Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Fund tracks pet-related companies

People love their furry friends; now you can bet on it

- By Vildana Hajric

If there’s one thing you can put your money on, it’s Americans’ love for their pets. Just ask ProShares Advisors.

The Bethesda, Md.-based firm is launching the ProShares Pet Care ETF, ticker PAWZ, on Tuesday. The exchange-traded fund will track the FactSet Pet Care Index, which is comprised of companies that generate at least half their revenues from pet-related business. It’ll charge a fee of $5 for every $1,000 invested.

The pet care industry is booming in the U.S., where 68 percent of households have pets, compared with 41 percent that have children, according to data from Statista.

Americans spent more than $69 billion on their furry friends last year, up from around $41 billion in 2007, according to the American Pet Products Associatio­n. The industry has grown by an average of 7.6 percent since 2005 and is projected to reach more than $72 billion in 2018.

The growth is in part because pet trends mirror human ones. For example, the demand for higher quality pet food has helped boost retail sales, according to research by Nielsen. As an investment, the sector historical­ly has been “resilient to economic downturns,” ProShares wrote in the fund’s prospectus.

“If you can get over how gimmicky it sounds, there’s a fundamenta­l story here,” said Eric Balchunas, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst.

PAWZ is the second petrelated ETF to hit the market this year. The Gabelli Pet Parent Fund NextShares, or PETZC, started trading in June with an active management structure and fee of $9 per $1,000 invested, nearly twice what PAWZ will charge. It hasn’t exactly caught on with investors, attracting only $1.2 million in assets.

“We chose to initially offer the Gabelli Pet Parents strategy in a NextShares format, which is an actively managed non-transparen­t ETMF structure that doesn’t offer as much availabili­ty as other structures might,” said Dan Miller, a portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds. “We’re exploring other opportunit­ies to raise assets given how compelling the investment strategy is.”

 ?? Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? A 6-month-old cocker spaniel pup snoozes in her comfy bed.
Getty Images/iStockphot­o A 6-month-old cocker spaniel pup snoozes in her comfy bed.

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