Are
ETFs Really Safe?
by
David Galland
Casey
Research
Recently
by David Galland: Politics
of Hate
A Casey
Report interview with Dr. Andrew Bogan
Dr. Andrew
Bogan is a managing member of Bogan Associates, LLC in Boston, Massachusetts.
He has spoken at many international investor conferences
his specialty being global equity investing and has been
interviewed on live television for CNBC's Strategy Session.
In an attempt
to understand the relatively new but wildly popular Exchange Traded
Funds (ETFs), Dr. Bogan did extensive research into the structures
used by ETF operators, with a special focus on the potential risks
that might arise should they be faced with large and sudden liquidations.
Given that there are about 2,000 ETFs in existence, with assets
totaling over $1 trillion, we thought it appropriate to find out
what Dr. Bogan has learned in his research.
David Galland:
Our primary goal today is to give readers a better understanding
of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and the risks that come with them.
Speaking personally, I've been in this business for a long time,
and I find anything that grows as quickly as ETFs have a bit worrisome.
To begin, maybe
you could just talk a little about the difference between an ETF
and a traditional stock or bond mutual fund.
Andrew Bogan:
Yes. Shares in a traditional mutual fund, whether it's an index
fund or has a managed portfolio, don't trade in the open market.
If you want to own shares, you buy them from the fund. If you want
to get rid of your shares, you sell them to the fund.
A traditional
mutual fund takes its shareholders' capital and invests it directly
on a one-to-one basis in stocks or bonds and holds those securities
in custody. Thus it's always 100% reserved, meaning that the securities
it owns correspond exactly to the shares its investors own. If you
want your capital back, the fund can deliver it to you either in
kind or in cash, depending on market conditions.
That's not
the case with an ETF. Shares in an ETF trade in the open market,
which is where retail investors buy and sell them. An ETF also issues
and redeems shares every day, like a mutual fund. But, unlike a
mutual fund, it does so only through "authorized participants,"
which are brokers, market-makers and other institutions.
DG:
Jumping right to the point, has there ever been a problem with an
ETF?
AB:
ETFs have operated pretty well historically, but the mechanics of
share issuance and redemption also creates some unique differences
that we believe may lead to unintended consequences.
There already
have been a few problems with ETFs, some more significant than others.
The Flash Crash on May 6 of last year showed some structural issues
with ETFs and perhaps with our whole market system for equities
as well. It's hard to decide where to draw the line, but a lot of
securities departed from their perceived value during the Flash
Crash by very large amounts. The reasons are still not completely
understood, although the SEC has made a reasonable effort to understand
what happened.
Another incident
occurred in September 2008, when the Lehman and AIG mess was upon
us. The commodity ETFs run by ETF Securities, Ltd., in London halted
trading when AIG's solvency came into question. The funds were investing
in derivative contracts, including swap agreements, some of which
were with AIG. It was only the Federal Reserve pumping in tens of
billions of dollars that prevented those products from going. Bailing
out AIG averted a disaster for the funds, and they continued to
trade the next day.
DG:
So, the issue with the ETF securities fund was more around the derivatives
the fund held, not the structure of the fund itself?
AB:
In that particular case, it was around the derivative contracts
that underlay the fund, although that kind of arrangement is very
common with European ETFs. Even equity index ETFs in Europe tend
to be structured that way, and that's also not uncommon with a lot
of the foreign stock ETFs as well including some of those
traded here in the United States.
I think it's
a clear example where you have a counterparty risk wrapped inside
the fund that could be very significant in bad circumstances.
DG:
In the case of the Flash Crash, your research paper pointed out
that even though ETFs represent only 11% of the listedsecurities
in the U.S., 70% of the canceled trades during the Flash Crash involved
ETFs. Is there an explanation for that?
AB:
Some clarity is starting to emerge from work done by the SEC and
others. But from our perspective, those statistics are quite alarming.
There's no good reason 70% of canceled trades would be in ETFs while
only 11% of listed securities are ETFs. And even though ETFs trade
more actively, they don't represent 70% of all trading volume. So
any way you look at it, they were badly overrepresented among the
canceled trades, i.e., overrepresented among the most extremely
off-priced trades.
From the perspective
of financial theory, that makes absolutely no sense. ETFs are meant
to be index-fund trackers. Theyre meant to represent a whole
basket of shares, and yet these very securities that are meant to
be diversified actually fell more than their underlying stocks during
the Flash Crash, more often and more deeply.
That's quite
worrisome; it tells you that in a crisis environment ETFs don't
behave the way financial logic suggests they ought to, which suggests
to me that the theory is incomplete. People havent really
looked closely enough at what the unintended consequences of ETF
issuance and redemption mechanics are, and what the realities are
in stressful market conditions.
DG:
At this point, more than half the American Stock Exchange's daily
volume is ETFs, which is quite a number. These things have only
been around for, what, less than 20 years. Yet from everything I've
read, it seems theyre not very well understood, even by you
guys. Which is saying something because youve spent a lot
of time looking at them, and there are still blank spots in your
knowledge about how they actually operate.
AB:
Absolutely, and I think that's an important point. We understand
the mechanics of how an equity trades and from where it derives
its value and how it's priced in the market. The mechanics for mutual
funds are well understood also. The challenge with ETFs is that
the process of issuing and redeeming shares that also are trading
is much more complicated than a lot of people want to talk about.
It allows for some unintended consequences, particularly in connection
with short-selling, which became an important factor only in the
last decade.
DG:
Lets talk about the process of creating new shares. If I'm
running an ETF that is designed to mimic the S&P 500 index and
I have a lot of people who want to own my fund, I can simply issue
new shares based upon the flow of stocks into my fund, right?
AB:
Shares can be created at the end of any day if someone delivers
a basket of underlying stocks to the ETF through an authorized participant.
And shares that are not wanted in the marketplace can be redeemed
in kind for the underlying stocks or in some cases cash.
That's all been carefully structured and works smoothly. The issue
is what happens when short-selling dominates the trading.
People have
been short-selling ETFs up to shocking levels, like 100% short,
500% short, sometimes over 1,000% short. That's in a world where
stocks like Apple are 1% short, or IBM is 1.4% short, or General
Electric is 0.5% short. You really dont see traditional stocks
with short positions anything like this, so clearly something is
fundamentally different. The difference is that ETF short-sellers
including hedge funds, dealers and arbitragers are
confident they can always create the shares needed to cover, so
they see less risk of being squeezed.
DG:
But in a traditional short-selling situation, you typically have
to borrow the shares before you can short them.
AB:
Yes, and that's true here too. But if you look at the Securities
Settlement Failure data, ETFs are very oddly overrepresented, so
it does look like there is some short-selling that happens before
the shares are borrowed. But that's a small matter. The problem
is that there is no limit to the amount of short-selling you can
theoretically do while still having borrowed the shares. It simply
requires the same share to have been borrowed, short-sold, borrowed
from the new owner and short-sold again down a daisy chain. That's
how you get these arbitrarily large short interest figures.
The short-selling
involves new buyers coming in without the shares being created at
all, and that's the fundamental asymmetry in the short-selling that
we're most concerned about.
DG:
Let's get to that, because you have retail investors, for lack of
a better word, and youve got the hedge funds. I suppose they
could both own the same fund, but for completely different reasons;
a hedger to hedge another bet, and a retail investor to pursue a
certain goal, but the net result is that the short interest is still
way out of whack from what you'd expect to see in a traditional
stock. I suspect this is something that most of the retail investors
are unaware of. So, where is the potential for the ETFs to get into
trouble?
AB:
The trouble could come from a number of different angles.
One concern
is that the huge short interest building up essentially leaves the
ETF as a fractionally reserved stock ownership system. If you have
a fund, for example, that is 500% net short, then for every one
holder of an actual share there are five other investors who own
IOUs for the shares. Their real shares have been lent out and short-sold
to someone else usually without the original owner's knowledge,
unless they read and still remember the margin agreement they signed
when they opened the account 10 years ago.
For the ETF
itself, it means that the fund holds only 15% of the underlying
securities implied by the gross number of fund shares that investors
think they own. The other 85% isn't totally missing, it just isn't
held by the fund.
Morningstar
commented that the money is all there, it's just in hidden plumbing
in the financial system, and we agree with that exactly. The question
is, how many investors understood they were storing their money
in the hidden plumbing?
DG:
So walk us through what might happen if there were large-scale redemptions.
Let's just say that for whatever reason, people decided this was
the time to get out of a particular fund. How do things get unwound?
AB:
Redemptions have to flow through an authorized participant, which
is usually a broker or market-maker, and it's only that institutional
layer that can actually redeem. If for some reason a significant
portion, say, half or 80% or so, of the total fund ownership wanted
to redeem and get the underlying stocks from the ETF through the
authorized participant layer, you would fundamentally have a crisis
in a fractional-reserve system.
The ETF could
not deliver the underlying stocks to all the would-be redeemers.
The investors who really owned just an IOU on shares that had been
lent to short-sellers wouldn't have a direct claim on the fund,
so their demand to redeem would force an unwinding of the short-sales.
DG:
So it seems that it's not so much the fund that might have a problem.
The fund is only liable for the shares it has issued. The risk seems
to lie in the counterparties the brokers or the investors
that brokers lent shares to.
AB:
Right. Essentially you have just that. You have quite a bit of counterparty
risk here, because if you think your shares can be redeemed and
then the fund halts redemptions because theyre running out
of the underlying stocks, you're stuck. Normally ETF shares are
redeemable through the authorized-participant channel, but an ETF
or any other institution that issues something that is redeemable
but fractionally reserved could be hit with a run, like a bank run.
Now the big
question is, in practice, would this happen? It's up to everyone
to form their own conclusion, but interestingly the first argument
we heard when we began looking into ETFs was that this was just
a theoretical topic and that there would never be a really big redemption
in a large ETF. But we have since learned that's actually not the
case, because a giant redemption in IWM, one of the largest ETFs,
occurred in 2007.
Now we think
that 2007, being one of the best markets for equities since maybe
the late 90s, was a pretty forgiving time to test the crashworthiness
of an ETF that runs into a massive, unexpected redemption. But IWM
was redeemed from millions of shares outstanding down to something
on the order of 150,000 shares, and in one day, and that's because
somebody tried to crash the fund.
DG:
Was that a really lousy fund, and somebody just said, "Enough,
I'm going to punish you guys and get out of it, or
AB:
Oh, no, no, IWM is one of the largest and most liquid ETFs in the
entire market. It's the Russell 2000 iShares ETF. It is the poster
child of why ETFs are great. But even so, what's interesting is
that the first argument we got from industry insiders was that our
misgivings are nonsense, growing out of some theoretical conversation
about what might happen but is never going to happen, and now we're
being told it already has happened and nothing broke too badly,
so what are we worried about.
DG:
Lets stick with this potential problem of a huge bunch of
redemptions. People say, "Oh my god, I've got to get out of
my ETFs," and there is a wholesale run on the funds. Because
of the way ETFs are structured, it would seem that if they post
net redemptions for a day, that the broker that had lent fund shares
to short-sellers would just force the borrowers to buy back and
cover their obligations.
AB:
That's exactly right, but remember, for an ETF to create units requires
someone to deliver the underlying stocks, so there's somebody who's
on the hook to buy those stocks en masse all at the same time.
DG:
No matter what has happened to the price in the interim.
AB:
Yes, which gives rise to the question of who's on the hook and what's
their creditworthiness when they get put on the hook. Have their
prime brokers really been keeping appropriate track, as theyre
required to do and on most days have done, of the creditworthiness
of those, say, hedge funds or other kinds of short-sellers?
DG:
Because you're not talking about small amounts of money.
AB:
No. In fact, in one ETF, IWM again, short positions recently amounted
to 14 billion dollars. That's not an enormous amount for the capital
markets, but it's a pretty significant amount with respect to 2,000
small stocks. If there were a run, actually doing that unwind and
getting those 14 billion dollars' worth of extra ETF shares would
require buying 14 billion dollars worth of Russell 2000 stocks.
If you didnt want to be more than, say, 10% of volume, it
would take 40 trading days to buy all you needed.
So we think
that if you actually had a very sudden redemption run on IWM, there
is a real likelihood of a short squeeze occurring in the Russell
2000. We dont expect that at any particular time, it's just
something that could happen if enough things went wrong.
The short position
in an ETF like IWM being over 100% means that a large amount of
the money investors think they have placed in Russell 2000 stocks
has in fact been lent to hedge funds and other short-sellers. You
take that across the entire ETF industry and you're looking at about
100 billion dollars in short interest money that did not
go into the underlying shares or gold or whatever the ETF represents.
It was instead lent to hedge funds. It has been deposited in a shadow
banking system where ETFs allow short-sellers to borrow money from
institutional and retail investors.
DG:
And what are they doing with that money?
AB:
Well, no one knows. Presumably they invest it in what they think
is going to make a better return than what they shorted, because
you can't score the 10% or 20% those guys are all trying to make
every year by buying the index. So it's anybody's guess.
DG:
One question that Terry Coxon asked as I prepared for this interview
was whether there is any way for the marketplace to let the fund's
share price deviate for long from NAV?
AB:
The tracking of an ETF's price with the fund's NAV, which historically
has been extremely close, is totally dependent on an arbitrage mechanism.
The arbitrager can make money by continuously pushing the price
of the ETF toward its NAV. The question is... what NAV? What they
mean by NAV is a value per share outstanding of the fund's underlying
stocks. But of course you have this huge implied ownership through
short-selling, and the short-sellers' shares are not being counted
in the shares outstanding number.
DG:
A lot of our readers have money in GLD, which is the ETF that invests
in physical gold. You've looked at GLD, and it's based upon the
premise that as investors pour money in, the operators of GLD turn
around and buy physical gold and store it. And likewise with redemptions,
they just sell the gold. My understanding is that there isn't anywhere
near the same level of short interest on GLD.
AB:
The short position in GLD isn't nearly as large as it is for some
equity funds but we have looked at GLD, and it has the same
structural issues, just to a lesser extent, at least for now. The
short interest in GLD has fluctuated around 20 million shares. Now,
GLD is a pretty big fund. With 20 million shares short, it is roughly
95% fractionally reserved. So for all the investors who think they
own the underlying physical gold, the fund actually has 95% of it
in the vaults.
But GLD does
not have to stay at 95% fractionally reserved. If there were a massive
wave of short-selling in GLD, you could end up with a very significant
fractional-reserve situation. If that were followed by heavy redemptions,
you'd have the same kind of problem I described earlier not
enough gold to redeem all the shares.
DG:
Could they just say, "From here on, we're not issuing any more
shares"? Would that stop the short-selling?
AB:
Not necessarily, because, you know, the short-sellers are selling
in fact, it would probably exacerbate the short-selling.
So as long as a fund is issuing shares, aggregate buying demand
can be satisfied by expanding the fund. If they stop issuing shares,
aggregate demand would get satisfied by short-sales of existing
shares. So, if anything, closing the issue window should make the
problem worse, not better.
DG:
Working through the mechanics of this, let's say gold drops by a
few hundred bucks. Say, for instance, that there is some major change
in the market along the lines of when Volcker raised interest rates
back in '79-'80. And at that point a lot of short-sellers say, "Okay,
this is it for gold," they pile on, they start shorting the
hell out of GLD, and now all of a sudden youve got a real
problem because the fractional aspect of it balloons, if you will.
AB:
Well, you dont necessarily have an immediate problem. It depends
on the market conditions and the level of panic. You certainly would
have a ballooning fractional-reserve situation, meaning that the
reserves held in actual gold versus the implied ownership by people
who think they own GLD (even though the shares have been hypothecated
by the broker) will shrink. Those investors may believe they are
still entitled to the metal, but the reserve of gold held on their
behalf starts to shrink very quickly under those conditions.
The bigger
challenge might be if there were an actual redemption wave. If that
happened when GLD was already substantially fractionally reserved,
then you're back to an 1800s gold bank problem. Fractionally reserved
banks can be hit with a run.
DG:
Right. Is there anything else that would make this whole "house
of cards" collapse? Suppose a highly visible ETF stumbles and
is unable to meet redemptions, or they just have to postpone redemptions.
That might be the sort of trigger that could really send people
off.
AB:
You know, one of the big risks, by the way, that no one has really
discussed much, is if an ETF were to have a big redemption run in
panicky market conditions and halted redemptions. Halting redemptions
is a complicated decision, because it breaks the symmetry that allows
the arbitragers to go long or short both the basket of stocks and
the ETF shares to move price toward NAV.
So it's quite
possible that if redemptions were halted for any length of time,
the arbitragers wouldn't be keeping the share price in line with
NAV. We already know from the Flash Crash that significant price
departures from NAV are quite possible for ETFs.
DG:
Knowing what you do, I mean, obviously you deal on an institutional
level with your money-management firm, do you own ETFs personally?
AB:
We do not. We do not own any ETFs either personally or on behalf
of the funds we manage.
DG:
Is it because of the research youve done or just because it's
not what you guys do?
AB:
I would say it's primarily because it's not part of our strategy,
but obviously we did the research because we were interested in
understanding the product better.
DG:
So, any advice for readers? Is there a short interest over which
a person should be concerned about his holdings?
AB:
Well, I dont know if I could set a threshold, but I would
certainly encourage people to make sure they know what the short
interest is in any fund they are considering. That's a metric that
is starting to become more accessible. Since we published in September,
some of the ETF sponsors, like BlackRock, have begun reporting on
ETF short interest, which I think is terrific kudos to those
guys. We would like to see better transparency and disclosure, so
that institutional and retail investors alike are aware of the counterparty
risks that are "hidden in the plumbing," to use Morningstar's
term, and are aware of the actual and somewhat complicated mechanics
of the products that theyre buying.
DG:
Do the ETFs with a mandate to magnify an index 2 or 3 times (e.g.,
RSW) have an elevated level of risk, due to the additional leverage?
AB:
The underlying "assets" from which these funds get their
NAV are derivatives to begin with, which introduces another layer
of counterparty risk one that has already experienced serious
problems. We find it surprising that packaging complex derivatives
in an exchange-listed security (the ETF) seems to remove all of
the sophisticated investor standards usually applied to derivatives
trading by SEC, CFTC, etc.
One ETF recently
launched in the U.S. is PEK, the Market Vectors China A Shares ETF.
This is another great example of where the industry is headed.
It is illegal
for most foreign investors except a few licensed global institutions
to buy A shares on Shanghai or Shenzhen, China's two mainland
stock markets, and Market Vectors is not one of the exceptions.
So instead of owning A shares, the ETF owns swaps with brokers that
are licensed in China to own A shares. The fund holds the swaps
as its underlying "assets." So PEK is an NYSE-listed China
A shares ETF that does not own a single Chinese A share.
If PEK were
to become significantly short in the secondary market, it would
mean a fractional-reserve ownership of a derivative representing
a basket of stocks that would be illegal for nearly all of the ETF's
investors to own directly. More confusing still is what it means
to be short PEK in the first place, since it has historically been
illegal to be short A shares in China at all.
In essence,
ETFs are being used to package and securitize products that are
at best poorly understood and in some cases are used to circumvent
securities regulations. An example closer to home is when the SEC
briefly banned short-selling of essentially all financial stocks
in 2008. The financial-sector ETFs were not on the list, so many
hedge funds kept right on shorting financials using those ETFs.
DG:
Certainly a lot to think about here. Any other questions I forgot
to ask about, but that I should have?
AB:
No, I think that was a pretty good coverage of a little bit of work
we've done.
DG:
Is there a good publication that would help people better understand
the mechanics of the ETFs, because it is obviously very complicated,
something that people might want to be able to study?
AB:
Always the best place to look is in the fund's prospectus. The prospectuses
are long and impenetrable, because theyre written by the legal
team, but they really do have a tremendous amount of information.
If you can float through one of them, I think it's definitely to
your advantage.
DG:
Thank you for your time.
Successful
crisis investing requires that you see the big picture
and
know where its leading in the near future. That is the forte
of The Casey Report, with its editorial team of two economists
and two investment pros, among them Doug Casey himself. While its
hard to make enough money in todays markets to beat inflation,
it is possible
learn how in our free report Your
Bank Account Is Slowly Bleeding to Death.
April 8, 2011
David Galland
is the managing editor of Casey
Research.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
Research
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