Three and a half years after ChatGPT launched, it is tempting to assume the AI cycle is well advanced. We believe the opposite. In our view, 2026 looks less like the middle of the cycle than its beginning. This is the point at which AI moves from a productivity tool used by relatively few to a general-purpose technology that reshapes how work is organised, and where value is created, across every sector of the global economy.

The easiest way to underestimate AI is to mistake the interface for the capability. For most investors, ‘AI’ is still the chat window: a tool that drafts emails, summarises documents and writes code, or an enhanced version of search. Those productivity gains are real, but anchoring to the current interface systematically underestimates both the scale of the underlying capability and the duration of the cycle ahead.

Early use cases for transformative technology are often lightweight, even trivial. Consider the early decades of electricity. When the telegraph was commercialised in the 1840s, investors were right to be excited, but the telegraph was a poor preview of what electricity would become. It was one narrow application of a far more general capability and it gave little hint of the electric light, refrigerated food, the factory motor or the wholesale reorganisation of industries that followed. The most meaningful productivity gains from electrification also only arrived once factories were redesigned around distributed power, instead of bolting electric motors onto layouts inherited from the age of steam.

Today’s chat interface is the telegraph: a real but narrow use of the underlying capability. That capability – machine cognition that is becoming abundant and increasingly autonomous – is the electricity. Much of the value may accrue not to the technology itself but to the companies in every sector that reorganise and innovate around it, and that reorganisation has barely begun. This is why we believe the cycle is closer to its start.

The agentic inflection

The critical development of the past 12 months is the arrival of agentic AI that completes work autonomously across extended, multi-step tasks. Enterprises run on repetitive, complex workflows that are too complex for a single prompt yet do not need human judgement at every step. Unlike a chatbot, agentic AI can plug into existing systems and own these processes end to end and deliver their outcomes.

Goldman Sachs estimates that by 2030 agentic AI could drive token consumption 24x higher than current levels.

The evidence is concrete. The length of task an AI agent can reliably complete has been doubling roughly every four months, from under a minute in 2022 to nearly 15 hours for Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.8 today. Google is processing 3.2 quadrillion tokens per month, according to Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai at its annual developed conference, Google I/O 2026, a 330x increase in two years, driven in large part by the shift to reasoning models and agentic workflows that multiply token consumption per interaction. These figures are not Google-specific. This is an accelerating step-change in AI consumption that, in our view, the market continues to underestimate.

Coding has been the first domain to demonstrate this at scale, partly because feedback is unambiguous – code either runs or not – and partly because training data is abundant. Claude Code went from effectively zero to around 4% of all public GitHub commits within 13 months. More significantly, what looks like faster coding is better understood as the removal of the human bottleneck from software production: without that constraint, output becomes a function of compute, not headcount. This non-human scaling has moved AI into a genuinely new phase.

The commercial validation is equally striking. Goldman Sachs estimates that by 2030 agentic AI could drive token consumption 24x higher than current levels. That is not a projection about the distant future but an extrapolation from trends already visible in the data. Average AI token spend among Ramp's 50,000 corporate customers has increased 13x since January 2025 alone, and now accounts for 1-2% of total corporate spend on the platform. This speaks to a broader and accelerating step-change in the velocity of AI consumption globally and supports our view that inference demand is being structurally underestimated by the market.

Still early in a long cycle

AI spending today represents approximately 1% of global gross domestic product (GDP). Historical precedent suggests peak intensity could reach 2-5% over a cycle lasting at least 5-10 years. Morgan Stanley sees a potential $10trn AI infrastructure buildout over the full cycle, roughly 10x the mobile and cloud capital expenditure (capex) of the previous era. Set against $44trn of knowledge worker expenditure and $60trn of corporate operating costs, today’s spending looks like an early instalment rather than a peak.

Hyperscale quarterly capex estimates since 20241
Where we really are in the AI cycle
Source: Polar Capital, April 2026. 1.Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, FactSet, 3 May 2026. Past performance is not indicative or a guarantee of future returns. Forecasts are based upon subjective estimates and assumptions about circumstances and events that may not yet have taken place and may never do so.

Frontier lab revenue trajectories make this very clear. Anthropic’s annualised revenue run rate was $1bn 16 months ago and crossed $47bn in May 2026 – to our knowledge, the fastest business-to-business revenue ramp in the history of software. This is not being driven by speculation. The structural case for the cycle to continue is compelling: scaling laws have held for over a decade, the cost of a given level of intelligence is falling by roughly 10x a year and AI is now beginning to accelerate its own development.

The structural reasons for expecting the cycle to run further are threefold. First, scaling laws – the empirically observed relationships between compute, data, model parameters and capability – have remained intact for over a decade, driving capability improvements at roughly 10x the pace of Moore's Law. Each generation of frontier model is materially better than the last. Anthropic's confirmation of its Mythos model – a meaningful step-change across coding, reasoning and cybersecurity benchmarks – points firmly to continued progress. We are only now seeing the first models trained on NVIDIA's Blackwell architecture, with further capability gains expected as larger clusters of more powerful hardware come online through 2026-27.

Second, AI is now beginning to accelerate its own development. Claude Code is c90% self-written, and Anthropic's productivity platform Cowork was built almost entirely with Claude Code in roughly 10 days. The recursive loop of AI improving AI is compressing model iteration cycles in a way with few historical parallels.

Third, 84% of the world's population has never used AI and enterprise adoption – which is where the economic value concentrates – has only begun to inflect in the past two quarters.

The supply picture is also worth noting. We believe capacity constraints serve, at least in the near term, to prevent this investment cycle from becoming a bubble. TSMC's relatively conservative 2026 capex of $52-56bn, combined with the multi-year lead times required to construct hyperscale data centres and connect the necessary power, means supply growth remains structurally constrained even as demand accelerates. High-end graphics processing unit (GPU) spot prices have reflected this: the price of NVIDIA’s Blackwell B200 GPU has nearly doubled in the past two months and the rollout of higher per-token (the basic units of text an AI model processes) pricing plans by the leading labs is a further signal that demand continues to overwhelm available supply. This is not the profile of a market pricing in speculation but rather, we believe, the profile of a market in which real demand is running ahead of real supply.

The frontier model layer is, in our view, the critical strategic asset of the agentic era, the operating system on which everything else runs.

The scale of capital commitment reinforces the structural case. Combined hyperscaler capex of more than $750bn is expected in 2026, scaling towards $1trn or more in 2027. These figures appear reasonable when set against the size of the markets ultimately being addressed. A wave of capital markets activity, including Anthropic's $65bn Series H fund raise at a $965bn valuation, initial public offering (IPO) filings from both Anthropic and OpenAI expected, and the successful SpaceX listing should further underpin confidence in the cycle's durability and draw broader institutional capital into the AI investment thesis.

Where the investment opportunity sits

For us, this framework has meaningful implications for portfolio positioning. We continue to hold a constructive, pro-AI stance which we view as early in a multi-year structural growth cycle.

The frontier model layer is, in our view, the critical strategic asset of the agentic era, the operating system on which everything else runs. Any company without a frontier model is building on someone else's infrastructure, exposed to margin compression and rapid obsolescence as the cost of code converges on zero, in our view. The infrastructure layer High-end GPU spot prices have reflected this: B200 prices have nearly doubled in the past two months – semiconductors, data centres, power, networking and the supply chain supporting them – represents the most visible near-term opportunity. NVIDIA's results announced in May illustrate both the demand environment and the durability of that case: 85% year-on-year revenue growth, a fifth consecutive quarter of accelerating growth and guidance for the next quarter implying 95% year-on-year growth.

At the same time, disruption risk is real and increasingly visible. The pre-AI digital profit pools – software; information services; digital advertising; e-commerce – face structural pressure from abundant code, non-human actors operating on a different cost curve and a natural language interface that progressively unbundles users from incumbent applications. We have materially reduced software exposure in the portfolio as a result.

The deeper point is one of framing. The risk in assessing this cycle is not that investors are too excited but that they are anchoring their expectations to the current interface rather than the underlying capability. Applying a productivity-tool framework to a general-purpose technology systematically undervalues both the duration and the eventual scale of what is ahead. Anthropic's finding of 80% median time savings on multi-step cognitive tasks, applied to the addressable portion of the $23trn developed-world knowledge wage bill, implies a potential AI revenue opportunity of $1.5-1.6trn at a conservative capture rate. Today's industry revenue sits below 1% of that figure.

We strongly believe we are still early in a rare moment of discontinuous technological progress, where decades of normal innovation are compressed into months, the impact of which is hard to comprehend and continues to be widely underestimated. The low-hanging fruit has not been picked. We have barely entered the orchard.

Risks

  • Capital is at risk and there is no guarantee the Fund will achieve its objective. Investors should make sure their attitude towards risk is aligned with the risk profile of the Fund before investing.
  • Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of investments may go down as well as up and you might get back less than you originally invested as there is no guarantee in place.
  • The value of a fund’s assets may be affected by uncertainties such as international political developments, market sentiment, economic conditions, changes in government policies, restrictions on foreign investment and currency repatriation, currency fluctuations and other developments in the laws and regulations of countries in which investment may be made. Please see the Fund’s Prospectus for details of all risks.
  • The Fund invests in the shares of companies and share prices can rise or fall due to several factors affecting global stock markets.
  • The Fund uses derivatives which carry the risk of reduced liquidity, substantial loss, and increased volatility in adverse market conditions, such as failure amongst market participants.
  • The Fund invests in assets denominated in currencies other than the Fund's base currency. Changes in exchange rates may have a negative impact on the Fund's investments. If the share class currency is different from the currency of the country in which you reside, exchange rate fluctuations may affect your returns when converted into your local currency.
  • The Fund invests in emerging markets where there is a greater risk of volatility due to political and economic uncertainties, restrictions on foreign investment, currency repatriation and currency fluctuations. Developing markets are typically less liquid which may result in large price movements to the Fund.


Important Information:
This is a marketing communication and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to any person to buy or sell any related securities or financial instruments. Any opinions expressed may change. This document does not contain information material to the investment objectives or financial needs of the recipient. This document is not advice on legal, taxation or investment matters. Tax treatment depends on personal circumstances. Investors must rely on their own examination of the Fund or seek advice. Investment may be restricted in other countries and as such, any individual who receives this document must make themselves aware of their respective jurisdiction and observe any restrictions.

A decision may be taken at any time to terminate the marketing of the Fund in any EEA Member State in which it is currently marketed. Shareholders in the affected EEA Member State will be given notification of any decision and provided the opportunity to redeem their interests in the Fund, free of any charges or deductions, for at least 30 working days from the date of the notification.

Investment in the Fund is an investment in the shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. Further information about fund characteristics and any associated risks can be found in the Fund’s Key Information Document or Key Investor Information Document (“KID” or “KIID”), the Prospectus (and relevant Fund Supplement), the Articles of Association and the Annual and Semi-Annual Reports. Please refer to these documents before making any final investment decisions.  These documents are available free of charge at Polar Capital Funds plc, Georges Court, 54-62 Townsend Street, Dublin 2, Ireland, via email by contacting Investor-Relations@polarcapitalfunds.com or by visiting www.polarcapital.co.uk. The KID is available in the languages of all EEA member states in which the Fund is registered for sale; the Prospectus, Annual and Semi-Annual Reports and KIID are available in English.

The Fund promotes, among other characteristics, environmental or social characteristics and is classified as an Article 8 fund under the EU's Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR). For more information, please see the Prospectus and relevant Fund Supplement.

ESG and sustainability characteristics are further detailed on the investment manager’s website: - https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/ESG-and-Sustainability/Responsible-Investing/.

A summary of investor rights associated with investment in the Fund can be found here.

This document is provided and approved by both Polar Capital LLP and Polar Capital (Europe) SAS.

Polar Capital LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) in the United Kingdom, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in the United States. Polar Capital LLP’s registered address is 16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD, United Kingdom.

Polar Capital (Europe) SAS is authorised and regulated by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) in France. Polar Capital (Europe) SAS’s registered address is 18 Rue de Londres, Paris 75009, France.

Polar Capital LLP is a registered Investment Advisor with the SEC. Polar Capital LLP is the investment manager and promoter of Polar Capital Funds plc – an open-ended investment company with variable capital and with segregated liability between its sub-funds – incorporated in Ireland, authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland and recognised by the FCA. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

For UK investors: The Fund is recognised in the UK under the Overseas Funds Regime (OFR) but it is not a UK-authorised Fund. UK investors should be aware that they may not be able to refer a complaint against its Management Company or its Depositary to the UK’s Financial Ombudsman Service. Any claims for losses relating to the Management Company or the Depositary will not be covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, in the event that either entity should become unable to meet its liabilities to investors. For information on the complaint process to the Management Company, please see the Country Supplement for this fund available at https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/

Benchmark: The Fund is actively managed and uses the MSCI ACWI Net TR Index as a performance target and to calculate the performance fee. The benchmark has been chosen as it is generally considered to be representative of the investment universe in which the Fund invests. The performance of the Fund is likely to differ from the performance of the benchmark as the holdings, weightings and asset allocation will be different. Investors should carefully consider these differences when making comparisons. Further information about the benchmark can be found here. The benchmark is provided by an administrator on the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) register of benchmarks which includes details of all authorised, registered, recognised and endorsed EU and third country benchmark administrators together with their national competent authorities.

Third-party Data: Some information contained herein has been obtained from third party sources and has not been independently verified by Polar Capital. Neither Polar Capital nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any data contained herein.

Country Specific Disclaimers: Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. When considering an investment into the Fund, you should make yourself aware of the relevant financial, legal and tax implications. Neither Polar Capital LLP nor Polar Capital Funds plc shall be liable for, and accept no liability for, the use or misuse of this document.

None

Three and a half years after ChatGPT launched, it is tempting to assume the AI cycle is well advanced. We believe the opposite. In our view, 2026 looks less like the middle of the cycle than its beginning. This is the point at which AI moves from a productivity tool used by relatively few to a general-purpose technology that reshapes how work is organised, and where value is created, across every sector of the global economy.

The easiest way to underestimate AI is to mistake the interface for the capability. For most investors, ‘AI’ is still the chat window: a tool that drafts emails, summarises documents and writes code, or an enhanced version of search. Those productivity gains are real, but anchoring to the current interface systematically underestimates both the scale of the underlying capability and the duration of the cycle ahead.

Early use cases for transformative technology are often lightweight, even trivial. Consider the early decades of electricity. When the telegraph was commercialised in the 1840s, investors were right to be excited, but the telegraph was a poor preview of what electricity would become. It was one narrow application of a far more general capability and it gave little hint of the electric light, refrigerated food, the factory motor or the wholesale reorganisation of industries that followed. The most meaningful productivity gains from electrification also only arrived once factories were redesigned around distributed power, instead of bolting electric motors onto layouts inherited from the age of steam.

Today’s chat interface is the telegraph: a real but narrow use of the underlying capability. That capability – machine cognition that is becoming abundant and increasingly autonomous – is the electricity. Much of the value may accrue not to the technology itself but to the companies in every sector that reorganise and innovate around it, and that reorganisation has barely begun. This is why we believe the cycle is closer to its start.

The agentic inflection

The critical development of the past 12 months is the arrival of agentic AI that completes work autonomously across extended, multi-step tasks. Enterprises run on repetitive, complex workflows that are too complex for a single prompt yet do not need human judgement at every step. Unlike a chatbot, agentic AI can plug into existing systems and own these processes end to end and deliver their outcomes.

Goldman Sachs estimates that by 2030 agentic AI could drive token consumption 24x higher than current levels.

The evidence is concrete. The length of task an AI agent can reliably complete has been doubling roughly every four months, from under a minute in 2022 to nearly 15 hours for Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.8 today. Google is processing 3.2 quadrillion tokens per month, according to Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai at its annual developed conference, Google I/O 2026, a 330x increase in two years, driven in large part by the shift to reasoning models and agentic workflows that multiply token consumption per interaction. These figures are not Google-specific. This is an accelerating step-change in AI consumption that, in our view, the market continues to underestimate.

Coding has been the first domain to demonstrate this at scale, partly because feedback is unambiguous – code either runs or not – and partly because training data is abundant. Claude Code went from effectively zero to around 4% of all public GitHub commits within 13 months. More significantly, what looks like faster coding is better understood as the removal of the human bottleneck from software production: without that constraint, output becomes a function of compute, not headcount. This non-human scaling has moved AI into a genuinely new phase.

The commercial validation is equally striking. Goldman Sachs estimates that by 2030 agentic AI could drive token consumption 24x higher than current levels. That is not a projection about the distant future but an extrapolation from trends already visible in the data. Average AI token spend among Ramp's 50,000 corporate customers has increased 13x since January 2025 alone, and now accounts for 1-2% of total corporate spend on the platform. This speaks to a broader and accelerating step-change in the velocity of AI consumption globally and supports our view that inference demand is being structurally underestimated by the market.

Still early in a long cycle

AI spending today represents approximately 1% of global gross domestic product (GDP). Historical precedent suggests peak intensity could reach 2-5% over a cycle lasting at least 5-10 years. Morgan Stanley sees a potential $10trn AI infrastructure buildout over the full cycle, roughly 10x the mobile and cloud capital expenditure (capex) of the previous era. Set against $44trn of knowledge worker expenditure and $60trn of corporate operating costs, today’s spending looks like an early instalment rather than a peak.

Hyperscale quarterly capex estimates since 20241
Where we really are in the AI cycle
Source: Polar Capital, April 2026. 1.Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, FactSet, 3 May 2026. Past performance is not indicative or a guarantee of future returns. Forecasts are based upon subjective estimates and assumptions about circumstances and events that may not yet have taken place and may never do so.

Frontier lab revenue trajectories make this very clear. Anthropic’s annualised revenue run rate was $1bn 16 months ago and crossed $47bn in May 2026 – to our knowledge, the fastest business-to-business revenue ramp in the history of software. This is not being driven by speculation. The structural case for the cycle to continue is compelling: scaling laws have held for over a decade, the cost of a given level of intelligence is falling by roughly 10x a year and AI is now beginning to accelerate its own development.

The structural reasons for expecting the cycle to run further are threefold. First, scaling laws – the empirically observed relationships between compute, data, model parameters and capability – have remained intact for over a decade, driving capability improvements at roughly 10x the pace of Moore's Law. Each generation of frontier model is materially better than the last. Anthropic's confirmation of its Mythos model – a meaningful step-change across coding, reasoning and cybersecurity benchmarks – points firmly to continued progress. We are only now seeing the first models trained on NVIDIA's Blackwell architecture, with further capability gains expected as larger clusters of more powerful hardware come online through 2026-27.

Second, AI is now beginning to accelerate its own development. Claude Code is c90% self-written, and Anthropic's productivity platform Cowork was built almost entirely with Claude Code in roughly 10 days. The recursive loop of AI improving AI is compressing model iteration cycles in a way with few historical parallels.

Third, 84% of the world's population has never used AI and enterprise adoption – which is where the economic value concentrates – has only begun to inflect in the past two quarters.

The supply picture is also worth noting. We believe capacity constraints serve, at least in the near term, to prevent this investment cycle from becoming a bubble. TSMC's relatively conservative 2026 capex of $52-56bn, combined with the multi-year lead times required to construct hyperscale data centres and connect the necessary power, means supply growth remains structurally constrained even as demand accelerates. High-end graphics processing unit (GPU) spot prices have reflected this: the price of NVIDIA’s Blackwell B200 GPU has nearly doubled in the past two months and the rollout of higher per-token (the basic units of text an AI model processes) pricing plans by the leading labs is a further signal that demand continues to overwhelm available supply. This is not the profile of a market pricing in speculation but rather, we believe, the profile of a market in which real demand is running ahead of real supply.

The frontier model layer is, in our view, the critical strategic asset of the agentic era, the operating system on which everything else runs.

The scale of capital commitment reinforces the structural case. Combined hyperscaler capex of more than $750bn is expected in 2026, scaling towards $1trn or more in 2027. These figures appear reasonable when set against the size of the markets ultimately being addressed. A wave of capital markets activity, including Anthropic's $65bn Series H fund raise at a $965bn valuation, initial public offering (IPO) filings from both Anthropic and OpenAI expected, and the successful SpaceX listing should further underpin confidence in the cycle's durability and draw broader institutional capital into the AI investment thesis.

Where the investment opportunity sits

For us, this framework has meaningful implications for portfolio positioning. We continue to hold a constructive, pro-AI stance which we view as early in a multi-year structural growth cycle.

The frontier model layer is, in our view, the critical strategic asset of the agentic era, the operating system on which everything else runs. Any company without a frontier model is building on someone else's infrastructure, exposed to margin compression and rapid obsolescence as the cost of code converges on zero, in our view. The infrastructure layer High-end GPU spot prices have reflected this: B200 prices have nearly doubled in the past two months – semiconductors, data centres, power, networking and the supply chain supporting them – represents the most visible near-term opportunity. NVIDIA's results announced in May illustrate both the demand environment and the durability of that case: 85% year-on-year revenue growth, a fifth consecutive quarter of accelerating growth and guidance for the next quarter implying 95% year-on-year growth.

At the same time, disruption risk is real and increasingly visible. The pre-AI digital profit pools – software; information services; digital advertising; e-commerce – face structural pressure from abundant code, non-human actors operating on a different cost curve and a natural language interface that progressively unbundles users from incumbent applications. We have materially reduced software exposure in the portfolio as a result.

The deeper point is one of framing. The risk in assessing this cycle is not that investors are too excited but that they are anchoring their expectations to the current interface rather than the underlying capability. Applying a productivity-tool framework to a general-purpose technology systematically undervalues both the duration and the eventual scale of what is ahead. Anthropic's finding of 80% median time savings on multi-step cognitive tasks, applied to the addressable portion of the $23trn developed-world knowledge wage bill, implies a potential AI revenue opportunity of $1.5-1.6trn at a conservative capture rate. Today's industry revenue sits below 1% of that figure.

We strongly believe we are still early in a rare moment of discontinuous technological progress, where decades of normal innovation are compressed into months, the impact of which is hard to comprehend and continues to be widely underestimated. The low-hanging fruit has not been picked. We have barely entered the orchard.

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Risks

  • Capital is at risk and there is no guarantee the Fund will achieve its objective. Investors should make sure their attitude towards risk is aligned with the risk profile of the Fund before investing.
  • Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of investments may go down as well as up and you might get back less than you originally invested as there is no guarantee in place.
  • The value of a fund’s assets may be affected by uncertainties such as international political developments, market sentiment, economic conditions, changes in government policies, restrictions on foreign investment and currency repatriation, currency fluctuations and other developments in the laws and regulations of countries in which investment may be made. Please see the Fund’s Prospectus for details of all risks.
  • The Fund invests in the shares of companies and share prices can rise or fall due to several factors affecting global stock markets.
  • The Fund uses derivatives which carry the risk of reduced liquidity, substantial loss, and increased volatility in adverse market conditions, such as failure amongst market participants.
  • The Fund invests in assets denominated in currencies other than the Fund's base currency. Changes in exchange rates may have a negative impact on the Fund's investments. If the share class currency is different from the currency of the country in which you reside, exchange rate fluctuations may affect your returns when converted into your local currency.
  • The Fund invests in emerging markets where there is a greater risk of volatility due to political and economic uncertainties, restrictions on foreign investment, currency repatriation and currency fluctuations. Developing markets are typically less liquid which may result in large price movements to the Fund.


Important Information:
This is a marketing communication and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to any person to buy or sell any related securities or financial instruments. Any opinions expressed may change. This document does not contain information material to the investment objectives or financial needs of the recipient. This document is not advice on legal, taxation or investment matters. Tax treatment depends on personal circumstances. Investors must rely on their own examination of the Fund or seek advice. Investment may be restricted in other countries and as such, any individual who receives this document must make themselves aware of their respective jurisdiction and observe any restrictions.

A decision may be taken at any time to terminate the marketing of the Fund in any EEA Member State in which it is currently marketed. Shareholders in the affected EEA Member State will be given notification of any decision and provided the opportunity to redeem their interests in the Fund, free of any charges or deductions, for at least 30 working days from the date of the notification.

Investment in the Fund is an investment in the shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. Further information about fund characteristics and any associated risks can be found in the Fund’s Key Information Document or Key Investor Information Document (“KID” or “KIID”), the Prospectus (and relevant Fund Supplement), the Articles of Association and the Annual and Semi-Annual Reports. Please refer to these documents before making any final investment decisions.  These documents are available free of charge at Polar Capital Funds plc, Georges Court, 54-62 Townsend Street, Dublin 2, Ireland, via email by contacting Investor-Relations@polarcapitalfunds.com or by visiting www.polarcapital.co.uk. The KID is available in the languages of all EEA member states in which the Fund is registered for sale; the Prospectus, Annual and Semi-Annual Reports and KIID are available in English.

The Fund promotes, among other characteristics, environmental or social characteristics and is classified as an Article 8 fund under the EU's Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR). For more information, please see the Prospectus and relevant Fund Supplement.

ESG and sustainability characteristics are further detailed on the investment manager’s website: - https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/ESG-and-Sustainability/Responsible-Investing/.

A summary of investor rights associated with investment in the Fund can be found here.

This document is provided and approved by both Polar Capital LLP and Polar Capital (Europe) SAS.

Polar Capital LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) in the United Kingdom, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in the United States. Polar Capital LLP’s registered address is 16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD, United Kingdom.

Polar Capital (Europe) SAS is authorised and regulated by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) in France. Polar Capital (Europe) SAS’s registered address is 18 Rue de Londres, Paris 75009, France.

Polar Capital LLP is a registered Investment Advisor with the SEC. Polar Capital LLP is the investment manager and promoter of Polar Capital Funds plc – an open-ended investment company with variable capital and with segregated liability between its sub-funds – incorporated in Ireland, authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland and recognised by the FCA. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

For UK investors: The Fund is recognised in the UK under the Overseas Funds Regime (OFR) but it is not a UK-authorised Fund. UK investors should be aware that they may not be able to refer a complaint against its Management Company or its Depositary to the UK’s Financial Ombudsman Service. Any claims for losses relating to the Management Company or the Depositary will not be covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, in the event that either entity should become unable to meet its liabilities to investors. For information on the complaint process to the Management Company, please see the Country Supplement for this fund available at https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/

Benchmark: The Fund is actively managed and uses the MSCI ACWI Net TR Index as a performance target and to calculate the performance fee. The benchmark has been chosen as it is generally considered to be representative of the investment universe in which the Fund invests. The performance of the Fund is likely to differ from the performance of the benchmark as the holdings, weightings and asset allocation will be different. Investors should carefully consider these differences when making comparisons. Further information about the benchmark can be found here. The benchmark is provided by an administrator on the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) register of benchmarks which includes details of all authorised, registered, recognised and endorsed EU and third country benchmark administrators together with their national competent authorities.

Third-party Data: Some information contained herein has been obtained from third party sources and has not been independently verified by Polar Capital. Neither Polar Capital nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any data contained herein.

Country Specific Disclaimers: Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. When considering an investment into the Fund, you should make yourself aware of the relevant financial, legal and tax implications. Neither Polar Capital LLP nor Polar Capital Funds plc shall be liable for, and accept no liability for, the use or misuse of this document.