Asset Management
ETFs Beat Hedge Funds - Data

Data suggests that low-cost exchange-traded funds and products mostly beat hedge funds for inflows and assets last year.
The world’s exchange-traded fund and products sector holds more
assets than hedge funds, demonstrating how index-tracking
vehicles that typically charge low fees have won over investors,
even if markets have turned more challenging recently.
Assets invested in ETFs and ETPs listed globally amounted to
$4.82 trillion at the end of Q4 2018, following net inflows of
$164.84 billion and market moves during the period. Total AuM
fell by 0.49 per cent over the year. Meanwhile, hedge funds saw
assets fall to $3.11 trillion, with net outflows of $22.5 billion
during the quarter, with total AuM down by 3.24 per cent,
according to ETFGI, the
research firm.
There was $4.82 trillion invested in 7,620 ETFs/ETPs listed
globally at the end of 2018, the report showed. (ETFs are
typically open-ended, index-based funds bought and sold like
ordinary shares on a stock exchange and offer broad exposure
across developed, emerging and frontier markets, equities, fixed
income and commodities. Exchange-traded products are products
that have similarities to ETFs in the way that they trade and
settle, but do not use an open-end fund structure.)
The HFRI Fund weighted composite index, produced by Hedge Fund
Research, fell by 5.76 per cent in Q4 2018 compared with a fall
of 13.52 per cent of the S&P 500 index (w/dividends), as many
hedge funds strategies positioned for a market correction finally
bore fruit. Despite this, investors still ploughed money into
passive funds, with ETFs/ETPs attracting $164.84 billion in the
final three months of last year.
The figures highlight debate on whether index-tracking funds,
which have boomed on the back of a bull market in equities
lasting a decade, will continue to do so if markets stall. Hedge
funds, which are typically more expensive, have struggled in
recent years, losing some of their vaunted reputation for
generating returns in all conditions.
Gold
Separately, the World Gold Council, an industry group association
representing the gold sector, said holdings of gold-backed ETFs
and similar products rose in January by 72 tonnes to 2,513
tonnes, equivalent to $3.1 billion in inflows, marking the fourth
consecutive month of net inflows.