Displaying items by tag: innovation
BlackRock Expands Tech ETF Offerings
BlackRock has introduced two new ETFs: the iShares Technology Opportunities Active ETF (TEK) and the iShares A.I. Innovation and Tech Active ETF (BAI). According to Tony Kim, BlackRock’s head of fundamental equities technology, these ETFs aim to capitalize on the rapidly expanding AI and tech landscape.
The TEK fund focuses on global tech leaders and disruptors, incorporating companies across various market caps to balance stability and potential growth. Meanwhile, BAI seeks strong returns by investing in innovative companies within the AI sector, applying rigorous fundamental research.
The fund covers a diverse range of cap sizes globally, emphasizing groundbreaking advancements in AI. BlackRock now manages over $3.1 trillion in U.S.-listed ETFs across 430 funds.
Finsum: Using ETFs to target a clients interests presents an already more balanced approach for portfolios
A Big Shift in Private Credit
Private credit has shifted from corporate finance to consumer lending, with firms like Elliott, Carlyle, and Fortress purchasing billions in loans from FinTech’s. Companies like Klarna, SoFi, and Upstart, once dominant, have struggled with high costs and rising interest rates, prompting them to offload loans.
By moving loans off their balance sheets, these FinTech’s hope to boost new lending, though the long-term financial impact is uncertain. Upstart, known for its AI-powered underwriting, faces substantial risks from loan defaults, leading to significant losses.
Private investors, focused on high returns from loan interest, are seizing opportunities, as seen in deals that boosted stock values for Upstart and SoFi. Despite FinTech’s’ ambitions to disrupt traditional banking, private credit is now positioned to challenge their dominance.
Finsum: We’ll see if private credit can improve where fintech has not, but this could drastically change the industry.
Generate Income, Not Headaches: Leveraging Income-Producing ETFs
For income-seeking investors, navigating the often volatile capital markets can be a tightrope walk between yield and stability. Enter income-producing ETFs, a potent blend of diversification and dependable returns. These innovative funds package high-yielding assets into a single, tradable security, offering investors a steady income stream without the burden of individual security selection.
One of the key strengths of income-producing ETFs lies in their inherent diversification. By spreading investments across a basket of assets, they mitigate the risks associated with individual maturities or underperformance. This eliminates the headache of reinvesting maturing bonds at potentially lower rates, a common pitfall for fixed-income investors.
Furthermore, income-producing ETFs typically hold less cash than their mutual fund counterparts. This seemingly minor distinction translates to a potentially significant advantage: reduced cash drag. Unlike mutual funds, which often require a cash cushion to facilitate redemptions, ETFs minimize uninvested capital, ensuring a greater portion of your portfolio actively generates income within its intended asset class.
Financial advisors seeking to craft reliable income streams for their clients should consider income-producing ETFs as a possible solution. They provide instant diversification, mitigate reinvestment risk, and maximize income potential through reduced cash drag.
Finsum: Income-producing ETFs can provide both diversification and steady returns with reduced reinvestment risk and cash drag.
Cybersecurity Research at Banks is Dropping
According to an analysis of patent filings, compiled by GlobalData, there is a shrinking number of cybersecurity-related applications in the banking industry over the past three months, compared to the previous year. The most recent filings show that the number of related patent applications in the banking industry was 596 in the three months ending July. This is down from 1096 during the same period last year. This indicates cybersecurity innovation in the retail banking industry is dropping off. Capital One Financial was the top innovator in the banking sector in the latest quarter. The company filed 125 related patents in the three months ending July, down from 230 in the same period last. Visa was second with 109 patent applications. One company that has increased research is Truist Financial, which saw a 35.7% growth in related patent applications in the three months ending in July.
Finsum:While cyber crimes are on the rise, cybersecurity innovation in the banking industry is falling.
Financial Services Getting a Tech Facelift in 2022
A slew of new technological advancements are coming to Financial services and portfolio management software in 2022. The biggest changes will be modernizing networks, edge computing, and decentralized infrastructure like Web3. This means a lot of financial technology will begin moving to the cloud. In addition, actual payment transactions will take place on the technological device and not through a central network, which improves efficiency and processing speed. This doesn’t come at a big cost either as it’s a more robust and safer technology for payments solutions. Finally, in a decentralized financial industry, anyone can turn their personal capital into collateral and extract yield others can borrow from eliminating financial middlemen.
Finsum: These are wild changes in decentralized finance but undoubtedly a couple of years off, however cloud computing is a game-changer for portfolio management software.