Financial Services
Live Price
Offline$105.74
+0.02% today
1Y Change
+0.25%
Window
Jun 25, 2025 โ Jun 12, 2026
Coverage: 242 bars ยท Jun 25, 2025 โ Jun 12, 2026
Research Briefing
A compact read on the setup, peer context, quarterly changes, and recent earnings reaction.
Research Snapshot
Invesco Treasury Collateral ETF (CLTL) is a Financial Services stock with a market cap of $1.35B and listed on NYSE. The stock last traded around $105.74 and up 0.2% across the available one-year price window (Jun 25, 2025 โ Jun 12, 2026). Baseline metrics include revenue growth of 0.0%, EPS growth of 0.0%, a dividend yield of 0.0%. What stands out right now is revenue 0.0%, EPS 0.0%, free cash flow 0.0% with operating margin 0.0% and ROIC 0.0%. Stock Foundry combines CLTL price history, valuation, growth, dividend context, earnings, analyst forecasts, news, related Financial Services peers on this page.
Sector Context
How this name stacks up against nearby peers on first-pass metrics.
Revenue Growth
Below sector median
0.0% vs +3.4% peer median
Operating Margin
Below sector median
0.0% vs +4.7% peer median
What Changed This Quarter
Latest report context and the signals most likely to have changed the story.
The setup is mixed rather than one-directional
Revenue is 0.0% and EPS is 0.0%, while operating margin sits near 0.0%.
Benchmark Edge
Normalized return, excess return, max drawdown, and calendar-year wins against the benchmarks investors actually use.
CLTL
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Normalized return
SPY
--
S&P 500
Excess Return
--
Relative to SPY
CLTL Max Drawdown
-0.41%
Trailing 1Y
SPY Max Drawdown
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Trailing 1Y
Uses the longest available daily history for CLTL and SPY.
Company Overview
Invesco Treasury Collateral ETF
NYSE
The fund generally will invest at least 80% of its total assets in the components of the index. The index is designed to measure the performance of U.S. Treasury Obligations with a maximum remaining maturity of less than or equal to 12 months. "U.S. Treasury Obligations" refer to securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury where the payment of principal and interest is backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government. They include U.S. Treasury notes, bills and bonds.
Valuation, growth, profitability, and balance sheet signals.
Company announcements and filings-style updates.
Next Step
After the overview, the strongest next step is usually chart context or a tighter compare set.