ETFs - Spring 2017  

Comparing ETFs and index mutual funds

  • Learn the main differences between ETFs and index mutual funds.
  • Comprehend why ETFs and passive products are growing in popularity.
  • Understand why a client might want exposure to one product over the other.
CPD
Approx.30min

Ms Perryman observes that ETFs and index funds can offer overlapping exposures at times. “It is fair to say that ETF product development has gone further and been more innovative than index mutual funds offering a broader range of market exposures,” she remarks. 

“This can be visible across a number of asset classes, such as fixed income where innovations like passively managed emerging market local currency debt or global convertible bond exposures came through ETFs first.”

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She continues: “Overall, the two types of vehicle co-habit in the product range space to meet different investor needs. They are both indexed exposures but will be bought, sold and traded differently.” 

There are clearly growing numbers of investors allocating to passive products, whether as part of a purely passive portfolio or a combination of active and passive exposures.

But perhaps deciding whether an ETF or index mutual fund is the right passive allocation needs more thought than simply comparing the two.

Mr Zingg believes there are three key points advisers and investors should focus on if they are choosing between an ETF and a mutual fund:

  • Firstly, and most importantly, what kind of exposure is the investor looking for? Sometimes a particular exposure may only be available in one type of product.
  • How long is the investor intending to hold the product? This has both a trading implication - ETFs allow for intraday trading and pricing - and a cost implication.
  • What are the likely costs of ownership? To compare the relative costs of holding a particular mutual fund versus a particular ETF, an investor needs to look both at the product’s underlying expense ratio and at transaction costs.

He adds: “The total costs will depend on how the investor wishes to use the product. Savings on transaction fees could outweigh savings on an underlying expense ratio if the investor is not planning to hold the product for long.

"However, if an investor is intending to hold the product for a long period, the reverse could be true.”

eleanor.duncan@ft.com

CPD
Approx.30min

Please answer the six multiple choice questions below in order to bank your CPD. Multiple attempts are available until all questions are correctly answered.

  1. Vanguard's Andreas Zingg says the ETF industry’s rapid rate of growth indicates that investors are increasingly considering ETFs as what?

  2. The intra-day liquidity ETFs offer may come into its own in what type of environment, according to Amanda Rebello?

  3. Approximately how many ETF products are there globally, according to iShares' Pollyanna Harper?

  4. Investors who historically only invested in active are introducing complementary passive exposures to their portfolios alongside what?

  5. Which of these is not one of the questions Mr Zingg suggests will help advisers and investors decide whether to invest in an ETF or index mutual fund?

  6. Claire Perryman says compared to index mutual funds, ETF product development has been what?

Nearly There…

You have successfully answered all the questions correctly, well done!

You should now know…

  • Learn the main differences between ETFs and index mutual funds.
  • Comprehend why ETFs and passive products are growing in popularity.
  • Understand why a client might want exposure to one product over the other.

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