Showing posts with label exchange traded funds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exchange traded funds. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Exchange Traded Fund Questions Answered

This past week, on the Financial Impact Factor with Paul Petillo, Dave Kittredge and Dave Ng we had David J. Abner. He is the Director for Institutional Sales and Trading at Wisdom Tree and the author of The ETF Handbook: How to Value and Trade Exchange Traded Funds (Wiley Finance) These funds, that trade like stocks have been coming to the forefront of the investment world for almost a decade. But even after all that time, their purpose isn't clearly understood, their benefits less so and the media, suggesting volatility has dampened our enthusiasm towards them. Mr. Abner discusses these products, what they are and why they are important. ETFs will begin showing up in your 401(k) as investor demand and plan administrator's fiduciary responsibility tightens. This increase exposure is good for the funds; but are the good for you?

Thursday, July 7, 2011

In Your Retirement Plan: Should ETFs Be Considered?


Mark Twain suggested: "The reason we hold truth in such respect is because we have so little opportunity to get familiar with it." This will be the selling point for exchange traded funds: you will hear that they are less expensive, that they are better than the mutual funds - many of them indexed, and that you should own them in your 401(k).

They will suggest you overlook the cost of trading them, the fact that they tempt you to trade them more frequently than ou would a mutual fund and in doing so, allow you to follow the herd on any given day, a behavioral no-no for every investor. So what exactly is the attraction that they want us to see? Are mutual funds better or worse than ETFs?
The answer depends on who you are. If the sort of investor who believes that they can make small moves to harness big gains, then you should probably avoid the lure of ETFs. Exchange traded funds are mutual funds that can be traded just like stocks. They tend to have lower fees than their comparable cohort the mutual fund but the commissions that brokers charge for these trades tend to erase the advertised returns you might get.

If you are the sort of investor who buys to hold, then the surprising choice would be ETFs. Yet you will need to harness the inner trader in you that wants to succumb to the temptation to trade. This sounds easy. But in truth, is no easy feat.

So let's run some numbers comparing a total stock market ETF sold byVanguard and a total stock market index sold by the same company. The ETF (trade as VTI) carries and expense of 0.07%. The mutual fund version of the same thing (bought as VTSMX) levies a 0.18% fee on investors. The former has no minimum investment,; the later wants $3,000 to begin. So we'll start there and propose a hopeful return over 10 years of 4%.

In the first calculated example, the investor made no additional contributions to the investment. Vanguard does suggest that they charge no brokerage fees but they do charge a $20 annual fee for the account. This might be much higher when accessing these funds through your 401(k) and there may be additional brokerage fees. So we'll assume a $10.00 brokerage fee - as I said, yours might be lower and in most cases, the brokerage charge is on both ends of the transaction.

Based on the above numbers, the ETF, once purchased and held begins to creep past, in terms of raw returns by the third year. By the 10th year, you will have saved about $19.41 in fees giving you a net gain for your ETF of $32.82.

But begin adding to the security on a regular basis (say $200 a month) and the differences are much more notable. To add to the ETF in equal proportions over the same 10 year period would cost you $1021 in commission costs and with this money not working for you, the sacrifice in what each would be worth at the end of the 10-year investment period used in our example in addition to the trading cost would leave you with over $1200 less in the ETF account.

Inside a 401(k), where regular contributions rule the way you invest, ETFs can give the average investor less of an opportunity than proponents suggest they will. In a taxable account, bought without commissions such as Vanguard offers and purchased in large lump sums, ETFs slightly trump their mutual fund siblings.

Will you take the time to learn the truth about yourself before making the decision on which investment is better? You are the debate.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The All ETF 401(k)

Exchange Traded Funds, like many new products that have hit the investment market in the last ten years or so, have made steady inroads among hardcore investors looking to use these often specifically indexed funds to "park" money as a hedge against other trades or as way to take advantage of a broader market bet. These are professional maneuvers that come with costs and are probably not good for the average investor.

First off, let me explain what an ETF is. Exchange Traded Funds are basically index funds. Index funds are basically passive in nature, mimicking a published list of the stocks grouped together, such as the top 500 companies (published by Standard and Poors) allowing the investor to purchase a fixed group. They can also be broken down further to include numerous other indexes from mid-cap, small-cap and indexes of stocks from around the world. These funds, like their mutual fund counterparts have sliced and diced the world into segments.

For instance, if you think India is the next big hot spot. There is an ETF that buys the broad market along with some smaller regions in that country. Do you believe that Latin America will recover first? There is an ETF that allows you to play that economy. Perhaps you feel as though a stake in a commodity such as oil or gold is the next best place to invest. There are ETFs for that as well. Even bonds are covered.

ETFs, because they fall outside the realm of mutual fund regulation, also offer some savvy investor the ability to short (borrowing shares in the hope that the price will fall and then, buying the less-expensive shares) or leverage (using some stocks as collateral for purchasing more shares) or buy real estate without the REIT.

And while that sounds like a world we should all play in, for most of us it simply won't work.

Because Exchange Traded Funds are traded throughout the day, investors using them can buy and sell a position without waiting for the 4pm close that mutual funds have. The downside: ETFs also create brokerage charges in and out of the position and because of that, do not give the impression that this is a park and hold investment. The double downside: this create volatility that rattles the market in the hour before the close.

There is also a transparency and a legacy issue. Despite the publicized passivity of the fund, there is not always a good indication of just what the index represents at any one given moment. They also have not been around long enough to compare to mutual funds. New ETFs pop up everyday as the world gets chopped up into increasingly smaller chunks. And this creates a problem as well. Index funds stick to the index they track or the index they claim to mimic. ETFs can have some style drift within the fund making them difficult to pinpoint with any real accuracy.

ETFs are index fund cheap as well. An upside for any investor looking to keep the overall expenses of investing at a minimum. They rarely mention the cost of trading these funds, just the convenience.

The question is: do they belong in your 401(k)? Sharebuilder thinks so and has announced their launch of a new program for advisers to sell. Designed to make the interaction small businesses have with these registered investment advisers (RIAs) easier and more seamless, low cost ETFs will make up 100% of what these plans offer.

According to ShareBuilder these "investment offering consists of a preset line-up of 16 ETFs from popular funds offerings like a S&P 500 ETF to important fixed asset categories like treasury inflation protected securities (TIPs) not common today in most plans. ShareBuilder 401k also provides five model portfolios to help make it easy for participants to get off on the right foot."

Once again, is this right for your retirement portfolio? While we have discussed how fees can eat up a great deal of the potential profits an investor might expect. And if they are hidden as they so often are (the fees I am referring to are more from the adviser end of things) as little as a one percent increase over what a small business is paying could impact returns over the course of a working career as much as 17%. Sharebuilder promises that this new plan will be less expensive to operate with features such as auto-enrollment and auto-rebalancing thrown in for good measure.

But by making the plan completely ETFs, the risk level drops considerably. The average employee will relinquish more control to index funds than is needed to raise your portfolio's earning potential. Small plans will have a limited number of the these index-type offerings narrowing the potential for better-than-average results. In fact, your results using only ETFs will be average.

ETFs can be used as a tool for investors. But to have them solely as a tool for those planning on retiring, seems to serve the adviser more than the client.