There's a moment in every investor's journey when they look at the market, squint sceptically, and mutter, “Everyone else is an idiot.” Some people channel this energy into angry posts on X. Others start podcasts. David Lee, formerly of Bank of America Merrill Lynch's Asia Pacific Global Credit and Special Situations desk, decided to launch an ETF.
The LOGIQ Contrarian Opportunities ETF (ticker: LCO) began trading on the NYSE this week, and its prospectus reads like a love letter to everyone who's ever been confidently wrong at a dinner party. The fund seeks “total return, consisting of capital appreciation and income” by taking a “contrarian approach,” which the filing defines as identifying “investments where prevailing market views or positioning diverge from the Sub-Adviser's views.”
In simpler terms: they buy stuff other people don't want to buy.
The word “contrarian” appears approximately 900 times in the prospectus, or at least it feels that way. The strategy involves finding companies where the market's view is wrong and LOGIQ's view is right, which, when you think about it, is what every single active manager believes they're doing. The difference here is the candour. Most fund managers dress up their approach in language about “alpha generation” and “systematic edge.” LOGIQ just comes out and says it: we think the crowd is wrong, and we're going to bet on it.
The filing explains that the sub-adviser considers factors like “valuation relative to fundamentals, earnings growth potential, cash flow generation, balance sheet strength, material changes in industry outlook, competitive positioning within its industry, management quality, and sensitivity to macroeconomic and sector-specific trends.”
So, everything. They look at everything. Contrarianism with comprehensive due diligence.
LOGIQ Capital LLC, based in Englewood, New Jersey, serves as sub-adviser, with Tidal Investments handling the ETF wrapper. Tidal, for those keeping score at home, now manages approximately $48.87 billion across its various trusts and has become the preferred white-label ETF platform for anyone with a strategy and a dream.
The fund can invest in basically anything: domestic and foreign equities, depositary receipts, MLPs, preferred stocks, corporate bonds, government bonds, high-yield bonds (the prospectus helpfully notes these are also called “junk bonds,” presumably for the retail investors who wandered in), U.S. Treasuries, cash equivalents, and other ETFs. Foreign investments may include emerging market exposure. The portfolio will generally hold between 30 and 75 positions.
There's also an options component, because of course there is. The fund may “purchase and write put and call options on equity securities and equity security indices in an effort to generate income, establish directional positions, reduce portfolio volatility and/or hedge against market or other risks.” Nothing says contrarian like also hedging your contrarian bets.
David Lee's career trajectory makes for an interesting foundation for a contrarian fund. According to LOGIQ Capital's website (which, in keeping with the contrarian theme, is charmingly minimalist), Lee previously ran the Global Credit and Special Situations business in the Asia Pacific region for Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
“Special Situations” is Wall Street code for “things are complicated and potentially messy.” It's the department that handles distressed debt, restructurings, and other investments that require more lawyers than analysts. In other words, Lee spent years professionally navigating situations where the obvious path was wrong and the non-obvious path required serious homework.
LOGIQ Capital Partners describes itself as “a private investment firm managing the long-term capital of our family and closely aligned partners,” with an “investment philosophy rooted in fundamental research, patient capital allocation, and a willingness to pursue contrarian opportunities where we believe the market is mispricing risk or potential.”
The ETF, then, represents a democratisation of the approach: now everyone can invest alongside the family office, for the cost of whatever expense ratio they've settled on.
Launching a contrarian fund at the end of 2025 is either perfectly timed or hilariously mistimed, depending on your view.
On one hand, markets have been dominated by a handful of mega-cap tech stocks for years. Concentration risk is elevated, passive flows have pushed valuations in certain sectors to levels that make traditional value investors weep, and the opportunity set for genuine contrarians has arguably never been richer. The stuff nobody wants? There's a lot of it.
On the other hand, being contrarian in the age of meme stocks, retail options trading, and AI-driven momentum means occasionally standing in front of freight trains that don't stop just because your DCF model says they should.
The real question is whether there's enough demand for a formalised contrarian strategy. The target market appears to be investors who (a) believe the crowd is often wrong, (b) don't trust themselves to pick the specific wrong crowd to bet against, and (c) want someone with actual credit and special situations experience to do it for them.
That's a real niche, and probably a durable one. The human tendency to prefer consensus is well-documented, which means the contrarian opportunity set should remain robust indefinitely.
The LOGIQ Contrarian Opportunities ETF is a genuinely interesting addition to the ETF landscape, not because the strategy is novel (contrarian investing is as old as markets themselves) but because the positioning is so explicit. There's no pretence here, no obscure factor tilts dressed up in quantitative jargon. The fund's entire pitch is: “We think we're smarter than the market, and we'd like you to pay us a fee to prove it.”
Whether that confidence is warranted remains to be seen. David Lee's background suggests he's seen enough special situations to know what a genuine mispricing looks like. The multi-asset flexibility gives the fund room to find opportunities wherever they exist. And the willingness to actually call the strategy “contrarian” suggests a level of self-awareness that's refreshing in an industry addicted to complexity.
For investors who've spent years nodding along to Warren Buffett's “be fearful when others are greedy” wisdom while dutifully buying whatever index fund their 401(k) offers, LCO provides a way to actually act on those instincts.
Just remember: being contrarian only works when you're right. The prospectus, to its credit, doesn't promise that part.