Ease of use, lower expense ratios and transparency are among the many reasons that financial advisors have become big advocates and users of exchange-traded funds, according to an online survey conducted recently by ThinkAdvisor.com. The advisor poll focused on advisors' usage, strategies and other trends related to ETFs, which are estimated to have some $3 trillion in assets under management worldwide.
Overall, 90% of survey respondents say they use index (or passive) ETFs in client portfolios, 54% employ active ETFs, and 50% rely on smart beta ETFs. The survey finds that nearly two-thirds of advisors, or 63%, offer ETFs in all client portfolios, while more than half, or 57%, use them specifically for cost effectiveness in smaller portfolios or when investment fees are a major factor for clients. Also, three-quarters, or 75%, of respondents say they use non-cap-weighted ETFs now, and most of these advisors plan to use more of these products over the next year or two.
Why ETFs?
Ninety percent of advisors (or more) rank low expense ratios, trading ease/liquidity, transparency and diversification as their top reasons for using ETFs. Low tracking error and garnering alpha are seen as important, too, with 74% of advisors or more stating that these factors influence their use of the product.
Comparing ETFs to mutual funds, Alan Myers, president and senior portfolio manager of Aerie Capital Management in Baltimore, says, "For me, the best attribute is ease of trading during the day." Myers uses options, and the ability to write calls on ETFs is "highly beneficial."
Another attribute he appreciates about ETFs is that they "are easy to understand relative to an actively managed mutual fund," the advisor says. "It is one thing to say that a value-oriented mutual fund uses low price/book value as a starting point, but can you trust that they really do that? An ETF, because it has to follow the rules of an index, must use a low price/book ratio if that is where the index starts."
Other advisors echo Myers' thinking when it comes to the ease of intraday trading and transparency. "ETF transparency is good because it is tied to an index; it's a defined process, even with equal-weighted, low-volatility or factor-based approaches," says John Diak, principal of Oatley & Diak LLC in Parker, Colorado, near Denver. "For a mutual fund shop, you're entrusting individuals and a track record [with client assets], and a philosophy might change," Diak explains.
In addition, low cost matters. "In my practice, ETFs offer a means to reduce the overall investment cost to a client," says Rob Shedd, a financial advisor with Addison Avenue Investment of Fort Collins, Colorado. "My goal is to always place clients in the best available investment at the lowest cost to them, and by incorporating select ETFs into strategies, I can accomplish this."
Don Roy, branch manager of New England Wealth Advisors in Merrimack, New Hampshire, agrees: "With costs being such an issue with clients, ETFs provide an alternative to assist in cost reduction while still creating a portfolio that is effectively diversified."
Portfolio Matters
Broad-based U.S. equity index ETFs are the most popular products used by advisors today, with 81% of advisors polled saying they employ them. Equity-sector indexes are used by 68% of respondents. ETFs tracking broad fixed income indexes are employed by 64% of advisors polled, while broad-based international index ETFs are relied upon by 57%. Other product categories used by advisors include leveraged/inverse ETFs (17%), currency ETFs (15%) and ESG/impact investing products (13%).
Non-cap-weighted ETF strategies have gained traction, the most popular being equal weighted (46%), low volatility (44%) and fundamental (42%). Plus, 49% of advisors say they will use these non-cap-weighted products more in the next year or two.
Mack Courter, principal of Courter Financial LLC in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, mainly uses cap-weighted "plain vanilla" ETFs for the core holdings of a portfolio, and then adds sector, equal-weighted or fundamental ETFs as "opportunity" holdings, he says. "I choose the ETFs based on many factors, starting with the asset class I want exposure to, then moving on to the methodology used by the ETFs to get the best fit, and then finally I look at liquidity and expenses," he explains.
Diak says his group's approach is somewhat different: "As we transition from mutual funds and individual stocks to [becoming] an ETF-focused shop, we're really focused [on] broad-based index funds to create the core for client portfolios," and have begun to add factor-investing, smart beta and low-volatility ETFs to create dividend and value-based holdings.
Tax Tactics
Mark Butterworth, president of Butterworth Financial in Tulsa, Oklahoma, has a similar approach. "We'll have the equivalent of large-cap, mid-sized and small companies in the mixture, and if it's a taxable account or a non-retirement [account], we use ETFs because of tax efficiencies as well as the transparency of what is owned." The advisor explains that, depending on market conditions, he has gravitated to value-added and alpha-based ETFs but doesn't employ leveraged products.
Butterworth also points out that his firm aims to be proactive. "We don't set it and forget it. Part of the rationale of using ETFs is from a tax-efficiency standpoint. ETFs can have a capital gain, but most of the time it is handled internally. Mutual funds can have those [kinds of] hiccups at year-end," he explains.
John Cooper, a private-client advisor with Greenwood Capital in Greenwood, South Carolina, mainly uses international and corporate-bond ETFs. "The reason is some clients need diversification in small accounts under $500,000. Also, our firm does all in-house research, except for international and emerging markets," he says, adding that the proliferation of ETFs has helped him customize smaller portfolios.
Although a growing number of managers are using non-cap-weighted funds, Nathan Raabe, a partner of CBF Wealth Management in Norfolk, Nebraska, says his practice mainly uses index-weighted ETFs for equities and fixed income exposure "because we take our tilts using DFA's equity funds." The advisor plans to keep using more ETFs in certain asset classes due to cost, "unless mutual funds can do it cheaper and more efficiently."