Seeks capital appreciation, measured in US dollars
INVESTMENT FOCUS
By including fundamental, quantitative and macro views in a global flexible multi-asset strategy, seeks to assess risk premia through a consistent framework across both security selection and asset allocation, enabling optimization between bottom-up and top-down positioning
Flexible approach that aims to capture alpha through strategic asset allocation, tactical flexibility and bottom-up security selection over the full global economic cycle
Seeks to incorporate MFS' investment insights from across the entire investment platform
Important Risk Considerations
The fund may not achieve its objective and/or you could lose money on your investment in the fund.
Stock: Stock markets and investments in individual stocks are volatile and can decline significantly in response to or investor perception of, issuer, market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions.
Bond: Investments in debt instruments may decline in value as the result of, or perception of, declines in the credit quality of the issuer, borrower, counterparty, or other entity responsible for payment, underlying collateral, or changes in economic, political, issuer-specific, or other conditions. Certain types of debt instruments can be more sensitive to these factors and therefore more volatile. In addition, debt instruments entail interest rate risk (as interest rates rise, prices usually fall). Therefore, the portfolio's value may decline during rising rates. Portfolios that consist of debt instruments with longer durations are generally more sensitive to a rise in interest rates than those with shorter durations. At times, and particularly during periods of market turmoil, all or a large portion of segments of the market may not have an active trading market. As a result, it may be difficult to value these investments and it may not be possible to sell a particular investment or type of investment at any particular time or at an acceptable price. The price of an instrument trading at a negative interest rate responds to interest rate changes like other debt instruments; however, an instrument purchased at a negative interest rate is expected to produce a negative return if held to maturity.
Derivatives: Investments in derivatives can be used to take both long and short positions, be highly volatile, involve leverage (which can magnify losses), and involve risks in addition to the risks of the underlying indicator(s) on which the derivative is based, such as counterparty and liquidity risk.
Value: The portfolio's investments can continue to be undervalued for long periods of time, not realize their expected value, and be more volatile than the stock market in general.
Growth: Investments in growth companies can be more sensitive to the company's earnings and more volatile than the stock market in general.
Commodity: Commodity-related investments can be more volatile than investments in equity securities or debt instruments and can be affected by changes in overall market movements, commodity index volatility, changes in interest rates, currency fluctuations, or factors affecting a particular industry or commodity, and demand/supply imbalances in the market for the commodity. Events that affect the financial services sector may have a significant adverse effect on the portfolio.
Please see the prospectus for further information on these and other risk considerations.
Fund Information
Fund Inception
19-Nov-2024
Net Assets
(US$
M)
As of 31-Jan-25
US$15.60
Fiscal Year End
JANUARY
SFDR Classification
Article 8
Benchmark
60% MSCI All Country World Index/ 40% Bloomberg Global Aggregate (USD Hedged) Blended Index
Share Class Information
Class Inception
20-Nov-2024
Net Asset Value (NAV)
As of 11-Feb-25
$102.45
Most Recent NAV Change
As of 11-Feb-25
$0.02
|
0.02%
ISIN
LU2864446013
SEDOL
BQV3GC3
WKN
A40JNL
Bloomberg
MFGFMI1 LX
CUSIP
L63678426
Maximum Sales Charge
--
Benchmark
60% MSCI All Country World Index/ 40% Bloomberg Global Aggregate (USD Hedged) Blended Index
Kevin M. Dwan is an investment officer and equity portfolio manager for the International Growth strategies at MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). In this role, he is responsible for final buy and sell decisions, portfolio construction and risk and cash management. He also participates in the research process and strategy discussions. He is based in Singapore.
Kevin joined MFS in 2005 as a global equity analyst. He was named director of research -- Asia in 2007 and assumed his current role in 2012. Prior to MFS, he worked for nine years at Putnam Investments in various roles in Boston, London and Tokyo, including equity analyst and sector-sleeve portfolio manager for international core equity strategies. He began his career in the financial services industry in 1996.
Kevin earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics from Harvard University and a Master of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School.
Pilar Gomez-Bravo, CFA, is co-chief investment officer of Fixed Income at MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). As co-CIO, she has joint oversight of MFS' global fixed income team and works collaboratively with MFS' investment leadership team to ensure its fixed income investors have the tools and skill sets necessary to serve the firm's clients globally. She is also a fixed income portfolio manager with oversight of the firm's Global Aggregate and Global Credit portfolio management teams. She is based in MFS' London office.
Pilar joined MFS in 2013 as a portfolio manager from Imperial Capital, where she served as a managing director. She was named director of Fixed Income -- Europe in 2017 before being named co-CIO in 2023. She previously served as a portfolio manager and head of research at Negentropy Capital, within Matrix Asset Management, and cofounded Marengo Asset Management. From 2006 through 2010, she served as a senior portfolio manager and head of credit, Europe, for Neuberger Berman. She began her career in financial services at Lehman Brothers in 1997 and spent nine years with the firm, including serving as head of investment grade credit research for Europe.
Pilar earned the equivalent of an LL.B degree in Law and a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics and Business Science from Universidad Pontificia Comillas (ICADE E-3, Spain). She also earned a Master of Business Administration degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management. She has held the Chartered Financial Analyst designation since 2000.
Performance results reflect ongoing charges and any applicable expense subsidies and waivers in effect during the periods shown. All historic results assume distributions within the fund and/or the share class are reinvested.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator for future results. All financial investments involve an element of risk. The value of investments may rise and fall so you may get back less than originally invested.
Investors should consider the risks, including lower returns, related to currency movements between their investing currency and the portfolio's base currency, if different.
Important Performance Information
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Average Annual Total Returns
Annual Rate of Return
Annual Rate of Return (%)
Annual Rate of Return (%)
No data currently available
annual rate of return table
Performance results reflect ongoing charges and any applicable expense subsidies and waivers in effect during the periods shown. All historic results assume distributions within the fund and/or the share class are reinvested.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator for future results. All financial investments involve an element of risk. The value of investments may rise and fall so you may get back less than originally invested.
Investors should consider the risks, including lower returns, related to currency movements between their investing currency and the portfolio's base currency, if different.
Important Performance Information
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Pricing & Distributions
Pricing History
NAV at Close of Trading on:
11-Feb-25
Net Asset Value (NAV):
$102.45
Change
($) (since
10-Feb-25):
0.02
Change (%) (since
10-Feb-25):
0.02
Market Price (MP):
Maximum data displayed is for the most recent 10 years
Historical NAV Lookup
Enter date for which you wish to obtain a Historical NAV for this fund
Historical NAV may not be available for all dates.
Historical MP Lookup
Enter date for which you wish to obtain a Historical MP for this fund
The Record Date is the date on which a fund declares a distribution. To receive the distribution, an investor must be a shareholder of record on that date.
The Payable Date is the date on which the distribution is paid to shareholders.
Dividend Rate per Share is the amount of dividend that a shareholder will receive for each share held. It can be calculated by taking the total amount of dividends paid and dividing it by the total shares outstanding.
Ex-Dividend Date is the date on which a fund goes ex-dividend. The interval between the announcement and the payment of the next dividend. An investor must own the fund before the ex-dividend date to be eligible for the dividend payout.
There are no distributions for this share class or distributions are currently not available
Portfolio & Holdings Information
The portfolio is actively managed, and current holdings may be different.
The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS®) was developed by and/or is the exclusive property of MSCI, Inc. and S&P Global Market Intelligence Inc. ("S&P Global Market Intelligence"). GICS is a service mark of MSCI and S&P Global Market Intelligence and has been licensed for use by MFS. MFS has applied its own internal sector/industry classification methodology for equity securities and non-equity securities that are unclassified by GICS.
Alpha is a measure of the portfolio's risk-adjusted performance. When compared to the portfolio's beta, a positive alpha indicates better-than-expected portfolio performance and a negative indicates alpha worse-than-expected portfolio performance.
Beta is a measure of the volatility of a portfolio relative to the overall market. A beta less than 1.0 indicates lower risk than the market; a beta greater than 1.0 indicates higher risk than the market. It is most reliable as a risk measure when the return fluctuations of the portfolio are highly correlated with the return fluctuations of the index chosen to represent the market.
Information ratio is a measure of consistency in excess return. It is calculated by taking the annualized excess return over a benchmark and dividing it by the annualized standard deviation of excess return.
R squared represents the percentage of the portfolio's movements that can be explained by the general movements of the market. Index portfolios will tend to have values very close to 100. R squared is not a measure of performance.
The Sharpe Ratio is a risk-adjusted measure calculated to determine reward per unit of risk. It uses a standard deviation and excess return. The higher the Sharpe Ratio, the better the portfolio's historical risk-adjusted performance.
Standard Deviation is an indicator of the portfolio's total return volatility, which is based on a minimum of 36 monthly returns. The larger the portfolio's standard deviation, the greater the portfolio's volatility.
Tracking error is the standard deviation of a portfolio's excess returns. Excess returns are a portfolio's return minus the benchmark's annualized return.
Treynor Ratio: Treynor Ratio is a risk adjusted measure of performance. It is the ratio of the annualized excess return of the portfolio over the risk free rate for a given period divided by the Beta of the portfolio versus its benchmark for the same period. It measures the amount of excess return over the risk free rate earned per unit of systematic risk (beta) assumed.
Upside and downside capture is a measure of how well a manager was able to replicate or improve on phases of positive benchmark returns, and how badly the manager was affected by phases of negative benchmark returns. Upside capture ratio for a portfolio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during periods when the benchmark had a positive return and dividing it by the benchmark return during that same period. Downside capture ratio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during the periods of negative benchmark performance and dividing it by the benchmark return for that period.
Updated Monthly As of
31-Jan-25
Benchmark
60% MSCI All Country World Index/ 40% Bloomberg Global Aggregate (USD Hedged) Blended Index
Performance Statistics Table
10 Yr.
5 Yr.
3 Yr.
Alpha
n/a
n/a
n/a
Beta
n/a
n/a
n/a
R-squared
n/a
n/a
n/a
Standard Deviation %
n/a
n/a
n/a
Sharpe Ratio
n/a
n/a
n/a
Tracking Error
n/a
n/a
n/a
Information Ratio
n/a
n/a
n/a
Treynor Ratio
n/a
n/a
n/a
Downside Capture %
n/a
n/a
n/a
Upside Capture %
n/a
n/a
n/a
Top 10 Holdings
As of
31-Jan-25
UST Bond 2Yr Future MAR 31 25
iShares Physical Gold ETC ETF
Bloomberg Commodity F3 Total Return Swap
Apple Inc
NVIDIA Corp
Microsoft Corp
Euro BOBL Future MAR 06 25
Amazon.com Inc
Meta Platforms Inc
Euro Bund 10Yr Future MAR 06 25*
The portfolio is actively managed, and current holdings may be different.
Top 10 Equity Holdings
As of
31-Jan-25
Apple Inc
NVIDIA Corp
Microsoft Corp
Amazon.com Inc
Meta Platforms Inc
Amundi MSCI India II UCITS ETF ETF
Alphabet Inc Class A
Tesla Inc
Alphabet Inc Class C
Broadcom Inc
Top 10 Fixed Income Holdings
As of
31-Jan-25
UST Bond 2Yr Future MAR 31 25
Euro BOBL Future MAR 06 25
UST Bond 5Yr Future MAR 31 25
USD CPI 5YR RECEIVER
Japan Government Thirty Year Bond 2.4% DEC 20 34
Euro Schatz 2Yr Future MAR 06 25
Hellenic Republic Government Bond 3.375% JUN 15 34
UMBS 30 Year 2.0
Korea Treasury Bond 1.875% JUN 10 29
Euro Bund 10Yr Future MAR 06 25*
Sector Weights (%)
As of
31-Jan-25
% of Equity Assets
Information Technology
24.87
Financials
17.19
Consumer Discretionary
11.61
Industrials
10.25
Communication Services
9.47
Health Care
8.17
Consumer Staples
5.25
Energy
3.98
Materials
3.13
Utilities
2.17
ETFs
1.72
Real Estate
1.61
Index Options
0.59
Equity Warrants
0.00
The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS®) was developed by and/or is the exclusive property of MSCI, Inc. and S&P Global Market Intelligence Inc. ("S&P Global Market Intelligence"). GICS is a service mark of MSCI and S&P Global Market Intelligence and has been licensed for use by MFS. MFS has applied its own internal sector/industry classification methodology for equity securities and non-equity securities that are unclassified by GICS.
The portfolio is actively managed, and current holdings may be different.
Portfolio characteristics are based on equivalent exposure, which measures how a portfolio's value would change due to price changes in an asset held either directly or, in the case of a derivative contract, indirectly. The market value of the holding may differ.
*Short positions, unlike long positions, lose value if the underlying asset gains value.
Click here to view fund documents such as Key Investor Documents, Complete Prospectus, Annual Report, Semi Annual Report, Swing Pricing, and Fact Sheets. Some of these documents are available in other languages.
Seeks capital appreciation, measured in US dollars
INVESTMENT FOCUS
By including fundamental, quantitative and macro views in a global flexible multi-asset strategy, seeks to assess risk premia through a consistent framework across both security selection and asset allocation, enabling optimization between bottom-up and top-down positioning
Flexible approach that aims to capture alpha through strategic asset allocation, tactical flexibility and bottom-up security selection over the full global economic cycle
Seeks to incorporate MFS' investment insights from across the entire investment platform
Important Risk Considerations
The fund may not achieve its objective and/or you could lose money on your investment in the fund.
Stock: Stock markets and investments in individual stocks are volatile and can decline significantly in response to or investor perception of, issuer, market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions.
Bond: Investments in debt instruments may decline in value as the result of, or perception of, declines in the credit quality of the issuer, borrower, counterparty, or other entity responsible for payment, underlying collateral, or changes in economic, political, issuer-specific, or other conditions. Certain types of debt instruments can be more sensitive to these factors and therefore more volatile. In addition, debt instruments entail interest rate risk (as interest rates rise, prices usually fall). Therefore, the portfolio's value may decline during rising rates. Portfolios that consist of debt instruments with longer durations are generally more sensitive to a rise in interest rates than those with shorter durations. At times, and particularly during periods of market turmoil, all or a large portion of segments of the market may not have an active trading market. As a result, it may be difficult to value these investments and it may not be possible to sell a particular investment or type of investment at any particular time or at an acceptable price. The price of an instrument trading at a negative interest rate responds to interest rate changes like other debt instruments; however, an instrument purchased at a negative interest rate is expected to produce a negative return if held to maturity.
Derivatives: Investments in derivatives can be used to take both long and short positions, be highly volatile, involve leverage (which can magnify losses), and involve risks in addition to the risks of the underlying indicator(s) on which the derivative is based, such as counterparty and liquidity risk.
Value: The portfolio's investments can continue to be undervalued for long periods of time, not realize their expected value, and be more volatile than the stock market in general.
Growth: Investments in growth companies can be more sensitive to the company's earnings and more volatile than the stock market in general.
Commodity: Commodity-related investments can be more volatile than investments in equity securities or debt instruments and can be affected by changes in overall market movements, commodity index volatility, changes in interest rates, currency fluctuations, or factors affecting a particular industry or commodity, and demand/supply imbalances in the market for the commodity. Events that affect the financial services sector may have a significant adverse effect on the portfolio.
Please see the prospectus for further information on these and other risk considerations.
Fund Information
Fund Inception
19-Nov-2024
Net Assets
(US$
M)
As of 31-Jan-25
US$15.60
Fiscal Year End
JANUARY
SFDR Classification
Article 8
Benchmark
60% MSCI All Country World Index/ 40% Bloomberg Global Aggregate (USD Hedged) Blended Index
Share Class Information
Class Inception
20-Nov-2024
Net Asset Value (NAV)
As of 11-Feb-25
$102.45
Most Recent NAV Change
As of 11-Feb-25
$0.02
|
0.02%
ISIN
LU2864446013
SEDOL
BQV3GC3
WKN
A40JNL
Bloomberg
MFGFMI1 LX
CUSIP
L63678426
Maximum Sales Charge
--
Benchmark
60% MSCI All Country World Index/ 40% Bloomberg Global Aggregate (USD Hedged) Blended Index
Kevin M. Dwan is an investment officer and equity portfolio manager for the International Growth strategies at MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). In this role, he is responsible for final buy and sell decisions, portfolio construction and risk and cash management. He also participates in the research process and strategy discussions. He is based in Singapore.
Kevin joined MFS in 2005 as a global equity analyst. He was named director of research -- Asia in 2007 and assumed his current role in 2012. Prior to MFS, he worked for nine years at Putnam Investments in various roles in Boston, London and Tokyo, including equity analyst and sector-sleeve portfolio manager for international core equity strategies. He began his career in the financial services industry in 1996.
Kevin earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics from Harvard University and a Master of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School.
Pilar Gomez-Bravo, CFA, is co-chief investment officer of Fixed Income at MFS Investment Management® (MFS®). As co-CIO, she has joint oversight of MFS' global fixed income team and works collaboratively with MFS' investment leadership team to ensure its fixed income investors have the tools and skill sets necessary to serve the firm's clients globally. She is also a fixed income portfolio manager with oversight of the firm's Global Aggregate and Global Credit portfolio management teams. She is based in MFS' London office.
Pilar joined MFS in 2013 as a portfolio manager from Imperial Capital, where she served as a managing director. She was named director of Fixed Income -- Europe in 2017 before being named co-CIO in 2023. She previously served as a portfolio manager and head of research at Negentropy Capital, within Matrix Asset Management, and cofounded Marengo Asset Management. From 2006 through 2010, she served as a senior portfolio manager and head of credit, Europe, for Neuberger Berman. She began her career in financial services at Lehman Brothers in 1997 and spent nine years with the firm, including serving as head of investment grade credit research for Europe.
Pilar earned the equivalent of an LL.B degree in Law and a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics and Business Science from Universidad Pontificia Comillas (ICADE E-3, Spain). She also earned a Master of Business Administration degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management. She has held the Chartered Financial Analyst designation since 2000.
Performance results reflect ongoing charges and any applicable expense subsidies and waivers in effect during the periods shown. All historic results assume distributions within the fund and/or the share class are reinvested.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator for future results. All financial investments involve an element of risk. The value of investments may rise and fall so you may get back less than originally invested.
Investors should consider the risks, including lower returns, related to currency movements between their investing currency and the portfolio's base currency, if different.
Important Performance Information
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Average Annual Total Returns
Annual Rate of Return
Annual Rate of Return (%)
Annual Rate of Return (%)
No data currently available
annual rate of return table
Performance results reflect ongoing charges and any applicable expense subsidies and waivers in effect during the periods shown. All historic results assume distributions within the fund and/or the share class are reinvested.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator for future results. All financial investments involve an element of risk. The value of investments may rise and fall so you may get back less than originally invested.
Investors should consider the risks, including lower returns, related to currency movements between their investing currency and the portfolio's base currency, if different.
Important Performance Information
Class I1 Roll-Up shares do not pay distributions to shareholders.
Pricing & Distributions
Pricing History
NAV at Close of Trading on:
11-Feb-25
Net Asset Value (NAV):
$102.45
Change
($) (since
10-Feb-25):
0.02
Change (%) (since
10-Feb-25):
0.02
Market Price (MP):
Maximum data displayed is for the most recent 10 years
Historical NAV Lookup
Enter date for which you wish to obtain a Historical NAV for this fund
Historical NAV may not be available for all dates.
Historical MP Lookup
Enter date for which you wish to obtain a Historical MP for this fund
The Record Date is the date on which a fund declares a distribution. To receive the distribution, an investor must be a shareholder of record on that date.
The Payable Date is the date on which the distribution is paid to shareholders.
Dividend Rate per Share is the amount of dividend that a shareholder will receive for each share held. It can be calculated by taking the total amount of dividends paid and dividing it by the total shares outstanding.
Ex-Dividend Date is the date on which a fund goes ex-dividend. The interval between the announcement and the payment of the next dividend. An investor must own the fund before the ex-dividend date to be eligible for the dividend payout.
There are no distributions for this share class or distributions are currently not available
The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS®) was developed by and/or is the exclusive property of MSCI, Inc. and S&P Global Market Intelligence Inc. ("S&P Global Market Intelligence"). GICS is a service mark of MSCI and S&P Global Market Intelligence and has been licensed for use by MFS. MFS has applied its own internal sector/industry classification methodology for equity securities and non-equity securities that are unclassified by GICS.
Alpha is a measure of the portfolio's risk-adjusted performance. When compared to the portfolio's beta, a positive alpha indicates better-than-expected portfolio performance and a negative indicates alpha worse-than-expected portfolio performance.
Beta is a measure of the volatility of a portfolio relative to the overall market. A beta less than 1.0 indicates lower risk than the market; a beta greater than 1.0 indicates higher risk than the market. It is most reliable as a risk measure when the return fluctuations of the portfolio are highly correlated with the return fluctuations of the index chosen to represent the market.
Information ratio is a measure of consistency in excess return. It is calculated by taking the annualized excess return over a benchmark and dividing it by the annualized standard deviation of excess return.
R squared represents the percentage of the portfolio's movements that can be explained by the general movements of the market. Index portfolios will tend to have values very close to 100. R squared is not a measure of performance.
The Sharpe Ratio is a risk-adjusted measure calculated to determine reward per unit of risk. It uses a standard deviation and excess return. The higher the Sharpe Ratio, the better the portfolio's historical risk-adjusted performance.
Standard Deviation is an indicator of the portfolio's total return volatility, which is based on a minimum of 36 monthly returns. The larger the portfolio's standard deviation, the greater the portfolio's volatility.
Tracking error is the standard deviation of a portfolio's excess returns. Excess returns are a portfolio's return minus the benchmark's annualized return.
Treynor Ratio: Treynor Ratio is a risk adjusted measure of performance. It is the ratio of the annualized excess return of the portfolio over the risk free rate for a given period divided by the Beta of the portfolio versus its benchmark for the same period. It measures the amount of excess return over the risk free rate earned per unit of systematic risk (beta) assumed.
Upside and downside capture is a measure of how well a manager was able to replicate or improve on phases of positive benchmark returns, and how badly the manager was affected by phases of negative benchmark returns. Upside capture ratio for a portfolio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during periods when the benchmark had a positive return and dividing it by the benchmark return during that same period. Downside capture ratio is calculated by taking the portfolio's return during the periods of negative benchmark performance and dividing it by the benchmark return for that period.
Updated Monthly As of
31-Jan-25
Benchmark
60% MSCI All Country World Index/ 40% Bloomberg Global Aggregate (USD Hedged) Blended Index
Performance Statistics Table
10 Yr.
5 Yr.
3 Yr.
Alpha
n/a
n/a
n/a
Beta
n/a
n/a
n/a
R-squared
n/a
n/a
n/a
Standard Deviation %
n/a
n/a
n/a
Sharpe Ratio
n/a
n/a
n/a
Tracking Error
n/a
n/a
n/a
Information Ratio
n/a
n/a
n/a
Treynor Ratio
n/a
n/a
n/a
Downside Capture %
n/a
n/a
n/a
Upside Capture %
n/a
n/a
n/a
Top 10 Holdings
As of
31-Jan-25
UST Bond 2Yr Future MAR 31 25
iShares Physical Gold ETC ETF
Bloomberg Commodity F3 Total Return Swap
Apple Inc
NVIDIA Corp
Microsoft Corp
Euro BOBL Future MAR 06 25
Amazon.com Inc
Meta Platforms Inc
Euro Bund 10Yr Future MAR 06 25*
The portfolio is actively managed, and current holdings may be different.
Top 10 Equity Holdings
As of
31-Jan-25
Apple Inc
NVIDIA Corp
Microsoft Corp
Amazon.com Inc
Meta Platforms Inc
Amundi MSCI India II UCITS ETF ETF
Alphabet Inc Class A
Tesla Inc
Alphabet Inc Class C
Broadcom Inc
Top 10 Fixed Income Holdings
As of
31-Jan-25
UST Bond 2Yr Future MAR 31 25
Euro BOBL Future MAR 06 25
UST Bond 5Yr Future MAR 31 25
USD CPI 5YR RECEIVER
Japan Government Thirty Year Bond 2.4% DEC 20 34
Euro Schatz 2Yr Future MAR 06 25
Hellenic Republic Government Bond 3.375% JUN 15 34
UMBS 30 Year 2.0
Korea Treasury Bond 1.875% JUN 10 29
Euro Bund 10Yr Future MAR 06 25*
Sector Weights (%)
As of
31-Jan-25
% of Equity Assets
Information Technology
24.87
Financials
17.19
Consumer Discretionary
11.61
Industrials
10.25
Communication Services
9.47
Health Care
8.17
Consumer Staples
5.25
Energy
3.98
Materials
3.13
Utilities
2.17
ETFs
1.72
Real Estate
1.61
Index Options
0.59
Equity Warrants
0.00
The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS®) was developed by and/or is the exclusive property of MSCI, Inc. and S&P Global Market Intelligence Inc. ("S&P Global Market Intelligence"). GICS is a service mark of MSCI and S&P Global Market Intelligence and has been licensed for use by MFS. MFS has applied its own internal sector/industry classification methodology for equity securities and non-equity securities that are unclassified by GICS.
The portfolio is actively managed, and current holdings may be different.
Portfolio characteristics are based on equivalent exposure, which measures how a portfolio's value would change due to price changes in an asset held either directly or, in the case of a derivative contract, indirectly. The market value of the holding may differ.
*Short positions, unlike long positions, lose value if the underlying asset gains value.
Click here to view fund documents such as Key Investor Documents, Complete Prospectus, Annual Report, Semi Annual Report, Swing Pricing, and Fact Sheets. Some of these documents are available in other languages.