Columbia Overseas Value Fund beats benchmark in Q1 2026

Institutional shares of the Columbia Overseas Value Fund posted a 3.45 percent return for the first quarter of 2026, outperforming its benchmark amid sharp moves in energy markets.

The fund's performance for the period ending March 31 exceeded the MSCI EAFE Value Index Net return of 2.00 percent. An overweight position in energy stocks drove the outperformance as the sector rose 42.09 percent. Brent crude prices increased 74.27 percent during the quarter after an attack on Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz raised concerns over supply. Holdings such as TotalEnergies and Vermilion Energy advanced with higher energy prices, while Sun Hung Kai Properties gained as Hong Kong housing prices recovered. Columbia Management's base-case outlook assumes the Strait of Hormuz will stay effectively blockaded for weeks, which it expects to weigh on global growth while supporting higher inflation.

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Seoul stock traders watch KOSPI plunge amid oil price swings from Strait of Hormuz blockade.
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Seoul shares fall as oil swings on prolonged Hormuz blockade

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South Korean stocks fell Friday morning after Iran's new leader vowed to maintain the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, causing global crude prices to fluctuate around the $100 level. The KOSPI index dropped sharply at the open but trimmed losses later while staying in negative territory. Disruptions at the key Middle East waterway persist despite U.S. President Donald Trump's claim that the war is nearing an end.

The Columbia Floating Rate Fund posted a quarterly return of -0.39 percent, beating its benchmark index by 0.08 percentage points.

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The Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund posted a quarterly return of negative 1.90 percent for the first three months of 2026. This result exceeded the negative 4.33 percent decline recorded by the S&P 500 index over the same period.

Greenlight Capital's funds delivered a 6.5% return in the first quarter of 2026, net of fees and expenses, outperforming the S&P 500's decline of 4.4%. The hedge fund cited gains from gold, healthcare, shipping, and energy stocks amid uncertainty from the war in Iran. Managers emphasized capital preservation given limited downside priced into markets.

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The John Hancock Multimanager 2020 Lifetime Portfolio delivered a positive return and beat its benchmark in the first quarter of 2026.

Conestoga Capital Advisors' Small Cap Composite Portfolio returned -5.01% net-of-fees in the first quarter of 2026, trailing the Russell 2000 Growth Index's -2.81% decline. The fund faced headwinds from software stocks amid valuation compression. Positive contributions came from industrial holdings.

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Seoul stocks opened sharply lower on Monday amid renewed energy price concerns after Iran's warning on the Strait of Hormuz. The KOSPI fell 4.72% in the first 15 minutes. The drop comes amid escalating U.S.-Iran tensions.

 

 

 

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