Vanguard ETFs Take On iShares Index ETF Funds

by Dan Wiener | July 1, 2010 7:13 pm

This week we learned that Vanguard will over some index ETFs to combat ETF funds from the iShares family. Specifically, mutual fund giant Vanguard plans to offer exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, on a series of Russell and S&P indexes. These ETF funds include the S&P 500, and challenges the dominance of Barclay’s iShares unit.

This is a Vanguard marketing move, plain and simple.Vanguard doesn’t need another series of large-cap (S&P 500, Russell 3000 and Russell 1000), mid-cap (S&P 400) or small-cap (S&P 600 and Russell 2000) ETFs. In fact, the investment company has long argued that the methodology used to create the MSCI indexes it uses for its current Vanguard Large Cap Index (VLACX[1]) mutual fund, Vanguard MidCap Index (VIMSX[2]) mutual fund and Vanguard Small Cap Index (NAESX[3]) mutual fund — as well as their growth and value subsets and the ETFs based on them — is better than the methodology used by S&P or Russell.

In a paper written when Vanguard was moving toward a shift from the S&P index benchmarks it had been using to the MSCI indexes it now uses, Vanguard’s chief investment officer, Gus Sauter, wrote that growth and value indexes “measure the wrong set of securities or, if not that, then the wrong way of managing those securities.” In his view “an index must reflect the way that money managers actually invest.” Vanguard has also stated that the MSCI indexes “have superior construction and rebalancing methods.”

It didn’t hurt that Vanguard found a “better index” about the time Standard & Poor’s sued to prevent Vanguard from issuing ETF shares on Vanguard 500 Index (VFINX), Vanguard Growth Index (VIGRX) and Vanguard Value Index (VIVAX) all of which were based on S&P index benchmarks at the time.

Vanguard has now been given carte blanche to issue ETFs on the vaunted 500 Index as well as to issue new ETFs on the same S&P indexes it was once prevented from tracking.

A few things that haven’t been focused on in the discussion of this announcement:

While Vanguard hasn’t put a set date on the launch of these various ETFs, filings with the SEC suggest they won’t be appearing before mid-September at the earliest. This gives iShares a little time to figure out how they are going to combat this attack.

Links in this item:
  1. VLACX: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=VLACX
  2. VIMSX: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=VIMSX
  3. NAESX: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=NAESX

Source URL: http://www.investorplace.com/2010/07/vanguard-etf-index-funds-investing-etfs-ishares-vlacx-vimsx-naesx/
Short URL: http://www.investorplace.com/?p=8606