| Bond
Index Funds - A Synopsis
By Sam Henry
June 30, 2000 |
|
It is fitting that a detailed discussion about bond index funds
should
begin by mentioning John Bogle and Vanguard Mutual funds. These
are two forces that originated bond index funds and index funds
in general. The first bond index fund was in the early conceptual
stages in 1985 when an article in Forbes magazine discussing the
inability of high-cost bond fund managers to match the bond market
indexes asked, "Vanguard, where are you when we need you?"
This was all the encouragement that Bogle and company needed.
By the next year Vanguard's Total Bond Market Index (VBMFX) was
up and running. SEI Funds also started a bond index fund that
year. In 1991 Galaxy Funds opened an index fund of government
long bonds and Mainstay Funds started its long-term bond index.
Also in 1991 Charles Schwab Co. opened its Short-Term Bond Market
Index. In 1994, Vanguard created the first series of bond index
funds of varying maturities, short, intermediate, and long.
Although John Bogle didn't see any pressing need at the time
for this series of bond index funds, he said that he was anticipating
the market for bond index funds that he knew would develop. Today
there are 29 bond index funds. Vanguard's are currently preeminent
among them. Their four bond index funds have $15.8 billion in
assets-about 75% of all bond index fund assets. And they are reportedly
also the largest bond fund managers in general with $80 billion
under management.
| Fund Name |
Category |
Load % |
Exp. % |
YTD % |
1 Yr % |
3Yr % |
5 Yr % |
10 Yr % |
| BNY
Hamilton Intermed. Inv. Grade Inst. Index |
Intermed. |
No |
0.8 |
-0.01 |
0.27 |
4.26 |
- |
- |
| Barclays
Global Inv. Bond Index |
Intermed. |
No |
0.23 |
1.84 |
1.54 |
5.45 |
5.42 |
- |
| Dreyfus Bond Market
Index Basic |
Intermed. |
No |
0.15 |
1.24 |
1.45 |
5.63 |
5.58 |
- |
| Dreyfus
Bond Market Index Inv. |
Intermed. |
No |
0.40 |
1.14 |
1.28 |
5.34 |
5.29 |
- |
| E*Trade
Bond Index |
Short |
No |
1.50 |
0.20 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Fidelity
U.S. Bond Index |
Intermed. |
No |
0.31 |
1.78 |
1.84 |
5.73 |
5.89 |
7.85 |
| Firstar Short-Term
Bond Institutional |
Short |
No |
0.50 |
1.97 |
4.14 |
5.39 |
5.61 |
6.70 |
| Firstar Short-Term
Bond Retail |
Short |
3.75 |
0.75 |
1.87 |
3.88 |
5.13 |
5.35 |
- |
| Galaxy
II US Treasury Index |
Long |
No |
0.41 |
3.29 |
2.88 |
5.90 |
5.66 |
- |
| Mainstay Instl.
Indexed Bond Instl. |
Long |
No |
0.50 |
2.01 |
1.65 |
5.02 |
5.21 |
- |
| Mainstay Instl.
Indexed Bond Instl Svc. |
Long |
No |
0.75 |
1.91 |
1.36 |
4.76 |
4.96 |
- |
| Maxim
Bond Index |
Intermed. |
No |
1.70 |
1.50 |
2.52 |
4.49 |
4.87 |
- |
| Maxim Loomis Sayles
Corp. Bond Index |
Intermed. |
No |
1.85 |
0.94 |
1.83 |
5.98 |
8.50 |
- |
| Mercantile Bond
Index Inst. |
Intermed. |
No |
0.79 |
2.04 |
1.73 |
3.47 |
- |
- |
| Mercantile Bond
Index Inv. |
Intermed. |
4.75 |
0.77 |
2.12 |
1.81 |
5.20 |
- |
- |
| Mercantile
Bond Index Tr. |
Intermed. |
No |
0.42 |
2.25 |
2.22 |
5.74 |
- |
- |
| Merrill Lynch Aggregate
Bond Index A |
Intermed. |
No |
0.35 |
2.55 |
2.91 |
5.44 |
- |
- |
| Merrill Lynch Aggregate
Bond Index D |
Intermed. |
No |
0.60 |
2.46 |
2.66 |
5.18 |
- |
- |
| Northern Inst. US
Trs. Idx A |
Intermed. |
No |
0.26 |
3.50 |
3.09 |
6.10 |
5.86 |
- |
| Prudential Bond
Market Index Z |
Intermed. |
No |
0.40 |
1.55 |
1.56 |
- |
- |
- |
| SEI
Index Bond Index A |
Intermed. |
No |
0.38 |
1.85 |
1.84 |
5.52 |
5.60 |
7.19 |
| Schwab
Short-Term Bond Mkt Index |
Short |
No |
0.35 |
1.75 |
3.49 |
5.01 |
5.16 |
- |
| Schwab Total Bond
Market Index |
Intermed. |
No |
0.35 |
1.09 |
1.63 |
5.48 |
5.52 |
- |
| Vanguard Short-Term
Bond Index |
Short |
No |
0.20 |
1.69 |
3.46 |
5.44 |
5.60 |
- |
| Vanguard Intermediate-Term
Bond Index |
Intermed. |
No |
0.20 |
1.05 |
0.45 |
5.20 |
5.47 |
- |
| Vanguard Long Term
Bond Index |
Long |
No |
0.20 |
3.48 |
0.26 |
6.74 |
6.31 |
- |
| Vanguard Total Bond
Market Index |
Intermed. |
No |
0.20 |
1.75 |
1.91 |
5.66 |
5.88 |
7.63 |
| Vanguard Total Bond
Market Index Inst. |
Intermed. |
No |
0.10 |
1.80 |
2.02 |
5.76 |
- |
- |
Morningstar Returns Through May
31, 2000 - 3, 5 & 10 year returns are annualized
Replicating, to an extent, the success they achieved with stock
index funds, Vanguard, and 17 competitors have nurtured a small
but steadfast base of bond index fund customers. Although this
customer base has not grown as fast as that in stock index funds,
bond index fund managers now handle $21 billion. Bond index fund
assets have grown slowly in part because report of the virtues
of fund indexing has for the most part spread through word of
mouth, and because low-cost index funds rarely budget much for
sales and marketing.
Bond index funds occupy a fairly small niche in the world of
mutual funds; only 3% of all bond fund assets are in bond index
funds and these assets are held disproportionately by institutional
investors, who keep about 25% of their bond fund assets in bond
index funds.
How they Work
Bond index funds use a technique called "sampling"
to fill out their portfolios. Total Bond Market index funds, like
those managed by Vanguard and Charles Schwab Co., as well as intermediate
bond indexes like the Maxim Bond Index, usually aim to trace the
performance of the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index. This
benchmark is a collection of 5,545 bonds (as of 12/31/99) from
the Treasury, corporate, mortgage backed, and international U.S.
dollar-denominated debt sectors.
Various other short, intermediate and long duration bond index
funds trace subsets of this index. For instance, the Vanguard
Short-Term Bond Index Fund traces a subset of this index called
the Lehman Brothers Mutual Fund Short Government/Corporate Index,
which holds 1,874 bonds. Now, it wouldn't be cost-efficient for
managers to include, say, all 5,545 issues from the Lehman Brothers
Aggregate index, among other reasons because they would forgo
very substantial volume discounts at auction.
Instead they use sophisticated computer programs to select a
cross-section of issues from this Lehman Brothers index that is
representative of the index as a whole in terms of duration, cash
flow distribution, sector and quality weights, and other characteristics.
For instance, at times when 30% of the Lehman Brothers Aggregate
Bond Index is composed of mortgage-backed securities, the managers
of Vanguard's Total Bond Market Index would invest about 30% of
the fund's assets in mortgage-backed securities that have similar
characteristics as a group to those in the Lehman Brothers broad
index. As of 12/31/99 the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index
was composed thus:
| U.S.Government Bonds |
Corporate Bonds |
Mortgage-Backed |
U.S. $ Instl. |
| 41.6% |
18.2% |
35.6% |
4.6% |
International U.S. dollar denominated bonds are issued by foreign
governments and companies in U.S. dollars, usually in order to
attract U.S. investors.
Hardly "Passive" Management
Kenneth Volpert, senior manager of Vanguard's bond index funds,
likes to say, "People say that these funds can be run by
a monkey. That's not true." He understates his case. The
truth is that these managers tinker a lot with their portfolios,
though not as much so as the so-called "active managers."
Usually bond index funds hold only a little more than 80% of their
assets in bonds enumerated in the Lehman Bothers index. The other
20% of the bonds have characteristics - like maturity, credit
quality, and issuer type-similar to those in the index, but not
the actual issues enumerated there.
And, as the Vanguard bond index funds prospectus puts it, "To
the extent that the funds invest outside of the index, they may
employ active management strategies. The index and non-index securities,
in combination, will have characteristics and risks similar to
the index." The prospectus goes on to authorize further managerial
latitude for these managers. For instance, Vanguard fund managers
nearly always make use of an option in the prospectus called "corporate
substitution," whereby managers can overweight particular
types of corporate bonds relative to their representation in the
index.
A favorite gambit is to snap up corporate issues late in the
fourth quarter after they've been dumped by Wall Street firm,
as happens almost every year. (Business Week online 3/13/98).
Vanguard bond index funds limit corporate substitution to bonds
with less than four years remaining to maturity, and each bond
index fund limits corporate substitutions to about 15% of assets.
It's astonishing how far beyond the indexes these prospectuses
allow their fund managers to go. Vanguard's short, intermediate,
and long term bond index funds are at times composed of a basket
of securities, 35% of which are outside the Lehman Brothers subindexes,
including smaller public issues or medium term notes not in the
index because they're too small. These funds managers may also
buy money market instruments and some derivatives in order to
manage cash flow, to reduce transaction costs, or to take advantage
of arbitrage opportunities when they arise. One example of such
an arbitrage opportunity occurs when Treasury bond futures prices
are significantly lower than the cash index. In such a situation
Volpert and other bond index fund managers will often buy bond
futures and hold them until near expiration because at expiration
cash and futures prices are, by definition, identical. (Business
Week online 3/13/98)
The Vanguard prospectus stipulates that each bond index fund's
obligation to buy bonds under futures contracts may not exceed
20% of the fund's total assets. This alone would hardly be comforting
to anyone suspecting fund managers of wild speculation. The fact
is though, that managers at Vanguard and most other houses use
these various investment options very conservatively to make up
their miniscule (0.20%-0.50%) operating expenses and perhaps a
couple of basis points more. It should be noted that some of the
smaller bond index funds have more vaguely-worded prospectuses,
although they contain otherwise similar stipulations. Investors
should investigate these funds more thoroughly before investing
in them and understand that under these prospectuses their managers
are allowed even greater latitude from the pure indexing ideal.
Advantages of Bond Index Funds Over Actively Managed Bond
Funds
Although John Bogle can personally claim credit for getting
index funds off the ground, it is their evident benefits to customers
that are responsible for the ongoing success of bond index funds.
Consistent Performance
Bond index funds offer numerous advantages over actively traded
bond funds. Most important is their consistently superior performance.
Between 1988 and 1998 Bond index funds returned 8.9% annually
vs. 8.2% for actively managed bond funds, according to Morningstar.
And during that time bond index funds outperformed 85% of bond
funds. Vanguard's Total Bond Market Index typifies a solid bond
index fund. It's current 7% 5-year average beats 87% of funds
in the intermediate maturity range even though it carries a 3.8%
standard deviation risk, as opposed to the 4% risk of the average
fund (Dow Jones Newswire 4/4/00). Although it's true that Vanguard's
bond index funds boast some of the best returns, other bond index
funds, such as those offered by Charles Schwab and Fidelity, are
also quite competitive.
Index Funds Enjoy Lower Operating Expenses
To a great degree, these superior returns are the result of
the significantly lower expenses that bond index funds incur.
Especially when bond yields are low, operating expenses represent
a high percentage of any bond fund's return. Currently, the average
actively-managed bond fund charges 1.1% of fund assets-a full
20% of the projected return-for management fees and other expenses.
The average bond index fund charges less than half that, or 0.45%.
Vanguard Group, the leader in bond index funds, charges 0.2% for
its Total Bond Market Portfolio Index fund. (Investment News,
1/25/99, p.24 ff.)
Bond index funds, like their counterparts in equities, have little
need for research departments; computers perform a much larger
proportion of the funds' analytical work. And actively-managed
bond funds almost always trade more. Consequently they incur a
variety of extra expenses such as greater brokerage fees and greater
capital gains tax payouts. In addition, actively-managed funds
tend to keep some assets in low-yielding money market funds to
cover investor redemptions.
It should be noted that managers of high-cost funds are almost
certainly at times tempted to overcome this performance disadvantage
by taking on additional risk. Conversely managers of low-cost
funds are often able to provide competitive returns with a lower
level of risk than other funds.
Also, because indexing is a buy-and-hold strategy, bond index
funds often enjoy a lower turnover rate, which is expressed as
the percentage of issues in the portfolio that are either bought
or sold over the course of a year.
The lower costs and tax advantages of indexing, however, provide
a smaller advantage for bond index funds than for stock index
funds. In part that's because the current income paid by a bond
fund is usually more significant than potential capital gains,
and that current income is taxable. Also, because bonds mature,
they must be replaced by the fund, while a stock index fund may
hold some stocks indefinitely.
Particularly Tough to Beat the Market in Bonds
As mentioned above, bond index funds consistently beat actively
managed funds by 0.7% or 0.8% annually. In large part this is
because bond fund managers have great difficulty beating the indexes,
even more so than do stock fund managers. Unlike stock funds,
bond funds vary little in their gross returns. Once an investor
has chosen a level of credit quality and average maturity, most
bond funds will have a similar gross yield-the yield before expenses.
It is really expenses more than anything that differentiates bond
funds, and it is index funds that are the leaders in keeping expenses
down.
By virtually all accounts, the world of high grade bonds is far
more homogenous than the stock market in both risks and returns.
Kenneth Volpert, a senior bond fund manager for the Vanguard Group,
said that it's unlikely that a small-cap growth stock fund manager
can consistently pick stocks that outperform the S&P 500 and
the Wilshire 5000. But he said that chances are far worse that
a high-grade bond fund manager will consistently outperform a
bond index such as the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index. (Chicago
Tribune 7/19/98, C3).
Alice Lowenstein, bond editor at Morningstar Research says, "The
investment-grade bond area, with high-quality, highly liquid securities,
is an ideal place for index investing. There's very little a manager
can do. There's no surer way to outperform among high-quality
bond funds than to have smaller expenses." Indexing also
lends itself especially well to shorter-term corporate and U.S.
government bonds, where active managers have still fewer opportunities
to outperform the indexes.
Diversification
A rarely-noted advantage of bond index funds is that they are
frequently more diversified than actively-managed bond funds.
An index that follows the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index,
as most bond index funds do, will hold a wide variety of government
and corporate bonds and mortgage-backed securities, which is usually
not the case with actively-managed funds, where managers often
favor the more liquid issues. Even within the bond index fund
subcategory of bond funds, there is substantial variance in the
funds' breadth of participation. Perhaps the best fund as far
as this kind of breadth is concerned, is Vanguard's Total Bond
Market Index, which includes every possible maturity and sector
of bonds, except junk, so no matter what sector rallies, this
fund will participate.
Advantages of Bond Index Funds Over Buying Bonds Directly
* Bigger is better in Bonds There are numerous benefits to being
very well-capitalized when buying bonds, including volume discounts
and invitations to closed auctions. Ordinary investors can rarely
take advantage of these benefits.
* Lower Investment Amounts The minimum investment for an individual
bond can be as high as $10k. Realistically it probably takes about
$50k to build a diversified and cost-effective portfolio of bonds.
On the other hand, the minimum investment in a bond index fund
is usually $500 or $1000. And a mutual fund investor can often
buy addition fund shares in increments as low as about $10.
* Regular Monthly Income Most bond index funds distribute dividends
monthly. Investors may choose to receive them as cash or have
them automatically reinvested. Individual bonds usually pay interest
only every six months and these payments cannot be reinvested
automatically. This is often an important consideration, especially
for retirees.
* Even "passive" bond index funds enjoy the benefits
of fixed-income analysts; Vanguard has six such analysts who decide
which bonds to buy and sell for their index funds and actively-managed
funds. These analysts are important because few investors have
the time or the expertise to manage their personal investments
or to investigate all the different bonds on the market. And investors
often underestimate the complexity of global fixed-income securities
markets.
* Lower Commissions in Most Cases When an investor buys individual
bonds through a broker, he pays a commission that's usually hidden;
the quoted bond price includes a substantial commission. The smaller
the investment, the greater the commission. On a $1000 bond the
commission can be 5%. Sometimes the hidden costs for these bonds
appear quite cryptic. Jason Zweig of Money Magazine said, "if
you have $100k you're better off buying a bond fund than individual
bonds because most bond brokers take an 'invisible spread' which
lowers yield." He doesn't elaborate on how this 'invisible
spread' works, but given Mr. Zweig's formidable reputation, one
should suspect that he's referring to something substantial.
* Daily Liquidity Investors may buy and sell shares in a bond
index fund on any business day. And the market for shares in many
bond index funds is highly liquid. Also, most bond index funds
offer options such as check writing and telephone redemption to
make bond investing more convenient.
* Bond index funds Outperform Inflation-indexed Bonds in a Low-inflation
Environment According to Morningstar, when inflation is low the
principal of the inflation-indexed bond would remain the same
and the yield would decrease. Simultaneously the net asset value
(NAV) of the bond index fund would increase, but the yield would
decrease. This scenario favors bond index funds.
Disadvantages of Bond Index Funds vs. Actively Managed
Bond Funds: Could Retard Great Talent
Some feel that there are a number of disadvantages to the indexing
of bond funds, among them the preclusion of great fund management
talent. The career of William Gross of Pimco Funds is proof that
excellence in bond fund management is not necessarily tied to
indexing. Mr. Gross and his staff manage about $180 billion in
bond assets and more than $40 billion in mutual funds, "about
5% of the assets in such funds," according to the Wall Street
Journal (12/28/99). Pimco's Total Return Fund, the nation's largest
bond mutual fund, has returned 9% annually over the last decade,
putting it in the top 5% of its peer group. In 1999 the bond funds
managed by Mr. Gross have brought in more than eight billion dollars
in net new money, which is about half the new money that has come
into bond funds this year. Clearly any system of investing that
allows this sort of talent to lie idle is probably a system that
does not have excellence as its goal.
Morningstar Study Concludes That It's Unclear Whether Bond
Index Funds Are Best
In an October, 1998 study of five years' worth of bond mutual
fund performance, researchers at Morningstar concluded that with
taxable bond funds "managers running intermediate-term funds
have managed to outrun their index on the upside, and long-term
funds have done better than their benchmark on the downside."
This is explained in part because most long-term bond funds are
less sensitive to changes in interest rates than the index. This
keeps fund returns down when bonds are rallying, as they did for
much of the '90s, but keeps things stable when bond prices fall.
On the other hand, intermediate funds in general carry longer-term
debt than their benchmarks, which pays off during bond rallies.
The Morningstar editors went on to recommend Vanguard's Bond Index
Total Market [VBMFX] and the Fidelity U.S. Bond Index [FBIDX]
among bond index funds, as well as Loomis Sayles Bond [LSBRX]
and Warburg Pincus Fixed Income [CUFIX] among the actively-managed
funds. The study concluded that "the low costs of index funds
are a real benefit in this area of the market, but we wouldn't
count out active managers...Bottom line...Taxable Bonds: Could
go either way."
Bond Index Fund Managers Can't Monitor Credit Quality or
Call Risk as Closely
Many feel that bond index fund managers are ill-equipped to
manage credit quality, that is, to select the highest quality
bonds from any sector, and moreover to anticipate which are likely
to be upgraded by the credit agencies. Also, active managers can
potentially better control "call risk," the possibility
that certain bonds with "call features" may be redeemed
before maturity in a period of falling interest rates and rising
bond prices. The active manager is probably better positioned
to invest only in bonds that cannot be called and thereby to avoid
having to reinvest assets at lower interest rates when higher-yielding
bonds are redeemed.
Some Investors Don't Like Having Treasuries in Bond Index
Funds
Some mutual fund customers complain that they don't need or
want to pay a management fee to hold treasury bonds in a portfolio,
since they can buy treasury bonds commission-free from the government.
And some say they would prefer to hold only corporate bonds or
GNMAs in a high-quality index fund, but that such funds don't
exist at present. (Morningstar.com)
Some Investors Don't Like Having Treasuries in Bond Index
Funds
Some mutual fund customers complain that they don't need or
want to pay a management fee to hold treasury bonds in a portfolio,
since they can buy treasury bonds commission-free from the government.
And some say they would prefer to hold only corporate bonds or
GNMAs in a high-quality index fund, but that such funds don't
exist at present. (Morningstar.com)
Disadvantages of Bond Index Funds vs. Other Investment Instruments:
Some Compelling Arguments for Holding Individual Bonds
As John J. Brennan, CEO at Vanguard said, "1999 was a useful
reminder that you can lose money in Bond Funds." During that
year investors learned not to "count on regular capital appreciation
in a bond fund investment." In some bear market years, like
1994 and 1999, bond funds can carry considerably greater downside
risk. So even though many bondholders saw the value of their investments
plummet on the secondary market, and even though these bonds occasionally
lost money after inflation, bond mutual fund investors reportedly
lost even more money during these years.
Bond Holders Can Control Timing of Buying and Selling
By holding individual bonds, the investor chooses when to buy
or sell-thus retaining control over the timing of any taxable
capital gains or losses. With treasuries or investment grade corporate
bonds, investors also have the assurance that they will almost
certainly be paid at a certain time and at a set interest rate.
Investors Can Buy Treasuries Commission-Free Directly from
the Government
Recently, the Treasury has made bonds available with no fee
when investors buy them online or over the phone. Click here
or here for
the relevant government websites. The minimum investment through
Treasury Direct is $1,000, although one would probably need about
$50k to achieve a decent degree of diversification.
Five Year Treasury Study
Scott Burns, a syndicated financial editor who writes for the
Dallas Morning News, among other periodicals, recently (5/2/00)
published a study comparing the returns of five-year treasury
bonds with the returns of various bond funds. He found that in
each of the five-year periods ending in the previous six months,
a five year treasury bond has yielded greater returns than an
index of 20 major government securities funds. Moreover, of the
1290 bond funds with five year track records, only 282, or 22%,
produced a higher load-adjusted return than a five year treasury
note, and almost all of these 282 bond funds contained riskier
issues from emerging markets, international bonds, junk bonds,
or long-term treasuries.
The Wealthy Should Likely Park Their Money in Municipal
Bonds
Bond index funds are probably not the best investment vehicles
for wealthy individual investors. In general, tax-exempt municipal
bonds are probably best for those whose combined federal and state
tax bracket is over 28%. Although there are various actively managed
funds specializing in municipal bonds, and Lehman Brothers has
a municipal bond index, there is no municipal bond index fund
because of complications concerning various call features and
"duration options" of these bonds, among other reasons.
Tax laws concerning munis vary from state to state so it might
be a good idea to plug one's information into one of the following
the investment planner websites: finance.yahoo.com or morningstar.com
to learn more about investing in muni bonds.
Bonds May Not Diversify As Well
It may be that bond index funds and fixed income investments
in general have lost some of their diversifying capabilities in
recent years. In his book Stocks for the Long Run, Jeremy Siegel
argues that the once negative correlation between stocks and bonds
is now much more positive. Also, the presence of high yield (junk
bond) debt in some full spectrum bond index funds make these funds
correlate more closely with stocks, especially, perhaps, when
stocks are at such high valuations.
Inflation-adjusted Bonds Work Well in Inflationary Times
In times of inflation, Inflation-adjusted Bonds offer protection
against inflation while bond index funds do not. With I Bonds,
as the Consumer Price Index rises, principal remains the same
but interest rates increase. Conversely, bond index funds would
decrease in net asset value (NAV), but yield would eventually
increase. This scenario favors I Bonds.
New Products in the Bond Index Fund Arena
On June 6, 2000, Barclay's Global Investors announced that they
were planning to launch the first exchange-tradable index funds
focusing on the bond market. If all goes according to plan, shares
will begin trading in the spring of 2001. Ten days later, on June
16, Barclays actually began trading eleven exchange-traded equity
index funds that are each centered on ten different industrial
sectors, such as Chemicals, and Healthcare, and one catch-all
equity offering, their Total Market Index.
Some analysts find it "questionable whether bond index
funds are easy enough to price and trade throughout the day for
a firm to use them for an exchange-traded product." (Wall
Street Journal 6/6/00) About exchange-traded bond index funds,
there is also the concern that proportionately fewer traders trade
bond funds short-term, and thus there might well be less demand
for such an exchange-traded fund.
Still, these kinds of funds could potentially pose a great threat
to more conventional index funds and mutual funds in general, not
least of all because their expenses should probably be lower. For
instance, Barclays
iShares,
an exchange-traded index fund that tracks the S & P 500, charges
only .10% annual expenses, half of what Vanguard charges to manage
its Total Bond Market Index fund and its other three bond index
funds.