Hello,
Apparently it is big business for ETFs to lend out their shares (for short-selling, etc.). But what if the borrower gets in a jam and can't cover? It think the ETF shareholders (not BlackRock) are on the hook for the default. And if there is systemic default, the ETF shareholders could be wiped out through no fault of their own.
I've been getting into ETFs to reduce risk. But I definitely don't want to sign myself up for "black swan" systemic risk.
Any thoughts on this?
Here is article that discusses the concern:
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/stocks/09/securities-lending-concern.asp
Apparently it is big business for ETFs to lend out their shares (for short-selling, etc.). But what if the borrower gets in a jam and can't cover? It think the ETF shareholders (not BlackRock) are on the hook for the default. And if there is systemic default, the ETF shareholders could be wiped out through no fault of their own.
I've been getting into ETFs to reduce risk. But I definitely don't want to sign myself up for "black swan" systemic risk.
Any thoughts on this?
Here is article that discusses the concern:
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/stocks/09/securities-lending-concern.asp
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