("ETF INVESTOR: Investors Win As Fund Firms Fight To Cut Fees,"
published at 7:56 a.m. Wednesday, misspelled the name of Tamara
Bohlig, an executive at Charles Schwab Corp., in 13th paragraph. A
correct version follows.)
By Jonathan Burton
A DOW JONES COLUMN
A price war is slashing expenses to the bone on index-tracking
exchange-traded funds and mutual funds. And that suits Harold
Evensky fine.
"It's great," said the Coral Gables, Fla., financial adviser,
who makes those funds a mainstay in his portfolios. "My clients get
the benefit."
For a long time, traditional index funds were the vehicle of
choice for cost-conscious investors, but now the ETF marketplace
holds the lowest fees and most intense cost competition. Industry
giants including Vanguard Group, BlackRock Inc. (BLK), Charles
Schwab Corp. (SCHW) and State Street Corp. (STT) are locked in a
race to see who can cut expenses the fastest, vying for
penny-pinching investors who have become increasingly sensitive to
costs after years of subpar results.
And the fight is still in the early rounds. Further cuts are
likely among popular broad-market ETFs and funds, as well as on
products in niches such as emerging markets and industry
sectors.
Take Vanguard, which has been aggressively cutting fees. Some of
its ETFs are likely to get even cheaper in the near future, said
Joel Dickson, a senior investment strategist at the firm. One
possible candidate for a cut, he said, is the popular Vanguard
Emerging Markets ETF (VWO).
"Given that asset returns have grown faster than costs, I would
expect some further downward pressure on expenses," he said.
Bips On The Radar
On the surface at least, the battle is over basis points, or
"bips" in industry jargon--tiny slivers of a fund's expense ratio,
each equal to 1/100th of 1% of fund assets a year. It may not seem
like much, but in this market every bit helps. "Every basis point
counts," Evensky said. "In a low-return environment, fees can have
a huge impact."
So, for ETF and mutual-fund providers, slashing points is a way
to gather assets, build market share and retain customers.
In October, Vanguard cut fees for investors in many of its index
mutual funds by dropping the minimum investment required to buy its
reduced-fee Admiral class of shares. On broad stock-market index
funds, that minimum dropped to $10,000 from $100,000--and Vanguard
automatically shifted qualifying investors to the cheaper
shares.
How much did investors end up saving? Qualifying Vanguard 500
Index Fund (VFINX) investors, for instance, saw expenses fall to
seven basis points, or seven cents on every $100 invested, from 18
basis points in their previous Investor-class shares.
The ETF version of Vanguard 500, Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO),
charges even less: six basis points. The nearest-priced ETFs that
also track the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index--BlackRock's
iShares S&P 500 Index (IVV) and SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) from
State Street Global Advisors, a unit of State Street--each run nine
basis points.
Schwab, meanwhile, cut fees on six of its most popular ETFs last
year in a direct challenge to Vanguard. Schwab U.S. Broad Market
ETF (SCHB) now charges six basis points. Its closest-priced rival
is Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) at seven basis points.
"We are very competitively priced," said Tamara Bohlig, a Schwab
vice president who oversees the firm's ETF business.
Inching Downward
Those threadbare fees amount to real money, especially when
compared with the average 1.38% expense ratio of actively managed
diversified U.S. stock funds and the 0.62% average cost of all
diversified U.S. stock index funds as reported by investment
researcher Morningstar Inc. Pricing has become a game of inches,
where one provider trumpets success by charging 1/100th of 1% less
than another.
"It's a marketing race," said Matt Hougan, editor-in-chief at
IndexUniverse.com, a website that covers the ETF and index-fund
business. "Where there are big differences, investors reward the
low-cost funds."
Look at what happened to iShares Gold Trust (IAU) last year.
Gold buyers had largely favored the ETF's larger rival, SPDR Gold
Trust (GLD), even though each charged 0.40%. In late June, iShares
cut its ETF's expenses to 0.25%, and over the next five months the
fund took in around $875 million in new money, while the SPDR
product saw a net exodus of more than $1.2 billion, according to
Morningstar.
The lure of low fees also is evident in investors' response to a
pair of ETFs focused on the hot emerging-markets sector.
Vanguard Emerging Markets and iShares MSCI Emerging Markets
(EEM) both track the same index, but the Vanguard fund charges
0.27% while the iShares offering costs 0.69%. The iShares fund had
long overshadowed its Vanguard rival, but then retail investors
climbed on the emerging-markets bandwagon. In the first 11 months
of 2010, Vanguard's ETF added $18.2 billion versus inflows of $3.7
billion for the iShares fund, according to National Stock Exchange,
an electronic stock exchange that provides ETF data. At that pace,
Vanguard will soon top iShares as the biggest emerging-markets ETF
provider.
Look Beyond Bips
The firms behind SPDR Gold and iShares MSCI Emerging Markets say
those products remain attractive and competitive when all the costs
of ETF investing are considered. "When comparing the costs of any
two ETFs, expense ratios are just the starting point," said Jim
Ross, global head of exchange-traded funds at State Street Global
Advisors, SPDR Gold's sponsor.
For example, additional costs can come in the form of wide
bid-ask spreads, the difference between the prices quoted to buy
and sell a fund. And if an ETF is thinly traded, any attempt to buy
in quantity can drive up the price. Among its peers, SPDR Gold
"remains the preferred choice for a wide range of institutional and
retail investors," Ross said.
Similarly, Jennifer Grancio, head of U.S. distribution for
iShares, said that firm's emerging-markets ETF is widely traded, so
investors can buy and sell easily without compromising on price.
"If you look only at the expense ratio, it doesn't give you a full
picture of value in terms of what's under the hood."
She said officials at iShares, which oversees about $600 billion
of the $1 trillion in ETF assets, "don't plan to make broad pricing
changes in any of the products." She notes that "lower expense
ratios are not the only thing that investors want."
One other important cost consideration for individual investors
in ETFs is the commissions they face to buy and sell. ETFs
typically are not cost-effective against traditional index mutual
funds if you make monthly or other frequent purchases, unless your
broker offers free trades. Some ETF providers, in fact, are taking
that step; Schwab, TD Ameritrade, Vanguard and Fidelity all offer
some form of commission-free ETF trading.
Still, even if fees are only a partial way to evaluate one of
these investments, they're likely to get even more attention with
all the price cutting that's going on--especially if expenses on
some broad-market ETFs start falling to zero.
It's a possibility. Running an ETF isn't as expensive as a
mutual fund to begin with, mostly because the bill for shareholder
servicing and other administrative tasks is much lower. Already,
Deutsche Bank's db x-trackers Euro Stoxx 50 ETF, traded in Europe,
charges investors a grand total of nothing. Instead, the bank
collects fee income on the ETF assets by lending portfolio
securities to short sellers and other borrowers. (The comparable
U.S.-listed SPDR Euro Stoxx 50 ETF (FEZ) costs 0.29%.)
"You could see ETFs with zero expense ratios," said
IndexUniverse's Hougan. "As assets go up, prices will come down. I
don't know if it matters if it's six basis points or zero--you're
starting to shave pennies--but it's fun to watch."
Scott Burns, Morningstar's director of ETF research, agrees.
"Things will get cheaper, both in terms of transaction costs and
fees," he said.
The broad-market indexes reflect the first wave of fee cuts, he
said, adding, "It's only a matter of time before it proliferates to
international and sector and fixed-income funds."
In particular, Vanguard's aggressive price cutting may help
drive the industry toward the zero point. The firm can absorb those
cuts because it's uniquely structured to operate its funds at cost.
Vanguard is essentially run as a cooperative, where profits go
directly into the fund or ETF instead of to the management
company.
"With Vanguard setting the low-cost standard, the rest of the
industry will either have to fall in line or innovate to stay
competitive," said Dan Wiener, editor of the Independent Adviser
for Vanguard Investors newsletter.
Market observers think that bodes well for buyers. "There are
some good competitive battles," said Tom Lydon, editor of
ETFTrends.com. "Who wins? The individual investor."
(Jonathan Burton is MarketWatch's investments editor, based in
San Francisco. He can be reached at 415-439-6400 or by email at
AskNewswires@dowjones.com.)