A three-year-old, alternatives-focused fund firm is preparing to buy a $450-million-AUM (as of yesterday) fund family, after buying another fund last month.
| Gregory David "Greg" Bassuk AXS Investments LLC Chairman, CEO | |
Last week, the folks at Port Chester, New York-based
AXS Investments [
profile]
filed to adopt Greenwich, Connecticut-based
Tuttle Capital Management, LLC's [
profile] six ETFs. And
ETF.com reports that
Matthew Tuttle, CEO of his eponymous shop, will join AXS "in charge of capital markets and trading." Pricing and terms of the deal have not been publicly disclosed, nor is the deal timing revealed in the filing. (News of the AXS-TCM deal comes after AXS
bought the $110-million-AUM CHGX ETF last month.)
AXS has about $640 million in AUM, according to its most recent form ADV
filed back in January, so the pending adoption deal would boost its AUM to about $1.09 billion. (It's not clear what the deal means for a $75-million trio of ETFs that TCM subadvises for
Mohr Funds.)
"The Tuttle family of funds really fits in very well with our approach to non-traditional alternative exposures for individuals,"
Greg Bassuk, CEO of AXS, tells
ETF.com. (Last year, Bassuk
talked with MFWire about what AXS is hunting for.)
TCM's $45-million-AUM, actively managed
SPAC and New Issue ETF (SPCX) (which launched on December 15, 2020) will become the
AXS SPAC and New Issue ETF. Its expense ratio will remain 95 basis points (after a 21-bps fee waiver).
TCM's $1.72-million-AUM, passively managed
De-SPAC ETF (DSPC) (which launched on May 19, 2021) will become the
AXS De-SPAC ETF. Its expense ratio will remain 75 bps (after a 137-bps fee waiver).
TCM's $1.4-million-AUM, actively managed
Short De-SPAC ETF (SOGU) (which also launched on May 19, 2021) will become the
AXS Short De-SPAC ETF. Its expense ratio will remain 95 bps (after a 26-bps fee waiver).
TCM's $6.15-million-AUM, actively managed
FOMO ETF (FOMO) (which launched on May 25, 2021) will become the
AXS FOMO ETF. Its expense ratio will remain 90 bps (after a 47-bps fee waiver).
TCM's $8.09-million-AUM, actively managed
Revere Sector Opportunity ETF (RSPY) (which launched on August 24, 2021) will become the
AXS Revere Sector Opportunity ETF. Its expense ratio will drop from 115 bps to 105 bps (after a 54-bps fee waiver).
And the $387.35-million-AUM, actively managed
Tuttle Capital Short Innovation ETF (SARK) (which launched on November 9, 2021) will become the
AXS Short Innovation ETF. The fund currently has an expense ratio of 75 bps, and an updated expense ratio is not listed in AXS' filing from last week.
Under the deal, AXS Investments LLC will take over as investment advisor to each of TCM's six ETFs. Tuttle himself will remain PM to the five ETFs he already PMed.
Revere Wealth Management will continue to subadvise the Revere fund, which will continue to be PMed by Revere's own
Scott Fullman. All six funds, which are currently series of the
Collaborative Investment Series Trust, will become series of the
Investment Managers Series Trust II.
IMST Distributors, LLC will take over as distributor and principal underwriter for the six adopted funds, succeeding
Foreside Fund Services, LLC.
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP will take over as the funds' counsel, succeeding
Thompson Hine LLP. The funds' new custodian, fund accounting agent, independent accounting firm, and transfer agent were not revealed in AXS' filing. (All six TCM ETFs currently use
Citi Fund Services Ohio, Inc. as their administrator and fund accountant and Citibank, N.A. as their custodian. SARK uses
BBD, LLP as its independent accounting firm, while the other five TCM ETFs use
Cohen & Company, Ltd.) 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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