Industry Updates

Robotic ETFs heat up in Korea

David Tuckwell

Today's listings

Korea

In Korea, two new ETFs will be listed this week, each of which tracks tech stocks with big visions. Kodex, the ETF issuer run by Korean chaebol Samsung, has launched a robotics and automation ETF (276990). 276990 will synthetically track ROBO Global's "Robotics & Automation Index", which as the name suggests, tallies up companies from around the world involved in robotics and automation. Samsung is not the first issuer to peg an ETF to this index. In Europe, ETF Securities has a product tracking it; in the US, Exchange Traded Concepts has one.

The second ETF comes from KBStar, the ETF issuing arm of Korea bank, which is launching a "Global 4th Industry Revolution IT ETF" (276650). The ETF will track the S&P Global 1200 Information Technology Index. In the US, iShares also runs an ETF that tracks this index. 276650 will use swaps to track its benchmark.

Taiwan

Other new issues come from nearby Taiwan, where asset manager Fuh Hwa has listed three new fixed income ETFs.

  • 00710B, the "Fuh Hwa 1-5 Yr High Yield ETF" will track the performance of non-investment grade high-risk bonds.

  • 00711B, the "Fuh Hwa Emerging Market 10+ Yr Bond ETF" will track the long-term debts of developing countries.

  • 00712, the "Fuh Hwa FTSE Mortgage REITs ETF" will track mortgages mostly in the US.

Today's news from around the web

One retail chain for ETFs

It's become a truism that Amazon will eat retail, but there is one store that seems exempt: Ross. The unkempt discounter is so many and disorganised the customers love it. This is why ETF issuer Reality Shares is holding on to chunks of it despite the slow motion death of retail.

Health care ETFs are very healthy

Health care in the US is big business, making on the third largest sector allocation of the S&P. The industry has rebounded big time this year took office, and health care trackers are reaping the tail wind.

Europe fixed income sees outflows

Inflows into European ETFs stayed steady last month, with the industry seeing €8.7 billion in new assets. Fixed income ETFs, however, took a €2.3bn dip, meaning they're seeing some of the lowest inflows in the past two years.

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