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  <channel>
    <title>ETF View Blog</title>
    <link>https://www.etfview.com/insights</link>
    <description>We provide comprehensive information on a wide range of funds, including performance metrics, holdings, and more. Stay on top of the latest market trends and make informed investment decisions with our accurate and easy-to-use data.</description>
    <language>en</language>
    <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 14:12:32 GMT</pubDate>
    <dc:date>2026-06-15T14:12:32Z</dc:date>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <item>
      <title>Inaugural ETF View kick-off meeting </title>
      <link>https://www.etfview.com/insights/inaugural-etf-view-kick-off-meeting</link>
      <description>&lt;div class="hs-featured-image-wrapper"&gt; 
 &lt;a href="https://www.etfview.com/insights/inaugural-etf-view-kick-off-meeting" title="" class="hs-featured-image-link"&gt; &lt;img src="https://www.etfview.com/hubfs/Inaugural%20ETF%20View%20kick-off%20meeting.jpg" alt="Inaugural ETF View kick-off meeting&amp;nbsp;" class="hs-featured-image" style="width:auto !important; max-width:50%; float:left; margin:0 15px 15px 0;"&gt; &lt;/a&gt; 
&lt;/div&gt; 28 April 2026 
&lt;br&gt; 
&lt;br&gt; 
&lt;ul&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt;Key takeaways: 
  &lt;ul&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;T+1 settlement and active ETF classification were the two biggest issues taken forward&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Ensure smoother launches and correct valid pricing, a more refined pre-launch process needed, Ultumus took on responsibility for driving this forward&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Ultumus agreed to engage more broadly with issuers on these topics ahead of the next meeting&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;The group wants to push for more standardisation and more industry coordination&lt;/li&gt; 
  &lt;/ul&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt;Next session focus: 
  &lt;ul&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Active ETF classification&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;T+1 settlement&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Pre-launch UAT and PCF process&lt;/li&gt; 
  &lt;/ul&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
&lt;/ul&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded>28 April 2026
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt; 
&lt;ul&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt;Key takeaways: 
  &lt;ul&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;T+1 settlement and active ETF classification were the two biggest issues taken forward&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Ensure smoother launches and correct valid pricing, a more refined pre-launch process needed, Ultumus took on responsibility for driving this forward&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Ultumus agreed to engage more broadly with issuers on these topics ahead of the next meeting&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;The group wants to push for more standardisation and more industry coordination&lt;/li&gt; 
  &lt;/ul&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt;Next session focus: 
  &lt;ul&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Active ETF classification&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;T+1 settlement&lt;/li&gt; 
   &lt;li&gt;Pre-launch UAT and PCF process&lt;/li&gt; 
  &lt;/ul&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
&lt;/ul&gt;  
&lt;img src="https://track-eu1.hubspot.com/__ptq.gif?a=148570238&amp;amp;k=14&amp;amp;r=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.etfview.com%2Finsights%2Finaugural-etf-view-kick-off-meeting&amp;amp;bu=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.etfview.com%252Finsights&amp;amp;bvt=rss" alt="" width="1" height="1" style="min-height:1px!important;width:1px!important;border-width:0!important;margin-top:0!important;margin-bottom:0!important;margin-right:0!important;margin-left:0!important;padding-top:0!important;padding-bottom:0!important;padding-right:0!important;padding-left:0!important; "&gt;</content:encoded>
      <category>Meeting Insights</category>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 14:12:32 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.etfview.com/insights/inaugural-etf-view-kick-off-meeting</guid>
      <dc:date>2026-06-15T14:12:32Z</dc:date>
      <dc:creator>Bernie Thurston</dc:creator>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Nasdaq Playing fast and loose with the rules, Yahoo! was the lesson, SpaceX is the sequel.</title>
      <link>https://www.etfview.com/insights/insights</link>
      <description>&lt;div class="hs-featured-image-wrapper"&gt; 
 &lt;a href="https://www.etfview.com/insights/insights" title="" class="hs-featured-image-link"&gt; &lt;img src="https://www.etfview.com/hubfs/Lead%20Image%20(94)%20(1).png" alt="Nasdaq Playing fast and loose with the rules, Yahoo!" class="hs-featured-image" style="width:auto !important; max-width:50%; float:left; margin:0 15px 15px 0;"&gt; &lt;/a&gt; 
&lt;/div&gt; 
&lt;h5&gt;&lt;span style="font-size: 16px; color: #434953;"&gt;Three decades after Yahoo! demonstrated what happens when an index pretends a 10% float is the same as a 100% float, Nasdaq has rewritten its rulebook so a single $1.75 trillion private rocket company can join the index roughly fifteen trading days after listing. The passive investor, as ever, gets a starring role: that of the patsy.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/h5&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;h5&gt;&lt;span style="font-size: 16px; color: #434953;"&gt;Three decades after Yahoo! demonstrated what happens when an index pretends a 10% float is the same as a 100% float, Nasdaq has rewritten its rulebook so a single $1.75 trillion private rocket company can join the index roughly fifteen trading days after listing. The passive investor, as ever, gets a starring role: that of the patsy.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/h5&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Did you ever think index inclusion was supposed to be rules-based, dull, and largely indifferent to whichever billionaire was behind the new issuance? Did you think the Nasdaq-100 was a vehicle for passive investors rather than a marketing channel for the listings desk? If so, the 2026 Nasdaq-100 methodology update is not pleasant reading.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;SpaceX is preparing what would be the largest IPO in history. If reports are correct, it is targeting a valuation of roughly $1.75 trillion on a free float of about 4.3% of shares outstanding. On the proposed methodology, the company will be eligible for Nasdaq-100 inclusion within 15 trading days of listing, courtesy of a new “Fast Entry” rule and a removed minimum float threshold. Dave Nadig has estimated the resulting forced buying from Nasdaq-100 trackers at around $7 billion in a single session. For those keeping score at home: roughly 10% of the entire tradable capacity, soaked up in one day, by people who are not allowed to ask the price.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The ETF industry was built on a single, repeated promise: this is passive, rules-based, transparent, and indifferent to who is issuing the stock. No star manager. No discretion. No favours. Just methodology. That is the trust that took $20 trillion of global ETF assets to where they are. Rewrite the eligibility and weighting rules around one issuer and the index stops looking passive. It starts looking like an active allocation decision with a pre-selected beneficiary. On the reported facts, that beneficiary is Elon Musk.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is not the moment ETFs break. It is the moment we find out, that index rules can quietly turn passive money into exit liquidity for low-float mega-IPOs. The last time we ran this experiment, the case study was called Yahoo!. The last time was an accident. This time it looks intentional.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;&lt;br&gt;Yahoo! 1996-1999: the original low-float lesson nobody bothered to remember&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;When Yahoo! listed in April 1996, only around 2.6 million of its 25.7 million shares were sold into the float. The rest sat with founders Jerry Yang and David Filo, SoftBank, Sequoia and assorted early backers. The Nasdaq-100 of the day weighted Yahoo! by full market capitalisation, on the apparent theory that the SoftBank stake would magically materialise on the offer if a Vanguard fund happened to need some additional equity.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;As the price went vertical through 1997-1999, Yahoo!'s notional weight inflated regardless of how many shares actually changed hands. By 1999, the Nasdaq-100 also had a Microsoft problem: the stock had grown to more than 24% of the index, brushing up against the 25% concentration cap embedded in the IRS 5-10-40 diversification rule for registered investment companies. The December 1998 special rebalance was, with admirable honesty, designed to make the QQQ launchable. Investor protection was a happy by-product, not the brief (Betashares whitepaper).&lt;br&gt;Yahoo!'s own moment of clarity arrived in December 1999, when S&amp;amp;P 500 inclusion punted the stock up by roughly a quarter in a single session as index funds bought what they were obliged to buy into a float that was not there. Norway's sovereign wealth fund later described the episode as “the textbook example of the importance of free float adjustment”. The textbook, in a surprising twist, was published shortly after the exam.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;&lt;br&gt;SpaceX 2026: bigger, brassier, with worse share class arithmetic&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;SpaceX reportedly submitted its confidential S-1 to the SEC on 1 April 2026, a date whose symbolism we will leave without additional comment. The May 2026 marketing assumes a valuation of about $1.75 trillion and a raise of up to $75 billion, against estimated 2025 revenue of around $18.5 billion. That works out at roughly 95 times trailing revenue, in a part of the market that does not contain a comparable public company at remotely the same scale. The fact that this is being absorbed without notable rebellion is, depending on your priors, a tribute to narrative or a tribute to amnesia.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;On those numbers, the public free float at IPO would be roughly 4.3% of shares outstanding - smaller, in percentage terms, than Yahoo!'s in 1996. Elon Musk would reportedly retain around 42-43% of the equity. The proposed dual-class structure would give Class B shares ten votes each, and reports suggest Musk would be effectively unremovable without his own consent. Alphabet, Sequoia, Fidelity and other strategic holders make up much of the rest. None of them, as far as anyone has volunteered, intend to be net sellers into the IPO.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;&lt;br&gt;The methodology change that just happens to fit one issuer&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;In February 2026, Nasdaq published a consultation on amendments to the Nasdaq-100 methodology. The rules were approved on 30 March 2026 and reportedly took effect on 1 May 2026, conveniently positioned ahead of the IPO window. Press reports have suggested SpaceX made fast index inclusion a condition of choosing Nasdaq over NYSE, a negotiating posture that, in a more self-respecting decade, an exchange might have politely declined. We will let readers assess whether the timing is coincidental.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: bold;"&gt;Three changes deserve attention:&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;ul&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt;Fast Entry. A newly listed company whose market cap would rank in the top 40 of the Nasdaq-100 can be added within 15 trading days of IPO, replacing the previous 3–12-month seasoning period.&lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt;M&lt;span style="background-color: transparent; letter-spacing: 0em;"&gt;inimum float requirement gone. The prior 10% minimum free float threshold for inclusion has been quietly removed.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt;&lt;span style="background-color: transparent; letter-spacing: 0em;"&gt;&lt;/span&gt;3x float cap. Companies with free float below 33% are weighted at up to three times their float market cap. The original proposal was 5x, reduced after consultation feedback - which is to say, the industry objected and the objectionable thing was discounted rather than removed.&lt;/li&gt; 
&lt;/ul&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Nasdaq's stated rationale is that a graduated cap is more thoughtful than a binary 10% threshold, allowing low-float names to enter at modest weights that scale as float increases. This is a defensible argument in the abstract. The Financial Times still felt comfortable describing the package as offering SpaceX “free liquidity”. Jason Zweig called the changes “arbitrary, unfair and potentially risky”. Robin Wigglesworth flagged the risk of “the biggest bagholder exercise of all time”. Michael Burry, never short of an adjective, branded the original 5x proposal “the most SHAMELESS structural manipulation of a major index I've ever seen”. The 3x compromise, on the available evidence, did not appease him. Generally, nobody seems to think this is a good idea, apart from Elon and Nasdaq&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;The arithmetic of forced buying&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;On the draft numbers, the inclusion mechanics are straightforward to a depressing degree:&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;ul&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt; &lt;p&gt;Assumed valuation: about $1.75 trillion.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt; &lt;p&gt;Public float at IPO: roughly $75 billion, or about 4.3% of shares outstanding.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt; &lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="background-color: transparent; letter-spacing: 0em;"&gt;3x float multiplier: $75bn x 3 = about $225 billion of effective weighting market cap.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt; &lt;p&gt;Nasdaq-100 total market cap: roughly $25-27 trillion at current levels.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
 &lt;li&gt; &lt;p&gt;Implied initial Nasdaq-100 weight for SpaceX: around 0.53%, which would rank it roughly 23rd in the index on day one of inclusion.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;/li&gt; 
&lt;/ul&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;At first glance this looks modest. It is not, once you remember what sits behind the weight. QQQ alone runs around $385 billion in net assets, with BlackRock and State Street also offering competing Nasdaq-100 ETFs. Add index mutual funds, separate accounts and benchmarked institutional money, and the tracked pool is considerably larger. Dave Nadig's $7 billion single-day forced buy is not an outlandish number; it is the boring product of multiplying AUM by required weight.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Set $7 billion of mandatory demand against $75 billion of float, and you have around 10% of the tradable supply being bought in a single session by funds that are not legally allowed to pay attention to the price. NEPC, the institutional consultant, described accelerated inclusion as something that “effectively pulls passive demand forward, forcing execution against limited liquidity and compressing price discovery” (NEPC). The colloquial version: the trackers will be the last in, after the funds that read prospectuses for a living, own calendars, and intend to be elsewhere at the close.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;Who pays - the ETF industry, in detail&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Press coverage of this story tends to stop at “index funds will be forced to buy”. The actual plumbing is more interesting, and more uncomfortable.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Authorised participants. APs create and redeem ETF shares against the underlying basket. On inclusion day, APs servicing Nasdaq-100 ETFs will need to source a meaningful slug of SpaceX into creation baskets against a float that has barely settled. If borrow is tight or hedge funds are sitting on the inventory, AP spreads widen and primary market frictions feed straight back into secondary market ETF prices. ETFs do not stop working; they just stop tracking quite as politely.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Index trackers and ETF providers. Nasdaq-100 tracking funds are contractually obliged to follow the index. They do not get to opine on whether the underlying name is appropriately weighted, appropriately governed, or appropriately valued. They get to track. That is the deal. The 2026 changes do not break that deal; they simply expand the universe of decisions they are required to outsource to whoever writes the rulebook.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Market makers and OTC market makers will be asked to provide two-way prices in a name with a freshly minted listing, a thin float, a fiercely concentrated insider register, an active borrow market and a wall of guaranteed passive demand on a known date. That is not a regime in which bid-offer narrows. Expect wider spreads in SpaceX, and modest knock-on widening in ETFs holding it during the inclusion window.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Retail and pension investors. The QQQ holder, the 401(k) target-date investor and the pension scheme tracking the Nasdaq-100 do not know they have a SpaceX position until they have one. They will then own the world's largest space-launch company, at a price set against guaranteed forced demand, with no governance to speak of and no opt-out short of switching benchmarks. “Passive” is doing a lot of work in that sentence.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Passive-investing credibility. This is the deepest and most underrated cost. ETFs became the dominant savings vehicle of the last twenty years because they were sold as the opposite of an active fund: boring, transparent, mechanical, indifferent to the issuer. Every time an exchange rewrites its rulebook in close temporal proximity to a single high-profile listing, that pitch becomes harder to deliver with a straight face. On the reported facts, Nasdaq has redesigned eligibility and weighting around the calendar and float profile of one company, controlled by one individual. That is not a passive index following a methodology; it risks looking like an active allocation decision, taken at the index-provider level, for the apparent benefit of Elon Musk. The product still works. The story around it does not survive many more of these.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;The lockup expiry: a second, larger wave&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;The single-day inclusion event is the obvious risk. The structurally more unpleasant moment may arrive 90-180 days later, when insider lockups expire. At that point, billions of dollars of SpaceX paper held by employees, early VCs and strategic holders becomes saleable. Under the 3x float cap, as float rises through successive unlocks, the index weight rises with it, which means trackers have to buy more. Insiders, behaving rationally rather than uncharitably, sell into the bid that the index has just guaranteed them.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Nadig has described the dynamic as Nasdaq-100 exposure scaling from, say, 15% to 45% of full weight as float unlocks, because each step is 3x whatever the float is on rebalance. This is not a prediction so much as a reading of the rules. The 3x multiplier turns each lockup expiry into a scheduled buying window for passive money and a scheduled exit window for insiders. The mechanism has the impersonal reliability of a vending machine.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Recent academic work in the Review of Asset Pricing Studies, using CRSP data, finds that fast-track IPOs outperform standard IPOs by more than 5 percentage points between IPO and inclusion - driven by anticipatory buying and then mean-revert by 1.5-2.5% within two weeks of inclusion (Oxford Academic). The premium is borne, in aggregate, by passive investors. The paper is online.&amp;nbsp;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The rules were updated anyway.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;&lt;br&gt;Will this break the ETF market? Probably not. Will it tell on it? Absolutely.&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: bold;"&gt;Short-term dislocation: high&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Day-15 will almost certainly be lively. A thin float, a known mandatory bid and an unknown number of hedge funds reading the same prospectus is not a recipe for orderly price discovery. Trackers will execute; ETFs will keep trading; APs will keep creating and redeeming. The ride into the close will, however, be priced by people other than the index funds doing the buying.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: bold;"&gt;Medium-term valuation: moderate-to-high&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;A 95x trailing revenue multiple has few useful analogues at this scale. Forced buying provides artificial support during the inclusion window. Once that flow is absorbed, the multiple has to stand on its own. If it does not, passive holders find out, in real time, what a multiple correction in a 0.5%-plus index constituent feels like inside a diversified vehicle.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: bold;"&gt;Systemic risk to index integrity: meaningful, not catastrophic&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The structural concern is not that one IPO breaks ETFs. It is that the principle on which passive was sold - rules-based inclusion, insulated from issuer self-interest, is quietly being negotiated away. If reports about the conditions attached to the listing are accurate, an issuer's preference has been a meaningful input into a rule change that will dictate forced buying by people who are not allowed to evaluate price.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;SpaceX is not the last trillion-dollar private company in the pipeline. OpenAI and Anthropic are routinely discussed as candidates at potentially comparable valuations. If Fast Entry and the 3x float cap remain as written, each subsequent low-float mega-IPO triggers a similar forced-buying cascade. Index providers do not have to want this outcome for it to be the outcome the rulebook produces.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;FTSE Russell is reportedly weighing relaxations of its own minimum float requirements for large IPOs. The competitive pressure between index providers to attract high-profile listings looks structural rather than incidental. When index providers compete for listings by adjusting the rules that bind passive investors, the constituency being served is not the one writing the cheques to the trackers.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;Nasdaq's defence, on its own terms&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Nasdaq's argument is reasonable in isolation. The prior binary 10% float threshold was crude: cross it and you came in at full market-cap weight, regardless of how much paper was actually for sale. A graduated 3x float cap is more proportionate than a 5x cap, and more proportionate than a hard threshold that flipped from zero to everything overnight. The trouble is that it is still a multiplier. A 3x cap inflates SpaceX's notional index weight by three times what its tradable supply would imply on a clean free float basis. The protection on offer is that passive investors will be overcharged by a factor of three rather than a factor of twenty. Better, certainly. The same word was once applied to the slightly improved version of credit default swaps.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;Thirty years, two rebalances, one lesson half-learned&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;What has changed. The 1998 methodology change was driven by a post-hoc regulatory bind: get Microsoft under the 25% cap so QQQ could launch. The 2026 methodology change has, on the reported timeline, the structure of a pre-hoc commercial negotiation. The passive Nasdaq-100 complex has grown from effectively zero ETF assets in early 1999 to roughly $385 billion in QQQ alone, with multiple competing trackers behind it. The size of the forced bid has gone up by several orders of magnitude. So has the academic literature documenting the dynamics. So, presumably, has the number of people on the buy side who have read it.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;What has not changed. A company with a huge headline market cap and a tiny public float can still distort a market-cap-weighted index. The tension between an index provider's commercial appetite for prestigious listings and its notional duty to maintain investable, coherent benchmarks is still unresolved. The retail saver, the 401(k) participant and the pension beneficiary remain the last buyers of record at precisely the moment insiders decide the price is right to sell. The 1998 rebalance made the Nasdaq-100 viable for the ETF era. The 2026 changes may, on a charitable reading, be a sensible modernisation. On a less charitable reading, they are the point at which the commercial logic of index construction visibly overtook the investment logic. The insiders will be fine in either case.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;Bottom line for the ETF industry&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;This is not the trade that breaks passive. ETFs will create, redeem, trade at NAV most days, and produce indistinguishable tracking error charts a year from now.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is not yet a systemic event. It is a structural tell. The ETF industry has spent two decades arguing that passive is dull, mechanical and rules based. Nasdaq has spent the past year demonstrating, in public, that the rules are negotiable when the issuer is large enough and, on the reported facts, the issuer is Elon Musk. Nasdaq, for its own benefit, risks wounding the ETF golden goose. My bet is that SpaceX and these self-serving rule changes and are going to make the Yahoo! dislocation look like a minor blip.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;  
&lt;img src="https://track-eu1.hubspot.com/__ptq.gif?a=148570238&amp;amp;k=14&amp;amp;r=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.etfview.com%2Finsights%2Finsights&amp;amp;bu=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.etfview.com%252Finsights&amp;amp;bvt=rss" alt="" width="1" height="1" style="min-height:1px!important;width:1px!important;border-width:0!important;margin-top:0!important;margin-bottom:0!important;margin-right:0!important;margin-left:0!important;padding-top:0!important;padding-bottom:0!important;padding-right:0!important;padding-left:0!important; "&gt;</content:encoded>
      <category>Thought Leadership</category>
      <category>Industry Viewpoints</category>
      <category>Curated Industry News</category>
      <category>Meeting Insights</category>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 14:09:16 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.etfview.com/insights/insights</guid>
      <dc:date>2026-06-15T14:09:16Z</dc:date>
      <dc:creator>Bernie Thurston</dc:creator>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>New ETF Listings – Someone Has Put Physical Gold on a Blockchain, and Gold Was Already Doing Fine</title>
      <link>https://www.etfview.com/insights/new-etf-listings-someone-has-put-physical-gold-on-a-blockchain-and-gold-was-already-doing-fine</link>
      <description>&lt;div class="hs-featured-image-wrapper"&gt; 
 &lt;a href="https://www.etfview.com/insights/new-etf-listings-someone-has-put-physical-gold-on-a-blockchain-and-gold-was-already-doing-fine" title="" class="hs-featured-image-link"&gt; &lt;img src="https://www.etfview.com/hubfs/Lead%20Image%20(99)%20(1).png" alt="New ETF Listings – Someone Has Put Physical Gold on a Blockchain, and Gold Was Already Doing Fine" class="hs-featured-image" style="width:auto !important; max-width:50%; float:left; margin:0 15px 15px 0;"&gt; &lt;/a&gt; 
&lt;/div&gt; 
&lt;h5&gt;&lt;span style="color: #434953; font-size: 16px;"&gt;Gold is already at all-time highs. Someone looked at this situation and thought: needs blockchain. The ETP industry, to its credit, continues to find new things to do with assets that were already perfectly functional on their own. This batch has a few other highlights worth unpacking.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/h5&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;h5&gt;&lt;span style="color: #434953; font-size: 16px;"&gt;Gold is already at all-time highs. Someone looked at this situation and thought: needs blockchain. The ETP industry, to its credit, continues to find new things to do with assets that were already perfectly functional on their own. This batch has a few other highlights worth unpacking.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/h5&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;The Innovator Equity Dual Directional Buffer ETFs (DDTZ and DDFZ)&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Let me attempt to explain what these do, because the name “Dual Defined Range Note” (buried in the filing data) tells you almost nothing useful.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;These are buffer ETFs with a twist. Standard buffer ETFs protect you from a slice of downside in exchange for capped upside. These go further. If the S&amp;amp;P 500 falls by up to 10% over the outcome period, DDTZ does not merely cushion the blow: it converts that loss into a positive return of equal size. Down 7%, you are up 7%. The 15% version (DDFZ) extends that inversion to a larger band. In up markets, you participate to a cap. Beneath the defined threshold, you bear losses like everyone else.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is a structured note strategy, the kind that used to be sold by private banks to wealthy clients at significant fees, with poor liquidity and enough documentation to fill a weekend. Innovator has packaged it into an ETF with daily liquidity and exchange transparency.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The obvious question is: what is the cap? Because nothing in finance is free, and the cost of turning losses into gains is a ceiling on your upside. The mechanism is genuinely clever. Whether it is what most investors need is a separate question, but I respect the engineering enormously.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;The ChinaAMC Digital Gold ETF (3418, Hong Kong)&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Gold has been on a sustained run that has made a lot of sensible people look foolish for being sensible, and the product development community has responded in the only way it knows how: by adding a layer.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;ChinaAMC has launched a physically-backed gold ETF in Hong Kong that tracks the LBMA morning benchmark price, holds bullion in local vaults, and is available in three currencies. So far, so conventional. The “digital” designation comes from the blockchain element: ownership is tokenised, linking the Hong Kong equity markets infrastructure to the bullion trading system through distributed ledger technology.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Whether the blockchain adds anything meaningful to “gold sitting in a vault in Hong Kong” is a question the product documentation tactfully declines to answer at length. What it does offer is a 0.4% fee, which is competitive, and access to a market that has been increasingly keen to position itself as a financial hub where traditional assets and digital infrastructure converge.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It is physical gold on a blockchain. The gold is still just gold. The blockchain is still mostly a word that makes things sound more modern. And yet, listed the same morning gold is making headlines, you can see exactly why someone wrote this prospectus.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;&lt;br&gt;Meanwhile, Back in the Deletions Queue&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Eight SPDR funds from the SSGA Ireland stable are being wound down at the same time. Five bond ETFs covering European aggregate, high yield, government, and emerging market debt. Two equity ETFs tracking emerging markets. One Eurodollar corporate bond product.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;These are not failing products in any dramatic sense. They are the quiet rationalisations that ETF ranges undergo when consolidation comes. Overlapping exposures get merged, underused share classes get tidied away, and the product shelf becomes a little shorter and more coherent.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;&lt;br&gt;And Then There Are the Vanguard Canadian ETFs (VIGG and VUDH)&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Listed quietly, in Canadian dollars, on a Canadian exchange, for Canadian investors: a dividend appreciation equity ETF and a US high dividend yield ETF, both Vanguard. No buzzwords. No defined outcome periods. No blockchain adjacency.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;VIGG tracks international equities with a tilt toward dividend growth. VUDH gives exposure to high dividend US stocks. Both are exactly what they say on the label. Both will charge a modest fee and quietly compound for whoever holds them for decades.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;In a file that also contains a fund engineered to profit from market declines without going short and a tokenised gold product positioning itself at the intersection of bullion and distributed ledger technology, the Vanguard dividend ETFs are almost certainly outlast half the other products in this batch. They will definitely be less discussed.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;  
&lt;img src="https://track-eu1.hubspot.com/__ptq.gif?a=148570238&amp;amp;k=14&amp;amp;r=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.etfview.com%2Finsights%2Fnew-etf-listings-someone-has-put-physical-gold-on-a-blockchain-and-gold-was-already-doing-fine&amp;amp;bu=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.etfview.com%252Finsights&amp;amp;bvt=rss" alt="" width="1" height="1" style="min-height:1px!important;width:1px!important;border-width:0!important;margin-top:0!important;margin-bottom:0!important;margin-right:0!important;margin-left:0!important;padding-top:0!important;padding-bottom:0!important;padding-right:0!important;padding-left:0!important; "&gt;</content:encoded>
      <category>Thought Leadership</category>
      <category>Industry Viewpoints</category>
      <category>Curated Industry News</category>
      <category>Meeting Insights</category>
      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2026 11:31:42 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.etfview.com/insights/new-etf-listings-someone-has-put-physical-gold-on-a-blockchain-and-gold-was-already-doing-fine</guid>
      <dc:date>2026-06-05T11:31:42Z</dc:date>
      <dc:creator>Bernie Thurston</dc:creator>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>New Listings – Bitcoin Goes Green, Pikachu Goes Electric, and Two ESG Funds Quietly Give Up</title>
      <link>https://www.etfview.com/insights/new-listings-bitcoin-goes-green-pikachu-goes-electric-and-two-esg-funds-quietly-give-up</link>
      <description>&lt;div class="hs-featured-image-wrapper"&gt; 
 &lt;a href="https://www.etfview.com/insights/new-listings-bitcoin-goes-green-pikachu-goes-electric-and-two-esg-funds-quietly-give-up" title="" class="hs-featured-image-link"&gt; &lt;img src="https://www.etfview.com/hubfs/Lead%20Image%20-%202026-06-03T085417.878.png" alt="New Listings – Bitcoin Goes Green, Pikachu Goes Electric, and Two ESG Funds Quietly Give Up" class="hs-featured-image" style="width:auto !important; max-width:50%; float:left; margin:0 15px 15px 0;"&gt; &lt;/a&gt; 
&lt;/div&gt; 
&lt;h5&gt;&lt;span style="color: #434953; font-size: 16px;"&gt;This batch of new ETP listings contains a Bitcoin fund designed for environmental investors. It also contains, further down the list, two environmental funds that have been wound down. The market, as ever, is sending a message.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/h5&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;h5&gt;&lt;span style="color: #434953; font-size: 16px;"&gt;This batch of new ETP listings contains a Bitcoin fund designed for environmental investors. It also contains, further down the list, two environmental funds that have been wound down. The market, as ever, is sending a message.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/h5&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;BTCK: The Spot Bitcoin and Carbon Credit Futures ETF&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;There is an 80/20 portfolio thesis buried in this product, and it goes roughly as follows: Bitcoin is the future of money, carbon futures are the future of the planet, and combining them in a single ETF at an 80/20 ratio is the future of something. The 7RCC Spot Bitcoin and Carbon Credit Futures ETF (BTCK), sponsored by Teucrium, holds spot Bitcoin alongside futures tied to three major carbon markets: the EU Emissions Trading System, California's cap-and-trade scheme, and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The idea is that the carbon leg provides an ESG offset to the Bitcoin leg, making the product palatable to environmentally conscious investors.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is, to be entirely fair, a genuine attempt to solve a genuine problem. Bitcoin mining consumes roughly the electricity of a medium-sized country. Carbon offsets are a mechanism designed to address exactly this kind of thing. Whether a 20% allocation to carbon credit futures meaningfully neutralises the environmental footprint of the other 80% is a question better directed at the product's legal team than its marketing department.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;But one has to admire the ambition. This is not just a Bitcoin ETF. It is a Bitcoin ETF with a conscience. A very small, futures-based conscience, weighted at 20%.&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;&lt;br&gt;PIKA: VanEck Electrification UCITS ETF&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;The VanEck Electrification UCITS ETF has listed on the London Stock Exchange under the ticker PIKA.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;For those who did not grow up watching Saturday morning cartoons (and I assume everybody is of the same age as me): Pikachu is an electric mouse and the mascot of Pokémon. Its name is derived from the Japanese words for sparkle and mouse. The connection to electrification as a thematic investment strategy is a very knowing nod from the VanEck product team.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Either way, it is the best ticker on this list, and quite possibly the best ticker of the year.&lt;br&gt;The product itself covers sensible electrification themes: grid infrastructure, EV charging, renewables integration. Reasonable construction, coherent thesis. But it will forever be the Pikachu ETF to those of us who read listing files for a living.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;CORGI: Five Bond ETFs Named After a Dog&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;Corgi Funds recently made industry history by launching a record number of ETFs in a single day, raising nine figures in the process. The firm describes itself as an AI financial infrastructure company. The brand is named after a small, short-legged herding dog historically associated with the British royal family.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This latest batch of listings from Corgi includes five fixed income products: two T-bill strategies, a short-duration investment grade bond ETF, a 1-3 year treasury bond ETF, and a short-duration high yield fund. The tickers are CBIL, CGOV, CIVG, CUST, and CHYG.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Each one is a tidy, institutional-grade, quietly sensible fixed income product. Each one is brought to you by a company called Corgi! This team seems to be generating new ETF products on a daily basis. They must be the most caffeinated on the street.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;WYFL: 2X Long WhiteFiber Daily ETF&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;WhiteFiber carries the ticker WYFI, which looks exactly like what you think it looks like but is in fact an AI data centre company, not a wireless networking provider. The firm runs GPU infrastructure for high-performance computing. It is loss-making, growing quickly, and has recently secured a meaningful government defence contract.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Defiance has now filed a 2X daily leveraged product on the stock (WYFL), offering twice the daily return of an already volatile small-cap AI infrastructure company. Revenue growth is strong. Net income is negative. Gross margins are respectable. This is the archetypal AI infrastructure company in its current form: plausible, exciting, not yet profitable, and now available at double the daily move.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt; 
&lt;h4&gt;Meanwhile, quietly, two ESG funds left the building&lt;/h4&gt; 
&lt;p&gt;At the other end of this listing file: two delistings.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The AXA IM ACT Climate Equity ETF (ACLU) has been removed from the Swiss exchange.&amp;nbsp;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The BNPP Easy II Biodiversity USD ETF (ABIU) has followed it out the door.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Both were genuine attempts to provide equity exposure to climate and biodiversity themes. Both launched during an era when ESG was a growth category. Both have now been wound down.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In the same batch of new listings that contains a product designed to make Bitcoin acceptable to ESG investors, two actual ESG funds have quietly given up and gone home.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I am not making any commentary on the ethical / moral complexity of the financial markets, do we merely reflect society.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;  
&lt;img src="https://track-eu1.hubspot.com/__ptq.gif?a=148570238&amp;amp;k=14&amp;amp;r=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.etfview.com%2Finsights%2Fnew-listings-bitcoin-goes-green-pikachu-goes-electric-and-two-esg-funds-quietly-give-up&amp;amp;bu=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.etfview.com%252Finsights&amp;amp;bvt=rss" alt="" width="1" height="1" style="min-height:1px!important;width:1px!important;border-width:0!important;margin-top:0!important;margin-bottom:0!important;margin-right:0!important;margin-left:0!important;padding-top:0!important;padding-bottom:0!important;padding-right:0!important;padding-left:0!important; "&gt;</content:encoded>
      <category>Thought Leadership</category>
      <category>Industry Viewpoints</category>
      <category>Curated Industry News</category>
      <category>Meeting Insights</category>
      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2026 11:31:34 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.etfview.com/insights/new-listings-bitcoin-goes-green-pikachu-goes-electric-and-two-esg-funds-quietly-give-up</guid>
      <dc:date>2026-06-05T11:31:34Z</dc:date>
      <dc:creator>Bernie Thurston</dc:creator>
    </item>
  </channel>
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