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Grail Launches Four Active ETFs
October 02, 2009 5:19 am
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There’s active, and then there’s active. On Oct. 2, Grail Advisors launched what some consider the first traditional “actively managed” equity exchange-traded funds, debuting four new products on the New York Stock Exchange. The new funds are:
Quite a few actively managed ETFs have already launched, including the PowerShares Active Alpha MultiCap Fund (NYSEArca: PQZ) and the Grail American Beacon Large Cap Value ETF (NYSEArca: GVT). But until today, all of those funds either used primarily quantitative strategies or relied on a multimanager format. The RiverPark ETFs use what the Wall Street Journal referred to as “traditional, kick-the-tires stock pickers.” Grail Advisors chief executive William Thomas said the launch was part of his firm’s aim to introduce a slew of new actively managed products to compete in the predominantly index-based ETF market. “Our stated goal has been to bring a full lineup of traditional, active fund managers and strategies to the ETF marketplace,” said Thomas. The funds charge 0.89 percent in annual expenses; expensive for ETFs, but below the average 0.99 percent fee for traditional mutual funds. The funds will be managed by the New York-based RiverPark Advisors, a relatively new firm run by former executives and managers at Baron Funds. The new funds will be fully transparent, disclosing their full portfolios at the end of the day.
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Short-Seller’s Guide To GLD
Gold, despite its recent rebound, has gotten clobbered over the past three months.Looking Beyond VWO And EEM
Broad-based, cap-weighted ETFs were the way to play emerging markets over the past decade. But it’s time for investors to become more strategic and look beyond VWO and EEM.
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JP Morgan & ETN Credit Risk
Paul & Ugo discuss the implications of J.P. Morgan's $2 billion loss, the European debt crisis and what it means for ETN investors.
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