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ETFs shutting down at the fastest pace since 2017

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During the first quarter, 72 exchange-traded funds with $1.4 billion in assets closed their doors

The tumultuous start to 2020 saw exchange-traded funds shutter at the fastest pace in almost three years.

A total of 72 ETFs with $1.4 billion in assets shut down and returned their money to investors in the first quarter as the coronavirus outbreak roiled markets, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the most since the third quarter of 2017, when 73 funds closed.

The liquidations came as the economic fallout from the virus unleashed volatility across asset classes, sending the S&P 500 Index into a bear market at the fastest pace on record.

That degree of turbulence sparked a reckoning for the myriad niche funds populating the nearly $4 trillion ETF market, according to WallachBeth Capital.

“With huge market movements, investors are going to flock to broad-based funds to hedge out risk, rather than smaller niche products,” said Mohit Bajaj, WallachBeth’s director of ETFs. “It was hard enough when the market was at its peak to get market share, even harder when the S&P is down over 20%.”

Calling It Quits

Invesco led the liquidations, shutting a total of 42 ETFs as part of plans to consolidate the company’s offerings after it bought OppenheimerFunds Inc. in 2019. ProShares and Direxion closed several leveraged ETFs, which use derivatives to amplify returns of the securities they track.

The still-elevated level of volatility has slowed the pace of ETF debuts as well. Just four funds started trading in March, the lowest monthly total since August and a steep drop from the 29 ETFs that came online in February.

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