| ETF
Assets Fall in Weak Market
By IndexFunds.com Staff
August 27, 2001 |
|
Exchange-traded fund (ETF) assets fell slightly in July, underscoring
the current climate of soft equity prices. The slim $40 million
decline occurred despite the fact that issued shares exceeded
redeemed shares by $2.58 billion, according to Investment Company
Institute (ICI).
In June, ETF assets under management actually rose by $2.8 billion
while mutual fund assets shed $82.5 billion (or 1.2%) of their
value for the month. The July decrease in ETF assets comes amidst
a 7-year run of exponential growth in ETF assets.
Off and Running - ETF Assets 1993-2000
According to State Street Global Advisors (SSgA), there was almost
$89 billion in assets in 150 ETFs worldwide as of the end of July
2001, although that number has since risen to 157 funds. Three
fund managers control a vast majority of ETF
assets - over 94%, as shown in the below table.
| ETFs - The
Big Three |
| Fund Manager |
# of ETFs |
Total ETF Assets |
Worldwide Market Share |
| State Street |
26 |
$38.0 billion |
44.43% |
| Bank of NY |
2 |
$26.7 billion |
31.22% |
| Barclays Global |
88 |
$16.0 billion |
18.77% |
Source: State Street Global Advisors, data
as of 7/31/2001
Although Bank of NY manages only two ETFs - MidCap SPDRs (
MDY)
and Nasdaq-100 Tracking Stock (
QQQ)
- the popular QQQ or "cubes" were the second-largest ETF
as of the end of last week, according to the American Stock Exchange
(AMEX). With almost $23 billion in assets, QQQ is second only to
the SPDR 500 (
SPY),
which was the first U.S. ETF launched in 1993 by SSgA. The SPDR
500 fund had $28.7 billion in assets under management as of 8/24/2001.
Currently, there are 90 ETFs trading on AMEX with nearly $75
billion in assets under management, not including HOLDRs.
| ETF Series |
Total Assets |
| FORTUNE Index Funds (2) |
$60,190,000 |
| iShares Cohen & Steers (1) |
$44,415,000 |
| iShares Dow Jones (15) |
$825,865,000 |
| iShares Goldman Sachs (4) |
$153,372,500 |
| iShares MSCI (22) |
$1,883,532,100 |
| iShares Nasdaq Series (1) |
$130,949,500 |
| iShares Russell (12) |
$4,590,735,893 |
| iShares S&P (11) |
$5,077,037,500 |
| Select SPDRs (9) |
$2,779,743,270 |
| streetTRACKS Dow Jones Series (5) |
$114,773,000 |
| streetTRACKS Morgan Stanley Series (2) |
$74,484,500 |
| streetTRACKS Wilshire Series (1) - REIT |
$18,823,500 |
| Vanguard Wilshire (1) - Total Market |
$126,367,550 |
| Total AMEX ETF Assets |
$74,991,725,890 |
Source: AMEX, data as of 8/24/2001
The two domestically-traded ETFs not listed on AMEX are iShares
S&P 100 Index Fund (OEF)
and iShares S&P Global 100 Index Fund (IOO).
The iShares S&P 100, which trades on Chicago Board Options
Exchange, currently has over $210 million in assets. The NYSE-traded
iShares S&P Global 100 has over $48 million in assets under
management.
ETFs Down Under
State Street Global Advisors today launched two exchange-traded
funds tied to broad Australian equity indexes: the streetTRACKS
S&P/ASX 50 and the streetTRACKS S&P/ASX 200. Both are
trading on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) and have an expense
ratio of 0.286%.
The S&P/ASX 50 index is comprised of the largest national
and multinational securities listed on the Australian equity market,
reflecting 76% of the market capitalization of domestic equities
listed on the ASX. The S&P/ASX 200 is an even broader benchmark
of the largest companies in Australia, and represents about 91%
of the market cap of the Australian equity market.
Through the Grapevine
At the end of 2001, index provider Standard & Poor's (S&P)
will shift
its indexes to the Global Industry Classification System (GICS).
As the above table illustrates, there are currently 9 Select SPDRs
with over $2.7 billion in assets.
According to SSgA, which manages the Select SPDRs, these sector
ETFs were developed through a partnership between Merrill Lynch
and State Street Global Advisors in 1998. SSgA and Merrill Lynch
developed a sector classification system based on S&P 500
stocks under the guidance of Merrill Lynch's former chief investment
strategist.
SSgA says the current asset size and the trading costs that would
be incurred for the Select SPDRs to adjust to the new GICS system
have ruled out a switch to the new indexes. Therefore, Merrill
Lynch will maintain indexes based on the old S&P sector classification
methodology to prevent what would otherwise be a huge rebalancing
of the Select SPDRs.