Wall Street's Mutual Fund-to-ETF Magic Trick Is Failing to Wow

A parade of money managers who converted mutual funds into exchange-traded funds in a bid to ride rampant demand for the newer, easier-to-trade structures are discovering it may not be so simple to tap the ETF boom.

More than one-third of converted funds have posted net outflows since they made the switch, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, while 61% have attracted less than $10 million each. In fact, only quant giant Dimensional Fund Advisors’s funds have seen significant positive net flows since converting. Even JPMorgan Asset Management, whose overall ETF business is booming, saw net outflows for its converted funds.

The underwhelming results put a damper on the accelerating mutual fund-to-ETF conversion trend as issuers try to recapture the attention of investors who have been spurning old-school mutual funds at a record clip and pouring money into tax-friendly ETFs.

“Just because you convert doesn’t mean the flows are going to come in,” said Eric Balchunas, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “The dog has to want the food in the bowl. If it’s a bad strategy, it won’t sell no matter what bowl it’s in.”

By converting an existing fund, issuers hope to bring an established track record and assets to the ETF market, giving each strategy a head start. They also aim to forestall investors from exiting the mutual fund.