‘Cannibalization’ Fears Haunt Stockpickers Seeking ETF Lifeline

Investors are pouring money into active ETFs, but a closer look reveals a migration of assets into the wrapper instead of a resurgence in alpha-chasing bets.

Over the past five years, firms like Capital Group and Dimensional Fund Advisors have seen tens of billions in ETF inflows — just as their mutual fund complexes have lost even more. At Capital Group, $76 billion entered active ETFs while $294 billion exited mutual funds through the end of September. Dimensional flipped $125 billion in outflows into $135 billion of active ETF inflows in that timeframe, Bloomberg Intelligence data showed.

The two-way traffic suggests that this isn’t active management making a grand comeback — it’s largely investors shifting to the ETF wrapper from mutual funds. Advisers and platforms are swapping into the exchange-traded structure for lower fees and to minimize taxes. Among managers of active strategies, only JPMorgan seems to show genuine net growth, with both its mutual funds and active ETFs attracting new assets.

BB Active ETFs

The result of the migration into the ETF wrapper is a less-than-perfect offset in at least some smaller categories. Families of so-called clones, which Morningstar Inc. defines as funds with 90% overlap in their holdings, have seen nearly $288 billion exit from active mutual funds since the start of 2020. Their ETF counterparts, meanwhile, have absorbed roughly $222 billion.

“Outflows in the overall active bucket are getting bigger. The ETFs are getting some flows, but it’s not reversing or slowing down the trend of money fleeing active equity funds in general,” said Jack Shannon, principal, equity strategies at Morningstar. “Even for the clones, it’s not a pure offset.”

It’s an asterisk on yet another banner year for actively managed ETFs, which have seen their share of the $13.2 trillion US ETF industry double in less than a decade, Bloomberg Intelligence data showed. A record $319 billion has poured into the structure year-to-date — shattering the previous high-water mark, which was set just last year. At the same time, nearly $458 billion has exited from active mutual funds so far in 2025.