{
    "type": "ETF",
    "ucits": true,
    "fund_name": "AMUNDI PRIME GLOBAL GOVERNMENT BOND UCITS ETF",
    "investment_objective": "Track the performance of Solactive Global Developed Government Bond Index with minimized tracking error",
    "primary_asset_class": "Bond",
    "geographic_focus": "Global Developed Markets (main developed, Investment Grade rated countries)",
    "replication_method": "physical",
    "swaps": false,
    "derivatives": false,
    "leverage": false,
    "inverse": false,
    "complex_factors": [],
    "classification": "non-complex",
    "supporting_data": "The ETF is a UCITS-compliant bond ETF that physically replicates the Solactive Global Developed Government Bond Index using a sampled direct replication method. The KIID and PRIIPs KID explicitly state that the fund invests mainly in transferable securities representing the index constituents, with no mention of synthetic replication or swap agreements. Derivatives may be used only for efficient portfolio management (e.g., managing inflows/outflows or better exposure), not as an inherent part of the investment strategy, so derivatives are marked false. There is no leverage, inverse or amplified exposure. The risk indicator is moderate-low (3/7), consistent with a straightforward bond index fund. The fund holds a diversified portfolio of investment grade government bonds from developed countries, with no complex underlying assets such as contingent convertible bonds or CLOs. No capital protection or structured features are present. Costs are simple with a low ongoing charge (0.05%) and no performance fees or swap fees. The monthly factsheet confirms physical replication, no use of swaps, and a straightforward bond portfolio with over 1000 holdings, average rating A+, and no complex derivatives exposure. There are no complexity flags such as counterparty risk from swaps, leverage, or structured products. The PRIIPs KID does not include any comprehension warnings or complexity disclaimers. Overall, the ETF is non-complex under MiFID II criteria."
}