Nope. Not that I know of. All .40 S&W rounds
I've seen have a blunt nose.
Myself, I still think the main reason for the
blunt nose is so the round can be the same
length as a 9mm round, and thus fit into 9mm
sized mag wells.
I think it came out of the FBI tests where they
were evaluating the 10mm. They found the 10mm
too stout for some users, and the large frame
10mm pistol hard for some to hold on to.
So.. They came out with the .40 S&W which is
basically the FBI "10mm lite" round.
It has less recoil than the 10mm, but still
managed to pass their performance aims.
With the blunt nose, it's the same length as
the 9mm round, and uses the small pistol primer
vs the large primer for the 10mm.
So it can be designed using the same size frame/
mag well as the 9mm pistol.
I tend to think that, more than anything else
is what led to the blunt nose of the .40 round.
Myself, I like the blunt nose. Punches a cleaner
hole which will bleed out faster than a sleek
pointy nose slug like the 9mm.
I use a .40 S&W as a "woods" pistol quite a bit.
With the blunt nose, I can use just plain jane
FMJ and know it's going to punch a pretty mean
hole, and will penetrate well. The blunt nose
lets it act as sort of a poor mans "woods" load
without the higher cost of say the cast "woods"
loads that double tap sells.
The FMJ is almost as effective, just has a
weaker charge than the high $$$ stuff.