Hartford Lowers Fees
On Wednesday, Hartford said its lowering fees on four of its five ETFs by an average of 14 percent. The ETF that will not yet see a fee reduction is the Hartford Multifactor REIT ETF RORE. RORE charges 0.45 percent per year, or $45 on a $10,000 investment and was the first ETF launched by Hartford following the acquisition of Lattice.
RORE tracks the Lattice Risk-Optimized Real Estate Strategy Index with the objective of beating traditional real estate benchmarks, such as the MSCI US REIT Index.
“RORE seeks to track an index which is designed to capture the income and growth potential of investing within the U.S. REIT universe. The strategy selects equity securities of REITs exhibiting a favorable combination of factor characteristics, including quality, momentum, and value. RORE is the first ETF launched by Hartford Funds since the firm acquired Lattice Strategies just over 60 days ago,” according to a statement.
4 Fee Cuts In Focus
Hartford is lowering the annual fee on the Hartford Multifactor Developed Markets (ex-US) ETF RODM to 0.39 percent from 0.5 percent. The new fee on the Hartford Multifactor Emerging Markets ETF ROAM is 0.59 percent, down from 0.65 percent.
Hartford Multifactor U.S. Equity ETF ROUS will charge 0.29 percent per year, down from 0.35 percent, while the Hartford Multifactor Global Small Cap ETF ROGS saw its expense ratio trimmed by 5 basis points to 0.55 percent.
The Trend
As has been the case in years past, ETF issuers have been willing to lower fees this year in an effort to attract new assets. For example, BlackRock, Inc. BLK, the world's largest asset manager, made waves in the exchange-traded funds industry by announcing lower fees for 15 of its iShares core ETFs in October.
Just days later, Charles Schwab Corp SCHW revealed lower fees on several of its ETFs, which were already among the industry's least expensive.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.