Vanguard Enters
ETF Fray
Bogle Not Sure He Would have Done it
By Jim Wiandt,
Managing Editor
The Vanguard Group announced its plan to launch Exchange
Traded Funds (ETFs). The funds, called Vipers, would
be linked to Vanguard index funds. In a Wall Street
Journal interview, Vanguard founder John Bogle said,
"Anything that gets investors involved with heavy
trading will hurt them."
Entering a crowded field of new ETFs, Vanguard
said it had filed with the SEC to launch ETFs for
nine of its U.S. index funds. Bogle, who now heads
up the Bogle
Financial Markets Research Center said that if
he were still running Vanguard, he may not have launched
the Vipers. While he has no problem with the instruments
themselves, which may actually cost investors less
money, he is opposed to anything that encourages trading,
"Investors cut their own throat when they trade."
Initially, only five ETFs will be available. Funds
will be offered for the Total Stock Market Fund (VTSMX),
the Vanguard 500 Index (VFINX), the Small-Cap Index
(NAESX), the Growth Index (VIGRX), and the Value Index
(VIVAX). The shares will be available on the American
Stock Exchange.
The ETF offering marks a major departure for Vanguard,
which has consistently advocated long-term index investing.
Clearly the launch was meant to attract the capital
of short-term investors, as long-term investors are
likely to gain higher returns by investing in Vanguard's
traditional open-end mutual funds.
ETFs can be
traded like stocks, and shorted or bought on margin.
The funds manage to avoid paying capital gains by
not selling stocks to the open market when redemptions
are made. Stockholders who redeem their shares are
given a share distribution from the underlying equity
shares, which they then sell themselves. Thus, individual
investors must pay taxes on their gain, but the fund
itself doesn't.
While Vanguard has not yet revealed its fee structure
for the ETFs, the expense ratios are likely to be
less than those of Barclays
Global. Barclays charges 10 basis points annually
(a basis point is one-hundredth of a percent) on its
ETFs. The ETFs are able to charge lower fees than
open-ended mutual funds because of the very limited
interaction ETF managers have with their investors.
Open-end investors send emails and make telephone
calls to investment advisors, raising fees.
Still, while the Vanguard 500 Index Fund charges
18 basis points on its open-ended mutual fund, most
investors - especially those who make regular purchases
- are likely to pay lower fees in the traditional
mutual fund. This is because investors must pay brokerage
commissions each time they buy or sell ETF shares.
Nonetheless, the low expense ratios and tax efficiency
of the new exchange-traded funds can make them attractive
to index investors. Unlike most index investors, however,
most of the buyers of the new ETF shares will likely
hold their shares for weeks or months, rather than
years.
05-16-00
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