Now, IVES seen it all.
Wedbush Fund Advisers is following up its successful first exchange-traded fund launch with product features that are nearly as flashy as the namesake investment researcherโs wardrobe: artificial intelligence and autocallables. The firmโs nearly $1 billion Dan Ives Wedbush AI Revolution ETF (IVES) is getting a companion fund, the Dan Ives Wedbush AI Autocallable Income ETF. Wedbush, which currently has two funds on its product roster, filed last week for the forthcoming product.
โWeโve got some interesting [intellectual property] in the IVES persona and research that creates some opportunities for differentiated products,โ Matthew Bromberg, chief operating officer and general counsel for Wedbush Fund Advisers, said, referring to the companyโs overall direction rather than the forthcoming fund launch.
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The ETF will use total return swaps and other instruments that provide exposure to an autocallable index. Autocallables are market-linked instruments that pay income via regular coupons and principal at maturity, depending on the performance of an index. In this case, thatโs the Solactive Wedbush AI 30% VT 4% Decrement Index, which gives volatility adjusted exposure to the Solactive Wedbush Artificial Intelligence Index. And that latter index includes stocks that are in the Dan Ives AI 30 Research Report. Phew.
The IVES ETF, which launched last June, has dropped over 7% so far this year, though it gained 16% in the past 12 months. The fundโs focus on AI, along with Dan Ivesโ fame, helped make it one of the fastest-growing ETFs last year. Separately, autocallable ETFs are growing rapidly as a category:
Among at least 10 US products whose names include autocallable, there is a total of about $1 billion in assets, per data from Morningstar Direct.
Calamos, which last year launched the first autocallable ETFs, has the biggest footprint in the space. Its $761 million US Equity Autocallable Income ETF and the $114 million Nasdaq Autocallable Income ETF are the largest funds.
GraniteShares is taking a different approach with the two funds it launched in February that are focused on individual companies: Tesla and Nvidia.
Donโt Label Us: Wedbush, which recently launched its second ETF, the ReturnOnLeadership US Large-Cap ETF (EXEQ), is not planning to โoverdo itโ on Dan Ives-branded products, Bromberg said, noting that the firm has numerous other analysts on its research team. It also isnโt planning to be a white-label ETF shop for other firms, though it may partner with subadvisors and others, he said. โWe want to earn our place. We want to find truly differentiated products that meet investor demand, and we hope more often than not, weโll get it right.โ
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