Wall Street’s Deluge of ESG-Fund Launches Risks Breaking Point

The flood of new ESG funds is threatening to test the limits of investor demand, with the world’s largest credit ETF the latest to get a socially responsible doppelganger even as it bleeds cash.

The iShares ESG Advanced Investment Grade Corporate Bond exchange-traded fund (ticker ELQD) -- a copycat of the $38.4 billion iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF (LQD) -- debuted this week touting higher environmental, social and governance standards.

The BlackRock Inc. ESG launch comes despite a market backlash against credit strategies teeming with interest-rate risk. Short interest in LQD has rarely been higher, with about 20% of outstanding shares on loan, according to data from IHS Markit Ltd. Investors have pulled $14.9 billion from the product this year -- more than any other U.S. ETF and erasing all 2020 inflows.

Just a week ago, BlackRock executed a similar move with the introduction of ESMV, an ESG take on its low-volatility fund with the latter hit by more redemptions than any other equity ETF this year. A spokesperson for BlackRock didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The arrival of ESG versions of these currently unloved products is an acid test of demand for socially conscious investing options. U.S. issuers alone have launched 27 such ETFs in 2021 so far, one shy of last year’s record.

“Within the next year, I think we’ll start seeing a spike in ESG ETF closures,” said Nate Geraci, president of The ETF Store, an advisory firm. “A lot of product is being launched without proof that investor demand actually exists.”