Investing in ETFs For Dummies. Russell WildЧитать онлайн книгу.
that won’t tank should the stock market tank. See Chapter 11 for more on this topic.
Why Individual Investors Are Learning to Love ETFs
Clients I’ve worked with are often amazed that I can put them into a financial product that will cost them a fraction in expenses compared to what they are currently paying. Low costs are probably what I love the most about ETFs. But I also love their tax efficiency, their transparency (you know what you’re buying), and the long track record of success for indexed investments.
In the world of actively managed mutual funds (which is to say most mutual funds), the average annual management fee, according to Morningstar, is 1.25 percent of the account balance. That may not sound like a lot, but don’t be misled. A well-balanced portfolio with both stocks and bonds may return, say, 6 percent over time. In that case, paying 1.25 percent to a third party means that you’ve just lowered your total investment returns by more than one-fifth. In a bad year, when your investments earn, say, 1.25 percent, you’ve just lowered your investment returns to zero. And in a very bad year … you don’t need me to do the math.
In the world of index funds, the expenses are much lower, with index mutual funds averaging 0.87 percent and ETFs averaging 0.53 percent, although many of the more traditional indexed ETFs cost no more than 0.20 percent a year in management fees. A good number – 122 at last count – are 0.10 percent or less. Some are so low as to be negligible.
Why ETFs are cheaper
The management companies that bring us ETFs, such as BlackRock, Inc., and Invesco PowerShares, are presumably not doing so for their health. No, they’re making a good profit. One reason they can offer ETFs so cheaply compared to mutual funds is that their expenses are much less. When you buy an ETF, you go through a brokerage house, not BlackRock or Invesco PowerShares. That brokerage house (Merrill Lynch, Fidelity, TD Ameritrade) does all the necessary paperwork and bookkeeping on the purchase. If you have any questions about your money, you’ll likely call Schwab, not BlackRock. So unlike a mutual fund company, which must maintain telephone operators, bookkeepers, and a mailroom, the providers of ETFs can operate almost entirely in cyberspace.
ETFs that are linked to indexes do have to pay some kind of fee to Dow Jones or MSCI or whoever created the index. But that fee is nothing compared to the exorbitant salaries that mutual funds pay their stock pickers, er, market analysts.
An unfair race
Active mutual funds really don’t have much chance of beating passive index funds – whether mutual funds or ETFs – over the long run, at least not as a group. (There are individual exceptions, but it’s virtually impossible to identify them before the fact.) Someone once described the contest as a race in which the active mutual funds are “running with lead boots.” Why? In addition to the management fees that eat up much of any gains, there are also the trading costs. Yes, when mutual funds trade stocks or bonds, they pay a spread and a small cut to the stock exchange, just like you and I do. That cost is passed on to you, and it’s on top of the annual management fees previously discussed.
It’s been estimated that annual turnover costs for active mutual funds typically run about 0.8 percent. And active mutual fund managers must constantly keep some cash on hand for all those trades. Having cash on hand costs money, too: The opportunity cost is estimated to be in the neighborhood of 0.4 percent.
So you take the 1.25 percent average management fee, and the 0.8 percent hidden trading costs, and the 0.4 percent opportunity cost, and you can see where the lead boots come in. Add taxes to the equation, and while some actively managed mutual funds may do better than ETFs for a few years, over the long haul I wouldn’t bank on many of them coming out ahead.
Alas, unless your money is in a tax-advantaged retirement account, making money in the markets means that you have to fork something over to Uncle Sam at year’s end. That’s true, of course, whether you invest in individual securities or funds. But before there were ETFs, individual securities had a big advantage over funds in that you were required to pay capital gains taxes only when you actually enjoyed a capital gain. With mutual funds, that isn’t so. The fund itself may realize a capital gain by selling off an appreciated stock. You pay the capital gains tax regardless of whether you sell anything and regardless of whether the share price of the mutual fund increased or decreased since the time you bought it.
In the world of ETFs, such losses are very unlikely to happen. Because most ETFs are index-based, they generally have little turnover to create capital gains. To boot, ETFs are structured in a way that largely insulates shareholders from capital gains that result when mutual funds are forced to sell in order to free up cash to pay off shareholders who cash in their chips.
No tax calories
The structure of ETFs makes them different from mutual funds. Actually, ETFs are legally structured in three different ways: as exchange-traded open-end mutual funds, exchange-traded unit investment trusts, and exchange-traded grantor trusts. The differences are subtle, and I elaborate on them somewhat in Chapter 3 and throughout Part II. For now, I want to focus on one seminal difference between ETFs and mutual funds, which boils down to an extremely clever setup whereby ETF shares, which represent stock holdings, can be traded without any actual trading of stocks. In a way it’s like fat-free potato chips (remember Olestra?), which have no fat calories because the fat just passes through your body.
Market makers and croupiers
In the world of ETFs, we don’t have croupiers, but we have market makers. Market makers are people who work at the stock exchanges and create (like magic!) ETF shares. Each ETF share represents a portion of a portfolio of stocks, sort of like poker chips represent a pile of cash. As an ETF grows, so does the number of shares. Concurrently (once a day), new stocks are added to a portfolio that mirrors the ETF.
When an ETF investor sells shares, those shares are bought by a market maker who turns around and sells them to another ETF investor. By contrast, with mutual funds, if one person sells, the mutual fund must sell off shares of the underlying stock to pay off the shareholder. If stocks sold in the mutual fund are being sold for more than the original purchase price, the shareholders left behind are stuck paying a capital gains tax. In some years, that amount can be substantial.
In the world of ETFs,