Saturday, August 11, 2007

Investing In ETFs

ETFs or Exchange Traded Funds and similar to index fund and mutual funds in that they are invested in an index, commodity or basket of assets. The difference is that they trade like a stock on an exchange.

Investing in both individual stocks and mutual funds have their drawbacks. When you buy an individual stock, all of your investment dollars are riding on the company you invest in. One factor of successful portfolios is diversification and to obtain diversification investing in individual stocks is extremely expensive, it would cost tens of thousands of dollars to create a portfolio that held just one of each of the stocks in the S&P 500. Not to mention the amount of transaction fees you would rack up. The obvious alternative to this mutual funds and index funds.

Mutual funds on the other hand offer the diversity and balance needed for a successful portfolio and there are a wide range of funds that track the different indices, sectors and markets. Mutual funds do have their drawbacks though. Most mutual funds have a minimum investment, $2500 is not uncommon. Additionally, mutual funds carry expense ratios and fees that can take a huge chunk out of your earnings. Mutual funds are meant to be held long term and you don't have as many options as you would with individual stocks. On top of that the majority of actively manages mutual funds fail to beat their benchmark.

ETFs To The Rescue

ETFs offer the best of both worlds. You receive the automatic diversification that you would with a mutual fund but it behaves like a stock. This means that you can buy as little as one share. ETFs also have lower expense ratios than their mutual funds counterparts.Unlike mutual funds that are priced once daily, ETFs price fluctuates throughout the day just like a stock. Since ETFs behave like a stock, you have the option to short sell and buy on margin.

Additionally, there is an ETF for pretty much everything you can think of. The most common are Spiders (SPY) which tracks the S&P500, Diamonds (DIA) which tracks the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Cubes (QQQQ), which tracks Nasdaq 100. There a so many many more though for every index and every and sector. ETFs are also broken into categories such as large cap, small cap, growth, value, etc...There are also ETFs for bonds and fixed income and they too are categorized into everything from total bond market to short term bonds. There are even ETFs for commodities such as gold, oil and silver.

The only costs involved in purchasing ETFs are you're regular transaction fees. You can buy stocks free or at a low cost with either http://www.zecco.com/ or www.sharebuilder.com

Good luck and happy investing,
Finance Girl

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