ETFs Draw Increased Scrutiny as Assets Migrate | Page 2 of 2 | ETF Trends

In fact, Morningstar has produced data refuting claims that leveraged ETFs are contributing to recent market volatility. [Do Leveraged ETFs Really Exacerbate Volatility?]

Recent trading scandals at UBS and Societe Generale have involved traders at so-called Delta One desks, which trade equity swaps, futures and ETFs.

At the Morningstar conference, top executives at Vanguard, State Street and BlackRock’s iShares expressed frustration that ETFs are being scapegoated for issues in the markets.

“Some of the allegations are so wrong on so many levels,” said Sue Thompson, head of BlackRock’s registered investment advisor group and 401(k) sales. She added the business needs to step up its education efforts.

Rick Genoni, head of Vanguard’s ETF product management department, said index strategies such as futures contracts have been leveraged for years. He said macroeconomic trends are driving market correlations higher, rather than ETFs, as some allege. Also, the trading scandals are the result of risk-control failures rather than a problem specific to ETFs.

“ETFs are not causing correlations to rise,” said Tony Rochte, head of the North American intermediary business group at State Street Global Advisors. “These are historic times,” Rochte said, pointing to the near-collapse of the mortgage market in 2008, followed by corporate balance sheet issues and now the sovereign debt crisis. [Sector ETF Correlations Highest Since Financial Crisis]