An ETF issuer is following in Cathie Wood’s footsteps with a new innovation-themed fund, despite the fact that her flagship ETF tumbled 61% this year.

The AOT Growth and Innovation ETF (ticker AOTG) is set to be listed at the end of next week. Similar to the Ark Innovation ETF (ARKK), it will be actively managed and invest in companies with high growth potential and low marginal costs, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

“When I saw news of the launch, the first reaction was: well this is a bit of head-scratcher,” said Cinthia Murphy, director of research at ETF Think Thank. “There’s nothing more out of favor than super growth stocks.”

Those stocks have been under immense pressure as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates in response to inflation that’s proved more persistent than anticipated. After the central bank delivered a 75 basis-point hike Wednesday, tech stocks slumped Thursday, with the Nasdaq 100 Index falling 3.6%.

Along with ARKK, other innovation-themed funds have also taken a beating this year. The iShares Exponential Technologies ETF (XT) and the SPDR S&P Kensho New Economies Composite ETF (KOMP) have both fallen more than 30%.

Well Positioned
John Tinsman, founder of AOT Invest LLC, and a money manager for the new fund, sees it as a good time to launch.

“We’ve seen valuations come down in growth significantly,” he said. Also, many of the fund’s likely holdings are profitable and have little debt, meaning they don’t need to borrow more as interest rates rise.

He’s not the only who sees opportunity in growth. A team of JPMorgan strategists led by Marko Kolanovic said that within equities, it favors “segments that sold off strongly and are trading near record low relative valuations,” such as innovation. “The most attractive investment opportunities are in these oversold sectors that provide asymmetric upside,” the strategists wrote in a note this week.

Compared with ARKK, the new ETF will be more disciplined in looking at the price and profitability of holdings, Tinsman said.

“We’re taking a bit more of a traditional stance on the valuations of the companies, but also providing a lot of the same sauce that’s in the Cathie Wood funds.”

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