S.A. Mason initiated a new position in the Akre Focus ETF (AKRE +0.00%), purchasing 45,209 shares in the fourth quarter for an estimated $2.96 million, according to a January 29 SEC filing.
What happened
According to a SEC filing dated January 29, S.A. Mason established a new position in Akre Focus ETF (AKRE +0.00%), adding 45,209 shares. The net position change for the quarter-end was $2.96 million, reflecting the share value as of December 31.
What else to know
This is a new position and now comprises 1.17% of S.A. Mason’s reportable U.S. equity assets under management.
Top five holdings after the quarter:
- NASDAQ: NVDA: $15.20 million (6.0% of AUM)
- NYSEMKT: VTI: $9.42 million (3.7% of AUM)
- NASDAQ: MSFT: $7.42 million (2.9% of AUM)
- NYSEMKT: IVV: $7.33 million (2.9% of AUM)
- NYSEMKT: VSDM: $6.39 million (2.5% of AUM)
As of January 29, shares of the Akre Focus ETF were priced at $61.15, down about 10% over the past year, compared to a 15% gain for the S&P 500.
ETF overview
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Price (as of 2026-01-29) | $61.15 |
| Market Capitalization | $9.14 billion |
| Sector | Financial Services |
| Industry | Asset Management |
ETF snapshot
- AKRE offers an actively managed portfolio of U.S. equities and equity-like instruments, including preferred stocks, warrants, options, REITs, and convertible securities.
- The fund generates returns through capital appreciation and income by investing in companies with high shareholder returns, strong management, and reinvestment potential, with a disciplined approach to valuation and portfolio turnover.
- It targets institutional and individual investors seeking exposure to a concentrated portfolio of high-quality U.S. and select foreign equities.
The Akre Focus ETF employs a focused investment strategy, selecting companies with sustainable competitive advantages and robust capital allocation practices. The fund prioritizes long-term growth by investing in businesses with proven management teams and attractive reinvestment opportunities. Its disciplined approach to security selection and portfolio management aims to deliver consistent risk-adjusted returns for investors.
What this transaction means for investors
The Akre Focus ETF has fallen about 10% since its October launch, falling well short of the S&P 500’s roughly 1% gain in the same period and creating a rare divergence between passive benchmarks and high-conviction active strategies.
The portfolio itself helps explain the appeal. The fund runs a tightly focused structure, with its top holdings dominated by capital-light compounders like Mastercard, Brookfield, Constellation Software, Visa, and Moody’s, each designed to reinvest at high incremental returns over long cycles. As of mid-January, the top 10 positions accounted for the bulk of assets, reflecting a mandate that prioritizes durability over diversification.
That concentration contrasts sharply with the buyer’s broader exposure to mega-cap tech and index funds, suggesting this addition is meant to complement, not replace, core beta. For long-term investors, the takeaway is less about near-term performance and more about patience. When concentrated strategies lag in momentum-driven markets, they often do so quietly, setting the stage for sharper relative gains when fundamentals reassert themselves.
