An exchange-traded fund tied to bets on natural disasters has started trading in London, after becoming the first such ETF to attract a lead market maker.The KRC Cat Bond UCITS ETF was launched with the goal of drawing more retail investors into the rapidly growing market for catastrophe bonds, says Rick Pagnani, chief executive of King Ridge Capital Advisors, which is behind the new ETF. King Ridge, whose platform provider is HANetf, has tapped London-based Goldenberg Hehmeyer LLP as lead market maker.
“We want to make catastrophe bonds accessible to the general public,” Pagnani, who co-founded King Ridge in 2024 after half a decade running the insurance-linked securities desk at Pacific Investment Management Co., said in an interview.
The market for cat bonds has soared in recent years as increasingly costly natural disasters drive insured losses well above historical norms. That’s forcing insurers and reinsurers to offload part of their risk to the capital markets in an effort to hedge their exposure. Investors in the bonds make money if a pre-defined catastrophe doesn’t materialize.
Cat bond investors have largely dodged major payouts of late, thanks in part to highly calibrated models that only acknowledge trigger events after a certain loss level has been breached.
Over the past four years, the Swiss Re index tracking cat bonds has soared more than 50%, exceeding gains in the MSCI World Index over the period. Even in 2022, when Hurricane Ian caused significant losses in Florida, the Swiss Re index only dipped about 2%.
King Ridge’s ETF, which started trading in London on Tuesday, marks something of a milestone. An equivalent ETF that went public in New York in April — the world’s first such listing — failed to attract a lead market maker. That ETF — the Brookmont Catastrophic Bond ETF, which is overseen by Brookmont Capital Management LLC and run by King Ridge — has since drawn about $36 million in investor capital.
Pagnani says initial uncertainty surrounding the US ETF has now subsided, allowing it to exceed its break-even mark of $25 million. That’s a key reason why Goldenberg Hehmeyer felt “comfortable” taking on the lead market maker role for the European ETF, he said.
Europe “has been in the forefront of cat bond investments relative to the US, so there’s open space” for such funds to target a wider array of investors, according to Pagnani. His new ETF, which is domiciled in Ireland and also trades in Frankfurt and Milan, has so far only lured $3 million. The expectation is that it will hit its $25 million break-even mark “in short order,” he said.
“We’re not going anywhere” and “we’ve got plenty of reserves to stay in the game,” Pagnani said. For now, the fund’s small size leaves it exposed to sudden price moves. The ETF slipped 3.8% on Thursday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
