Flurry of ETFs Come to Market

Large asset managers that have been slow to cash in on investor demand for ETFs are now trying to grab a slice of the market.

|

Large, established asset managers that have been slow to cash in on investor demand for exchange-traded funds are now trying to grab a slice of the market with a flurry of new ETFs and also by converting existing mutual funds into ETFs.

Goldman Sachs and Calamos Investment Management recently established actively managed ETFs. Morgan Stanley announced plans to convert two of its actively managed mutual funds into ETFs.

The moves demonstrate the eagerness with which asset management firms that are relatively new entrants are embracing ETFs, which are cheaper and more liquid for investors than traditional mutual funds.

Around 75% of the 376 new ETFs launched this year through Oct. 6 were active, according to Morningstar Direct. That means that rather than tracking an index, a manager or team is selecting assets aimed at reflecting an investment strategy or outperforming a specific benchmark.

That compares with 63% last year and 36% in 2019 when U.S. securities regulators opened the doors to the product.

Lower fees, strong liquidity and transparency have steadily lured investors away from traditional mutual funds and into ETFs over the past five years. U.S. ETF assets have doubled to reach $7.4 trillion. That accounts for nearly 30% of assets managed by all U.S. firms in mutual funds or ETFs, according to Morningstar.

Mutual fund assets, meanwhile, fell 14% to $15.3 trillion.

Slow to act

Traditional asset managers that built their reputations offering mutual funds are now trying to respond.

“Some industry participants are playing catch-up,” said Brendan McCarthy, head of ETF distribution at Goldman Sachs Asset Management which launched a small-cap active ETF last week. It manages six other active ETFs, and 36 ETFs in total.

While active ETFs only account for 6% of the market, their assets have grown at a rate of 23% so far this year, said Bryan Armour, a Morningstar analyst. That compares to asset growth of only 4.5% for the traditional passive index ETFs in the same period.

Many established asset management firms eager to capture a share of the rapidly growing ETF market have identified their stock-picking skills as a competitive advantage.

“This is very much the direction of travel for us,” said McCarthy.

Calamos Investment Management is another established manager trying to leverage its brand name and expertise by investing in what are known as “convertible bonds,” securities that pay out yields like bonds but that can be swapped for the underlying stocks. It rolled out an active ETF to draw on that expertise last week.

“We think this is something distinctive, that draws on our analytical knowledge of the market,” said Matthew Kaufman, who joined Calamos in January to head its fledgling ETF business.

Converting an existing mutual fund is another way traditional managers can catch up while also retaining star managers, said Aniket Ullal, head of ETF data and analytics at CFRA, an investment research firm.

“Conversions give a firm the opportunity to leapfrog up the leaderboard,” Ullal added.

Assets held in converted ETFs now tally some $78 billion, compared with $40 billion at the end of 2022, Ullal said.

Morgan Stanley is among the latest managers to join the conversion rush. It plans to transform its Core Plus Fixed Income Portfolio fund and the Short Duration Municipal Income Portfolio fund, which have nearly $750 million in assets, into ETFs. Morgan Stanley didn’t return calls seeking comment.

The article was provided by Reuters.

Latest News

See all >>

Healthcare Rollbacks Will Hurt Many Older Americans: KFF

Health policy experts anticipate fallout for early retirees and nursing-home residents under the new budget reconciliation law.

Tariff Volatility Drives Investors to Actively Managed Funds

Analysts say active managers focused on three factors may lead them to outperform the broader market in the months ahead.

Georgia Ponzi Scheme Duped 300 Investors Out of $140M, SEC Alleges

First Liberty Building & Loan started by making bridge loans to businesses but switched to a scam, investigators say.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Offers Opportunities for Advisors, Investors

Financial advisors need to understand these changes to serve their wealthy clients properly.

Being ‘Wealthy’ Harder to Achieve Since 2021

Inflation and soaring costs have raised the amount Americans think it takes to be wealthy. And the number varies by generation.

Vanguard Announces Three New Treasuries-Based ETFs

Vanguard Fixed Income Group now offers 36 fixed income bond ETFs, including 28 index.