A.  Hanson & Doremus Investment Management (the “Registrant”) is a corporation formed on July 17, 
1995, in the state of Vermont. The Registrant became registered as an Investment Adviser Firm in 
July 1995. The Registrant is principally owned by Julie A. Won, Eric Sven Eklof Jr., Arthur P. 
Wright and Alexander A. Watson. 
 
B.  As discussed below, the Registrant offers to its clients (individuals, business entities, trusts, estates, 
pension and profit-sharing plans, financial institutions, and charitable organizations, etc.) 
investment advisory services, including financial planning and related consulting services. 
Investment Advisory Services 
 
As noted above, the client can determine to engage the Registrant to provide discretionary investment 
advisory services on a fee-only basis. The Registrant is a full-service investment counseling firm that offers 
professional portfolio management and investment planning. The Registrant builds and manages customized 
investment portfolios for individuals, business entities, trusts, estates, pension and profit-sharing plans, 
financial institutions, and charitable organizations. The Registrant’s annual investment advisory fee is based 
upon a percentage (%) of the market value of the assets placed under the Registrant’s management, as set 
forth in Item 5.A below. Before engaging Registrant to provide those services, clients are required to enter 
into an Investment Advisory Agreement with Registrant setting forth the terms and conditions of the 
engagement (including termination), describing the scope of the services to be provided, and the fee that is 
due from the client. Before providing investment advisory services, an investment adviser representative 
will ascertain each client’s investment objectives, time horizon and risk tolerance. Thereafter, Registrant 
will allocate and/or recommend that the client allocate investment assets consistent with the designated 
investment objectives. Once allocated, Registrant provides ongoing monitoring and review of account 
performance, asset allocation and client investment objectives, and may rebalance and/or may recommend 
that clients rebalance accounts as necessary based on such review. 
Registrant’s annual investment advisory fee shall include investment advisory services and financial planning 
and consulting services. In the event that the client requires extraordinary planning and/or consultation 
services (to be determined in the sole discretion of the Registrant), the Registrant may determine to charge 
for such additional services, the dollar amount of which shall be set forth in a separate agreement with the 
client. The Registrant may provide a variety of financial planning and consulting services to individuals, 
families, and other clients regarding the management of their financial resources based upon an analysis of 
the client’s current situation, goals, and objectives. Generally, such financial planning services will involve 
preparing a financial plan or rendering a financial consultation for clients based on the client’s financial goals 
and objectives. Please Note: Registrant believes that it is important for the client to address financial 
planning issues on an ongoing basis. Registrant’s advisory fee, as set forth at Item 5 below, will remain the 
same regardless of whether or not the client determines to address financial planning issues with Registrant. 
It remains each client’s responsibility to promptly notify Registrant if there is ever any change in his/her/its 
financial situation or investment objectives for the purpose of reviewing/evaluating/revising our previous 
recommendations and/or services. 
Investment-Related Consulting Services (Stand-Alone) 
 
As noted above, and to the extent requested by a client, the Registrant may determine to provide 
additional financial planning and investment-related planning that is generally incidental to the investment 
management process, such as a retirement planning analysis. Registrant’s planning and consulting fee is 
negotiable, but generally is $250 on an hourly rate basis 
 
Miscellaneous 
 
Limitations of Financial Planning and Non-Investment Consulting/Implementation 
Services. As indicated above, to the extent requested by a client, we may provide financial planning and 
related consulting services regarding non-investment related matters, such as estate planning, tax planning, 
insurance, etc. Please Note: The Registrant does not serve as an attorney, accountant, or insurance 
agent, and no portion of our services should be construed as legal, accounting or insurance services. 
Accordingly, The Registrant does not prepare estate planning or any other legal documents, tax returns, 
or sell insurance products. To the extent requested by a client, we may recommend the services of other 
professionals for non-investment implementation purpose (i.e. attorneys, accountants, insurance, etc.). No 
client is under any obligation to utilize the services of any such recommended professional. The client 
retains absolute discretion over all such implementation decisions and is free to accept or 
reject any recommendation from Registrant and/or its representatives. Please Also Note: If 
the client engages any professional (i.e. attorney, accountant, insurance agent, etc.), recommended or 
otherwise, and a dispute arises thereafter relative to such engagement, the client agrees to seek recourse 
exclusively from the engaged professional. If, and when, the Registrant is involved in a specific matter (i.e. 
estate planning, insurance, accounting-related engagement, etc.), it is the engaged licensed professionals 
(i.e. attorney, accountant, insurance agent, etc.), and not the Registrant, that is responsible for the quality 
and competency of the services provided. Please Also Note: It remains the client’s responsibility to 
promptly notify the Registrant if there is ever any change in his/her/its financial situation or investment 
objectives for the purpose of reviewing/evaluating/revising Registrant’s previous recommendations and/or 
services. 
 
Retirement Plan Rollovers: Potential for Conflict of Interest: A client or prospective client 
leaving an employer typically has four options regarding an existing retirement plan (and may engage in a 
combination of these options): (i) leave the money in the former employer's plan, if permitted, (ii) roll over 
the assets to the new employer's plan, if one is available and rollovers are permitted, (iii) roll over to an 
Individual Retirement Account ("IRA"), or (iv) cash out the account value (which could, depending upon 
the client's age, result in adverse tax consequences). If the Registrant recommends that a client roll over 
their retirement plan assets into an account to be managed by the Registrant, such a recommendation 
creates a conflict of interest if the Registrant will earn new (or increase its current) compensation as a 
result of the rollover. If Registrant provides a recommendation as to whether a client should engage in a 
rollover or not (whether it is from an employer’s plan or an existing IRA), Registrant is acting as a 
fiduciary within the meaning of Title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act and/or the 
Internal Revenue Code, as applicable, which are laws governing retirement accounts. No client is under any 
obligation to roll over retirement plan assets to an account managed by The Registrant, whether it is from 
an employer’s plan or an existing IRA. ANY QUESTIONS: The Registrant’s Compliance Officer, 
Eric Sven Eklof Jr., remains available to address any questions that a client or prospective 
client may have regarding the potential for conflict of interest presented by such rollover 
recommendation. 
Use of Mutual Funds and Exchange Traded Funds. While the Registrant may recommend allocating 
investment assets to mutual funds and exchange traded funds that are not available directly to the public, 
The Registrant may also recommend that clients allocate investment assets to publicly available mutual 
funds or exchange traded funds that the client could obtain without engaging the Registrant as an 
investment advisor. However, if a client or prospective client determines to allocate investment assets to 
publicly available mutual funds or exchange traded funds without engaging the Registrant as an investment 
advisor, the client or prospective client would not receive the benefit of the Registrant's initial and ongoing 
investment advisory services. Please Note: In addition to the Registrant's investment advisory fee 
described below, and transaction and/or custodial fees discussed below, clients will also incur, relative to 
all mutual fund and exchange traded fund purchases, charges imposed at the fund level (e.g., management 
fees and other fund expenses). 
Custodian Charges-Additional Fees: As discussed below at Item 12 below, when requested to 
recommend a broker-dealer/custodian for client accounts, the Registrant generally recommends that 
Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. (“Schwab”) serve as the broker-dealer/custodian for client investment 
management assets. Broker-dealers such as Schwab charge brokerage commissions, transaction, and/or 
other type fees for effecting certain types of securities transactions (i.e., including transaction fees for 
certain mutual funds, and mark-ups and mark-downs charged for fixed income transactions, etc.). The 
types of securities for which transaction fees, commissions, and/or other type fees (as well as the amount of 
those fees) shall differ depending upon the broker-dealer/custodian (while certain custodians, including 
Schwab (with some potential exceptions), do not currently charge fees on individual equity or EFT 
transactions, others do). Please Note: there can be no assurance that Schwab will not change its transaction 
fee pricing in the future. Please Also Note: Schwab may also assess fees to clients who elect to receive 
trade confirmations and account statements by regular mail rather than electronically. In addition to the 
Registrant’s investment advisory fee referenced in Item 5 below, the client will also incur transaction fees 
to purchase securities for the client’s account (i.e., mutual funds, exchange traded funds, individual equity, 
and fixed income securities, etc.). Any Questions: The Registrant’s Chief Compliance Officer, 
Eric Sven Eklof Jr. remains available to address any questions that a client or prospective 
client may have regarding the above. 
However, Schwab (as do its primary competitors that provide similar pricing arrangements) requires that 
cash proceeds be automatically swept into a Schwab proprietary or affiliated money market mutual funds or 
cash sweeps accounts, which proprietary/affiliated Schwab funds/accounts may not provide the highest 
return available. 
Schwab Institutional Intelligent Portfolios: The Registrant offers an automated investment program 
(the "Program") through which clients are invested in a range of investment strategies we have constructed 
and manage, each consisting of a portfolio of exchange-traded funds ("Funds") and a cash allocation. The 
client may instruct us to exclude up to three Funds from their portfolio. The client's portfolio is held in a 
brokerage account opened by the client at Charles Schwab & Co., (“CS&Co”). The Registrant uses the 
lnstitutional Intelligent Portfolios® platform ("Platform"), offered by Schwab Performance Technologies 
("SPT"), a software provider to independent investment advisors and an affiliate of Schwab., to operate the 
Program. The Registrant is independent of, and not owned by, affiliated with, or sponsored or supervised 
by SPT, Schwab, or their affiliates (together, "Schwab"). Registrant, and not Schwab, is the client's 
investment advisor and primary point of contact with respect to the Program. Registrant is solely 
responsible, and Schwab is not responsible, for determining the appropriateness of the Program for the 
client, choosing a suitable investment strategy and portfolio for the client's investment needs and goals, and 
managing that portfolio on an ongoing basis. The Registrant has contracted with SPT to provide it with the 
Platform, which consists of technology and related trading and account management services for the 
Program. The Platform enables us to make the Program available to clients online and includes a system 
that automates certain key parts of our investment process (the "System"). Based on information the client 
provides to the Registrant, it will recommend a portfolio via the System. The client may then indicate an 
interest in a portfolio that is one level less or more conservative or aggressive than the recommended 
portfolio, but Registrant then makes the final decision and selects a portfolio based on all the information it 
has about the client. The System also includes an automated investment engine through which we manage 
the client's portfolio on an ongoing basis through automatic rebalancing and tax-loss harvesting (if the client 
is eligible and elects). 
Registrant charges clients a fee for our services as described below under Item 5 Fees and Compensation. Our 
fees are not set or supervised by Schwab. Clients do not pay brokerage commissions or any other fees to 
Schwab as part of the Program. Schwab does receive other revenues, including (i) the profit earned by 
Charles Schwab Bank, a Schwab affiliate, on the allocation to the Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Sweep 
Program described in the Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Sweep Program Disclosure Statement; (ii) 
investment advisory and/or administrative service fees (or unitary fees received by Charles Schwab 
Investment Management, Inc., a Schwab affiliate) from Schwab ETFs™, Schwab Funds®, and Laudus 
Funds® that we select to buy and hold in the client's brokerage account; (iii) fees received by Schwab from 
third-party ETFs that participate in the Schwab ETF OneSource™ program and mutual funds in the Schwab 
Mutual Fund Marketplace® (including certain Schwab Funds and Laudus Funds) in the client's brokerage 
account for services Schwab provides; and (iv) remuneration Schwab may receive from the market centers 
where it routes ETF trade orders for execution. 
The Registrant will not pay SPT fees for the Platform so long as we maintain $100 million in client assets in 
accounts at Schwab that are not enrolled in the Program. If we do not meet this condition, then we pay SPT 
an annual licensing fee of 0.10% (10 basis points) on the value of our clients' assets in the Program. 
This arrangement presents a conflict of interest, as it provides an incentive for Registrant to recommend 
that clients maintain their accounts at CS&Co. Notwithstanding, Registrant may generally recommend to 
its clients that investment management accounts be maintained at CS&Co based on the considerations 
discussed in Item 12 below, which mitigates this conflict of interest. Our Chief Compliance Officer remains 
available to address any questions that a client or prospective client may have regarding the above conflict of 
interest. 
The System will rebalance a client’s account periodically by generating instructions to CS&Co to buy and 
sell shares of ETFs and depositing or withdrawing funds through the “Sweep Program”, considering the 
asset allocation for the client’s investment strategy. Rebalancing trade instructions can be generated by the 
System when (i) the percentage allocation of an ETF varies by a set parameter established by the Registrant, 
(ii) Registrant decides to change the ETFs or their percentage allocations for an investment strategy or (iii) 
Registrant decides to change a client’s investment strategy, which could occur, for example, when a client 
makes changes to their investment profile or imposes or modifies restrictions on the management of their 
account. Accounts
                                        
                                        
                                             below $4,000 may deviate farther than the set parameters as well as the target allocation 
of the selected investment profile. Rebalancing below $4,000 may impact the ability to maintain positions 
in selected asset classes due to the inability to buy or sell at least one share of an ETF. For example, 
withdrawal requests may require entire asset classes to be liquidated to generate and disburse the requested 
cash. 
Each investment strategy involves a cash allocation (“Cash Allocation”) that will be held in a sweep program 
at Charles Schwab Bank (the “Sweep Program”). The Cash Allocation will be a minimum of 4% of an 
account’s value to be held in cash, and may be higher, depending on the investment strategy chosen for a 
client. The Cash Allocation will be accomplished through enrollment in the Sweep Program, a program 
sponsored by CS&Co. By enrolling in the Program, clients consent to having the free credit balances in 
their brokerage accounts at CS&Co swept into deposit accounts (“Deposit Accounts”) at Charles Schwab 
Bank (“Schwab Bank”) through the Sweep Program. Schwab Bank is an FDIC-insured depository institution 
that is a Schwab affiliate. The Sweep Program is a required feature of TDC Now. If the Deposit Account 
balances exceed the Cash Allocation for a client’s investment strategy, the excess over the rebalancing 
parameter will be used to purchase securities as part of rebalancing. If clients request cash withdrawals from 
their accounts, this likely will require the sale of ETF positions in their accounts to bring their Cash 
Allocation in line with the target allocation for their chosen investment strategy. If those clients have 
taxable accounts, those sales may generate capital gains (or losses) for tax purposes. In accordance with an 
agreement with CS&Co, Schwab Bank has agreed to pay an interest rate to depositors participating in the 
Sweep Program that will be determined by reference to an index. 
The Registrant primarily offers this as a solution for smaller managed accounts. 
ByAllAccounts/MoneyGuidePro. In conjunction with the services provided by ByAllAccounts, Inc, 
and MoneyGuidePro, the Registrant may also provide periodic comprehensive reporting services, which 
can incorporate all of the client’s investment assets including those investment assets that are not part of the 
assets managed by the Registrant (the “Excluded Assets”). The Registrant’s service relative to the Excluded 
Assets is limited to reporting services only, which does not include investment implementation. Because the 
Registrant does not have trading authority for the Excluded Assets, to the extent applicable to the nature of 
the Excluded Assets (assets over which the client maintains trading authority vs. trading authority 
designated to another investment professional), the client (and/or the other investment professional), and 
not the Registrant, shall be exclusively responsible for directly implementing any recommendations relative 
to the Excluded Assets. The client and/or their other advisors that maintain trading authority, and not the 
Registrant, shall be exclusively responsible for the investment performance of the Excluded Assets. 
Without limiting the above, the Registrant shall not be responsible for any implementation error (timing, 
trading, etc.) relative to the Excluded Assets. In the event the client desires that the Registrant provide 
investment management services with respect to the Excluded Assets, the client may engage the Registrant 
to do so by the terms and conditions of the Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and the 
client. 
 
ERISA Plan and 401(K) Individual Engagements 
•  Trustee Directed Plans. The Registrant can be engaged to provide investment advisory services 
to ERISA retirement plans, whereby the Firm shall manage Plan assets consistent with the 
investment objective designated by the Plan trustees. In such engagements, The Registrant will 
serve as an investment fiduciary as that term is defined under The Employee Retirement Income 
Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”). The Registrant will generally provide services on an “assets under 
management” fee basis per the terms and conditions of an Investment Advisory Agreement between the 
Plan and the Firm. 
•  Client Retirement Plan Assets. If requested to do so, The Registrant shall provide investment 
advisory services relative to the client’s 401(k) plan assets. In such event, The Registrant shall 
recommend that the client allocate the retirement account assets among the investment options 
available on the 401(k) platform. The Registrant shall be limited to making recommendations 
regarding the allocation of the assets among the investment alternatives available through the plan. 
The Registrant will not receive any communications from the plan sponsor or custodian, and it shall 
remain the client’s exclusive obligation to notify The Registrant of any changes in investment 
alternatives, restrictions, etc. pertaining to the retirement account. 
Portfolio Activity. The Registrant has a fiduciary duty to provide services consistent with the client’s best 
interest. As part of its investment advisory services, The Registrant will review client portfolios on an 
ongoing basis to determine if any changes are necessary based upon various factors, including, but not 
limited to, investment performance, market conditions, fund manager tenure, style drift, account 
additions/withdrawals, and/or a change in the client’s investment objective. Based upon these factors, 
there may be extended periods of time when the Registrant determines that changes to a client’s portfolio 
are neither necessary nor prudent. Of course, as indicated below, there can be no assurance that investment 
decisions made by the Registrant will be profitable or equal any specific performance level(s). Clients 
nonetheless remain subject to the fees described in Item 5 below during periods of account inactivity. 
Please Note: Socially Responsible Investing Limitations. Socially Responsible Investing involves the 
incorporation of Environmental, Social and Governance considerations into the investment due 
diligence process (“ESG). ESG investing incorporates a set of criteria/factors used in evaluating potential 
investments: Environmental (i.e., considers how a company safeguards the environment); Social (i.e., the 
manner in which a company manages relationships with its employees, customers, and the communities in 
which it operates); and Governance (i.e., company management considerations). The number of companies 
that meet an acceptable ESG mandate can be limited when compared to those that do not, and could 
underperform broad market indices. Investors must accept these limitations, including the potential for 
underperformance. Correspondingly, the number of ESG mutual funds and exchange-traded funds are 
limited when compared to those that do not maintain such a mandate. As with any type of investment 
(including any investment and/or investment strategies recommended and/or undertaken by Registrant), 
there can be no assurance that investment in ESG securities or funds will be profitable, or prove successful.  
Registrant generally relies on the assessments undertaken by the unaffiliated mutual fund, exchange traded 
fund or separate account portfolio manager to determine that the fund’s or portfolio’s underlying company 
securities meet a socially responsible mandate. 
Please Note: Cash Positions. The Registrant continues to treat cash as an asset class. As such, unless 
determined to the contrary by the Registrant, all cash positions (money markets, etc.) shall continue to be 
included as part of assets under management for purposes of calculating Registrant’s advisory fee. At any 
specific point in time, depending upon perceived or anticipated market conditions/events (there being no 
guarantee that such anticipated market conditions/events will occur), Registrant may maintain cash 
positions for defensive purposes. In addition, while assets are maintained in cash, such amounts could miss 
market advances. Depending upon current yields, at any point in time, Registrant’s advisory fee could 
exceed the interest paid by the client’s money market fund. 
 
Cash Sweep Accounts. Account custodians generally require that cash proceeds from account 
transactions or cash deposits be swept into and/or initially maintained in the custodian’s sweep account. 
The yield on the sweep account is generally lower than those available in money market accounts. To help 
mitigate this issue, Registrant shall generally purchase a higher yielding money market fund available on the 
custodian’s platform with cash proceeds or deposits, unless Registrant reasonably anticipates that it will 
utilize the cash proceeds during the subsequent 30-day period to purchase additional investments for the 
client’s account. Exceptions and/or modifications can and will occur with respect to all or a portion of the 
cash balances for various reasons, including, but not limited to, the amount of dispersion between the 
sweep account and a money market fund, an indication from the client of an imminent need for such cash, 
or the client has a demonstrated history of writing checks from the account. 
Please Note: The above does not apply to the cash component maintained within the Registrant’s actively 
managed investment strategy (the cash balances for which shall generally remain in the custodian designated 
cash sweep account), an indication from the client of a need for access to such cash, assets allocated to an 
unaffiliated investment manager, and cash balances maintained for fee billing purposes. Please Also Note: 
The client shall remain exclusively responsible for yield dispersion/cash balance decisions and 
corresponding transactions for cash balances maintained in any of the Registrant’s unmanaged accounts. 
Cybersecurity Risk. The information technology systems and networks that Registrant and its third-
party service providers use to provide services to Registrant’s clients employ various controls, which are 
designed to prevent cybersecurity incidents stemming from intentional or unintentional actions that could 
cause significant interruptions in Registrant’s operations and result in the unauthorized acquisition or use of 
clients’ confidential or non-public personal information. Clients and Registrant are nonetheless subject to 
the risk of cybersecurity incidents that could ultimately cause them to incur losses, including for example: 
financial losses, cost, and reputational damage to respond to regulatory obligations, other costs associated 
with corrective measures, and loss from damage or interruption to systems. Although Registrant has 
established its systems to reduce the risk of cybersecurity incidents, there is no guarantee that these efforts 
will always be successful, especially considering that Registrant does not directly control the cybersecurity 
measures and policies employed by third-party service providers. Clients could incur similar adverse 
consequences resulting from cybersecurity incidents that more directly affect issuers of securities in which 
those clients invest, broker-dealers, qualified custodians, governmental and other regulatory authorities, 
exchange and other financial market operators, or other financial institutions. 
Borrowing Against Assets/Risks. A client who has a need to borrow money could determine to do so 
by using: 
•  Margin - The account custodian or broker-dealer lends money to the client. The custodian 
charges the client interest for the right to borrow money, and uses the assets in the client’s 
brokerage account as collateral; and, 
•  Pledged Assets Loan - In consideration for a lender (i.e., a bank, etc.) to make a loan to the 
client, the client pledges investment assets held at the account custodian as collateral. 
These above-described collateralized loans are generally utilized because they typically provide more 
favorable interest rates than standard commercial loans. These types of collateralized loans can assist with a 
pending home purchase, permit the retirement of more expensive debt, or enable borrowing in lieu of 
liquidating existing account positions and incurring capital gains taxes. However, such loans are not without 
potential material risk to the client’s investment assets. The lender (i.e., custodian, bank, etc.) will have 
recourse against the client’s investment assets in the event of loan default or if the assets fall below a certain 
level. For this reason, The Registrant does not recommend such borrowing unless it is for specific short-
term purposes (i.e., a bridge loan to purchase a new residence). Registrant does not recommend such 
borrowing for investment purposes (i.e. to invest borrowed funds in the market). Regardless, if the client 
was to determine to utilize margin or a pledged assets loan, the following economic benefits would inure to 
the Registrant: 
•  by taking the loan rather than liquidating assets in the client’s account, Registrant continues to earn 
a fee on such Account assets; and, 
•  if the client invests any portion of the loan proceeds in an account to be managed by Registrant, 
Registrant will receive an advisory fee on the invested amount; and, 
•  if Registrant’s advisory fee is based upon the higher margined account value, Registrant will earn a 
correspondingly higher advisory fee. This could provide Registrant with a disincentive to encourage 
the client to discontinue the use of margin. 
Please Note: The Client must accept the above risks and potential corresponding consequences associated 
with the use of margin or a pledged assets loan. 
Please Note: Non-Discretionary Service Limitations. Clients that determine to engage the 
Registrant on a non-discretionary investment advisory basis must be willing to accept that the 
Registrant cannot effect any account transactions without obtaining prior verbal consent to any such 
transaction(s) from the client. Thus, in the event of a market correction during which the client is 
unavailable, the Registrant will be unable to effect any account transactions (as it would for its discretionary 
clients) without first obtaining the client’s consent. Please Note: Registrant no longer offers non-
discretionary account management to new clients. 
Client Obligations. In performing its services, Registrant shall not be required to verify any information 
received from the client or from the client’s other professionals and is expressly authorized to rely thereon. 
Moreover, each client is advised that it remains his/her/its responsibility to promptly notify the Registrant 
if there is ever any change in his/her/its financial situation or investment objectives for the purpose of 
reviewing/evaluating/revising Registrant’s previous recommendations and/or services. 
Disclosure Statement. A copy of the Registrant’s written Brochure as set forth on Part 2A of Form 
ADV, along with our Form CRS (Relationship Summary), shall be provided to each client prior to, or 
contemporaneously with, the execution of the Investment Advisory Agreement or Financial Planning and 
Consulting Agreement. 
A.  The Registrant shall provide investment advisory services specific to the needs of each client. Prior 
to providing investment advisory services, an investment adviser representative will ascertain each 
client’s investment objective(s). Thereafter, the Registrant shall allocate and/or recommend that 
the client allocate investment assets consistent with the designated investment objective(s). The 
client may, at any time, impose reasonable restrictions, in writing, on the Registrant’s services. 
B.  The Registrant does not participate in a wrap fee program. 
C.  As of December 31, 2023, the Registrant had $736,675,665 in assets under management on a 
discretionary basis and $32,638,261 in assets under management on a non-discretionary basis.