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New Calamos ETF promises ‘100% downside protection.’ How it works

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All the good, none of the bad? New funds, new promise

A new ETF designed to shield investors from the risk of market volatility starts trading on Wednesday. 

The Calamos S&P 500 Structured Alt Protection ETF (CPSM) promises to deliver investors “100% downside protection” against the index’s losses over a one-year outcome period, according the firm’s news release.

Calamos’ head of ETFs Matt Kaufman helped build the new product.

“There’s no tricks. There’s no magic,” he told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” on Monday. “This is the secret sauce.”

Kaufman explained the new ETF enters into three options positions. Investors in the fund are subject to limits on the extent to which they can capture gains tied to the S&P 500.

“They all work together. It’s a fully funded options package that delivers the upside of the S&P 500 to a cap with 100% capital protection over a 365-day outcome period,” he said. “Then at the end of that year, the options reset, stay in the ETF and keep on going.”

The fund will have an annual expense ratio of 0.69%.

In order to receive the full downside protection against losses in the S&P 500 that the fund promises, Kaufman noted investors must buy it Wednesday when it hits the market.

“If you buy in on day one, you get that 100% protection,” he said. “[But] even day two [or] day three, there’s probably opportunities to buy in all along the way.”

The fund is just one of a suite of 12 structured protection ETFs the firm plans to launch over the course of the next year. Upcoming funds include those aiming to protect against losses tied to the Nasdaq 100 and Russell 2000 benchmarks. 

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Klarna doubles losses in first quarter as IPO remains on hold

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Sebastian Siemiatkowski, CEO of Klarna, speaking at a fintech event in London on Monday, April 4, 2022.

Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg via Getty Images

Klarna saw its losses jump in the first quarter as the popular buy now, pay later firm applies the brakes on a hotly anticipated U.S. initial public offering.

The Swedish payments startup said its net loss for the first three months of 2025 totaled $99 million — significantly worse than the $47 million loss it reported a year ago. Klarna said this was due to several one-off costs related to depreciation, share-based payments and restructuring.

Revenues at the firm increased 13% year-over-year to $701 million. Klarna said it now has 100 million active users and 724,00 merchant partners globally.

It comes as Klarna remains in pause mode regarding a highly anticipated U.S. IPO that was at one stage set to value the SoftBank-backed company at over $15 billion.

Klarna put its IPO plans on hold last month due to market turbulence caused by President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff plans. Online ticketing platform StubHub also put its IPO plans on ice.

Prior to the IPO delay, Klarna had been on a marketing blitz touting itself as an artificial intelligence-powered fintech. The company partnered up with ChatGPT maker OpenAI in 2023. A year later, Klarna used OpenAI technology to create an AI customer service assistant.

Last week, Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski said the company was able to shrink its headcount by about 40%, in part due to investments in AI.

Watch CNBC's full interview with Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski

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Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Walmart, Netflix, Tesla, Reddit and more

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