A biotech and investment banking veteran is entering the ETF business. Watch for his startup to roll out more ETFs, indices and even mutual funds.
| Rory Balfour Riggs Syntax Advisors / Syntax / Locus Analytics / New Ventures Funds CEO / CEO / CEO / Managing Partner | |
On Tuesday
Rory Riggs, founder and CEO of
Syntax Advisors,
unveiled the New York City-based firm's first ETF, the
Syntax Stratified LargeCap ETF (SSPY on the
NYSE Arca). The fund, launched on January 4 and converted from a private strategy, tracks the
Stratified LargeCap Index maintained by Syntax Advisors' parent, Syntax LLC, and calculated by
S&P Dow Jones Indices as an alternative weighting of the components of the
S&P 500.
Vantage Consulting Group subadvisors the new fund, and Vantage director
Jim Wolfe PMs.
State Street serves as the fund's administrator, custodian, and transfer agent.
Foreside is the fund's distributor.
Ernst & Young is the independent accounting firm for the fund and the indices. ANd
Chapman and Cutler is the fund's legal counsel.
Riggs is the CEO of Syntax Advisors (the ETF firm) and of Syntax (the index provider), which combined have about 20 employees. He is also the CEO and founder of
Locus Analytics, through which he developed the
Locus Model for organizing business and economic data (which underlies Syntax's indices). And he remains involved in biotech: as chairman and co-founder of Royalty Pharma, managing partner of New Ventures Fund, chairman and co-founder of Cibus Global, and board member and co-founder of FibroGen.
The inspiration for the model, Riggs says, comes from his time in the biotech sector.
"In biotechnology we have always taken populations and stratified them to take biases out of the performance," Riggs says. "I was always amazed that nobody had ever done this in finance."
Riggs worries about the "inherent bias at the end of a bull-market" when it comes to traditional, market cap-weighted indices. So Syntax weights indices differently, by dividing, say, the S&P 500 into eight different sectors (and then each of those into sub-sectors). The index is then equally weighted among each of those eight sectors (and each sub-sector within a given sector is also equally weighted).
"I invented a new way of classifying business. We have 14 patents," Riggs says. "We've created a map of an economy, and we place businesses into that map. We think that it's a better predictor of whether businesses correlate."
"This is what an active managers says they'll do for you: 'I'll fix the biases in the S&P 500,'" Riggs adds.
Working with S&P Dow Jones, Syntax already offers 11 different
Stratified Weight versions of S&P's indices. They also have teamed up with other index providers like
FTSE Russell and
MSCI. So, Riggs has a number of different indices to choose from when planning more ETFs. And he's working on stratified weight versions of more indices, too.
"Our hope is to role out at first a family of ETFs," tracking stratified weight versions of the most widely used indices. "We do also hope to have mutual fund products out by the end of 2019."
An alumnus of Middlebury College and of Columbia University, Riggs previously served as president and director of Biomatrix, as president and CEO of RF&P Corporation, and as a managing director in Paine Webber's M&A department. He's worked with New Ventures Funds since 2006 and he founded Locus in 2010. 
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