Same equity benchmark. Two different engines. Together, something more.
RSST and RSSY were up 55.70% and 52.63% respectively, each beating the S&P 500 Index by more than 20 percentage points over the 12 months ending April 30, 2026.
But the real story isn't just the numbers — it's how they got there. RSST stacks managed futures (trend) on top of U.S. equities. RSSY stacks futures yield (carry). Different diversifying engines, firing at different moments. Together, producing a more robust outcome than either one alone would have.
This is not only a case for return stacking. It's a case for diversifying your diversifiers. Join Rodrigo Gordillo and Corey Hoffstein for a live conversation on what makes RSST and RSSY structurally different — and why that difference matters for your portfolio.
What They'll Cover
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How RSST and RSSY work — and why they're different Trend and carry are not the same strategy. Understand what drives each, when they tend to work, and why combining them changes the equation.
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Why diversifying your diversifiers matters Adding a single diversifier is a start. Stacking two uncorrelated ones — that fire at different times — is a more resilient approach across market regimes.
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How to think about RSST and RSSY in a portfolio Practical guidance on positioning, sizing, and client conversations.
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Live Q&A Rodrigo and Corey will take your questions in real time.
Register to get a link to the live event!
Index Definitions
The S&P 500 Total Return Index is the Standard & Poor’s 500, a market-capitalization-weighted index of 500 leading publicly traded companies in the U.S.
Investors should carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses of the Return Stacked® ETFs. This and other important information about the ETFs is contained in their prospectuses, which can be obtained by calling 1-844-737-3001 or clicking here. The prospectuses should be read carefully before investing.
Investments involve risk. Principal loss is possible. Unlike mutual funds, ETFs may trade at a premium or discount to their net asset value. Brokerage commissions may apply and would reduce returns. Derivatives Risk. Derivatives are instruments, such as futures contracts, whose value is derived from that of other assets, rates, or indices. The use of derivatives for non-hedging purposes may be considered to carry more risk than other types of investments. Leverage Risk: As part of the Fund’s principal investment strategy, the Fund will make investments in futures contracts to gain long and short exposure across four major asset classes (commodities, currencies, fixed income, and equities). These derivative instruments provide the economic effect of financial leverage by creating additional investment exposure to the underlying instrument, as well as the potential for greater loss. Non-Diversification Risk. The Fund is non-diversified, meaning that it is permitted to invest a larger percentage of its assets in fewer issuers than diversified funds. High Portfolio Turnover Risk. The Fund may actively and frequently trade all or a significant portion of the Fund’s holdings."
Management Investment Adviser
Tidal Investments, LLC serves as investment adviser to the Fund and the Subsidiary.
Investment Sub-Advisers
Newfound Research LLC serves as investment sub-adviser to the Fund.
ReSolve Asset Management Inc. ("RAM") serves as a non-discretionary investment sub-adviser to the Fund and the Subsidiary.
Futures Advisor
ReSolve Asset Management SEZC (Cayman) serves as futures advisor to the Fund and the Subsidiary.
Distributor
Foreside Fund Services, LLC is the distributor for the Fund. Foreside is not related to Tidal, Newfound, or RAM.
Case # ffe9d217-312a-4c8d-84e9-d20ee30a6632
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