Man Group Goes All-In on ETFs With Hedge-Fund Trades for Masses

The world’s largest publicly listed hedge fund is breaking ranks with tradition — and stepping into the ETF arena under its own name.

On Thursday, Man Group Plc is launching two actively-managed bond ETFs — the Man Active High Yield ETF (ticker MHY) and the Man Active Income ETF (MANI). Hedge funds have dipped their toes into ETFs via so-called sub-advisory deals but Man is going full tilt. In a first for the firm, Man will be sole adviser and operator, housing the funds in its own trust. That allows for full control over distribution, branding and portfolio construction.

It’s a bet on the future of active ETFs and a symbolic move for the hedge fund community, which has long resisted the transparency and daily liquidity that come with typically low-fee ETF offerings.

“Look at this as Man being all-in in the ETF business versus just us dipping our toes,” said Michael Barrer, Man’s head of ETF capital markets. “This is early innings in the ETF space for managers like Man.”

Man’s new funds are set to have similar characteristics of two existing offerings the firm already manages, one focused on high yield, the other on diversified income. The funds have delivered annualized returns of about 9% and 22%, respectively, based on documents from the firm’s website.

The strategies won’t be cheap, going by ETF standards. MHY — at 0.69% — will be among the priciest ones in its category, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence. But London-listed Man is betting its track-record will attract clients.