Capital Group preps another wave of active ETFs

Capital Group preps another wave of active ETFs
The four active ETFs the company is readying include international equity and emerging markets exposure.
FEB 08, 2024

Capital Group is expanding its footprint in the active ETFs business, and on Wednesday filed for its fourth wave of products.

The firm, which launched its first exchange-traded funds just under two years ago, currently has $21 billion across its line of 14 ETFs, which it notes makes it one of the fastest-growing firms in the category.

In filings this week with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Capital Group indicated plans for four additional ETFs: the Capital Group New Geography Equity, International Core Equity, Global Equity, and Conservative Equity ETFs.

“We continue to expand our suite of ETFs which are designed to sit at the core of a portfolio,” a company spokesperson said in an email. “The four new equity ETFs meet a need we’ve heard directly from advisors and the investors they serve. We filed for four new equity ETFs that will complement our existing suite and provide enhanced optionality for clients and expect to launch the new strategies this spring.”

Of the 14 ETFs Capital Group currently offers, seven are equity strategies, six are fixed income and one is multiasset.

For advisors who seek to build portfolios with the firm’s ETFs, the emerging markets category has been missing, said Todd Rosenbluth, head of research at VettaFi. The New Geography Equity ETF covers that but does not appear to be a typical emerging markets fund, he noted.

“They have a couple of internationally focused one, which have the majority of assets invested in developed markets companies,” he said. “Many advisors want an emerging markets sleeve of their portfolio for diversification purposes.”

The forthcoming New Geography Equity ETF appears to differ from strictly emerging markets strategies in that it will allow some assets to be invested in companies domiciled in countries that are not qualified as developing, but have business in emerging markets. At least 30% of assets will be invested in companies in developing countries, according to the initial prospectus.

That strategy could help address the liquidity constraints of the ETF structure while allowing the typically less-liquid emerging markets asset class to be included, Rosenbluth said.

Since Capital Group started launching ETFs in February 2022, the company has added products in waves – it brought a few more to market later in 2022 and then again last year, he noted.

“Even though the ETF industry is 30 years old … it’s really been in the last three years that actively managed ETFs have risen in popularity,” Rosenbluth said. That has been largely due to additions of products, some of which have had been so-called semitransparent ETFs, which don’t disclose exact portfolio holdings as often as fully transparent ETFs. The active ETFs from Capital Group fall into the latter category. Currently, regulatory approval for the semitransparent ETF structure only applies to U.S. equity holdings, Rosenbluth noted.

So far, demand for active ETFs has been high, with money rushing into the product category at the same time actively managed mutual funds have been hemorrhaging. The biggest mutual fund providers have been attentive to that need, having added ETFs even if they had been hesitant to do so in the past.

Among the biggest active ETF providers, Capital Group is different, in that the shop focuses on core portfolio holdings with traditional, long-term management, Rosenbluth said. The biggest active ETF provider, Dimensional Fund Advisors, has broad market exposure using small-cap valuation and quality as drivers, he noted. The biggest active ETF, the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF, at nearly $32 billion, is a covered-call ETF.

“Capital Group has [used] much more of a fundamental approach, and when you look at their holdings, there are many that are widely held within benchmarks, but they’re also choosing to not hold stocks,” Rosenbluth said, comparing that to approaches associated more with active mutual funds.

And even with $21 billion in assets, the Capital Group ETFs represent a small slice of the company’s business, less than 1 percent of its total $2.5 trillion in assets under management. While the company’s flagship American Funds mutual funds have remained a draw for investors seeking active management in a ’40 Act structure, the ETFs that Capital Group has been rolling out are distinct products, Rosenbluth noted.

Among the 14 existing ETFs, there is some overlap in portfolio management with similar mutual fund strategies, but they “are not clones,” he said.

Investors need to know the differences between actively managed ETFs

Latest News

Maryland bars advisor over charging excessive fees to clients
Maryland bars advisor over charging excessive fees to clients

Blue Anchor Capital Management and Pickett also purchased “highly aggressive and volatile” securities, according to the order.

Wave of SEC appointments signals regulatory shift with implications for financial advisors
Wave of SEC appointments signals regulatory shift with implications for financial advisors

Reshuffle provides strong indication of where the regulator's priorities now lie.

US insurers want to take a larger slice of the retirement market through the RIA channel
US insurers want to take a larger slice of the retirement market through the RIA channel

Goldman Sachs Asset Management report reveals sharpened focus on annuities.

Why DA Davidson's wealth vice chairman still follows his dad's investment advice
Why DA Davidson's wealth vice chairman still follows his dad's investment advice

Ahead of Father's Day, InvestmentNews speaks with Andrew Crowell.

401(k) participants seek advice, but few turn to financial advisors
401(k) participants seek advice, but few turn to financial advisors

Cerulli research finds nearly two-thirds of active retirement plan participants are unadvised, opening a potential engagement opportunity.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today’s choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave