Thursday, January 17, 2013

How ETF And Mutual Fund Expenses Stack Up

Over the last 20 years, ETFs have become more and more popular in part because they are very cheap, often charging management fees that are considerably lower than older investment vehicles. Mutual funds are one of the biggest offenders when it comes to management costs eating into investment returns, and consequently they are losing a huge number of clients to the variety and cheapness of ETFs [for updates on all new ETFs, sign up for the free ETFdb newsletter].

Every strategy has a cost, but investors need to decide before they play what hypothetical return is worth the real costs associated with buying into an ETF or mutual fund. One of the largest and most publicly recognized costs in investing is the expense ratio, which covers a wide variety of the costs that come with owning and operating a fund.

[Download 101 ETF Lessons Every Financial Advisor Should Learn with a free ETFdb Subscription]

Mutual funds have to hire and pay fund managers, as well as cover brokerage costs and administrative expenses that come up; all of these fees add up to an average mutual fund expense ratio of around 1.40%. Being cost efficient is one of the most sound pieces of retirement advice you may ever receive, as a few dozen basis points can make a significant difference over the long run [see All Commission Free ETFs].

While it may not seem like a lot, consider $100,000 invested in an all-ETF model portfolio (with an average expense ratio of 0.20%) and another $100,000 invested in mutual funds (with the average expense ratio  of 1.40%) over 30 years.  With an annual return of 10% a year for both, investors may not notice the difference expense ratios make at first, but after only 10 years it becomes clear just how much more you can make when not wrapped up in management fees. At the end of 30 years, the ETF investor will beat the mutual fund return by over $200,000 [for other great money saving tips, check out the Money Management Center over at Dividend.com].

The rather huge difference among expense ratios is in part due to the automation behind ETFs; everyone can buy into these global funds, most of which run off of a predetermined index and adjust far less often than a comparable mutual fund. Are the high fees worth the returns promised by mutual funds? The Securities and Exchange Commission doesn’t think so, as their website states “higher expense funds do not, on average, perform better than lower expense funds.”

Investors looking for a easy way to switch from the world of mutual funds to ETFs should consider the ETFdb Cheapskate Portfolio as a great starting point. This portfolio is designed for investors who wish to construct a well-rounded, buy-and-hold portfolio for the long haul, while keeping a close eye on expenses [see all 50+ All-ETF Model Portfolios].

Disclosure: No positions at time of writing.

ETF Database is not an investment advisor, and any content published by ETF Database does not constitute individual investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. From time to time, issuers of exchange-traded products mentioned herein may place paid advertisements with ETF Database. All content on ETF Database is produced independently of any advertising relationships. Read the full disclaimer here.


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ETF Insider: S&P 500 Pumps Breaks Ahead Of Major Resistance

Bullish price action has persisted for much longer on Wall Street than many had anticipated; following the massive gap higher at the start of the new year, major equity indexes have held onto gains amid the looming uncertainties, perhaps hinting at the possibility for new highs in the coming weeks. What’s truly noteworthy is the fact that stocks remained resilient even after last week’s Fed minutes, during which policymakers noted that the ongoing bond-repurchase program may be coming to an end in 2013 [see Free 7 Simple & Cheap All-ETF Portfolios].

Below, we highlight ETFs that may see an increase in trading activity as relevant market data is released and evaluated by investors:

SPDR S&P China ETF (GXC, A): With all eyes on China’s manufacturing sector, the nation’s upcoming CPI report should offer valuable insights into just how hot growth really is overseas. GXC could see volatile trading on Thursday morning as investors react to the overnight inflation report; analysts are expecting for China CPI to come in at 2%.MSCI United Kingdom Index Fund (EWU, A): British equity markets will come into the spotlight on Thursday morning as markets digest commentary from the latest Bank of England interest rate decision; analysts are expecting for rates to hold steady at 0.50%, although any hints of a policy change could lead to volatile trading on the stock front.European ETF (VGK, A+): The European Central Bank is slated to announce its rate decision less than one hour after the Bank of England, which could lead to further volatility across overseas markets ahead of Wall Street’s opening bell. Analysts are expecting for the rate to remain at 0.75%, however, the economic outlook issued after the decision itself should offer further insights.SPDR Gold Trust (GLD, A): The yellow metal could encounter headwinds on Thursday if policymakers from the European Central Bank make no mention of further stimulus measures; gold has enjoyed a stellar run-up largely due to loose monetary policies around the globe, which is why the metal stands to loose its luster at the first sign of tightening measures.

The S&P 500 Index is demonstrating great resilience as it hovers around the 1,460 level, however, those looking to jump in at current levels should exercise extreme caution. Keep in mind that this index has historic resistance around the 1,475 level, which means that the slightest pessimistic economic development has the potential to inspire profit taking pressures given the hefty gains accumulated in just the first week of 2013. From a fundamental perspective, with no major releases taking place at home this week, the S&P 500 Index will have to deal with overseas headlines; in terms of downside, near-term support lies around the 1,440 level.

Below, we have highlighted three trading ideas for the upcoming week. Note that most of these recommendations require active management as they are only relevant for a very short period of time. As always, investors of all experience levels are advised to use stop-loss orders and practice disciplined profit-taking techniques.

Actionable ETF Idea #1: Long LQD

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Disclosure: No positions at time of writing.

ETF Database is not an investment advisor, and any content published by ETF Database does not constitute individual investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. From time to time, issuers of exchange-traded products mentioned herein may place paid advertisements with ETF Database. All content on ETF Database is produced independently of any advertising relationships. Read the full disclaimer here.


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Daily ETF Roundup: Stocks Slide Sideways

Compared to last week, today’s trading session was relatively quiet. The first few trading days of 2013 were explosive to say the least, as the S&P 500 managed to close at its highest point since December of 2007 last week. But the euphoria was quick to wear off, as a new day brought a new set of problems and a lack of optimism on The Street. The big story of the day was Bank of America (BAC), which reached an agreement to pay $10 billion to Fannie Mae using a combination of cash and mortgage repurchases [see also Seven Simple & Cheap ETF Model Portfolios].

It was a relatively slow day, as investors took profits from last week’s massive run with little else happening. Now, traders will have their sights set on February as the new Congress debates the U.S. debt ceiling, a story that will like push and pull at stocks for the next few weeks. The S&P 500 ETF (SPY, A) slipped nearly 0.3% while the Dow Jones ETF (DIA, B) lost 0.4%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq ETF (QQQ, A-) managed to eek out a 0.03% gain despite another weak trading session for its top component AAPL.

Bond ETF Roundup

The bond market saw a bit more movement today, as investors piled into inflation protected securities, helping (TIP) to jump 0.34%. The only major fixed income fund to lose ground was the juggernaut (AGG) as this product finished the day -0.05%. These funds will be especially crucial to watch in the coming weeks as U.S. debt drama continues to play out.

Commodity Roundup

The physical gold fund (GLD) continued its lackluster performance as of late, dropping 0.6% as the precious metal space continues to exhibit weakness. Soybeans (SOYB) made a strong jump to open the week and it gained about as much as gold lost, as the ag space had a nice comeback after a few days of weakness.

As gold continues its weakness, the mining space has been getting hammered. GDX has lost more than 14% in the trailing 13 weeks and has been featuring a beta of -2.19. GDX gapped lower at market open and faced a harsh sell-off as the trading day came to a close, losing 1.9% on the day [see GLD-Free Gold Bug ETFdb Portfolio].

Ags had a strong performance to open up the week,  allowing the DB Agriculture Fund to benefit from the jump. Soybeans, cocoa, coffee, cotton, corn, and wheat all had positive performances on Monday, allowing DBA to jump 0.7% [see Commodity Guru ETFdb Portfolio].

The first fund launched in 2013 was the iPath S&P MLP ETN (IMLP) which debuted on January 4th.

[For more ETF analysis, make sure to sign up for our free ETF newsletter or try a free seven day trial to ETFdb Pro]

Disclosure: No positions at time of writing.

-- Market Wrap-Up for Jan.7 (BAC, BK, VLO, AAPL, LOW, more) at (January 7, 2013) -- ETF Insider: S&P 500 Pumps Breaks Ahead Of Major Resistance at ETF Database (January 7, 2013) -- Bank of America Reaches $10.3 Billion Settlement with Fannie Mae (BAC) at (January 7, 2013) -- Why SPY Has No Love For Buffett And Berkshire at ETF Database (January 7, 2013) -- Daily ETF Roundup: Jobs Report Boosts Markets at ETF Database (January 4, 2013) -- Daily ETF Roundup: Fed Minutes Spook Stocks at ETF Database (January 3, 2013) ETF Database is not an investment advisor, and any content published by ETF Database does not constitute individual investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. From time to time, issuers of exchange-traded products mentioned herein may place paid advertisements with ETF Database. All content on ETF Database is produced independently of any advertising relationships. Read the full disclaimer here.


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PowerShares To Shut Down 13 ETFs

Invesco PowerShares announced in December that its board had approved the shuttering of thirteen exchange-traded portfolios near the end of February, including a number of energy funds, bond funds and equity portfolios. The move comes as the Chicago firm is looking to weed out some of its least productive ETFs and, unlike some other issuers, losing thirteen funds is barely a dent in Invesco’s portfolio of 171 funds. February 26 will be the last day of trading for the following ETFs:

Dynamic Insurance Portfolio (PIC)Morningstar StockInvestor Core Portfolio (PYH)Dynamic Banking Portfolio (PJB)Global Steel Portfolio (PSTL)Active Low Duration Portfolio (PLK)Global Wind Energy Portfolio (PWND)Active Mega-Cap Portfolio (PMA)Global Coal Portfolio (PKOL)Global Nuclear Energy Portfolio (PKN)Ibbotson Alternative Completion Portfolio (PTO)RiverFront Tactical Balanced Growth Portfolio (PAO)RiverFront Tactical Growth & Income Portfolio (PCA)Convertible Securities Portfolio (CVRT)

As the ETF industry continues to expand rapidly, product closures have become a regular occurrence. Unless the minimum number of investors is reached, the revenues generated through management fees are not sufficient to cover the associated expenses, meaning that they are being run at a loss. The PowerShares ETPs being shuttered in February combined to represent only about $128 million in aggregate assets, a minor portion of the company’s total lineup.

ETF closures are generally very orderly procedures; the products highlighted above will continue to track their index and continue to trade regularly for the next month or so. Eventually, the underlying securities will be sold and converted to cash, which will be distributed to shareholders who elect to continue to maintain their positions in these ETFs.

Investors are advised to avoid “panic selling” on news of an ETF closure, as putting in a market order to liquidate shares can potentially result in a less-than-optimal execution. Investors essentially have two options: selling the shares of the closing ETFs in the next month, or receiving a cash distribution once Invesco liquidates the funds [see How To Deal With ETF Closures].

Disclosure: No positions at time of writing.

ETF Database is not an investment advisor, and any content published by ETF Database does not constitute individual investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. From time to time, issuers of exchange-traded products mentioned herein may place paid advertisements with ETF Database. All content on ETF Database is produced independently of any advertising relationships. Read the full disclaimer here.


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Why SPY Has No Love For Buffett And Berkshire

In addition to being one of the most widely followed benchmarks in the world, the S&P 500 also serves as the basis for the world’s largest ETF. Between SPY, IVV and VOO, there is more than $160 billion linked to this index in U.S.-listed ETFs, significantly more than any other benchmark [for updates on all new ETFs, sign up for the free ETFdb newsletter].

Most investors know that the S&P 500 includes exposure to the largest U.S.-listed companies, giving the biggest weights to the most valuable companies. But that’s not entirely the case; the cap-weighted methodology used by S&P makes an adjustment for the “free float” outstanding. In other words, it excludes shares deemed to be locked in–held by the government, restricted insiders or otherwise unable to be publicly acquired–from its calculation [see 5 Important ETF Lessons In Pictures].

In many cases, that hardly puts a dent in the value of the company. But in others, it can be more significant. Below, we highlight a handful of companies that have a huge number shares locked in, resulting in a considerably smaller allocation in the S&P 500 (and therefore related ETFs) than they would otherwise command:

[See a Visual History of the S&P 500]

1.  Wal-Mart Stores: With a total of 3.35 billion shares outstanding, this multi-national retail corporation founded only 50 years ago has reinvented how people shop for consumer goods. But 1.72 billion of these shares are deemed to be “locked in,” primarily held by members of the Walton family who routinely dominate Richest American lists (in 2011 six members of the Walton family together had the same net worth as the bottom 30% of American families combined– about $100 billion).

SPY does hold a whole bunch of Wal-Mart shares, but would hold considerably more if there was no float adjustment. Despite being the fourth-largest company by market cap, WMT isn’t found in the top 20 of the S&P [Download 101 ETF Lessons Every Financial Advisor Should Learn]. 

WMT is the top holding in several consumer-focused ETFs, including the Market Vectors Retail ETF (RTH) and Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR (XLP).

2. Berkshire Hathaway: This conglomerate holding company is probably best known for its CEO, Warren Buffet, and his impressive track record in the investing world. Of the 1.66 million shares outstanding, only about 1.27 million are available for purchase on the market. As such, BRK also has a major reduction made when its place in the S&P 500 is determined. These 390,000 shares are primarily used by Buffett’s investing group–and have helped him amass a fortune of over $44 billion by 2012, good enough to claim third place on Richest People lists.

Berkshire is one of the six biggest companies by market cap, but barely makes it into the top 15 for the S&P 500.

3. Google: With 80% of the 328.59 million shares outstanding publicly floating, the internet giant has a large number of restricted shares set aside for founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, and other insiders. There are also a number of shares tied up in Google.org, the not-for-profit philanthropic organization that is primarily funded by the remaining locked in shares [see 25 Things Every FA Should Know About ETFs]. 

Google is the third-largest company by market cap, but currently occupies the #9 spot in the S&P 500.

Disclosure: No positions at time of writing.

ETF Database is not an investment advisor, and any content published by ETF Database does not constitute individual investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. From time to time, issuers of exchange-traded products mentioned herein may place paid advertisements with ETF Database. All content on ETF Database is produced independently of any advertising relationships. Read the full disclaimer here.


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Lindsay Lohan Misses Court While Her Attorney Bases Chances of Winning on a Psychic Reading [VIDEO]

Lindsay Lohan didn’t show up for court in New York on Monday.

Shocker, we know. How’s your pulse?

The legally-challenged actress was expected in court in response to her nightclub assault case from November. You’ll recall that she was arrested for third degree misdemeanor assault after being accused of punching a woman in the face in a nightclub altercation when the woman wouldn’t give LiLo her space.

Luckily for Lohan, TMZ found out that instead of a bench warrant being issued for her arrest, prosecutors delayed the proceedings, saying, “The investigation into this case is continuing.”

Also in the “good news” column for our favorite ginger outlaw, her attorney Mark Heller says a psychic told Lohan that 2013 would be a lucky year for her. We aren’t sure there’s a lot of precedent in case law for using psychic readings as outcome assessments, but the lawyer seemed confident that the prediction was good for his case.

Most likely, Lohan is still in London playing Penny Lane for the Wanted, so perhaps if they decide to prosecute and she blows her probation, she can pull a Roman Polanski and just not come back. Then 2013 would be lucky for us all.


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