BlackRock’s Fink Says Worried About Leveraged ETFs | ETF Trends

The war of words between the largest exchange traded fund manager, BlackRock, and the providers of leveraged ETFs heated up again Tuesday when BlackRock’s chief executive said the financial products need more disclosure.

“Our statements against leveraged ETFs are related to disclosure,” BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said during a CNBC interview Tuesday.

BlackRock has been critical of leveraged products and says the funds shouldn’t be labeled ETFs.

Meanwhile, firms that oversee leveraged and inverse ETFs counter that BlackRock’s classification proposal is unworkable and anti-competitive, and that clients understand how to use the products. BlackRock doesn’t offer any leveraged ETFs. [What’s in an ETF Name?]

“ETFs were designed to be very basic,” BlackRock’s Fink told CNBC on Tuesday. “They’re mostly mimicking indices and different sectors of the marketplace. And now we overlay, through the ingenuity of the Street, products that have leverage in them so can you get hyper returns, positive or negative. The question I have is do we want to have another incident of a problem because of structural leverage.”

These high-octane ETFs are designed to multiply the market’s performance, and allow investors to go long or short. ETFs are baskets of securities that trade on an exchange like an individual stock. Leverage and inverse ETFs may invest in derivatives.