---
title: "When 13F AUM and Holdings Value Do Not Match: A Simple Sanity Check"
type: learn
slug: when-13f-aum-and-holdings-value-do-not-match
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/learn/when-13f-aum-and-holdings-value-do-not-match
published_at: 2026-04-01T02:41:15.704Z
updated_at: 2026-04-01T02:41:17.121Z
author: Sarah Mitchell
author_title: Education Editor
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/sarah-mitchell
word_count: 381
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# When 13F AUM and Holdings Value Do Not Match: A Simple Sanity Check

> Sometimes the headline 13F AUM and the visible holdings sum tell different stories. Here is how to sanity-check the numbers before you repeat the wrong one.

One of the fastest ways to publish a bad 13F take is to grab the biggest dollar figure you see and turn it into a headline. Sometimes reported AUM and visible holdings value match closely. Sometimes they do not. When they diverge, you need a simple sanity check before you decide which number belongs in the story. Why The Mismatch Happens Some of it is normal differences in how data is aggregated. Some of it comes from upstream quirks. And sometimes the issue is much more dramatic, where the reported AUM can look 100x or 1000x away from the visible holdings sum. That is exactly the kind of error a disciplined workflow should catch. The Practical Rule Do not hand-type the headline number. Use the canonical summary or research brief generated from validated source data. That is the safest way to avoid publishing a fake “mega fund” headline off a broken number. A Platform Example Look at recent large-filer workflows on 13F Insight. The article-generation process separates canonical AUM from the holdings value sum so readers can see both. That keeps you from confusing “the validated portfolio headline” with “the specific holdings slice being analyzed.” How To Sanity-Check A Number Read the headline AUM. Compare it with the holdings value sum. If the gap is extreme, check whether the workflow flagged a canonical override. Use the canonical number in titles, tables, and chart labels. Common Mistakes Using the larger number just because it looks more impressive. Mixing a current holdings slice with a separate filer headline and calling them the same thing. Recomputing compact units by hand and changing millions into billions incorrectly. Bottom Line Readers do not need the biggest number. They need the right number. A five-second sanity check can save an entire article from drifting off the rails. Questions Beginners Ask Should I mention both numbers when they differ? Yes, if both are relevant and you explain what each one represents. How do I know which number to trust? Trust the canonical value produced by the validated workflow, not a hand-picked figure from a raw endpoint. What should I read next? Pair this with the sanity-check guide, the historical-quarter workflow, and filer pages like Deutsche Bank or MFS to see how the distinction plays out in real filings.

## FAQ

### Why can reported 13F AUM and holdings value differ?

Because different endpoints and filing views can summarize the book differently, and upstream data can occasionally contain unit or aggregation issues. That is why a sanity check matters.

### What is the first sanity check to run?

Compare the reported AUM with the visible holdings sum and look for implausibly large gaps. Then confirm which value the platform has designated as canonical for content use.

### Should I always use the larger number?

No. Use the canonical source from the validated brief or platform logic. The bigger number is not automatically the better number.

### How does 13F Insight handle mismatches?

The content workflow generates canonical summaries and research briefs specifically so article numbers do not drift away from validated source data.

---

Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/learn/when-13f-aum-and-holdings-value-do-not-match
Author: Sarah Mitchell — https://13finsight.com/authors/sarah-mitchell
Last updated: 2026-04-01T02:41:17.121Z