| Frequently Asked Questions about ETFs
By IndexFunds.com Staff
October 19, 2000 |
|
What
is an ETF?
An exchange-traded
fund is a mutual fund that trades like a single stock. Until the
development of the ETF, this was never before possible. An ETF
is a basket of stocks that reflects the composition of an index,
like the S&P 500 or the Nasdaq 100. The ETF's trading value
is based on the net asset value of the underlying stocks that
it represents. Think of it as a mutual fund that you can buy and
sell in real time at a price that changes throughout the day.
What
are the benefits of using ETFs?
Essentially,
with ETFs, you enjoy both the flexibility of a stock and the diversification
of an index fund. While most mutual funds are priced at their
net asset value (NAV) at 4:00 p.m. daily, the price of the ETF
changes in real time throughout the day. ETFs can also be bought
on margin (money borrowed from your broker) and sold short. Unlike
regular stocks, ETFs can also be sold short on a downtick (in
a market that is moving down).
In addition
to having both the benefits of flexibility and diversity, the
expense ratios for most ETFs are extremely low. Also, since the
underlying components of an ETF basket remain constant, the fund
is not forced to sell stocks when investors sell their shares.
Often, when traditional mutual fund investors sell all or part
of their investment, all of the investors in that fund suffer
capital gains tax consequences. While ETF investors may suffer
capital gains costs as the result of dividend payouts or index
rebalancing, they do not suffer these consequences from redemptions
in the fund.
Are
there any negatives?
While the expense ratios of ETFs are low, and the funds are
generally very tax efficient, there are certain costs that are
unique to ETFs. Since ETFs, like stocks, are bought as shares
through a broker, every time an investor makes a purchase he pays
a commission to his broker of $8 and up depending on the broker
and the amount of shares purchased. In addition, the ETF investor
can suffer from the usual costs of trading stocks, including differences
in the ask-bid spread, unexecuted trades, etc. Of course, mutual
fund investors are also subjected to the same trading costs indirectly,
as their fund managers must pay costs to buy the stocks that are
in the fund. Nonetheless, since large managers are buying in bulk,
they can limit trading costs in the way that a small investor
cannot.
One other
potential cost/benefit for the ETF investor is unique to ETFs.
This is the premium/discount that the ETF is trading to its underlying
net asset value. While ETFs are tied to a basket of underlying
stocks, the trading of the ETF is theoretically unrelated to the
actual stocks it holds. What generally keeps the trading and net
asset values very similar is arbitrage. If an investor thinks
that he can capitalize on a difference in the two values, he can
buy a large number of shares at a discount and redeem them for
the actual shares to realize a profit. This is what generally
keeps the values so close together. Traders will step in to profit
from very small differences in the trading and net asset values.
How
can I buy and sell ETFs?
All U.S.-based
ETFs currently trade on the American Stock Exchange (AMEX),
though the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
plans to introduce ETFs in the near future. Shares can be
purchased the same way you would purchase a normal stock. Like
individual stocks, ETFs have ticker symbols (like DIA or QQQ)
and can be purchased through your broker. Likewise you sell shares
in an ETF the same way you would sell shares of a normal stock.
How
are ETFs created and redeemed?
What basically
happens is that a market maker or "authorized participant"
essentially loans an entire portfolio of shares to the fund manager.
The stocks are then placed in a trust and shares of the ETF are
created, generally in a creation unit of 50,000 shares. ETF shares
are sold and resold freely among investors on the open market.
If he purchases a sufficient amount of shares, an 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.
What
ETFs are available on the market?
Including the Merrill Lynch HOLDRS, which are set baskets
of stocks that don't change like a regular ETF, there were 93
U.S.-based ETFs on the market as of October 20, 2000, with many
more due to hit the market in coming months. For a complete, regularly
updated listing of all these ETFs, as well as complete factual
information and data on each please click
here.
How
can I use ETFs in managing my portfolio?
The diversity
of ETFs matches the diversity of the market. By using ETF offerings
of the total market, value, growth, large and small stock indexes,
and of sectors-specific and international regional and single-country
offerings, investors can fully diversify the equity part of their
portfolio solely by using ETFs.
How
much money is in ETFs and how fast is that number growing?
Excluding Merrill
Lynch HOLDRS, as of 3/30/2001, the amount of assets under management
in ETF funds had reached $75.8 billion. From the beginning of
1998 to the end of 2000, assets under management in ETFs grew
nearly tenfold. The first U.S.-based ETF, the S&P 500
SPDR (SPY) opened in 1993.

| Year
End |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
1999 |
2000 |
| Assets
(Millions$) |
461.3 |
419.2 |
1,053.5 |
2,404.2 |
6,709.5 |
15,628.4 |
33,908.1 |
65,257.8 |
Source:
American Stock Exchange, excludes HOLDRs
What
is cash equitization?
While investors
generally like to be as fully invested in the stock market as
possible, they often need to hold some cash to give them flexibility
in their investment decisions. Converting this cash to very liquid
ETF holdings, allows investors, particularly large investors to
remain in the market, while ensuring that the assets are very
easy to convert to cash for reinvestment.
What
future products we can expect ETF managers to develop?
ETF fund managers
are actively exploring their options. Assuming that significant
regulatory and logistical obstacles can be overcome a variety
of new products are likely to enter the market. There has been
talk of fixed-income ETFs, an expansion into other market sectors
and other regions of the world, and the Holy Grail of ETF fund
managers: expansion into actively picked stock funds.
Will
ETFs make traditional mutual funds obsolete?
Ah yes, the $64,000 question...Both sides claim that they
are not after the other's market, but Vanguard recent announcement
that it would enter the fray despite having serious reservations
about ETFs was very telling. The primary obstacle preventing a
revolutionary shift is trading costs. The cost of dollar-cost
averaging with ETFs is prohibitive. Rest assured, though, the
ETF fund managers are looking for ways to tap into the vast pools
of retirement capital.