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Clearing Up an ETF Liquidity Myth
By John Spence, Associate
Editor
We thought it was time to put a common misconception on exchange-traded
fund liquidity to rest.
Some investors appear to believe that the liquidity of an ETF is
dependent on the fund's average trading volume, or the number of
shares traded per day. However, this is not the case. Rather, a
better measure of ETF liquidity is the liquidity of the underlying
stocks in the index. Understanding this fact requires a brief
look into how ETFs function on a basic level.
Since ETFs trade like stocks, market makers (also called authorized
participants or APs) are the folks that order the creation and redemption
of ETF shares. Market makers build an ETF share from the shares
of the companies in the underlying index. They create or redeem
shares depending on the market demand for the ETF shares.
It should also be noted that market makers and specialists can
create and redeem shares to arbitrage premiums or discounts to the
underlying net asset value (NAV). This activity is beneficial to
ETF investors because it keeps the price of the fund in line with
the NAV and prevents specialists from making unfair markets. Think
of it as a mechanism that ensures retail investors like us will
get a fair price as the APs step all over each other trying to make
a buck. Pretty neat, huh?
Large brokerage houses such as Morgan Stanley and Salomon Smith
Barney also occasionally act as authorized participants when a client
makes a large order. Based on their ability to purchase the underlying
stocks in the ETF, they can create a huge number of ETF shares instantly
with little difficulty in a liquid index like the S&P 500. In
essence, there is enormous liquidity in ETFs based on popular indexes
- the AP just has to turn on the hose.
Not surprisingly, ETFs based on indexes that also have derivatives
tied to them have even slimmer bid-ask spreads. The reason is that
there is heightened interaction between the specialists, market
makers, and arbitrageurs. In other words, ETF shareholders benefit
from this increased competition because it narrows spreads. For
example, State Street Global Advisors recently reported that the
average bid-ask spread calculated over 160 days on SPDR 500 (SPY)
was 0.09%. More firms are researching ETF bid-ask spreads, and the
results confirm that ETFs tied to liquid indexes have very small
spreads.
Investors with a healthy apocalypse complex might notice here that
an ETF's liquidity could dry up in severe market conditions. This
did in fact happen with a Malaysian
basket of stocks after that country instituted currency controls.
We don't mean to harp on this fact, but investors should at least
be aware of this bit of ETF history.
However, if you have confidence in U.S. market liquidity then you
should feel safe using existing broad-based domestic ETFs, and their
history thus far bears that out. We would add that a wait-and-see
attitude could be beneficial for potential ETFs tied to illiquid
indexes - private securities or municipal bonds, for example.
03/20/2002
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