Booming MicroStrategy ETFs Are Straining Limits at Prime Brokers

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(Bloomberg) — Amid a red-hot run in the shares of MicroStrategy Inc. last month, Matt Tuttle got some bad news from the prime brokers for his booming leveraged ETF linked to the shares of the crypto-centric company.

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The prime brokers — units within banks that work with their clients on activities like securities lending — had reached their limits on how much swap exposure they were willing to offer for his roughly month-old fund, the T-Rex 2X Long MSTR Daily Target ETF (ticker MSTU), which by some measures was the most volatile exchange-traded fund to ever hit Wall Street at the time of its launch.

The ETF, which offers double the return on the highly turbulent shares of MicroStrategy, was surging in mid-October, luring hundreds of millions of dollars. To achieve the juiced-up returns he was targeting, Tuttle had been buying swaps via his prime brokers — a typical tactic. But only three firms had agreed to work with him given the gyrations in MicroStrategy — the largest publicly traded corporate holder of Bitcoin — and all three started to reach capacity constraints.

At one point, he needed $100 million worth of exposure and the firms were only offering a total of $20 million. So, to fulfill his fund’s mandate, he turned to buying call options.

“If this was a fund on Procter & Gamble, I could get as much swap exposure as I wanted,” said Tuttle. “But MicroStrategy is a different beast.”

The message is that the unprecedented boom in such a highly leveraged ETF is testing the risk appetite among some key Wall Street players — the prime brokers. And while buying options to fulfill a fund’s goals isn’t controversial, it shows the hurdles that had to be overcome to meet the surging demand for the product.

It was a similar picture at Tuttle’s rival, the Defiance Daily Target 2X Long MSTR ETF (MSTX), which debuted in August. Sylvia Jablonski, the chief executive officer of Defiance ETFs, said she started using options to help meet the ETF’s stated leverage soon after its launch. The fund began by offering 1.75 times leverage, before boosting it to two times after Tuttle introduced his ETF.

The episodes can also be chalked up to the extremely turbulent nature of MicroStrategy itself. The shares slumped as much as 22% on Thursday after Citron Research said it’s betting against the company. On Friday, it was up as much as 8% in morning trading.

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