Contents
ETF Fundamentals
Why Invest in ETFs?
Stock ETFs
Fixed-Income (Bond) ETFs
Real Estate (REIT) ETFs
Commodities ETFs
How to Build a Balanced Investment Portfolio with ETFs
How to Build a Portfolio with ETFs and Other Types of Investments
How to Buy ETFs for Your Portfolio
- Why ETFs are often a better investment choice than stocks or mutual funds
- The most popular types of ETFs, with several specific examples of each
- How to build a balanced investment portfolio with ETFs
ETF Fundamentals
Exchange-traded funds, known as ETFs for short, are investments that work like hybrids of mutual funds and individual stocks.
- Like mutual funds, ETFs allow investors to own a wide variety of investments by buying just one investment.
- Like stocks, ETFs can be bought and sold anytime throughout the trading day—mutual funds are priced and traded just once per day, after the market closes.
ETFs have exploded in popularity in recent years and are now the fastest-growing segment of the investing industry.
What Are ETFs?
ETFs are individual investments that track the performance of an entire index, which is an assortment of various other investments grouped together based on certain criteria. An index can contain a group of virtually any type of investment, whether stocks, bonds, or commodities such gold and silver. When you buy an ETF, you own a fractional stake in all of the investments contained in the index that the ETF tracks. For instance, if you buy an ETF that tracks an index of 500 stocks, you’ll own a tiny slice of each of those stocks without having to buy the individual stocks themselves.
How Do ETFs Work?
Just like individual stocks, ETFs trade in shares on stock exchanges. Each ETF has a share price that changes throughout the trading day based on the performance of the investments in the index that the ETF tracks. As those investments rise or fall in value, so does the ETF’s share price. To buy or sell an ETF, you need to know its trading symbol and the number of shares that you’d like to buy or sell.
ETF Names and Trading Symbols
All ETFs have a unique name and a trading symbol, or ticker symbol, that consists of 2–4 letters. Whereas stocks and mutual funds are often referred to by name, ETFs are typically referred to by symbol (or a nickname based on that symbol). For instance, the most popular ETF is the S&P 500® Index Depositary Receipts ETF (symbol: SPY) but is typically referred to as “SPY” or as the “SPDRs” (”spiders”) ETF.
Who Creates and Markets ETFs?
There are hundreds of different ETFs on the market, and many more are constantly being created and introduced. About 10 financial services firms dominate the ETF industry. Most of these firms offer ETFs that track indexes created by other firms, called index providers. Index providers license their indexes to financial services firms for use in creating and marketing ETFs. The firms that sell ETFs to the public are known as ETF families. The table below lists the most popular ETF families and the links to their websites:
ETF Family |
Website |
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iShares |
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PowerShares |
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ProShares |
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Rydex |
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streetTRACKS |
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Vanguard |
||
|
WisdomTree |
| Acknowledgments |
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