NAA LARGE GROWTH SERIES
New Age Alpha Variable Funds Trust
Expense ratio
Net assets1
$54.53M
Holdings1
79
Category
US Equity
Return

Investment objective & strategy

As of May 2, 2025 · prospectus

Objective. The NAA Large Growth Series (the Fund) seeks long-term capital growth.

Strategy. Under normal circumstances, the Fund pursues its objective by investing at least 80% of its assets (net assets, plus the amount of any borrowings for investment purposes) in large-capitalization securities that the Adviser considers having growth characteristics. The Fund defines: ? growth as investments having what the Adviser believes to be above-average growth rates (high growth rates for earnings, sales, book value, and cash flow) as compared to their industry or the overall market. ? large-capitalization as those companies with market capitalizations generally falling within the range of the S&P 500 Index. The capitalization range of the S&P 500 Index is between $5.8 billion and $3.8 trillion as of December 31, 2024. The Fund will primarily invest in equity securities, … Under normal circumstances, the Fund pursues its objective by investing at least 80% of its assets (net assets, plus the amount of any borrowings for investment purposes) in large-capitalization securities that the Adviser considers having growth characteristics. The Fund defines: ? growth as investments having what the Adviser believes to be above-average growth rates (high growth rates for earnings, sales, book value, and cash flow) as compared to their industry or the overall market. ? large-capitalization as those companies with market capitalizations generally falling within the range of the S&P 500 Index. The capitalization range of the S&P 500 Index is between $5.8 billion and $3.8 trillion as of December 31, 2024. The Fund will primarily invest in equity securities, including common stocks, REITs, options, warrants, convertible debt securities of U.S. and U.S. -dollar denominated foreign issuers, and American Depositary Receipts (ADRs). Convertible securities are hybrid financial instruments that typically consist of bonds, debentures, or preferred shares that can be converted into a specified number of common shares of the issuing company, typically at the option of the security holder. The Fund may also invest in various investment vehicles for portfolio management purposes, such as mutual funds and exchange-t raded funds (ETFs), including cash management and liquidity management, to obtain a higher return on collateral positions and achieve greater diversification and trading efficiency than would usually be experienced by investing directly and separately in individual securities. In selecting mutual funds and ETFs for investment, the Adviser will prioritize investments that align with and support the Funds overall strategy. In selecting investments for the Fund, the Adviser uses qualitative and quantitative analysis, and other proprietary strategies to identify securities that, in combination, are expected to exceed the total return of the S&P 500 Growth Index by attempting to avoid the losers in the Index. The avoid the losers philosophy is fundamental to the underlying actuarial-like approach of the Adviser with respect to asset management. In its attempts to generate alpha, the Adviser does not aim to pick the winners; instead, it aims to avoid the losers. A loser is a company that, according to the Advisers investment methodology, cannot deliver revenue growth to support its stock price. The Adviser has developed a probability-based measure to identify and avoid these stocks, called the h-factor (h-factor), which is the foundation of the Advisers investment philosophy. The h-factor measures the probability a company cannot deliver the revenue growth indicated by its stock price. In buying and selling securities for the Fund, the Adviser will apply its proprietary h-factor methodology to its security selection process. H-factor uses an algorithm rooted in actuarial risk principles to construct a portfolio with exposure to returns across sectors, styles, geographies, and asset classes. Using an actuarial-based approach, h-factor aims to identify underpriced and overpriced securities and assign them an h-factor score, which is the probability that the issuer will not deliver revenue growth to support the securities current price. Utilizing these scores, the Adviser seeks to avoid the overpriced securities and invest in the underpriced securities. The Fund will sell investments when they no longer meet the Advisers investment criteria, market conditions change or to meet redemption requests.

Top holdings

As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT
SecurityTickerValue% of fund
NVIDIA CORP $5.94M 10.89%
APPLE INC $5.39M 9.89%
MICROSOFT CORP $3.77M 6.91%
BROADCOM INC $3.16M 5.80%
ALPHABET INC CL A $2.92M 5.35%
META PLATFORMS INC CL A $2.46M 4.52%
NETFLIX INC $2.19M 4.01%
AMAZON.COM INC $1.91M 3.51%
BERKSHIRE HATH-B $1.58M 2.90%
MICRON TECHNOLOGY INC $1.53M 2.81%
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Allocation by sector

As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT
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Portfolio moves

Dec 31, 2025 → Mar 31, 2026
Opened
0
Exited
0
Increased
0
Decreased
78
Unchanged
1

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 December 31, 2025 · N-CEN
FirmRole
New Age Alpha Advisors, LLC Adviser

Footnotes

  1. Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.

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