Investment objective & strategy
As of April 28, 2025 · prospectusObjective. Seeks long-term capital appreciation while managing portfolio volatility.
Strategy. Under normal market conditions, the Sub-Adviser will allocate the Portfolios assets to achieve targeted exposures among equity investments and fixed income investments. The Portfolios current target allocation for long-term investments is approximately 60% of its net assets in equity investments and approximately 40% of its net assets in fixed income investments. The Portfolio employs a dynamic allocation approach and may from time to time make tactical increases or decreases beyond these target allocations based on a broad range of market and economic trends and qualitative and quantitative factors. This means at any time the Portfolios asset mix may differ from the target allocations. The Portfolio is expected to invest primarily in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and derivative instruments to gain broad … Under normal market conditions, the Sub-Adviser will allocate the Portfolios assets to achieve targeted exposures among equity investments and fixed income investments. The Portfolios current target allocation for long-term investments is approximately 60% of its net assets in equity investments and approximately 40% of its net assets in fixed income investments. The Portfolio employs a dynamic allocation approach and may from time to time make tactical increases or decreases beyond these target allocations based on a broad range of market and economic trends and qualitative and quantitative factors. This means at any time the Portfolios asset mix may differ from the target allocations. The Portfolio is expected to invest primarily in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and derivative instruments to gain broad exposure to a particular asset category. The Portfolios equity allocation will be invested in the following equity asset categories: U.S. Large Cap Equity, U.S. Mid Cap Equity, U.S. Small Cap Equity, and International Equity (excluding emerging markets). The Portfolios current target is to invest (either directly or indirectly through other investments) approximately the following percentages of its net assets in instruments that provide exposure to these equity asset categories: U.S. Large Cap Equity (36%), U.S. Mid Cap Equity (3%), U.S. Small Cap Equity (3%), and International Equity (18%). The allocations among the equity asset categories may be changed by the Sub-Adviser without notice or shareholder approval. To gain exposure to each equity asset category, the Sub-Adviser generally will invest the Portfolios assets in ETFs and other equity-related instruments in a manner that is intended to track the performance (before fees and expenses) of an unmanaged index selected by the Sub-Adviser that measures the equity market performance of the asset category. In addition to ETFs, the Portfolios equity investments may include common stocks, options, rights, warrants and other equity-related instruments, including, but not limited to, derivatives as described below. The Sub-Adviser will periodically rebalance the Portfolios allocations among the equity asset categories to maintain the desired exposure to each asset category. The Portfolios allocations to different market capitalizations will vary based on the Sub-Advisers tactical views and in response to changing market conditions. Securities in which the Portfolio may invest may be denominated in any currency. The Portfolios fixed income allocation will be invested primarily (either directly or indirectly through other investments) in U.S. dollar-denominated corporate debt securities that are rated investment grade at the time of purchase (i.e., at least Baa by Moodys Investors Service, Inc. (Moodys) or BBB by Standard & Poors Global Ratings (S&P) or Fitch Ratings Ltd. (Fitch)), or if unrated, determined by the Adviser or Sub-Adviser to be of comparable quality. In addition to ETFs, the Portfolios investments in fixed income securities may include fixed coupon bonds, step-up bonds, bonds with sinking funds, medium term notes, callable and putable bonds, and 144A bonds. The Portfolio may also purchase or sell futures contracts on fixed income securities and ETFs and enter into swap contracts in lieu of investing directly in fixed income securities themselves. In selecting the Portfolios investments in fixed income securities, the Sub-Adviser seeks to create a fixed income allocation with a risk and return profile similar to that of the Bloomberg U.S. Credit Corporate 5-10 Year Index, which is an unmanaged index that includes U.S. dollar-denominated, investment-grade, fixed-rate, taxable securities issued by industrial, utility and financial companies, with maturities between 5 and 10 years. The Portfolio may invest in instruments that provide exposure to the U.S. Treasuries asset class, such as U.S. Treasuries and U.S. Treasury futures contracts. The Portfolios allocation to such instruments will vary based on the Sub-Advisers tactical views and in response to changing market conditions. The Sub-Adviser also will implement a volatility management strategy that seeks to reduce the Portfolios market risk exposure and overall volatility during periods of expected heightened market volatility. Volatility is a statistical measure of the magnitude of changes in the Portfolios returns. A higher volatility level generally indicates higher risk and often results in more frequent and sometimes significant changes in the Portfolios returns. To implement this volatility management strategy, the Sub-Adviser will monitor the expected volatility of the Portfolio as well as a range of risk indicators designed to detect potential volatility. When the expected market volatility increases to a certain level as determined by the Sub-Adviser based on its volatility management strategy, the Portfolio may reduce its exposure to equity investments by shorting equity index futures or by investing in instruments that provide exposure to the U.S. Treasuries asset class or in cash or cash equivalents. During such times, the Portfolios overall exposure to equity investments may deviate significantly from its target allocation and could be substantially less than 60% of the Portfolios net assets (and could be 0% or a net short position in equity investments). In addition, over time the use of a volatility management strategy could result in the Portfolios having average exposure to equity investments that is lower than its target allocation. Although these actions are intended to reduce the overall risk of investing in the Portfolio, they could result in periods of underperformance, including during periods when market values are increasing, but market volatility is high. Under normal market conditions, the Portfolio seeks to maintain, over an extended period of years, an average annualized volatility in the Portfolios daily equity returns of not more than 20%. Due to market conditions or other factors, the actual or realized volatility of the Portfolio for any particular period of time may be materially higher or lower. The magnitude of the changes (or volatility) in the Portfolios daily equity returns is measured by standard deviation. The Sub-Adviser may determine, in its sole discretion, not to implement the volatility management strategy or to allocate the Portfolios assets in a manner different than the target allocations described above for various reasons including, but not limited to, if the volatility management strategy would result in de minimis trades or result in excess trading due to expected flows into or out of the Portfolio, or in connection with market events and conditions and other circumstances as determined by the Sub-Adviser. Volatility management techniques could reduce potential losses and/or mitigate financial risks to insurance companies that provide certain benefits and guarantees available under the Contracts and offer the Portfolio as an investment option in their products. Accordingly, volatility management techniques could also benefit the insurance companies by reducing the risk that the insurance companies will be required to pay amounts to meet the benefits and guarantees from their own resources. In pursuing its investment objectives, the Portfolio may invest in derivatives to implement the volatility management strategy. It is anticipated that the Portfolios derivative instruments will consist of long and short positions on exchange-traded equity and fixed income futures contracts and options on futures contracts, ETFs and indices as well as currency forwards. The Portfolio also may utilize other types of derivatives, such as swaps, and may engage in short sales. The Portfolios investments in derivatives may be deemed to involve the use of leverage because the Portfolio is not required to invest the full market value of the contract upon entering into the contract but participates in gains and losses on the full contract price. The use of derivatives also may be deemed to involve the use of leverage because the heightened price sensitivity of some derivatives to market changes may magnify the Portfolios gain or loss. It is not generally expected, however, that the Portfolio will be leveraged by borrowing money for investment purposes. From time to time or potentially for extended periods of time in periods of continued market distress, the Portfolio may maintain a considerable percentage of its total assets in cash and cash equivalent instruments, including money market funds, as margin or collateral for the Portfolios obligations under derivative transactions, to implement the volatility management strategy, and for other portfolio management purposes. The larger the value of the Portfolios derivative positions, as opposed to positions held in non-derivative instruments, the more the Portfolio will be required to maintain cash and cash equivalents as margin or collateral for such derivatives. The Portfolio may engage in active and frequent trading of portfolio securities in pursuing its principal investment strategies.
Top holdings
As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT| Security | Ticker | Value | % of fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| VANGUARD INT-TERM CORPORATE MUTUAL FUND | VCIT | $75.70M | 38.98% |
| ISH CORE EAFE | IEFA US | $35.46M | 18.26% |
| SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF | — | $21.13M | 10.88% |
| iShares Core S&P 500 ETF | — | $21.10M | 10.86% |
| Vanguard S&P 500 ETF | — | $21.09M | 10.86% |
| Russell 2000 ETF | IWM | $6.62M | 3.41% |
| Vanguard Scottsdale Funds INTERMEDIATE-TERM TREASURY | VGIT | $6.27M | 3.23% |
| ISHARES-C S&P MC | IJH | $6.06M | 3.12% |
| Invesco Government & Agency Portfolio, Institutional Class | — | $2.12M | 1.09% |
| JPMorgan Prime Money Market Fund, IM Shares | — | $649.44K | 0.33% |
Portfolio moves
Dec 31, 2025 → Mar 31, 2026How 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.
Similar funds
Funds whose portfolios most overlap this one, by weight| Fund | Overlap | Net exp. |
|---|---|---|
| 1290 VT Moderate Growth Allocation Portfolio | 77% | 0.85% |
| EQ/Goldman Sachs Growth Allocation Portfolio | 40% | 0.90% |
| Transamerica Goldman Sachs Managed Risk - Growth ETF VP | 39% | 0.40% |
Advisers
| Firm | Role |
|---|---|
| American Century Investment Management, Inc. | Sub-adviser |
| Equitable Investment Management Group, LLC | Adviser |
Footnotes
- Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
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