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| | | ... 30 where it took out the number one spot again after receiving flows of $130 million. BetaShares chief executive Alex Vynokur told Financial Standard the $2 billion cash ETF is popular with advisers that are de-risking portfolios and allocating more ... |
| | | | ... and our job as a fiduciary is that even remote risks have a risk management strategy," BetaShares chief executive Alex Vynokur said. OOO is now the worst-performing of all ASX-listed ETFs at -73.1% return year to date, as at July 24. It raked up significant ... |
| | | | ... significantly to under 65 cents and has bound back to 70 [and] that extra volatility it adds to portfolio is not always welcome," Vynokur told Financial Standard. "In the last 10 years, the story has been the depreciation of the Australian dollar to ... |
| | | | ... said to be eligible, bonds must have a remaining term to maturity of more than 20 years. BetaShares chief executive Alex Vynokur said in previous share market downturns, government bonds historically have tended to rise in value "We are excited to be ... |
| | | | ... into hedged international products, coinciding with further Australian dollar weakness. BetaShares chief executive Alex Vynokur said: "During this challenging period, the extraordinary rise in ETF trading volumes indicates that Australian investors are ... |
| | | | ... currently manages mostly in-house and has been running for about a month, according to BetaShares chief executive Alex Vynokur. "It's a big positive because the investors [in the old fund] have significantly topped up their investments," he said. BetaShares ... |
| | | | ... the same. "What we are seeing right now is that there is no meeting of the minds between the buyers and the sellers," Vynokur says. "ETFs are not trading at a discount themselves, but the underlying bonds are trading less frequently and so the net asset ... |
| | | | ... equities is over. So, Financial Standard checked back in with Simon Doyle, head of fixed income at Schroders, and Alex Vynokur, chief executive at BetaShares, for their updated thoughts now that the market has changed. "I've always found it a bit frustrating ... |
| | | | ... doubling their assets to about $551 million at Monday's market close, according to BetaShares chief executive Alex Vynokur. "In the past month or so, we have seen a very, very significant increase in their usage. Trading volumes are 30 times higher ... |
| | | | ... all-time monthly high, with just over $7 billion traded in Australian ETFs in February. BetaShares chief executive Alex Vynokur said the $2 billion drop in FUM was expected. "While many investors' portfolios clearly have suffered from recent falls ... |
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