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Goldman Sachs Group’s recently created business designed to help firms quickly launch exchange-traded funds has more than just traditional asset managers as clients.
“It’s really been surprising,” said Lisa Mantil, global head of the Goldman Sachs ETF Accelerator, in a phone interview. She said that insurance companies, private banks, family offices, hedge funds and registered investment advisers, or RIAs, are among the clients of Goldman’s ETF Accelerator, which was introduced in November.
Goldman announced on Oct. 5 the first funds launched through its digital Accelerator platform, with Brandes Investments Partners using it to list three actively managed ETFs: Brandes U.S. Small-Mid Cap Value ETF
BSMC,
Brandes U.S. Value ETF
BUSA
and Brandes International ETF
BINV.
Goldman
GS,
expects that “the next wave of growth in the ETF space is going to be the active ETF,” Mantil said, adding that the company wants “to help our clients get there.”
The ETF Accelerator was created because clients were calling the bank to ask for help in offering exchange-traded funds, according to Mantil.
“A couple years ago, all we were doing was really giving free consulting to them” by getting on the phone for an hour to provide “a little bit of what that road map was to launch an ETF,” she said.
Mantil said Goldman’s Accelerator platform aims to help clients launch their first ETF within six months and without having to hire dozens of people, as opposed to the two years it might otherwise take.
“ETFs are the fastest growing part of the investment management industry,” Goldman said in its announcement. Ordinary investors buy shares of ETFs to gain exposures to various investment strategies across assets such as stocks and bonds.
U.S.-listed ETFs now have more than $7 trillion in assets across almost 3,200 funds, according to a Citigroup research note from earlier this month.
“Actively managed ETFs have gone from 20-40% of launches pre-2020, to over 60% since then,” Citi said. “More strategies that require active trading, especially in derivatives, are now accessible via ETFs.”
As for the Goldman Sachs ETF Accelerator’s pipeline, Mantil said she sees hedge funds seeking to diversify their investor base through the ETF market by potentially offering, for instance, a “long-only” ETF. But hedge funds, whose investor base is heavily represented by institutional investors, are “in no way” considering making their “super high alpha” strategies that fall under their traditional fee structures transparent in an ETF, she said of the bank’s pipeline.
Read: Why Goldman Sachs sees uptick in interest in hedge funds in new market regime
The Accelerator, which is a multi-asset and global platform, has also attracted interest from family offices, according to Mantil. That’s partly because ETFs may provide tax efficiency for family offices grappling with the operational complexity of many different accounts, she said.
Meanwhile, GMO, the Boston-based investment firm co-founded by Jeremy Grantham, has turned to Goldman’s ETF Accelerator to launch its first exchange-traded fund. GMO disclosed in a regulatory filing that the bank’s Accelerator business is assisting the firm with consulting services.
Read: Jeremy Grantham’s GMO plans its first ETF, a fund that will target quality stocks
“For our clients, it is their strategy,” brand, marketing and distribution, Mantil said. “It is their ETF. They’re just using our infrastructure.”