Mackenzie Investments 2026 ETF Outlook: ETFs Playing a New Role in Portfolio Construction
As Canadian ETF assets surpass
In 2025, ETFs reached a new milestone of
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In the Outlook, Mackenzie has identified three defining trends that will drive the ETF industry in 2026 and beyond:
- Active ETFs Come of Age: Active ETFs have moved from niche to mainstream, now accounting for a significant share of Canadian ETF assets after growing fifteen-fold in the past decade. This rapid rise reflects a broader shift in advisors' preference for combining active management insights with the liquidity and cost-efficiency of ETFs. With Client Relationship Model III (CRM3) bringing greater fee transparency, Mackenzie believes active ETFs are well-positioned to benefit as advisors seek cost-efficient, easy-to-explain solutions that align with evolving client expectations.
- Systematic Strategies Find Their Stride: Systematic and factor-based strategies that allow advisors to fine-tune exposures and manage cycles with greater discipline are becoming essential building blocks of modern ETF portfolios. Canadian advisors are embracing "smart beta" strategies that tilt toward quality, value, growth, momentum and low volatility through data-driven processes to enhance portfolio resilience. As technology and analytics become more embedded in advisory practices, Mackenzie expects that systematic ETFs will form a cornerstone of modern portfolios, supporting advisors in delivering process-driven outcomes without sacrificing flexibility.
- Alternatives Find a Home in the ETF Structure: Alternative strategies are rapidly expanding within ETFs, offering exposure to differentiated return streams once reserved for institutional investors, including access to commodities, credit and hedged-equity strategies. As investors seek to diversify beyond the traditional 60/40 mix, ETFs offer accessible, liquid solutions for diversification, volatility management and income generation. With the forecasted rapid growth of Canadian ETF assets, advisor education and appropriate due diligence will become critical in distinguishing between alternative ETFs that truly add diversification to portfolios rather than simply repackaging market beta.
"As the ETF landscape deepens with solutions across active, systematic and alternative categories, advisors have evolved from product selectors to portfolio architects," noted
To read Mackenzie's 2026 ETF Outlook, please visit: https://www.mackenzieinvestments.com/en/institute/insights/etf-outlook
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