Ramaswamy's Anti-ESG ETF Firm Hits $1B in Assets

Vivek Ramaswamy, chairman and founder of Montes Archimedes Acquisition Corp., speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas, US, on Friday, Aug. 5, 2022. The Conservative Political Action Conference launched in 1974 brings together conservative organizations, elected leaders, and activists.

Strive Asset Management, an anti-activism fund company co-founded by Republican presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy, has crossed $1 billion in assets even as it comes under legal scrutiny.

Ohio-based Strive controls these assets across its 11 exchange-traded funds, just over a year since its first fund began trading, according to press release Tuesday.

The asset manager launched in 2022 with backing from billionaire investors including Peter Thiel and Bill Ackman as an antithesis to investment giants such as BlackRock Inc., which have emphasized environmental, social and governance-focused investing.

Strive’s mission statement — encouraging companies to “focus on excellence” rather than ESG mandates, according to Tuesday’s release — appears to be resonating as investor appetite for ESG dries up and corporate advocates including BlackRock’s Larry Fink back away from the phrase.

Ramaswamy’s presidential bid is also likely drawing more eyeballs to Strive’s lineup than would be there otherwise, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

He is currently polling third in the Republican primary field — behind Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis — according to the Real Clear Politics average of polls.

“It is a rare feat for any indie issuer to hit $1 billion in first year, let alone one that is largely a pushback to ESG as many of those ETFs have flopped,” Bloomberg Intelligence senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said. “Ramaswamy’s wealthy backers helped a lot and running for president probably can’t hurt either. That is some unchartered territory when it comes to ETF marketing.”

Strive has had the most success with its $369 million Strive US Energy ETF (ticker DRLL), which tracks the same portfolio as BlackRock’s $1.4 billion iShares US Energy ETF (IYE).

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However, DRLL’s selling point is that Strive would use its shareholder-voting power to encourage the companies it holds to “drill more and frack more,” Ramaswamy said last August.