Vanguard's Take on Active ETFs
Description

Vanguard's Rick Genoni on why the market has seen more actively managed bond vs. equity ETF products.
Transcript
Vanguard's Take on Active ETFs
Scott Burns: Active management ETFs? What does Vanguard think about that?
Hi there, I'm Scott Burns, director of ETF research with
Morningstar. Joining me today to answer that question is Rick
Genoni, head of Vanguard's ETF product group.
Rick thanks for joining me.
Rick Genoni: Thanks, Scott.
Scott Burns: One thing is I think a lot of people before we even get into ETFs, I
think there's this general perception in the world that Vanguard is
not active management at all, that Vanguard is passive. Vanguard
equals passive and other competitors out there equal active and
never the two shall tweak.
But there are some stats on Vanguard that I think would shock a lot
of people. I mean what percentage of total Vanguard assets are
currently being actively managed?
Rick Genoni: It's roughly 50/50. We hear often that clients think that Vanguard's
just a passive firm that we only run index funds. Frankly, that just
speaks to the quality of product that we've brought to the
marketplace but certainly we have some very high quality, actively
managed funds offered at very low fees also.
Scott Burns: Now let's get back to ETFs a little bit here and active management
ETFs. We were discussing a little before we came on camera here.
I think I sit on one side and say, look, active management and ETF
transparency is not an issue. But I think you have a little different
take.
Rick Genoni: I do. I think broadly, most active managers are not willing to be
fully transparent in their holdings every day for the risk of front
running. Now that's broadly.
Looking at some of the top, top tier active managers, they're very
close to the best. They don't want to show others what their
holdings are, either at a single stock level or just broadly what their
strategy might be, whether they're tilting to certain sectors or
others.
So I think it's something that the marketplace is thinking about,
and it's one of the reasons why we haven't seen more active equity
products at least entering the marketplace.
Scott Burns: Right. We've seen filings and I'd say a lot of the filings are actually
definitely tilted more towards fixed income. Do you think that
matters? Do you think if someone comes in and says, "I'm going to
be an active Treasury manager," is the chance of front running that
less than say, equity?
Rick Genoni: Certainly, it's less. Vanguard has a filing in right now for an active
TIPS product. That's a product that we actually feel very good
about being fully transparent on the fund holdings because mostly
often that fund is coming from our trading strategies around those
holdings and not from selections of the underlying bonds or any
bets we're making on the curve.
Scott Burns: Right. So that is different, I guess than what most people's
perception of traditional active really is sitting around picking, "I'm
buying this sector, but not that sector." This is an alpha that's being
generated by your trading prowess.
Rick Genoni: True, yes.
Scott Burns: I guess it's kind of active, but it's not necessarily active. But you
won't be tracking an index as most of your ETF products do. Is that
correct?
Rick Genoni: Well, there's a benchmark that you're looking to beat, so it isn't
tracking to try and match that benchmark. But in this space,
frankly, active management gets you close to the index.
Running an index product against the TIPS market actually would
likely mean that you would under-perform the marketplace. You
actually need a little bit of the active management with hopes to
bring the performance of the fund up closer to where the index is
overall.
Scott Burns: Are there other areas that you're investigating for this kind of
active management?
Rick Genoni: Vanguard always asks the question with each new product that
we're offering in the marketplace. One whether it should be multi-
class or single-class, always chosen multi-class.
Also, should it be a passively managed fund or should it be an
actively managed fund? Vanguard oftentimes has both active and
management funds using the same basic underlying benchmark, so
it's a choice that we have to make every product launch.
In most cases, again, we've chosen to go down the index route, but
we will keep our eyes open for the right opportunities in the active
space.
Scott Burns: All right. Well, thanks for joining me and sharing your thoughts,
Rick.
Rick Genoni: Thanks, Scott.
Scott Burns: I'm Scott Burns with Morningstar. For this and other ETF
commentary, please check out Morningstar.com's ETF Center and
Morningstar's "ETFInvestor" Newsletter.
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