BlackRock seeks clearance for index ETFs that can sell short

BlackRock seeks clearance for index ETFs that can sell short
BlackRock Inc. is seeking regulatory clearance to create exchange-traded funds that can bet against stocks or bonds, as the $826 billion industry's largest player seeks new products to boost revenue.
AUG 27, 2010
BlackRock Inc. is seeking regulatory clearance to create exchange-traded funds that can bet against stocks or bonds, as the $826 billion industry’s largest player seeks new products to boost revenue. The company applied today with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for the right to engage in short sales when running ETFs that track market indexes. Until now, the New York- based company’s ETFs have been based on indexes that buy stocks rather than selling them short, a strategy that generates profits when the underlying asset declines in value. Firms like BlackRock are exhausting the market for ETFs that track traditional benchmarks, such as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, said Peter Shea, a lawyer in the New York office of Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP. The ability to engage in short sales would help such firms expand into other areas once dominated by money managers using active strategies, he said. “Sponsors of ETFs are cognizant that their growth has come at the expense of managed mutual funds,” said Shea, who works with ETFs and exchange traded commodity products. “To lock in that growth, there is a movement towards diversifying their products into strategy-based ETFs.” ETFs were originally designed to invest passively in baskets of securities designed to mirror the performance of indexes and commodities such as gold. Unlike index mutual funds, which are priced at the end of the day, the value of ETFs changes as they trade throughout the day. ETF Market Since their introduction in 1993, ETFs have taken almost half of the $1.75 trillion market for so-called passive products that mimic a stock or bond index. PowerShares Capital Management LLC, the ETF unit of Invesco Ltd., received SEC approval in 2008 for the first actively managed ETFs, which also were viewed as having the potential to undercut mutual funds. BlackRock became the largest U.S. provider of ETFs through its December acquisition of Barclays Global Investors for $15.2 billion. Its IShares brand of ETFs oversees about $395 billion, equaling a 48 percent market share, said Christine Hudacko, a BlackRock spokeswoman in San Francisco. According to the application filed today, BlackRock will offer ETFs based on indexes that invest in some assets, known as long positions, and sell others to create short positions. The firm may later create funds that are based on indexes that exclusively hold short positions, the filing said. “We may offer long-short strategies in any number of ways, one being we would track an index,” Hudacko said in an interview today. “We may also do it in other ways, such as more active-type strategies.” Short-Sale Ban Selling short is the practice of borrowing securities and selling them in the hope that their price will decrease. A short seller profits by buying back the asset at a lower price and pocketing the difference. ProShare Advisors LLC announced in July 2009 that it would open the nation’s first 130/30 ETF, based on a Credit Suisse index that uses mathematical models to forecast the best- and worst-performing stocks. The index bets against the losers through short sales equaling 30 percent of its assets and then invests the cash in its top picks, creating long positions that equal 130 percent of assets. The ProShares Credit Suisse 130/30 currently has a market capitalization of about $54 million. BlackRock will initially create a 130/30 fund based on the MSCI USA Barra Earnings Yield index, according to the company’s application. This index uses mathematical models to buy companies with “positive earnings momentum” and sell short those that have negative earnings momentum, the filing said. “In seeking to achieve its investment objective, each new fund will utilize passive indexing investment strategies,” BlackRock said in the filing. BlackRock also said that the new ETFs “anticipate using securities lending to a greater extent” than existing funds to facilitate their investment strategies.

Latest News

Merrill lands four advisor teams as May recruiting data shows firm's two-way churn
Merrill lands four advisor teams as May recruiting data shows firm's two-way churn

Merrill's latest hires span Colorado to Louisiana, even as industry-wide recruiting data suggests the firm is losing almost as many advisors as it gains.

Fund manager sues Kandeo, alleges $100 million FinSocial loss
Fund manager sues Kandeo, alleges $100 million FinSocial loss

The $36 million buy allegedly hid inflated books and a $50 million diversion.

Advisor gets $200,000 from Ameriprise in 'emotional distress' lawsuit
Advisor gets $200,000 from Ameriprise in 'emotional distress' lawsuit

“An award citing emotional distress is very unusual,” an industry executive said.

Workplace financial education linked to stronger financial habits, but participation remains low
Workplace financial education linked to stronger financial habits, but participation remains low

New EBRI research found workers who participated in employer financial education reported higher confidence, literacy and financial satisfaction.

The rise of the super advisor: How AI is redefining competitive advantage in wealth management
The rise of the super advisor: How AI is redefining competitive advantage in wealth management

Beyond operational excellence, the winning advisors of the future are the ones who can reach across multiple disciplines without discarding specialist skills.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income