Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. Irrationally exuberant investors who lose their shirts get a lot of attention. But there is another way to manage your money poorly: taking so little risk that you end up with little reward.
Enter the Calamos Bitcoin Structured Alt Protection ETF, which started trading under the “CBOJ" ticker last Wednesday. The fund uses a combination of safe investments and options on other bitcoin vehicles to guarantee that initial backers won’t lose any money over the following year, despite investing in one of the most speculative assets in existence. The flip side is that it also limits the maximum returns they will receive over this period at 11.65%.
Since 2016, there have been 23 occasions in which bitcoin has risen more than that in a single day. Its average annual volatility has been 86%. Calamos frames this as an advantage, since the chances of hitting the maximum are high, but there is an equally big probability that the cryptocurrency will tumble and never again come close to a well-cited 2011 paper by Brian Henderson and Neil Pearson, found no value in adding structured products to portfolios after accounting for the high fees charged by issuer banks.
And complexity can be an issue for the unsophisticated: Those who buy structured ETFs after launch, for instance, must remember that the terms shift with market prices. CBOJ’s downside protection has gone from 100% to 100.03% as a result of bitcoin falling over the past week. Why, then, is the promise of not losing capital so mesmerizing? Research by psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky famously found that many people decline betting on a coin flip when they have a 50% chance to win $150 and a 50% chance to lose $100.
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