âStar Portfolio Managerâ Model Returns in the ETF Era
Do investors want faces to go with their funds? Itâs hard to imagine ARK Invest without Cathie Wood, for example. And a small but growing number of exchange-traded funds have become associated with other financial personalities. Wedbushâs Dan Ives and Fundstratâs Tom Lee are the personas behind successful lines of relatively new ETFs. Not only do their ideas shape the investment strategies, but their names are central to the marketing. Itâs a trend that is attracting a lot of interest from investors. âWhile the fund industry has shifted away from star portfolio managers running funds, there are some starâmanaged ETFs, like those run by Cathie Woodâs ARK and Chris Davisâs Davis Advisors that rely on a portfolio manager making discretionary, convictionâdriven stock picks each day,â said Cindy Zarker, relationship manager at Fuse Research Network. âEssentially, [itâs] the mutualâfund âstar PMâ model delivered through an ETF wrapper.â Last week, Carter Worth, a financial analyst who regularly appears on CNBC, launched his own fund, the Worth Charting Options Income ETF (WRTH), which is designed to profit as short-term price changes after earnings announcements revert to normal levels. That fund uses a modified (and simply adorable-sounding) âstrangleâ strategy, which benefits from a stock price fluctuating in a range defined by a sold call optionâs higher strike price and a sold put optionâs lower strike price. It takes advantage of the decrease in the value of an option over time. âShort-term options expire worthless a high, high percentage of the time,â Worth told ETF Upside. Funds built with technical or research frameworks differ from those of the star manager days of old, particularly because they follow rules-based methodologies instead of a portfolio managerâs daily judgment, Zarker said. âThis removes keyâperson risk and makes them more indexâlike, even when active,â she said. âWhile a few wellâknown analysts have packaged their research frameworks into ETFs, this remains a niche corner of the market, and we donât view it as a huge trend in the foreseeable future.â Still, for some of the ETFs in the niche category, having a face attached to a name has likely added wind to their sails: - Tom Leeâs three Fundstrat Grannyshots ETFs attracted about $3.2 billion over 12 months, per Morningstar Direct. The $4.3 billion Grannyshots US Large Cap ETF (GRNY) has returned about 8% year to date and 40% over a year. - The Dan IVES Wedbush AI Revolution ETF (IVES) dropped $5 million in the first three months of the year, but raked in nearly $900 million over 12 months. That fund is up about 5% year to date and 30% over a year. Who Wants to Be a Billionaire? Worth built his business selling research to institutional clients, expanding it later to individuals like portfolio managers. âThe most fertile ground is people who are currently customers,â he said, of potential ETF investors. âWe have a brand. We have a body of work over 30 years ⊠Itâs a package.â The post âStar Portfolio Managerâ Model Returns in the ETF Era appeared first on The Daily Upside.
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