BlackRock Cuts ETF Fees
05 Ottobre 2016 - 7:40AM
Dow Jones News
The world's largest money manager is cutting fees at more than a
dozen exchange-traded funds, another sign of how a federal overhaul
of retirement-savings rules is transforming parts of the
financial-services industry.
The move by BlackRock Inc. covers $216 billion in assets and
will lower expenses below or on par with those offered by low-cost
pioneer Vanguard Group and Boston rival State Street Global
Advisors. BlackRock's price reductions affect 15 ETFs within its
iShares business, trimming the cost of widely used funds like the
iShares Core S&P 500 ETF to 0.04% from 0.07% and the iShares
Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF to 0.05% from 0.08%.
The New York asset manager is betting that low-cost funds that
mimic the performance of the market will become bigger staples
within retirement accounts in the coming years because of new Obama
administration regulations requiring brokers to put the interests
of retirement savers ahead of their own.
"We believe the rule will have as big an impact for the
wealth-management industry as Dodd-Frank had on banks," said
BlackRock Chief Executive Laurence Fink, referring to a regulatory
overhaul passed after the last financial crisis designed to reduce
risk taking on Wall Street.
The Labor Department's new fiduciary rule, set to take effect in
April, holds advisers who work with tax-advantaged retirement
savings to a "fiduciary" standard, meaning they must work in the
best interest of their clients and generally avoid conflicts.
Previously, advisers were required to offer only "suitable"
guidance, a less-rigorous standard.
The changes are widely expected to be a boon for passively
managed index funds that track markets instead of trying to beat
them. Those funds are typically cheaper than funds run by managers
who bet on individual stocks and bonds. Fund-research firm
Morningstar Inc. expects the rule could push as much as $1 trillion
into passive investments.
Some brokerage firms already have unveiled changes to how they
handle retirement products, including a smaller lineup of funds and
alterations of longstanding pricing structures.
BlackRock's discounts affect a small portion of its $4.9
trillion in assets under management. But the cuts apply to about
18% of its $1.3 trillion in iShares assets.
Mark Weidman, the global head of iShares, said the firm wants
its S&P 500 ETF, which goes head to head with similar products
at Vanguard and SSGA, to be "the biggest ETF in the world."
It has $79.3 billion in assets, leaving it more than $100
billion short of SSGA's SPDR S&P 500 ETF, the world's largest
ETF.
SPDR S&P 500 ETF has about $197 billion in assets and a net
fee of 0.0945%.
The discounts are part of a broader reduction in the price of
investing as firms increasingly undercut each other on price and
fight for price-sensitive clients. Over the last 12 months, $437.3
billion has flowed into passive funds, according to Morningstar,
while investors have yanked $303.34 billion from actively managed
funds.
Another BlackRock rival, Fidelity Investments, which has a
distribution partnership with BlackRock for the ETFs affected by
the price change, reduced prices on a set of its own funds in June.
Charles Schwab Corp., another large ETF provider that has cut
prices in recent years, has a strategy of matching fee reductions
made by rivals.
BlackRock executives say investors that use the types of funds
affected by Wednesday's price cuts are more likely to buy other
ETFs and actively managed funds. The firm expects financial
advisers to increasingly use ETFs in lieu of individuals stocks and
bonds.
Write to Sarah Krouse at sarah.krouse@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 05, 2016 01:25 ET (05:25 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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