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DBi Managed Futures (DBMF) returned 25.26% over the past year and is up 8.05% YTD with a 0.85% expense ratio. S&P 500 ETF (SPY) returned 16.54% over the past year and is down 0.23% YTD.
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DBMF captured gains from the April 2025 volatility spike and persistent rate uncertainty creating trends across asset classes that trend-following models exploit.
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When the VIX spiked to 52.33 in April 2025, most portfolios bled. iMGP DBi Managed Futures Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA:DBMF) was built precisely for that kind of environment, and the past year’s performance suggests it delivered.
Managed futures strategies use trend-following models to go long or short across a diversified mix of asset classes, including equities, bonds, currencies, and commodities. DBMF specifically replicates the positioning of the largest managed futures hedge funds using liquid futures contracts, without the steep fees those funds charge. The goal is to generate returns that move independently of stocks and bonds, providing a genuine diversifier rather than just another correlated bet.
For retirees, the appeal is straightforward: a holding that can rise when equities fall protects the sequence-of-returns risk that makes early retirement withdrawals so dangerous. Losing a significant amount in year one of retirement is far more damaging than the same loss a decade in.
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Over the past year, DBMF returned 25.26%, meaningfully outpacing SPY’s 16.54%. That gap reflects how well trend-following strategies performed during the volatility spike of 2025, when sharp dislocations across equities, bonds, and currencies created exactly the directional trends these models are built to exploit.
That outperformance has extended into 2026. Year-to-date, DBMF is up 8.05% while SPY sits essentially flat at -0.23%, suggesting the macro environment — marked by persistent rate uncertainty and equity turbulence — continues to favor managed futures positioning.
For cost-conscious retirees evaluating the fund, DBMF carries a dividend yield that can supplement income during drawdown periods, offset in part by its 0.85% expense ratio — reasonable for an actively managed alternatives strategy but worth factoring into net return expectations.
The five-year picture tells a more complicated story. Over five years, DBMF returned 53.12% versus SPY’s 80.6%. Trend-following strategies earn their keep during dislocations, not during calm bull markets. Investors who held DBMF through the quiet stretch of late 2024 and early 2025 paid an opportunity cost for that insurance.


