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Summary Prospectus
January 1, 2026
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American Century® U.S. Quality Value ETF
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Ticker: VALQ
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Exchange: NYSE Arca, Inc.
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Before you invest, you may want to review the fund's prospectus, which contains more information about the fund and its risks. You can find the fund's prospectus, reports to shareholders, and other information about the fund online at americancentury.com/etfdocs. You can also get this information at no cost by calling 833-ACI-ETFS or sending an email request to [email protected]. The fund's prospectus and other information are also available from financial intermediaries through which shares of the fund may be purchased or sold.
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This summary prospectus incorporates by reference the fund's prospectus and statement of additional information (SAI) each dated January 1, 2026 (as supplemented at the time you receive this summary prospectus), as well as the Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and the financial statements included in the fund's Form N-CSR for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2025. The fund's SAI and Form N-CSR may be obtained, free of charge, in the same manner as the prospectus.
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Investment Objective
The fund seeks to provide investment results that closely correspond, before fees and expenses, to the performance of the American Century U.S. Quality Value Index (Index).
Fees and Expenses
The following table describes the fees and expenses you may pay if you buy, hold, and sell shares of the fund. You may pay other fees, such as brokerage commissions and other fees to financial intermediaries, which are not reflected in the tables and examples below.
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Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)
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Management Fee
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0.29%
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Other Expenses
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0.00%
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Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
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0.29%
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Example
The example below is intended to help you compare the costs of investing in the fund with the costs of investing in other funds. The example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the fund for the time periods indicated and then redeem all of your shares at the end of those periods (unless otherwise indicated), that you earn a 5% return each year, and that the fund's operating expenses remain the same. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions your costs would be:
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1 year
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3 years
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5 years
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10 years
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$30
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$93
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$163
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$369
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Portfolio Turnover
The fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or "turns over" its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs and may result in higher taxes when fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the fund's performance. During the most recent fiscal year, the fund's portfolio turnover rate was 147% of the average value of its portfolio.
Principal Investment Strategies
Under normal market conditions, the fund invests at least 80% of its assets in the component securities of the underlying index. The Index is a rules-based index maintained by American Century Investment Management, Inc. (the index provider). The Index is designed to select securities of large- and mid-capitalization companies that are undervalued or have sustainable income.
The Index universe is defined by the S-Network US Equity Large/Mid-Cap 1000 Index, which consists of 1000 large and medium publicly traded U.S. equity securities. The Index is constructed using a rules-based methodology that screens and weights stocks based on fundamental measures of quality, value, and income. A quality screen seeks to eliminate the bottom of the universe of stocks based on measures of profitability, earnings quality, management quality, leverage and momentum. A valuation score is computed for the remaining stocks, determined by the attractiveness of each stock relative to its peers in the same industry group based on value, earnings yield and cash flow yield metrics. An income screen based on dividend yield is applied to eliminate the bottom of the universe of dividend-paying stocks. The Index is constructed by combining the value stocks and income stocks using the valuation and income scores and portfolio optimization. Portfolio optimization uses quantitative models to build a portfolio of stocks from the scores described above that are expected to provide the optimal balance between risk and expected return. Though component securities of the Index may change from time to time, the index typically consists of 200-300 securities and, as of September 30, 2025, its market capitalization was approximately $4.6 billion and larger.
The Index and fund are rebalanced monthly and reconstituted quarterly.
The fund may use a "representative sampling" strategy with respect to its Index when a replication strategy might be detrimental to shareholders. For example, the fund may use such strategy when there are practical difficulties or substantial costs involved in compiling a portfolio of securities to follow the Index or, in certain instances, when a component security becomes temporarily illiquid, unavailable or less liquid. To the extent the fund uses representative sampling, the advisor invests in what it believes to be a representative sample of the component securities in the Index using quantitative analytical procedures to give the fund's portfolio an investment profile similar to that of its Index. The fund also may realize savings in transaction costs or other efficiencies by investing up to 20% of its assets in securities or instruments not included in the Index, but which the advisor believes will help the fund track the Index. When deciding whether to buy or sell a security, and how and when to implement a trade, portfolio managers may consider the expected implementation costs and tax consequences of the trade in an attempt to gain trading efficiencies, avoid unnecessary risk, minimize tax impact, and/or enhance fund performance.
In addition, the fund may use futures contracts to invest cash balances, simulate investments in the Index, facilitate trading or minimize transaction costs. The portfolio managers may also use futures contracts to seek to reduce the fund's tracking error relative to the Index.
The fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its net assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the Index is concentrated.
Principal Risks
•Equity Securities Risk - The value of equity securities, may fluctuate due to changes in investor perception of a specific issuer, changes in the general condition of the stock market, or occurrences of political or economic events that affect equity issuers and the market. Common stock prices may be particularly sensitive to rising interest rates, as the cost of capital rises and borrowing costs increase.
•Market Trading Risk - The fund faces numerous market trading risks, including the potential lack of an active market for fund shares, losses from trading in secondary markets, periods of high volatility and disruption in the creation and/or redemption process of the fund. Any of these factors, among others, may lead to the fund's shares trading at a premium or discount to NAV. Thus, you may pay more (or less) than NAV when you buy shares of the fund in the secondary market, and you may receive less (or more) than NAV when you sell those shares in the secondary market. The portfolio managers cannot predict whether shares will trade above (premium), below (discount) or at NAV.
•Index-Related Risk - Unlike many investment companies, the fund is not actively managed and the portfolio managers do not attempt to take defensive positions under any market conditions, including declining markets. Therefore, the portfolio managers generally will not buy or sell a security unless that security is added or removed, respectively, from the Index, even if that security generally is underperforming. There is no assurance that the Index will be determined, composed or calculated accurately. While the index provider provides descriptions of what the Index is designed to achieve, the index provider does not guarantee the quality, accuracy or completeness of data in respect of its indices, and does not guarantee that the Index will be in line with the described index methodology. Gains, losses or costs to the fund caused by errors in the Index may therefore be borne by the fund and its shareholders.
•Rebalance Risk - The fund rebalances its portfolio in accordance with the Index's rebalance schedule. Accordingly, any change to this schedule will result in corresponding changes to the fund's rebalance schedule.
•Calculation Methodology Risk - The Index relies on various sources of information to assess the criteria of issuers included in the Index, including information that may be based on assumptions and estimates. Neither the fund nor American Century
Investment Management, Inc. (the advisor) can offer assurances that the Index's calculation methodology or sources of information will provide an accurate assessment of included issuers.
•Style Risk - There can be no assurance that the investment factor stock selection process and screens of the Index will enhance performance. Exposure to certain investment factors and use of screens may detract from performance in some market environments, perhaps for extended periods.
•Market Risk - The value of the fund's shares will go up and down, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, based on the performance of the companies whose securities it owns and other factors generally affecting the securities market. Market risks, including political, regulatory, economic and social developments, can affect the value of the fund's investments. Natural disasters, public health emergencies, war, terrorism and other unforeseeable events may lead to increased market volatility and may have adverse long-term effects on world economies and markets generally.
•Mid-Capitalization Company Risk - Investments in medium-size companies may involve greater risk and price volatility than investments in larger, more mature companies.
•Tracking Error Risk - Tracking error is the divergence of the fund's performance from that of the Index. Tracking error may occur because of differences between the securities held in the fund's portfolio and those included in the Index, pricing differences, transaction costs, the fund's holding of cash, differences in timing of the accrual of dividends or interest, changes to the Index or the need to meet various new or existing regulatory requirements. This risk may be heightened during times of increased market volatility or other unusual market conditions. Tracking error also may result because the fund incurs fees and expenses, while the Index does not.
•Sampling Risk - To the extent the fund uses a representative sampling strategy, it may hold a smaller number of securities than are in the Index or it may hold securities that are not included in the Index. As a result, an adverse development respecting an issuer of securities held by the fund could result in a greater decline in the fund's NAV than would be the case if all of the securities in the Index were held. The fund's use of a representative sampling strategy may also include the risk that it may not track the return of the Index with the same degree of accuracy as would an investment vehicle that invested in every component security of the Index with the same weightings as the Index.
•Management Risk - To the extent the fund uses representative sampling, the strategy may fail to produce the intended results.
•Non-Correlation Risk - There is no guarantee that the fund will achieve a high degree of correlation to the Index and, therefore, achieve its investment objective. Market disruptions and regulatory restrictions could have an adverse effect on the fund's ability to adjust its exposure to the required levels in order to track the Index. In addition, the fund's NAV may deviate from the Index if the fund fair values a portfolio security at a price other than the price used by the Index for that security.
•Authorized Participant Concentration Risk - Only an authorized participant may engage in creation or redemption transactions directly with the fund. The fund may have a limited number of institutions that act as authorized participants. To the extent that these institutions exit the business or are unable to proceed with creation and/or redemption orders with respect to the fund and no other authorized participant is able to step forward to process creation and/or redemption orders, fund shares may trade at a discount to net asset value (NAV) and possibly face trading halts and/or delisting. This risk may be more pronounced in volatile markets, potentially where there are significant redemptions in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) generally.
•Concentration Risk - To the extent the fund concentrates in a specific industry or a group of industries, it may be subject to greater risks and market fluctuations than a portfolio investing in a broader range of industries.
•Large Shareholder Risk - Certain shareholders, including other funds advised by the advisor, may from time to time own a substantial amount of the shares of the fund. In addition, a third party investor, the advisor or an affiliate of the advisor, an authorized participant, a market maker, or another entity may invest in the fund and hold its investment for a limited period of time solely to facilitate commencement of the fund or to facilitate the fund's achieving a specified size or scale. There can be no assurance that any large shareholder would not redeem its investment, that the size of the fund would be maintained at such levels or that the fund would continue to meet applicable listing requirements. Redemptions by large shareholders could have a significant negative impact on the fund. In addition, transactions by large shareholders may account for a large percentage of the trading volume on the NYSE Arca, Inc. and may therefore have a material upward or downward effect on the market price of the shares.
•Derivatives Risk - The use of derivative instruments such as futures contracts involves risks different from, or possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing directly in securities and other traditional instruments. Derivatives are subject to a number of risks, including liquidity, interest rate, market, credit and correlation risk. Derivatives used for hedging or risk management may not operate as intended, may expose the fund to other risks, and may be insufficient to protect the fund from the risks they were intended to hedge. In addition, derivatives can create economic leverage in the fund's portfolio, which may result in significant volatility and cause the fund to participate in losses (as well as gains) in an amount that exceeds the fund's initial investment. Certain derivatives have the potential for unlimited loss, regardless of the size of the initial investment.
•Principal Loss Risk - At any given time your shares may be worth less than the price you paid for them. In other words, it is possible to lose money by investing in the fund.
An investment in the fund is not a bank deposit, and it is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any other government agency.
Fund Performance
The following bar chart and table provide some indication of the risks of investing in the fund. The bar chart shows changes in the fund's performance from year to year. The table shows how the fund's average annual returns for the periods shown compared with those of a broad measure of market performance. The table also shows returns for the Russell 1000® Value Index and the American Century U.S. Quality Value Index, which the advisor considers to be more representative of the fund's investment strategy. The fund's past performance (before and after taxes) is not necessarily an indication of how the fund will perform in the future. For current performance information, please visit americancentury.com.
Sales charges and account fees, if applicable, are not reflected in the bar chart. If those charges were included, returns would be less than those shown.
Calendar Year Total Returns
Highest Performance Quarter (2Q 2020): 15.82% Lowest Performance Quarter (1Q 2020): -26.89%
As of September 30, 2025, the most recent calendar quarter end, the fund's year-to-date return was 7.15%.
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Average Annual Total Returns
For the calendar year ended December 31, 2024
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1 year
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5 years
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Since Inception
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Inception Date
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American Century U.S. Quality Value ETF Shares
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Return Before Taxes
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16.74%
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9.42%
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8.41%
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01/11/2018
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Return After Taxes on Distributions
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16.29%
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8.89%
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7.84%
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01/11/2018
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Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares
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10.21%
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7.35%
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6.58%
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01/11/2018
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Russell 1000® Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes)
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24.51%
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14.28%
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13.07%
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American Century U.S. Quality Value Index1
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes)
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17.17%
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N/A
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N/A
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-
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Russell 1000® Value Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes)
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14.37%
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8.68%
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8.02%
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1 The inception date of the American Century U.S. Quality Value Index was November 22, 2022.
After-tax returns are calculated using the historical highest individual federal marginal income tax rates and do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Actual after-tax returns depend on an investor's tax situation and may differ from those shown. After-tax returns are not relevant to investors who hold their fund shares through tax-deferred arrangements, such as 401(k) plans or IRAs.
Portfolio Management
Investment Advisor
American Century Investment Management, Inc.
Portfolio Managers
Will Enderle, Portfolio Manager, has been a member of the team that manages the fund since 2022.
Stephen Quance, Senior Vice President, CIO of Disciplined Equity and Head of Global Analytics, has been a member of the team that manages the fund since 2025.
Purchase and Sale of Fund Shares
The fund is an ETF. Fund shares may only be bought and sold in a secondary market through a broker-dealer at a market price. Because ETF shares trade at market prices rather than NAV, shares may trade at a price greater than NAV (a premium) or less than NAV (a discount). An investor may incur costs attributable to the difference between the highest price a buyer is willing to pay to purchase shares of the fund (bid) and the lowest price a seller is willing to accept for shares of the fund (ask) when buying or selling shares in the secondary market (bid-ask spread). Investors can find information on the fund's NAV, market price, premiums and discounts, and bid-ask spread at americancentury.com.
Tax Information
Fund distributions are generally taxable as ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-deferred account such as a 401(k) or individual retirement account (in which case you may be taxed upon withdrawal of your investment from such account).
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other Financial Intermediaries
If you purchase the fund through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the advisor and its related companies may pay the intermediary for the sale of fund shares and related services. These payments may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other intermediary and your salesperson to recommend the fund over another investment. Ask your salesperson or visit your financial intermediary's website for more information.
©2026 American Century Proprietary Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved.
CL-SUM-93572 2601