| ETF
Net Asset Value Not Always Best Indicator of Short-Term
Value
By Will McClatchy
February 22, 2001 |
|
Initially, critics of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) decried their
trading at a significant premium/discount to net asset value (NAV),
the underlying stock values they represent. This is a problem
that regularly plagues closed-end mutual funds, where prices of
the funds are generally lower (sometimes by 50% or more) than
the NAV of their portfolios due to a lack of liquidity.
So far most critics appear misinformed. The biggest flaw in their
argument is their selection of end-of-day NAV figures as the measure
of the true worth of a portfolio. End-of-day NAV will always be
an imprecise measure of a stock portfolio, especially one with
small capitalization and international equities.
Consider an ETF trading in the U.S. that represents an index
for a country on the other side of the world. The U.S. exchange
trading the ETF is open while the exchange trading the underlying
stocks is closed. The official end-of-day NAV is many hours old
and will reflect yesterday's news, while the ETF trades actively
and reflects today's news. Which is going to be a more accurate
reflection of the value of the underlying stocks? We put our money
on the ETF.
To test this theory, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter conducted a study
on July 5, 2000 following after-hours price movements in U.S.
markets of the iShares MSCI Japan ETF and after-hours Nikkei 225
futures contracts, two instruments representing the same Japanese
stock index.
The study started at the close of Tokyo's exchange, when the
official end-of-day NAV was recorded and Japanese traders there
went to bed. The ETF and futures soon began to trade in New York
and meandered throughout the day, incorporating changes in investor
sentiment, currency exchange rates, and a myriad of other information.
The ETF and futures remained nearly in lockstep, moving inexorably
away from the official end-of-day NAV. Lo and behold, when the
Japanese stock traders arrived for business the next day, NAV
at the open market resumed almost exactly where the ETF and U.S.
futures left off, and far from the previous day's official NAV.
All of this is consistent with basic trading theory.

Chart courtesy of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. Originally appeared
in an August 2000 Global
Equity and Derivative Markets feature "MSCI iShares and
their Relationship to Net Asset Value," and is reproduced
with permission.
A similar situation occurs with a U.S. ETF replicating U.S. small
cap stocks. Both types of instruments trade during the same hours,
but they certainly don't all trade as frequently. Many small stocks
have relatively few interested investors and trades are sometimes
separated by hours, so that NAV figures - on average - represent
relatively old information. ETFs, on the other hand, tend to trade
by the minute, if not the second.
In such cases bid/ask spreads of the small stocks tell more about
where the next trade is likely to take place than the last trades
used to construct official NAV figures.
More importantly, the ETF also rarely strays from within the
bid/ask spread. In other words, the last price paid for an ETF
that claims to accurately represent a portfolio generally lies
between what all the sellers of stocks of that portfolio want
to receive and buyers want to pay. This is all just as it should
be.
This can be seen from a study
by Salomon Smith Barney of ETF activity during September 2000.
The study shows that ETF prices during taken at multiple "snapshots"
mid-day stray on average an incredibly small 0.014% from the midpoint
of the bid/ask spread of underlying stocks. The midpoint has no
magical meaning, but seems like a sensible spot to locate fair
pricing in absence of recent actual trades. As expected, the variation
around that midpoint is higher for small cap and sector ETFs with
lower trading volumes.