Matthew Tuttle has previously given the market an ETF powered by UFO disclosure data. He has launched leveraged single-stock products, meme stock wrappers, and instruments whose regulatory filings read like a particularly confident piece of speculative fiction. So, when Tuttle Capital files for a fund called the Heavy Assets Low Obsolescence ETF, you stop.
Heavy assets. Low obsolescence. These are not buzzwords. They are, in a certain light, the anti-buzzwords. The implicit pitch is: things that are large, physical, and entirely indifferent to being disrupted by a nineteen-year-old in a co-working space somewhere. Infrastructure. Plant. Tangible capital. The kinds of assets that generate returns not because someone came up with a better algorithm, but because the pipeline is still there in the morning.
Whether this is a quietly profound contrarian thesis or the funniest joke in this year's ETF filings is, genuinely, unclear. With Tuttle Capital, the line between the two has never been easy to locate. The most interesting part is that HALX is probably the most ideologically coherent product he has ever filed. That is not a compliment I expected to be writing.
Palladium had its crisis of confidence. The auto industry, having decided that electric vehicles would retire the catalytic converter as a concept, engineered its way toward platinum-dominant catalysts. Major manufacturers completed the transition. Analysts drafted the supply surplus projections. The price responded as prices do when the thesis fractures.
Then EV adoption slowed. Hybrids surged faster than pure electrics. The catalytic converter proved rather more durable than the bear case required. Palladium found itself with a recovery narrative it had not been expected to need. It is not back to its highs. But it is back to being a reasonable subject of a product pitch.
Both palladium and platinum are now listed as new CHF-hedged ETPs on the Swiss exchange. The construction is pragmatic: Swiss investors, Swiss francs, no currency drag. No leverage, no theme, no acronym that requires explanation. Just the metals, cleanly packaged.
There is something clarifying about a product that knows precisely what it is.
The SEI High Yield Bond Alternative Credit ETF (LEND, NYSE) appeared in the new listings this week. In a different context, this would barely register. People launch high yield bond ETFs.
The context, however, is that the same batch of data contains seven sector-specific high yield bond ETFs going in the other direction. BondBloxx had constructed a complete set: slice the HY market by industry (consumer cyclicals, consumer non-cyclicals, energy, healthcare, industrials, financials, telecoms) and offer each sector in its own wrapper. The product logic was genuinely thoughtful. The idea was that sophisticated investors could construct their own tilted high yield allocation without buying the whole market.
The market responded with measured indifference.
The BondBloxx product that survived is their sector rotation fund, which makes the allocation decisions for you. LEND, arriving in the same data file as those seven closures, is offering broad HY exposure with an alternative credit angle. The lesson being relearned, as it is on a roughly five-year cycle, is that investors will pay considerably more for someone else to make the hard calls than they will for the tools to make those calls themselves.
The philosopher Plato proposed that behind every imperfect physical thing exists a perfect ideal form, accessible only through reason. The investment management firm bearing his name has applied this principle to the problem of generating franking credits for Australian superannuation investors in retirement.
The Plato Global Shares Income Active ETF holds up to 600 global equities, caps any single position at 3%, and is built to maximise distributions and tax efficiency for pension-phase investors in self-managed super funds. The construction is sensible. The mandate is clear. The audience knows exactly what they are getting.
It is not heavy assets. It is not palladium at an inflection point. It will not prompt anyone to file an SEC document that sounds like the opening chapter of a novel. It is, in the most literal sense possible, a fund that does exactly what it says.
Plato, writing in the dialogues, was primarily interested in what things really are rather than what they merely appear to be. In that sense, PGI2 is deeply Platonic. It appears to be an income fund. It is an income fund.