Financings
Leverage Shares by Themes Unveils Nine New 2X Single-Stock ETFs Tracking Key Players in the Technology Supply Chain
Expanding leveraged ETF lineup to capture active trading demand in the tech supply chain niche.

Executive Summary
- Leverage Shares by Themes is launching nine Cboe-listed 2X daily leveraged ETFs targeting key technology supply chain companies.
- The funds provide 200% daily leveraged exposure to underlying single stocks, with management fees ranging from 0.75% to 0.99%.
- Trading begins June 23, 2026, explicitly targeting active traders and retail investors seeking amplified daily returns.
- Underlying stocks include CDNS, FORM, ENTG, FPS, ASTG, GFS, HPE, MTSI, and SMTC.
- The funds utilize daily rebalancing and compounding, with explicit risk disclosures that returns over periods longer than a single day will likely differ from 200% of the underlying stock's return.
Material Impact
- The release represents a standard product expansion for an ETF issuer, adding niche leveraged exposure to a specific sector theme.
- No immediate assets under management (AUM) or revenue impact is disclosed. Leveraged ETF launches typically require months to accumulate meaningful AUM, and fee income at launch is negligible.
- The underlying companies are not directly impacted by the ETF launch; these are trading vehicles, not long-term capital raising mechanisms.
- The business model remains unchanged: revenue is driven by management fees and trading volume, both of which are highly sensitive to market volatility rather than product launches alone.
GFSG · Price
Company Overview
- Leverage Shares by Themes operates as an exchange-traded fund provider specializing in leveraged and inverse products.
- The launch targets active traders seeking amplified daily exposure to specific technology supply chain names, including semiconductor design, manufacturing, networking, and enterprise computing.
- The company's growth depends on capturing trading flow in volatile markets, as leveraged products attract short-term traders rather than long-term buy-and-hold investors.