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SXHI ETF: what the Ninepoint SpaceX HighShares ETF will be

By Sammy · Updated Jun 13, 2026 ·
Illustration for SXHI ETF: what the Ninepoint SpaceX HighShares ETF will be

Short answer: SXHI is the Ninepoint SpaceX HighShares ETF, an announced single-stock SpaceX ETF with a disclosed 0.29% management fee, the lowest stated fee of the announced SpaceX funds. It is expected to begin trading after the SpaceX IPO, subject to TSX approval, and is not trading yet.

SXHI is Ninepoint’s planned way into the SpaceX ETF race. Of the announced Canadian SpaceX funds, it carries the lowest disclosed management fee, which is the detail most likely to draw attention. As of mid-2026 it is announced but not yet trading, with a launch expected to follow the SpaceX IPO. This page lays out what Ninepoint has disclosed and what remains unknown. It is not financial advice, and a pre-launch fund can change, so confirm everything against Ninepoint’s filings before acting.

What SXHI is expected to be

SXHI: what has been announced
AttributeDisclosed plan
TickerSXHI
IssuerNinepoint Partners
UnderlyingSpaceX (single-stock)
Management fee0.29%
StatusAnnounced; expected to trade after the SpaceX IPO, pending TSX approval

The “HighShares” name signals a single-stock structure built around SpaceX. Ninepoint has led with the fee, 0.29%, which undercuts the 0.40% disclosed by both Purpose’s SPXY and Harvest’s SPXE. Whether that headline fee tells the whole cost story will depend on the leverage and any options overlay Ninepoint confirms at launch.

What is still unknown

The fee is disclosed; much of the structure is not yet public. Before SXHI is worth a decision, watch for:

  • Leverage. Whether SXHI uses borrowing to amplify its SpaceX exposure, and how much.
  • Options overlay. Whether it writes covered calls for income, which would cap upside the way its peers do, or holds SpaceX more directly.
  • SpaceX valuation method. How the fund values its pre-IPO SpaceX position, the central risk for any fund holding a private company.
  • Published MER. The all-in cost once the fund has history, which can sit above the 0.29% management fee.

The risks that apply regardless

For broader context, SpaceX is private, so no fund can hold it cheaply or simply, and a diversified alternative like Global X’s ORBX trades today but does not hold SpaceX at all. The SpaceX ETF Canada guide compares every route.

Frequently asked questions

When does SXHI launch?

Ninepoint has announced SXHI but has not confirmed a trading date. It is expected to begin trading after SpaceX’s IPO, subject to TSX approval. Treat the timing as open until the company confirms it.

Is SXHI cheaper than SPXY and SPXE?

On the disclosed management fee, yes. SXHI’s 0.29% is lower than the 0.40% stated for both SPXY and SPXE. But the full cost depends on leverage and trading, which show up in the MER after launch, so the fee gap may narrow once all three funds report real numbers.

Is SXHI a good investment?

It is too early to judge, because the fund is not trading and key structural details are not yet public. As a category, single-stock SpaceX ETFs are high-risk satellite bets, not core holdings. Wait for the confirmed structure, the valuation method, and the published MER before deciding.

Bottom line

SXHI is Ninepoint’s announced single-stock SpaceX ETF, notable for the lowest disclosed fee of the group but still waiting on the IPO to launch. There is nothing to buy yet, and a low fee does not change the high-risk, single-company nature of the bet. Keep it on the watch list, and if it lists and earns a small spot in your portfolio, Greenline will show you how it fits alongside everything else you own.

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