Benefits
of ETFs Debated at Asset Allocation Seminar
By John Spence,
Associate Editor
At the recent seminar in San Francisco entitled "Asset
Allocation: Theories vs. Realities," representatives
from the industry outlined the benefits of using exchanged-traded
funds (ETFs) in portfolio management
strategies. Many of the institutional investors who attended
the conference were trustees or appointed board members
of retirement and pension funds. The seminar was presented
by Dow Jones Indexes along with The National Association
of Investment Fiduciaries.
When
the floor was opened for discussion, some institutional
investors expressed a concern that is a common reaction
to the concept of the exchange-traded fund: that they are
the tool of the speculator and market-timer. They claimed,
as many have, that ETFs are not an investment product designed
for long-term buy-and-hold investors, but rather an instrument
for exploiting discounts and premiums.
"What
benefit do these products have for society?" asked
one institutional investor. "The capital being invested
in ETFs is not being applied to real products, real workers."
This
pension fund trustee also made the claim that ETFs are more
like "casino chips" than a long-term investment.
As
usual, the most informative portion of the session occurred
during this Q&A format when investors were able to interact
directly with the speakers.
"An
ETF represents the same sort of collective account as a
mutual fund," explained Brad Zigler, Principal of Marketing
and Education for Barclays Global Investors (BGI). "You
might think that ETFs are used as trading tools, but the
research seems to indicate otherwise. A recent Financial
Research Corporation study reports that 75% of people that
invest in ETFs or plan to invest in ETFs are doing so with
a buy-and-hold strategy, while the remaining 25% said they
would use them for a mix of both long-term and trading-oriented
strategies."
Many
investors are spooked by the fact that arbitrage opportunities
with ETFs, which sometimes become available when an ETF
trades above or below its fair market value, are the mechanism
that determines share prices.
"There
is the arbitrage opportunity [with ETFs], which tends to
keep the prices of the ETFs shares and the portfolio value
in line," said Zigler.
Gus
Fleites, Director of ETFs for State Street Global Advisor
(SSgA), further outlined why ETFs are appropriate for the
long-term investor, retail or institutional.
"Whether
you like it or not, the market is made up of buy-and-hold
investors, traders, and speculators," said Fleites.
"Before ETFs were available, it was very difficult
to remove the impact of the speculator and the trader from
the products retail investors were buying. The instruments
that some of the aggressive traders are using are either
the derivative market or mutual index funds. The fact that
they were using index funds caused great havoc for the buy-and-hold
investors [in the form of distributions]. What this product
does very successfully is marry all of the camps because
you need all three parties to have an efficient market.
With ETFs, buy-and-hold investors aren't going to pay for
the sins, if you will, of the people who are going to trade
aggressively. There's been a lot of attention given to the
high turnover of these products. The truth is that you could
have 300% turnover and it's not going to hurt the buy-and-hold
investor who is looking to invest 5, 10, or 20 years."
In
his presentation about iShares ETFs and the market in general,
BGI's Zigler pointed out that, unlike mutual funds, ETF
investors don't interact with the fund itself.
"When
ETF shares are created, the creator doesn't hand the fund
cash as in a traditional mutual fund environment, but instead
hands the component securities as dictated by the daily
portfolio creation file that's put out by the fund's manager,"
said Zigler. "Instead of getting back cash when you
turn in ETF shares you're going to get back the same holdings
that make up the index portfolio. There is very little interaction
with capital markets in managing an ETF portfolio. The one
case where the fund will have to access capital markets
[other than in the creation/redemption and in the actual
trading of the fund itself] to buy or sell securities is
during an index reconstitution."
ETF
educational seminars such as the one conducted at the Dow
Jones Indexes Asset Allocation Conference are becoming more
frequent as investor curiousity toward ETFs grows, and several
studies examining ETFs and investor perceptions of ETFs
are being published or currently carried out by analyst
groups. For example, the Boston Research Group (BRG) in
late September released a public opinion survey about investor
attitudes toward ETFs. BRG conducted market research with
204 individual investors with a minimum of $100,000 in household
income, as well as 201 financial intermediaries with a minimum
of $50 million in client assets under management. The research
was sponsored by Barclays Global Investors.
The
study found that 67% of financial intermediaries are aware
of ETFs, compared with only 17% of individual investors.
Part of the study also examined the perceived benefits of
ETFs, and individual investors and financial intermediaries
were asked which features of ETFs were most valuable on
scale of 1 to 5 (1 represents "not at all valuable,
and 5 represents "very valuable"). The table below
illustrates which percentage of the subjects responded to
the benefit as "very valuable."
| Perceived
benefit |
Percentage
Individual Investors who replied "very valuable" |
Percentage
Financial Intermediaries who replied "very
valuable" |
| Tax efficiency
by minimizing capital gains to share holders |
53%
|
41%
|
| Lower management
fees |
48%
|
46%
|
| Intra-day
pricing |
43%
|
42%
|
| Able to
purchase through any brokerage firm |
39%
|
42%
|
| Behave
like stock - can buy on margin and sell short |
18%
|
26%
|
Source:
Boston Research Group
Of the individual
investors surveyed, 57% said they were likely to consider
ETFs for their next investments.
In addition
to the BRG study, the Boston-based Financial Research Corporation
recently released a study entitled "The Future of ETFs
- An Emerging Alternative to Mutual Funds," which was
quoted above by BGI's Brad Zigler.
It appears that
investors' cries for more information about ETFs are finally
being heeded. Wiesenberger, a Thomson Financial company,
releases the "Exchange-Traded Funds Weekly Review,"
and the Equity Derivatives and Quantitative Research division
of Lehman Brothers has begun printing a similar weekly,
"The Exchange-Traded Fund Monitor."
For more information
about ETFs, please visit our ETFzone.
11/02/2000