ETF startup
IndexIQ, Inc. is the latest advisor in the exchange-traded fund game to lock up a star from academia. The
Wall Street Journal's Fund Track column reports that IndexIQ lassoed Yale professor
Frank J. Fabozzi as a senior advisor. The signing takes a page from the playbook of rivals, including WisdomTree which signed
Jeremy Siegel, a professor at U. Penn's Wharton School.
Last week
Barclays Global Investors also brought Princeton Prof
Burton Malkiel to a media conference where he endorsed ETFs before touting the merits of investing in China (ironically, the bulk of the
Fund Track reports on closed end funds investing in China and the liklihood that the Chinese stock market is overvalued).
Malkiel, a longtime Vanguard board member and an early proponent of indexing, also engaged in some good-humored joshing of Vanguard founder during the press briefing during which he acknowledge the rift between the two father of indexing that has arisen over the role of ETFs versus mutual funds. Noting that he had reviewed Bogle's last book for the New York Times, Malkiel doubted that Bogle would review his when it comes out. Malkiel is working on a book covering investing in China, called "From Wall Street to the Great Wall."
At IndexIQ, Fabozzi is expected to help the firm develop a series of if fixed-income products. The Yalie is well-known as an expert in bond investing and risk management. He is the editor of the
Journal of Portfolio Management. He has also lent his name to asset management conferences aimed at institutional investors.
Firms in the increasingly crowded ETF market are turning to academics in a bid to differentiate what are widely viewed as commodity products sold on price. Top academics carry a special weight with investors who are the primary users of these products. More than half of ETF trading is done by institutional investors and hedge funds. Much of the retail volume comes from financial advisors who rely on indexing for their clients while they provided other services, such as asset allocation and financial planning.
Few new products are able to grab significant market share in a space that is no dominated by two players: Barclays; iShares and State Street Global Investors.
* * *
ETF Market Share Leaders
|
Issuer
|
No. ETFs
|
ETF AUM $Bil
|
Share %
|
Barclays
|
136
|
$291.9
|
59.0%
|
State Street
|
59
|
103.3
|
20.9
|
Vanguard
|
32
|
34.7
|
7.0
|
PowerShares#
|
75
|
28.1
|
5.7
|
World Gold Trust Services
|
1
|
9.9
|
2.0
|
BoNY/Merrill (HOLDRs)
|
17
|
7.2
|
1.5
|
Rydex
|
25
|
6.0
|
1.2
|
ProShares
|
52
|
5.0
|
1.0
|
Wisdom Tree
|
36
|
3.9
|
0.8
|
DB Commodity Svs
|
11
|
1.8
|
0.4
|
Victoria Bay
|
2
|
0.9
|
0.2
|
Van Eck
|
5
|
0.8
|
0.2
|
Claymore
|
21
|
0.6
|
0.1
|
First Trust
|
31
|
0.4
|
0.1
|
Fidelity
|
1
|
0.1
|
0.0
|
XShares Advisors
|
17
|
0.1
|
0.0
|
Ziegler Capital
|
1
|
NM
|
0.0
|
# Owned by Invesco
Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research
|
|
 
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