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Legg Mason to close a quarter of its ETFs

The Legg Mason Inc. headquarters stands in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., on Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. Bill Miller, the Legg Mason Inc. manager famous for beating the Standard & Poor's 500 Index for a record 15 years through 2005, will step down from his main fund after trailing the index for four of the past five years. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

The firm is shutting three funds next month following a review of its product lineup.

Legg Mason Inc., the Baltimore-based investment management company, plans to close a quarter of its ETFs next month.

The firm is shutting three funds that focus on the U.S., emerging markets and developed markets outside the U.S. following a review of its product lineup “to ensure it is relevant to investor demand,” the company said in a statement. Together the funds manage $28 million, just 3% of assets in Legg Mason’s 12 ETFs, and a fraction of the firm’s $727 billion.

The ETFs are also closing just weeks after reaching their three-year anniversary, the first point at which some institutional investors and brokerage platforms will consider a new fund. Legg Mason’s decision to close these products suggests it’s becoming increasingly hard for even large asset managers to support slow-going funds in their quest to make it big in the $3.7 trillion U.S. ETF industry.

(More: Legg Mason hopes to reverse TDF fortunes with MassMutual deal)

“Running an ETF isn’t free, and at some point it just becomes better to throw in the towel,” said Eric Balchunas, an ETF analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “These funds just didn’t do anything to stick out from the growing number of smart-beta ETFs, they were just too middle of the road.”

Funds can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to run, prompting issuers to liquidate ones that don’t garner assets. Cumulative closures are on pace to cross 1,000 funds in 2019, with other issuers already announcing plans to close a sport sponsors ETF and one that skims social media to choose its stocks.

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