Wealth Management

After a decade of low rates and abundant central bank liquidity, market conditions are going to be much more challenging over the next decade. According to Jason Xavier, Head of EMEA ETF Capital Markets at Franklin Templeton, these developments mean that a major opportunity is brewing for active fixed income ETFs. He discussed this in a post for Franklin Templeton’s Beyond Bulls & Bears publication.

 

While most fixed income ETFs are passive, the active category is exploding in response to the need of investors to express various views. In contrast to passive strategies, active ETFs utilize fundamental analysis and have greater discretions on which instruments they can select rather than be limited by an index. Active managers have greater flexibility to respond to a change in market conditions or external catalysts unlike passive managers. 

 

In the fixed income space, the ETF structure leads to increased price transparency and liquidity especially compared to traditional bond markets which are typically quite opaque. ETFs also give smaller investors access to fixed income opportunities which were typically only available to high net worth investors or institutions. 

 

In sum, Xavier believes active fixed income ETFs will continue to see growth as they are likely to outperform in more volatile conditions and will lead to increased transparency and liquidity in the fixed income market.


Finsum: Franklin Templeton’s Jason Xavier sees the active fixed income ETF category continuing to rapidly grow as it offers major benefits to investors.

A recent article from Morningstar’s John Rekenthaler discussed the tax benefits of direct indexing. Direct indexing is a strategy that involves directly buying the stocks of an index rather than through a fund. 

This confers several benefits such as allowing investors to gain the benefits of indexing while still being able to customize their portfolio to reflect their values and better fit their needs. Due to this, the category has exploded and gone from a niche offering solely for high net-worth investors to being offered by retail brokerages to customers for as little as $5,000.

However, the strategy is not necessarily for everyone, but it can be particularly useful for those with sizeable assets due to the potential tax benefits. This is because direct indexing results in capital losses in a separate account when stocks drop below their cost bases. The proceeds are then re-invested in stocks with similar profiles. 

This strategy can be particularly useful for investors with high federal and state taxes, large amounts of money invested in direct indexing vs other investments, short-term capital gains, and dealing with a volatile market environment. 


FinSum: Direct indexing comes with several benefits for clients but the most substantial one is the tax savings. However, it’s only worthwhile for a particular group of investors.

 

According to Daniil Shapiro of Cerulli Associates, there is a major product development opportunity for active fixed income ETFs in the coming years. A variety of factors are behind this segment’s growing popularity including the increasing acceptance of the ETF structure, growth of advisors who are comfortable with fixed income ETFs, and rising rates which lead to increased structural demand for fixed income products.

The report was compiled by Cerulli Associates based on polling of financial advisors and was covered by Kathie O’Donnel in an article on Pensions & Investment.

The major takeaway is that use of fixed income ETFs by advisors is rapidly growing with 70% reporting use in 2022, up from 63% in 2021. Most ETF issuers pointed to greater advisor acceptance of the product and institutional demand as drivers of the ETF market. Among issuers, 66% see fixed income as their primary focus which exceeded equities at 57%. 

Overall, this survey reveals that there continues to be opportunity for ETF issuers in the active fixed income space, given rising demand. While there are plenty of options in passive fixed income, there are relatively less active options. 


Finsum: The fixed income ETF category is rapidly expanding. Within the space, passive is saturated but plenty of opportunity remain for active managers especially given expectations of rising demand in the coming years.

 

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