A relative new comer to the investment world is the Exchange Traded Fund (ETF). You can think of it as a cross between individual stocks and mutual funds, with a mixture of advantages and disadvantages of each. An ETF trades on a stock exchange like a stock but the underlying investment holds stocks and bonds similar to a mutual fund. Like stocks, when you buy and sell an ETF you generally pay a commission. Since the underlying securities are not being traded there are potential tax efficiencies from avoiding capital gain distributions and minimizing management fees.Before 2008 when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission authorized the creation of actively-managed ETFs, all U.S. ETFs tracked an index. It is not surprising that the older ETFs track the most popular indexes such as:
- S&P 500 Depositary Receipt (SPY) tracks the S&P 500 Index
- Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) tracked Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index through April 22, 2005, and performance of the MSCI US Broad Market Index thereafter.
At the time of this writing, Vanguard offerd 38 ETFs covering just about every conceivable sector and niche. Here are several random samples:
- Long-Term Bond ETF (BLV) tracks Lehman Brothers Mutual Fund Long Government/Corporate Index
- Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) tracks the Dividend Achievers Select Index
- REIT ETF (VNQ) tracks Morgan Stanley REIT Index
- FTSE All World ex US (VEU) tracks the FTSE/(R)/ All-World ex USA Index
Full Disclosure: Long VTI, BLV, VIG, VNQ
References
- Forbes: Attack Of The ETFs
- Wikipedia: Exchange-traded fund
- SEC: Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs)
Tags: [BLV] [SPY] [VEU] [VIG] [VNQ] [VTI]
