| ETFs:
A Picture of Concentration - Market Share of Early Pioneers
Declines as Product Offerings Expand
By Gavin Quill
May 2, 2001 |
|
Pioneers in any market always maintain a high market share during
the first stage of product establishment and proof of viability.
Once that viability is proven, however, inevitably other players
will follow and the early dominance of the pioneers from a market
share perspective will rapidly erode.
Early adopters may continue to grow their business rapidly on
an absolute basis, and they may even maintain a substantial lead
over the newcomers. But market share levels nearly always decline
during the second stage of product expansion, as the overall market
for a product begins to extend past an initial threshold.
This is not a threat to the pioneers, but rather a validation
of their early vision. It's also a healthy sign that additional
profits are available in the market. As indicated in the table
below, the big three exchange-traded fund (ETF)
sponsors - State Street Global Advisors, Bank of New
York, and Barclays Global
Investors - controlled 97.4% of worldwide assets as of April
1. This dominant position, however, has declined by 1.6% from
99.0% on January 1.
| ETF Worldwide Market
Share as of April 1, 2001 |
| Manager |
# of funds |
Assets ($bil) |
Avg. size ($bil) |
Share of funds |
Share of assets |
| State Street Global |
22 |
$34.6 |
$1.6 |
19% |
46% |
| Bank of NY |
2 |
$26.2 |
$13.1 |
2% |
35% |
| Barclays Global |
77 |
$12.9 |
$0.2 |
68% |
17% |
| 8 foreign sponsor/domiciles |
13 |
$2.0 |
$0.2 |
11% |
3% |
| Total |
114 |
$75.7 |
$0.7 |
100% |
100% |
*excludes HOLDRS
Source: State Street Global Advisors, Bloomberg
In just the past six months, seven new sponsors have brought their
first ETF products to market overseas. A large number of new entrants
are expected both internationally and domestically over the next
12-18 months.
Three Players Dominate
Today, Barclays dominates the worldwide ETF landscape with 77 different
products domiciled in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. This represents
more than two-thirds of all ETFs currently available. However, these
funds (most in existence
for less than a year) average only $168 million in assets. Barclays
total ETF assets of $12.9 billion represent only a 17.1% share of
worldwide assets.
State Street Global
is the market share leader in terms of
assets. Its 22 funds (including one in Hong Kong and one in Canada)
control $34.6 billion or 45.7% of all ETF assets. The flagship
SPDR
product with $26 billion is the largest single
ETF, representing 34% of global assets. Bank of New York ranks a
close second in asset share with 34.6% derived from just two funds.
Its Nasdaq-100 product (
QQQ),
currently at $22.6 billion for a 30% global share, has traded places
in
recent months with the SPDR as the largest ETF.
Each of the big three sponsors are primarily focused on the US marketplace,
where nearly three-quarters of all products are domiciled. However,
this year has seen the rapid emergence of new players overseas.
There are now eight
additional institutions offering 13 new products, both in established
European markets and places as diverse as Israel and South Africa.
Collectively, these eight firms control $2 billion or a 2.6% share.
Six months ago, only two of these 13
products existed, amounting to just $354 million.
Crossing Borders
The
American Stock Exchange (AMEX) is leading the way in
establishing cross listings in both Asia and
Europe
so that U.S.-domiciled funds will eventually be traded around the
clock on various bourses across the globe (beginning with
Singapore
this past month).
Euronext, a joint venture of exchanges
in Amsterdam, Brussels, and Paris, is offering two
Merrill Lynch-advised
products across Europe. And two of the big three advisors have already
brought separate ETFs to market in a variety of other countries.
If we combine foreign domiciled products advised by both foreign
and US companies, we find that there are now 31 non-U.S.-registered
funds representing 27% of total ETFs worldwide. However, 20 of these
are managed by Barclays,
State Street, or Merrill Lynch (excluding HOLDRs). The pioneering
American firms are not just dominating on American soil.
Phase Two is Rapidly Approaching
ETFs are now domiciled in a total of 11 different countries or international
exchanges (if we count Euronext as one), as indicated in the accompanying
table.
| ETF Worldwide Domiciles
as of April 1, 2001 |
| United States |
83 |
| Canada |
12 |
| United Kingdom |
7 |
| Germany |
3 |
| France |
2 |
| Euronext (Amsterdam/Paris/Brussels) |
2 |
| Sweden |
1 |
| Switzerland |
1 |
| Israel |
1 |
| South Africa |
1 |
| Hong Kong |
1 |
| Total ETFs |
114 |
Source: State Street Global Advisors, Bloomberg
Japan
is now entering the ETF arena for the first time. Australia, India,
and
Singapore are expected to follow soon. Over the next two years,
we expect several new countries and new exchanges to begin offering
their own ETFs. We are also looking for many new sponsors/advisors,
and a blizzard of new products and cross-listings from the established
participants.
In the United States, we also expect as many as a dozen new entrants
to emerge over the next year or so. Vanguard,
Nuveen,
and ProFunds are already on record, and several more announcements
may not be far behind. Look for several
of these new entrants to push the envelope with creative enhancements
to the structures and features of the current crop of ETFs.
Domestically there may not be very much room for identical offerings
that match the existing index-based lineup. But there remains
a great deal of opportunity for new innovations and product extensions
into fixed-income, leveraged, and enhanced ETFs, with eventually
even an actively managed version.
This article originally appeared in the April 2001 edition
of FRC Monitor, a publication by Financial Research Corporation,
and is reprinted with permission.
Gavin Quill is Senior Vice President and Director of
Research Studies at Financial
Research Corporation. Gavin oversees the research and writing
of comprehensive primary-source studies related to a wide variety
of mutual fund industry topics.