Money Magazine Australia

The latest on exchange traded funds

Investors are pouring billions of dollars into ETFs that aim to beat their passive peers

- STORY PAM WALKLEY

The rise of exchange traded funds (ETFs) has democratis­ed investing. Now a retail investor like you or me can get global diversific­ation (previously only available to large institutio­nal investors) in a single trade. In the 26 years since ETFs launched in the US, they have become one of the most popular investment vehicles for both institutio­ns and individual­s.

In Australia ETFs were launched 18 years ago.

The local exchange traded product (ETP) market – financial products traded on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), including ETFs, managed funds and structured products – exceeded $54 billion in market capitalisa­tion at August 2019, says Alva Devoy, Australian managing director at Fidelity Internatio­nal.

She says the ETF sector has steadily grown over the past six years and retail investors have helped drive the investment vehicle’s popularity.

In 2030, ETPs in Australia are expected to have

about $600 billion in funds under management, representi­ng 12% of the broad market, according to estimates from researcher Rainmaker Informatio­n.

Originally, ETFs were passive investment­s, designed to mimic an index focused on equities, fixed income or a blend of asset classes. Active ETFs, which aim to outperform their index by engaging the services of a portfolio manager, were only introduced into Australia in 2015.

Devoy says ASX trends showed that 50% of new ETF trades were active ETFs in the 2018 calendar year.

“There were 41 active ETFs at end August 2019 with $4.5 billion in funds under management,” she says.

Both active and smart beta (see breakout, right) segments have grown at around 70% a year for the past three years, says Rainmaker.

State of play

Fund manager Magellan has dominated the active ETP sector in recent years, but other managers are joining the fray. It means Magellan’s share of the market is now 57%, down from 83% at the end of June 2017, according to Rainmaker’s latest ETP report.

Platinum Asset Management and BetaShares each have more than 10% of market share and four other managers each have around 2%.

Vanguard, one of the world’s biggest ETF issuers, recently joined the active fray. In Australia it launched the Vanguard Global Value Equity Active ETF (ASX: VVLU) in March 2018, the Vanguard Global Minimum Volatility Active ETF (VMIN) in April 2018 and the Vanguard Global Multi-Factor Active ETF (VGMF) in April 2019.

Fidelity, another large fund manager, launched its first Australian active ETF, the Fidelity Global Emerging Markets Fund (FEMX), in November 2018. The fund manager says it plans to bring more to market. It’s understood there are 12 to 15 active ETFs queued up with a product disclosure statement ready to be lodged.

Role of active ETFs

“The main role is diversific­ation,” says Devoy. “Active ETFs offer a smooth way for investors to diversify their portfolios while accessing active investment management expertise.”

She says Australian Taxation Office data tells us that portfolios of self-managed super funds (SMSFs) are biased towards domestic listed investment­s, and this remains a concern.

Of most concern is that the bias can be tied up with investment properties and home ownership inside an SMSF – and it adds a layer of risk to the domestic Australian economy, house prices in particular.

“ETFs enable retail investors to be quite specific about what they want to invest in – and they can get lots of diversific­ation for low fees,” says Vincent O’Neill, director, private wealth at financial advice firm Stanford Brown.

Using ETFs, investors can build much better portfolios than those just including banks, hybrids and term deposits – all with high bank exposure. Investors are also fixated on income and franking credits and forget that capital growth is also important, says O’Neill.

How active ETFs work

“From an investor perspectiv­e, there is no difference to their trading experience on the ASX except now they have a wider range of options to choose from,” says Devoy.

“An investor can buy a direct equity share such as CBA [Commonweal­th Bank] via their broker, or chose to gain access to CBA via a rules-based or passive ETF or, now, exposure to CBA as part of an actively managed portfolio of Australian shares. The choice is up to them, switching is easy and transactio­n costs are low.”

It’s also easier for investors than going through the hoops associated with buying units of actively managed funds, says Devoy. These can include anti-money-laundering procedures and know-your-client procedures as well as large product disclosure statements (PDS). Trading through your broker account means there is no need for additional administra­tion, which has already been completed when you set up your account.

How to choose active/smart beta ETFs

“Look under the bonnet,” says O’Neill. “Understand what’s the style and the type of market it will perform in.”

Find out who the managers are and the strategy behind the ETF. Maybe it’s a bolt on to a strategy that’s been around for a while so there is a track record. Find out who the team is that’s running it, what their experience is, and whether they are sticking to their core strategy, adds O’Neill.

One of the first active ETFs launched in Australia, Magellan Global Equities (MGE), is an example of a bolt-on strategy. Listed in March 2015, it closely resembles the firm’s unlisted Magellan Global fund. MGE returned 15.59% in the year to September 2019 (the unlisted Magellan Global Fund returned 15.72%). Three-year returns were 18.16%pa (MGF 18.21%)

Fidelity’s Global Emerging Markets Fund (FEMX) is also based on Fidelity’s Global Emerging Markets Managed Fund, which is unlisted, launched in December 2013. FEMX has only a six-month performanc­e figure: 10.3% to September 2019. The unlisted fund returned 17.57% for the year to September and 10.95%pa since inception.

Both these active funds have shown strong returns but this has not been the case with all active funds. Indeed, some have disappoint­ed, so choose carefully. While past performanc­e is not an indicator of future performanc­e, investors should be wary of those that have failed to keep up with their stated benchmarks over the longer term. With ETFs that do reflect the strategy of an unlisted fund that’s been around for a while, it’s relatively easy to research long-term past performanc­e.

Size is also important, says O’Neill. Managers do need to have some scale but it can be a problem if they become too big as this can be an impediment to their ability to outperform, he says.

Make sure any ETF you choose has depth. Some ETFs are thinly traded, meaning they have extremely low liquidity, which can lead to a large spread in the buy/sell price.

Pay attention to the fees, says O’Neill. Fees are the first hurdle you need to overcome to make a profit. “We like those that pay a low ongoing fee but charge a performanc­e fee as this assures an alignment of interest.”

As retail investors we no longer have to pay for access to different markets as we did in the past, so the manager must add value to gain a fee, says O’Neill.

MGE is an example of an ETF that charges a performanc­e fee. Magellan charges the same price for the listed MGE as the unlisted Magellan Global Fund: an annual base fee of 1.35%, which is relatively high for an ETF. It also levies the same performanc­e fee of 10% over the dual hurdles of the MSCI World Total Return Net of Dividends $A Index and the Australian Government 10-year bond yield, subject to a high-water mark.

“The over-arching appeal of active ETFs is that they now afford a broader range of choice for an investor in an easy-to-access-and-manage format,” says Devoy. Choosing active ETFs to invest in is a personal question and is partly determined by what’s already in your portfolio as well as the investment view you want to express.

“For some, exposure to a single country is appealing, to others that might represent too much volatility risk and so they might chose a regional fund such as emerging markets or Asia.” This report was sponsored by Fidelity Internatio­nal but was independen­tly researched and written.

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