Volatility Shares Trust

04/01/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/01/2026 09:31

Summary Prospectus by Investment Company (Form 497K)

Rule 497(k)

File No. 333-263619

Summary Prospectus

2x Chainlink ETF

Trading Symbol: CHNU

CBOE BZX Exchange, Inc.

April 1, 2026

www.volatilityshares.com

Before you invest, you may want to review the 2x Chainlink ETF (the "Fund") statutory prospectus and statement of additional information, which contain more information about the Fund and its risks. The current statutory prospectus and statement of additional information dated April 1, 2026 are incorporated by reference into this Summary Prospectus. You can find the Fund's statutory prospectus, statement of additional information, reports to shareholders, and other information about the Fund online at www.volatilityshares.com/chnu. You can also get this information at no cost by calling at (866) 261-0273 or by sending an email request to [email protected].

Important Information About the Fund

2x Chainlink ETF (the "Fund") seeks daily investment results, before fees and expenses, that correspond to two times (2x) the return of the price of LINK (defined below) for a single day, not for any other period. A "single day" is measured from the time the Fund calculates its net asset value ("NAV") to the time of the Fund's next NAV calculation. The return of the Fund for periods longer than a single day will be the result of its return for each day compounded over the period. The Fund's returns for periods longer than a single day will very likely differ in amount, and possibly even direction, from the Fund's stated multiple (2x) times the return of LINK for the same period. For periods longer than a single day, the Fund will lose money if LINK's performance is flat, and it is possible that the Fund will lose money even if the price of LINK increases. Longer holding periods, higher LINK volatility, and greater leveraged exposure each exacerbate the impact of compounding on an investor's returns. During periods of higher LINK volatility, the volatility of LINK may affect the Fund's return as much as or more than the return of the price of LINK.

While the Fund has a daily investment objective, you may hold shares of the Fund ("Shares") for longer than one day if you believe doing so is consistent with your goals and risk tolerance. If you hold Shares for any period other than a day, it is important for you to understand that over your holding period:

• Your return may be higher or lower than that sought in the investment objective, and this difference may be significant.

• Factors that contribute to returns that are worse than the return sought in the investment objective include smaller LINK gains or losses and higher LINK volatility, as well as longer holding periods when these factors apply.

• Factors that contribute to returns that are better than the return sought in the investment objective include larger LINK gains or losses and lower LINK volatility, as well as longer holding periods when these factors apply.

• The more extreme these factors are, and the more they occur together, the more your return will tend to deviate from the return sought in the investment objective.

The Fund expects to gain 2x exposure to LINK by investing a portion of its assets in a wholly owned subsidiary of the Fund organized under the laws of the Cayman Islands (the "Subsidiary"). In order to qualify as a regulated investment company ("RIC") for purposes of federal income tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code"), the Fund will have to reduce its exposure to its Subsidiary on or around the end of each of the Fund's fiscal quarter ends. The Fund expects to reduce its exposure to its Subsidiary during these periods by investing in certain other investments as described below. During these periods, the Fund may not achieve its investment objective, and may return substantially less than two times (2x) the daily performance of LINK.

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Investment Objective

The Fund seeks daily investment results, before fees and expenses, that correspond to two times (2x) the daily performance of LINK. The Fund does not seek to achieve its stated investment objective over a period of time greater than a single day.

Fees and Expenses of the Fund

This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy, hold and sell Shares. Investors may pay other fees, such as brokerage commissions and other fees to financial intermediaries, which are not reflected in the table and example set forth below.

Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)

Management Fees

1.85%

Distribution and Service (12b-1) Fees

0.00%

Other Expenses(1)

0.00%

Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses

1.85%

​(1) "Other Expenses" are estimates based on the expenses the Fund expects to incur for the current fiscal year

Example

This example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in other funds. This example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the Fund for the time periods indicated and then sell all of your Shares at the end of those periods. The example also assumes that your investment has a 5% return each year and that the Fund's operating expenses remain at current levels. This example does not include the brokerage commissions that investors may pay to buy and sell Shares.

Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, your costs, based on these assumptions, would be:

1 Year

3 Years

$190

$587

Portfolio Turnover

The Fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it purchases and sells securities (or "turns over" its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover will cause the Fund to incur additional transaction costs and may result in higher taxes when Shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses or in the example, may affect the Fund's performance. Because the Fund has not yet commenced operations, portfolio turnover information is unavailable at this time.

Principal Investment Strategies

LINK is a digital asset that is created and transmitted through the operations of the Chainlink Network, a decentralized oracle network designed to connect smart contracts with real-world data, APIs, and off-chain systems.

The Fund is an exchange-traded fund ("ETF") that seeks to achieve its investment objective primarily through managed exposure to LINK futures contracts that trade only on an exchange registered with the CFTC ("LINK Futures Contracts"), and cash, cash-like instruments or high-quality securities that serve as collateral to the Fund's investments in LINK Futures Contracts ("Collateral Investments"). In this manner, the Fund seeks to provide investment results that correspond to twice the performance of the price of LINK for a single day.

The Fund does not invest directly in LINK. Instead, the Fund seeks to benefit from increases in the price of LINK Futures Contracts. Under normal circumstances, the Fund will invest at least 80% of the value of its net assets (plus borrowings for investment purposes) in LINK-Linked Instruments. For purposes of this policy, "LINK-Linked Instruments" means (i) LINK Futures Contracts; (ii) shares of other LINK-linked exchange-traded investment products not registered under as investment companies ("LINK-Linked ETPs") under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"); (iii) shares of other investment companies registered under the 1940 Act that invest in similar assets to those in which the Fund may invest ("Other Investment Companies"); (iv) exchange traded options on shares of Other Investment Companies or shares of LINK-Linked ETPs; and (v) swap agreement transactions that reference LINK, LINK Futures Contracts, LINK-Linked ETPs, Other Investment Companies, or LINK-referenced indexes. Certain LINK-Linked Instruments, such as LINK-Linked ETPs or options thereon, are currently unavailable for investment, though are expected to become available in the future.

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For the purpose of the Fund's investment objective, under normal circumstances, the Fund will use the price of LINK that is reflected in the next, or second to next, expiring LINK Futures Contract. If the Fund invests in other LINK-Linked Instruments, the value of LINK will be determined by an average of how LINK is valued in the financial instruments in which the Fund invests.

The investment adviser to the Fund and the Subsidiary is Volatility Shares LLC (the "Adviser"). The Adviser oversees the Fund and implements the day-to-day portfolio management responsibilities for the Fund. In serving as investment adviser to the Fund, the Adviser does not conduct conventional investment research or analysis or forecast market movement or trends.

The Fund is classified as a "non-diversified company" under the 1940 Act. The Fund will not concentrate its investments in securities of issuers in any industry or group of industries, as the term "concentrate" is used in the 1940 Act, except that the Fund may invest more than 25% of its total assets in investments that provide exposure to LINK and/or LINK Futures Contracts.

LINK Futures Contracts

In order to obtain 2x daily exposure to LINK, the Fund intends to typically enter into cash-settled LINK Futures Contracts as the "buyer," except as detailed below. In simplest terms, in a cash-settled futures market the counterparty pays cash to the buyer if the price of a futures contract goes up, and buyer pays cash to the counterparty if the price of the futures contract goes down. In order to maintain its 2x daily exposure to LINK, the Fund intends to exit its futures contracts as they near expiration and replace them with new futures contracts with a later expiration date. Futures contracts with a longer term to expiration may be priced higher than futures contracts with a shorter term to expiration, a relationship called "contango". When rolling futures contracts that are in contango the Fund will close its long position by selling the shorter term contract at a relatively lower price and buying a longer-dated contract at a relatively higher price. The presence of contango will adversely affect the performance of the Fund. Conversely, futures contracts with a longer term to expiration may be priced lower than futures contracts with a shorter term to expiration, a relationship called "backwardation". When rolling long futures contracts that are in backwardation, the Fund will close its long position by selling the shorter term contract at a relatively higher price and buying a longer-dated contract at a relatively lower price. The presence of backwardation may positively affect the performance of the Fund. Further, the returns of the Fund's LINK Futures Contracts may differ from that of LINK due to the divergence in prices or the costs associated with investing in futures contracts, which may negatively impact the Fund's returns.

The Fund invests in LINK Futures Contracts indirectly via the Subsidiary. The Subsidiary and the Fund will have the same investment adviser and investment objective. The Subsidiary will also follow the same general investment policies and restrictions as the Fund. Except as noted herein, for purposes of this Prospectus, references to the Fund's investment strategies and risks include those of the Subsidiary. The Fund complies with the provisions of the 1940 Act governing investment policies and capital structure and leverage on an aggregate basis with the Subsidiary. Furthermore, the Adviser, as the investment adviser to the Subsidiary, complies with the provisions of the 1940 Act relating to investment advisory contracts as it relates to its advisory agreement with the Subsidiary. The Subsidiary also complies with the provisions of the 1940 Act relating to affiliated transactions and custody. Because the Fund intends to qualify for treatment as a RIC under the Code, the size of the Fund's investment in the Subsidiary will not exceed 25% of the Fund's total assets at or around each quarter end of the Fund's fiscal year. At other times of the year, the Fund's investments in the Subsidiary will significantly exceed 25% of the Fund's total assets. The Subsidiary's custodian is U.S. Bank, N.A..

If circumstances occur where market prices for LINK Futures Contracts were not readily available, the Fund would fair value its LINK Futures Contracts in accordance with its pricing and valuation policy and procedures for fair value determinations. Pursuant to those policies and procedures, the Adviser would consider various factors, such as pricing history; market levels prior to price limits or halts; supply, demand, and open interest in LINK Futures Contracts; and comparison to other major digital asset futures, such as bitcoin, ether and LINK prices in the spot market. The Adviser would document its proposed pricing and methodology, detailing the factors that entered into the valuation.

The Chainlink Network and LINK

LINK is a digital asset that is created and transmitted through the operations of the Chainlink Network, a decentralized oracle network designed to connect smart contracts with real-world data, APIs, and off-chain systems. No single entity owns or operates the Chainlink Network, the infrastructure of which is collectively maintained by a decentralized network of independent node operators. The Chainlink Network allows smart contracts on various blockchains to securely access off-chain data feeds, web APIs, and traditional payment systems. LINK can be used to pay for goods and services, including compensation for node operators who retrieve and deliver data to smart contracts, or it can be converted to fiat currencies, such as the U.S. dollar, at rates determined on Digital Asset Exchanges or in individual end-user-to-end-user transactions under a barter system. Furthermore, the Chainlink Network was designed to enable smart

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contracts to interact with external data sources in a secure and reliable manner, providing data feeds for asset prices, weather information, sports results, and other real-world information that smart contracts cannot otherwise access on their own. Using Chainlink's oracle services, developers can create decentralized finance applications, insurance products, gaming platforms, and other applications that require verified external data. Oracle services are executed by Chainlink node operators in exchange for payment in LINK. Like other blockchain infrastructure projects, the Chainlink Network is intended to expand blockchain utility by bridging the gap between on-chain smart contracts and off-chain data sources.

The Chainlink Protocol introduced a decentralized oracle network architecture that aggregates data from multiple independent node operators to ensure accuracy and reliability. This design mitigates the "oracle problem" (the risk that a single point of failure in data delivery could compromise the security of a smart contract). By requiring multiple nodes to retrieve and report data, which is then aggregated and verified before delivery, Chainlink is intended to provide tamper-resistant and highly available data feeds that smart contracts can trust.

The Chainlink Network itself does not operate as a standalone Layer-1 blockchain with its own consensus mechanism. Instead, it leverages Ethereum (and other integrated chains) for transaction settlement while relying on decentralized oracle nodes for service provision. The Chainlink Staking mechanism, introduced in 2022 and expanded since, allows LINK holders to secure oracle networks by staking their tokens, thereby backing data quality and earning rewards.

The Chainlink Protocol was first conceived by Sergey Nazarov and Steve Ellis in a 2017 whitepaper. Development of the Chainlink Network is overseen by Chainlink Labs, the primary development organization behind the protocol, which administered the original network launch and token distribution.

Although Chainlink Labs continues to exert significant influence over the direction of the development of LINK and the Chainlink Network, the network operates in a decentralized manner across multiple blockchains and does not require governmental authorities or financial institution intermediaries to create, transmit, or determine the value of LINK.

The price of LINK has historically shown a correlation with the growth and adoption of decentralized finance ("DeFi") applications and broader smart contract usage across various blockchain ecosystems. Chainlink's oracle services are widely integrated into DeFi protocols for price feeds, lending and borrowing applications, and derivatives platforms. Increases in DeFi activity have generally corresponded with increased demand for Chainlink's services, as LINK is used to compensate node operators for providing data. It is important to note that while DeFi adoption appears to have had a significant impact on the value of LINK, other factors also influence LINK's price, such as overall market conditions, technological developments, competitive oracle solutions, and regulatory changes. As well, the long-term sustainability of this relationship between DeFi growth and LINK's price remains uncertain.

As of March 2026, approximately 708 million LINK tokens are in circulation, with a maximum total supply of 1 billion LINK. LINK has a fixed maximum supply, meaning it operates on a deflationary or fixed-supply model rather than an inflationary one. The initial token distribution allocated tokens to node operators, public sale participants, and the Chainlink team for ongoing development. Because the total supply is capped, no new LINK tokens will be created beyond the 1 billion token limit, though unreleased tokens from the initial allocation may continue to enter circulation over time as they are distributed to fund network development and ecosystem growth.

Collateral Investments

The Fund will invest assets in Collateral Investments. The Collateral Investments may consist of high-quality securities, which include: (1) U.S. Government securities, such as bills, notes and bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury; (2) investment companies registered under the 1940 Act that invest in high-quality securities; and/or (3) corporate debt securities, such as commercial paper and other short-term unsecured promissory notes issued by businesses that are rated investment grade or determined by the Adviser to be of comparable quality. For these purposes, "investment grade" is defined as investments with a rating at the time of purchase in one of the four highest categories of at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (e.g., BBB- or higher from S&P Global Ratings or Baa3 or higher from Moody's Investors Service, Inc.).

The Collateral Investments are designed to provide liquidity, serve as margin, or otherwise collateralize the Subsidiary's investments in LINK-Linked Instruments. The Fund expects that it will primarily invest its assets, and that the Subsidiary will primarily invest its assets, in Collateral Investments that are "securities," as such term is defined under the 1940 Act.

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Other Investments

In order to help the Fund meet its daily investment objective by maintaining the daily desired level of leveraged exposure to LINK, maintain its tax status as a regulated investment company on days in and around quarter-end, help the Fund maintain its desired exposure to LINK Futures Contracts when it is approaching or has exceeded position limits or accountability levels, or because of liquidity or other constraints, the Fund may invest in the following:

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

The Fund may invest in reverse repurchase agreements which are a form of borrowing in which the Fund sells portfolio securities to financial institutions and agrees to repurchase them at a mutually agreed-upon date and price that is higher than the original sale price, and use the proceeds for investment purchases.

As a result of the Fund repurchasing the securities at a higher price, the Fund will lose money by engaging in reverse repurchase agreement transactions.

As noted above, because the Fund intends to qualify for treatment as a RIC under the Code, the size of the Fund's investment in the Subsidiary will not exceed 25% of the Fund's total assets at or around each quarter end of the Fund's fiscal year (the "Asset Diversification Test"). At other times of the year, the Fund's investments in the Subsidiary will significantly exceed 25% of the Fund's total (or gross) assets.

When the Fund seeks to reduce its total assets exposure to the Subsidiary, it may use the short-term Treasury Bills it owns (and purchase additional Treasury Bills as needed) to transact in reverse repurchase agreement transactions, which are ostensibly loans to the Fund. Those loans will increase the gross assets of the Fund, which the Adviser expects will allow the Fund to meet the Asset Diversification Test. When the Fund enters into a reverse repurchase agreement, it will either (i) be consistent with Section 18 of the 1940 Act and maintain asset coverage of at least 300% of the value of the reverse repurchase agreement; or (ii) treat the reverse repurchase agreement transactions as derivative transactions for purposes of Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act ("Rule 18f-4"), including as applicable, the value-at-risk based limit on leverage risk.

LINK-Linked ETPs

The Fund may invest in shares of LINK-Linked ETPs, which are exchange-traded investment products that are not registered under the 1940 Act that derive their value from a basket of spot LINK, and trade intra-day on a national securities exchange. LINK-Linked ETPs are passively managed and do not pursue active management investment strategies, and their sponsors do not actively manage the LINK held by the ETP. This means that the sponsor of the ETP does not sell LINK at times when its price is high or acquire LINK at low prices in the expectation of future price increases. Although the shares of a LINK-Linked ETP are not the exact equivalent of a direct investment in LINK, they provide investors with an alternative that constitutes a relatively cost-effective way to obtain exposure to LINK through the securities market.

LINK-Linked ETPs, though currently unavailable for investment, are expected to become available in the future. LINK-Linked ETPs have not yet been approved by the SEC; accordingly, such ETPs must file a registration statement on Form S-1 and subsequently be declared effective before the LINK-Linked ETPs may become available for investment. Furthermore, the SEC's Division of Trading and Markets may be required to approve a rule change filed on behalf of securities exchange pursuant to Form 19b-4 permitting the exchange to list and trade shares of the LINK-Linked ETPs before such ETPs become available for investment.

Other Investment Companies

The Fund may invest in shares of Other Investment Companies, that is, shares of investment companies registered under the 1940 Act that invest in similar assets to those in which the Fund may invest.

Exchange-traded option contracts on shares of Other Investment Companies or shares of LINK-Linked ETPs.

The Fund may invest in exchange-listed option contracts on shares of Other Investment Companies or shares of LINK-Linked ETPs, each of which invest in similar assets to those in which the Fund may invest. An option is a contract that gives the purchaser of the option, in return for the premium paid, the right to buy shares of an investment company, from the writer of the option (in the case of a call option), or to sell shares of the investment company to the writer of the option (in the case of a put option) at a designated price during the term of the option. The premium paid by the buyer of an option will reflect, among other things, the relationship of the exercise price to the market price and the volatility of the shares of the investment company, the

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remaining term of the option, supply, demand, interest rates and/or currency exchange rates. The Fund may utilize "American" style options or "European" style options. American style options are exercisable on any date prior to the expiration date of the option contract. In contrast, European style options are exercisable only on the expiration date of the option contract.

Swaps that reference LINK, LINK-Linked ETPs, LINK Futures Contracts or Other Investment Companies.

Swap contracts are transactions entered into primarily with major global financial institutions for a specified period ranging from a day to more than one year. In a swap transaction, the Fund and a counterparty will agree to exchange or "swap" payments based on the change in value of an underlying asset or benchmark. For example, the two parties may agree to exchange the return (or differentials in rates of returns) earned or realized on a particular investment or instrument. In the case of the Fund, the reference asset can be LINK, shares of LINK-Linked ETPs, LINK Futures Contracts, or LINK-referenced indexes.

Principal Risks

Daily rebalancing and the compounding of each day's return over time means that the return of the Fund for a period longer than a single day will be the result of each day's returns compounded over the period. This will very likely differ in amount, and possibly even direction, from twice the return of LINK for the same period. The Fund will lose money if LINK's performance is flat over time. The Fund can lose money regardless of the performance of LINK, as a result of daily rebalancing, LINK's volatility, compounding of each day's return and other factors.

As with all investments, there are certain risks of investing in the Fund. Shares will change in value, and you could lose money by investing in the Fund. An investment in the Fund does not represent a complete investment program. An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and it is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency, the Adviser or any of their affiliates. You should consider carefully the following risks before investing in the Fund. As a leveraged ETF, the unique and substantial risks associated with LINK and LINK Futures Contracts, and the historic price volatility of LINK Futures Contracts, are exacerbated.

LINK-Linked Instruments are relatively new investments. They are subject to unique and substantial risks, and may be subject to significant price volatility. The value of an investment in the Fund could decline significantly and without warning, including to zero. You may lose the full value of your investment within a single day. If you are not prepared to accept significant and unexpected changes in the value of the Fund and the possibility that you could lose your entire investment in the Fund you should not invest in the Fund.

The value of an investment in the fund could decline significantly and without warning, including to zero. Shares will change in value, and you could lose money by investing in the Fund. You should be prepared to lose your entire investment. The Fund may not achieve its investment objective.

Each risk noted below is considered a principal risk of investing in the Fund, regardless of the order in which it appears. The significance of each risk factor below may change over time and you should review each risk factor carefully.

LINK Investing Risk. The Fund is indirectly exposed to the risks of investing in LINK through its investments in LINK Futures Contracts and other LINK-Linked Instruments. These risks include the following:

• The value of the Shares relates indirectly to the value of LINK, the value of which may be highly volatile and subject to fluctuations due to a number of factors, including:

• An increase in the global LINK supply;

• Manipulative trading activity on platforms that support the trading of LINK ("Digital Asset Trading Platforms"), which, in many cases, are largely unregulated;

• The adoption of LINK as a medium of exchange, store-of-value or other consumptive asset and the maintenance and development of the open-source software protocol of the Chainlink Network;

• Forks in the Chainlink Network;

• Investors' expectations with respect to interest rates, the rates of inflation of fiat currencies or LINK, and digital asset trading platform rates;

• Consumer preferences and perceptions of LINK specifically and digital assets generally;

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• Fiat currency withdrawal and deposit policies on Digital Asset Trading Platforms;

• Investment and trading activities of large investors that invest directly or indirectly in LINK;

• A "short squeeze" resulting from speculation on the price of LINK, if aggregate short exposure exceeds the number of Shares available for purchase;

• An active derivatives market for LINK or for digital assets generally;

• Monetary policies of governments, trade restrictions, currency devaluations and revaluations and regulatory measures or enforcement actions, if any, that restrict the use of LINK as a form of payment or the purchase of LINK on the Digital Asset Markets;

• Global or regional political, economic or financial conditions, events and situations, such as the novel coronavirus outbreak;

• Fees associated with processing a LINK transaction and the speed at which transactions are settled on the Chainlink Network;

• Interruptions in service from or closures or failures of major Digital Asset Trading Platforms;

• Decreased confidence in Digital Asset Trading Platforms due to the unregulated nature and lack of transparency surrounding the operations of Digital Asset Trading Platforms; and

• Increased competition from other forms of digital assets or payment services.

• The trading prices of LINK have experienced extreme volatility in recent periods and may continue to do so.

• LINK was only introduced within the past decade, and its value is subject to a number of factors relating to the capabilities and development of blockchain technologies and to the fundamental investment characteristics of digital assets.

• LINK is a new digital commodity, and the value of the Shares depends on the acceptance of LINK.

• The Chainlink Protocol was only founded in 2017 and the Chainlink Protocol may not function as intended, which could have an adverse impact on the value of LINK and an investment in the Shares.

• Smart contracts are a new technology and ongoing development may magnify initial problems, cause volatility on the networks that use smart contracts and reduce interest in them, which could have an adverse impact on the value of LINK.

• Changes in the governance of the Chainlink Network may not receive sufficient support from users and validators, which may negatively affect that network's ability to grow and respond to challenges.

• The Chainlink Network may face significant scaling challenges and efforts to increase the volume and speed of transactions may not be successful.

• Digital asset networks are developed by a diverse set of contributors and the perception that certain high-profile contributors will no longer contribute to the network could have an adverse effect on the market price of the related digital asset.

• The fixed supply of LINK may negatively impact the operation of the LINK Ledger.

• LINK may have concentrated ownership and large sales or distributions by holders of LINK, or any ability to participate in or otherwise influence the Chainlink Network, could have an adverse effect on the market price of LINK.

• If a malicious actor obtains control of more than 50% of the staked ether on the Ethereum Blockchain, or otherwise obtains control over the Ethereum Blockchain through its influence over trusted validators or otherwise, such actor could manipulate the Ethereum Blockchain, which could adversely affect the value of the Shares or the ability of the Trust to operate.

• A temporary or permanent "fork" or a "clone" could adversely affect the value of the Shares.

• If the Chainlink Network is used to facilitate illicit activities, businesses that facilitate transactions in LINK could be at increased risk of criminal or civil lawsuits, or of having services cut off, which could negatively affect the price of LINK and the value of the Shares.

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LINK Futures Contracts Risk. Risks of futures contracts include: (i) an imperfect correlation between the value of the futures contract and the underlying asset; (ii) possible lack of a liquid secondary market; (iii) the inability to close a futures contract when desired; (iv) losses caused by unanticipated market movements, which may be unlimited; (v) an obligation for the Fund to make daily cash payments to maintain its required margin, particularly at times when the Fund may have insufficient cash; and (vi) unfavorable execution prices from rapid selling. Unlike equities, which typically entitle the holder to a continuing stake in a corporation, futures contracts normally specify a certain date for settlement in cash based on the reference asset. As the futures contracts approach expiration, they may be replaced by similar contracts that have a later expiration. This process is referred to as "rolling." If the market for these contracts is in "contango," meaning that the prices of futures contracts in the nearer months are lower than the price of contracts in the distant months, the sale of the near-term month contract would be at a lower price than the longer-term contract, resulting in a cost to "roll" the futures contract. The actual realization of a potential roll cost will be dependent upon the difference in price of the near and distant contract. Because the margin requirement for futures contracts is less than the value of the assets underlying the futures contract, futures trading involves a degree of leverage. As a result, a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may result in immediate and substantial loss, as well as gain, to the investor. For example, if at the time of purchase, 40% of the value of the futures contract is deposited as margin, a subsequent 20% decrease in the value of the futures contract would result in a loss of half of the margin deposit, before any deduction for the transaction costs, if the account were then closed out. A decrease in excess of 40% would result in a loss exceeding the original margin deposit, if the futures contract were closed out. Thus, a purchase or sale of a futures contract may result in losses in excess of the amount initially invested in the futures contract. However, the Fund would presumably have sustained comparable losses if, instead of investing in the futures contract, it had invested in the underlying financial instrument and sold it after the decline. Additionally, significant and unpredictable increases in LINK Futures Contracts margin rates relative to prevailing futures prices could result in the Fund not achieving its sought after exposure to two times (2x) the daily performance of LINK. Further, if the LINK futures market is in a period of contango, if prices of LINK and LINK Futures Contracts were to decline, the Fund would experience the negative impact of contango. The impact of backwardation or contango may lead to the returns of the Fund to vary significantly from the total return of other price references, such as the spot price of LINK. Additionally, in the event of a prolonged period of contango, and absent the impact of rising or falling LINK prices, this could have a significant negative impact on the Fund's NAV and total return.

Position Limits and Price Limits

The CFTC and various exchanges on which LINK Futures Contracts trade have established position limits and price limits for LINK Futures Contracts. Position limit regulation and price limit regulation serve distinct purposes and are regulated differently.

Position limits are designed to prevent excessive speculation that could cause sudden or unreasonable fluctuations in the price of a commodity. They limit the maximum number of contracts a person or entity can hold in a particular commodity.

Price limits are mechanisms to maintain orderly markets by restricting the price range within which futures contracts can trade during a trading session. They prevent extreme price movements that could disrupt market stability. Price limits are typically set as a percentage of the previous day's settlement price. When price limits are hit, trading may be halted or expanded depending on the product and regulatory rules. Unlike position limits, price limits do not restrict the number of contracts a trader can hold but rather the price at which those contracts can be traded. When a price limit is hit, LINK futures markets may temporarily halt until price limits can be expanded or trading may be stopped for the day.

If the Fund is unable to buy or sell LINK Futures Contracts as a result of position limits being hit or price limits that result in a halted or closed market - or for other reasons including limited liquidity in the LINK futures market, a disruption to the LINK futures market, or as a result of margin requirements, accountability levels, or other limitations imposed by the Fund's FCMs, the listing exchanges, or the CFTC - the Adviser would take such action as it believes appropriate and in the best interest of the Fund in consideration of the facts and circumstances at such time, including: (i) investing in LINK-Linked Instruments that are not LINK Futures Contracts; (ii) requiring that Authorized Participants purchase and redeem creation units through an exchange for related position (EFRP) method rather than in cash; (iii) applying increased Authorized Participant variable transaction fees for purchases or redemptions of Creation Units made in cash; or (iv) de-levering the Fund, relative to its investment objective, by an amount reflecting prevailing price limits. In addition, the Fund generally may suspend the issuance of Creation Units only for a limited time and only due to extraordinary circumstances, such as when the markets on which the ETF's portfolio holdings are traded are closed for a limited period of time; that is to say, when the Fund is unable to increase its exposure to underlying assets.

Cost of Futures Investment Risk. When a LINK Futures Contract is nearing expiration, the Fund will generally sell it and use the proceeds to buy a LINK Futures Contract with a later expiration date. This is commonly referred to as "rolling".

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If the Fund rolls LINK Futures Contracts that are in contango, the Fund would sell a lower priced, expiring contract and purchase a higher priced, longer-dated contract. The price difference between the expiring contract and longer-dated contract associated with rolling LINK Futures Contracts is typically substantially higher than the price difference associated with rolling other futures contracts. Contango in the LINK futures market may have a significant adverse impact on the performance of the Fund and may cause LINK Futures Contracts and the Fund to underperform the spot price of LINK. Both contango and backwardation would reduce the Fund's correlation to the spot price of LINK and may limit or prevent the Fund from achieving its investment objective. The impact of both contango and backwardation may also be greater to the extent the Fund invests in back-month LINK Futures Contracts.

Aggressive Investment Risk. LINK Futures Contracts are relatively new investments, are subject to unique and substantial risks, and may be subject to significant price volatility. The value of an investment in the Fund could decline significantly and without warning, including to zero. You may lose the full value of your investment within a single day. If you are not prepared to accept significant and unexpected changes in the value of the Fund and the possibility that you could lose your entire investment in the Fund you should not invest in the Fund. The value of an investment in the Fund could decline significantly and without warning, including to zero. You should be prepared to lose your entire investment. Shares will change in value, and you could lose money by investing in the Fund. The Fund may not achieve its investment objective.

Compounding Risk. The Fund has a single day investment objective, and the Fund's performance for any other period is the result of its return for each day compounded over the period. The performance of the Fund for periods longer than a single day will very likely differ in amount, and possibly even direction, from twice (2x) of the daily return of the price of LINK for the same period, before accounting for fees and expenses. Compounding affects all investments, but has a more significant impact on a leveraged fund. This effect becomes more pronounced as LINK volatility and holding periods increase.

Leveraged Correlation Risk. A number of factors may affect the Fund's ability to achieve a high degree of leveraged (2x) correlation with the price of LINK, and there is no guarantee that the Fund will achieve a high degree of correlation. Failure to achieve a high degree of correlation may prevent the Fund from achieving its daily investment objective, and the percentage change of the Fund's NAV each day may differ, perhaps significantly in amount, and possibly even direction, from twice the returns of LINK on a given day.

A number of other factors may adversely affect the Fund's sought-after 2x correlation with LINK, including fees, expenses, transaction costs, financing costs associated with the use of derivatives, income items, valuation methodology, accounting standards and disruptions or illiquidity in the markets for LINK Futures Contracts in which the Fund invests. The Fund may take or refrain from taking positions in order to improve tax efficiency, comply with regulatory restrictions, or for other reasons, each of which may negatively affect the Fund's correlation with daily changes in LINK. The Fund may also be subject to large movements of assets into and out of the Fund, potentially resulting in the Fund being under- or over-exposed to LINK. Any of these factors could decrease correlation between the performance of the Fund and LINK and may hinder the Fund's ability to meet its daily investment objective.

Target Exposure and Rebalancing Risks. The Fund normally will seek to maintain notional exposure to LINK at 200%. However, in order to comply with certain tax qualification tests at the end of each tax quarter, the Fund may reduce its exposure to LINK Futures Contracts on or about such date. If the value of LINK Futures Contracts rises during such periods when the Fund has reduced its futures exposure to LINK Futures Contracts, without gaining a similar increased exposure through Other Investments, the performance of the Fund may be less than it would have been had the Fund maintained its exposure through such period.

In addition, significant and unpredictable increases in LINK Futures Contracts margin rates relative to prevailing futures prices could result in the Fund not achieving its target 2x exposure and as such would cause the Fund to experience greater risk of failing to meet its target exposure of two times (2x) the daily performance of LINK, before fees and expenses.

Rebalancing Risk. If for any reason the Fund is unable to rebalance all or a portion of its portfolio, or if all or a portion of the portfolio is rebalanced incorrectly, the Fund's investment exposure may not be consistent with the Fund's daily investment objective. In these instances, the Fund may not successfully track the performance of LINK and may not achieve its investment objective. Additionally, the rebalancing of futures contracts may impact the trading in such futures contracts and may adversely affect the value of the Fund. For example, such trading may cause the Fund's futures commission merchants ("FCMs") to adjust their hedges. The trading activity associated with such transactions will contribute to the existing trading volume on the underlying futures contracts and may adversely affect the market price of such underlying futures contracts.

Management Risk. The Fund is subject to management risk because it is an actively managed portfolio. The Adviser will apply investment techniques and risk analyses in making investment decisions for the Fund, but there can be no guarantee that the Fund will meet its investment objective.

Derivatives Risk. In addition to LINK Futures Contracts, the Fund may obtain exposure through the following other derivatives: swap agreement transactions that reference LINK, LINK-Linked ETPs, LINK Futures Contracts, or LINK-referenced indexes.

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Investing in derivatives may be considered aggressive and may expose the Fund to risks different from, or possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing directly in the reference asset(s) underlying the derivative (e.g., the securities or commodities contained in the Fund). The use of derivatives may result in larger losses or smaller gains than directly investing in securities or commodities. The risks of using derivatives include: (1) the risk that there may be imperfect correlation between the price of the financial instruments and movements in the prices of the reference asset(s); (2) the risk that an instrument is mispriced; (3) credit or counterparty risk on the amount a Fund expects to receive from a counterparty; (4) the risk that securities prices, interest rates and currency markets will move adversely and a Fund will incur significant losses; (5) the risk that the cost of holding a financial instrument might exceed its total return; and (6) the possible absence of a liquid secondary market for a particular instrument and possible exchange imposed price fluctuation limits, either of which may make it difficult or impossible to adjust a Fund's position in a particular instrument when desired. Each of these factors may prevent a Fund from achieving its investment objective and may increase the volatility (i.e., fluctuations) of the Fund's returns. Because derivatives often require limited initial investment, the use of derivatives also may expose a Fund to losses in excess of those amounts initially invested.

The performance of any LINK-Linked Instrument may not track the performance of its underlying benchmark due to embedded costs and other factors. Thus, to the extent the Fund invests in swaps that use a LINK-Linked Instrument as the reference asset, the Fund may be subject to greater correlation risk and may not achieve as high a degree of correlation with its investment objective than if the Fund only used LINK Futures Contracts.

Counterparty Risk. The Fund will be subject to credit risk (i.e., the risk that a counterparty is unwilling or unable to make timely payments or otherwise meet its contractual obligations) with respect to the amount the Fund expects to receive from counterparties to: LINK Futures Contracts; reverse repurchase agreements; swaps on LINK, LINK-Linked ETPs, LINK Futures Contracts, or LINK-referenced indexes.

The Fund may be negatively impacted if a counterparty becomes bankrupt or otherwise fails to perform its obligations under such an agreement. The Fund may experience significant delays in obtaining any recovery in a bankruptcy or other reorganization proceeding and the Fund may obtain only limited recovery or may obtain no recovery in such circumstances. In order to attempt to mitigate potential counterparty credit risk, the Fund typically enters into transactions with major financial institutions.

The counterparty to an exchange-traded futures contract is subject to the credit risk of the clearing house and the FCM through which it holds its position. Specifically, the FCM or the clearing house could fail to perform its obligations, causing significant losses to the Fund. For example, the Fund could lose margin payments it has deposited with an FCM as well as any gains owed but not paid to the Fund, if the FCM or clearing house becomes insolvent or otherwise fails to perform its obligations. Credit risk of market participants with respect to derivatives that are centrally cleared is concentrated in a few clearing houses and it is not clear how an insolvency proceeding of a clearing house would be conducted and what impact an insolvency of a clearing house would have on the financial system. Under current CFTC regulations, a FCM maintains customers' assets in a bulk segregated account. If a FCM fails to do so, or is unable to satisfy a substantial deficit in a customer account, its other customers may be subject to risk of loss of their funds in the event of that FCM's bankruptcy. In that event, in the case of futures, the FCM's customers are entitled to recover, even in respect of property specifically traceable to them, only a proportional share of all property available for distribution to all of that FCM's customers. In addition, if the FCM does not comply with the applicable regulations, or in the event of a fraud or misappropriation of customer assets by the FCM, the Fund could have only an unsecured creditor claim in an insolvency of the FCM with respect to the margin held by the FCM. FCMs are also required to transfer to the clearing house the amount of margin required by the clearing house, which amount is generally held in an omnibus account at the clearing house for all customers of the FCM. In addition, the Fund may enter into futures contracts and repurchase agreements with a limited number of counterparties, which may increase the Fund's exposure to counterparty credit risk. The Fund does not specifically limit its counterparty risk with respect to any single counterparty.

Further, there is a risk that no suitable counterparties are willing to enter into reverse repurchase agreements with the Fund, or continue to enter into, reverse repurchase agreement transactions with the Fund and, as a result, the Fund may not be able to achieve its investment objective. There is also the risk that the Fund may not be able to engage in reverse repurchase agreement transactions because suitable counterparties refuse to enter into transactions with the Fund. Contractual provisions and applicable law may prevent or delay the Fund from exercising its rights to terminate an investment or transaction with a financial institution experiencing financial difficulties, or to realize on collateral, and another institution may be substituted for that financial institution without the consent of the Fund. If the credit rating of a counterparty to a futures contract and/or repurchase agreement declines, the Fund may nonetheless choose or be required to keep existing transactions in place with the counterparty, in which event the Fund would be subject to any increased credit risk associated with those transactions. Also, in the event of a counterparty's (or its affiliate's) insolvency, the possibility exists that the Fund's ability to exercise remedies, such as the termination of transactions, netting of obligations and realization on collateral, could be stayed or eliminated under special resolution regimes adopted in the United States, the European Union and various other jurisdictions.

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Such regimes provide government authorities with broad authority to intervene when a financial institution is experiencing financial difficulty. In particular, the regulatory authorities could reduce, eliminate, or convert to equity the liabilities to the Fund of a counterparty who is subject to such proceedings in the European Union (sometimes referred to as a "bail in").

Investment Strategy Risk. The Fund, through the Subsidiary, invests primarily in LINK Futures Contracts. The Fund does not invest directly in or hold LINK. Instead, the Fund seeks to benefit from increases in the price of LINK Futures Contracts for a single day. The price of LINK Futures Contracts may differ, sometimes significantly, from the current cash price of LINK, which is sometimes referred to as the "spot" price of LINK. Consequently, the Fund may perform differently from the spot price of LINK. Although LINK Futures Contracts are relatively new instruments, the performance of digital asset futures contracts, in general, has historically been highly correlated to the performance of the digital asset. However, there can be no guarantee this will be the case with LINK and LINK Futures Contracts. Transaction costs (including the costs associated with futures investing), position limits, the availability of counterparties and other factors may impact the cost of LINK Futures Contracts and decrease the correlation between the performance of LINK Futures Contracts and LINK, over short or even long-term periods. In addition, the performance of back-month futures contracts is likely to differ more significantly from the performance of the spot prices of LINK. To the extent the Fund is invested in back-month LINK Futures Contracts, the performance of the Fund should be expected to deviate more significantly from the performance of LINK. Moreover, differences in the prices between LINK Futures Contracts and LINK will expose the Fund to risks different from, and possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing directly in LINK, including larger losses or smaller gains.

Liquidity Risk. The market for the LINK Futures Contracts may be subject to periods of illiquidity. During such times it may be difficult or impossible to buy or sell a position at the desired price. Market disruptions or volatility can also make it difficult to find a counterparty willing to transact at a reasonable price and sufficient size. Illiquid markets may cause losses, which could be significant. Large positions also increase the risk of illiquidity, which may make the Fund's positions more difficult to liquidate, and increase the losses incurred while trying to do so.

Collateral Investments Risk. The Fund's use of Collateral Investments may include obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies and instrumentalities, including bills, notes and bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury, investment companies registered under the 1940 Act that invest in high-quality securities and corporate debt securities, such as commercial paper.

Some securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities may not be backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, in which case the investor must look principally to the agency or instrumentality issuing or guaranteeing the security for ultimate repayment, and may not be able to assert a claim against the United States itself in the event that the agency or instrumentality does not meet its commitment. The U.S. Government, its agencies and instrumentalities do not guarantee the market value of their securities, and consequently, the value of such securities may fluctuate. Although the Fund may hold securities that carry U.S. Government guarantees, these guarantees do not extend to the Shares.

Investment companies that invest in high-quality securities are subject to management fees and other expenses. Therefore, investments in these funds will cause the Fund to bear indirectly a proportional share of the fees and costs of the funds in which it invests. At the same time, the Fund will continue to pay its own management fees and expenses with respect to all of its assets, including any portion invested in the shares of such fund. It is possible to lose money by investing in investment companies that invest in high-quality securities.

Corporate debt securities such as commercial paper generally are short-term unsecured promissory notes issued by businesses. Corporate debt may carry variable or floating rates of interest. Corporate debt securities carry both credit risk and interest rate risk. Credit risk is the risk that the Fund could lose money if the issuer of a corporate debt security is unable to pay interest or repay principal when it is due.

Active Management Risk. The Fund is actively managed, and its performance reflects investment decisions that the Adviser makes for the Fund. Such judgments about the Fund's investments may prove to be incorrect. If the investments selected and the strategies employed by the Fund fail to produce the intended results, the Fund could underperform as compared to other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies, or could have negative returns.

Active Market Risk. Although the Shares are listed for trading on the Exchange, there can be no assurance that an active trading market for the Shares will develop or be maintained. Shares trade on the Exchange at market prices that may be below, at or above the Fund's net asset value. Securities, including the Shares, are subject to market fluctuations and liquidity constraints that may be caused by such factors as economic, political, or regulatory developments, changes in interest rates, and/or perceived trends in securities prices. Shares of the Fund could decline in value or underperform other investments.

Asset Concentration Risk. Since the Fund may take concentrated positions in LINK Futures Contracts, the Fund's performance may be hurt disproportionately and significantly by the poor performance of those positions to which it has significant exposure. Asset concentration makes the Fund more susceptible to any single occurrence affecting the underlying positions and may subject the Fund to greater market risk than more diversified funds.

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Authorized Participant Concentration Risk. Only an AP may engage in creation or redemption transactions directly with the Fund. The Fund has a limited number of institutions that act as APs on an agency basis (i.e. on behalf of other market participants). To the extent that these institutions exit the business or are unable to proceed with creation and/or redemption orders with respect to the Fund and no other AP is able to step forward to create or redeem, in either of these cases, Shares may trade at a discount to the Fund's net asset value and possibly face delisting.

Cash Transaction Risk. Most ETFs generally make in-kind redemptions to avoid being taxed at the fund level on gains on the distributed portfolio securities. However, unlike most ETFs, the Fund currently intends to effect some or all redemptions for cash, rather than in-kind, because of the nature of the Fund's investments. The Fund may be required to sell portfolio securities to obtain the cash needed to distribute redemption proceeds, which involves transaction costs that the Fund may not have incurred had it effected redemptions entirely in kind. These costs may include brokerage costs and/or taxable gains or losses, which may be imposed on the Fund and decrease the Fund's NAV to the extent such costs are not offset by a transaction fee payable to an authorized participant ("AP"). If the Fund recognizes gain on these sales, this generally will cause the Fund to recognize gain it might not otherwise have recognized if it were to distribute portfolio securities in-kind, or to recognize such gain sooner than would otherwise be required. This may decrease the tax efficiency of the Fund compared to ETFs that utilize an in-kind redemption process, and there may be a substantial difference in the after-tax rate of return between the Fund and other ETFs.

Clearing Broker Risk. The Fund's investments in exchange-traded futures contracts expose it to the risks of a clearing broker (or a FCM). Under current regulations, a clearing broker or FCM maintains customers' assets in a bulk segregated account. There is a risk that Fund assets deposited with the clearing broker to serve as margin may be used to satisfy the broker's own obligations or the losses of the broker's other clients. In the event of default, the Fund could experience lengthy delays in recovering some or all of its assets and may not see any recovery at all. Furthermore, the Fund is subject to the risk that no FCM is willing or able to clear the Fund's transactions or maintain the Fund's assets. If the Fund's FCMs are unable or unwilling to clear the Fund's transactions, or if the FCM refuses to maintain the Fund's assets, the Fund will be unable have its orders for LINK Futures Contracts fulfilled or assets custodied. In such a circumstance, the performance of the Fund will likely deviate from the performance of daily changes in the price of LINK and may result in the proportion of LINK Futures Contracts in the Fund's portfolio relative to the total assets of the Fund to decrease.

Commodity Regulatory Risk. The Fund's use of commodity futures subject to regulation by the CFTC has caused the Fund to be classified as a "commodity pool" and this designation requires that the Fund comply with CFTC rules, which may impose additional regulatory requirements and compliance obligations. The Fund's investment decisions may need to be modified, and commodity contract positions held by the Fund may have to be liquidated at disadvantageous times or prices, to avoid exceeding any applicable position limits established by the CFTC, potentially subjecting the Fund to substantial losses. The regulation of commodity transactions in the United States is subject to ongoing modification by government, self-regulatory and judicial action. The effect of any future regulatory change with respect to any aspect of the Fund is impossible to predict, but could be substantial and adverse to the Fund.

LINK-Linked ETP Risk. The Fund may invest in shares of LINK-Linked ETPs, which are exchange-traded investment products not registered under the 1940 Act that seek to match the daily changes in the price of LINK, and trade intra-day on a national securities exchange. Shares of LINK-Linked ETPs are not traded at net asset value, but may trade at prices above or below the value of their underlying portfolios. The level of risk involved in the purchase or sale of a LINK-Linked ETPs is similar to the risk involved in the purchase or sale of an exchange traded fund, and generally reflect the risks of owning the underlying LINK Futures Contracts and cash that the LINK-Linked ETP holds.

LINK-Linked ETPs are subject to management fees and other fees that may increase their costs versus the costs of owning LINK Futures Contracts directly. The Fund will indirectly bear its proportionate share of management fees and other expenses that are charged by LINK-Linked ETPs in addition to the management fees and other expenses paid by the Fund. The Fund will pay brokerage commissions in connection with the purchase and sale of shares of LINK-Linked ETPs.

Credit Risk. An issuer or other obligated party of a debt security may be unable or unwilling to make dividend, interest and/or principal payments when due. In addition, the value of a debt security may decline because of concerns about the issuer's ability or unwillingness to make such payments.

Cyber Security Risk. The Fund is susceptible to operational risks through breaches in cyber security. A breach in cyber security refers to both intentional and unintentional events that may cause the Fund to lose proprietary information, suffer data corruption or lose operational capacity. Such events could cause the Fund to incur regulatory penalties, reputational damage, additional compliance costs associated with corrective measures and/or financial loss. Cyber security breaches may involve unauthorized access to the Fund's digital information systems through "hacking" or malicious software coding, but may also result from outside attacks such as denial-of

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service attacks through efforts to make network services unavailable to intended users. In addition, cyber security breaches of the Fund's third-party service providers, such as its administrator, transfer agent, or custodian, as applicable, or issuers in which the Fund invests, can also subject the Fund to many of the same risks associated with direct cyber security breaches. While the Fund has established business continuity plans and risk management systems designed to reduce the risks associated with cyber security, there are inherent limitations in such plans and systems. Additionally, there is no guarantee that such efforts will succeed, especially because the Fund does not directly control the cyber security systems of issuers or third-party service providers.

Debt Securities Risk. Investments in debt securities subject the holder to the credit risk of the issuer. Credit risk refers to the possibility that the issuer or other obligor of a security will not be able or willing to make payments of interest and principal when due. Generally, the value of debt securities will change inversely with changes in interest rates. To the extent that interest rates rise, certain underlying obligations may be paid off substantially slower than originally anticipated and the value of those securities may fall sharply. During periods of falling interest rates, the income received by the Fund may decline. If the principal on a debt security is prepaid before expected, the prepayments of principal may have to be reinvested in obligations paying interest at lower rates. Debt securities generally do not trade on a securities exchange making them generally less liquid and more difficult to value than common stock.

Frequent Trading Risk. The Fund regularly purchases and subsequently sells (i.e., "rolls") individual futures contracts throughout the year so as to maintain a fully invested position. As the contracts near their expiration dates, the Fund rolls them over into new contracts. This frequent trading of contracts may increase the amount of commissions or mark-ups to broker-dealers that the Fund pays when it buys and sells contracts, which may detract from the Fund's performance. High portfolio turnover may result in the Fund paying higher levels of transaction costs and may generate greater tax liabilities for shareholders. Frequent trading risk may cause the Fund's performance to be less than expected.

Interest Rate Risk. Interest rate risk is the risk that the value of the debt securities in the Fund's portfolio will decline because of rising market interest rates. Interest rate risk is generally lower for shorter term debt securities and higher for longer-term debt securities. Duration is a reasonably accurate measure of a debt security's price sensitivity to changes in interest rates and a common measure of interest rate risk. Duration measures a debt security's expected life on a present value basis, taking into account the debt security's yield, interest payments and final maturity. In general, duration represents the expected percentage change in the value of a security for an immediate 1% change in interest rates. For example, the price of a debt security with a three-year duration would be expected to drop by approximately 3% in response to a 1% increase in interest rates. Therefore, prices of debt securities with shorter durations tend to be less sensitive to interest rate changes than debt securities with longer durations. As the value of a debt security changes over time, so will its duration.

Investment Capacity Risk. If the Fund's ability to obtain exposure to LINK Futures Contracts consistent with its investment objective is disrupted for any reason, including but not limited to, limited liquidity in the LINK futures market, a disruption to the LINK futures market, or as a result of margin requirements or position limits imposed by the Fund's FCMs, the CME, or the CFTC, and the Fund could not otherwise meet its investment objective through the use of other investments discussed above, the Fund would not be able to achieve its investment objective and may experience significant losses.

Leverage Risk. The Fund seeks to achieve and maintain the exposure to the price of LINK by using leverage inherent in futures contracts. Therefore, the Fund is subject to leverage risk. When the Fund purchases or sells an instrument or enters into a transaction without investing an amount equal to the full economic exposure of the instrument or transaction, it creates leverage, which can result in the Fund losing more than it originally invested. As a result, these investments may magnify losses to the Fund, and even a small market movement may result in significant losses to the Fund. Leverage may also cause the Fund to be more volatile because it may exaggerate the effect of any increase or decrease in the value of the Fund's portfolio securities. Futures trading involves a degree of leverage and as a result, a relatively small price movement in futures instruments may result in immediate and substantial losses to the Fund. The Fund may at times be required to liquidate portfolio positions, including when it is not advantageous to do so, in order to comply with guidance from the SEC regarding asset segregation requirements to cover certain leveraged positions.

If the Fund is unable to obtain sufficient leveraged exposure to the value of LINK due to the limited availability of necessary investments or financial instruments or trading halts in LINK Futures Contracts brought about by price limits on the CME, the Fund could, among other things, limit or suspend the purchase of creation units until the Adviser determines that the requisite exposure to LINK Futures Contracts is obtainable. During the period that the purchase of creation units is suspended, the Fund could trade at a significant premium or discount to its NAV and could experience substantial redemptions.

Market Maker Risk. If the Fund has lower average daily trading volumes, it may rely on a small number of third-party market makers to provide a market for the purchase and sale of Shares. Any trading halt or other problem relating to the trading activity of these market makers could result in a dramatic change in the spread between the Fund's net asset value and the price at which the Shares are trading

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on the Exchange, which could result in a decrease in value of the Shares. In addition, decisions by market makers or APs to reduce their role or step away from these activities in times of market stress could inhibit the effectiveness of the arbitrage process in maintaining the relationship between the underlying values of the Fund's portfolio securities and the Fund's market price. This reduced effectiveness could result in Shares trading at a discount to net asset value and also in greater than normal intra-day bid-ask spreads for Shares.

Natural Disaster/Epidemic Risk. Natural or environmental disasters, such as earthquakes, fires, floods, hurricanes, tsunamis and other severe weather-related phenomena generally, and widespread disease, including pandemics and epidemics (for example, the novel coronavirus COVID-19), have been and can be highly disruptive to economies and markets and have recently led, and may continue to lead, to increased market volatility and significant market losses. Such natural disaster and health crises could exacerbate political, social, and economic risks, and result in significant breakdowns, delays, shutdowns, social isolation, and other disruptions to important global, local and regional supply chains affected, with potential corresponding results on the operating performance of the Fund and its investments. A climate of uncertainty and panic, including the contagion of infectious viruses or diseases, may adversely affect global, regional, and local economies and reduce the availability of potential investment opportunities, and increases the difficulty of performing due diligence and modeling market conditions, potentially reducing the accuracy of financial projections. Under these circumstances, the Fund may have difficulty achieving its investment objectives which may adversely impact Fund performance. Further, such events can be highly disruptive to economies and markets, significantly disrupt the operations of individual companies (including, but not limited to, the Fund's investment advisor, third party service providers, and counterparties), sectors, industries, markets, securities and commodity exchanges, currencies, interest and inflation rates, credit ratings, investor sentiment, and other factors affecting the value of the Fund's investments. These factors can cause substantial market volatility, exchange trading suspensions and closures, changes in the availability of and the margin requirements for certain instruments, and can impact the ability of the Fund to complete redemptions and otherwise affect Fund performance and Fund trading in the secondary market. A widespread crisis would also affect the global economy in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen. How long such events will last and whether they will continue or recur cannot be predicted. Impacts from these could have a significant impact on the Fund's performance, resulting in losses to your investment.

New Fund Risk. As of the date of this prospectus, the Fund has no operating history and currently has fewer assets than larger funds. Like other new funds, large inflows and outflows may impact the Fund's market exposure for limited periods of time. This impact may be positive or negative, depending on the direction of market movement during the period effected.

Non-Diversification Risk. The Fund is classified as a "non-diversified company" under the 1940 Act. As a result, the Fund is only limited as to the percentage of its assets which may be invested in the securities of any one issuer by the diversification requirements imposed by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. The Fund may invest a relatively high percentage of its assets in a limited number of issuers. As a result, the Fund may be more susceptible to a single adverse economic or regulatory occurrence affecting one or more of these issuers, experience increased volatility and be highly invested in certain issuers.

Operational Risk. The Fund is exposed to operational risks arising from a number of factors, including, but not limited to, human error, processing and communication errors, errors of the Fund's service providers, counterparties or other third parties, failed or inadequate processes and technology or systems failures. The Fund and the Adviser seek to reduce these operational risks through controls and procedures. However, these measures do not address every possible risk and may be inadequate to address these risks.

Premium/Discount Risk. The market price of the Fund's Shares will generally fluctuate in accordance with changes in the Fund's net asset value as well as the relative supply of and demand for Shares on the Exchange. The Fund's market price may deviate from the value of the Fund's underlying portfolio holdings, particularly in time of market stress, with the result that investors may pay more or receive less than the underlying value of the Shares bought or sold. The Adviser cannot predict whether Shares will trade below, at, or above their net asset value because the Shares trade on the Exchange at market prices and not at net asset value. Price differences may be due, in large part, to the fact that supply and demand forces at work in the secondary trading market for Shares will be closely related, but not identical, to the same forces influencing the prices of the holdings of the Fund trading individually or in the aggregate at any point in time. However, given that Shares can only be purchased and redeemed in Creation Units, and only to and from broker-dealers and large institutional investors that have entered into participation agreements (unlike shares of closed-end funds, which frequently trade at appreciable discounts from, and sometimes at premiums to, their net asset value), the Adviser believes that large discounts or premiums to the net asset value of Shares should not be sustained. During stressed market conditions, the market for the Fund's Shares may become less liquid in response to deteriorating liquidity in the market for the Fund's underlying portfolio holdings, which could in turn lead to differences between the market price of the Fund's Shares and their net asset value. This can be reflected as a spread between the bid and ask prices for the Fund quoted during the day or a premium or discount in the closing price from the Fund's NAV.

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Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk. The Fund may invest in reverse repurchase agreements. Reverse repurchase agreements are transactions in which the Fund sells portfolio securities to financial institutions such as banks and broker-dealers, and agrees to repurchase them at a mutually agreed-upon date and price which is higher than the original sale price. Reverse repurchase agreements are a form of leverage and the use of reverse repurchase agreements by the Fund may increase the Fund's volatility. The Fund incurs costs, including interest expenses, in connection with the opening and closing of reverse repurchase agreements that will be borne by the shareholders.

Reverse repurchase agreements are also subject to the risk that the other party to the reverse repurchase agreement will be unable or unwilling to complete the transaction as scheduled, which may result in losses to the Fund. In situations where the Fund is required to post collateral with a counterparty, the counterparty may fail to segregate the collateral or may commingle the collateral with the counterparty's own assets. As a result, in the event of the counterparty's bankruptcy or insolvency, the Fund's collateral may be subject to the conflicting claims of the counterparty's creditors, and the Fund may be exposed to the risk of a court treating the Fund as a general unsecured creditor of the counterparty, rather than as the owner of the collateral. There can be no assurance that a counterparty will not default and that the Fund will not sustain a loss on a transaction as a result.

Reverse repurchase agreements also involve the risk that the market value of the securities sold by the Fund may decline below the price at which it is obligated to repurchase the securities. In addition, when the Fund invests the proceeds it receives in a reverse repurchase transaction, there is a risk that those investments may decline in value. In this circumstance, the Fund could be required to sell other investments in order to meet its obligations to repurchase the securities.

Subsidiary Investment Risk. Changes in the laws of the United States and/or the Cayman Islands, under which the Fund and the Subsidiary are organized, respectively, could result in the inability of the Fund to operate as intended and could negatively affect the Fund and its shareholders. The Subsidiary is not registered under the 1940 Act and is not subject to all the investor protections of the 1940 Act. However, as the Subsidiary is wholly-owned by the Fund, and the investors of the Fund will have the investor protections of the 1940 Act, the Fund as a whole - including the Subsidiary - will provide investors with 1940 Act protections.

Swap Agreements Risk. The Fund may enter into cash-settled swaps and other derivatives to gain exposure to an underlying asset without actually purchasing such asset. Swaps are two-party contracts entered into primarily by institutional investors for periods ranging from a day to more than one year. In a standard "swap" transaction, two parties agree to exchange the returns (or differentials in rates of return) earned or realized on a particular pre-determined interest rate, commodity, security, indexes, or other assets or measurable indicators. The primary risks associated with the use of swaps are mispricing or improper valuation, imperfect correlation between movements in the notional amount and the price of the underlying investments, and the failure of a counterparty to perform. If a counterparty's creditworthiness for an over-the-counter swap declines, the value of the swap would likely decline. Moreover, there is no guarantee that the Fund could eliminate its exposure under an outstanding swap by entering into an offsetting swap with the same or another party. In addition, the Fund may use a combination of swaps on an underlying index and swaps that reference LINK-Linked ETPs that is designed to track the performance of that index. The performance of a LINK-Linked ETP may deviate from the performance of its underlying index due to embedded costs and other factors. Thus, the Fund's swaps may be subject to greater correlation risk to the extent such agreements reference a LINK-Linked ETP as the reference asset, and as a result may not achieve as high of a degree of correlation with the price of LINK as it otherwise would using LINK Futures Contracts.

Tax Risk. The Fund intends to elect and to qualify each year to be treated as a RIC under Subchapter M of the Code. As a RIC, the Fund will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on the portion of its net investment income and net capital gain that it distributes to Shareholders, provided that it satisfies certain requirements of the Code. If the Fund does not qualify as a RIC for any taxable year and certain relief provisions are not available, the Fund's taxable income will be subject to tax at the Fund level and to a further tax at the shareholder level when such income is distributed. Additionally, buying securities shortly before the record date for a taxable dividend or capital gain distribution is commonly known as "buying the dividend." In the event a shareholder purchases Shares shortly before such a distribution, the entire distribution may be taxable to the shareholder even though a portion of the distribution effectively represents a return of the purchase price. To comply with the asset diversification test applicable to a RIC, the Fund will limit its investments in the Subsidiary to 25% of the Fund's total assets at the end of each tax quarter. The investment strategy of the Fund will cause the Fund to hold substantially more than 25% of the Fund's total assets in investments in the Subsidiary the majority of the time. The Fund intends to manage the exposure to the Subsidiary so that the Fund's investments in the Subsidiary do not exceed 25% of the total assets at the end of any tax quarter. If the Fund's investments in the Subsidiary were to exceed 25% of the Fund's total assets at the end of a tax quarter, the Fund, generally, has a grace period to cure such lack of compliance. If the Fund fails to timely cure, it may no longer be eligible to be treated as a RIC.

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Because LINK Futures Contracts produce non-qualifying income for purposes of qualifying as a RIC, the Fund makes its investments in LINK Futures Contracts through the Subsidiary. The Fund intends to treat any income it may derive from the futures contracts received by the Subsidiary as "qualifying income" under the provisions of the Code applicable to RICs. The Internal Revenue Service (the "IRS") has issued numerous Private Letter Rulings ("PLRs") provided to third parties not associated with the Fund or its affiliates (which only those parties may rely on as precedent) concluding that similar arrangements resulted in qualifying income. Many of such PLRs have now been revoked by the IRS. In March of 2019, the Internal Revenue Service published Regulations that concluded that income from a corporation similar to the Subsidiary would be qualifying income, if the income is related to the Fund's business of investing in stocks or securities. Although the Regulations do not require distributions from the Subsidiary, the Fund intends to cause the Subsidiary to make distributions that would allow the Fund to make timely distributions to its shareholders. The Fund generally will be required to include in its own taxable income the income of the Subsidiary for a tax year, regardless of whether the Fund receives a distribution of the Subsidiary's income in that tax year, and this income would nevertheless be subject to the distribution requirement for qualification as a regulated investment company and would be taken into account for purposes of the 4% excise tax.

If, in any year, the Fund were to fail to qualify for the special tax treatment accorded a RIC and its shareholders, and were ineligible to or were not to cure such failure, the Fund would be taxed in the same manner as an ordinary corporation subject to U.S. federal income tax on all its income at the fund level. The resulting taxes could substantially reduce the Fund's net assets and the amount of income available for distribution. In addition, in order to requalify for taxation as a RIC, the Fund could be required to recognize unrealized gains, pay substantial taxes and interest, and make certain distributions.

Trading Issues Risk. Trading in Shares on the Exchange may be halted due to market conditions or for reasons that, in the view of the Exchange, make trading in Shares inadvisable. In addition, trading in Shares on the Exchange is subject to trading halts caused by extraordinary market volatility pursuant to the Exchange's "circuit breaker" rules. There can be no assurance that the requirements of the Exchange necessary to maintain the listing of the Fund will continue to be met or will remain unchanged. The Fund may have difficulty maintaining its listing on the Exchange in the event the Fund's assets are small, the Fund does not have enough shareholders, or if the Fund is unable to proceed with creation and/or redemption orders.

Valuation Risk. The Fund or the Subsidiary may hold securities or other assets that may be valued on the basis of factors other than market quotations. This may occur because the asset or security does not trade on a centralized exchange, or in times of market turmoil or reduced liquidity. There are multiple methods that can be used to value a portfolio holding when market quotations are not readily available. The value established for any portfolio holding at a point in time might differ from what would be produced using a different methodology or if it had been priced using market quotations. Portfolio holdings that are valued using techniques other than market quotations, including "fair valued" assets or securities, may be subject to greater fluctuation in their valuations from one day to the next than if market quotations were used. In addition, there is no assurance that the Fund or the Subsidiary could sell or close out a portfolio position for the value established for it at any time, and it is possible that the Fund or the Subsidiary would incur a loss because a portfolio position is sold or closed out at a discount to the valuation established by the Fund or the Subsidiary at that time. The Fund's ability to value investments may be impacted by technological issues or errors by pricing services or other third-party service providers.

Volatility Risk. Volatility is the characteristic of a security or other asset, an index or a market to fluctuate significantly in price within a short time period. The value of the Fund's investments in LINK Futures Contracts - and therefore the value of an investment in the Fund - could decline significantly and without warning, including to zero. If you are not prepared to accept significant and unexpected changes in the value of the Fund and the possibility that you could lose your entire investment in the Fund, you should not invest in the Fund.

The Shares will change in value, and you could lose money by investing in the Fund. The Fund may not achieve its investment objective.

Performance

As of the date of this prospectus, the Fund has not yet commenced operations and therefore does not have a performance history. Once available, the Fund's performance information will be accessible on the Fund's website at www.volatilityshares.com and will provide some indication of the risks of investing in the Fund.

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Management

Investment Adviser

Volatility Shares LLC

Portfolio Managers

The following persons serve as portfolio managers of the Fund.

• Charles Lowery - Chief Investment Officer, Volatility Shares

• Anand Desai - Head of Portfolio Management, Volatility Shares

• Dustin Shidaker - Portfolio Manager, Volatility Shares

Each of the portfolio managers is primarily and jointly responsible for the day-to-day management of the Fund. Each of the portfolio managers has served in such capacity since the Fund's inception.

Purchase and Sale of Shares

The Fund issues and redeems Shares on a continuous basis, at NAV, only in large blocks of shares called "Creation Units." Individual Shares of the Fund may only be purchased and sold on the secondary market through a broker-dealer at a market price. Since Shares of the Fund trade on securities exchanges in the secondary market at their market price rather than their NAV, the Fund's Shares may trade at a price greater than (premium) or less than (discount) the Fund's NAV. An investor may incur costs attributable to the difference between the highest price a buyer is willing to pay to purchase Shares of the Fund (bid) and the lowest price a seller is willing to accept for Shares of the Fund (ask) when buying or selling Shares in the secondary market (the "bid-ask spread"). Recent information, including the Fund's NAV, market price, premiums and discounts, and bid-ask spreads, is available online at www.volatilityshares.com.

Tax Information

The Fund's distributions will generally be taxable as ordinary income, returns of capital or capital gains. A sale of Shares may result in capital gain or loss.

Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other Financial Intermediaries

If you purchase Shares through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the Adviser and Foreside Fund Services, LLC, the Fund's distributor (the "Distributor"), may pay the intermediary for the sale of Shares and related services. These payments may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other intermediary and your salesperson to recommend the Fund over another investment. Ask your salesperson or visit your financial intermediary's website for more information.

You can find the Fund's statutory prospectus and other information about the Fund, including the statement of additional information and most recent reports to shareholders, online at www.volatilityshares.com/chnu.

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Volatility Shares Trust published this content on April 01, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via EDGAR on April 01, 2026 at 15:31 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]