Here's a question worth asking: does it matter who's running a company? Not just whether they're competent, but whether they founded the thing in the first place? Corgi Strategies thinks the answer is yes, and they've built an ETF around it.
The Founder-Led ETF (FDRS) started trading on the Nasdaq on December 30, 2025. Two days later, Corgi rang the bell at the Nasdaq MarketSite, because apparently someone believes this idea has legs.
Why Founders Might Actually Be Better Bosses
The pitch is straightforward. Companies run by their founders tend to think longer-term, stay closer to their customers, and innovate more aggressively than those helmed by professional managers brought in from outside. Instead of hunting for the next superstar CEO, FDRS wraps this philosophy into a rules-based product you can buy with a single ticker.
The fund tracks the Founder-Led Index – Benchmark TR Gross, which selects the 50 largest U.S.-listed public companies still led by their founders, ranked by free-float market cap. These aren't scrappy startups. They're established businesses where the person who started it all is still calling the shots or deeply involved.
Corgi CEO Nico Laqua explained the thinking in a LinkedIn post. He noticed that founder-led companies often have leaders who stay engaged with product development, look past quarterly earnings pressures, and keep innovating even after scaling up. FDRS is designed to give investors easy access to this slice of the market without assembling a custom portfolio stock by stock.
The Details: Fees and Structure
Structurally, FDRS keeps things simple. It's issued by Corgi Strategies LLC, trades on Nasdaq, and charges an expense ratio of 0.49%. That's higher than your typical broad-market index fund, but it's in line with other thematic or strategy-focused ETFs that target specific leadership styles or company characteristics.
Founder-Led Investing Gains Momentum
Founder-centric strategies have picked up steam in recent years as investors look for angles tied to governance and incentive structures. The idea isn't exactly new, but FDRS represents one of the latest efforts to package it into a clean, index-based ETF format.
Whether founder leadership actually delivers long-term outperformance is still up for debate. For now, FDRS offers a straightforward way to express that conviction—betting that having skin in the game and the original vision still matters, even after a company has grown up.




