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ETFs bear fruit

Originally intended as purely retail investment products, exchange-traded funds are now being used on a limited basis by some European pension funds. But opinions about their benefits to institutional portfolios are divided. By Ryan Davidson

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The direction of financial innovation is typically such that new products emerge in the wholesale markets and then filter down to retail. But a couple of years ago, exchange-traded fund (ETF) groups at major banks in Europe realised they may have on their hands a product whose path of adoption could move in the opposite direction. Increased competition among providers drove the cost of ETFs down

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