly in foreign currencies or in securities that trade in, and receive revenues in, foreign currencies, or in financial derivatives that provide exposure to foreign currencies, they will be subject to the risk that those currencies will decline in value relative to the base currency of the Funds, or, in the case of hedging positions, that the Funds’ base currency will decline in value relative to the currency being hedged. Currency rates in foreign countries may fluctuate significantly over short periods of time for a number of

 

 

 

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Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

reasons, including changes in interest rates, intervention (or the failure to intervene) by U.S. or foreign governments, central banks or supranational entities such as the International Monetary Fund, or by the imposition of currency controls or other political developments in the United States or abroad. As a result, the Funds’ investments in foreign currency denominated securities may reduce the returns of the Fund.

The fair values of equities, such as common stocks and preferred securities or equity related investments such as futures and options, may decline due to general market conditions which are not specifically related to a particular company, such as real or perceived adverse economic conditions, changes in the general outlook for corporate earnings, changes in interest or currency rates or adverse investor sentiment generally. They may also decline due to factors which affect a particular industry or industries, such as labor shortages or increased production costs and competitive conditions within an industry. Equity securities and equity related investments generally have greater market price volatility than fixed income securities.

Credit and Counterparty Risks

The SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund will be exposed to credit risk with respect to issuers of portfolio securities. The Fund minimizes concentrations of credit risk by undertaking transactions with a large number of issuers. The Fund could lose money if the issuer or guarantor of a fixed income security, or the counterparty to a financial derivatives contract, repurchase agreement or a loan of portfolio securities, is unable or unwilling to make timely principal and/or interest payments, or to otherwise honor its obligations. Securities are subject to varying degrees of credit risk, which are often reflected in credit ratings.

Similar to credit risk, the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund may be exposed to counterparty risk, or the risk that an institution or other entity with which the Fund has unsettled or open transactions will default. Financial assets, which potentially expose the Fund to counterparty risk, consist principally of cash due from counterparties and investments. Furthermore, to the extent that unpaid amounts owed to the Fund exceed a predetermined threshold agreed to with the counterparty, such counterparty shall advance collateral to the Fund in the form of cash or cash equivalents equal in value to the unpaid amount owed to the Fund. The Fund may invest such collateral in securities or other instruments and will typically pay interest to the counterparty on the collateral received. If the unpaid amount owed to the Fund subsequently falls, the Fund would be required to return to the counterparty all or a portion of the collateral previously advanced to the Fund.

All transactions in listed securities are settled/paid for upon delivery using approved counterparties. The risk of default is considered minimal, as delivery of securities sold is only made once the Fund has received payment. Payment is made on a purchase once the securities have been delivered by the counterparty. The trade will fail if either party fails to meet its obligation.

The SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund is subject to various Master Agreements, which govern the terms of certain transactions with select counterparties. These Master Agreements reduce the counterparty risk associated with relevant transactions by specifying credit protection mechanisms and providing standardization that improves legal certainty. Since different types of forward and OTC derivative transactions have different mechanics and are sometimes traded out of different legal entities of a particular counterparty organization, each type of transaction may be covered by a different Master Agreement and result in the need for multiple agreements with a single counterparty. Therefore, exposure cannot be netted and collateralized across all types of transactions. Exposures can only be netted across transactions governed under the same Master Agreement with the same legal entity.

Master Agreements can also help limit counterparty risk by specifying collateral posting arrangements at pre-arranged exposure levels. Under the Master Agreements, collateral is routinely transferred if the total net exposure to certain transactions (net of existing collateral already in place) governed under the relevant Master Agreement with a counterparty in a given account exceeds a specified threshold, which typically ranges from zero to $250,000 depending on the counterparty and the type of Master Agreement. United States Treasury bills and US dollar cash are generally the preferred forms of collateral, although other forms of AAA

 

 

 

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Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

rated paper may be used. The Fund’s overall exposure to counterparty risk can change substantially within a short period, as it is affected by each transaction subject to the relevant Master Agreement. Master Repurchase Agreements (“Master Repo Agreements”) govern transactions between the Fund and select counterparties. The Master Repo Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation, income payments, events of default, and maintenance of collateral for Repurchase Agreements.

Master Securities Forward Transaction Agreements (“Master Forward Agreements”) govern the considerations and factors surrounding the settlement of certain purchases and sales made on a delayed-delivery basis by and between the Fund and select counterparties. The Master Forward Agreements maintain provisions for, among other things, initiation and confirmation, payment and transfer, events of default, termination, and maintenance of collateral.

International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. Master Agreements (“ISDA Master Agreements”) govern OTC financial derivative transactions entered into by the SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund and those counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreements maintain provisions for general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral and events of default or termination. Events of termination include conditions that may entitle counterparties to elect to terminate early and cause settlement of all outstanding transactions under the applicable ISDA Master Agreement. Any election to early terminate could be material to the financial statements. The fair value of OTC financial derivative transactions net of collateral received in or pledged by counterparty as of period end is disclosed in the Notes to the Schedule of Investments.

Offsetting Assets and Liabilities

The Funds are parties to enforceable master netting agreements between brokers and counterparties, which provide for the right to offset under certain circumstances. The Funds employ multiple money managers and counterparties and have elected not to offset qualifying financial and derivative instruments on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities, as such all financial and derivative instruments are presented on a gross basis. The impacts of netting arrangements that provide the right to offset are detailed below. The net amount represents the net receivable or payable that would be due from or to the counterparty in the event of default. Exposure from borrowings and other financing agreements such as repurchase agreements can only be netted across transactions governed by the same Master Agreement with the same legal entity. All amounts reported below represent the balance as of August 31, 2014 (in thousands).

The London Company Income Equity

Offsetting of Financial Assets and Derivative Assets as of August 31, 2014:

 

Description

   Gross Amounts of
Recognized Assets
     Gross Amounts
Offset in the
Statements of
Assets

and Liabilities
     Net Amounts of Liabilities
Presented in the
Statements of Assets
and Liabilities
 

Futures Contracts (1)

   $ 18       $ —         $ 18   

Financial Assets, Derivative Assets, and Collateral Pledged by Counterparty as of August 31, 2014:

 

     Net amount of Assets
Presented in the Statements of
Assets and Liabilities
     Gross Amounts Not Offset in the
Statements of Assets and Liabilities
        

Counterparty

      Financial
Instruments
     Cash Collateral
Received
     Net
Amount
 

Goldman Sachs & Co.

   $ 18       $  —         $ —         $ 18   

 

(1)  The securities presented here within are not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this is disclosed for informational purposes only.

 

 

 

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Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Zebra Global Equity

Offsetting of Financial Assets and Derivative Assets as of August 31, 2014:

 

Description

   Gross Amounts of
Recognized Assets
     Gross Amounts
Offset in the
Statements of
Assets

and Liabilities
     Net Amounts of Liabilities
Presented in the
Statements of Assets
and Liabilities
 

Futures Contracts (1)

   $ —         $ —         $ —     

Financial Assets, Derivative Assets, and Collateral Pledged by Counterparty as of August 31, 2014:

 

     Net amount of Assets
Presented in the Statements of
Assets and Liabilities
     Gross Amounts Not Offset in the
Statements of Assets and Liabilities
        

Counterparty

      Financial
Instruments
     Cash Collateral
Received
     Net
Amount
 

Goldman Sachs & Co.

   $ —         $ —         $ —         $ —     

 

(1)  The securities presented here within are not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this is disclosed for informational purposes only.

Zebra Small Cap Equity

Offsetting of Financial Assets and Derivative Assets as of August 31, 2014:

 

Description

   Gross Amounts of
Recognized Assets
    Gross Amounts
Offset in the
Statement of Assets
and Liabilities
     Net Amounts of Liabilities
Presented in the
Statement of Assets
and Liabilities
 

Futures Contracts (1)

   $ (3   $ —         $ (3

Financial Assets, Derivative Assets, and Collateral Pledged by Counterparty as of August 31, 2014

 

     Net amount of Assets
Presented in the Statements of
Assets and Liabilities
    Gross Amounts Not Offset in the
Statements of Assets and Liabilities
        

Counterparty

     Financial
Instruments
     Cash Collateral
Received
     Net
Amount
 

Goldman Sachs & Co.

   $ (3   $ —         $ —         $ (3

 

(1)  The securities presented here within are not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this is disclosed for informational purposes only.

SiM High Yield Opportunities

Offsetting of Financial Assets and Derivative Assets as of August 31, 2014:

 

Description

   Gross Amounts of
Recognized Assets
     Gross Amounts
Offset in the
Statements of
Assets

and Liabilities
     Net Amounts of Liabilities
Presented in the
Statements of Assets
and Liabilities
 

Credit Default Swaps

   $ 1,937       $ —         $ 1,937   

Futures Contracts (1)

     2,536         —           2,536   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ 4,473       $ —         $ 4,473   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Offsetting of Financial Liabilities and Derivative Liabilities as of August 31, 2014:

 

Description

   Gross Amounts of
Recognized
Liabilities
     Gross Amounts
Offset in the
Statement of Assets
and Liabilities
     Net Amounts of Liabilities
Presented in the Statement of
Assets and Liabilities
 

Futures Contracts(1)

   $ 786       $  —         $ 786   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ 786       $ —         $ 786   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

 

 

55


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Financial Assets, Derivative Assets, and Collateral Pledged by Counterparty as of August 31, 2014:

 

     Net amount of Assets
Presented in the
Statements of Assets and
Liabilities
     Gross Amounts Not Offset in the
Statements of Assets and Liabilities
        

Counterparty

      Financial
Instruments
     Cash Collateral
Received1
     Net
Amount
 

Archer Financial Services, Inc.

   $ 1,937       $ —         $ 1,937       $ —     
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 
   $ 1,937       $ —         $ 1,937       $ —     
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

(1)  The securities presented here within are not subject to Master Netting Agreements. As such, this is disclosed for informational purposes only.

7. Federal Income and Excise Taxes

It is the policy of each Fund to qualify as a regulated investment company (“RIC”), by complying with all applicable provisions of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, and to make distribution of taxable income sufficient to relieve it from substantially all federal income and excise taxes. For federal income tax purposes, each Fund is treated as a single entity for the purpose of determining such qualification.

The Funds do not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. The tax years for the periods ended August 31, 2012, 2013 and 2014 remain subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. If applicable, the Funds recognized interest accrued related to unrecognized tax benefits in interest expense and penalties in “Other expenses” on the Statements of Operations.

Dividends are categorized in accordance with income tax regulations which may treat certain transactions differently than U.S. GAAP. Accordingly, the character of distributions and composition of net assets for tax purposes may differ from those reflected in the accompanying financial statements.

The Funds may be subject to taxes imposed by countries in which it invests. Such taxes are generally based on returns of income earned or gains realized or repatriated. Taxes are accrued and applied to net investment income, net realized capital gains and net unrealized appreciation or depreciation, as applicable, as the income is earned or capital gains are recorded.

The tax character of distributions paid were as follows (in thousands):

 

     The London Company Income Equity      Zebra Global Equity  
     Year Ended
August 31, 2014
     Year Ended
August 31, 2013
     Year Ended
August 31, 2014
     Year Ended
August 31, 2013
 

Distributions paid from:

           

Ordinary income*

           

Institutional Class

   $ 1,201       $ 558       $ 91       $ 22   

Y Class

     1,703         157         21         6   

Investor Class

     333         111         88         33   

A Class

     450         105         419         143   

C Class

     386         23         56         4   

Long-term Capital Gains

           

Institutional Class 109

     109         7         93         51   

Y Class

     154         1         21         15   

Investor Class

     37         2         84         106   

A Class

     54         1         425         486   

C Class

     57         —           62         24   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total distributions paid

   $ 4,484       $ 965       $ 1,360       $ 890   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

 

 

56


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Zebra Small Cap Equity      SiM High Yield Opportunities  
     Year Ended
August 31, 2014
     Year Ended
August 31, 2013
     Year Ended
August 31, 2014
     Year Ended
August 31, 2013
 

Distributions paid from:

           

Ordinary income*

           

Institutional Class

   $ 97       $ 123       $ 3,754       $ 3,987   

Y Class

     175         153         9,029         3,985   

Investor Class

     375         205         19,007         14,641   

A Class

     175         234         5,884         4,225   

C Class

     62         58         4,004         2,850   

Long-term Capital Gains

           

Institutional Class

     67         26         574         164   

Y Class

     120         34         1,373         127   

Investor Class

     257         46         3,540         667   

A Class

     120         53         1,085         178   

C Class

     42         14         842         131   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total distributions paid

   $ 1,490       $ 946       $ 49,092       $ 30,955   
  

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

* For tax purposes, short-term capital gains are considered ordinary income distributions.

As of August 31, 2014, the components of distributable earnings or (deficits) on a tax basis were as follows (in thousands):

 

     The London
Company Income
Equity
    Zebra Global
Equity
    Zebra Small Cap
Equity
    SiM High Yield
Opportunities
 

Cost basis of investments for federal income tax purposes

   $ 244,585      $ 6,731      $ 17,780      $ 658,323   

Unrealized appreciation

     32,540        853        1,978        29,354   

Unrealized depreciation

     (221     (91     (636     (17,102
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net unrealized appreciation or (depreciation)

     32,319        762        1,342        12,252   

Undistributed ordinary income

     1,224        328        86        2,969   

Undistributed long-term gain or (loss)

     2,248        291        208        6,478   

Other temporary differences

     —          —          —          (1,985
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Distributable earnings or (deficits)

   $ 35,791      $ 1,381      $ 1,636      $ 19,715   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Financial reporting records are adjusted for permanent book/tax differences to reflect tax character. Financial records are not adjusted for temporary differences. The temporary differences between financial reporting and tax-basis reporting of unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) are attributable primarily to the tax deferral of losses from wash sales, the realization for tax purposes of unrealized gains or (losses) on certain derivative instruments and the reclassification of income from real estate investment securities, royalty trusts, and publicly traded partnerships.

Due to inherent differences in the recognition of income, expenses and realized gains or (losses) under U.S. GAAP and federal income tax regulations, permanent differences between book and tax reporting have been identified and appropriately reclassified on the Statements of Assets and Liabilities.

Accordingly, the following amounts represent current year permanent differences derived from foreign currency, paydown reclasses, reclassifications of income from real estate investment securities, publicly traded partnerships, and royalty trusts, and dividend reclasses that have been reclassified as of August 31, 2014 (in thousands):

 

     The London
Company Income
Equity
    Zebra
Global
Equity
    Zebra
Small Cap
Equity
    SiM High
Yield
Opportunities
 

Paid-in-capital

   $ —        $ (37   $ 9      $ (35

Undistributed net investment income

     9        (9     (44     667   

Accumulated net realized gain (loss)

     (9     46        35        (632

Unrealized appreciation or (depreciation) of investments, foreign currency contracts, futures contracts, and swap agreements

     —          —          —          —     

 

 

 

57


Table of Contents

American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

Under the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010 (the “RIC MOD”), net capital losses recognized by Funds in taxable years beginning after December 22, 2010 are carried forward indefinitely and retain their character as short-term and/or long-term losses. Prior to RIC MOD, net capital losses incurred by the Funds were carried forward for eight years and treated as short-term losses. RIC MOD requires that post-enactment net capital losses be used before pre-enactment net capital losses.

As of August 31, 2014, the Funds did not have capital loss carryforwards.

8. Investment Transactions

The aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments other than short-term obligations for the year ended August 31, 2014 were (in thousands):

 

     Purchases      Sales  

The London Company Income Equity

   $ 157,792       $ 17,372   

Zebra Global Equity

     4,214         4,657   

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     19,834         12,064   

SiM High Yield Opportunities (non U.S. Government securities)

     364,627         218,944   

SiM High Yield Opportunities (U.S. Government securities)

     100         —     

9. Capital Share Transactions

The tables below summarize the activity in capital shares for each Class of the Fund (dollars and shares in thousands):

For the year ended August 31, 2014

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

The London Company Income Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     1,861      $ 23,942        7,625      $ 98,479        968      $ 12,613   

Reinvestment of dividends

     95        1,226        36        467        27        348   

Shares redeemed

     (1,621     (20,277     (1,384     (18,019     (571     (7,735
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     335      $ 4,891        6,277      $ 80,927        424      $ 5,226   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     A Class     C Class  

The London Company Income Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     1,610      $ 20,758        2,786      $ 35,549   

Reinvestment of dividends

     18        233        9        118   

Shares redeemed

     (408     (5,305     (134     (1,734
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     1,220      $ 15,686        2,661      $ 33,933   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

Zebra Global Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     22      $ 308        64      $ 802        44      $ 552   

Reinvestment of dividends

     15        170        4        42        15        171   

Shares redeemed

     (31     (381     (39     (482     (96     (1,275
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in shares outstanding

     6      $ 97        29      $ 362        (37   $ (552
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     A Class     C Class  

Zebra Global Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     71      $ 905        53      $ 681   

Reinvestment of dividends

     57        673        10        115   

Shares redeemed

     (110     (1,455     (2     (24
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     18      $ 123        61      $ 772   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

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American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     65      $ 911        548      $ 7,861        283      $ 4,077   

Reinvestment of dividends

     12        163        20        286        44        631   

Shares redeemed

     (76     (1,077     (127     (1,811     (359     (5,080
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in shares outstanding

     1      $ (3     441      $ 6,336        (32   $ (372
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     A Class     C Class  

Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     280      $ 4,011        75      $ 1,060   

Reinvestment of dividends

     16        230        6        83   

Shares redeemed

     (108     (1,559     (28     (403
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     188      $ 2,682        53      $ 740   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     4,682      $ 48,431        17,585      $ 181,305        9,097      $ 93,455   

Redemption Fees

     —          5        —          12        —          22   

Reinvestment of dividends

     389        3,989        801        8,201        2,181        22,257   

Shares redeemed

     (2,268     (23,347     (3,126     (32,139     (16,463     (169,250
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in shares outstanding

     2,803      $ 29,078        15,260      $ 157,379        (5,185   $ (53,516
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     A Class     C Class  

SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     3,017      $ 31,114        2,087      $ 21,594   

Redemption Fees

     —          7        —          6   

Reinvestment of dividends

     475        4,861        367        3,774   

Shares redeemed

     (2,012     (20,738     (1,079     (11,150
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     1,480      $ 15,244        1,375      $ 14,224   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

For the Year ended August 31, 2013

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

The London Company Income Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     3,182      $ 36,734        2,605      $ 30,619        755      $ 8,467   

Reinvestment of dividends

     44        502        11        130        9        100   

Shares redeemed

     (419     (4,972     (216     (2,589     (210     (2,311
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     2,807      $ 32,264        2,400      $ 28,160        554      $ 6,256   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     A Class     C Class  

The London Company Income Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     1,045      $ 12,022        663      $ 7,825   

Reinvestment of dividends

     8        93        2        19   

Shares redeemed

     (80     (939     (4     (45
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     973      $ 11,176        661      $ 7,799   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

Zebra Global Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     4      $ 50        3      $ 44        22      $ 285   

Reinvestment of dividends

     6        73        2        21        12        137   

Shares redeemed

     (32     (416     (12     (153     (103     (1,308
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net (decrease) in shares outstanding

     (22   $ (293     (7   $ (88     (69   $ (886
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

59


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American Beacon FundsSM

Notes to Financial Statements

August 31, 2014

 

 

     Retirement Class     A Class     C Class  

Zebra Global Equity Fund

   Shares      Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     —         $ —          22      $ 285        —        $ 1   

Reinvestment of dividends

     —           —          42        511        2        25   

Shares redeemed

     —           (1     (525     (6,763     (18     (231
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net (decrease) in shares outstanding

     —         $ (1     (461   $ (5,967     (16   $ (205
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     39      $ 485        45      $ 598        138      $ 1,820   

Reinvestment of dividends

     13        149        17        186        21        239   

Shares redeemed

     (15     (189     (33     (409     (53     (649
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     37      $ 445        29      $ 375        106      $ 1,410   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     Retirement Class     A Class     C Class  

Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund

   Shares      Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     —         $ —          32      $ 422        11      $ 148   

Reinvestment of dividends

     —           —          18        209        6        70   

Shares redeemed

     —           (1     (78     (978     (7     (89
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in shares outstanding

     —         $ (1     (28   $ (347     10      $ 129   
  

 

 

    

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class     Investor Class  

SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     2,760      $ 28,607        8,733      $ 90,816        16,917      $ 173,890   

Redemption Fees

     —          26        —          29        —          106   

Reinvestment of dividends

     375        3,879        313        3,236        1,318        13,575   

Shares redeemed

     (4,978     (51,725     (2,334     (24,189     (8,911     (91,841
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in shares outstanding

     (1,843   $ (19,215     6,712      $ 69,892        9,324      $ 95,730   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

     A Class     C Class  

SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

   Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

Shares sold

     4,523      $ 46,825        3,741      $ 38,777   

Redemption Fees

     —          32        —          24   

Reinvestment of dividends

     250        2,582        181        1,874   

Shares redeemed

     (1,585     (16,414     (620     (6,425
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase in shares outstanding

     3,188      $ 33,025        3,302      $ 34,250   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

60


Table of Contents

American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund SM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

     Institutional Class  
     Year Ended    

May 29

To

 
     August 31,     Aug.
31,
 
     2014     2013     2012  

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 11.80      $ 10.49      $ 10.00   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Income from investment operations:

      

Net investment income

     0.30        0.31        0.06   

Net gains (losses) on investments (both realized and unrealized)

     2.39        1.30        0.47   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total income (loss) from investment operations

     2.69        1.61        0.53   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions:

      

Dividends from net investment income

     (0.28     (0.29     (0.04

Distributions from net realized gains

     (0.09     (0.01     —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total distributions

     (0.37     (0.30     (0.04
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 14.12      $ 11.80      $ 10.49   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return A

     23.13     15.55     5.31 %B 
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Ratios and supplemental data:

      

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

   $ 58,277      $ 44,731      $ 10,331   

Ratios to average net assets:

      

Expenses, before reimbursements or recoupments

     0.82     1.13     7.28 %C 

Expenses, net of reimbursements or recoupments

     0.79     0.79     0.79 %C 

Net investment income (loss), before expense reimbursements or recoupments

     2.31     2.32     (3.99 )%C 

Net investment income, net of reimbursements or recoupments

     2.33     2.66     2.50 %C 

Portfolio turnover rate

     10     15     6 %D 

 

A Based on net asset value, which does not reflect the sales charge, redemption fee, or contingent deferred sales charge, if applicable. May include adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions.
B Not annualized.
C Annualized.
D Portfolio turnover rate is for the period from May 29 through August 31, 2012, and is not annualized.

 

 

 

61


Table of Contents

American Beacon The London Company Income Equity FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

Y Class     Investor Class     A Class     C Class  
      May 29                 May 29                 May 29                 May 29  
Year Ended     To     Year Ended     To     Year Ended     To     Year Ended     To  
August 31,     Aug. 31,     August 31,     Aug. 31,     August 31,     Aug. 31,     August 31,     Aug. 31,  
2014     2013     2012     2014     2013     2012     2014     2013     2012     2014     2013     2012  
$ 11.75      $ 10.49      $ 10.00      $ 11.76      $ 10.48      $ 10.00      $ 11.70      $ 10.47      $ 10.00      $ 11.66      $ 10.46      $ 10.00   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  0.28        0.33        0.05        0.26        0.27        0.05        0.24        0.31        0.05        0.15        0.24        0.04   
  2.39        1.26        0.48        2.39        1.29        0.47        2.37        1.23        0.46        2.35        1.21        0.46   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  2.67        1.59        0.53        2.65        1.56        0.52        2.61        1.54        0.51        2.50        1.45        0.50   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  (0.27     (0.32     (0.04     (0.24     (0.27     (0.04     (0.22     (0.30     (0.04     (0.14     (0.24     (0.04
  (0.09     (0.01     —          (0.09     (0.01     —          (0.09     (0.01     —          (0.09     (0.01     —     

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  (0.36     (0.33     (0.04     (0.33     (0.28     (0.04     (0.31     (0.31     (0.04     (0.23     (0.25     (0.04

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
$ 14.06      $ 11.75      $ 10.49      $ 14.08      $ 11.76      $ 10.48      $ 14.00      $ 11.70      $ 10.47      $ 13.93      $ 11.66      $ 10.46   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  23.05     15.45     5.31 %B      22.83     15.14     5.21 %B      22.58     14.99     5.11 %B      21.69     14.05     5.01 %B 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
$ 122,715      $ 28,814      $ 551      $ 16,550      $ 8,840      $ 2,073      $ 31,579      $ 12,109      $ 647      $ 46,639      $ 8,015      $ 274   
  0.89     1.09     10.59 %C      1.06     1.54     10.14 %C      1.28     1.59     11.94 %C      2.02     2.26     13.83 %C 
  0.89     0.89     0.89 %C      1.10     1.17     1.17 %C      1.27     1.29     1.29 %C      2.01     2.04     2.04 %C 
  2.24     2.22     (7.30 )%C      2.06     1.86     (6.99 )%C      1.85     1.93     (8.87 )%C      1.11     1.09     (10.65 )%C 
  2.25     2.42     2.40 %C      2.02     2.23     1.99 %C      1.86     2.23     1.78 %C      1.12     1.31     1.14 %C 
  10     15     6 %D      10     15     6 %D      10     15     6 %D      10     15     6 %D 

 

 

 

62


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

 

     Institutional Class  
                             June 1  
           to  
     Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,  
     2014     2013     2012     2011     2010  

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 13.33      $ 12.57      $ 11.46      $ 10.10      $ 10.00   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Income from investment operations:

          

Net investment income (loss)

     0.14        0.46        0.39        0.23        0.05   

Net gains from investments (both realized and unrealized)

     2.15        1.51        0.84        1.41        0.05   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total income from investment operations

     2.29        1.97        1.23        1.64        0.10   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions:

          

Dividends from net investment income

     (0.13     (0.35     (0.12     (0.17     —     

Distributions from net realized gains

     (2.78     (0.86     —          (0.11     —     

Return of capital

            —          —          —          —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total distributions

     (2.91     (1.21     (0.12     (0.28     —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 12.71      $ 13.33      $ 12.57      $ 11.46      $ 10.10   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return A

     19.17     16.75     10.85     16.19     1.00 %B 
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Ratios and supplemental data:

          

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

   $ 706      $ 656      $ 899      $ 1,776      $ 1,005   

Ratios to average net assets:

          

Expenses, before reimbursements

     2.55     2.56     1.84     2.38     6.33 %C 

Expenses, net of reimbursements

     0.79     0.79     0.79     0.77     0.79 %C 

Net investment income (loss), before reimbursements

     (0.25 )%      0.59     0.62     (0.16 )%      (3.63 )%C 

Net investment income, net of reimbursements

     1.51     2.37     1.67     1.45     1.91 %C 

Portfolio turnover rate

     63     164     66     24     0 %D 

 

A  Based on net asset value, which does not reflect the sales charge, redemption fee, or contingent deferred sales charge, if applicable. May include adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions.
B Not annualized.
C Annualized.
D Portfolio turnover rate is for the period from June 1 through August 31, 2010, and is not annualized.
E Based on average shares outstanding.

 

 

 

63


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

Y Class     Investor Class  
                       

June 1

to

                           

June 1

to

 
Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,     Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,  
2014     2013     2012     2011     2010     2014     2013     2012     2011     2010  
$ 13.45      $ 12.68      $ 11.58      $ 10.10      $ 10.00      $ 13.46      $ 12.64      $ 11.53      $ 10.08      $ 10.00   
                 
  (0.04     0.44        0.38        0.13        0.02 E      0.34        0.35        0.18        0.09        0.03 E 
  2.34        1.54        0.84        1.51        0.08        1.92        1.59        1.02        1.51        0.05   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  2.30        1.98        1.22        1.64        0.10        2.26        1.94        1.20        1.60        0.08   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                 
  (0.17     (0.35     (0.12     (0.05     —          (0.23     (0.26     (0.09     (0.04     —     
  (2.78     (0.86     —          (0.11     —          (2.78     (0.86     —          (0.11     —     
  —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —     

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  (2.95     (1.21     (0.12     (0.16     —          (3.01     (1.12     (0.09     (0.15     —     

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
$ 12.80      $ 13.45      $ 12.68      $ 11.58      $ 10.10      $ 12.71      $ 13.46      $ 12.64      $ 11.53      $ 10.08   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  19.08     16.60     10.68     16.18     1.00 %B      18.80     16.24     10.47     15.86     0.80 %B 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                 
$ 575      $ 210      $ 285      $ 768      $ 84      $ 818      $ 1,365      $ 2,159      $ 4,160      $ 114   
                 
  2.50     2.58     1.91     2.57     6.00 %C      2.87     2.90     2.25     2.45     6.12 %C 
  0.89     0.89     0.89     0.86     0.89 %C      1.17     1.17     1.17     1.14     0.93 %C 
  (0.05 )%      0.60     0.53     (0.42 )%      (3.24 )%C      (0.48 )%      0.28     0.17     (0.23 )%      (3.86 )%C 
  1.55     2.29     1.54     1.29     1.87 %C      1.22     2.01     1.26     1.08     1.33 %C 
  63%        164     66     24     0 %D      63     164     66     24     0 %D 

 

 

 

64


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Global Equity FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

     A Class     C Class  
                             June 1                          
                             to                          
     Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,     Year Ended August 31,  
     2014     2013     2012     2011     2010     2014     2013     2012     2011  

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 13.47      $ 12.65      $ 11.54      $ 10.08      $ 10.00      $ 13.36      $ 12.52      $ 11.46      $ 10.32   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Income from investment operations:

                  

Net investment income (loss)

     0.15        0.37        0.14        0.03        0.03        (0.03     0.18        0.06        0.02   

Net gains from investments (both realized and unrealized)

     2.11        1.55        1.04        1.56        0.05        2.17        1.63        1.03        1.25   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total income from investment operations

     2.26        1.92        1.18        1.59        0.08        2.14        1.81        1.09        1.27   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions:

                  

Dividends from net investment income

     (0.14     (0.24     (0.07     (0.02     —          (0.01     (0.11     (0.03     (0.02

Distributions from net realized gains

     (2.78     (0.86     —          (0.11     —          (2.78     (0.86     —          (0.11

Return of capital

     —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total distributions

     (2.92     (1.10     (0.07     (0.13     —          (2.79     (0.97     (0.03     (0.13
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 12.81      $ 13.47      $ 12.65      $ 11.54      $ 10.08      $ 12.71      $ 13.36      $ 12.52      $ 11.46   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return B

     18.71     16.08     10.33     15.74     0.80 %B      17.76     15.24     9.50     12.24
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Ratios and supplemental data:

                  

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

   $ 4,410      $ 4,390      $ 9,945      $ 7,369      $ 1      $ 1,015      $ 261      $ 447      $ 437   

Ratios to average net assets:

                  

Expenses, before reimbursements

     3.02     2.93     2.40     2.26     7.17 %C      3.71     3.74     3.18     3.92

Expenses, net of reimbursements

     1.27     1.29     1.29     1.25     1.32 %C      2.02     2.04     2.04     1.96

Net investment income (loss), before reimbursements

     (0.63 )%      0.28     0.13     (0.11 )%      (4.53 )%C      (1.22 )%      (0.55 )%      (0.67 )%      (1.76 )% 

Net investment income, net of reimbursements

     1.12     1.93     1.24     0.90     1.33 %C      0.47     1.16     0.47     0.21

Portfolio turnover rate

     63     164     66     24     0 %D      63     164     66     24

 

A Based on net asset value, which does not reflect the sales charge, redemption fee, or contingent deferred sales charge, if applicable. May include adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions.
B Not annualized.
C Annualized.
D Portfolio turnover rate is for the period from June 1 through August 31, 2010, and is not annualized.
E Based on average shares outstanding.

 

 

 

65


Table of Contents

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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66


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

 

     Institutional Class  
                            

June 1

to

 
     Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,  
     2014     2013     2012     2011     2010  

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 13.66      $ 12.40      $ 11.30      $ 9.63      $ 10.00   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Income from investment operations:

          

Net investment income (loss)

     0.14        0.46        0.27        0.17        0.03   

Net gains (losses) from investments (both realized and unrealized)

     2.12        2.79        1.15        1.66        (0.40
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total income (loss) from investment operations

     2.26        3.25        1.42        1.83        (0.37
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions:

          

Dividends from net investment income

     —          (1.17     (0.10     (0.11     —     

Distributions from net realized gains

     (1.56     (0.82     (0.22     (0.05     —     

Return of capital

     —          —          —          —          —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total distributions

     (1.56     (1.99     (0.32     (0.16     —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 14.36      $ 13.66      $ 12.40      $ 11.30      $ 9.63   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return A

     16.67     29.81     12.78     18.93     (3.70 )%B 
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Ratios and supplemental data:

          

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

   $ 1,606      $ 1,522      $ 923      $ 1,325      $ 959   

Ratios to average net assets:

          

Expenses, before reimbursements

     1.64     2.77     3.18     3.24     18.32 %C 

Expenses, net of reimbursements

     0.99     0.99     0.99     0.99     0.99 %C 

Net investment income (loss), before reimbursements

     0.33     (0.28 )%      (0.71 )%      (1.16 )%      (16.04 )%C 

Net investment income (loss), net of reimbursements

     0.99     1.50     1.48     1.09     1.28 %C 

Portfolio turnover rate

     76     89     103     66     1 %D 

 

A  Based on net asset value, which does not reflect the sales charge, redemption fee, or contingent deferred sales charge, if applicable. May include adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions.
B  Not annualized.
C  Annualized.
D  Portfolio turnover rate is for the period from June 1 through August 31, 2010, and is not annualized.
E  Based on average shares outstanding.

 

 

 

67


Table of Contents

American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

Y Class     Investor Class  
                       

June 1

to

                           

June 1

to

 
Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,     Year Ended August 31,     Aug. 31,  
2014     2013     2012     2011     2010     2014     2013     2012     2011     2010  
$ 13.79      $ 12.46      $ 11.36      $ 9.62      $ 10.00      $ 13.73      $ 12.44      $ 11.31      $ 9.62      $ 10.00   
                 
  0.56        0.37        0.06        0.15        0.03        0.10        0.53        0.17        0.06        0.01 E 
  1.71        2.89        1.37        1.66        (0.41     2.12        2.68        1.22        1.71        (0.39

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  2.27        3.26        1.43        1.81        (0.38     2.22        3.21        1.39        1.77        (0.38
                 
  —          (1.11     (0.11     (0.02     —          —          (1.10     (0.04     (0.03     —     
  (1.56     (0.82     (0.22     (0.05     —          (1.56     (0.82     (0.22     (0.05     —     
  —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —     

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  (1.56     (1.93     (0.33     (0.07     —          (1.56     (1.92     (0.26     (0.08     —     

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
$ 14.50      $ 13.79      $ 12.46      $ 11.36      $ 9.62      $ 14.39      $ 13.73      $ 12.44      $ 11.31      $ 9.62   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  16.59     29.65     12.78     18.81     (3.80 )%B      16.27     29.30     12.45     18.34     (3.80 )%B 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                 
$ 8,168      $ 1,693      $ 1,174      $ 255      $ 1      $ 3,004      $ 3,302      $ 1,670      $ 2,207      $ 24   
                 
  1.65     2.79     3.39     3.08     183.72 %C      1.86     3.07     3.60     3.18     55.64 %C 
  1.09     1.09     1.09     1.09     1.09 %C      1.37     1.37     1.37     1.36     1.36 %C 
  0.19     (0.23 )%      (0.81 )%      (1.25 )%      (181.45 )%C      0.15     (0.60 )%      (1.14 )%      (1.21 )%      (53.84 )%C 
  0.75     1.47     1.49     0.75     1.18 %C      0.64     1.11     1.08     0.61     0.43 %C 
  76     89     103     66     1 %D      76     89     103     66     1 %D 

 

 

 

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American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

     A Class     C Class  
                             June 1                          
     Year Ended August 31,     to     Year Ended August 31,  
                             Aug. 31,                          
     2014     2013     2012     2011     2010     2014     2013     2012     2011  

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 13.75      $ 12.46      $ 11.32      $ 9.61      $ 10.00      $ 13.57      $ 12.28      $ 11.24      $ 9.94   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Income from investment operations:

                  

Net investment income (loss)

     0.48        0.18        0.13        0.02        0.02        0.33        0.24        0.03        (0.02

Net gains (losses) from investments (both realized and unrealized)

     1.73        3.02        1.24        1.76        (0.41     1.74        2.84        1.23        1.38   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total income (loss) from investment operations

     2.21        3.20        1.37        1.78        (0.39     2.07        3.08        1.26        1.36   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions:

                  

Dividends from net investment income

     —          (1.09     (0.01     (0.02     —          —          (0.97     —          (0.01

Distributions from net realized gains

     (1.56     (0.82     (0.22     (0.05     —          (1.56     (0.82     (0.22     (0.05

Return of capital

     —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total distributions

     (1.56     (1.91     (0.23     (0.07     —          (1.56     (1.79     (0.22     (0.06
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 14.40      $ 13.75      $ 12.46      $ 11.32      $ 9.61      $ 14.08      $ 13.57      $ 12.28      $ 11.24   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return B

     16.17     29.07     12.28     18.48     (3.90 )%B      15.29     28.20     11.35     13.64
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Ratios and supplemental data:

                  

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

   $ 4,894      $ 2,081      $ 2,232      $ 2,451      $ 1      $ 1,469      $ 695      $ 507      $ 410   

Ratios to average net assets:

                  

Expenses, before reimbursements

     2.05     3.22     3.71     3.20     186.19 %C      2.81     3.95     4.48     4.35

Expenses, net of reimbursements

     1.47     1.49     1.49     1.47     1.49 %C      2.22     2.24     2.24     2.22

Net investment income (loss), before reimbursements

     (0.14 )%      (0.62 )%      (1.26 )%      (1.29 )%      (183.90 )%C      (0.89 )%      (1.38 )%      (2.02 )%      (2.44 )% 

Net investment income (loss), net of reimbursements

     0.45     1.11     0.97     0.43     0.80 %C      (0.30 )%      0.33     0.23     (0.31 )% 

Portfolio turnover rate

     76     89     103     66     1 %D      76     89     103     66

 

A Based on net asset value, which does not reflect the sales charge, redemption fee, or contingent deferred sales charge, if applicable. May include adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions.
B Not annualized.
C Annualized.
D Portfolio turnover rate is for the period from June 1 through August 31, 2010, and is not annualized.
E Based on average shares outstanding.

 

 

 

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American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

 

     Institutional Class     Y Class  
                       Feb. 14                       Feb. 14  
     Year Ended August 31,     to     Year Ended August 31,     to  
                       Aug. 31,                       Aug. 31,  
     2014     2013     2012     2011     2014     2013     2012     2011  

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 10.16      $ 9.93      $ 9.42      $ 10.00      $ 10.14      $ 9.92      $ 9.41      $ 10.00   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Income from investment operations:

                

Net investment income

     0.64        0.75        0.77        0.37        0.64        0.73        0.76        0.36   

Net gains (losses) from investments (both realized and unrealized)

     0.47        0.26        0.51        (0.58     0.46        0.25        0.51        (0.59
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total income (loss) from investment operations

     1.11        1.01        1.28        (0.21     1.10        0.98        1.27        (0.23
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions:

                

Dividends from net investment income

     (0.69     (0.75     (0.77     (0.37     (0.67     (0.73     (0.76     (0.36

Distributions from net realized gains

     (0.23     (0.03     —          —          (0.23     (0.03     —          —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total distributions

     (0.92     (0.78     (0.77     (0.37     (0.90     (0.76     (0.76     (0.36
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Redemption fees added to beneficial interests A

     —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —     
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 10.35      $ 10.16      $ 9.93      $ 9.42      $ 10.34      $ 10.14      $ 9.92      $ 9.41   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return B

     11.34     10.29     14.19     (2.24 )%C      11.33     10.08     14.09     (2.44 )%C 
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Ratios and supplemental data:

                

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

   $ 75,389      $ 45,471      $ 62,790      $ 9,839      $ 247,179      $ 87,639      $ 19,129      $ 378   

Ratios to average net assets:

                

Expenses, before reimbursements or recoupments

     0.86     0.93     1.06     2.62 %D      0.94     0.99     1.09     5.04 %D 

Expenses, net of reimbursements or recoupments

     0.84     0.84     0.84     0.82 %D      0.94     0.93     0.94     0.92 %D 

Net investment income, before reimbursements or recoupments

     5.88     7.11     7.90     5.03 %D      5.77     6.77     7.92     2.87 %D 

Net investment income, net of reimbursements or recoupments

     5.90     7.20     8.12     6.83 %D      5.77     6.82     8.07     6.99 %D 

Portfolio turnover rate

     38     65     43     20 %E      38     65     43     20 %E 

 

A Amounts represent less than $0.01 per share.
B Based on net asset value, which does not reflect the sales charge, redemption fee, or contingent deferred sales charge, if applicable. May include adjustments in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and as such, the net asset value for reporting purposes and the returns based upon those net asset values may differ from the net asset value and returns for shareholder transactions.
C Not annualized.
D Annualized.
E Portfolio turnover rate is for the period from February 14, 2011, the inception date, through August 31, 2011, and is not annualized.

 

 

 

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American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities FundSM

Financial Highlights

(For a share outstanding throughout the period)

 

 

Investor Class     A Class     C Class  
                  Feb. 14                       Feb. 14                       Feb. 14  
Year Ended August 31,     to     Year Ended August 31,     to     Year Ended August 31,     to  
                  Aug. 31,                       Aug. 31,                       Aug. 31,  
2014     2013     2012     2011     2014     2013     2012     2011     2014     2013     2012     2011  
$ 10.12      $ 9.90      $ 9.38      $ 10.00      $ 10.15      $ 9.92      $ 9.41      $ 10.00      $ 10.16      $ 9.94      $ 9.42      $ 10.00   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                     
  0.56        0.71        0.73        0.35        0.57        0.69        0.72        0.34        0.49        0.62        0.65        0.30   
  0.52        0.25        0.52        (0.62     0.49        0.26        0.51        (0.59     0.50        0.25        0.52        (0.58

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  1.08        0.96        1.25        (0.27     1.06        0.95        1.23        (0.25     0.99        0.87        1.17        (0.28

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                     
  (0.65     (0.71     (0.73     (0.35     (0.62     (0.69     (0.72     (0.34     (0.52     (0.62     (0.65     (0.30
  (0.23     (0.03     —          —          (0.23     (0.03     —          —          (0.23     (0.03     —          —     

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  (0.88     (0.74     (0.73     (0.35     (0.85     (0.72     (0.72     (0.34     (0.75     (0.65     (0.65     (0.30

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —          —     

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
$ 10.32      $ 10.12      $ 9.90      $ 9.38      $ 10.36      $ 10.15      $ 9.92      $ 9.41      $ 10.40      $ 10.16      $ 9.94      $ 9.42   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
  11.08     9.84     13.92     (2.85 )%C      10.87     9.74     13.63     (2.61 )%C      10.12     8.81     12.90     (2.88 )%C 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 
                     
$ 199,534      $ 248,052      $ 150,396      $ 4,894      $ 93,061      $ 76,146      $ 42,832      $ 4,932      $ 76,536      $ 60,830      $ 26,679      $ 1,239   
                     
  1.11     1.15     1.23     2.78 %D      1.33     1.41     1.53     2.92 %D      2.08     2.15     2.26     4.03 %D 
  1.11     1.17     1.19     1.19 %D      1.32     1.35     1.34     1.31 %D      2.07     2.09     2.09     2.07 %D 
  5.68     6.81     7.74     5.14 %D      5.44     6.53     7.44     4.98 %D      4.68     5.76     6.70     3.98 %D 
  5.68     6.79     7.78     6.73 %D      5.45     6.60     7.62     6.60 %D      4.69     5.82     6.87     5.94 %D 
  38     65     43     20 %E      38     65     43     20 %E      38     65     43     20 %E 

 

 

 

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American Beacon FundsSM

Privacy Policy and Federal Tax Information

August 31, 2014 (Unaudited)

 

 

Privacy Policy

The American Beacon Funds recognize and respect the privacy of our shareholders. We are providing this notice to you so you will understand how shareholder information may be collected and used.

We may collect nonpublic personal information about you from one or more of the following sources:

 

    information we receive from you on applications or other forms;

 

    information about your transactions with us or our service providers; and

 

    information we receive from third parties.

We do not disclose any nonpublic personal information about our customers or former customers to anyone, except as permitted by law.

We restrict access to your nonpublic personal information to those employees or service providers who need to know that information to provide products or services to you. To ensure the confidentiality of your nonpublic personal information, we maintain safeguards that comply with federal standards.

Federal Tax Information

Certain tax information regarding the Funds is required to be provided to shareholders based upon the Funds’ income and distributions for the taxable year ended August 31, 2014. The information and distributions reported herein may differ from information and distributions taxable to the shareholders for the calendar year ended December 31, 2014.

The Funds designated the following items with regard to distributions paid during the fiscal year ended August 31, 2014. All designations are based on financial information available as of this annual report and, accordingly, are subject to change. For each item, it is the intention of the Funds to designate the maximum amount permitted under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and the regulations there under.

 

Corporate Dividends-Received Deduction:   

The London Company Income Equity

     83.94

Zebra Global Equity

     51.23

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     72.57

SiM High Yield Opportunities

     3.99
Qualified Dividend Income:   

The London Company Income Equity

     100.00

Zebra Global Equity

     100.00

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     100.00

SiM High Yield Opportunities

     2.78
Long-Term Capital Gain Distributions:   

The London Company Income Equity

   $ 411,338   

Zebra Global Equity

     685,769   

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     606,276   

SiM High Yield Opportunities

     7,617,620   
Short-Term Capital Gain Distributions:   

The London Company Income Equity

   $ 628,140   

Zebra Global Equity

     611,243   

Zebra Small Cap Equity

     883,594   

SiM High Yield Opportunities

     5,872,346   

Shareholders will receive notification in January 2015 of the applicable tax information necessary to prepare their 2014 income tax returns.

 

 

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Disclosure Regarding the Board of Trustees’ Approval of the Management Agreement and Investment Advisory Agreements of the Funds (Unaudited)

 

 

At in-person meetings held on May 15, 2014 and June 5, 2014 (collectively, the “Meetings”), the Board of Trustees (“Board”) considered and then, at its June 5 meeting, approved: (1) the renewal of the Management Agreement between American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (“Manager”) and the American Beacon Funds (“Beacon Trust”) and American Beacon Select Funds (“Select Trust”) on behalf of each of their series that had been operational for at least one year (collectively, the “Funds”); and (2) the renewal of the investment advisory agreements (each an “Investment Advisory Agreement”) among the Manager, each subadvisor and, as applicable, the Beacon Trust, other than the Investment Advisory Agreements with subadvisors with respect to which the Board approved a new Investment Advisory Agreement within the past year (each a “subadvisor”). The Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreements are collectively referred to herein as the “Agreements.” In preparation for the Board to consider the renewal of these Agreements, the Board undertook steps to gather and consider information furnished by the Manager, the subadvisors, Lipper, Inc. (“Lipper”), Morningstar, Inc. (“Morningstar”), Bobroff Consulting, Inc. and Callan Associates, Inc. (“Callan”). The Board, with the assistance of independent legal counsel, requested and received certain relevant information from the Manager and each subadvisor.

In advance of the Meetings, the Board’s Investment Committee coordinated the production of information from Lipper and Morningstar regarding the performance, fees and expenses of the Funds as well as information from the Manager and the subadvisors. At the Meetings, the Board considered the information provided. Further, the Board took into consideration information furnished for the Board’s review and consideration throughout the year at regular meetings of the Board and its committees, as well as information specifically prepared in connection with the renewal process.

In connection with the Board’s consideration of the Management Agreement and each Investment Advisory Agreement, the Trustees received and evaluated such information as they deemed necessary. The information requested on behalf of the Board included, among other information, the following materials. References herein to the “firm” refer to the Manager and/or each applicable subadvisor.

 

    comparisons of the performance of an appropriate share class of each Fund to comparable investment companies and appropriate benchmark indices, including peer group averages and performance analyses provided by Lipper and Morningstar, and to the performance of any similar accounts managed by the firm;

 

    for Funds having multiple firms managing assets, information regarding the performance of the individual firms with respect to their allocated portions of a Fund’s portfolio, and the performance of certain relevant benchmarks and other similar accounts managed by the firm;

 

    comparisons of each Fund’s management and subadvisory fee rates and expense ratio with those of comparable mutual funds, including peer group averages and fee and expense analyses provided by Lipper and Morningstar, and the advisory fee rates charged to other clients for which similar services are provided;

 

    a description of any applicable fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements in place for each Fund during the past year, and any proposed changes to the expense caps;

 

    the Manager’s profitability with respect to the services that it provided to each Fund;

 

    any actual or anticipated economies of scale in relation to the services the firm provides or will provide to each Fund and whether the current fee rates charged or to be charged to each Fund reflect these economies of scale for the benefit of the Fund’s investors;

 

    an evaluation of any other benefits to the firm or Funds as a result of their relationship, if any;

 

    information regarding the securities lending, cash management, administrative and accounting-related services that the Manager provides to certain Funds and the fees that the Manager receives for such services, including Callan’s review of the Funds’ securities lending program; and

 

    information regarding a firm’s financial condition, the personnel who are or will be assigned primary responsibility for managing the Funds, staffing levels, portfolio managers’ compensation, disaster recovery plans, insurance coverage, material pending litigation, code of ethics, compliance matters, trading activities, and actual or potential conflicts of interest that the firm experiences, or anticipates that it will experience, in providing services to the Funds.

The Board considered that the Manager provides management and administrative services to the Funds pursuant to separate agreements. The Board noted, in this regard, that many mutual funds have a single contract governing both types of services, and observed that the actual management fee rates provided by Lipper for peer group funds reflect the combined advisory and administrative expenses, reduced by any fee waivers and/or reimbursements.

Certain firms may not have been able to, or opted not to, provide information in response to certain information requests, in which case the Board conducted its evaluation of those firms based on information that was provided. For each Fund with more than one class of shares, the class of shares used for comparative performance purposes was the share class with the lowest expenses available for purchase by the general public, which, in most cases, was the Institutional Class. For the American Beacon Holland Large Cap Growth Fund, the comparison was made using the Investor Class of shares due to the short period of time that its Institutional Class of shares has been in existence. The Board also considered that the use of Institutional Class performance generally facilitates a meaningful comparison for expense and performance purposes.

Provided below is an overview of certain factors the Board considered in connection with its renewal and approval of the Management Agreement and Investment Advisory Agreements. The Board did not identify any particular information that was most relevant to its consideration to renew or approve each Agreement, and each Trustee may have afforded different weight to the various factors. Legal counsel to the independent Trustees provided the Board with a memorandum regarding its responsibilities pertaining to the renewal and approval of each Agreement. The memorandum explained the regulatory requirements surrounding the Trustees’ process for evaluating investment advisors and the terms of the contracts. Based on its evaluation, the Board unanimously concluded that the terms of

 

 

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each Agreement were reasonable and fair and that the renewal and approval of each Agreement was in the best interests of the Funds and their shareholders.

Considerations With Respect to the Renewal of the Management Agreement and Each Investment Advisory Agreement

In determining whether to renew the Management Agreement and each Investment Advisory Agreement on behalf of the Funds, the Trustees considered the best interests of each Fund separately. While the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreements for all of the Funds were considered at the Meetings, the Board considered each Fund’s investment management and subadvisory relationships separately.

In each instance, the Board considered, among other things, the following factors: (1) the nature, extent and quality of the services provided; (2) the investment performance of a Fund and, as applicable, each subadvisor for a Fund; (3) the costs incurred by the Manager in rendering services to the Funds and its resulting profits or losses; (4) comparisons of services and fee rates with contracts entered into by the Manager or a subadvisor or their affiliates with other clients (such as pension funds and other institutional clients); (5) the extent to which economies of scale have been taken into account in setting each fee rate schedule; (6) whether fee rate levels reflect these economies of scale for the benefit of Fund investors; and (7) any other benefits derived or anticipated to be derived by the Manager or a subadvisor from their relationship with a Fund. The Trustees posed questions to various management personnel of the Manager regarding certain key aspects of the materials submitted in support of the renewal.

Nature, Extent and Quality of Services. With respect to the renewal of the Management Agreement, the Board considered, among other factors: each Fund’s long-term performance and the background and experience of key investment personnel at the Manager; the cost structure of the Funds; the Manager’s culture of compliance and support for compliance operations that reduce risks to the Funds; the Manager’s commitment to enhance the Funds’ product line and increase assets in the Funds; the Manager’s quality of services; the Manager’s active role in monitoring and, as appropriate, recommending additional or replacement subadvisors; the Manager’s commitment to training employees; and the Manager’s efforts to retain key employees and maintain staffing levels.

With respect to the renewal of each Investment Advisory Agreement, the Trustees considered the level of staffing, quality, background and experience of each subadvisor’s investment personnel responsible for managing the Funds, the size of the subadvisor and the subadvisor’s ability to continue to attract and retain qualified investment personnel. The Board also considered the adequacy of the resources committed to the Funds by each subadvisor, and whether those resources were commensurate with the needs of the Funds and are sufficient to sustain appropriate levels of performance and compliance needs. In this regard, the Board considered the financial stability of each subadvisor. The Board also considered the subadvisors’ representations regarding their compliance programs and codes of ethics. Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the nature, extent and quality of the management and advisory services provided by the Manager and each subadvisor were appropriate for each Fund and, thus, determined to renew the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreement for each Fund.

Investment Performance. The Board evaluated the comparative information provided by Lipper and the Manager regarding each Fund’s investment performance relative to its Lipper performance universe, Lipper performance group, and/or benchmark index(es) as well as the Fund’s Morningstar rating. The Board considered the information provided by Lipper regarding its independent peer selection methodology to select all performance groups and universes. The Board also considered that the performance groups and universes selected by Lipper may not provide appropriate comparisons for certain Funds. In addition, the Board considered the performance reports and discussions with management at Board and Committee meetings throughout the year. The Board also considered in each instance the Manager’s recommendation to continue to retain each subadvisor. A discussion regarding the Board’s considerations with respect to each Fund’s performance appears below under “Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to Each Fund.”

Costs of the Services Provided to the Funds and the Profits Realized by the Manager from its Relationship with the Funds. In analyzing the cost of services and profitability of the Manager, the Board considered the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by the Manager. The profits or losses were noted at both an aggregate level for all Funds and at an individual Fund level, with some Funds being profitable for the Manager and with the Manager sustaining losses with respect to other Funds. Although the Board noted that, in certain cases, the fee rates paid by other clients of the Manager are lower than the fee rates paid by the Funds, the Manager represented that the difference reflects the greater level of responsibility and regulatory requirements associated with managing the Funds.

The Board also noted that the Manager proposed to continue the expense waivers and reimbursements for certain Funds and share classes that were in place during the last fiscal year. The Board further considered that, with respect to each Fund, the Management Agreement provides for the Manager to receive a management fee comprised of an annualized fee that is retained by the Manager and, in some instances, the amount payable by the Manager to a subadvisor. The Board also considered that the Manager receives service and administrative fees to compensate the Manager for providing administrative services to the Funds and to compensate third-party administrators and broker-dealers for services to Fund shareholders. In addition, the Board considered that the Manager receives management fees for overseeing the securities lending program on behalf of certain Funds. In considering the management fees for overseeing the securities lending program, the Board reviewed the analysis of the securities lending program prepared by Callan. The Board also noted that certain share classes of the Funds maintain higher expense ratios in order to compensate third-party distributors.

In analyzing the fee rates charged by each subadvisor in connection with its investment advisory services to the Fund, the Board considered that, in many cases, the Manager has negotiated the lowest fee rate a subadvisor charges for any comparable client accounts. The Board did not request profitability data from the subadvisors because the Board did not view this data as imperative to its deliberations given the arm’s-length nature of the relationship between the Manager and the subadvisors with respect to the negotiation of

 

 

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subadvisory fee rates. In addition, the Board noted that subadvisors may not account for their profits on an account-by-account basis and those that do likely employ different methodologies in connection with these calculations.

Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the profitability levels of the Manager were reasonable in light of the services performed by the Manager. A discussion regarding the Board’s considerations with respect to each Fund’s fee rates is set forth below under “Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to Each Fund.”

Economies of Scale. In considering the reasonableness of the management and investment advisory fees rates, the Board considered whether economies of scale will be realized as the Funds grow and whether fee rate levels reflect these economies of scale for the benefit of Fund shareholders. In this regard, the Board considered that the Manager has negotiated breakpoints in many subadvisory fee rates. The Board also noted that, for purposes of determining the fee rates chargeable to the Funds, certain subadvisors have agreed to take into account assets of American Airlines Group and its pension plans that are managed by the subadvisors. Thus, the Funds are able to receive lower effective fee rates.

In addition, the Board noted the Manager’s representation that many of the Funds benefit from economies of scale because comparably low fee rate levels are reflected in the current fee rates the Manager charges. The Board further noted the Manager’s representation that many of the Funds benefit from these comparably low fee rate levels despite not having yet reached an asset size at which economies of scale would traditionally be considered to exist, and the Manager’s belief that breakpoints are not appropriate at this time. Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the Manager and subadvisor fee rate schedules for each Fund provide for a reasonable sharing of benefits from any economies of scale with the Funds.

Benefits Derived from the Relationship with the Funds. The Board considered the “fall-out” or ancillary benefits that accrue to the Manager and/or the subadvisors as a result of the advisory relationships with the Funds, including greater exposure in the marketplace with respect to the Manager’s or subadvisor’s investment process and expanding the level of assets under management by the Manager and the subadvisors. In addition, the Board noted that certain subadvisors benefit from soft dollar arrangements for third party and proprietary research.

In addition, the Manager noted that the Funds also derive benefits from their association with the Manager. Specifically, the Board noted the Manager’s representation that it provides services to most Funds at a lower than industry average cost. The Board considered that certain subadvisors reimburse the Manager for certain costs relating to distribution activities for the Funds, as well as representations by all such subadvisors that they would not reduce their fee rates in lieu of providing such reimbursements. Based on the foregoing information, the Board concluded that the potential benefits accruing to the Manager and the subadvisors by virtue of their relationships with the Funds appear to be fair and reasonable.

Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to Each Fund

The performance comparisons below were made versus each Fund’s Lipper performance universe and Lipper performance group, with the 1st Quintile representing the top twenty percent of the universe or group based on performance and the 5th Quintile representing the bottom twenty percent of the universe or group based on performance. References below to each Fund’s Lipper performance group and Lipper performance universe are to the respective group or universe of comparable mutual funds included in the analysis provided by Lipper. A Lipper performance group consists of the Fund and a representative sample of funds with similar investment classifications and objectives as the Fund, as selected by Lipper. A Lipper performance universe is an expansion of the performance group, providing a broader view of performance across the Fund’s investment classification/objective and allowing for a more extensive comparison. In reviewing the performance, the Trustees viewed longer-term performance over a full market cycle, typically five years or longer, as the most important consideration, because relative performance over shorter periods may be significantly impacted by market or economic events that do not reflect manager skill.

The expense comparisons below were made versus each Fund’s Lipper expense universe and Lipper expense group, with the 1st Quintile representing the top twenty percent of the universe or group based on lowest total expense and the 5th Quintile representing the bottom twenty percent of the universe or group based on highest total expense. References below to each Fund’s expense group and expense universe are to the respective group or universe of comparable mutual funds included in the analysis by Lipper. A Lipper expense group consists of the Fund and a representative sample of funds with similar operating structures, as selected by Lipper. A Lipper expense universe includes all funds in the investment classification/objective with a similar load type to the share class of the Fund included in the Lipper comparative information and provides a broader view of expenses across the Fund’s investment classification/objective. For all Funds, other than for the American Beacon Money Market Select Fund and American Beacon U.S. Government Money Market Select Fund for which information was not available, the Trustees also considered a Fund’s Morningstar fee level category. In reviewing expenses, the Trustees considered the positive impact of fee waivers where applicable and the Manager’s agreement to continue the fee waivers. In addition, information regarding the use of soft dollars was requested from the Manager and all subadvisors and was considered by the Trustees.

Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund

In considering the renewal of the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreement with The London Company of Virginia, LLC (“London Company”) for the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund, the Trustees considered the following additional factors:

Lipper Total Expense Analysis and Morningstar Fee Level Ranking

 

 

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Compared to Lipper Expense Universe    2nd Quintile
Compared to Lipper Expense Group    2nd Quintile
Morningstar Fee Level Ranking - Institutional Class    Average Expense Ratio

Lipper Fund Performance Analysis (one-year period ended March 31, 2014)

 

Compared to Lipper Performance Universe
   4th Quintile
Compared to Lipper Performance Group    5th Quintile

(1) Information provided by London Company that, for fee rate comparison purposes, it does not manage other accounts in the same strategy as the subadvisor manages the Fund; and (2) the Manager’s recommendation to continue to retain the subadvisor based upon, among other factors, the relatively brief period that this Fund has been in operation.

Based on these and other considerations, the Trustees: (1) concluded that the fees paid to the Manager and subadvisor under the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements are fair and reasonable; (2) determined that the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund and its shareholders would benefit from the Manager’s and subadvisor’s continued management of the Fund; and (3) approved the renewal of the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements with respect to the American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund.

Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to the American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund

In considering the renewal of the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreement with Zebra Capital Management, LLC (“Zebra”) for the American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund, the Trustees considered the following additional factors:

Lipper Total Expense Analysis and Morningstar Fee Level Ranking

 

Compared to Lipper Expense Universe    1st Quintile
Compared to Lipper Expense Group
   1st Quintile
Morningstar Fee Level Ranking - Institutional Class    Low Expense Ratio

Lipper Fund Performance Analysis (three-year period ended March 31, 2014)

 

Compared to Lipper Performance Universe
   2nd Quintile
Compared to Lipper Performance Group    Not Available

(1) The Manager’s explanation that Zebra utilizes a unique, proprietary investment process only available in global equities through the Fund; (2) representations by Zebra that it does not manage accounts with comparable objectives and policies to the Fund; and (3) the Manager’s recommendation to continue to retain the subadvisor.

Based on these and other considerations, the Trustees: (1) concluded that the fees paid to the Manager and the subadvisor under the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements are fair and reasonable; (2) determined that the American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund and its shareholders would benefit from the Manager’s and subadvisor’s continued management of the Fund; and (3) approved the renewal of the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements with respect to the American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund.

Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to the American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund

In considering the renewal of the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreement with Zebra for the American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund, the Trustees considered the following additional factors:

Lipper Total Expense Analysis and Morningstar Fee Level Ranking

 

Compared to Lipper Expense Universe    2nd Quintile
Compared to Lipper Expense Group
   1st Quintile
Morningstar Fee Level Ranking - Institutional Class    Below Average Expense Ratio

Lipper Fund Performance Analysis (three-year period ended March 31, 2014)

 

Compared to Lipper Performance Universe    2nd Quintile
Compared to Lipper Performance Group    Not Available

(1) The Manager’s explanation that Zebra utilizes a unique, proprietary investment process only available in small cap equities through the Fund; (2) representations by Zebra that it does not manage accounts with comparable objectives and policies to the Fund; (3) the Manager’s recommendation to continue to retain the subadvisor.

Based on these and other considerations, the Trustees: (1) concluded that the fees paid to the Manager and the subadvisor under the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements are fair and reasonable; (2) determined that the American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund and its shareholders would benefit from the Manager’s and subadvisor’s continued management of the Fund; and (3) approved the renewal of the Management and Investment Advisory Agreement with respect to the American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund.

 

 

 

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Additional Considerations and Conclusions with Respect to the American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund

In considering the renewal of the Management Agreement and the Investment Advisory Agreement with Strategic Income Management, LLC (“SiM”) for the American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund, the Trustees considered the following additional factors:

Lipper Total Expense Analysis and Morningstar Fee Level Ranking

 

Compared to Lipper Expense Universe    3rd Quintile
Compared to Lipper Expense Group    4th Quintile
Morningstar Fee Level Ranking - Institutional Class    Above Average Expense Ratio

Lipper Fund Performance Analysis(three-year period ended March 31, 2014)

 

Compared to Lipper Performance Universe    1st Quintile
Compared to Lipper Performance Group    1st Quintile

(1) Information provided by SiM regarding fee rates charged for managing accounts in the same strategy as the subadvisor manages the Fund; and (2) the Manager’s recommendation to continue to retain the subadvisor.

Based on these and other considerations, the Trustees: (1) concluded that the fees paid to the Manager and subadvisor under the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements are fair and reasonable; (2) determined that the American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund and its shareholders would benefit from the Manager’s and subadvisor’s continued management of the Fund; and (3) approved the renewal of the Management and Investment Advisory Agreements with respect to the American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund.

 

 

 

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Trustees and Officers of the American Beacon FundsSM

(Unaudited)

 

 

The Trustees and officers of the American Beacon Funds (the “Trust”) are listed below, together with their principal occupations during the past five years. Unless otherwise indicated, the address of each person listed below is 4151 Amon Carter Boulevard, MD 2450, Fort Worth, Texas 76155. Each Trustee oversees thirty-two funds in the fund complex that includes the Trust and the American Beacon Select Funds. The Trust’s Statement of Additional Information contains additional information about the Trustees and is available without charge by calling 1-800-658-5811.

 

Name, Age and Address

  

Position, Term of

Office and Length

of Time Served

with the Trust

  

Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years

and Current Directorships

INTERESTED TRUSTEES

   Term   
  

Lifetime of Trust

until removal,

resignation or

retirement*

  

Gerard J. Arpey** (56)

   Trustee since 2012    Partner, Emerald Creek Group (private equity firm) (2011-Present); Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, AMR Corp. and American Airlines; Inc. (2003-2011); Director, S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. (privately held company) (2008-present); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2012-Present).

Alan D. Feld** (77)

   Trustee since 1996    Sole Shareholder of a professional corporation which is a Partner in the law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, LLP (law firm) (1960-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (1996-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (1999-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (1996-2012).
   Term   

NON-INTERESTED TRUSTEES

  

Lifetime of Trust

until removal,

resignation or

retirement*

  

W. Humphrey Bogart (70)

   Trustee since 2004    Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2004-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2004-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2004-2012).

Brenda A. Cline (53)

   Trustee since 2004    Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary, Kimbell Art Foundation (1993-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2004-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2004-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2004-2012).

Eugene J. Duffy (60)

   Trustee since 2008    Principal and Executive Vice President, Paradigm Asset Management (1994-Present); Director, Sunrise Bank of Atlanta (2008-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2008-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2008-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2008-2012).

Thomas M. Dunning (71)

   Trustee since 2008    Chairman Emeritus (2008-Present) and Chairman (1998-2008), Lockton Dunning Benefits (consulting firm in employee benefits); Lead Director, Oncor Electric Delivery Company LLC (2007-Present); Board Member, BancTec (2010-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2008-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2008-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2008-2012).

Richard A. Massman (71)

  

Trustee since 2004

Chairman since 2008

   Consultant and General Counsel Emeritus (2009-Present) and Senior Vice President and General Counsel (1994-2009), Hunt Consolidated, Inc. (holding company engaged in oil and gas exploration and production, refining, real estate, farming, ranching and venture capital activities); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2004-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2004-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2004-2012).

Barbara J. McKenna, CFA (51)

   Trustee since 2012    Managing Principal, Longfellow Investment Management Company (2005-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2012-Present).

R. Gerald Turner (68)

225 Perkins Admin. Bldg.

Southern Methodist Univ.

Dallas, Texas75275

   Trustee since 2001    President, Southern Methodist University (1995-Present); Director, J.C. Penney Company, Inc. (1996-Present); Director, Kronus Worldwide Inc. (chemical manufacturing) (2003-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Mileage Funds (2001-2012); Trustee, American Beacon Select Funds (2001-Present); Trustee, American Beacon Master Trust (2001-2012).

 

 

 

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Trustees and Officers of the American Beacon Funds

(Unaudited)

 

 

Name, Age and Address

  

Position, Term of

Office and Length

of Time Served

with the Trust

  

Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years

and Current Directorships

OFFICERS

   Term   
   One Year   

Gene L. Needles, Jr. (59)

  

President since 2009

Executive Vice President

since 2009

   President, CEO and Director (2009-Present), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; President, CEO and Director (2009-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; President and CEO (2009-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.; President (2009-Present), American Beacon Select Funds; President (2009-2012), American Beacon Mileage Funds; President (2008-2009), Touchstone Investments; President (2003-2007), CEO (2004-2007), AIM Distributors.

Rosemary K. Behan (55)

  

VP, Secretary and

Chief Legal

Officer since 2006

   General Counsel, Vice President, Legal and Compliance, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (2006-Present); Secretary (2008-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; Secretary (2008-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.

Brian E. Brett (54)

   VP since 2004    Vice President, Director of Sales, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (2004-Present).

Wyatt Crumpler (48)

   VP since 2007    Chief Investment Officer (2012-Present), Vice President, Asset Management (2009-2012), and Vice President, Trust Investments (2007-2009), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.

Erica Duncan (43)

   VP Since 2011    Vice President, Marketing and Client Services (2011-Present), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; Supervisor, Brand Marketing (2010-2011), Invesco; Supervisor, Marketing Communications (2009-2010) and Senior Financial Writer (2004-2009), Invesco AIM.

Michael W. Fields (60)

   VP since 1989    Chief Fixed Income Officer (2011-Present) and Vice President, Fixed Income Investments, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (1988-2011); Director, American Beacon Global Funds SPC (2002-2011); Director, American Beacon Global Funds plc (2007-2009).

Melinda G. Heika (53)

  

Treasurer since

2010

   Treasurer (2010-Present), and Controller (2005-2009), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; Treasurer (2010-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; Treasurer (2010-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.

Terri L. McKinney (50)

   VP since 2010    Vice President, Enterprise Services (2009-Present) and Managing Director (2003-2009), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.

Jeffrey K. Ringdahl (39)

   VP since 2010    Chief Operating Officer, American Beacon Advisors, Inc. (2010-Present); Vice President, Product Management, Touchstone Advisors, Inc. (2007-2010); Senior Director, Business Integration, Fidelity Investments (2005-2007).

Samuel J. Silver (51)

   VP Since 2011    Vice President, Fixed Income Investments (2011-Present) and Senior Portfolio Manager, Fixed Income Investments (1999-2011), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.

Christina E. Sears (42)

  

Chief Compliance

Officer since 2004

and Asst. Secretary since 1999

   Chief Compliance Officer (2004-Present) and Senior Compliance Analyst (1998-2004), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.

Sonia L. Bates (57)

   Asst. Treasurer since 2011    Director, Tax and Financial Reporting (2011-Present) and Manager, Tax and Financial Reporting (2005-2010), American Beacon Advisors, Inc.; Asst. Treasurer (2011-Present), Lighthouse Holdings, Inc.; Asst. Treasurer (2011-Present), Lighthouse Holdings Parent, Inc.

 

* The Board has adopted a retirement plan that requires Trustees to retire no later than the last day of the calendar year in which they reach the age of 72, provided, however, that the board may determine to grant one or more annual exemptions to this requirement.
** Mr. Arpey is deemed to be an “interested person” of the Trust, as defined by the 1940 Act. Mr. Arpey previously served as CEO of AMR Corp., which has a material relationship with the Manager.
*** Mr. Feld is deemed to be an “interested person” of the Trust, as defined by the 1940 Act. Mr. Feld’s law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld LLP has provided legal services within the past two years to the Manager and one or more of the Trust’s sub-advisors.

 

 

 

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LOGO

 

 

Delivery of Documents

eDelivery is NOW AVAILABLE – Stop traditional mail delivery and receive your

shareholder reports and summary prospectus on-line. Sign up at

www.americanbeaconfunds.com

If you invest in the Fund through a financial institution, you may be able to receive the Fund’s regulatory mailings, such as the Prospectus, Annual Report and Semi-Annual Report, by e-mail. If you are interested in this option, please go to www.icsdelivery.com and search for your financial institution’s name or contact your financial institution directly.

To obtain more information about the Fund:

 

    
LOGO    LOGO

By E-mail:

american_beacon.funds@ambeacon.com

  

On the Internet:

Visit our website at www.americanbeaconfunds.com

      
  
LOGO    LOGO

By Telephone:

Institutional, Y, and InvestorClasses

Call (800) 658-5811

  

By Mail:

American Beacon Funds

P.O. Box 219643

Kansas City, MO64121-9643

      
  
 

Availability of Quarterly Portfolio Schedules

 

In addition to the Schedule of Investments provided in each semi-annual and annual report, the Fund files a complete schedule of its portfolio holdings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on Form N-Q as of the first and third fiscal quarters. The Fund’s Forms N-Q are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Section, 100 F Street, NE, Washington, D.C. 20549-1520. Information regarding the operation of the SEC’s Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling (202) 551-8090. A complete schedule of each Fund’s portfolio holdings is also made available on the Funds’ website at www.americanbeaconfunds.com.

  

Availability of Proxy Voting Policy and Records

 

A description of the policies and procedures the Fund uses to determine how to vote proxies relating to portfolio securities is available in the Fund’s Statement of Additional Information, which is available free of charge on the Fund’s website at www.americanbeaconfunds.com and by calling 1-800-967-9009 or by accessing the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Fund’s proxy voting record for the most recent year ended June 30 is filed annually with the SEC on Form N-PX. The Fund’s Forms N-PX are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Fund’s proxy voting record may also be obtained by calling

1-800-967-9009.

Fund Service Providers:

 

CUSTODIAN

State Street Bank and Trust

Boston, Massachusetts

   

TRANSFER AGENT

Boston Financial Data Services

Kansas City, Missouri

   

INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

Ernst & Young LLP

Dallas, Texas

   

DISTRIBUTOR

Foreside Fund Services, LLC

Portland, Maine

This report is prepared for shareholders of the American Beacon Funds and may be distributed to others only if preceded or accompanied by a current Prospectus of Summary Prospectus.

 

American Beacon Funds, American Beacon The London Company Income Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Global Equity Fund, American Beacon Zebra Small Cap Equity Fund, and American Beacon SiM High Yield Opportunities Fund are service marks of American Beacon Advisors, Inc.

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Table of Contents
ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS.

The Trust has adopted a code of ethics that applies to its principal executive and financial officers (the “Code”). The Trust amended its code November 12, 2013 to disclose the removal of terminated Investment Companies. The Trust did not grant any waivers to the provisions of the Code during the period covered by the shareholder report presented in Item 1. The Code is filed herewith as Exhibit 99.CODE ETH.

 

ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

The Trust’s Board of Trustees has determined that Ms. Brenda A Cline, a member of the Trust’s Audit and Compliance Committee, is an “audit committee financial expert” as defined in Form N-CSR. Ms. Cline is “independent” as defined in Form N-CSR.

 

ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

(a)

 

Audit Fees

    

Fiscal Year Ended

 
$ 209,783         8/31/2013   
$ 384,699         10/31/2013   
$ 168,847         12/31/2013   
$ 105,556         1/31/2014   
$ 403,681         8/31/2014   
$ 396,969         10/31/2014   
$ 236,768         12/31/2014   
$ 197,167         1/31/2015   

(b)

 

Audit-Related
Fees

    

Fiscal Year Ended

 
$ 0         8/31/2013   
$ 0         10/31/2013   
$ 0         12/31/2013   
$ 0         1/31/2014   
$ 0         8/31/2014   
$ 0         10/31/2014   
$ 0         12/31/2014   
$ 0         1/31/2015   

(c)

 

Tax Fees

    

Fiscal Year Ended

 
$ 36,250         8/31/2013   
$ 70,713         10/31/2013   
$ 20,000         12/31/2013   
$ 10,500         1/31/2014   
$ 36,250         8/31/2014   
$ 63,017         10/31/2014   
$ 44,750         12/31/2014   
$ 42,330         1/31/2015   

(d)

 

All Other Fees

    

Fiscal Year Ended

 
$ 0         8/31/2013   
$ 0         10/31/2013   
$ 0         12/31/2013   
$ 0         1/31/2014   
$ 0         8/31/2014   
$ 0         10/31/2014   
$ 0         12/31/2014   
$ 0         1/31/2015   


Table of Contents

(e)(1) Pursuant to its charter, the Trust’s Audit and Compliance Committee shall have the following duties and powers pertaining to pre-approval of audit and non-audit services provided by the Trust’s principal accountant:

- to approve, prior to appointment, the engagement of auditors to annually audit and provide their opinion on the Trusts’ financial statements, and, in connection therewith, reviewing and evaluating matters potentially affecting the independence and capabilities of the auditors;

- to approve, prior to appointment, the engagement of the auditors to provide non-audit services to the Trusts, an investment adviser to any series of the Trusts or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with an investment adviser (“adviser affiliate”) that provides ongoing services to the Trusts, if the engagement relates directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Trusts;

- to consider whether the non-audit services provided by a Trust’s auditor to an investment adviser or any adviser affiliate that provides ongoing services to a series of the Trusts, which services were not pre-approved by the Committee, are compatible with maintaining the auditor’s independence;

- to review the arrangements for and scope of the annual audit and any special audits; and

- to review and approving the fees proposed to be charged to the Trusts by the auditors for each audit and non-audit service.

The Audit and Compliance Committee may delegate any portion of its authority, including the authority to grant pre-approvals of audit and permitted non-audit services, to a subcommittee of one or more members. Any decisions of the subcommittee to grant pre-approvals shall be presented to the full audit committee at its next regularly scheduled meeting.

(e)(2) None of the fees disclosed in paragraphs (b) through (d) above were approved by the audit committee pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

 

(f) Not applicable.

 

(g)

Aggregate Non-Audit Fees for Services Rendered to the:

 

Registrant

    

Adviser

    

Adviser’s Affiliates Providing

Ongoing Services to Registrant

  

Fiscal Year Ended

 
$ 36,250       $ 0       N/A      8/31/2013   
$ 70,713       $ 0       N/A      10/31/2013   
$ 20,000       $ 0       N/A      12/31/2013   
$ 10,500       $ 0       N/A      1/31/2014   
$ 36,250       $ 0       N/A      8/31/2014   
$ 63,017       $ 0       N/A      10/31/2014   
$ 44,750       $ 0       N/A      12/31/2014   
$ 42,330       $ 0       N/A      1/31/2015   

 

(h) Not applicable.


Table of Contents
ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 6. SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS.

The schedules of investments for each series of the Trust are included in the shareholder report presented in Item 1.

 

ITEM 7. DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 8. PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 9. PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 10. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

The Trust has made no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the Trust’s Board of Trustees since the Trust last disclosed such procedures in Schedule 14A.

 

ITEM 11. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

(a) Based upon an evaluation within 90 days of the filing date of this report, the principal executive and financial officers concluded that the disclosure controls and procedures of the Trust are effective.

(b) There were no changes in the Trust’s internal control over financial reporting during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Trust’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

ITEM 12. EXHIBITS.

(a)(1) Filed herewith as EX-99.CODE ETH.

(a)(2) A separate certification for each principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the Trust as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 is attached hereto as EX-99.CERT.

(a)(3) Not applicable.

(b) The certifications required by Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 are attached hereto as EX-99.906CERT.


Table of Contents

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 

(Registrant): American Beacon Funds
By  

/s/ Gene L. Needles, Jr.

 

Gene L. Needles, Jr.

President

  American Beacon Funds

Date: November 25, 2014

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

 

By  

/s/ Gene L. Needles, Jr.

 

Gene L. Needles, Jr.

President

  American Beacon Funds

Date: November 25, 2014

 

By  

/s/ Melinda G. Heika

 

Melinda G. Heika

Treasurer

  American Beacon Funds

Date: November 25, 2014


Dates Referenced Herein   and   Documents Incorporated by Reference

This ‘N-CSR/A’ Filing    Date    Other Filings
8/31/15
12/31/14
Filed on / Effective on:11/25/14
10/30/14NSAR-B
For Period End:8/31/1424F-2NT,  N-CSR,  NSAR-B
8/29/14N-PX,  NSAR-A
7/1/14
6/30/14497,  497K,  N-CSRS,  N-PX,  N-Q,  NSAR-A
6/5/14
5/15/14
3/31/14N-Q,  NSAR-B
3/1/14
11/12/13
9/18/13497,  497K
9/5/13N-CSRS
8/31/1324F-2NT,  N-CSR,  NSAR-B,  NSAR-B/A
12/31/1224F-2NT,  485BPOS,  N-CSR,  NSAR-B
8/31/12N-CSR,  N-CSR/A,  N-Q,  NSAR-B
8/31/1124F-2NT,  N-CSR,  N-PX,  NSAR-B,  NSAR-B/A
7/5/11485BPOS,  497K
2/14/11485BPOS
12/22/10
8/31/1024F-2NT,  485BPOS,  N-CSR,  N-PX,  NSAR-B
 List all Filings
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