| AMEX
and Tokyo Exchange to Cross-List ETFs
By IndexFunds.com Staff
June 19, 2001 |
|
The American Stock Exchange (AMEX) and the Tokyo Stock Exchange
inked a deal today to cross-list and trade U.S. and Japanese exchange-traded
funds (ETFs).
The alliance is the latest move by AMEX to set up a global trading
platform for ETFs. The exchange has already partnered with the
Singapore exchange, and though they currently do not enjoy significant
trading volume, five AMEX ETFs are currently
trading in Asia. Additionally, AMEX signed
a memorandum of understanding with Euronext in February to cross-list
and trade ETFs in Europe and the U.S.
"As the globalization of the financial markets continues,
there is no question in my mind that innovative, progressive products
- like ETFs - will continue to grow in both significance and popularity,"
said Salvatore F. Sodano, AMEX chairman and CEO.
AMEX begins calculating America's Fastest Growing Companies
indexes
The American Stock Exchange began calculating three new stock
indexes that could soon have ETFs tied to them. Starting June
14, AMEX began disseminating the values for three Individual Investor
Group indexes:
- America's Fastest Growing Companies Total Market Index (FGT)
- America's Fastest Growing Companies LargeCap 50 Index (FGL)
- America's Fastest Growing Companies MidCap 300 Index (FGM)
AMEX previously calculated and disseminated Individual Investor
Group's original America's Fastest Growing Companies (small-cap)
index (NDI), which Nuveen Investments has licensed
for an ETF. Nuveen also has plans
to launch four fixed-income ETFs. Initially, Nuveen announced
it would release five fixed-income ETFs, but has since scrapped
plans for a 20-year Treasury Separate Trading of Registered Interest
and Principal Securities (STRIPs) ETF.
Individual Investor Group has 14 sector indexes that it is making
available for ETF licensing. To learn more about the methodology
for the America's Fastest Growing Companies indexes, click here.
State Street Launches Pan-Euro ETF on Euronext
Trading of an ETF hitched to the MSCI Pan-Euro index began today
on the Euronext exchange. The new offering is available only to
French investors, and has an expense ratio of 0.50%.
The MSCI Pan-Euro
is a cap-weighted index of 193 European companies, with a total
market capitalization of about $5 trillion. The new ETF, managed
by State Street Global Advisors (SSgA), is the latest addition
to the streetTRACKS family, which now is comprised of 12 ETFs.
SSgA currently manages 25 ETFs worldwide, including the largest
- SPDRs
- which had $28.7 billion in assets as of the end of April.
SSgA has plans to soon roll out more ETFs based on MSCI European
sector indexes, which are broken down according to the Global
Industry Classification System (GICS),
developed jointly by MSCI and Standard & Poor's (S&P).
Additionally, ETFs tracking MSCI's broad U.K. index and European
small-cap index are in the works.
Although Bank of N.Y. manages the second largest ETF in the Nasdaq-100
Tracking Stock, (QQQ),
ETFs are currently dominated by SSgA and Barclays Global Investors
(BGI). However, given the explosive growth of ETFs in the past
few years, other investment firms are gearing up to enter the
market.
According to Financial Research Corporation (FRC), ETFs have
grown at an annual rate of 128% over the past four years, from
$2 billion in assets under management to over $65 billion at the
close of 2000. FRC predicts the rapid growth will continue over
the next 5 to 7 years, with total ETF assets nearing levels as
high as $500 billion.
Dow Jones increases emerging markets coverage in World Index
Effective yesterday, Dow Indexes increased coverage of emerging
stock markets in the Dow
Jones World Index to 95% from 80%.
"This major step will provide individual and institutional
investors with a broader and thus more effective tool to measure
the markets on a global scale," said Michael A. Petronella,
managing director of Dow Jones Indexes. "As the developed
markets in our Dow Jones World Index cover 95% of the underlying
market capitalization already, our index family now becomes consistent
across all markets."
Dow Jones designates 11 countries as emerging markets - the broader
coverage will increase the number of constituents from these countries
to 824 from 608. The total number of stocks in the Dow Jones World
Index will increase from 4,801 to 5,046.