Fiduciary rule prompts ETF price cuts at BlackRock

(Bloomberg) --BlackRock is cutting prices across its core ETFs, anticipating the Department of Labor's fiduciary rule will drive more investors into passive funds.

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The U.S. Department of Labor headquarters stands in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, July 3, 2013. The U.S. Department of Labor is scheduled to release unemployment rate figures on Friday, July 5. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

The iShares lineup will feature lower expense ratios on 15 stock and bond funds aimed at buy-and-hold investors, BlackRock said Wednesday in a statement. Starting today the $80 billion iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV), for example, will charge 4 basis points, or $4 a year per $10,000 invested, instead of 7, while the $42 billion iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF (AGG) will cost clients $5 instead of $8.

“A new era is dawning for advisers and long-term investors of all kinds,” Mark Wiedman, global head of iShares, said in the statement. “To meet this historic shift, we aim to set a new market convention for core investing.”

Mark Weidman
Mark Wiedman, senior managing director of BlackRock Inc., speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York, U.S., on Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2016. Wiedman explained the firm's decision to cut prices across core ETFs as they anticipate an influx of investors into passive funds due to new U.S. rules. Photographer: Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg

Labor's fiduciary rule requires full compliance in 2018, stating that brokers must put clients’ interests ahead of their own when handling retirement investments. New York-based BlackRock expects financial advisers to turn increasingly to ETFs as they focus on the quality and cost-efficiency of funds. Asset managers already have been reducing prices on ETFs to attract individual and institutional investors frustrated with the higher expenses and lackluster performance of some actively managed funds.

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Wiedman said revenue reductions from price cuts will be made up by greater flows into the ETFs. He expects the iShares Core series, which was launched in 2012, to grow to $1 trillion in assets in the next ten years.

"We make it up on volume," Wiedman said.

In 2015, BlackRock cut fees to as low as 0.03% on seven U.S.-listed ETFs targeting price-conscious investors. The firm is competing with Vanguard Group, whose broad-market ETFs have lured individual investors.

BlackRock’s move is part of a race to the bottom on fees for ETFs and other retirement-savings products. In August, Schwab announced that it was introducing low-priced target date funds for retirement accounts with an expense ratio of 8 basis points and no minimum investments.

BlackRock’s ETFs have attracted $64 billion in cash this year, while Vanguard’s have gathered $62 billion. This accounts for about 80 percent of the $157 billion in total ETF flows, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

"We see a lot of money coming into motion over the next few years and we want to win," Wiedman said.

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