The Inverse Cramer ETF Hype is Good for the ETF Industry

 | Mar 23, 2023 12:41

The long-awaited Tuttle Capital Management Inverse Cramer Tracker ETF (SJIM) was released to much fanfare on March 1st, 2023, and investor sentiment is split. Some laud it as a highly innovative idea, while others are deriding it as a meme gimmick. Either way, it's certainly controversial.

Here's my angle – I think SJIM is great for the ETF industry. While it may not be as sensible of a long-term hold as say, the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) is, it nonetheless plays an important role today: it's a magnet for Gen Z investors looking for a meme-worthy idea that resonates with them.

That's right – the same irreverent bunch of r/wallstreetbets-browsing, Robinhood-using Zoomers are now graduating to ETFs after years of YOLO'ing weekly out-of-the-money Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) call options. Funny thematic ETFs like SJIM are exactly the gateway drug they're looking for.

h2 Gen Z invests in notables/h2

I think the defining ETF trend of post 2020 is the explosion in thematic ETFs tracking notable persons. While thematic mega-trends like disruption, genomics, and robotics caught wind during 2020 as a result of Cathie Wood's ARK Invest ETFs, there wasn't a way to really bet against a person.

This changed in November 2021 when the AXS Short Innovation Daily ETF (SARK) launched. This ETF bet against Wood's flagship ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK). Because the ETF was actively managed with Wood making stock picks at the helm, investors who bought SARK were by extension, betting against her.

The next ETF that capitalized on this trend was the MeetKevin Pricing Power ETF (PP), based on the stock picks of a famous financial YouTuber, MeetKevin. Long story short, this actively managed ETF invests in U.S. listed companies that in MeetKevin's view qualify as an "innovative company" with "pricing power".

However, none of these ETFs were as notable or clamored about as SJIM due to one simple factor: a relative lack of "meme-worthiness".

h2 Why meme potential is so powerful/h2

Jim Cramer is one of the most famous personalities in investing, especially among younger generations. Sure, we can talk about actual powerful investors like Kenneth Griffin, Carl Icahn, Warren Buffett, but none of them resonate with the Gen Z crowd. (Asides from Ryan Cohen, who has seemingly attracted a cult of meme-stock apes that interpret every one of his tweets for hidden messages).

Jim Cramer stands out. As the host of Mad Money and an active figure on financial Twitter, Cramer is constantly in the headlines, mostly for his stock recommendations that apparently don't have a great track record. Just check out some of the posts from @CramerTracker that call out his many errors.

Gen Z has aptly taken notice. A quick search of "Inverse Cramer" on Reddit turns up a slew of results featuring not only memes, but also detailed analysis and even backtests, many of which sport thousands of upvotes and comments on popular communities like r/wallstreetbets.

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