US regulators, in unusual move, raise concerns about new private credit ETF
(Reuters) - The U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission sounded the alarm about aspects of the first broad private credit market exchange-traded fund, in a letter posted on its website on Thursday, hours after the ETF began trading.
In what analysts and other asset management firms described as a highly unusual move, Brent Fields, associate director of the SEC's division of investment management, asked State Street Global Advisors to address what it described as "significant outstanding issues" involving the SPDR SSGA Apollo IG Public & Private Credit ETF.
Fields declined to comment further. A spokesperson for the SEC declined to comment on questions involving any specific issuer.
State Street said it will be responding to the SEC's letter but had no further comment at present.
"This is a very unusual event," said Todd Sohn, ETF analyst at Strategas. "It's also very odd timing, given that the ETF has already launched and is trading."
Typically, sweeping questions of the kind raised in the letter are resolved before an ETF launches.
As reported earlier by Bloomberg News, the SEC raised concerns about the fund's liquidity and State Street's ability to comply with SEC valuation rules. Regulators also asked State Street to remove the name of Apollo Global Management from the name of the ETF as including it is "misleading" in context of Apollo's involvement.
"Nothing in the contents of the letter surprised me; we have been watching the questions they cited," said Amrita Nandakumar, president of Vident Asset Management. "The date on the letter was astonishing, however."
The SEC's letter said State Street had not yet addressed its concerns about liquidity. The ETF is the first to offer exposure to the private credit space via an array of privately issued bonds and loans.
SEC rules cap holdings of illiquid securities in ETFs to 15% of assets, but State Street said it may hold as much as 35% of assets in these instruments. To do that, it relied on a liquidity commitment from Apollo Global Investors.
Bryan Armour, ETF analyst at Morningstar, said this is the most significant issue raised by the SEC, given the fact that other asset managers are hoping to launch their own private credit ETFs. Nor, Armour said, did the SEC cite any possible penalties if State Street doesn't act promptly to resolve its concerns.
"It's within the SEC's rights to order the ETF to stop trading," Armour said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Walmart broadens 10% staff discount to include most grocery products, WSJ reports
(Reuters) -Walmart has expanded its 10% employee discount to nearly all of its grocery items, as the retail giant looks to retain workers, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, citing a letter from chief people officer to the company's staff. The 10% discount, previously available on products such as fresh produce and general merchandise, now extends to almost all grocery purchases at its stores and online, effective immediately, according to the report. Walmart, the largest private employer in the country, did not immediately respond to a Reuters' request for comment. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Sterling edges up to highest level since July on rate outlook
LONDON (Reuters) -The pound rose to three-week highs against the dollar on Wednesday, as investors grew increasingly convinced that U.S. interest rates are likely to fall more quickly than British ones, following a benign reading of U.S. inflation. Data on Tuesday showed U.S. consumer prices rose by an annual 2.7% in July, compared with expectations for 2.8%. An underlying measure of inflation that excludes food and energy rose more quickly than forecast, up 3.1% year-on-year, versus expectations for a rate of 3%, reflecting the increased cost of some goods and services, as tariffs started to kick in. Sterling, which has gained 8.3% this year against the dollar, was last up 0.5% at $1.3569, having hit a session peak of $1.3578, the most since July 25. The pound has risen by nearly 2.4% in August against the dollar, which, if maintained, would be the largest monthly increase since April. Money markets show traders fully expect the Federal Reserve to lower borrowing costs in September and see a strong possibility of further easing by year-end, following the CPI data. Last week's employment report showed the U.S. economy created far fewer jobs than expected between May and July, putting a September rate cut firmly on the table. In contrast, UK labour data on Tuesday showed weakness in hiring but persistent wage growth, a positive for British consumers but a headache for the Bank of England, which is juggling the risks of a slowing economy and stubborn inflation. The BoE last week cut rates, but signalled concern over the outlook for UK inflation. Traders now think the next BoE cut might only come in November. If both scenarios play out, UK rates would end the year roughly on a par with U.S. ones, around 3.7-3.8%, which, in theory, removes some of the dollar's competitive advantage against sterling. Next up for UK markets is gross domestic product data on Thursday, which economists expect to show the UK economy expanded by 0.1% in the three months to June, compared with an expansion of 0.7% in the first quarter, based on data from the Office for National Statistics. "Sterling's resilience underscores how sensitive the currency is to rate expectations. Tomorrow's flash Q2 GDP report is the next hurdle; we expect a slight uptick in quarterly growth, but any disappointment could prompt a reversal in recent gains," analysts at Monex said.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Goldman economist, uncowed by Trump attack, plans to 'keep doing' as before
(Reuters) -A top economist for Goldman Sachs on Wednesday signaled no plans to change how his team conducts and publishes its research after President Donald Trump lashed out at the Wall Street firm and its chief executive because of the research team's estimate that American consumers would bear the brunt of the costs of Trump's tariffs. Chief U.S. Economist David Mericle's defense of his team's work came a day after Trump in a social media post said Goldman Chief Executive David Solomon should "not bother running a major financial institution" and lambasted the bank's economics research. The report Trump attacked, published August 10, estimated that U.S. consumers so far have borne less than a quarter of the cost of Trump's tariffs but that share would rise to two-thirds if the tariffs play out in the same way they had previously. Trump, by contrast, insists that foreign companies and governments are absorbing the cost of tariffs that now average the highest in about a century, and that American households are unscathed. He attacked Goldman and its economists for making "a bad prediction." Asked in a CNBC interview whether Trump's broadside had had a chilling effect on his team's work, Mericle said: "We're just trying to do the best economic forecast that we can for our clients, and we publish research reports like the one that we published over the weekend to inform those views. And we'll keep doing that." Sign in to access your portfolio