Exchange-traded funds (or ETFs) are open-ended collective investment schemes, traded as shares on most global stock exchanges. Typically, ETFs try to replicate a stock market index such as the S&P 500 or Hang Seng Index, a market sector such as energy or technology, or a commodity such as gold or petroleum.
The legal structure and makeup varies around the world, however the major common features include:
These qualities provide ETFs with some significant advantages compared to traditional open-ended collective investments. The ETF’s structure allows for a diversified, low cost, low turnover index investment. This appeals to both institutional and retail investors to use as a long term hold and for selling short and hedging strategies.
It is unknown whether the SEC may in future approve an ETF that is not based on some index. In their web site, they state flatly that an ETF is "a type of investment company whose investment objective is to achieve the same return as a particular market index".
ETF shares are sold and resold freely among large investors on the open market. If they purchase a sufficient amount of shares, the investor can exchange one full creation unit of ETF shares for the underlying shares of stock. The ETF creation unit is then destroyed and the underlying stocks are delivered out of the trust.
The attraction of this method of dealing for the ETF fund manager is that the institutional investors cover the dealing costs in purchasing the required shares to make up the portfolio. The reason they are willing to do this is the profit they can make by arbitrage based on the trading price of shares on the secondary market. Shares will trade at a premium to net asset value if demand is high and at a discount to net asset value if demand is low. These market drivers provide the efficiency for the ETF managers as the bulk buying power of the institutional investors allows them to avoid the expense of mass share creation and deletion.
Lastly, some people think that owners of ETFs are more sophisticated, therefore more likely to be proponents of indexing. So it's not obvious who would buy such a thing.
There are over one hundred ETFs traded on the American Stock Exchange, with more in other countries. ETFs have been gaining popularity ever since they were introduced on the American Stock Exchange in the mid 1990s, beginning with SPDR in 1993. ETFs are attractive to investors because they offer the diversification of mutual funds with the features of a stock. The popularity is likely to increase as new and more innovative ETFs are introduced.
The original ETFs were set up as competitors to open-ended index funds, and subsequent ETFs have usually followed in their footsteps: they typically have very low expense ratios compared to actively managed mutual funds. They also have a lower turnover ratio, which tends to be more tax-favorable.
ETF managers such as Barclays and State Street typically have the highest money under management of all companies. This can raise corporate governance issues as often the largest owner of a company is a money management company which simply owns that company as part of trying to own all companies based on a belief that this strategy will do better than most others.
There are many advantages to ETFs, and these advantages will likely increase over time. Most ETFs have a lower expense ratio than comparable mutual funds. Mutual funds can charge 1% to 3%, or more; index funds are generally lower, while ETFs are almost always in the 0.1% to 1% range. Over the long term, these cost differences can compound into a noticeable difference.
In the US only, ETFs are usually more tax-efficient than mutual funds in some jurisdictions *. In the U.S., whenever a mutual fund realizes a capital gain that is not balanced by a realized loss, the mutual fund must distribute the capital gains to their shareholders by the end of the quarter. This can happen when stocks are added to and removed from the index, or when a large number of shares are redeemed (such as during a panic). These gains are taxable to all shareholders, even those who reinvest the gains distributions in more shares of the fund. In contrast, ETFs are not redeemed by holders (instead, holders simply sell their ETF on the stock market, as they would a stock), so that investors generally only realize capital gains when they sell their own shares.
Perhaps the most important, although subtle, benefit of an ETF is the stock-like features offered. Since ETFs trade on the market, investors can carry out the same types of trades that they can with a stock. For instance, investors can sell short, use a limit order, use a stop-loss order, buy on margin, and invest as much or as little money as they wish (there is no minimum investment requirement). Mutual funds do not offer those features.
For example, an investor in an open-ended fund can only purchase or sell at the end of the day at the mutual fund's closing price. This makes stop-loss orders much less useful for open-ended funds – if your broker even allows them. An ETF is continually priced throughout the day and therefore is not subject to this disadvantage, allowing the user to react to adverse or beneficial market condition on an intraday basis.
A more subtle advantage is that ETF's, like closed-ended funds, are immune from some market timing problems that have plagued open-ended mutual funds. In these timing attacks, large investors trade in and out of an open ended fund quickly, exploiting minor variances in price in order to profit at the expense of the long-term unit holders. With an ETF (or closed-ended fund) such an operation is not possible--the underlying assets of the fund are not affected by its trading on the market.
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Top 10 US-based ETFs, by assets under management:
(as of December 2005)
In the European Union many ETFs are traded as cross border UCITS III funds. For example the UK iShares are Irish registered UCITS funds and traded on the London Stock Exchange. The European Market leader on ETF's is Indexchange. The Fonds are listet in Germany by the Deutsche Börse. Indexchange is a daughter of the HypoVereinbank
Note that commodity ETFs invest in real commodities (via future contracts or storing gold bars for example) and not to commodity producing companies.
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