JPMorgan Overthrows JPMorgan for Crown of Largest Actively Managed ETF

JPMorgan has unseated itself for the title of largest actively managed exchange-traded fund in the $7 trillion arena.

A $101 million inflow on Monday boosted assets in the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (ticker JEPI) to $24.7 billion, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That influx finally vaulted JEPI past the $24.6 billion JPMorgan Ultra-Short Income ETF (JPST), which previously held the crown of biggest active ETF.

While both ETFs have benefited massively from the hunt-for-income that’s taken hold during the Federal Reserve’s aggressive campaign to cool inflation, the equity-focused JEPI has at last pulled ahead of fixed income-oriented JPST.

After a record-breaking 2022, JEPI — which invests in low-volatility stocks and employs an income-generating call-writing strategy — built upon that momentum, even as climbing bond yields offered competition. That should be seen as a win for stockpickers broadly, given that active management tends to be more popular in fixed-income, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

“It’s a huge moment because fixed-income has always been where active dominates in ETFs,” Bloomberg Intelligence senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said. “This should come as some reassurance that it’s possible to have a hit product that’s active on the stock side.”

Beyond the two JPMorgan products, money has flooded into active ETFs this year at a record clip. Actively managed strategies have attracted more than 27% of the $115 billion worth of inflows into ETFs this year, even though active funds make up just about 6% of the $7 trillion market by assets.