The following research was contributed to by Christine Short, VP of Research at Wall Street Horizon.
- Amid a lack of Wall Street dealmaking this year, ETF issuers have been busy crafting new strategies
- Our data show that 2024 paces to be a banner year for new US ETFs
- Option ETFs, leveraged single-stock funds, and crypto are all big themes – with a newcomer set to grab the headlines
Quick: Name that last major IPO to capture the intrigue of the investment public.
Next: What’s the biggest M&A deal you can recall? And when was the last round of stock splits to signal to Wall Street that executives were optimistic about rising stock prices ahead?
Adjusting to the New Normal
If you have to shake a few cobwebs loose to come up with the answers, you’re not alone. Wall Street Horizon data show that there has been a relative dearth of activity across a range of corporate actions, recent split announcements from Walmart (WMT), Chipotle (CMG), and NVIDIA (NVDA) notwithstanding.
The reason? While it might require a deep dive, it’s hard to ignore the elephant in the room. The Federal Reserve’s historic rate-hiking campaign that began shortly after one of the most bubbly periods in US market history has possibly taken its toll on capital-market activity.
2024: An ETF Boom
But leave it to Wall Street to produce new tools to draw in investors and traders alike. With almost five months of data now in the books, our team noticed that the count of total new US ETFs is tracking at materially higher levels this year compared to 2023.
A Rise in US ETFs Coming to Market in 2024
Investors Have ‘Options’ and Are Getting Active
What could be responsible for a bulk of the jump is the meteoric rise in popularity of income-focused funds. ETFs that sell options to generate additional yield are broadly targeted at investors who prefer income rather than growth. It’s an interesting bifurcation given the constant attention (ourselves included) at Magnificent Seven or Fab Five stocks.
Investors are also getting active with their bond ETF interests. Data from VettaFi reveal that narrower credit spreads and uncertainty over Fed rate policy have helped draw over $11 billion in net inflows domestically and $27 billion globally into active bond ETFs. Financial advisors are using these funds to manage their clients’ fixed-income allocations. What’s more, the bond bear market that began some four years ago has resulted in a significant transition from fixed-income mutual funds to ETFs.1
“Advisors and investors are increasingly turning to ETFs to gain exposure. While most of the assets are in a low-cost, broad market ETFs, in 2024 asset managers have been turning to offering more targeted strategies that charge higher fees and can benefit from education,” explained Todd Rosenbluth, Head of Research at VettaFi.
Leveraged Ways to Play Tech
Last week’s earnings report from the AI poster child, NVIDIA (NVDA), seemed to be the center of the financial media’s attention before the long weekend. And with Alphabet (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Apple (AAPL) each holding major product events this month and next, it’s easy to look beyond the proliferation of the aforementioned hybrid ETFs.
There’s another nascent ETF niche, though. Single-stock funds designed to either provide a yield boost or lever up exposure to an individual mega-cap is another mushrooming corner of the ETF space.
Enter: ETH
But, oh, that’s not all. Crypto investors are having their day. Back in January, 11 spot Bitcoin ETFs were approved and began trading.2 The world’s largest cryptocurrency soared initially, but then pulled back and held within a volatile trading range. Bitcoin printed a new all-time high shortly before the end of the first quarter, rewarding early-buyers of the ETFs.
Then just last week, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved eight applications for spot Ether ETF – regulators had requested exchanges get their fund filings together just days before the Thursday night announcement.3 It could be the next wave of investor interest in ETFs.
The Bottom Line
While corporate dealmaking remains generally tepid so far in 2024, there has been a notable jump in the number of new US ETFs coming to market. There continues to be an increase in covered-call and other equity-options ETFs, but expect more headlines in the crypto ETF arena as the summer heats up.
Sources:
1 Golden Age for Active Bond ETFs?, VettaFi, Kirsten Chang, May 22, 2024, https://www.etftrends.com
2 11 newly approved bitcoin ETFs start trading today—but experts say to ‘approach with caution’, CNBC, Mike Winters, January 10, 2024, https://www.cnbc.com
3 US SEC approves exchange applications to list spot ether ETFs, Reuters, Hannah Lang, Suzanne McGee, May 23, 2024, https://www.reuters.com
Wall Street Horizon provides institutional traders and investors with the most accurate and comprehensive forward-looking event data. Covering 9,000 companies worldwide, we offer more than 40 corporate event types via a range of delivery options from machine-readable files to API solutions to streaming feeds. By keeping clients apprised of critical market-moving events and event revisions, our data empowers financial professionals to take advantage of or avoid the ensuing volatility.
Christine Short, VP of Research at Wall Street Horizon, is focused on publishing research on Wall Street Horizon event data covering 9,000 global equities in the marketplace. Over the past 15 years in the financial data industry, her research has been widely featured in financial news outlets including regular appearances on networks such as CNBC and Fox to talk corporate earnings and the economy.
Twitter: @ChristineLShort
The author may hold positions in mentioned securities. Any opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author, and do not in any way represent the views or opinions of any other person or entity.