Wall Street now has an ETF betting the government will admit aliens are real.

The Tuttle Capital UFO Disclosure ETF (BATS:UFOD) began trading in February, charges 0.99% a year, and holds stocks that portfolio manager Matthew Tuttle thinks could profit from federal disclosure of advanced "non-human" technology.

He told the Wall Street Journal he was inspired by videos that appear to show craft moving in anomalous ways.

Tuttle's Track Record Tuttle has built a brand on provocative funds.

He previously ran the Inverse Cramer and Long Cramer ETFs, which traded against and with the picks of CNBC host Jim Cramer before both were liquidated in 2024 for lack of assets.