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EXCLUSIVE: Scharf Investments Delves Into ETF Benefits
Amanda Cheesley
15 December 2025
In an interview with this news service, Jason Marcus, chief operating officer and chief compliance officer of Scharf Investments, said that exchange-traded funds are far more tax efficient than mutual funds. ETFs offer more significant tax benefits in the US than traditional mutual funds, mainly through superior tax efficiency, making them a powerful tool for long-term wealth building by minimizing the impact of annual taxes on returns. They use a process whereby “authorized participants” exchange baskets of securities for ETF shares rather than cash. This keeps capital gains within the fund low, often resulting in zero or minimal distributions. Marcus highlighted that ETFs have outperformed mutual funds over the long-term. “During the last five years, ETF assets have nearly doubled, while mutual fund assets have increased more modestly,” he said. Active ETFs also captured 37 per cent of industry inflows in 2025 and the conversion wave is accelerating.The global ETF industry reached a record $17.34 trillion in assets at the end of July 2025, an increase of nearly 17 per cent since the end of 2024. Europe has seen similarly strong expansion, with the market reaching $2.58 trillion. “We prefer ETFs to mutual funds as they are fully transparent on pricing and easier to manage,” he said. “We lean toward healthcare and IT, including firms like Microsoft and Oracle. We are also positive about the outlook in 2026.” Marcus recently led the 351 conversion of Scharf's strategies into the Scharf ETF and Scharf Global Opportunities ETF . A 351 conversion allows firms to compete immediately at scale rather than spending years gathering assets. But Marcus said conversions can go wrong, from regulatory missteps to operational failures that damage shareholder value. Scharf Global Opportunity Strategy ETF Top holdings include tech multinational Microsoft, pharmaceutical firms AstraZeneca and Novartis, as well as asset manager Brookfield. Scharf Quality Value Strategy ETF Top holdings include tech multinationals Microsoft and Oracle, asset manager Brookfield and pharmaceutical business Novatis. See more here. A number of investment managers have been launching ETFs recently, notably in Europe, even though they don’t have the same tax advantages as in the US. Dimensional Fund Advisors, a large US-based active exchange-traded fund manager, for instance, has officially launched its first active European ETF in November. US-headquartered investment managers Invesco and Franklin Templeton have also launched a number of ETFs recently. See more here and here. US-based State Street Investment Management published its 2025 EMEA Wealth Manager Survey last month, showing that ETFs remain dominant, with rising demand for both index and active strategies. In a time of macroeconomic uncertainty and industry change, the survey shows that 88 per cent of wealth managers expect to use ETFs more frequently in client portfolios. See more here.
Scharf Investments aims to identify common equities with low valuations combined with sustainable earnings, cash flow, and/or book value. The firm invests in companies located both in the US and abroad, and in developed or emerging markets.
The Scharf Quality Value Strategy aims to invest in high quality, enduring franchises priced at substantial discounts to fair value. The team identifies companies with low valuations combined with consistent and sustainable earnings, cash flow and/or book value. The goal is to provide capital appreciation over the course of a market cycle while losing notably less than relevant benchmarks in falling markets.