<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none;" alt="" src="https://px.ads.linkedin.com/collect/?pid=4496002&amp;fmt=gif">

New ETF Listings – Corgi Had One Leveraged ETF. Now They Have Thirty-Five.

Until this week, Corgi Funds were primarily known as a creative thematic ETF house: Coffee and Energy Drinks, Beauty and Skincare, US War Machine, Bay Area Based, NYC Based. Inventive stuff. They had one leveraged product on the books, the 2x Founder-Led Companies ETF, which suggested a cautious toe in the water.

The latest batch of new listings suggests they have since decided the water is fine, and that they would like a much larger pool. Out of 39 flagged products this week, 34 are new Corgi 2X daily leveraged ETFs, filed in a single batch. Covering Brazil, China, Taiwan, South Korea, emerging markets, Europe, US biotech, US regional banks, US micro caps, US mega cap growth, US real estate, and (my personal favourite) US consumer staples. They went from one leveraged product to thirty-five. In one go. I find this admirable in the same way one finds a person jumping off a very high cliff admirable: the commitment is beyond question.


EUVX: They Made a 2X Version of the Thing That Already Works

Let me tell you about the Corgi Lithography and Semiconductor Photonics ETF. The non-leveraged version, trading under the ticker EUV, launched recently and crossed $150 million in assets under management within two weeks. That is, by any measure, an extraordinary reception for a thematic fund. Investors clearly wanted EUV lithography, photoresists, optical networking components, and the broader photonics supply chain. They found the story compelling. They put real money in.

The natural follow-up question in any normal industry would be: what have we learned from this success? What does strong early demand tell us about how to develop the product further?

Corgi's answer, which I find entirely logical, is: more leverage. EUVX is the 2X daily version of their own successful fund. The underlying theme (ASML, TSMC, Lam Research, the whole semiconductor photonics stack) is genuinely interesting, the equipment cycle is genuinely strong, and so the obvious next step is to create a product that doubles your gains on the up days and doubles your losses on the down days, with daily rebalancing decay quietly working in the background. The description in the listing data renders this product as “CORGI LTHGRPHY AND SMCNDCTR PHT ETF,” which I think is simply the universe telling you not to look too closely.


XAGI: Two Times the SingularityNET Token, for When Regular Crypto AI Feels Insufficient

Of all the products in this batch, XAGI is the one I keep returning to. The Corgi AGIX 2X Daily ETF provides 2X daily leveraged exposure to the SingularityNET token.
SingularityNET, for context, is a blockchain-based artificial intelligence marketplace. The mission, in the company's own words, involves creating a decentralised network for AI services, with its native token facilitating transactions between AI agents. The project takes its name from the concept of technological singularity: the hypothetical point at which artificial intelligence surpasses human intelligence and accelerates beyond our ability to predict or control.

Someone at Corgi has looked at this and thought: we should offer 2X daily leverage on that.

There is a peculiar coherence to it, once you sit with it for a moment. The token already trades at a price point measured in cents, meaning each percentage move represents a very small absolute value that could, in theory, become a larger absolute value via leverage. Whether it moves in the direction you would prefer is, of course, a different matter entirely. The token trades with the volatility you would expect from a crypto AI governance token: which is to say, quite a lot. Adding a 2X daily multiplier to that curve seems less like a product decision and more like a philosophical statement about the nature of risk.

Hartford Alpha Capture Growth ETF: ACGO, Quietly Interesting in the Corner

Somewhere in this same batch, between the leveraged corgis and the SingularityNET futures, sits the Hartford Alpha Capture Growth ETF. Alpha capture, as a concept, comes from institutional finance. Investment banks run systems that collect and aggregate trading ideas from sell-side analysts across their coverage universes. The idea is that if you harvest enough of these signals systematically, you can isolate genuine alpha from the noise. This is a real, serious strategy that large institutions run quietly in the background.

Hartford has decided to package it as a retail ETF. The ticker is ACGO. It is, relative to everything else in this batch, disarmingly sensible.

OWN: The Best Ticker in the Batch

The last product I want to mention is the Inside Ownership 100 ETF, with the ticker OWN. The premise is that companies where senior executives hold significant equity stakes in their own businesses have skin in the game and, in theory, operate with interests more aligned to shareholders than companies where leadership treats their stock mostly as a compensation mechanism to be sold on a schedule.

This is a real and defensible investment thesis. It has been studied. Serious people have written papers about it. And now it is an ETF that tracks 100 such companies, under a ticker that is either the product of genius or a very fortunate coincidence.


Bernie Thurston

Bernie loves data. Fortunately for him, London’s finance industry has been indulgent, providing him lots of benchmark data to play with and enjoy. Bernie’s journey began at Sky, where he designed the first interactive television and helped build a technical-based charity (ctt.org). He then hopped over to finance, and soon found himself at a start-up working on dividends and derivatives. Then, by nature of the fact that finance and technology have rapidly conjoined, he found himself working with Credit Suisse to build an index aggregation and distribution platform. Markit then acquired the start-up and Bernie battled his way up the greasy pole becoming the Managing Director of Markit’s equities division, with responsibility for index, ETF and Dividends. But the siren song of startups called once more. And Bernie was headhunted to rescue a failing index business. Over five years, he helped reverse the fortunes of DeltaOne Solutions, turning into a fighting force. So successful was the turn around that Markit came along and acquired this company as well. But Bernie still loved start-ups. To that end, he founded Ultumus, an ETF and benchmark data company. Ultumus aims to provide the best data in the most timely and consumable manner possible. With clients on both buy and sell side, when something happens in the index or ETF industry, Ultumus is the first to know.

Comments

Related posts

Search New ETF Listings – The ESG Shelf Is Quietly Being Cleared Out, the 3X Leveraged Quantum Shelf Is Filling Up
New Listings – Bitcoin Goes Green, Pikachu Goes Electric, and Two ESG Funds Quietly Give Up Search