Subscribe

State Street adds two currency-hedged ETFs as competition heats up

Firm follows BlackRock, Deutsche Bank and WisdomTree in rolling out currency-hedged offerings.

State Street Corp., the firm that opened the first U.S. exchange-traded fund in 1993, added two currency-hedged ETFs as it competes with similar offerings from rivals including WisdomTree Investments Inc.
The SPDR MSCI International Real Estate Currency Hedged ETF tracks stocks involved in the ownership, development and management of core properties while protecting against foreign-currency movements, the Boston-based firm said Tuesday in a statement.
The SPDR S&P International Dividend Currency Hedged ETF follows the 100 highest dividend-yielding common stocks and American depositary receipts in the S&P Global BMI Ex-U.S. Index while minimizing exposure to currency fluctuations.
State Street, whose new offerings debuted Tuesday on the NYSE Arca, follows firms such as BlackRock Inc., Deutsche Bank AG and WisdomTree in rolling out currency-hedged offerings. It started trading its first such ETF in June, tracking the performance of large stocks in the euro region. State Street, one of the largest custody banks, has been seeking to expand its asset-management business after losing ETF market share to BlackRock and Vanguard Group, the two biggest providers.
“Recent flow trends have highlighted continued investor interest in currency-hedged ETFs to help manage currency volatility,” James Ross, executive vice president and global head of SPDR Exchange Traded Funds at State Street Global Advisors, said in the statement.
State Street’s asset-management unit oversaw $2.4 trillion as of June 30, according to the statement.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Credent Wealth Management attracts two new partner-advisors

Indiana-based $2.5B RIA has added 12 firms since it was founded in 2018.

Tech rally fuels equities rally, commodities gain

But there are headwinds including US data, Japan intervention.

Treasuries rise ahead of US inflation data

Early trade Friday paused a selloff in global bonds.

Bad day for Bitcoin, net $218M withdrawn from ETFs

Hong Kong will become latest market to launch crypto ETFs.

UBS share buybacks may be at risk from regulators

The banking group may need an extra $20B buffer under new rules.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print