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It's a class of exchange-traded funds designed to prevent your portfolio from hitting dramatic lows — but it may require a level of sophistication.
The idea: Incorporate short-term levered plays including covered call and risk-reversal strategies in order to help investors customize their own defensive strategies similar to hedging.
However, it may come with an unintended price. According to Ben Slavin of BNY Mellon, issuers and advisors may struggle to keep up with continuous product growth and change.
«The toolkit has expanded immensely over the last couple years, and it's going to continue to grow,» the company's global head of ETFs told CNBC's "ETF Edge" last week. «That said, the negative is really trying to parse all of these different products. Really understand what you're owning and explain that to investors or even advisors who are struggling to keep up with the nuances between these products.»
Liquidity providers and asset servicers may experience difficulties with product expansion as well, he added.
Yet, it may still benefit investors with low-risk appetites.
Andrew McOrmond, managing director at WallachBeth Capital, joined Slavin on «ETF Edge» to explain how investors can hold defensive, risk-averse positions using leveraged products.
Playing the levered game
Covered calls grant protection to clients looking to minimize losses, McOrmond said. These short-term levered plays better define outcomes, but in turn investors may miss out on gains.
«If you sell options, and the market moves against you, you'll be protected — but you're going to just reduce your upside [potential],» he explained, noting covered calls are «the only option» for risk-averse clients because hedging is complicated for
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