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Retail Investor Perception of Exchange-Traded Funds
By John Spence, Associate
Editor
The biggest players in exchange-traded funds, Barclays Global Investors
(BGI) and State Street Global Advisors (SSgA), truly believe they've
pioneered a tool that's perfect for index investors - low management
fees, protection from taxes and turnover, and reduced index tracking
error. If only people knew how great these things were, then the
cash would just roll in, they figure.
BGI says that it plans to shell out over $20 million in 2001 on
television advertising, direct mail, and Internet development to
educate retail investors on ETFs. SSgA, which launched the first
U.S. ETF (SPY), has announced it will roll out more ETFs
based on domestic and international indexes. "What SSgA and
the AMEX did to the investment industry with the introduction of
the ETF in 1993. . . they're about to do again," trumpets a
recent State Street ad.
But are index investors listening?
Financial Research
Corporation (FRC) wanted to find out. In a new study, FRC polled
892 investors to gauge how retail investors really view ETFs.
Very few of the respondents - approximately 2% - had actually invested
in ETFs, and only 41% were moderately or very informed about them,
but all were financial decision-makers controlling assets. Not surprisingly,
investor familiarity with ETFs tended to rise with investable asset
levels.
Participants were also asked to rank the perceived benefits of
ETFs. The table below shows which features of ETFs they found most
advantageous.
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Primary Reasons for Potential ETF Interest
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Rank
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ETF Feature/Benefit
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% of Respondents Indicating Primary Reason
for Potential Interest
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1
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Tax efficiency
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55%
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2
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Trading & tax flexibility
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48%
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3
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Lower expense ratios
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46%
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4
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Diversification
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39%
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5
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Invest in entire market sector
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37%
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6
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Access to sectors/indices not available
with mutual funds
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35%
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7
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Continuous pricing
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26%
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Source: Financial Research Corporation
"Given what you hear in the media, you would guess the most
attractive features would be continuous pricing and trading and
tax flexibility," said FRC's Gavin Quill, author of the study.
Ranked dead last was continuous pricing, a result that doesn't
appear to correlate with the notion that trade-happy investors will
gravitate to ETFs.
The top three attractions - tax efficiency, trading and tax flexibility,
lower expense ratios - reflect growing investor awareness of expenses
and how they can devour returns.
Quill takes the view that trading and tax flexibility, which ranked
second, does not reflect investor desire to use ETFs as active trading
tools. Instead, he believes timing flexibility gives investors a
feeling of increased control and security when they do decide to
trade.
"Just because ETF investors can trade all day doesn't mean
they will trade all day," said Quill.
Many studies have shown that heavy trading in any security leads
to high expenses that are extremely difficult to overcome through
superior stock-picking. Clearly, FRC's study turned up lots of buy-and-hold
investors interested in ETFs who are quite aware that their final
returns after tax are the only true measure of success.
02/23/2001
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