The never-ending debate between proponents of active and passive investing continues Wednesday in the pages of the
Wall Street Journal's latest "Investing in Funds" special report, even as the paper also takes another look at one of the newest frontiers in active investing: exchange-traded funds.
Fidelity equity group president
Brian Hogan,
FRC research analyst
Christopher Yeomans,
Hammond Associates senior consultant
Bill Thatcher,
Invesco U.S. growth investing chief investment officer
Juliet Ellis,
MFS Diversified Income Fund co-head
Jim Swanson,
Morningstar research vice president
John Rekenthaler,
Russell Investments client investment strategies CIO
Erik Ristuben and
Vanguard investment strategy group chief
Francis Kinniry all weigh in for Annelena Lobb's
article on the latest comparisons between active and passive mutual funds.
Meanwhile, the WSJ's Larry Light
ponders whether or not "stock-picking managers [will] be the next big thing for ETFs" and highlights the niche's existing players, including:
BlackRock's
iShares,
Grail Advisors,
HS Dent,
Invesco's
PowerShares and
Pimco. (He also points to fund firms interested in getting into the active ETF game, including
John Hancock,
Putnam,
T. Rowe Price and
Vanguard.)
Don Putnam, managing partner of Grail Advisors affiliate
Grail Partners,
PowerShares senior vice president of portfolio strategy
Ed McRedmond,
IndexUniverse.com editor
Matt Hougan and several advisors offer their thoughts on actively-managed ETFs. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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