ETFs Are Reducing Market Efficiency
ETFs have attracted plenty of criticism over the past few years, and according to researchers at Stanford University, Emory University and the Interdisciplinary Center of Herzliya in Israel, at least some of these concerns are valid. The researchers published a paper on the topic last month within which they examined whether an increase in ETF ownership is accompanied by a decline in pricing efficiency for the underlying component securities. What they found only confirmed their initial predictions: ETFs are reducing market efficiency.
ETFs are reducing market efficiency as assets continue to climb
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Specifically, the study finds that an increase in ETF ownership is associated with (1) higher trading costs (bid-ask spreads and market liquidity), (2) an increase in “stock return synchronicity,” (3) a decline in “future earnings response coefficients,” and (4) a decline in the number of analysts covering the firm.
Combined, these factors “eventually turn stocks into drones that move in lockstep with their industry” and reduces the number of opportunities for “traders seeking informational edges by offering fewer opportunities” according to Bloomberg’s analysis of the findings.
ETFs Are Reducing Market Efficiency
The researchers discovered that a single percentage point increase in ETF ownership of a stock leads to a 9% increase in correlation between the ETF and share’s industry group and the broader market. Furthermore, the relationship between a share’s price and future earnings falls 14%. The bid-ask spread also rises 1.6%, and absolute returns grow by 2%.
The paper goes on to argue that these changes occur because of the way unsophisticated investors buy securities. Indeed, ETFs have greatly improved the average investors’ access to markets and also reduced trading costs, but at the same time, they’ve also decreased the advantage Wall Street has over nonprofessional investors. Whereas before traders who thought they knew something others didn’t, could profit by outmaneuvering less informed buyers, today a large volume of stock is locked up in ETFs reducing the trader’s ability to profit. These negative impacts snowball. Fewer trades occur, so liquidity deteriorates, increasing transaction costs, which deters professional traders, impacting liquidity further and so on.
However, despite the fact that their evidence points to the conclusion ETFs are bad for markets, the researchers do acknowledge that the rise of the ETF has not been as damaging as many believe it has due to the instrument’s ability to open up markets, which were once inaccessible:
“Our evidence suggests the growth of ETFs may have (unintended) long-run consequences for the pricing efficiency of the underlying securities. However, ETFs are clearly an important development in financial markets, which have brought many well-documented benefits to investors. We have not conducted a welfare analysis, and our findings should not be construed an indictment against these funds. Rather, we view these findings as yet another reminder that the informational efficiency of financial markets is not, after all, a free good.”
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