It’s been a long time coming for the asset management world, but ETF share classes are now a reality. Fidelity Investments has joined that movement, with the launch of its first ETF share classes for some of its mutual funds. The firm announced the move Monday, with three ETF share classes available on June 18, 2026.
Fidelity's ETF Share Classes Move: Key Takeaways
- Fidelity Investments has launched three new ETF share classes of existing mutual funds.
- The trio includes FIMU, FREI, and FSTB, three fixed income strategies.
- The move potentially opens up the firms trillions in assets to the ETF space. That marks a major milestone for the ETF industry writ large.
The move makes Fidelity Investments the fifth firm to add ETF share classes for their mutual funds. The firm has a massive $17.9 trillion in assets under administration. The trio includes the Fidelity Intermediate Municipal Income ETF (FIMU) and the Fidelity Real Estate Income ETF (FREI). It also includes the Fidelity Short-Term Bond ETF (FSTB).
“We are at an inflection point in the ETF industry, with exemptive relief providing the opportunity to offer additional product choice for investors,” said Greg Friedman, head of ETFs at Fidelity Investments, in a press release.
“Fidelity remains committed to delivering innovation and exceptional value to our customers, and the long-term historical performance of these strategies paired with the experienced portfolio management teams make them a strong fit to adopt Fidelity’s first ETF share classes,” he added.
With the new share classes, investors can get the benefits of the ETF wrapper while accessing more strategies. That means potentially reduced tax exposure and added transparency, as well. All three of the new share classes target fixed income, with two explicitly focused on income. Intriguingly, investors will be able to directly convert their mutual fund shares into ETF shares of those particular funds.
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Overall, the move represents another big step for firms actually using the ruling. The rollout prior to this milestone moment had been gradual, as VettaFi Head of Research Todd Rosenbluth wrote this month in an analysis of the ETF share classes news. Rosenbluth noted that the rollout has been marked not for its rapid pace, but for its intentionality.
“The shift was expected to open the floodgates for billions of dollars in mutual fund assets to easily enter the exchange-traded ecosystem,” he wrote. “In addition, it was a gateway for firms to enter the fast growing active ETF market.”
This move from Fidelity, then, with its own ETF classes, could be a trigger for other names to follow suit. Should the company, as one would expect, continue to add ETF shares for its funds, a huge amount of mutual fund AUM could suddenly be available in the ETF wrapper. Together, the move is one to note for ETF watchers, and may augur other shops to follow suit in the near future.
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Fidelity Investments® is an independent company unaffiliated with VettaFi LLC (“VettaFi”). These articles do not form any kind of legal partnership, agency affiliation, or similar relationship between VettaFi and Fidelity Investments, nor is such a relationship created or implied by the articles herein. VettaFi LLC is the author and owner of these articles.
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