State Street: Active, Retail, Inheritances to Drive Next $10T in ETF Assets

SSGA Chief Business Officer Anna Paglia, Chief Investment Strategist Michael Arone, and Citigroup ETF strategist Scott Chronert expect the rise of active management, highly targeted funds, and a new macroeconomic regime to significantly change how the ETF industry will add another $10 trillion in global assets in the coming years.

On Wednesday, the trio spoke with reporters in an event previewing SSGA’s upcoming 2024 ETF Impact Survey, which is due for release on Monday.

A New Decade for Active Managers, Alts

Chronert argued index equity funds dominated the post-great financial crisis era as low interest rates and stubbornly low inflation allowed U.S. stocks — the "Magnificent Seven" in particular — to reach soaring valuations.

But the COVID-19 pandemic, years of inflation above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, and some of the highest interest rates in decades are threatening that tech-heavy investing regime. Chronert believes a world with higher interest rates and more prevalent inflation will create more space to carve out niches in a more dispersed and volatile environment.

“That should open the door to active management,” he said.

BlackRock also expects a renaissance for active ETFs after recently projecting that global ETF assets will rise to $4 trillion by 2030.