Investment Product and Service Launches

JPMorgan launches China active ETF; First Trust launches inflation sensitive ETF; Modern Capital announces the Modern Capital Tactical Opportunities Fund; and more.


J.P. Morgan Asset Management Launches JPMorgan Active China ETF

J.P. Morgan Asset Management announced the launch of the JPMorgan Active China ETF. The fund is designed to provide a “best ideas” portfolio of Chinese equities, focusing on an investment process driven by bottom-up stock selection.

Managed by JPMorgan Asset Management (Asia Pacific) Ltd., the fund leverages the Greater China research team within J.P. Morgan’s emerging markets and Asia Pacific Equities team.

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“The launch of JPMorgan Active China ETF is another example of our commitment to delivering innovative and differentiated investment solutions to clients,” said Bryon Lake, global head of ETF solutions at J.P. Morgan Asset Management. “There are a lot of opportunities in China that investors want to invest in with intentionality, and we are excited to offer them a strategic option to capitalize on.”

First Trust Launches First Trust Bloomberg Inflation Sensitive Equity ETF

First Trust Advisors LP announced it has launched a new exchange-traded fund, the First Trust Bloomberg Inflation Sensitive Equity ETF.

The fund looks for investment results that correspond generally to the price and yield of the Bloomberg Inflation Sensitive Equity Index.

The FTIF aims to combat inflation by investing in companies in the energy, materials and real estate sectors. These companies generate high free cash flow and have shown historically strong performance during inflationary cycles.

“We believe that high inflation is one of the most important challenges that investors are facing in 2023,” said Ryan Issakainen, a senior vice president and ETF strategist at First Trust, in a statement. “High quality stocks from sectors that have historically benefitted from rising prices may help investors navigate this environment.”

Modern Capital Announces Capital Tactical Opportunities Fund

Modern Capital Inc. announced that the Modern Capital Tactical Opportunities Fund is available to investment advisers who have custody of client accounts at Charles Schwab.

“Our goal is to be on all the major RIA platforms that investment advisors utilize daily. Charles Schwab is a game-changer for our firm, and we are eager to get to work,” said Michael Pierce, head of institutional distribution at Modern Capital, in a statement.

The fund seeks to provide income and capital gains by investing a significant portion of the portfolio in closed-end funds, exchange-traded funds and sponsored American depositary receipts. Unlike funds with a narrow mandate restricting portfolio managers’ ability to react to fluid market conditions, MCTDX allows for greater discretion.

Mirae Asset Mutual Fund Launches Smart Beta ETF

The Mirae Asset Financial Group announced the launch of the Mirae Asset Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30 ETF. The product is a smart beta ETF that aims to measure the performance of the securities in the large market capitalization segment.

Key Highlights of Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30 Index ETF include:

  • In the short term, it can be used as an investment during bear markets/choppy markets;
  • In the long term, it can used for investment, as the product has generated higher risk-adjusted returns over a longer horizon;
  • It has relatively lower drawdown compared to a broad market; and
  • It provides alternate sectorial exposure, which is different from the Nifty 100 Index.

“Smart beta strategies typically capture factor exposures using systematic, rules-based approaches cost-effectively,” Mirae Asset’s head of ETF products, Siddharth Srivastava, said in a statement. “[The] Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30 Index aims to generate better risk-adjusted return over a longer horizon and provides alternate sectorial exposure. This fund may be used by investors who are cautious about portfolio volatility and downside risk and are keen to generate long-term wealth with relatively lower risk.”

Brown Advisory Launches Sustainable Value Mutual Fund

Brown Advisory announced the launch of the Brown Advisory Sustainable Value Fund.

The fund invests in large-market capitalization companies with durable fundamentals and capital discipline that are deemed undervalued by the portfolio manager. The companies should satisfy the fund’s environmental, social and governance criteria.

The fund will be managed by Michael Poggi, who joined Brown Advisory as an equity analyst in 2003. During his tenure, he has covered a range of sectors, with a focus on value investment opportunities.

“The Sustainable Value Fund is unique because it combines Brown Advisory’s expertise in sustainable research with our years of experience in large cap and value investing,” said Poggi in a statement. “We believe that this approach allows us to uncover undervalued companies that others may overlook. We believe that the result of integrating our fundamental research with an ESG lens, utilizing our extensive and diverse team of analysts, will drive our ability to deliver returns for our investors.”

With SECURE 2.0, the Cash Balance DB Plan May Be Back

Experts at a DB Summit discussed the resurgence of cash balance plans and the advantages of variable benefit plans tied to the markets.


There may be renewed interest from companies in starting defined benefit plans and even opening up frozen plans that are not accepting new participants, according to panelists at the PLANADVISER/PLANSPONSOR DB Summit held last week.

Steve Mendelsohn, pension director at Zenith American Solutions Inc., moderated the Alternative DB Plan Designs session, in which experts discussed both cash balance plans and variable benefit plans.

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A DB cash balance plan is an account paid into by the employer, yet operating similarly to a 401(k) plan for participants; it also gives retiring or terminated employees the option of a lifetime income annuity or lump-sum payout. Thanks to the return of regulation that allows for plan payouts to align with employee tenure, companies may be interested in starting DB cash balance plans again, said John Lowell, a partner and consulting actuary at October Three Consulting LLC.

Recently, many organizations were either freezing or skipping the DB plan option because “they couldn’t stand the volatility” that went into managing them due to market fluctuations, Lowell explained on the webinar. They also were struggling with the advantages of it, because regulation did not allow them to vary the retirement income check based on tenure.

“It’s very technical, but essentially [regulators] said almost any cash balance design you have with a variable interest crediting rate has to have back-pay credits,” Lowell said. “That means that if you give a 5% pay credit to a person who’s 20 years old, you have to give a 5% pay credit to a person who’s 60 years old. You can’t have any variability.”

Past cash balance plans tended to have graded pay credits. To get back to that more attractive option, Lowell said, industry players were told they needed a Congressional fix to allow for graded pay credits.

Thank You, Congress

That fix came with the passage of the SECURE 2.0 of 2022 in December 2022. It allowed plan sponsors to assume an interest credit that is a “reasonable” rate of return, provided it does not exceed 6%.

“What that does is now say that participants can get a market rate of return on a basket of investments that they can get invest in, in just the regular world or in their defined contribution plan,” Lowell said.

As a plan sponsor, if you know what the rates of return are going to be, you can hedge them by making the same or similar investments, he explained. This is key, because a sponsor’s assets and liabilities can track each other, essentially de-risking the plan and providing costs that are at least as stable and predictable as a 401(k) plan or a profit-sharing plan.

“There’s really no difference from an employer’s standpoint in terms of cash flow perspective,” Lowell said. “But from the employee standpoint, there’s an awful lot you get. … You get your choice of a lump sum in almost all plans, or an annuity at fair prices.”

Variable Benefit Plans

Another trend in the DB space is what moderator Mendelsohn called variable pension plans, which reduce risk to the funding sponsor. These types of plans have “struck a chord with Taft-Hartley” trustees, or multiemployer benefit trusts, he said.

There are two types of variable plans, said Richard Hudson, a consulting actuary at First Actuarial Consulting Inc. In one, the participant’s end-benefit fluctuates depending on market returns.

These type of plans “generally show their benefit in terms of shares on the plan,” Hudson said. “A benefit formula might be $100 per month per years of service for one person to pay whatever it might be; you take that benefit, and you convert it to a number of shares.”

Those share values are going to increase and decrease each year with the investment performance trust fund, Hudson explained. One concern is that if a participant retires and there is a market downturn, they might lose 20% of their benefit. To offset that, some plans set up a reserve to protect retirees from a downturn. Either way, this market-tied defined benefit may be a challenge for sponsors to manage due to market fluctuation.

Scenario Two

In the second variable-plan scenario, the employee will get a fixed contribution—what changes are the future accruals within the trust, Hudson said.

“The general idea of this plan is to provide the employer with a fixed contribution,” he explained. This plan is “not subject to volatility and ensures that the contribution is sufficient by adjusting for future benefits. It then allocates those dollars between newer pools and underfunding in the plan and paying that off.”

In a static pension plan, Hudson said, it is hard to determine what the next 10 or 20 years are going to be. With variable benefits, the result is to reverse that setup to make the contributions stable, while the benefit formulas adjust over time.

That setup “will absorb the impact of gains and losses,” Hudson said. “If the plan becomes underfunded, you have more contribution dollars that are needed to shore up the fund, so less money is available for benefits, and it will decrease the accrual. If the plan becomes overfunded, you have more money than you need, and [you]’re going to amortize that money back into new benefits by increasing the accrual.”

There are drawbacks to the plan, according to Hudson. That includes the plan needing to be designed correctly without knowing the future of the investment market, as well as some gray areas around how the IRS values variable benefit plans.

In the end, sponsors can go back and forth while weighing benefits of the two plan designs, Hudson said, “but ultimately, the deciding factor is always going to be what can we communicate to our participants. And what are they going to understand. That becomes the deciding factor as to which plan you’re going to deal with long term.”

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