ETFs and similar products are all about price ... or are they?
The latest salvo in the ETF price war was
fired yesterday by State Street Global Advisors (
SSgA [
profile]), which revealed lower management fees for 41 of its
SPDR ETFs shortly after Vanguard
overtook SSgA to win the mantle of second-biggest ETF provider in the U.S.
Barron's described SSgA's move as part of a continued "march downhill" for ETF fees.
Reuters framed the news by saying ETF "price competition heats up," and
InvestmentNews' headline
reads that SSgA "slashes ETF prices" while "facing historic redemptions".
SSgA, Vanguard, and BlackRock's iShares (the biggest ETF provider) all focus on indexed ETFs, and for the vast majority of the more than 800 mutual fund shops out there, indexing is not a game they can hope to achieve scale at. So if the ETF business is all about price cuts and scale, should most fundsters pay any attention?
Yet passive isn't the only way into the exchange-traded world. Pimco launched an ETF version of its giant Total Return Fund, and last May
Jim Ross and his team at SSgA
teamed up with another star bond PM, Jeff Gundlach of DoubleLine.
The most recent variation on active managers' efforts in the exchange-traded space is
Eaton Vance's [
profile] "exchange-traded managed funds",
powered by the fund shop's
Navigate Fund Solutions subsidiary under the
NextShares brand. ETMFs offer active managers the ability to sell their wares in a structure that allows for real-time trading without the daily portfolio holdings disclosures that ETFs require. The vision is to license the ETMF structure to other active shops, and last month Navigate president
Stephen Clarke won his first ETMF convert, American Beacon.
Yesterday, one of the old school star-powered mutual fund shops,
Mario Gabelli's Gamco [
profile],
unveiled plans to launch its own NextShares ETMF family.
Barron's and
Reuters both picked up on the news.
Active shops like American Beacon and Gamco, especially those driven by star PMs like Gabelli, aren't getting into exchange-trade products to compete on price. If they want in, it's because they think they can have their exchange-traded cake and investors will still eat their active management prices. Fund industry consultant Neil Bathon once said that ETFs are just another share class of mutual fund. If that's true, then there may be space for many other active shops to take a plunge similar to American Beacon's, Eaton Vance's, and Gamco's. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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