Investment objective & strategy
As of Oct. 31, 2025 · prospectusObjective. Investment Objective: The Simplify Interest Rate Hedge ETF (the Fund or PFIX) seeks to hedge interest rate movements arising from rising long-term interest rates, and to benefit from market stress when fixed income volatility increases, while providing the potential for income.
Strategy. Principal Investment Strategies: The Adviser seeks to achieve the Funds investment objective by allocating the Funds assets approximately equally between: ? interest rate related derivatives and ? interest income producing debt instruments. The Adviser expects to allocate assets among derivatives and debt instruments, depending upon market conditions. The Adviser seeks to achieve the interest rate hedging aspect of the Funds investment objective by investing in swaptions, interest rate options, and Treasury futures. Consequently, the Funds portfolio will be highly sensitive to changes in interest rates. A swaption is an option to enter into a swap contract. The Fund also may short swaptions. The Fund may purchase payer swaptions that give the Fund the option to enter into fixed interest rate … Principal Investment Strategies: The Adviser seeks to achieve the Funds investment objective by allocating the Funds assets approximately equally between: ? interest rate related derivatives and ? interest income producing debt instruments. The Adviser expects to allocate assets among derivatives and debt instruments, depending upon market conditions. The Adviser seeks to achieve the interest rate hedging aspect of the Funds investment objective by investing in swaptions, interest rate options, and Treasury futures. Consequently, the Funds portfolio will be highly sensitive to changes in interest rates. A swaption is an option to enter into a swap contract. The Fund also may short swaptions. The Fund may purchase payer swaptions that give the Fund the option to enter into fixed interest rate swaps upon expiration of the swaption. These instruments have positive price sensitivity to rising interest rates. Opposite to bond prices which typically fall when interest rates rise, it is expected that the Fund will benefit from swaption value increases, providing a hedge against the rising interest rates. Consequently, when viewed from a total return perspective, price gains in these instruments will tend to offset the effect of lower debt prices caused by rising interest rates. These derivatives are selected to protect against rising long-term interest rates on high-quality instruments such as U.S. government securities and high-quality corporate debt. To select a derivative that it believes will produce the most effective hedge against rising interest rates, the Adviser assesses the interaction of maturity, strike price, reference interest rate, the risk-free rate, and volatility on the price of swaptions and interest rate options. While the investment focus of the interest rate related derivatives strategy is on gains from rising rates, to a lesser extent the Advisers selection process is also intended to generate gains from option and swaption positions when interest rate volatility increases. Specifically, the Adviser will tend to increase allocations to swaptions and interest rate options when it believes interest rate volatility is poised to increase as these instruments become more valuable in higher volatility environments. The Adviser rebalances derivative exposure after extreme rate movements (for example, 0.50%) or after the passage of time has significantly changed the rate sensitivity of a derivative. As time passes, swaptions and interest rate options become less sensitive to movements in the reference swap rate or interest rate. The Adviser does not take speculative positions based on its forecast for interest rates. The Fund limits net economic exposure at the time of investment to any one over-the-counter counterparty to 25% of Fund net assets. The Adviser seeks to achieve the income aspect of the Funds investment objective by investing U.S. Treasury securities, U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), exchange traded funds that primarily invest in U.S. Treasuries, TIPS, and investment grade bonds. TIPS are securities whose principal amount increases with inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index and are designed to protect investors from inflation risk. The Fund may purchase debt securities of any maturity. The Adviser may invest in affiliated money market ETFs to manage liquidity or to pledge as collateral for derivatives. Generally, the Funds strategy may be appropriate for investors who are seeking to hedge against rising interest rates. The Funds strategy may also be appropriate to help hedge real estate securities portfolios, as rising interest rates have historically led to sell-offs in real estate and growth equities, that are often negatively correlated with rising interest rates. When using various derivatives, the Fund may be required to post collateral to assure its performance. The Fund will hold cash and cash-like instruments or high-quality short term fixed income securities (collectively, Collateral). The Collateral may consist of (1) U.S. Government securities, such as bills, notes and bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury; (2) money market funds (including affiliated money market ETFs); (3) fixed income ETFs; and/or (4) corporate debt securities, such as commercial paper and other short-term unsecured promissory notes issued by companies that are rated investment grade or of comparable quality. The Adviser considers an unrated security to be of comparable quality to a security rated investment grade if it believes it has a similar low risk of default. The Fund is classified as a non-diversified investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, which means that the Fund may invest a higher percentage of its assets in a fewer number of issuers than is permissible for a diversified Fund.
Top holdings
As of March 31, 2026 · N-PORT| Security | Ticker | Value | % of fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simplify Government Money Market ETF | SBIL | $44.78M | 24.07% |
| U.S. Treasury Bills | — | $34.32M | 18.45% |
| U.S. Treasury Bill | — | $30.62M | 16.46% |
| U.S. Treasury Bills | — | $21.69M | 11.66% |
| United States Treasury Bill | — | $11.87M | 6.38% |
| U.S. Treasury Bills | — | $11.34M | 6.10% |
| ZURICH INSURANCE GROUP AG | N/A | $8.57M | 4.61% |
| ZTO EXPRESS CAYMAN INC (GS) (CFD) | N/A | $7.03M | 3.78% |
| United States Treasury Bill | — | $3.98M | 2.14% |
| ZTO EXPRESS CAYMAN INC (GS) (CFD) | N/A | $3.73M | 2.01% |
Portfolio moves
Dec 31, 2025 → Mar 31, 2026How many positions this fund opened, exited, grew, trimmed, or left unchanged between its two most recent N-PORT snapshots — net changes between point-in-time reports, not a trade log.
Similar funds
Funds whose portfolios most overlap this one, by weight| Fund | Overlap | Net exp. |
|---|---|---|
| Simplify Multi-QIS Alternative ETF · QIS | 51% | 1.21% |
| Simplify Currency Strategy ETF | 51% | 0.81% |
| Simplify China A Shares PLUS Income ETF | 51% | 0.88% |
Advisers
| Firm | Role |
|---|---|
| Simplify Asset Management Inc. | Adviser |
Footnotes
- Expense ratio as of October 31, 2025, from the fund's prospectus.
- Net assets and holdings count as of March 31, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
- Total return for calendar year 2025, before tax and after fund expenses. Computed by compounding the twelve monthly total returns the fund reported in its SEC N-PORT filings for 2025 (the latest prospectus does not yet chart this year).
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