Vanguard triumphs over State Street to take largest ETF crown - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
ETF

Vanguard triumphs over State Street to take largest ETF crown

The manager’s VOO S&P 500 vehicle has overtaken rival SPY by amassing $632bn of assets

Vanguard’s blue-chip US stock exchange-traded fund has become the world’s biggest, seizing the crown from State Street’s S&P 500 tracker, in a sign of how a race to slash fees is reshaping the industry.

Vanguard’s fund, known by its ticker VOO, held assets of $631.8bn in early US trading on Tuesday, pushing it ahead of the $630.3bn of State Street’s SPY, which was the first-ever US ETF when it launched in 1993, 17 years before VOO.

The Vanguard vehicle’s ascent is a reflection of its low fees and the rapid growth of ETFs among retail investors, who are less likely to buy State Street’s more institutionally tailored vehicle.

“VOO turned on the flows afterburners last year and caught up to SPY much quicker than expected,” said Bryan Armour, director of passive strategies research for North America at Morningstar.

In a sign of VOO’s swift climb, the fund was $182bn behind SPY at the start of 2022 and still $50bn behind as recently as November, when it overtook BlackRock’s iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV) to take the second spot.

More than $23bn has flowed into VOO this year, compared with net outflows of $16bn from SPY, according to TMX VettaFi data.

All three leading S&P 500 ETFs have benefited from runaway global demand for vehicles tracking US equities, which accounted for 60.5 per cent of global stock market capitalisation at the end of 2023, the highest level since 1973, according to UBS.

Wall Street stocks have also posted huge gains in recent years, notching up returns of more than 20 per cent both in 2023 and 2024.

Vanguard has surged thanks to its low fees, charging just 0.03 per cent annually. It has also benefited from the ever-widening use of ETFs for building portfolios. The ETF industry as a whole recently passed $10tn.

SPY, which charges 0.0945 per cent, is favoured by more active traders, since it is cheaper to trade and offers greater leverage through derivatives.

“VOO is just such a cheap, useful tool,” said Syl Flood, senior product manager at Morningstar. “It’s most used by long-term investors whereas SPY is more of a trading tool. The money in Vanguard’s funds is stickier than almost anybody else’s money.”

He added that Vanguard’s and BlackRock’s funds had benefited from investors switching money from actively managed funds to passive ETFs.

“VOO’s minuscule expense ratio, combined with the Vanguard investor buy-and-hold mentality, is a tough combination to beat — particularly with the S&P 500 outperforming nearly every other asset class over the past 15 years,” said Nate Geraci, president of financial adviser The ETF Store.

State Street waged a counteroffensive in 2023 by slashing the fee on its own buy-and-hold SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF (SPLG) to just 0.02 per cent, but so far it has amassed only $58bn.

Despite SPLG undercutting Vanguard, Armour argued that “inertia helps keep VOO at the top of the [flows] list, and a one basis point fee difference does little to quell switching costs. Vanguard also benefits from its tremendous distribution network and loyal investor base.”

Vanguard is also the only asset manager, thus far, permitted by the US Securities and Exchange Commission to operate the “ETF-as-a-share class” model that it patented, even though that patent has now expired.

Under this structure, an ETF and a mutual fund can operate as separate classes of an overall fund and Vanguard “allows mutual fund share class owners to convert into VOO”, a trade incentivised by the mutual fund arm being slightly more expensive, at 0.04 per cent.

VOO’s success is a sign of Vanguard’s broader ascendancy in the ETF industry. At the end of December, its $3.2tn of ETF assets were a record 76 per cent of market leader BlackRock’s $4.3tn, according to Morningstar, a figure that has climbed steadily from 52 per cent at the start of 2018.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

AI价格战是否一触即发?

中美技术差距缩小,竞争重心或转向价格,支撑美国大型企业估值的假设可能过于乐观。

沙特阿拉伯的AI企业Humain向马斯克的xAI投资30亿美元

这笔加深与这位亿万富翁关系的投资,是该国实现经济多元化目标的一部分。

语音会成为人与AI的主要交互方式吗?

尽管仍有瑕疵,科技行业笃定语音将成为人工智能的下一片疆域。

AI热潮引爆树莓派股价疯涨

富时250指数成分股估值升至10亿英镑后回落。

特朗普推动AI在Maga腹地引发反弹

共和党人担心,针对白宫议程的反弹可能会削弱他们在今年中期选举中所获的支持。

“并非所有超加工食品都一样”——食品业接下来该怎么做?

两本书以耳目一新的论证为工业创新和肉类替代品辩护——而不夹带令人反感的道德说教。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×