Can someone explain to me the meaning of remark 1.1.2 at the begining of SGA4.1?
It says that if $C$ is a category that belongs to some universe $U$ (which I understand as "$\mathrm{Ob}(C)$ and $\mathrm{Mor}(C)$ are elements of $U$, or $U$-sets"), then the functor category $\mathrm{Fonct}(C,U\mbox{-}\mathrm{Set})$ from $C$ to the category of $U$-sets (whose objects are the elements of $U$ and whose morphisms are applications between these) has neither of the following two properties:
$\mathrm{Fonct}(C,U\mbox{-}\mathrm{Set})$ is a subset of $U$.
for any two functors $F,G\in \mathrm{Fonct}(C,U\mbox{-}\mathrm{Set})$, the set $\mathrm{Hom}(F,G)$ is a member of $U$.
For this reason Grothendieck introduces a more general notion of '$U$-category' as a category whose hom sets are not necessarily members of $U$ but are all equipotent to members of $U$.
My problem is that I don't see how $\mathrm{Fonct}(C,U\mbox{-}\mathrm{Set})$ can fail to have properties 1 and 2.
If $C$ is a member of $U$, then any functor from $C$ to $U$-Set can be seen as a subset of a member of $U$ (or a pair of such subsets), so is a member of $U$, which implies that $\mathrm{Ob}(\mathrm{Fonct}(C,U\mbox{-}\mathrm{Set}))$ is a subset of $U$; and likewise, if $F,G$ are functors from $C$ to $U$-Set, a morphism from $F$ to $G$ will be a function from $C$ (a member of $U$) to the union (over $X\in C$) of the sets defined by the morphisms $F(X)\rightarrow G(X)$, which are members of $U$.
Likely I did not read this remark right or there is something wrong in the above reasoning... Many thanks in advance for any help in clarifying this.