Finance

Virgin Galactic rockets up 18% after Tesla investor Ark reveals it will launch a space-themed ETF

chamath palihapitiya richard branson virgin galactic ipo
Virgin Galactic co-founder Sir Richard Branson, CEO George Whitesides, and Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya pose together outside of the New York Stock Exchange ahead of Virgin Galactic trading on October 28, 2019.

Brendan McDermid/Reuters

  • Virgin Galactic shares surged as much as 18% on Thursday.
  • The space-tourism group may be added to Ark Investment Management’s planned Space Exploration ETF.
  • The fund manages a total of $42 billion in ETF products, Bloomberg estimates.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Virgin Galactic stock soared as much as 18% on Thursday, boosting its market capitalization by more than $1 billion, after a major investment fund disclosed plans to launch a space-themed exchange-traded fund.

Investors in the commercial-spaceflight company – which counts billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson as its cofounder and billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya as its chairman – are betting it will be included in Ark Investment Management’s ARK Space Exploration ETF.

Read more:The space industry will grow by over $1 trillion in the next decade, Bank of America says. Here are the 14 stocks best positioned to benefit from the boom.

Ark, led by founder and investment chief Cathie Wood, already runs seven ETFs focused on areas such as genomics, 3D printing, robotics, and financial technology. Its flagship Ark Innovation ETF counts Tesla as its largest holding.

Thanks to a massive influx of investor capital in recent months, Ark now oversees about $42 billion in ETF products – a sharp increase from less than $4 billion a year ago, according to Bloomberg’s estimates.

Read more:An ETF provider whose specialty funds have smashed the market breaks down how to capitalize on the red-hot SPAC craze – and shares 4 to watch in 2021

Wood and her team plan to actively manage their space ETF. They intend to invest in domestic and foreign companies engaged in space exploration and innovation, and hold between 40 and 55 stocks.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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