Jan van Eck Talks 20 Years of ETFs

Concerned about an AI bubble? Sign up for The Daily Upside for smart and actionable market news, built for investors. Are you 1? Are you 2? Are you 3? Actually, never mind. We’d be here for a while. VanEck’s ETF business turned 20 this month. Founded in 1955 by John van Eck as a mutual…


Jan van Eck Talks 20 Years of ETFs

Concerned about an AI bubble? Sign up for The Daily Upside for smart and actionable market news, built for investors.

Are you 1? Are you 2? Are you 3? Actually, never mind. We’d be here for a while.

VanEck’s ETF business turned 20 this month. Founded in 1955 by John van Eck as a mutual fund firm, the company entered the ETF market in 2006 with the launch of the VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX). Today, it manages more than 70 ETFs with roughly $165 billion in assets. Having entered the ETF space relatively early, John’s son and CEO Jan van Eck has watched countless funds and strategies come and go over the past two decades, some successful, others less so. Yet despite the industry’s maturity, he still sees plenty of room for innovation.

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READ ALSO: Fee Wars Are Changing Which ETFs Go to Market. Here’s How and How Institutional Investors Are Reshaping the ETF Industry

“Ten years ago, I really thought we were going to be running out of ideas,” he told ETF Upside. Instead, entirely new industries have continued to emerge, creating fresh opportunities for fund issuers. “We just launched a space ETF. That wouldn’t have existed five years ago. People weren’t thinking about data centers and returnable rockets. That inspires us. We’ve got a big pipeline.”

We caught up with van Eck on a video call to discuss the past, present and future of both the firm and the ETF industry as a whole. His desk was covered in reports and folders, one stack nearly a foot tall. “These are my macro outlooks,” he said. “I probably should just throw them all in the garbage, but every time I do quarterly investment outlooks and find good ideas, I put them in that pile.”

How have your investment strategies developed over the past 20 years? 

Effectively, we have had two eras. We were kind of early in 2006 when we first got into ETFs, and that first decade saw us offering funds to parts of the market that didn’t have an ETF yet. The term was white space. There was no Russian ETF. There was no Vietnam ETF. We were early to munis and sectors of the economy others hadn’t gotten to. Also, sometimes the indices world isn’t really how investors think about the world. In the resources area, which is where we started, we looked at gold miners as very different from copper miners when some indices just lumped everything together.

The second era was more about taking existing asset classes, and if we thought we could improve exposure to them, we did. We have a high-yield bond strategy called Fallen Angel that only buys those bonds that started life as investment grade bonds and then got downgraded. It’s a great contrarian strategy because it ends up buying bonds when they’re under stress, and then when they recover, you get added return.

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