ETF Shocker: Russell to Close 25 Funds - ETF News And Commentary
20 August 2012 - 10:01PM
Zacks
Although the ETF industry continues to expand at a rapid pace,
we have seen a great deal of closures in the past few weeks.
Socttrade abandoned its ETF lineup by closing FocusShares, while
Direxion and IndexIQ both announced that a few of their funds were
shutting down as well.
This trend is now apparently continuing with Russell Investments
and their ETF lineup which is facing the axe too. The company
recently announced that it would ‘review’ its ETF business and has
apparently decided to shutter 25 of their 26 funds, closing every
index-based product while keeping alive the Russell Equity
ETF (ONEF).
The decision comes as somewhat of a shock to many in the
industry, although it should be noted that Russell has broadly been
unable to duplicate its indexing success with its assets under
management system. The company’s indexes were the basis for funds
that had over $80 billion in assets and undoubtedly Russell wanted
a piece of this action for their own bottom line (see Six Easy Ways
to Target Low Volatility Stocks with ETFs).
However, this has proven to be more difficult for Russell than
they initially thought as their entire lineup garnered just over
$310 million in assets while only seven funds managed to hit even
then $10 million mark for AUM.
Yet, despite this overall poor showing, a few funds did manage
to see decent inflows in their short lifetimes. The Russell
100 Low Volatility ETF (LVOL) had over $65 million in
assets while the Russell Equity Income ETF (EQIN)
managed to cross the $50 million mark as well.
Meanwhile, the actively managed Russell Equity ETF (ONEF) was
actually one of the three least popular funds for the company and
was merely just a carryover for the firm when it bought ETF issuer
U.S. One a few years back. Yet it appears as though, despite the
rough road that many active ETFs have had in accumulating assets,
that Russell is throwing its weight behind the active management
wave in the industry (see Three Overlooked Active ETFs).
The impacted funds will be closed to new investment on October
9th and then delisted on October 16th. Full
liquidation of the funds is intended to be completed about a week
later, on October 24th so in between those two dates no
activity will take place, besides the winding down of the
investment, before the final distribution is made to investors (see
more in the Zacks ETF Center).
“Recognizing the role that ETFs can play in an investment
portfolio, Russell will continue to focus on offering solutions in
the actively-managed, asset allocated ETF space as part of its core
capability in investment strategy implementation as well as in the
passive ETF space through its index licensing business” wrote the
company in a recent press release (you can see the full list of the
funds closing on the link as well). “Russell remains the underlying
index provider for many ETFs around the world, which have more than
$80 billion in assets under management, and will continue its
strong partnership with all of its ETF sponsor clients.”
Personally, I am very surprised that Russell didn’t try to sell
off at least a few of its funds that had a decent amount of assets
to another ETF firm. Furthermore, the tilt towards active
management, and a fund that has never really caught on in over two
years on the market, is strange to say the least.
Many active funds have had great trouble amassing a meaningful
amount of assets and ONEF has been no exception. Still, it appears
as though this is where the ETF industry is heading, as more firms
are putting out more active ETFs while shunning some passive
management techniques in today’s market environment (read
Huntington Launches Its First ETF).
Despite the many negatives of this situation and the puzzling
business decision, it at least shows that ETF issuers are now not
quite as afraid to close down underperforming funds. Some
consolidation is still undoubtedly needed in the space, so this
trend in the near term could go a long way in terms of making the
ETF industry that much healthier for the long term even though this
is clearly a short-term setback for the space.
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RUSL-EQ INCOME (EQIN): ETF Research Reports
RUSL-1K LO VOLA (LVOL): ETF Research Reports
RUSSELL EQT ETF (ONEF): ETF Research Reports
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