Fund Management
Weaker Markets Hit ETF, ETP Assets In 2018

Assets under management in these index-tracking entities, which have boomed over recent years, unsurprisingly felt a chill at the end of last year as markets fell across the board.
Exchange traded funds and products weren’t able to withstand
gravity at the end of last year, as falling equities dragged
total assets under management down in December, new figures
showed. Even so, money continued to flow into these low-cost
entities.
Total assets invested in the global ETF and ETP industry fell
5.28 per cent by the end of December, from $5.06 trillion at the
end of November, to $4.79 trillion, ETFGI, a research business
tracking the sector, said.
Across the sector, these entities gathered net inflows of $76.24
billion during December. For the whole of last year, inflows were
$516 billion, below the $654 billion figure in 2017.
“The end of 2018 saw the trend in developed markets reverse, and
although arguably predictable, the severity left many pundits
scratching their heads. This end of year stress has widely been
attributed to the disruption caused by trade disputes feeding
into economic data, and the view policy makers are not going to
be quite as accommodating as initially expected,” Deborah Fuhr,
managing partner and founder of ETFGI, said.
AT the end of last year there were a total of 7,657 ETFs/ETPs,
with 14,993 listings.
ETFs are typically open-ended, index-based funds, with active
ETFs and can be 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 they trade and settle but do not use an open-end
fund structure.