Bryon Lake, the Managing Director and Global Head of ETF Solutions at J.P. Morgan Asset Management (JPMAM), is set to depart the firm after a notable seven-year tenure, as confirmed by a company spokesperson.
Lake, who relocated to the U.S. in 2021 to take on his latest role, previously led JPMAM's international ETF business from London. “Bryon Lake has conveyed his decision to leave the organization, and we extend our best wishes for his future endeavors,” stated the spokesperson, who chose not to elaborate on the circumstances surrounding his departure.
JPMAM, a pivotal division of J.P. Morgan Chase, boasts a robust ETF portfolio with $169 billion in assets under management, spread across 98 products. The global ETF operations are currently under the stewardship of Jed Laskowitz, the Chief Investment Officer and Global Head of Asset Management Solutions.
According to Todd Rosenbluth, Head of Research at TMX VettaFi, JPMAM has ascended rapidly in the ETF industry rankings in recent years, primarily due to its strategic shift towards actively managed products. “They have successfully transitioned some of their top managers to the ETF arena, catering to advisors’ preferences for investment formats,” Rosenbluth remarked. He highlighted the firm's achievements in traditional active equity and fixed income spheres, as well as in covered call products.
As of the latest reporting on March 31, JPMAM reported managing total assets worth $3.2 trillion.
May 1, 2024
More Articles
Bridging Crypto and Traditional Finance: Inside CoinDesk’s Advisor Strategy
The Bitcoin ETF approvals opened the door. Now CoinDesk Indices is building the necessary infrastructure—regulated benchmarks, proprietary data from 300+ exchanges, and multi-token indices designed for advisors. Dave LaValle, President of CoinDesk Indices and Data, explains how the firm applies traditional finance standards to crypto markets, creating the equivalent of an S&P 500 for digital assets and enabling diversified exposure through familiar ETF structures.
How to Think About the Current AI Craze Compared to Past Bubbles
Will AI prove to be a bubble like what we experienced 25 years ago with the Internet boom?