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Boutique ETF Broker Eyes Growth of ETF Market in Europe; WallachBeth International Brings US Approach to London

marketsmedia logoCourtesy of MarketsMedia.com

The burgeoning exchange-traded funds sector in Europe is expected to grow still further in the coming years, after the industry recently celebrated its 20th birthday.

ETFs, which are funds that track baskets of shares, bonds or commodities and are traded like stocks, were invented in 1993 in the U.S. and have been on an upward growth trajectory ever since due to their low costs and simplicity since they generally track established indexes.

“ETFs started in the U.S. and they’ve certainly been embraced there by everyone from institutions to retail,” said James Ryan, vice-president, institutional sales and trading at WallachBeth International in London, a U.S. brokerage firm which brought its best execution ETF trading model to Europe last year.

jrETF team
James Ryan, WallachBeth International

“We set up in Europe for a couple of reasons. Firstly, we expect growth of the ETF market in Europe and second, we don’t think anyone is doing exactly what we do. You have other brokers, but our desk is ETF-centric.”

A recent study by ETF provider State Street Global Advisors (SSgA), the asset management unit of State Street, which surveyed 260 European corporate pension plans and 41 U.K. active fund managers, found that 39% had no holdings of ETFs at all while a further 32% held less than 10% of their portfolios in ETFs.

“Despite strong growth in the ETF business globally over the past 20 years, the European ETF business remains relatively small compared with the wider mutual funds and U.S. ETF businesses,” said Scott Ebner, global head of ETF product development at SSgA.

However, almost half of the European corporate pension plans surveyed by SSgA said that they planned to increase their allocations to ETFs over the next five years while 42% of the U.K. active fund managers indicated that they would also increase their ETF usage in future.

“The whole of Europe is starting to see more products and is embracing ETFs slowly,” said Alan Roldan, institutional sales and trading at WallachBeth International.

Alan RoldanWallachBeth International
Alan Roldan
WallachBeth International

“People like Vanguard [one of the largest ETF providers] have also set up over in Europe from the U.S.. That’s a good indication we are not the only ones who feel that way.”

The ETF sector is seen as more opaque in Europe, with as much as 70% of trades enacted over-the-counter. Trade reporting for ETFs in the U.S., in the form of a consolidated tape, is mandatory, although there are provisions for this to happen in Europe in the latest MiFID II proposals, but this is not likely to be enforced until 2015 at the earliest. And compared to the U.S., knowledge of ETF products generally is also seen as slightly lacking in Europe.

“Once education—getting acclimated to the product—and more transparency with the regulations happen, then that is going to be a massive catalyst,” said Roldan.

There also appears to have been a recent push by issuers of ETFs in Europe to target the retail sector, which has been relatively untapped so far.

“Once retail flow comes up that will also spur growth in the institutional market,” said Roldan.

Virtu Financial Buys Dutch Market-Maker in Push to Provide European ETF Liquidity

Courtesy of WSJ with reporting by Jenny Strasburg

Virtu Financial LLC said it bought a Dutch market-making business, bolstering the U.S. trading firm’s presence in a European exchange-traded-funds market that has emerged as a profitable battleground for high-speed traders.

Virtu, one of the most-active traders of stocks, commodities and other securities in the U.S. and Europe, acquired the market-making division from Amsterdam-based Nyenburgh Holding BV, the companies said. They declined to disclose the value of the transaction.

Market makers stand ready to buy and sell securities at quoted prices, helping ensure that trades are executed smoothly. Market makers take a sliver of profit from each transaction, and the flow of data can help them profit in their own trades.

With the Nyenburgh deal, New York-based Virtu gains relationships with ETF issuers as well as buyers and sellers of the instruments, which include pensions and hedge funds, said Chris Concannon, a Virtu partner and chief compliance officer of its broker-dealer operation. Virtu has traded European ETFs since 2009.

Virtu expects growth in the ETF market will help fuel trading in the assets that underlie them, from gold and palladium to agricultural-commodity futures. The firm, through its Dublin-based office, became a registered market maker on the London Stock Exchange in August, and is registering on major European exchanges, said Douglas Cifu, Virtu’s president and chief operating officer.

The deal comes amid mounting competition and regulation in the European market for ETFs, or investment funds that track the performance of indexes and other baskets of individual securities. Unlike in the U.S., the majority of ETF trading in Europe occurs in over-the-counter transactions. But new rules are pushing more ETF trading onto exchanges, providing opportunities for  trading firms like Virtu to grab a bigger share of the market.

Noted James Ryan of London-based ETF broker WallachBeth International, “Virtu’s expanded role as a liquidity provider in European-based ETFs will necessarily enhance the playing field as the ETF market in Europe continues to evolve and otherwise catch up to the US market in terms of both institutional investor transparency and overall liquidity.” Continue reading