Now that
SEC has cleared the way for active ETFs that use derivatives, how will the industry change?
Wall Street Journal reporter Joe Light
expects to see a "blossoming" in the active ETF field, but thinks that asset managers may use this rule change to pump up the risk in their portfolios.
Earlier this month, SEC investment management head
Norm Champ announced that the agency is lifting the nearly three-year moratorium on approving active ETFs that use derivatives, a common practice for active ETF managers. Light writes that firms including
OppenheimerFunds and
Vanguard wrote letters to the agency urging it to remove this restriction on new products.
The
WSJ thinks this regulatory change could finally spur the active ETF business to the growth that analysts have long expected to see. And Morningstar analyst
Robert Goldsborough feels the same.
"This definitely gives a money manager more flexibility and more options in shaping a portfolio," Goldsborough told the
WSJ. "At the margin, it removes an impediment that some money managers might have had that prevented them from moving ahead."
The full
Wall Street Journal piece is
here 
Edited by:
Chris Cumming
Stay ahead of the news ... Sign up for our email alerts now
CLICK HERE