Market Research
Investors Innovate With ETFs To Enhance Liquidity

Institutional investors are increasingly turning to exchange traded funds to facilitate a number of surprising fund management practices.
Institutional investors are increasingly turning to exchange traded funds to facilitate a number of surprising fund management practices, a new study has shown.
According to a study by US-based Greenwich Associates, institutions which integrate ETFs into their standard manager transitions or cash equitisation processes, are using ETFs for additional applications, like liquidity management.
The iShares-sponsored study showed that seventy-eight percent
of
asset managers and 44 per cent of pensions, foundations and
endowments use ETFs
for cash equitisation. Sixty-one percent of asset managers and 55
per cent of
institutional funds use ETFs for manager transitions.
Thirty-one percent of institutional funds and one-third of
asset
managers are now employing ETFs as part of an ETF overlay or
sleeve to
add liquidity to a portfolio and/or to reduce implementation and
trading
costs. That usage rate is up from just one in 10 among both
groups in
2011.
The adoption of ETFs as a tool for liquidity enhancement
demonstrates
how institutional investors are applying ETFs in new ways to
solve
problems, said Liz Tennican, head of US institutional sales for
iShares at BlackRock.
“The marked increase in the use of ETFs for liquidity management is a significant development, reflecting sharper focus by institutions to assert control over their operational abilities during periods of irregular market conditions,” she added.
“Liquidity has become a governance issue since the global financial crisis. Institutional investors are applying their acquired knowledge from that period to their search for effective liquidity solutions. ETFs can be an effective tool for them.”
As institutional investors use ETFs more strategically, they also
apply ETFs to portfolio completion. This year, 28 per cent of
asset managers and 42 per cent of institutional investors use
ETFs for portfolio completion. Last year, approximately just
one-in-five institutional investors used ETFs for portfolio
completion.
Tennican said, “We are finding that institutional investors are
expanding the types of asset classes when they utilize ETFs, for
example, expanding further into international single countries
and US and international fixed income.”
The study was conducted between February and April 2012 through live, one-on-one interviews between Greenwich Associates and representatives of pensions funds, endowments, foundations and asset management companies. All participants were from organisations that include ETFs among their portfolio holdings.