Goldman using JPMorgan’s tactics against it in ETF row

Bloomberg

Goldman Sachs Group Inc is throwing everything but the kitchen sink at boosting its share of the $4 trillion US market for exchange-traded funds — even mimicking one of its Wall Street foes.
The bank is adopting an approach pioneered by JPMorgan Chase & Co, filing for a line of broad-based index products that could start trading at rock-bottom prices as early as next week, regulatory records show.
After getting off to a blistering start four years ago on the back of a dirt-cheap factor ETF, Goldman dropped behind its Wall Street competitor, which has ridden a strategy dubbed “bring your own assets” to a $29 billion business.
Essentially cloning popular ETFs and moving client cash from those products into its own, the controversial approach may be Wall Street’s best hope for challenging the dominance of State Street Corp, BlackRock Inc and Vanguard Group.
“As we continue to grow and build out our ETF business, along with our recent acquisitions, it just makes sense in some areas for us to have the building blocks that fuel those portfolios,” said Steve Sachs, head of capital markets for ETFs at Goldman.
Even before this latest chapter, the race between the Wall Street giants had enough twists and turns to power a thriller.
Goldman emerged in 2015, establishing itself as a leader in factor investing with its ActiveBeta US Large Cap Equity fund, ticker GSLC.
The product wowed the ETF industry with a fee of just 9 basis points, unheard-of for smart beta strategies — but newer ventures have stumbled. This year, it introduced a handful of thematic strategies, but they’ve collected less than $50 million.
JPMorgan was relatively quiet until June 2018, when it kickstarted its business with a suite of vanilla ETFs called BetaBuilders.
Unlike the more specialised products the bank was hawking up until then, the funds tracked broad developed-market benchmarks — at thrift-store prices.
It was an inspired play, tripling JPMorgan’s ETF assets to near $30 billion within a 14-month span and powering it ahead of Goldman.
“JPMorgan saw this as a smart move ahead of anyone,” said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Eric Balchunas.
“We’ve seen how hard it is to get any assets. But bringing your own assets gets you mojo, and mojo gets people in the door and investors on the phone.”

Smarter, Cheaper
The bank made smart moves elsewhere, winning a foothold in the nascent but growing fixed-income ETF market, and planting a flag early in Europe, whose industry is around half the size of the US but growing rapidly.
Goldman has yet to list an ETF in the region despite some high-profile hires, though it plans to commence the business before year-end, a spokesman in London said. That puts it several years behind JPMorgan, which has $2.8 billion in assets there.
Now Goldman hopes to turn the tables on its investment-banking rival by embracing the bring-your-own-assets strategy.
The firm already has some experience in the area as the largest owner of GSLC, and its latest foray is fuelled by a recent acquisition spree.
The bank scooped up S&P’s model portfolio business and United Capital this year, giving it fresh pipelines for flows into its own funds.

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