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World's first AI-run global exchange-traded fund debuts

World's first AI-run global exchange-traded fund debuts on Business Standard. Steve Hawkins said AI will prove itself to be smarter than your average portfolio manager<br>

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World's first AI-run global exchange-traded fund debuts

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  1. Business Standard World's first AI-run global exchange-traded fund debuts Steve Hawkins said AI will prove itself to be smarter than your average portfolio manager The first global equity exchange-traded fund (ETF) run by robots even as its managers expressed anxiety about investing in an ETF lacking the human touch. made its trading debut

  2. “I’m going to be buying some but I’m buying it as a nervous investor myself,” Steve Hawkins, co-chief executive officer of Horizons ETFs Management Canada, said before the Horizons Active AI Global Equity ETF began trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange Wednesday. “We don’t know what the computer will do.” Hawkins stressed that the artificial intelligence Qraft Technologies, was rigorously back-tested over 10 years of market moves to make sure it learned how to interpret data and make smart investments. However, unlike human portfolio managers, it will never be able to explain why it made a particular decision. “We don’t know why it’s going to be making those independent decisions, but from our rigorous testing we believe that it’s going to make the right decisions,” Hawkins said in a phone interview. The Horizon AI fund, sub-advised by Mirae Asset Global Investments, has a management fee of 0.55 per cent and will be rebalanced monthly. It will invest in global equities using a basket of primarily North American-listed ETFs and will make its decisions using more than 50 metrics, including six-month relative performance and short interest. It trades on the Toronto bourse under the ticker symbol MIND. behind the ETF, developed by Korea-based The ETF opened little changed at C$25.15 at 9:44 am in Toronto. It’s not the first robot-run ETF. The AI Powered Equity ETF of US stocks, driven by International Business Machines Corporation’s Watson computer, beat it by two weeks. Horizons says it’s the first to invest in global equities. Toronto-based Horizons, controlled by Seoul-based Mirae Asset, operates 79 ETFs and has C$8.9 billion ($6.9 billion) in assets under management. Artificial intelligence may seem scary to some investors, but Hawkins said he’s confident it will prove itself to be smarter than your average portfolio manager…..read more

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