Investment Strategy |
Feb. 28, 2026 |
|---|---|
| MFS Active International Value ETF | |
| Prospectus [Line Items] | |
| Strategy [Heading] | Principal Investment Strategies |
| Strategy Narrative [Text Block] | MFS (Massachusetts Financial Services Company, the fund's investment adviser) normally invests at least 80% of the fund’s net assets in value companies. Value companies are companies that MFS believes are undervalued compared to their perceived worth in the marketplace. MFS considers a number of factors when determining whether a company is undervalued, including whether (i) the issuer is included in an index which is representative of value companies; (ii) the issuer is classified as a value company by an independent third party financial data provider and/or (iii) the issuer exhibits the characteristics of a value company, considering metrics such as historical and/or projected price-to-book, price-to-earnings, and price-to-cash flow ratios, enterprise value (the total value of the issuer’s outstanding equity and debt) relative to earnings, and free cash flow yield compared to the applicable equity market and/or to issuers in the same sector or industry. In assessing the relative value of an issuer, MFS may also consider measures of financial quality, such as indicators of profitability (i.e., return on equity and return on invested capital), balance sheet strength (including leverage and interest coverage ratios), and capital allocation discipline. Value companies tend to have stock prices that are low relative to their earnings, dividends, assets, or other financial measures. MFS normally invests the fund’s assets primarily in foreign equity securities, including emerging market equity securities. Emerging market countries are countries with financial and capital markets in the development phase. Emerging market countries include countries located in Latin America, Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and developing countries of Europe, primarily Eastern Europe. MFS normally invests the fund’s assets primarily in common stocks and depositary receipts. Equity securities include common stocks, depositary receipts, and other securities that represent an ownership interest (or right to acquire an ownership interest) in a company or other issuer. MFS may invest the fund’s assets in securities of companies of any size. MFS normally invests the fund's assets across different industries, sectors, countries, and regions, but MFS may invest a significant percentage of the fund’s assets in issuers in a single industry, sector, country, or region. MFS uses an active bottom-up investment approach to buying and selling investments for the fund. Investments are selected primarily based on fundamental analysis of individual issuers. In managing the fund, MFS also utilizes quantitative models to assist the portfolio management team in the portfolio construction and security selection process. For purposes of the fund's 80% policy, net assets include the amount of any borrowings for investment purposes. |
| MFS Blended Research Small-Mid Cap ETF | |
| Prospectus [Line Items] | |
| Strategy [Heading] | Principal Investment Strategies |
| Strategy Narrative [Text Block] | MFS (Massachusetts Financial Services Company, the fund’s investment adviser) seeks to achieve the fund's objective by actively identifying potential investments based on fundamental and quantitative analysis and then constructing a portfolio from these potential investments while managing various risk factors (e.g., issuer, industry, and sector weightings, market capitalization, and volatility) compared to the Russell 2500 Index. MFS normally invests at least 80% of the fund’s net assets in issuers with small and/or medium market capitalizations. MFS defines small and medium market capitalization companies as issuers that (i) have market capitalizations within the capitalization range of the Russell 2500 Index over the past 12 months based on the current composition of the index and/or are (ii) classified as a small or medium capitalization company by an independent third party financial data provider. The market capitalization range of companies considered to have small and medium capitalizations based on the above criteria will change over time depending on market conditions. For illustrative purposes, as of April 30, 2026, the range of the market capitalizations of the issuers in the Russell 2500 Index was between approximately $27.7 million and $161.9 billion. MFS normally invests the fund’s assets primarily in common stocks and equity interests in real estate investment trusts (REITs). Common stocks and equity interests in REITs are equity securities that represent an ownership interest (or right to acquire an ownership interest) in a company or other issuer. In selecting investments for the fund, MFS is not constrained by any particular investment style. MFS may invest the fund’s assets in the stocks of companies it believes to have above average earnings growth potential compared to other companies (growth companies), in the stocks of companies it believes are undervalued compared to their perceived worth (value companies), or in a combination of growth and value companies. MFS may invest the fund’s assets in foreign securities. MFS normally invests the fund's assets across different industries and sectors, but MFS may invest a significant percentage of the fund's assets in issuers in a single industry or sector. MFS uses an active bottom-up approach to buying and selling investments for the fund. Investments are selected primarily based on blending fundamental and quantitative research. MFS uses fundamental analysis of individual issuers, which takes into account factors such as an issuer’s financial condition and market, economic, political, and regulatory conditions, to determine a fundamental rating for an issuer. MFS uses quantitative analysis to systematically evaluate an issuer’s valuation, price and earnings momentum, earnings quality, and other factors, in determining a quantitative rating for an issuer. MFS combines the fundamental rating with the quantitative rating to create a blended rating for an issuer. When the fundamental rating is not available, MFS treats the issuer as having a neutral fundamental rating. MFS constructs the portfolio using a portfolio optimization process that considers the blended rating, as well as issuer, industry, and sector weightings, market capitalization, volatility, and other factors. The portfolio managers have the discretion to adjust the inputs and parameters used in the optimization process and the fund's portfolio holdings based on factors such as the desired portfolio characteristics and the portfolio managers’ qualitative assessment of the optimization results. MFS' goal is to construct an actively managed portfolio with a target predicted tracking error of approximately 2% compared to the Russell 2500 Index. Tracking error generally measures how the differences between the fund's returns and the Russell 2500 Index's returns have varied over a period of time. For purposes of the fund's 80% policy, net assets include the amount of any borrowings for investment purposes. |