Displaying items by tag: ETFs

Thursday, 07 June 2018 09:41

How to Replicate Private Equity with ETFs

(New York)

One of the things the growing ETF markets lacks is many options regarding private equity, and with good reason. The returns of the sector are hard to reproduce with publicly traded stocks. But getting private equity returns can be difficult to attain anyway because of the challenges of investing in the sector, especially for investors who are not at the wealthiest end of the spectrum. However, there are two newish ETFs on the market, BUYN and BUY, which use an investing methodology developed at Harvard to try to replicate the returns of the private equity sector. The provider is SummerHaven, who comments about their funds that “We believe that these ETFs based on our private equity strategy indexes will provide investors with an opportunity to access returns comparable to an asset class that has traditionally only been available through private markets, with the added benefit of liquidity and transparent and without lockups, vintage risk, investment minimums or takeover premiums. These ETFs will allow both retail and institutional investors an opportunity to access private equity strategy returns at substantially lower fees”.


FINSUM: On paper these sound like an interesting option, but only time will tell if the strategy actually achieves what it says. The ETFs are especially unproven because the Harvard paper which underpins the strategy was only published last year.

Published in Eq: Large Cap

(Washington)

Brokers who want to publish more of their own research will now find it easier. For the last several years, publishing research on individual funds has been a complicated and risky endeavor for brokers as rules meant some research work could be seen as a sales material, subjecting it to stricter scrutiny. The SEC is harmonizing rules to allow brokers to publish research on ETFs, mutual funds, registered closed-end funds, and business development companies under the same rules that govern other types of research.


FINSUM: This delineation had existed too long and we think this is a good change of rules.

Published in Wealth Management
Monday, 14 May 2018 11:48

Smart Beta Isn’t for the Faint of Heart

(New York)

Advisors considering putting client capital into smart beta funds need to be prepared for what to expect. The reality is that smart beta strategies tend to accentuate the returns of the market, or run counter to them altogether. In up times a smart beta strategy playing into the market’s strengths can do much better than the index overall, the opposite can happen in down markets. However, even in decent markets, many smart beta strategies can perform terribly because of the nature of the rise.


FINSUM: If you are just getting into smart beta funds, it is really important that you understand the strategy inside and out to make sure you understand how it will sit within your portfolio.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Monday, 09 April 2018 10:26

The Best Actively Managed ETFs

(New York)

The actively managed ETF used to be a rare breed, and one that didn’t even make sense so long ago. However, with the rise of the asset class has come an explosion of variety, and especially, the overlaying of themes into ETFs. With all that said, the difficulty is choosing the best actively managed ETFs. Here are some to look at: Fidelity’s Total Bond fund, Davis Worldwide Select fund, Vanguard U.S. Multifactor, the iShares Russell 1000 Growth, JPMorgan Disciplined High Yield, iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond.


FINSUM: This is an interesting mix of funds, and most have expense ratios under 0.65%. Generally speaking, we like the idea of actively managed ETFs so long as the fees stay low.

Published in Eq: Large Cap

(New York)

One of the biggest surprises in the rise of ETFs has been the dominance of stocks over bonds. Bonds have always had some liquidity challenges for individual investors, so at the outset one would have expected bond ETFs to do well since they greatly enhanced accessibility to the asset class. However, while stock ETFs have exploded, bond ETFs have been more of a steady progression, but things are heating up. Bonds represent 15% of the total ETF market, but are growing quickly, with the market size doubling to $1.5 tn by 2022.


FINSUM: We think bond ETF demand will rise in line with rates. Once people start seeing 5% yields plus on solid bonds with short durations we think there will be more and more buying.

Published in Bonds: Total Market
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