Lee
Kranefuss, CEO of U.S. Individual Investor Business at Barclays
Global Investors, recently sat down with IndexFunds.com's Jim
Wiandt to discuss the proliferation of iShares and the future
of exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
IF.com: What
do you see as the most significant benefits of investing with
exchange-traded funds (ETFs)?
LK: It's really the fact that they're a combination of
the features of stocks and funds. You're getting the professional
management and diversification you'd expect with a fund and,
at the same time, you're getting the portability and flexibility
of a stock you can buy and sell at any brokerage account. And
in many dimensions, the fact that you can buy and sell it during
the day if you use margin or short dimensions, for example hedging,
you're able to do those as well. You can borrow against it.
So it's really the best of both worlds.
IF.com: What do you see as situations where investors
might do better with a traditional open-ended mutual fund?
LK: Probably the simplest situation is if you're doing
very small dollar cost averaging as a starting-out investor.
Unless you're in an account with unlimited trading privileges,
you're going to pay a transaction charge, a commission every
time you buy and sell. So if you're putting in $200, even then
an $18 trade is a big piece of it. So ETFs are probably not
right for the small dollar cost averagers or starting-out investor.
They're for somebody who already has a reasonable portfolio
of stocks and/or funds and needs to look at ETFs as a fair alternative.
IF.com: Has Barclays looked at any way to get into the
401(k) market, or is it just that the structure's not friendly
to it?
LK: Well, I don't know if it's friendly or unfriendly.
Right now we are concentrating on getting out there to the retail
and institutional markets and over time we'll look more carefully
at how we could get into some of the other markets, if it makes
sense.
IF.com: Is Barclay's working to narrow ETF premiums and
discounts underlying net asset value(NAV)? Are you satisfied
with the levels of transparency?
LK: There's a lot of misinformation about what goes on
and the importance of current price or last trade versus net
asset value. If I could take a couple minutes, I'll take you
through a little bit of some of the practical issues that go
into that and why that may not be as big a concern as some have
made it out to be.
The first thing to know is that NAV is cut at 4:00 p.m. EST
on most funds. But there's no reason it has to be. As far as
I know, it's done that way by convention because that is the
last trade of the major exchanges for stock. The first thing
to note about this is that ETFs continue trading; I think all
U.S. ETFs trade until 4:15. So if a fund is active and it's
got a lot of trades going on . . .
IF.com: It'll pass the NAV?
LK: Yes, you're trading past the time when the NAV was
calculated. So suppose that new information comes out on the
top holding in the fund - at 4:02 p.m. a big announcement is
made. You would expect the ETF to change in price to reflect
the announcement, and that traders would take that into account
and re-price the ETF. So there's one case where you're going
to see movement away from NAV.
IF.com: Right, it goes the other way too. If it's a very
lately traded fund and the last trade was at 11:00, the 4:00
NAV could be significantly different.
LK: That's precisely right, and there's a fair number
of those, and more specialized funds, so it could be hours since
the last trade took place. And that's just on domestics. On
internationals, where large NAV discrepancies are reported,
remember that you're dealing with stale prices in many cases.
So let's take a Japan fund today, at 4:00 today an NAV will
be cut on, for example, the iShares MSCI Japan. That's based
on closing market prices in Japan, which will have been approximately
16 hours earlier.
IF.com: Right.
LK: That's true of international funds in general - the
challenge of international funds is that the NAV is very stale
because the stock hasn't been trading. Now, what will happen
is the Japan iShare is trading and people are looking at it
and seeing the changing value, which is what it should be doing.
IF.com: Absolutely, based on currency trading.
LK: Currency, and also where the U.S. market is, depending
on the levels of correlation. What we would expect is that it's
being priced properly by 4:00 or 4:15, since Tokyo is going
to open in another hour and three-quarters, it should be pretty
close to where people expect the open in Tokyo to be on the
stocks - not where the close was 22 hours or 16 or 18 hours
earlier. So I often point out to people that if the NAV is always
the same as the last reported trade on any ETF, particularly
an international one, that would be an indication that the interday
pricing mechanism is not working properly. It would be a defect
- there would be something wrong. The fact that they diverge
is indicative of the fact that there is price discovery taking
place and that everything doesn't happen at 4:00.
IF.com: What do you propose as a more accurate representation
in terms of when they're reported?
LK: I'm not sure I have a perfect proposal. One thing
I encourage people to do, and what I do myself, is look at the
midpoint of the bid, ask, and spread at 4:00 and compare that
to NAV. That gives you a better picture because you know at
4:00 you could go and buy or sell at the bid or ask, so halfway
between is some indication of what the market is currently asking
for it. And you can compare that to the NAV.
IF.com: Is Barclay's doing anything to minimize the trauma
caused by some of the international funds - and some of the
sector funds in the U.S. - based on the 25 percent, 5/25 limitations?
Do you try to foresee where the index is going?
LK: What we try to do is use our experiences as a worldwide
index manager to make intelligent trade-offs. There are a number
of different approaches that one can take to dealing with the
issue in the optimization or sampling process. And we do our
best to try and make decisions to make them track the index
as closely as possible. The reality is that it's not an ETF
problem. If it's driven by SEC and IRS regulations, it would
happen to any other fund product, mutual fund or otherwise.
And that's inherent in the nature of the indexes.
IF.com: Where are iShares going in the future? Are you
going to move into 16 more international regional funds, international
size, value, growth sector funds? Anything like that?
LK: Sure. The angles that we'll be pursuing are, number
one, to continue expansion of both domestic and international
equity funds. There's a lot of demand out there for more products.
We have announced the intention to launch the S&P Global
100, which will be traded on the New York Stock Exchange. And
we'll be looking at more opportunities there for both domestic
and international index funds, although none are filed as of
yet. The next step in general product evolution is probably
fixed income. I don't know if you're aware, but we're in the
process of launching in Canada the first fixed income exchange-traded
fund. So we have that going up there. Canada tends to lead the
U.S. in exchange-traded funds. It's a little known fact that
the spreader was preceded by the Canadian products. Essentially
the HIPs have been around since the late '80s, they're now part
of our I-60. So they were first to market again with fixed income,
but we would hope to bring up fixed income products in due course.
And then the final step in the product evolution would be active
funds.
IF.com: I was going to ask you about that.
LK: Both fixed income and active pose some unique challenges.
Different, but unique from both an operational and regulatory
perspective, and we're looking at that and we hope to be the
first with funds out there. We now have 56 of the 69 funds in
the U.S., and we consider ourselves a leader and we'd like to
have the first ones out. But it's going to take a lot more work.
IF.com: What are the main obstacles in the actively traded
ETFs?
LK: The biggest obstacle in active is pretty simple.
With the normal exchange-traded fund, the way it maintains its
value during the day is through the arbitrage mechanism. That
requires you to post what securities are in the portfolio every
day. Most active managers consider it a gross violation of their
privacy to have to disclose twice a year what the holdings are.
So the concept of posting the basket every day,of revealing
what a fund is holding - it's unlikely to fly for most managers.
IF.com: Is there a way to post the NAV without having
to disclose what it consists of?
LK: That's where a lot of the research is going in, not
only here but in other firms. Is there a way to make changes
in a basket or an index that would be close enough, and you
could still post the NAV, find a way to take in securities,
continue to ensure that the arbitrage mechanism works, and at
the same time not have to give away all the holdings every day?
That's going to take some more work on an operational basis
and it's also going to take some work in the regulatory front
to get that through. Because no one's tried doing it yet.
IF.com: A couple of questions on the competition. Any
comments on Vanguard's assertions that the trading costs make
ETFs more expensive than open-ended funds for many smaller buy-and-hold
investors?
LK: Again, with any investment product, any investor
ought to assess the costs, the benefits, and the trade-offs
between alternatives and pick what's best for them. No single
product in investments or anywhere else is right for everyone.
We already talked about the small dollar cost averager, for
example, as somebody who is probably not going to benefit from
the exchange-traded fund. That having been said, you have to
look at each individual situation. The primary benefit of exchange-traded
funds is that they have very low costs and very high tax efficiency.
And if you are holding for the long term, the actual cost of
the brokerage commission - which is definitely going to be there
unless you're in an unlimited trading account which are increasing
in popularity, but let's assume you're not - you're going to
have to pay that. The trade-off is going to be how long you're
staying in the fund, how much you're saving, and how much you're
paying for that trade.
IF.com: Vanguard is saying that, on the average, you
lose a half point or a point.
LK: But there's no free lunch in the securities market.
If you're a mutual fund investor, somebody has to pay the bid/ask
spread. And you may not pay it when you go into a mutual fund,
per se, you may not see it, but the fund pays it.
IF.com: I guess Vanguard's basic point is for a retail investor,
you're more likely to get the lower end of the ask/bid spread
than a large institutional investor.
LK: Why?
IF.com: Because with volume, you can narrow down the
ask/bid spread and get closer to the middle.
LK: The market that institutions are trading in on the
floor of the exchange is the same market that the individuals
are trading in, and it's quoted there. And there are exchange
rules that cover all equity and exchange listed securities,
that try to ensure fairness between retail investors and large
institutions. You'd have to talk to the American Stock Exchange.
But that's an important part of exchange regulations: ensuring
that institutions are not always getting better execution than
the retail public. And so, there are no free lunches when it
comes to transactions cost in that sense. Now with the ETF,
you may see it when you actually go purchase the ETF, but the
good news is that the portfolio didn't have to just go purchase
securities and pay a bid/ask spread. So you have to take all
of the costs and benefits into account, including the holding
period. Also you need to take into account the relative tax
efficiency, because that matters too.
IF.com: Especially in terms of redemptions, that's where
you can take a big hit on the open-ended funds more than on
the ETFs.
LK: Mutual funds also. Many still have their own transaction
fees for entry and exit that have to be taken into account,
that get ignored sometimes. We all know about fund supermarkets,
which have no transaction fees. And if you have an account with
the fund company or you have a no transaction fee supermarket
where the fund you want is offered, then you don't pay any fee.
But a fair number of investors do pay a purchase charge on standard
mutual funds. And what we're seeing a lot is if you are in a
fund supermarket that does not have the fund that you want,
and you know particular index funds tend not to be in the transaction
fee supermarkets, then you are going to pay a commission essentially
- a trading fee to purchase the fund.
My point is that one does need to take into account an apples-to-apples
comparison relative to your own situation in terms of investment
horizon, the cost of the transaction, the relative savings,
and other fees. You really need to account for all those factors
carefully and make the best choice. And an ETF may not be the
best choice for some people and a traditional fund may not be
the best choice for other people.
IF.com: Any comments on State Street's strong move into
the international market? Is Barclays going to continue to move
aggressively in international, both in terms of U.S.-traded
international and foreign-based ETFs?
LK: We are currently the only manager, to the best of
my knowledge, who is offering any international products. We
offer what is now 21 country funds, I believe, and 22 country
funds and two European funds, as well. And more, including the
S&P Global 100, are on the way. So when it comes to international,
we're the only ones offering product right now. When it comes
to the foreign markets, we have product running in London and
we've made announcements about our intent in Japan. But we intend
to be the world leader. Right now there are 69 funds in the
U.S., and we manage 56 of them. As for the rest of the world,
there's one in Canada. There's one in London. And I believe
there are two in Germany. So there's four more around the world.
IF.com: It seems like every day you get a couple new
ones popping up.
LK: The market is clearly one that has caught people's
attention. Since 1996, when we started with the country funds,
we've been pointing out that these are very efficient ways to
invest. And you're definitely seeing that the rest of the world
has taken notice of this in the last two months. But right now,
we lead international in investments and we intend to continue
to be the strategic leader in this market.
IF.com: Who do you see as the main competition?
LK: I don't really think much about who is the main competition
in that way. We have such a broad product set, we have really
the only one that covers all the different sizes - mid, large,
and small cap, as well as style, value, and growth. We have
a complete set of Dow sectors. We have the international funds.
So the product set is just so much broader than what anyone
else is offering that it's just very different.
IF.com: Do you think ETFs are going to remain a niche
market or do you think that the mutual fund industry is going
to completely evolve?
LK: I don't know, time will tell what's going to happen
there. Have you seen the FRC study yet? There's a great study
out from the Financial Research Corporation, they say from their
broker surveys that actively-managed ETFs will have 16.5 percent
of equity fund assets by the year 2007. It's a very compelling
product and there are a number of advantages. You can buy it
in any brokerage account you want, and you can use it the same
way as equity. Mutual funds are a little bit inflexible in some
ways, they cannot by bought and sold during the day. They're
relatively difficult to borrow against if you have a margin
account and you just want to raise cash against them. They're
just a different beast.
IF.com: Where do you see the iShares being five years
down the road in terms of net assets?
LK: That's very hard to say because it's going to depend
a lot on what the overall market does, and how aggressively
people adopt ETFs as an alternative. We think that this is going
to be a market that continues to grow. We ended 1998 at about
$15 billion in assets, and we're up to about $40 billion to
$50 billion right now. And so it's a market that's growing fairly
quickly as more and more people find out about the benefits.
IF.com: It looks to me like a lot of other players are
trying to step in now.
LK: There's certainly a lot of attention and it validates
what we've been saying for a number of years that these are
great products. And so time will tell what the competitive landscape
looks like, what investor demand looks like. We think it's a
great product for us to be aligned with as the world's largest
indexer, the world's second largest money manager, the largest
institutional manager. It's a great product that features what
we bring to the table: scale, technology, and low cost, for
individual investors as well as institutions.
09/25/2000