Mint Mumbai

Billions flood active ETFs in hunt for cheap developing stocks

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As investors scour the globe for undervalue­d stocks, one increasing­ly popular destinatio­n is actively managed exchange-traded funds that focus on emerging markets.

In the $348 billion market for ETFs that invest in developing-nation assets, the holdings of only about 5% of funds are actively managed—rather than pinned directly to an underlying index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. But those actively managed funds have lured in more than a third of new cash that’s flowed into the asset class over the past year and more than 50% in the past month.

“If ever there was a compelling case for a more systematic approach to active management, it’s now,” said Donald Calcagni, chief investment officer of Mercer Advisors Investment Management and a buyer of active emerging-market ETFs. “Look at all the dislocatio­ns that are happening globally, at valuations, at how concentrat­ed markets have become.”

The reasons for the shift towards emerging-market shares are plenty. Developing­nation stocks are trading at a discount of about 43% compared to their peers in the US, just shy of the biggest valuation gap on record, data compiled by show.

That chasm is a signal to some on Wall Street—including those with very few overseas investment­s—that developing-nation stocks are undervalue­d, offering an ideal moment to load up on the assets.

Investors have been pouring cash into ETFs that wager on emerging assets in a bid to take advantage of lower fees and avoid the logistics of cross-border trading, reigniting the debate over whether active strategies can offer stronger returns versus passive ones beholden to a benchmark.

That momentum is reigniting the debate over whether investors can eke out stronger returns in nimble, active strategies compared with passive ones that are beholden to a benchmark.

Patrick Maynor, head of equities and portfolio manager at Trusted Capital Group, made his first foray into emergingma­rket funds by buying shares in the Avantis Emerging Markets Equity ETF, or AVEM, in April 2023. The ETF has posted a total return of nearly 13% since then, beating its benchmark by 3 percentage points.

It was a decision that hinged on the potential for value hidden in developing equity markets. Not only do the stocks trade at far cheaper prices than matureecon­omy peers, he said, but they also offer a way to diversify his firm’s $7 billion of assets under management. Maynor currently targets an allocation of 15% of his global equity strategy portfolio to AVEM, with the ability to “tactically increase over time”.

“Knowing my limitation­s on EM investing, it makes sense to partner with someone who does have expertise in that area,” he said. “I just know how hard it is investing in that landscape, and it’s certainly an investment space where you do need to have that activetype management.”

More than 95% of cash destined for actively managed EM ETFs in the past year has gone into strategies managed by Avantis Investors, a $40 billion investment offering from global asset manager American Century Investment­s, and Dimensiona­l Fund Advisors, according to data.

Investors have been pouring cash into ETFs that wager on EM assets to take advantage of lower fees, etc.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Developing-nation stocks are trading at a discount of about 43% compared with US peers, signalling undervalua­tion.
BLOOMBERG Developing-nation stocks are trading at a discount of about 43% compared with US peers, signalling undervalua­tion.

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