Fees on the firm's open-end and exchange-traded funds are a weakness, contributing negatively to the rating and creating a larger performance hurdle on funds. On average, Chiron Capital charges fees on its funds that are in the highest quintile of similarly distributed funds. With the current market environment of fee compression, this is cause for concern, as investors may flock over time to alternate asset managers to get a better deal. The Chiron Capital roster of open-end and exchange-traded funds has had below-average risk-adjusted performance, as evidenced by its average overall Morningstar Rating of 1.3 stars. Average tenure of nine years among the longest-tenured managers at Chiron Capital is on par with peer firms. In isolation, seasoned teams tend to have more experience to draw upon should they need to weather turbulent market conditions.
Chiron Capital lags peer asset managers in a number of stewardship qualities, resulting in a Below Average Parent Pillar rating.