The ETF Industry: Still Alive and Thriving | ETF Trends

Exchange traded funds have been criticized as some observers claim that they are to blame for losses and big swings in the financial markets. However, the numbers tell a different story, as there are over 1,500 ETFs trading, and assets have surpassed the $1 trillion mark.

“The ETF is to the mutual fund, what the Internet is to the newspaper,” Jonathan Steinberg, founder & CEO of WisdomTree, said. “Because of the added functionality, full transparency, greater liquidity, greater tax efficiency, those characteristics are so important for investing. That’s why I think it’s a better mouse trap.” [Advisor ETF Usage Rose 10% Last Year]

The ETF industry has a large piece of daily trading volume, and has risen to fame rapidly. The first ETF, the SPDR S&P 500 (NYSEArca: SPY), launched in 1993, and the fund industry has never been the same. So why do some still criticize the industry and look at it as an underdog? [What are ETFs? Portfolio Building Blocks]

One area where ETFs have failed to take off is in the actively managed ETF business. The battle for assets against the mutual fund industry has been uphill, which still have almost 10-times the assets under management, reports Matt Nesto for Yahoo Finance. [TVIX Washout Raises Questions Over ETNs]

“Last year was a mixed year for ETFs,” says Moody’s vice president Rory Callagy, in a note. “The European sovereign debt crisis, concerns about use of derivative in synthetic ETFs and elevated market volatility all proved to be strong headwinds against asset growth.” [Investors Actively Manage Passive ETFs]