| World's
First Active ETFs Begin Trading in Germany
By Jim Wiandt
November 21, 2000 |
|
In a development that would be unthinkable in the United States,
the world's first actively-managed ETFs began trading in Germany
just three months after DWS Investment filed for approval. Peering
through a window that might shed some light on how such funds
might work in the United States and elsewhere, IndexFunds.com
spoke at length with Helge Staack, product manager for the new
trading funds.
"The first day of trading went very well, and
though it was a difficult day for the market makers, the funds
traded with a difference between the buy and sell (bid/ask prices)
of 1 percent for the technology and biotech funds, for example.
The amount traded on the Frankfurt stock exchange was two and
a half million Euros," said Staack.
How The New Funds Performed In Early Trading
Data
Courtesy of Deutsche Börse includes first two days of trading
through 11/21/2000
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are
mutual funds that trade like a stock. Each fund holds a group
of component stocks, with trading of the exchange-traded shares
closely approximating the underlying net asset value of those
stocks. Until now, every available ETF has tracked an index with
known component stocks. The offering by DWS has changed all that.
Die Wertpapier
Spezialisten (DWS) is an arm of Deutsche Bank Gruppe. The
new DWS funds launched by DWS Investment trade on the Frankfurt
Exchange's Xetra platform and consist of broad German, European,
Asian, U.S., and global funds, as well as Biotech, Internet, Pharmaceutical,
U.S. Technology, Emerging Markets, and Gold funds.
Previous to the DWS launch, the European Exchange-Traded Fund
Company launched two listed diversified return securities (LDRS)
on the German Deutsche Börse. These funds are co-managed
by Merrill Lynch and track the Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 and Stoxx
50 indexes. They began trading in April, 2000.
Thus far, logistical and regulatory hurdles have stymied all
efforts to launch active ETFs. While AMEX hopes to launch active
ETFs in the United States sometime in 2001, it is still unclear
how near U.S. fund managers are to clearing Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) and Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) regulatory
hurdles.
Of particular concern has been the issue of how disclosure of
the underlying stocks would work. While active managers do not
want the market to know which stocks they are buying and selling,
it is important for investors to be aware of what the net asset
value (NAV) of the underlying basket of stocks is, so that they
can trade the ETF shares based on that value.
How the active funds trade in Germany
Because German fund managers are not subject to stringent levels
of disclosure that American fund managers are, it was considerably
easier to gain approval for the funds than it would be in the
United States. In fact, according to Staack, working out a contract
with the Frankfurt
Exchange (where ample information on the new funds in English
and German can be found) was a far greater obstacle to DWS than
obtaining regulatory approval.
Essentially, here is how the new funds trade: While component
stocks are not disclosed, once a day at the market close, DWS
releases a net asset value (NAV) price for the underlying stocks
comprising the funds. Based on this information and the direction
of the relevant market/sector, the funds trade freely during the
day.
And here's another interesting twist with the DWS funds. According
to Staack, "Investors have two ways to invest. An investor
can buy the fund for the net asset value, at this price, but only
once a day. You can also buy them at the trading value while the
market is open."
There is at this time no real-time disclosure of
the fund's NAV, although market makers are privy to additional
information about the component stocks that helps them to better
price the funds (something that, incidentally, would be unthinkable
in the United States).
Says Staack, "We give some more information to the market
maker to give him an idea of the underlying portfolio. As investor
you have a chance to invest at what is not the real net asset
value. But that is what makes it interesting." Indeed.
In addition, once a month, DWS provides extensive fact sheets
that reveal the funds' top ten holdings and fundamentals data.
Below is a list of every ETF currently available in Germany,
along with the relevant fund manager and the benchmark index that
the fund can fairly be compared with (or actually tracks in the
case of the index funds). The first 11 funds are the new active
ETFs launched November 20, 2000 by DWS Investment.



Chart Courtesy of Deutsche Börse is current as
of 11/21/2000
Despite the different regulations faced by U.S. and German fund
managers, the new ETFs do provide an interesting vantagepoint
from which to see how U.S. active ETFs may ultimately be structured.
Obviously the manager of a large active fund doesn't want the
entire market to know what he is buying and selling. It is difficult
enough to trade in large quantities without being front-run by
the market. Index fund managers know this well.
The remaining question is to what extent active ETF managers
will be able to conceal their holdings. The launch in Germany
shows that not only is it possible to provide an NAV without revealing
holdings, but that the funds can trade intraday with no real-time
gauge of what the NAV even is. It will certainly be interesting
to see how such funds are ultimately structured in the United
States, but the odds are that the launch in Germany will provide
additional impetus for the introduction of active ETFs in the
U.S.