Actively Managed ETF

Actively Managed ETF

An actively managed ETF is a form of exchange-traded fund that has a manager or team making decisions on the underlying portfolio allocation, otherwise not adhering to a passive investment strategy. An actively managed ETF is a form of exchange-traded fund that has a manager or team making decisions on the underlying portfolio allocation Generally, an actively managed ETF does not adhere to any passive investment strategy. 2:13 An actively managed ETF features many of the same benefits of a traditional exchange-traded fund like price transparency, liquidity, and tax efficiency, but with a fund manager that can adapt the fund to changing market conditions. Many actively managed ETFs have higher expense ratios than traditional index ETFs, which puts pressure on fund managers to consistently outperform the market. An actively managed ETF is a form of exchange-traded fund that has a manager or team making decisions on the underlying portfolio allocation, otherwise not adhering to a passive investment strategy.

An actively managed ETF is a form of exchange-traded fund that has a manager or team making decisions on the underlying portfolio allocation

What Is an Actively Managed ETF?

An actively managed ETF is a form of exchange-traded fund that has a manager or team making decisions on the underlying portfolio allocation, otherwise not adhering to a passive investment strategy.

An actively managed ETF will have a benchmark index, but managers may change sector allocations, market-time trades, or deviate from the index as they see fit. This produces investment returns that do not perfectly mirror the underlying index.

An actively managed ETF is a form of exchange-traded fund that has a manager or team making decisions on the underlying portfolio allocation
Generally, an actively managed ETF does not adhere to any passive investment strategy.
An actively managed ETF will have a benchmark index, but managers may deviate from the index as they see fit.
Advantages to actively managed ETFs include lower expense ratios, participation of seasoned financial professionals, and the opportunity for benchmark-beating returns.
Many actively managed ETFs have higher expense ratios than traditional index ETFs, which puts pressure on fund managers to consistently outperform the market.

How an Actively Managed ETF Works

An actively managed ETF features many of the same benefits of a traditional exchange-traded fund like price transparency, liquidity, and tax efficiency, but with a fund manager that can adapt the fund to changing market conditions. The combination of active management and an ETF provides investors with an innovative solution to asset management.

For investors, there is enough to like about actively managed ETFs, such as lower expense ratios than mutual funds, active participation of seasoned financial professionals, and the opportunity to gain benchmark-beating returns. 

It's not certain that an actively managed fund will underperform or outperform a passive-ETF rival, though. Traditional ETFs can at least be counted on to follow an index faithfully, which allows investors to know the holdings and risk profile of the fund. This helps keep a diversified portfolio in line with expectations.

Fund managers of an active ETF, however, have the freedom to trade outside of a benchmark index, which makes it more difficult for investors to anticipate the future makeup of the portfolio. This can work for investors when market conditions experience heavy volatility. An active manager can shift allocations away from underperforming positions to more appropriate sectors or asset classes. 

In 2018, asset management giant Vanguard rolled out a catalog of active managed ETFs. The move was a sharp departure from the index-based strategy championed by founder John Bogle for multiple decades. Many of these funds have become popular investment avenues.

Limitations of an Actively Managed ETF

Although actively managed ETFs share many of the same characteristics of traditional exchange-traded funds, they tend to come at a premium. Many of them have higher expense ratios than a traditional index ETF, which puts pressure on fund managers to consistently outperform or beat the market.

As with a mutual fund, the potential to outperform comes down to the underlying manager. Some will regularly beat expectations, but most research finds active management to underperform a passive strategy.

Furthermore, actively managed ETFs tend to contradict basic investment principles like diversification. The typical fund manager shifts allocations according to market conditions, meaning the fund may be less diversified than a passive ETF.

Related terms:

What Is Active Management in Investing?

Active management of a portfolio or a fund requires a professional money manager or team to regularly make buy, hold, and sell decisions. read more

ETF of ETFs

An ETF of ETFs is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks other ETFs rather than an underlying stock, bond, or index. read more

Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) and Overview

An exchange traded fund (ETF) is a basket of securities that tracks an underlying index. ETFs can contain investments such as stocks and bonds. read more

Index Fund

An index fund is a pooled investment vehicle that passively seeks to replicate the returns of some market indexes. read more

Index Hugger

An index hugger is a managed mutual fund that tends to perform much like a benchmark index. read more

Indexing

Indexing may be a statistical measure for tracking economic data, a methodology for grouping a specific market segment, or an investment management strategy for passive investments. read more

John Bogle

John Bogle founded the Vanguard Group and before his death served as a vocal proponent of index investing. read more

Passive ETF

A passive ETF is a method to invest in an entire index or sector with the benefits of low costs and transparency absent in active investing. read more

Smart Beta ETF

A smart Beta ETF is a type of exchange-traded fund that uses a rules-based system for selecting investments to be included in the fund. read more