
FINSUM
Direct Indexing is Revolutionizing Public Equity
The rise of direct indexing is transforming public equity portfolio construction, giving institutional investors unprecedented control over market exposures through access to increasingly granular trading data.
Instead of relying on traditional benchmarks, allocators can now customize portfolios to reflect sector convictions, exclude undesirable industries, and manage risk concentrations, like avoiding overexposure to mega-cap stocks such as Microsoft. Experts note that direct indexing's growth has been supercharged by post-pandemic volatility and evolving client expectations around values-based investing and tax efficiency.
Industry leaders view custom indexing as a flexible, modular solution that enables investors to “build any sector tilt, factor fiesta, or thematic maze,” as one CIO put it. As technology advances and AI becomes embedded in portfolio design, managers must evolve into tech-savvy strategists capable of leveraging these tools for tailored outcomes.
Finsum: What began as a “nice-to-have” has rapidly become essential in a market where precision, personalization, and proactive risk management drive success.
Economy Weakens and Treasuries Rally
U.S. Treasury yields plummeted, particularly on short-term notes, after July’s jobs report came in significantly weaker than expected, reigniting investor expectations for an imminent Federal Reserve rate cut.
The two-year yield dropped 25 basis points to 3.71%, its steepest one-day fall in a year, as traders priced in an 80% chance of a rate cut at the Fed’s September meeting. The labor data showed just 73,000 jobs added in July, well below forecasts, and revisions to prior months brought the three-month hiring average to a pandemic-era low of 35,000.
The market’s reaction signaled a dramatic pivot in sentiment, further fueled by political pressure from President Trump and dovish dissent from two Fed governors. Treasury futures volumes surged as traders abandoned flattening yield curve bets, and CreditSights analysts now anticipate a 50-basis-point rate cut in September, with more to follow by year-end.
Finsum: The Fed can afford aggressive easing without stoking inflation, setting the stage for a bold monetary policy shift.
Goldman Offers New Private Credit CIT
Goldman Sachs Asset Management has introduced the GS Private Credit CIT, a collective investment trust designed to bring private credit strategies into defined contribution retirement plans. The fund will invest in North American and European direct lending and private placements, while maintaining a liquidity sleeve to meet daily portfolio needs.
It has already been selected for inclusion in the Panorix Target Date Series by Great Gray Trust Company, which aims to offer institutional-quality investment strategies to retirement savers. Panorix will feature a custom glidepath from BlackRock, liquidity management from Wilshire, and a mix of public and private asset exposure including the GS Private Credit CIT.
This launch leverages Goldman’s $142 billion private credit platform and global underwriting capabilities to give retirement savers access to tools traditionally reserved for institutional investors.
Finsum: As public markets grow more concentrated, CITs can provide diversification and growth potential through private credit exposure.
The Battle Between Structured Notes and Active ETFs
At the ETFs Summit hosted by S&P Dow Jones and the Mexican Stock Exchange, industry leaders predicted that active ETFs will continue growing rapidly, drawing market share not only from mutual funds but increasingly from structured notes. Structured notes—once prized for their customization—are losing ground as active ETFs replicate similar strategies with added liquidity, transparency, and without the counterparty risk inherent in notes.
Retrocession fees no longer necessary, ETFs provide institutional-class access with real-time pricing, something structured notes cannot offer. While structured notes often come with hidden complexities and limited tradability, active ETFs deliver the same exposure with the ease of public market trading and daily liquidity.
This shift is part of a larger industry trend: of 600 ETFs launched last year, 400 were actively managed, signaling innovation is now happening more through ETFs than through complex structured products.
Finsum: As ETFs expand their reach across asset classes, including private credit and crypto, their dominance over less liquid, opaque vehicles like structured notes seems increasingly likely.
Don’t Drop the Ball on Estate Planning Offerings
Estate planning is often overlooked or treated as an afterthought, crammed into the final moments of client meetings, if it’s offered at all. Yet nearly all investors, especially younger ones, now expect their advisors to include estate and tax planning as core parts of a holistic financial strategy.
As trillions of dollars shift between generations, advisors who avoid these conversations risk irrelevance and client attrition. A modern, effective approach to estate planning requires more than good intentions, it demands scalable technology, family-inclusive strategies, and clear, repeatable processes.
Platforms that visualize beneficiary summaries, tax impact, and legacy goals not only make these conversations easier but also more meaningful and professional.
Finsum: In today’s competitive advisory landscape, firms that prioritize thoughtful estate planning will be the ones that grow, retain assets, and lead the next era of wealth management.