Exchange-traded funds vacuumed up cash in 2022 to post their second-best year ever for net inflows, and while analysts expect the hoovering to continue, this year could also see more ETF closures as managers pull plugs on funds struggling to attract assets.
The global ETF industry saw net inflows totaling $856.16 billion last year, its second-highest level of annual net inflows behind the record $1.29 trillion gathered in 2021, according to ETFGI LLP, a London-based research and consultancy firm.
ETFs racked up net inflows last year despite financial markets that Philadelphia-based Bloomberg Intelligence Senior ETF Analyst Eric Balchunas called "brutal." The S&P 500 index's price declined 19.4% in 2022 — its worst year since 2008 — while the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond index returned -13%.
While last year's markets were tough, ETF closures were relatively few, Mr. Balchunas said.
If, as he suspects, markets remain challenging this year, some of the more "niche" ETF products likely will struggle to get flows and will close as increasingly cautious investors lean into core strategies, he said.
Mr. Balchunas isn't alone in expecting an uptick in ETF closures this year.
"There have been a historic number of ETFs launched in the past three years, yet no increase in closures the past two years," said Chicago-based Bryan Armour, director of passive strategies research for North America at Morningstar Research Services LLC, a subsidiary of Morningstar Inc.
Given the recent poor market performance and the more than 1,200 U.S. ETFs with less than $50 million in assets under management, "our research suggests there could be an increase in ETF closures this year," Mr. Armour said.
Still, ETF inflows overall are likely to remain strong in 2023, analysts said. One big driver Mr. Balchunas cited is a "good chunk' of money currently sitting in mutual funds – much of it actively managed – will likely extend the pattern of mutual fund asset migration to the ETF world, he said.
"One of our big themes is that tomorrow's ETF stars are yesterday's active managers," said Mr. Balchunas, who clarified that by "stars," he was referring to ETF players with the ability to amass substantial assets.