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JPMorgan Dethrones Pimco With the Biggest Actively Managed ETF
JPMorgan Chase headquarters in Manhattan, 2012 (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

JPMorgan Dethrones Pimco With the Biggest Actively Managed ETF

JPMorgan's JPST has surged to $13.94 billion in assets, overtaking PIMCO's MINT, with $13.88 billion.

(Bloomberg) -- There’s a new king of actively managed exchange-traded funds.

The JPMorgan Ultra-Short Income ETF, ticker JPST, surpassed the long-reigning PIMCO Enhanced Short Maturity Active ETF, ticker MINT, as the largest active fund in the $4.9 trillion market. JPST has surged to $13.94 billion in assets after launching in May 2017, overtaking the $13.88 billion MINT, which debuted in November 2009.

It’s a coup for JPMorgan, which didn’t launch its first ETF until 2014. The firm is still a relatively small player: It controls just 31 funds with roughly $39 billion under management, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. However, the firm has carved out a niche in the actively managed corner of an industry that’s dominated by passive giants such as BlackRock Inc. and Vanguard Group Inc.

“JPMorgan was relatively late to crash the ETF party, but they have used their scale and strong brand to climb the leader board with both low-cost asset allocation based and actively managed fixed income ETF products,” said Todd Rosenbluth, head of ETF and mutual fund research at CFRA Research. “JPST has barely turned three years old and has become a go-to strategy for cash management.”

PST, which tracks investment-grade securities maturing in a year or less, charges 0.18% in fees and has attracted over $3.7 billion in flows so far this year. MINT, which also holds short-dated high-grade debt, has a 0.36% expense ratio and has taken in just $76 million in 2020.

JPMorgan’s fund didn’t fall as much as Pimco’s ETF during the global market downturn in March. Given that holders of short-duration ETFs are chiefly concerned about capital preservation, JPST’s performance likely resonated with investors, according to Morningstar Inc. It’s roughly 0.8% higher in 2020, compared with gains of just 0.3% for MINT.

“JPST experienced a relatively shallow drawdown during the selloff earlier this year,” said Ben Johnson, Morningstar’s global director of ETF research. “To the extent that JPST did a relatively better job on that front than MINT in the worst market in recent memory, it could have influenced subsequent flows.

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