Table 1: Total Fee Comparison of Three Hypothetical ETF Portfolios*
Portfolio A | Portfolio B | Portfolio C | ||||||
Weight | Fees (Basis Points) | Weight | Fees (Basis Points) | Weight | Fees (Basis Points) | |||
Passive ETFs | 100% | 15 | 50% | 15 | 100% | 15 | ||
Active/proprietary ETFs | 0% | 100 | 50% | 100 | 0% | 0 | ||
Strategist Fee | 30 | 0 | 0 | |||||
Total | 45 | 58 | 15 | |||||
*Note: The fees in the table are for illustration purpose only and do not represent the actual fees managers charge.
Management fees of ETF strategies have always been a confusing issue for many advisors. I will try to provide a framework here. Morningstar tracked 1,180 strategies from 182 firms with total assets of $123 billion through December 2017. The ETF strategies varied in investment universe, asset breadth, portfolio implementation or ETF exposure type.
Although it is challenging to have a unified pricing framework, the basic business principle should apply here. Management fees should be proportional to the value the manager offers or intend to offer. In that sense, tactical ETF strategies will charge the highest fee because they intend to outperform the strategic portfolios and/or help reduce total portfolio risk. Strategic ETF portfolios should charge the lowest fee because they don’t intend to generate any excess returns or reduce portfolio risk. The hybrid strategies which are combinations of the strategic and tactical components should charge something in between. Table 2 illustrates a unified framework of how the ETF strategies should be priced using an example.
Table 2: A Pricing Framework of ETF Portfolios*
Strategic ETF Portfolios | Hybrid ETF Portfolios | Tactical ETF Portfolios | ||||
Weight | Fees (Basis Points) | Weight | Fees (Basis Points) | Weight | Fees (Basis Points) | |
Strategic Component | 100% | 10 | 50% | 10 | 0% | 10 |
Tactical Component | 0% | 100 | 50% | 100 | 100% | 100 |
Total | 10 | 55 | 100 |
*Note: The fees in above table are for illustration purpose only and do not represent the actual fees managers charge.
Free ETF Portfolio Strategies Really Worth it?
In summary, when they evaluate the expenses of ETF portfolio strategies, advisors should consider the total fee including both the ETF strategist fee and the fees of the underlying ETFs. Some of the free ETF portfolios, especially those with active proprietary ETFs, may be more expensive. Secondly, advisors should pay ETF strategists according to how much potential extra value the strategies may add to clients’ portfolios. For a strategic passive ETF portfolio, advisors can easily create it by themselves and should not pay much. For a tactical ETF portfolio, advisors should pay more because there is a potential benefit of enhancing returns and/or reducing risks.
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