Before the US housing bubble burst, before Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone, before the Bank of England bailed out Northern Rock – from the viewpoint of 2006 few predicted the enormous changes about to hit.
Few too, back then, would have forecast the phenomenal growth of what was at that time a product hardly known outside of institutional investors' circle.
But exchange traded funds (ETFs) and other exchange traded products (ETPs) have had a decade to reckon with.
Back in 2006, assets held globally in ETFs amounted to US$580bn, according to figures from research provider ETFGI.
Now they stand at a staggering US$3.2trn. Record inflows of US$389bn were gathered in 2016 alone.
“The focus of much of this growth has been the US market, which accounts for over 70 per cent of ETF assets globally,” James McManus, investment manager at robo-advice firm Nutmeg says.
“However, growth has been exceptionally strong in other markets too – assets invested in European ETFs have grown from $94bn in 2006 to $524bn today.”
In their simplest form, ETFs trade on a stock exchange like a stock, experiencing the same daily price fluctuations, and track the performance of a specific index or basket of assets.
They are a type of fund which owns the underlying assets (shares of stock, bonds, oil futures, gold bars, foreign currency, etc.) and divides ownership of those assets into shares, which investors then buy into.
So what is behind the explosion in demand for these types of investments?
“The growth of ETFs has been driven by a variety of factors,” Joe Parkin, head of UK wealth and retail sales at ETF house iShares, explains.
“Firstly, the types of investors that are using ETFs has widened. Traditionally ETFs were primarily used by institutional investors, but are increasingly a staple in retail investors’ portfolios.”
UK retail investors have been turned on to ETFs for three main reasons – their low cost, access to previously unobtainable investments and changes in regulation that made them more likely to be recommended by financial advisers.
ETFs give investors the chance to buy whole indices as easily as buying a share on the London Stock Exchange.
Eligible for inclusion in Isas but attracting no stamp duty, ETFs also have the lowest annual charges of all collective investment schemes.
Mark Fitzgerald, product manager at fund house Vanguard, which does a thriving business in ETFs, said the “extraordinary” birth and growth of the market has “been fuelled by investors becoming increasingly aware of the importance of lowering costs”.
Regulation
The Retail Distribution Review, introduced at the end of 2012, has also helped level the playing field for ETFs.
While prior to December 2012 other retail investment products saw a commission paid by the product provider to the recommending adviser, ETFs have never paid commissions.
Historically this made ETFs less attractive to UK retail financial advisers for obvious reasons – they were not being paid to recommend them.