
The fund generally invests in common stocks of U.S. companies that have a market capitalization greater than $2 billion. It seeks to deliver a lower realized portfolio volatility than its benchmark, the S&P 500 Index, by utilizing a stock selection process that expands on traditional measures of price volatility by including measures of asymmetric volatility and seeking securities of businesses that demonstrate consistent cash-flows, stable operations, and strong balance sheets. The fund is an actively managed ETF that does not seek to replicate the performance of a specified index.
American Century Low Volatility ETF trades as LVOL on AMEX. The company is classified in Financial Services / Asset Management and reports in USD.
The current profile places the business in Asset Management. This section is intended to summarize the operating segments, products, geographies, and main revenue lines from official filings.
Detailed operating-segment data is not available for this symbol yet.
Use this area for management strategy, capital allocation priorities, target markets, and measurable goals from the latest annual report or investor presentation.
The app now provides the structure, but exact strategic claims should come from official company documents before being treated as a finished investment thesis.
American Century Low Volatility ETF can be compared against peers such as BlackRock Future Tech ETF, Calvert US Select Equity ETF, Innovator Double Stacker 9 Buffer ETF – October, Merlyn.AI SectorSurfer Momentum ETF, Goldman Sachs Future Real Estate and Infrastructure Equity ETF, VanEck Morningstar ESG Moat ETF.
A complete thesis should compare growth, margins, balance-sheet risk, valuation multiples, and market position against direct competitors.
Current signals to investigate include market capitalization of $14.62M, beta of 0.79, and return on equity of N/A.
This section should be validated with evidence such as durable margins, brand strength, regulation, switching costs, cost advantage, distribution, or technology.
Key risks should include financial leverage, cyclicality, customer concentration, regulatory exposure, currency risk, and execution risk.
LVOL currently shows total debt of N/A and beta of 0.79. Missing data should be treated as a research gap, not as low risk.
Production-capacity detail is not available as structured data yet. For industrial, defense, semiconductor, or real-estate companies, this should be reviewed from annual reports and investor presentations.
No structured backlog field is available yet. If the company reports backlog, review the relevant filing section before adding it to the thesis.
Use this section for major contracts, product launches, construction projects, acquisitions, or strategic programs that can materially affect valuation.
Recent filings to review: SC 13G/A (2026-06-03 00:00:00), SC 13G/A (2026-06-03 00:00:00), SC 13G/A (2026-06-03 00:00:00), SC 13G (2026-06-03 00:00:00).
Customer concentration is not available as structured data here. Add it from official filings when a company discloses material customers or revenue concentration.
Supplier concentration and critical supply-chain dependencies are not available as structured data here. This should be researched from annual reports and risk disclosures.
Company website is not available.
For US-listed stocks, verify the thesis against official filings, earnings call transcripts, and company investor relations materials.