By Javier Hasse and Eric TerBush.
âThis is going to be happening now, itâs going to be happening over the course of the next few years."
These words, said on the day cannabis was legalized in Canada by Evolve ETFâs Chief Investment Officer Elliot Johnson, proved to be almost prophetic. Around the world, cannabisâs legality and profitability have rapidly gained momentum.
Some of those may have gained their wealth through the Evolve Marijuana ETF (TSE:SEED) (OTC:EVVLF), which, in the last year, has delivered the best performance among all cannabis ETFs.
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Interested in learning more about the secret sauce behind the fundâs impressive performance, Benzinga recently sat down with Elliot Johnson and discussed the inception of SEED, how Evolve ETF manages its portfolio, and the importance of being ready, willing and able to respond to price movements.
Evolve ETFâs SEED
Evolve launched SEED on the Toronto Stock Exchange roughly 14 months ago. Since then, its unique management style and performance have accumulated a 33.52% year-to-date return.
âLooking at how to build the product, we first thought about what kind of index we could develop. There was always the question: if we donât want to go the index route, can we find somebody whoâs got a track record in asset management?" said Johnson.
âOf course, itâs a brand-new sector, thereâs no such thing as anybody with a track record. The problem with the index was that in an industry with this much volatility, you might end up holding the right things, but you hold them in the wrong weights at the wrong time. That to us seems to be great inefficiency in the index approach.â
Recognizing this, Evolve chose to embrace rapid active management rather than relying on the index approach.
Related: Discussing Canada's New US-Focused Cannabis ETF With Evolve Funds Group
âIt is the combination of portfolio construction, fundamental analysis of the names, as well as an overall risk management layer. That is how weâve done it and itâs how weâve been able to outperform the Index over the past year,â said Johnson.
âThe bottom-line is that weâre not married to a single weight, so itâs not like we comeback in line to a previously set model. If something has moved two standard deviations in a couple of weeks, we want to react to that, because thatâs not likely to happen again over the next few weeks.â
SEEDâs holdings are broadly-speaking, standard for a cannabis ETF. However, their ability to react and change their holdings is the catalyst for SEEDâs performance.
âI really think it is because of the weighting we have and our willingness to respond to price movements quickly. It comes down to portfolio construction and management. You can just buy and hold the basket of names we have in our top 10,youâre going to have a lot more volatility, which is going to lead to a lower long-term return,â said Johnson âWeâre not using techniques that other managers are unaware of, we just believe we can apply them to this market successfully and to benefit from the volatility rather than suffer it.â
Even SEED has taken hits during the most recent quarter. While its midterm hits may have been less severe than broad indices like the Horizons Marijuana Life Sciences Index ETF (OTC: HMLSF), downward movement in a volatile market like cannabis can test the endurance of any fund.
âWe take the view that we canât turn losses into profits. This is not an absolute return strategy where we are willing to go short the market. We are constrained. What weâre trying to do is be more defensive where we can,â said Johnson.
âItâs been a very volatile year for equities generally in the past six months and thereâs not really a catalyst imminently here in the Canadian market. To some degree, people have also been looking more to the U.S. market over the past three or four months. Those things add up, but we still think there is a lot of opportunity in Canadian names and we continue to be excited about it.â
The top holdings of the Evolve Marijuana ETF are:
Photo courtesy of TMX, parent company to the TSX.
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