Investment objective & strategy
As of Feb. 27, 2026 · prospectusObjective. The investment objective of TrueShares Quarterly Bear Hedge ETF (the Fund) is substantial protection of principal with total return.
Strategy. TrueShares Quarterly Bear Hedge ETF The Fund is an actively managed ETF that aims to provide substantial protection of principal and generation of interest income while maintaining the potential to create positive returns in the event of a decline in U.S. equity markets. The advisers strategy is designed to achieve the Funds goals, typically, over rolling three-month periods. This strategy potentially results in capital gains during high volatility environments. The Fund seeks to achieve these goals by combining: (1) an investment of substantially all its assets in a portfolio of short-term income-generating debt securities with (2) a modest investment in put options on securities or indexes that are representative of U.S. large capitalization companies. Over the long-term, the adviser expects … TrueShares Quarterly Bear Hedge ETF The Fund is an actively managed ETF that aims to provide substantial protection of principal and generation of interest income while maintaining the potential to create positive returns in the event of a decline in U.S. equity markets. The advisers strategy is designed to achieve the Funds goals, typically, over rolling three-month periods. This strategy potentially results in capital gains during high volatility environments. The Fund seeks to achieve these goals by combining: (1) an investment of substantially all its assets in a portfolio of short-term income-generating debt securities with (2) a modest investment in put options on securities or indexes that are representative of U.S. large capitalization companies. Over the long-term, the adviser expects income from the debt securities and capital gains from put options to combine to fulfill the total return aspect of the Funds investment objective. Substantial Protection of Principal The income component of the Funds portfolio is expected to represent at least 98% of its assets on a quarter-to-quarter basis, which the adviser believes will fulfil the substantial protection of principal aspect of the Funds investment objective. For example, even if a 2% put options component of the Funds portfolio expired worthless, the Fund would still have at least 98% of its value preserved by the high-quality short-term fixed income debt securities portfolio. Actual value preserved is expected to be somewhat higher than 98% because interest earned is expected to be higher than Fund expenses. The adviser believes that protection of at least 98% of principal on a quarter-to-quarter basis, even in adverse low-rate environments, would be considered substantial protection by most investors. Income Component The Fund seeks income through a strategy focused on high-quality short-term fixed income debt securities. The Fund anticipates a typical maturity of three months for its income portfolio but may invest in securities with a duration of one-year or less. The Fund invests without restriction as to issuer type but anticipates investing primarily in securities of the U.S. Government, its agencies, instrumentalities and sponsored enterprises; fixed-income ETFs; and corporations. To generate higher income, the Fund may also employ an option box spread strategy. While gains from options are capital gains, this options strategy is commonly referred to as an income producer and, therefore, is included in the Funds income component description. A box spread is a four-part, same expiration date, option portfolio with a maturity payout that does not vary and is considered a form of synthetic money market instrument. For example, the four parts of a box spread could be composed of (i) a long $5 in-the-money call option position paired with (ii) a written $5 out-of-the-money call option position; and (iii) a long $5 in-the-money put option position paired with (iv) a written $5 out-of-the-money put option position. At expiration of the options, no matter what the price of the underlying reference asset is, the payout to the Fund will be $10. If the Fund can construct this portfolio for less than $10 it will be profitable at expiration. The chart below illustrates the $10 payout that results from the example above. As the call leg increases in value, the put leg decreases in value such that, in total, the payoff is always $10. When the put options and income-generating investments carry matching maturities, an amount equal to the yield from the income strategy, net of the Funds management fee, is deployed to trade put options. If the income-generating investments carry a duration longer than the put positions, the amount invested in put options will be an amount equal to annualized income utilized net of management fee and divided by the number of three-month segments remaining until maturity and capped at that amount for each rolling three-month period. At times, the presence of an extreme low-rate environment could make generating income more challenging. In these circumstances, the Fund may utilize a maximum of one percent (net of the Funds management fee) of portfolio principal per three-month rolling period to implement the put options strategy. Put Options Component The Fund invests a modest portion of its portfolio in standardized exchange-listed options or in exchange-traded FLexible EXchange Options (FLEX Options), which are customized exchange-traded option contracts available through the Chicago Board Option Exchange (Cboe) that are guaranteed for settlement by The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC). The adviser selects options on securities, indexes, or ETFs that it believes are representative of the performance of U.S. large capitalization companies. The Fund defines large-capitalization companies as those with market capitalizations above $10 billion at the time of measurement, and defines U.S. companies as those organized in the U.S.; having a class of securities whose principal securities market is in the U.S.; or derives 50% or more of its total revenues or earnings from goods produced, sales made, or services provided in the U.S., or maintains 50% or more of its employees, assets, investments, operations, or other business activity in the U.S. When the Fund purchases a put option, the Fund has the right, but not the obligation, to sell a reference asset at a specified price (strike price) within or at the end of a specific time period. In the event the reference asset declines in value, the value of a put option generally will increase. In the event the reference asset appreciates in value, the value of a put option generally will decrease and may become worthless. Under normal circumstances, the Fund anticipates trading options on rolling three-month periods (i.e., quarterly); however, the Fund may trade options with expiration dates that are modestly longer or shorter than three months for a number of reasons such as if market volatility renders them more cost-effective. At the beginning of each three-month period, the Fund purchases out-of-the money (above current market price) or at-the-money put options. The adviser evaluates the relative prices of at-the-money and out-of-the money options and selects those with the highest expected return in light of then-recent U.S. large capitalization equity market volatility. The Funds strategy is designed to benefit from meaningful declines in the domestic large cap equity market (sometimes referred to as tail risk). The Funds equity market risk is limited to the risk that the put options will expire worthless. If, however, the value of the reference asset falls below the put options strike price, the option finishes in-the-money and the option seller pays the Fund the difference between the strike price and the value of the reference asset. In such an instance, employing the put option strategy may generate a positive return. Because puts increase in value when the reference asset declines, the Fund benefits from a market decline. Using this strategy, based on recent market conditions, the adviser anticipates that the Fund could reap a positive benefit equal to 20% to 40% of U.S. large capitalization equity market declines on a quarter-to-quarter basis.
Top holdings
As of April 30, 2026 · N-PORT| Security | Ticker | Value | % of fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| UST BILLS 0% 05/14/2026 | — | $20.65M | 33.49% |
| U.S. Treasury Bills | B | $20.59M | 33.39% |
| U.S. Treasury Bills | — | $20.52M | 33.28% |
| WY US 02/20/26 C25 | WY 2 C25 | $67.52K | 0.11% |
| WY US 02/20/26 C25 | WY 2 C25 | $65.98K | 0.11% |
| STATE STREET INST U.S. GOVERNMENT MMKT ADMN CLASS | SALXX | $56.71K | 0.09% |
| WY US 02/20/26 C25 | WY 2 C25 | $12.59K | 0.02% |
| WY US 02/20/26 C25 | WY 2 C25 | $12.07K | 0.02% |
| WY US 02/20/26 C25 | WY 2 C25 | $4.22K | 0.01% |
| WY US 02/20/26 C25 | WY 2 C25 | $3.23K | 0.01% |
Portfolio moves
Jan 31, 2026 → Apr 30, 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. |
|---|---|---|
| TrueShares Quarterly Bull Hedge ETF · QBUL | 98% | 0.79% |
| Harbor Commodity All-Weather Strategy ETF · HGER | 36% | 0.68% |
| TrueShares Structured Outcome (June) ETF · JUNZ | 34% | 0.79% |
Advisers
| Firm | Role |
|---|---|
| TrueMark Investments, LLC | Adviser |
Footnotes
- Expense ratio as of February 27, 2026, from the fund's prospectus.
- Net assets and holdings count as of April 30, 2026, from the fund's N-PORT filing.
- Total return for calendar year 2025, before tax and after fund expenses. As reported in the fund's prospectus performance bar chart.
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