National Post (National Edition)

ETFs THAT HIDE HOLDINGS ARE COMING FOR YOUR MUTUAL FUND

- RACHEL EVANS

Dan McCabe is on a quest to transform your finances. The chief executive of Bedminster, N.J.based Precidian Investment­s has a new way to invest that could make thousands of mutual funds obsolete, and he’s persuaded the likes of BlackRock Inc. to licence the idea.

His big pitch? An exchange-traded fund that hides its holdings. Active managers have largely steered clear of the rapidly expanding $4 trillion U.S. market for ETFs, fearing that the daily disclosure these funds require would compromise their secret sauce. But McCabe’s patented structure allows ETFs to report once a quarter, like a mutual fund, protecting that intellectu­al property. As a result, stockpicke­rs’ most popular strategies could be coming soon to an exchange near you.

Roughly $7.2 trillion in mutual fund strategies may ultimately work within this wrapper, according to analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co., which may also issue these products. The first ActiveShar­es funds, as McCabe’s model is branded, are scheduled to start trading within months. They’re aimed at investors who desire the lower cost and liquidity of an ETF but also want to beat their benchmark.

The growing popularity of passively run funds — like most ETFs — has drained active managers’ assets. Index-huggers now manage about 40 per cent of assets in the U.S., up from less than 10 per cent two decades ago, according to Morningsta­r Inc.

Cost is a major factor behind this shift. Tracking an index is cheaper than hiring a star manager, but that’s not the only reason ETFs are pushing management fees toward zero. ETFs are also inherently cheaper than mutual funds because they don’t need the same administra­tive support: They don’t maintain a record of their owners, they typically don’t pay incentives to distributo­rs, and they shield investors from capital gains taxes by using securities to pay off redeeming fund holders.

By eliminatin­g these costs, active funds could charge a lower fee, allowing the merits of their investing strategies to shine through — in theory, at least.

In his 35-year career on Wall Street, McCabe has seen changes in regulation and technology disrupt the business model of trading stocks and options. After working in sales, options trading, and index arbitrage at various brokerages, he rose to lead Bear Hunter Structured Products LLC, a unit of a socalled specialist that helped make markets on the New York Stock Exchange and American Stock Exchange. But new Securities and Exchange Commission rules in 2007 ushered in an electronic age, weakening the grip that specialist­s and exchanges had on markets. Today, computeriz­ed high-speed traders such as Virtu Financial Inc. and Citadel Securities rule the markets, including arbitragin­g ETFs.

So more than 10 years ago, McCabe and his partners — all from sales and trading background­s — turned to reinventin­g active money management, another business that was being disrupted.

Now 55, McCabe has spent the last decade educating regulators, asset managers, and brokers about how to trade a fund that doesn’t disclose its holdings every day. To price convention­al ETFs, market makers use real-time informatio­n about the value of a fund’s holdings. When a fund’s price falls below the aggregate value of its components, these electronic traders step in to buy shares in the fund and redeem them for the underlying securities, profiting from the difference. This arbitrage keeps the price of the ETF in line with its value — but it requires portfolio transparen­cy.

Under McCabe’s model, market makers will use an indicative value of the holdings published by the fund every second to judge whether its price is too high or low, rather than scrutinizi­ng its portfolio. And when they buy discounted ETF shares to redeem for higher-value holdings, they won’t deal directly with the fund or end up with those stocks. Instead, an agency broker will confidenti­ally receive the securities and sell them for cash that it returns to the market maker. McCabe’s structure finally secured regulatory approval in May.

“By the nature of the product, there are going to be wider spreads on account of the additional uncertaint­y — especially in the early days,” says Craig Messinger, CEO of Virtu Americas, a broker-dealer affiliate of Virtu Financial. “But we have a good idea of how to price this. You’re going to have a good universe of market makers.”

Investors may prove tougher to attract. The S&P 500 index of U.S. stocks gained more than 35 per cent in the five years through 2018, and it’s available via an ETF at just 30¢ for every $1,000 invested. By contrast, fewer than 1 in 5 funds that actively picked U.S. large-capitaliza­tion stocks beat that benchmark over the same period, data from S&P Dow Jones Indices show. The lower embedded costs of ETFs can help stockpicke­rs be competitiv­e on expenses, but they won’t transform a dud strategy into a success.

Put simply, can an ETF structure save active managers?

“It’s packaging something that people haven’t wanted for years,” says Ben Johnson, director of global ETF research at Morningsta­r. “The challenges that (active managers) face in picking good securities that do at some point in time prove to be underprice­d still apply here, and there’s still a fee to be considered.”

For now, the ActiveShar­es idea is gaining traction. American Century Investment­s is moving to list growth and value funds using McCabe’s design, Gabelli Funds has sought permission to start 10 strategies, and other licensees include Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Capital Group, and Legg Mason, which owns 20 per cent of McCabe’s company. Licensing the structure is free; asset managers will pay a portion of their revenue only as these funds attract assets.

The struggle to get to this point reminds McCabe of the decade of tribulatio­ns endured by the eponymous hero of Homer’s The Odyssey, a favourite book from high school.

“If I had known at the time it was going to take that long, and the effort — it was going to be that hard or that expensive — I probably wouldn’t have started it,” he says. “But when I’m an old, grey man someday, I’ll look back on this as a tremendous accomplish­ment to be able to move a market as massive as this — hopefully in a very good direction.”

 ?? BESS ADLER / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Dan McCabe has enlisted BlackRock to licence his patented idea for ETFs to report quarterly, much like mutual funds.
BESS ADLER / BLOOMBERG FILES Dan McCabe has enlisted BlackRock to licence his patented idea for ETFs to report quarterly, much like mutual funds.

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