By Suzanne McGee
(Reuters) โ 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 SECโs division of investment management, asked State Street Global Advisors to address what it described as โsignificant outstanding issuesโ 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 SECโs letter but had no further comment at present.
โThis is a very unusual event,โ said Todd Sohn, ETF analyst at Strategas. โItโs also very odd timing, given that the ETF has already launched and is trading.โ
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 fundโs liquidity and State Streetโs 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 โmisleadingโ in context of Apolloโs involvement.
โNothing in the contents of the letter surprised me; we have been watching the questions they cited,โ said Amrita Nandakumar, president of Vident Asset Management. โThe date on the letter was astonishing, however.โ
The SECโs 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 doesnโt act promptly to resolve its concerns.
โItโs within the SECโs rights to order the ETF to stop trading,โ Armour said.
(Reporting by Suzanne McGee, editing by Edward Tobin)
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