NEPC’s Dulari Pancholi was quoted in a recent Pensions & Investments article which discusses that despite heavy allocations to other forms of alts, institutional investors and private wealth clients are not yet looking to bring alternative ETFs into their portfolios. View the article on Pensions & Investments’ site here.
Over the last few years, the allocation that large institutional investors have been willing to commit to alternatives has appeared limitless. And the larger the investor, the more likely they were to utilize alts.
With few exceptions, however, alternatives offerings in the $8.3 trillion U.S. exchange-traded product market have failed to attract significant institutional interest. Yet some recent market and product trends have helped to shine a light on the opportunities and advantages of ETFs beyond equity and fixed-income exposures.
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“Similarly, Dulari Pancholi, partner and head of credit and multiasset research at NEPC, said she has observed investment managers watching ETFs and tracking flows “to get a sense of market movement and sentiment as a measurement to better inform when they might put on or take off a trade.” Institutional investors and private wealth clients, however, are not yet looking to bring alternative ETFs into their portfolios, according to Pancholi.”
Click here to continue reading the full Pensions & Investments article.