How XOVR Fits in a Growth Portfolio
A differentiated growth ETF that combines public equities with select private-company exposure inside a single ETF wrapper.
For investors searching for growth ETFs, private-market exposure, or access to pre-IPO companies, XOVR offers a distinct private-public crossover approach benchmarked against U.S. large-cap growth.
The Challenge
The Same Few Mega-Caps, Over and Over
Investors searching for growth ETFs, private-market exposure, or access to pre-IPO companies often face the same challenge: most traditional large-cap growth ETFs are concentrated in many of the same mega-cap technology stocks.
The ERShares Private-Public Crossover ETF, XOVR, was designed to offer a differentiated growth ETF approach by combining public equities with select private-company exposure inside an ETF structure.
The Framework
Benchmarked to Growth, Built On the ER30TR
XOVR is benchmarked against U.S. large-cap growth indices, while its public equity sleeve is based on the ER30TR, the Entrepreneur 30 Total Return Index. The ER30TR Index has a long-term performance history across multiple market environments, giving investors a measurable framework for evaluating the public-market portion of the XOVR strategy.
Benchmark
U.S. large-cap growth indices anchor the comparison set, aligning XOVR with the growth allocation investors already understand.
Public Sleeve
The public equity sleeve tracks the ER30TR, the Entrepreneur 30 Total Return Index, with a measurable long-term performance history.
Private Sleeve
XOVR has the ability to include select private-company exposure, currently including indirect exposure to SpaceX through a special purpose vehicle.
What Makes It Different
Entrepreneur-Led, Not Cap-Weighted
Unlike many conventional growth ETFs that are primarily driven by cap-weighted exposure to mega-cap technology companies, XOVR seeks to identify entrepreneur-led public companies with long-term growth potential.
The ETF also has the ability to include private-market exposure, which may provide access to companies that are not yet available through traditional public-market index funds.
Portfolio Fit
A Potential Complement to a Core Growth Allocation
This makes XOVR a potential complement to a core equity allocation or a large-cap growth allocation. Investors who already own broad-market ETFs or traditional growth ETFs may have meaningful exposure to the same group of large-cap technology companies.
XOVR seeks to diversify the sources of growth by adding a crossover ETF structure that includes both public and select private-company exposure.
For investors already holding broad-market or large-cap growth ETFs, XOVR is designed to diversify the sources of growth, not just the size of the allocation.
Private-Market Exposure
SpaceX, the SPV, and the Broader Thesis
XOVR’s private-company exposure currently includes indirect exposure to SpaceX through a special purpose vehicle. This exposure reflects the fund’s broader private-public crossover strategy and is not the sole investment thesis of the ETF. Holdings and portfolio weights are subject to change.
For Investors Researching
A Crossover ETF Built for Long-Term Growth Investors
For investors researching how to invest in private companies through an ETF, how to access pre-IPO companies, or how to add differentiated growth exposure to a portfolio, XOVR offers a distinct approach. The ETF combines a public growth equity strategy based on the ER30TR Index with the ability to invest in select private companies, creating a private-public crossover ETF designed for long-term growth investors.
XOVR may be considered as part of a diversified portfolio for investors who understand the risks of growth investing, private-market exposure, and ETF investing.
Ready to Invest
Buy XOVR With Your Broker
XOVR trades as a daily-priced ETF and is available through major brokerage platforms. No investment minimums.
Investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. There is no guarantee that any investment strategy will achieve its objectives, generate profits, or avoid losses. Holdings and portfolio weights are subject to change. Investors should carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses of an ETF before investing.