Subscribe

Covid-themed ETF shifts focus to monkeypox

monkeypox

As the White House declares monkeypox a national health emergency, ETFMG tweaks its marketing without adjusting the portfolio.

If there’s a mantra in the ETF space, it might be: If at first you don’t succeed, repackage.

That’s sort of what’s happening with the ETFMG Treatments Testing and Advancements ETF (GERM), which launched in 2020 to tap into efforts to fight Covid but has recently shifted its marketing pitch toward monkeypox, which the Biden Administration has declared a public health emergency.

The $29 million fund from the $4.5 billion boutique shop ETF Managers Group is still made up of the same underlying investments that were gathered at the start of the global pandemic but is now trying to catch a ride on whatever momentum is building around efforts to fight monkeypox.

“The broad portfolio is targeting any type of pandemic or virus in society,” said Alex Gordon, director at ETFMG.

Gordon said the idea behind GERM has always been to offer something beyond standard pharmaceutical company exposure, which is why the fund has a 30% crossover with the biotechnology sector, holdings-wise, but only a 14% crossover, weightings-wise.

“We didn’t want to provide a fund dominated by pharma,” he said. “We have some representation to pharma but on a much smaller scale.”

Top weightings in the fund include Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (LH), Quest Diagnostics (DGX), Moderna (MRNA) and Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (ALNY).

The fund is described as providing exposure to a subsector of the biotech industry, which is generally in line with ETFMG’s subsector strategy.

Other examples of where the ETF provider offers fine-tuned exposure includes the ETFMG Travel Tech ETF (AWAY), ETFMG Prime Security ETF (HACK) and ETFMG Alternative Harvest ETF (MJ).

In terms of performance, GERM, which charges 68 basis points, has been riding the market extremes with a 24% decline so far this year, following a 14% gain last year.

“I would put this more into the growth bucket,” Gordon said. “It has been driven down by the market. But these companies and this entire episode we’ve experienced with Covid are not leaving.”

Single-stock ETFs are risky business

Related Topics: , , , ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Are AUM fees heading toward extinction?

The asset-based model is the default setting for many firms, but more creative thinking is needed to attract the next generation of clients.

Advisors tilt toward ETFs, growth stocks and investment-grade bonds: Fidelity

Advisors hail traditional benefits of ETFs while trend toward aggressive equity exposure shows how 'soft landing has replaced recession.'

Chasing retirement plan prospects with a minority business owner connection

Martin Smith blends his advisory niche with an old-school method of rolling up his sleeves and making lots of cold calls.

Inflation data fuel markets but economists remain cautious

PCE inflation data is at its lowest level in two years, but is that enough to stop the Fed from raising interest rates?

Advisors roll with the Fed’s well-telegraphed monetary policy move

The June pause in the rate-hike cycle has introduced the possibility of another pause in September, but most advisors see rates higher for longer.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print