Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

ETFS making their mark

- ANTHONY KEANE

EXCHANGE traded funds are attracting hundreds of millions of dollars of new investment money each week despite shaky global financial markets.

However, ETF returns have differed dramatical­ly in performanc­e over the past year – reflecting global trends such as booming energy prices, commodity shortages, tech stock troubles and collapsing cryptocurr­ency prices.

The latest data from ETF Securities shows $1.63bn of inflows into the sector in the past four weeks, compared with $641m of outflows, while online investment group Stockspot says Australia’s ETF market has doubled in size in two years to $135bn.

“We expect the growth to continue as Australian­s are rapidly embracing the benefits of low-cost passive investing, with more money coming out of actively managed funds into the lower cost, index tracking funds,” said Stockspot senior manager of investment­s and business initiative­s Marc Jocum.

ETFS spread investors’ money across all stocks in an index – such as the ASX200 or the US’S S&P500 – to provide broad diversific­ation, but have increasing­ly expanded into thematic or sector-specific products.

“ETFS have grown four times faster than the broader Australian wealth management market, showing that ETFS are capturing a growing share of investable assets in Australia,” Mr Jocum said.

Catapult Wealth director Tony Catt said his firm used ETFS for clients’ internatio­nal investment­s “for diversific­ation, simplicity and liquidity”.

He expected the sector to continue growing through the current volatility in financial markets.

Mr Catt said volatility often prompted investors to become more conservati­ve “and go back to principles that have never been wrong – diversific­ation and playing a bit safer”.

However, ETFS can also be risky and bite investors hard.

An analysis by Stockspot of the winners and losers of the past 12 months shows total returns from some technology and Asia-focused ETFS have been between negative-20 and negative-40 per cent.

Cryptocurr­ency- focused ETFS are newcomers and have been caught in the recent crypto downturn.

One fund (CRYP) attracted huge interest when it launched in November, but its unit price has dropped from $11 to just above $3.

New crypto funds launched this month and their trading volumes are less than 10 per cent of CRYP’S.

Other ETFS have boomed in the past year, especially those focused on energy, resources, agricultur­e, cybersecur­ity and India.

“Inflationa­ry pressures caused by loose monetary policy, the war in Ukraine and global supply chain issues have led to rising commodity prices such as oil, nickel and agricultur­al goods like wheat,” Mr Jocum said.

Stockspot holds broad index-based ETFS, but investor interest has driven the launch of thematic ETFS with quirky stock codes such as ACDC (battery tech), ROBO (AI and robotics) and CURE (biotech companies).

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