SA Multi-Managed Moderate Growth Portfolio
SEASONS SERIES TRUST
Expense ratio
Net assets1
$54.68M
Holdings1
1151
Category
Allocation
Return

Investment objective & strategy

As of July 26, 2024 · prospectus

Objective. The Portfolios investment goal is long-term growth of capital, with capital preservation as a secondary objective.

Strategy. The Portfolio attempts to achieve its investment goal by allocating its assets among three distinct, actively-managed investment components (the Managed Components), each with a different investment strategy. The Managed Components include a small-cap growth component, a fixed income component and a growth component. The Managed Components each invest to varying degrees, according to its investment strategy, in a diverse portfolio of securities including, but not limited to, common stocks, securities with equity characteristics (such as preferred stocks, warrants or fixed income securities convertible into common stock), corporate and U.S. Government fixed income securities, money market instruments and/or cash or cash equivalents. The target allocation of the Portfolios assets among the components is as follows: Small-Cap Growth Component 18.0% Fixed Income … The Portfolio attempts to achieve its investment goal by allocating its assets among three distinct, actively-managed investment components (the Managed Components), each with a different investment strategy. The Managed Components include a small-cap growth component, a fixed income component and a growth component. The Managed Components each invest to varying degrees, according to its investment strategy, in a diverse portfolio of securities including, but not limited to, common stocks, securities with equity characteristics (such as preferred stocks, warrants or fixed income securities convertible into common stock), corporate and U.S. Government fixed income securities, money market instruments and/or cash or cash equivalents. The target allocation of the Portfolios assets among the components is as follows: Small-Cap Growth Component 18.0% Fixed Income Component 41.4% Growth Component 40.6% Differences in investment returns among the Managed Components will cause the actual percentages to vary over the course of a calendar quarter from the target allocations referenced above. Accordingly, the Portfolios assets will be reallocated or rebalanced among the Managed Components on at least a quarterly basis to restore the target allocations for the Portfolio. The Small-Cap Growth Component invests principally in equity securities, including those of lesser known or high growth companies or industries, such as technology, telecommunications, media, healthcare, energy, real estate investment trusts and consumer cyclicals. Although the components investments will primarily be in small-capitalization companies, the component may invest substantially in mid-capitalization companies and, to a smaller degree, large-capitalization companies. As noted above, approximately 41.4% of the Portfolios assets will be allocated to the Fixed Income Component, which, under normal circumstances, invests primarily in investment grade fixed income securities (U.S. or foreign). The component may also invest substantially in short-term investments, foreign securities (including securities denominated in foreign currencies), asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities and when-issued and delayed-delivery securities. Under normal market conditions, the subadviser for the Growth Component invests primarily in established companies with capitalizations within the range of companies included in the Russell 1000 Growth Index. As of May 31, 2024, the market capitalization range of the companies in the Russell 1000 Growth Index was between approximately $ 702 million and $3.09 trillion. The subadviser for the Growth Component emphasizes a bottom-up stock selection process, seeking attractive investments on an individual company basis. In selecting securities for investment, the subadviser for the Growth Component typically invests in companies it believes have strong name recognition and sustainable competitive advantages with above average business visibility, the ability to deploy capital at high rates of return, strong balance sheets and an attractive risk/reward. The subadviser for the Growth Component generally considers selling a portfolio holding when it determines that the holding no longer satisfies its investment criteria. The Growth Component may invest in foreign securities, which may include emerging market securities. The Growth Component may invest in equity securities. The subadviser for the Growth Component actively integrates sustainability into the investment process by using environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors as a lens for additional fundamental research, which can contribute to investment decision-making. The subadviser for the Growth Component seeks to understand how environmental and social initiatives within companies can create value by strengthening durable competitive advantages, creating growth opportunities, driving profitability and/or aligning with secular growth trends. The subadviser for the Growth Component generally engages with company management teams to discuss their ESG practices, with the aim of identifying how sustainability themes present opportunities and risks that can be material to the value of the security over the long term. Other aspects of the investment process include a proprietary, systematic evaluation of governance policies, specifically focusing on compensation alignment on long-term value creation. The Portfolio may at times invest significantly in certain sectors, such as the information technology sector. The Portfolio may invest in derivatives, such as interest rate swaps, credit default swaps, options, futures, to-be-announced (TBAs) and foreign currency forwards. The subadviser may invest in such instruments for hedging and non-hedging purposes: for example, the subadviser may use foreign currency forwards to increase or decrease the portfolios exposure to a particular currency or group of currencies. Derivatives may also be used as a substitute for a direct investment in the securities of one or more issuers, the values of which move in the opposite direction from the underlying investment, index or currency.

Top holdings

As of March 31, 2025 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
CLOUDFLARE INC-A $2.18M 4.00%
DOORDASH INC-A $1.62M 2.97%
FNCL 6 4/26 $1.47M 2.69%
TESLA INC $1.42M 2.60%
SHOPIFY INC CL A $1.32M 2.42%
MERCADOLIBRE INC $1.30M 2.38%
US TREASURY N/B $1.29M 2.35%
STRATEGY INC CL A $1.22M 2.23%
FNCL 5.5 4/26 $1.18M 2.16%
ROYALTY PHARMA PLC $1.12M 2.05%
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Allocation by sector

As of March 31, 2025 · N-PORT
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Portfolio moves

Dec 31, 2024 → Mar 31, 2025
Opened
153
Exited
288
Increased
420
Decreased
219
Unchanged
364

How many positions this fund opened, exited, grew, trimmed, or left unchanged between its two most recent N-PORT snapshots — net changes between point-in-time reports, not a trade log.

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Advisers

As of March 31, 2025 · N-CEN
FirmRole
Wellington Management Company LLP Sub-adviser
J.P. Morgan Investment Management, Inc. Sub-adviser
Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. Sub-adviser
SunAmerica Asset Management, LLC Adviser

Footnotes

  1. Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2025, from the fund's N-PORT filing.

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