ETFs gain momentum in institutional market

Institutional use of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) is climbing as American institutional investors adopt ETFs both as an everyday tool in routine portfolio functions and as a means of obtaining long-term strategic investment exposures.

The Greenwich Associates study sponsored by BlackRock, ETFs: An Evolving Toolset for U.S. Institutions, reveals a steady increase in ETFs, and several important developments suggest ETFs are now being integrated into institutional investors’ standard toolsets.

  • The share of U.S. institutions using ETFs has increased in each of the past five years and is expected to rise in the coming year.
  • Nearly half of institutional ETF users now allocate more than 10% of total assets to ETFs.
  • The share of institutional users employing ETFs in domestic fixed income increased to two-thirds in 2014 from just 55% in 2013. Another 35% of institutions overall are utilizing ETFs for international fixed income access, up from 29% last year. Forty percent of the institutional ETF users employ the vehicles in commodities, and 45% are using ETFs in real estate investment trusts.
  • The share of institutions reporting average holding periods of two years or longer jumped to 49% in 2014 from 36% in 2013.
  • In 2014, approximately 80% of participating institutions using ETFs are employing them as a means of obtaining core portfolio exposures—making it the most common ETF application among study participants. That share is up from 74% using ETFs for this task in 2013.

As recently as 2011, fewer than 15% of U.S. institutions were using ETFs in their portfolios. That share climbed to 18% in 2012 and reached 21% in 2013. Those overall averages understate the extent to which ETFs are used by certain types of investors. For example, 40% of U.S. endowments employ ETFs in their portfolios, as do one-third of the largest public DB pension funds (those with at least US$5 billion in AUM) and roughly 25% of the largest corporate DB funds.

Although ETFs represent a small percentage of total U.S. institutional assets, some institutions have begun building sizable ETF allocations. Forty-six percent of institutional ETF users participating in the Greenwich Associates 2014 U.S. Exchange-Traded Funds Study allocate 10% or more of their total assets to ETFs, with almost three in 10 reporting ETF allocations from 10% to 25% and nearly one in five institutions making even greater allocations.

The results of the study suggest ETFs will continue to gain momentum in the coming year. Among institutions currently employing ETFs in their portfolios, nearly half say they expect to expand use in the next year. One-third of the institutions in the 2014 study expect to grow allocations by 1% to 10%, while nearly 15% plan to increase by 10% or more.

“What we’re seeing is a broadening of ETF use,” says Greenwich Associates consultant Andrew McCollum. “Institutions are finding that ETFs are an effective tool for implementing their portfolio strategies and obtaining core exposures, while at the same time they are continuing their use for the tactical applications in which many investors were first introduced to ETFs.”

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