ETF Trends in 2023: What Investors Must Look out for

 | Feb 10, 2023 04:57

  • Declines across asset classes in 2022 may be a net positive for ETFs as investors repair and retool their portfolios
  • Areas away from the S&P 500 are capturing flows while high yields in the Treasury market attract record-high idle cash
  • At the same time, advisors may rethink how they allocate capital in 2023 given favorable relative costs and the tax benefits of ETFs versus SMAs
  • With so many moving pieces, monitoring ETF trends will be key this year along with managing risk in the space
  • Last year’s market pain was ETFs’ gain. Big-time tax-loss harvesting allowed investors to sell losing mutual fund positions and purchase similar, often lower-cost, ETFs to improve their portfolios. It’s yet another tailwind for the ETF industry. Also consider that significant stock and bond market declines have not seemed to ding folks’ plans to continue putting money to work in various asset classes. According to one survey, 65% of retail investors intend to stick with their investment plans in 2023 while 29% expect to increase allocations.

    An International Equity ETF Renaissance/h2

    And we have already seen significant inflows to areas that were not so hot in 2022. China’s economic re-opening and the sudden outperformance among European equities since Q4 last year has led to a rebound in net flows toward those once beleaguered regions. According to data from EPFR, Euro Area equities took in more than $3 billion in net flows during the final week of January – the best single week in a year following a streak of 49 weeks of outflows that was halted the week prior. Todd Rosenbluth, VettFi’s head of research, notes that Chinese equity ETFs have gained popularity this year amid the ongoing rebound in emerging market stocks.

    European Equity Funds Capture Investors’ Dollars Following Strong Performance in Q4/h2