The global exchange-traded funds market was worth $7.3 trillion at the end of the second quarter of 2023, a rise of 5.8% from the previous quarter thanks to inflows of $136.6 billion and market appreciation worth $265 billion.
Inflows included $89 billion to equity strategies, $45.9 billion to fixed income, and $1.9 billion to other categories. The total for the quarter was roughly in line with the second quarter of 2020.
But where do ETF specialists from Vanguard see the market going in the months ahead, given that the Fed is showing signs of slowing rate hikes which is tempting investors back to risk assets?
A new report written by the investment manager’s Samuel Martinez, CFA (head of fixed income product), Cassandre Juste (head of index equity product), and David Sharp (senior ETF capital markets specialist), highlights the gains for equity products as the S&P500 returned 8.7%, while fixed income was dampened, likely by the expectation of an easing of rate hikes.
The rise for equity strategies was significant, 75% higher than in the first quarter, and marked a flip back to equities from the fixed income ETFs that dominated in the first three months of 2023. Large cap tech stocks were the main driver and U.S. funds were easily the focus with $63.7 billion inflows.
For fixed income, a notable trend was outflows from short-dated bond ETFs and inflows into intermediate-dated ones.
Vanguard’s experts also reaffirm the importance of actively managed ETFs, taking a 5.8% share of industry assets at the end of Q2 (up from 5.6% at the end of Q1) and accounting for 130 or the 189 new ETF launches in the first half of 2023.
By asset type, 9.6% of fixed income ETF cash flow and 18.9% of equity ETF cash flow in the second quarter
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