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The results of the Greenwich Associates 2016 European Exchange-Traded Funds Study show that institutional investors are turning to ETFs for liquidity, ease of use and fast access to exposures.
Institutional assets are flowing into exchange-traded funds as U.S. institutions integrate ETFs into essential functions ranging from risk management and liquidity enhancement to... 

Have Emerging Markets Emerged?

22 February 2017 By: William Llamas
In Q4 of 2016, Greenwich Associates conducted 181 online interviews across North America, Europe and Asia to bring clarity to the commission rates firms pay for equity trades. The result is a truly comprehensive view across 77 MSCI-defined developed...

ETFs: Asian Institutions Broaden Applications

21 February 2017 By: Andrew McCollum
Exchange-traded funds continue to attract new institutional users and assets in Asia, driven by significant growth among asset managers, institutional funds and insurance companies. The results of the Greenwich Associates 2016 Asian ETF...

Is There a Future for Active Management?

9 February 2017 By: Andrew McCollum, Davis Walmsley, Christopher Dunn, Mark Buckley
There is no doubt that institutional investors are shifting investment assets into lower-cost passive strategies. But, reports of the death of active management are not just premature, they are altogether incorrect. Greenwich Associates is...

Trading the Auctions

2 February 2017
The exchange-operated opening and closing auctions or “crosses” are becoming an increasingly important part of the trading day...
The MiFID II, Unbundling and Research Budgeting report provides a comprehensive look at key topics impacting equity trading desks in the U.S. and Europe.

Control and Transparency

24 January 2017
Find out how the changing role of buy-side traders will impact how they evaluate, select and reallocate commissions to brokers.
Three global brokers are pulling away from the pack in the Asian equity research/advisory business—a break from historical patterns characterized by a more gradual slope among major competitors.
2016 will go down as the Year of the Unexpected, as Brexit, Trump and the Chicago Cubs upended “likely outcomes.”

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