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PRIVATE CLIENT PROGRAM

 
Mackenzie Open Architecture Service

The Mackenzie Open Architecture Service (OAS) is one of the dedicated money management programs available in the Mackenzie Private Client Program. The Mackenzie OAS requires a minimum of $500,000 of investable assets across qualified family accounts. A complete wealth management solution, the service combines the best of both worlds – your advisor’s investment expertise with Mackenzie’s state of the art account management capabilities.Once you and your advisor have designed the optimal portfolio for your financial goals, we implement your portfolio decisions and provide administrative services, including:

  • Monitoring and automatic rebalancing (according to parameters decided by you and your advisor)
  • Quarterly consolidated reporting and performance measurement
  • A complimentary Tax and Estate Summary Report, if requested

Key Benefits

Institutional Series Shares

  • access to Mackenzie Institutional Series Shares
  • available at significantly lower cost than Mackenzie retail counterparts

Monitoring and Rebalancing
  • disciplined process assures each portfolio is automatically rebalanced based on the monitoring and rebalancing parameters you and your advisor establish

Enhanced Reporting and Communication
  • you'll receive a state-of-the-art quarterly report that includes market commentaries, transactions, portfolio holdings and performance with comparison to industry benchmarks
  • option of consolidated statement for constituent family accounts or multiple statements for each account
  • comprehensive tax information issued at year end

 

*Tax Status of Capital Class
Each Capital Class fund is a class of shares of Mackenzie Financial Capital Corporation (“Capitalcorp”), which is a mutual fund corporation. Unlike mutual fund trusts that calculate their income tax as individual entities, a mutual fund corporation must compute its income for tax
purposes as a single entity rather than on a fund specific basis. Therefore, all income, including capital gains, generated by the Capital Class funds is aggregated for tax purposes. The aggregate capital losses are used to offset the aggregate capital gains and, to the extent that results in net capital gains for Capitalcorp, capital gains dividends are paid to investors as described in the simplified prospectuses and annual information forms of the Capital Class funds. Increased capital gains increase the likelihood that capital gains dividends will have to be paid. While switching among Capital Class funds results in no immediate tax consequences to an investor, switching activity may trigger capital gains within Capitalcorp, thus increasing the possibility of a capital gains dividend being declared.