An exciting new player stepped up to the ETF arena this week: Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates. State Street Global Advisors plans to create the SPDR Bridgewater All Weather ETF, according to a Tuesday regulatory filing. The fund will be sub-advised by Bridgewater, which will provide a daily model portfolio specific to this product. There’s a few layers of intrigue to this: - Bridgewater wants to launch an ETF
- Bridgewater wants to launch an ETF now, when risk-parity strategies are struggling
- State Street continues to land high-profile partnerships (the most recent being its joint filing with Apollo for a private-credit ETF)
At this stage of the industry’s maturation — the US market commands $10.4 trillion in assets across nearly 4,000 listed funds — one gets the feeling that newcomers are looking to ETFs now because they’re being pushed to do so, rather than embracing the wrapper. The discussions underway at Baron Capital suggest as much. “Plans to launch now? No. Are we studying it? Yes,” Michael Baron, co-president and portfolio manager, said at last week’s Baron Capital’s annual investment conference in response to an audience question. “The active ETF structure is interesting. There are benefits to an active ETF whether it be liquid, transparent, tax, operational cost.” Baron Capital hasn’t been immune to the migration toward ETFs, with its assets declining more than 20% from a peak of some $59 billion in late 2021. Still, it isn’t fully sold on launching one of its own — and is still keeping an open mind toward other fund structures as well. “I think everybody’s crazed about ETFs, but those aren’t necessarily the only instruments,” said Rachel Stern, Baron’s chief operating officer. It’s abundantly clear that’s where the money is going: the ETF vehicle’s low fees, tax advantages and liquidity have drawn trillions away from mutual funds over the past decade. But a potential reason for reticence: those rock-bottom fees make the economics tough for issuers — hence BlackRock’s push into privates. |