The underlying asset prices of Australian exchange-traded funds (ETFs) swelled to grow the industry's market capitalisation by 3.9 per cent over September, according to Betashares' monthly ETF review.
The market grew to $5.7 billion in assets under management. ETF trading values were up 5 per cent but had come off a low base following a 21 per cent drop in trading values in August.
There were no new inflows in September - investors' risk appetite took a dive following a frenzy of equity buying in July which buoyed growth and led to a 4 per cent increase in market cap growth.
Precious metals and income were most popular among investors in July. Currency unhedged and hedged gold products saw a lot of activity, following the United States' announcement of a third round of quantitative easing (QE).
"With QE chatter reaching fever pitch before it was officially announced, strong inflows into gold ETFs were reflective of investors looking to profit from the upswing experienced during QE1 and QE2," Betashares' head of investment strategy Drew Corbett said.
Investors also favoured income such as high-dividend and cash ETFs over fixed income.
They appeared to view the Australian dollar as overvalued, Betashares said, as the US dollar ETF gained favour despite the debasement of the US currency.
"The US dollar ETF trading activity was similar to the S&P 500 ETF, a fund which is almost four times the size in terms of assets under management," Corbett said.
He said that despite September's subdued activity, the top five ETFs all returned over 20 per cent for the year to the end of September.
Ethical super fund Australian Ethical has announced the appointment of Anthony Lane as chief operating officer.
The structural shift towards active ETFs will reshape the asset management industry, according to McKinsey, and financial advisers will be a key group for managers to focus their distribution.
ASIC has warned that practices across the $200 billion private credit market are inconsistent and, in some cases, require serious improvement.
A surge in electricity prices has driven the monthly Consumer Price Index to its highest level in a year, exceeding forecasts.