XOVR turned away more than $1 billion in inflows before the SpaceX IPO to protect existing shareholders — a bet that helped the ETF deliver a 27.45% second-quarter return.
The ERShares Private-Public Crossover ETF returned 27.45% in the second quarter, driven largely by its SpaceX position, as the fund rejected more than $1 billion in pre-IPO inflows to limit dilution for existing holders.
"Our objective has always been to build an ETF that gives investors access to exceptional private companies while maintaining a focus on long-term shareholder outcomes and disciplined portfolio management," said Dr. Joel Shulman, founder and chief investment officer of ERShares. "The second quarter demonstrated that innovation alone is not enough."
XOVR held about $387 million of SpaceX exposure at quarter end, representing roughly 18% of its $2.2 billion in assets under management. The position contributed more than $135 million in unrealized appreciation during the quarter, with about $84 million of that coming in June alone, when SpaceX accounted for approximately 75% of the fund's 5.30% monthly return. Assets under management surged from about $400 million to $2.2 billion during the quarter, one of the fastest growth periods for a US-listed ETF.
The fund's decision to cap inflows before the June 12 SpaceX IPO — rejecting an estimated $1 billion in creation orders — preserved roughly 14% SpaceX exposure for long-term shareholders. Without the Shareholder Protection Plan, rapid asset growth would have diluted the fund's private company allocation, reducing the very exposure that drove its outperformance against major benchmarks that fell as much as 2.68% in June.
A Shareholder-First Approach to Rapid Growth
XOVR's asset growth created a structural tension familiar to crossover funds: as new money pours in, existing private company stakes shrink as a percentage of total assets. The fund addressed this by temporarily limiting new creation orders during the week before the IPO, a move management estimates cost it more than $1 billion in potential inflows and the associated management fees. XOVR charges a 0.75% management fee and does not earn additional fees on its private equity exposure, a structure Shulman said aligns the fund's incentives with those of its shareholders.
The fund's liquidity framework allowed it to exceed the traditional 15% threshold for illiquid private company exposure in ETFs by reclassifying SpaceX through a liquidity arrangement. This enabled XOVR to maintain what management believes is one of the largest private company positions among US-listed ETFs while offering daily liquidity — a structure typically unavailable to investors in traditional private equity vehicles that impose lock-up periods and performance fees.
What the SpaceX Position Means for the Fund's Trajectory
SpaceX contributed about 75% of XOVR's June return, making the single position the dominant driver of the fund's quarterly performance. While the IPO in June provided a liquidity event, management noted that the fund's SpaceX exposure experienced multiple unrealized gains throughout the quarter as new observable market information became available, and the fund made additional purchases to increase participation for existing shareholders.
ERShares intends to continue expanding XOVR's private equity portfolio as opportunities arise, management said. The fund's ability to maintain concentrated private exposure within an ETF structure — while turning away assets when doing so serves existing shareholders — represents a model that could influence how other crossover funds manage the tension between asset growth and portfolio concentration.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.