Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Benzinga
Benzinga
Chandrima Sanyal

Not Enough Believers: Faith-Based ETF Folds Amid Industry Purge

Stained,Glass,Windows,In,Small,Church,With,Wood,Pews

Faith Investor Services LLC intends to liquidate the FIS Knights of Columbus Global Belief ETF (NYSE:KOCG), a faith-based ETF that attempted to match investments with Catholic principles.

The action is the latest to affect smaller and thematic ETFs in a highly competitive environment.

  • Last day for orders: July 11, 2025
  • Last trading day on NYSE Arca: July 18, 2025
  • Liquidation distributions anticipated: On or around July 18, 2025

Investors who remain invested in KOCG shares by the close on July 18 will be paid a cash distribution equal to the fund’s net asset value (NAV), including any last capital gains and dividend distributions. The NAV, though, will be slightly lower to pay liquidation expenses. After all distributions are made, the fund will discontinue.

Founded to provide an investment product that aligns with Catholicism and international exposure, KOCG was unable to acquire significant assets or trading volume. Its shutdown illustrates the bitter pill for values-based, niche funds, where mission is frequently superseded by scale, liquidity, and cost savings.

See Also: Marjorie Taylor Greene Picks a Fight With Elon Musk’s AI Chatbot: ‘Grok Is Left Leaning’

Industry-Wide Wave Of ETF Shutdowns

This shutdown is part of a larger trend. Large asset managers have also been shutting down underperforming and thematic ETFs as investor interest dwindles:

  • BlackRock has closed eight ETFs and six mutual funds, three of which were ESG-themed ETFs, with a combined total of around $109 million in assets.
  • Goldman Sachs closed two thematic ETFs on June 18: the Future Consumer Equity ETF (NYSE:GBUY) and the Future Planet Equity ETF (NYSE:GSFP). Combined, they had around $29.7 million in assets.
  • VanEck, earlier in June, also shut down its Green Infrastructure ETF (NASDAQ:RNEW) and HIP Sustainable Muni ETF due to poor performance and investor demand.

These steps herald a wider pattern of industry consolidation, in which large managers are cutting niche and thematic products that do not provide scale or efficiency. Even with ESG investing still trendy, not all such products bear the test of time, and the expense of being irrelevant.

Bottom Line

The liquidation of KOCG fits into an emerging trend among ETF titans to reconsider product lineups and eliminate tiny, niche funds.

As the market becomes more crowded and fee-conscious, only those with the requisite assets and investor demand will remain.

Now Read:

Image: Shutterstock

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.