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    Subversive Capital has filed with the SEC to launch two new exchange-traded funds, the Nasdaq-100 Ex-Elon Enterprises ETF (QQNE) and the S&P 500 Ex-Elon Enterprises ETF (SPNE), that systematically exclude companies associated with Elon MuskThe actively managed funds provide broad market exposure while omitting Excluded Enterprises such as Tesla and SpaceX following the recent June 2026 initial public offering of the aerospace manufacturerManaged under the Tidal Trust I structure by portfolio managers Stephen Foy and Christopher P. Mullen, the portfolios reallocate the weight of excluded companies across other index constituents to cater to investors wary of corporate governance risks

    Subversive Capital filed the Ex-Elon ETFs on July 8, 2026. The move offers a pathway for investors to maintain index-tracking portfolios without supporting enterprises founded or led by the world's richest person. Market composition shifted significantly after SpaceX executed its highly anticipated initial public offering in June 2026. The aerospace manufacturer subsequently joined primary benchmarks and forced passive index funds to automatically increase their exposure to Musk-controlled entities.The new offerings will initially drop Tesla and Space Exploration Technologies Corp. from their holdings. According to the official SEC filing, the Nasdaq-100 Ex-Elon Enterprises ETF and the S&P 500 Ex-Elon Enterprises ETF aim for capital appreciation while sidestepping potential governance concerns. Public sentiment surrounding the billionaire has grown increasingly polarized following his extensive involvement with DOGE, controversial statements on the social media platform X and highly publicized political alignments.Managed under the Tidal Trust I structure, the funds rely on an active management process to identify and block companies where Musk serves as a founder, chief executive officer or controlling shareholder. Portfolio managers Stephen Foy and Christopher P. Mullen will oversee the day-to-day operations. Rather than leaving a void in the portfolio, the strategy reallocates the exact weighting of those excluded enterprises across the remaining constituents to mirror broader market performance.Avoiding the prominent billionaire can be notoriously tricky for the average retail investor. Standard mutual funds and broad market indices traditionally maintain heavy allocations in the targeted companies due to their massive market capitalizations. The newly launched exclusionary exchange-traded funds provide a highly specific financial vehicle for those looking to divest from the polarizing figure. This explicit strategy gives both retail and institutional traders a concrete mechanism to protest the chief executive without sacrificing core large-capitalization equity exposure.

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