Active ETFs Now Outnumber Passive Funds in Industry Watershed Moment

The ETF market has hit a symbolic turning point: active funds now outnumber passive ones for the first time, marking a sharp break from the industry’s index-tracking origins — even if actively managed assets still account for just a tenth of assets.

Roughly 51% of the nearly 4,300 US-listed exchange-traded funds are ones overseen by fund managers who have more discretion to pick stocks or other securities, eclipsing index-following products for the first time, Bloomberg Intelligence data show. The number of active ETFs has more than doubled in the past five years, from just 23% in 2020.

BB Active Overtakes graph

It’s another sign of the sea change underway in the $11 trillion US-listed ETF market. Investors have been gravitating toward actively managed strategies, which have absorbed about 40% of industry inflows amid this year’s market turbulence — the highest share ever. To meet that demand, asset managers are launching a record number of new active products, which command higher fees than their passive counterparts.