Fund Management
Exchange Traded Funds, Products Log Bumper Inflows - Data

This year has seen a big improvement in the amount of net new money flowing into these index-tracking funds and products, an overall sign of improved investor sentiment.
The world’s industry of exchange traded funds and products
gathered net inflows of $116.21 billion during October, bringing
the year-to-date haul to $1.04 trillion, almost double the
$538.26 billion gathered at this point last year, industry
figures showed.
Assets invested in the global ETFs/ETPs industry have expanded by
5 per cent from $9.50 trillion at the end of September 2021
reaching $9.98 trillion at the end of October, figures from ETFGI
show.
One of the great structural shifts in investment behaviour over
recent years has been its embrace of index-tracking entities such
as ETFs, encouraged by investor disenchantment with conventional
actively managed funds that often did little more than hug a
benchmark. The bull market in stocks after the 2008 financial
crash, fuelled by central bank monetary policy, also meant that
“beta” funds were able to ride the upward escalator at low cost,
becoming popular.
Equity ETFs and ETPs listed globally gathered a record $716.48
billion in year-to-date net inflows for 2021.
ETFs are typically open-ended, index-based funds. Active ETFs can
be bought and sold like ordinary shares on a stock exchange; they
offer broad exposure across developed, emerging and frontier
markets, equities, fixed income and commodities. Exchange traded
products are products which are similar to ETFs in the way in
which they trade and settle, but they do not use an open-end fund
structure.