ETF Fee War Hits ESG, Active Mgmt

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[Editor’s Note: The following originally appeared on FactSet.com. Elisabeth Kashner is director of ETF research and analytics for FactSet.]

 

The top ETF story of 2019 isn’t nontransparent active, ESG or marijuana. It’s not commission-free trading or the Schwab-TD tie-up.

It’s the relentless demand for super-low-cost ETFs. Investor appetite for ever-cheaper ETFs is driving flows and shaping asset growth. Investors are demanding low-cost funds across every strategy group in equity, fixed income and even commodities. That includes actively managed ETFs, ESG and smart beta. Asset managers are adapting, but are they moving fast enough? Those currently queuing to enter the ETF business should pay close attention to ETF pricing, especially in ESG and active management.

 

Fee Cuts
Fee compression saves investors money but creates challenges for fund issuers. Compression came by way of fee cuts and via asset transfer to lower-cost products.

2019 fee cuts returned $95 million to investors over the course of the year. Fee cuts outnumbered hikes by a factor of seven. ETF issuers dropped expenses for funds containing 31.5% of assets over the course of 2019. Fee hikes were scarce, covering just 4.1% of ETF assets.

New investors and those who sold expensive ETFs in favor of cheaper alternatives benefited too, as their overall costs dropped. A look at the top ETFs by net flows tells the story. Six of the top 10 ETFs saw a fee drop this past year.

 

Net Flows: Top 10 ETFs Of 2019

Name

2019 Flows ($B)

Cost 2018

Cost 2019

Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF

15.68

0.04%

0.03%

Vanguard S&P 500 ETF

12.80

0.04%

0.03%

iShares Edge MSCI Min Vol U.S.A. ETF

12.66

0.15%

0.15%

iShares Core MSCI EAFE ETF

11.38

0.08%

0.07%

Vanguard Total International Bond ETF

11.09

0.11%

0.09%

Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF

9.72

0.05%

0.04%

iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF

9.02

0.05%

0.05%

iShares Core S&P 500 ETF

9.00

0.04%

0.04%

iShares MBS ETF

8.30

0.09%

0.06%

iShares U.S. Treasury Bond ETF

8.28

0.15%

0.15%

Source: FactSet

 

All but two of the top-flows ETFs ended 2019 with expense ratios at 0.10% or lower. Half of them charged 0.05% or less. There’s not much room below that.

 

Flows Follow Fees
By the end of 2019, the asset-weighted average annual expense ratio for U.S.-listed ETFs was down to 0.20% vs. 0.21% one year prior, and 0.23% in December 2017. At year-end asset levels, that translates to $600 million of investor savings this year.

ETF expense ratios dropped even lower in equity and fixed income funds, as illustrated in the chart below.