Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKristin Scott Modified over 9 years ago
1
ETFs and ETPs Colgate Finance Club
2
What is an ETF/ETP An ETF/ETP is an exchange-traded fund or exchange- traded product that is traded on stock exchanges. It is a security that tracks an index or commodities basket like an index fund. Index Fund vs. Exchange Traded Fund Index Fund – A type of Mutual Fund that is structured to follow a Market Index (S&P 500, NASDAQ, etc.) ETF – Trades like a Mutual Index Fund, but it trades on a stock exchange and experiences price changes throughout the day as they are bought and sold. ETFs do not have an Net Asset Value (NAV) calculated every day like an Index Fund.
3
Benefits of an ETF Diversification Is a basket of stocks, bonds, and commodities rather than tracking a single company. Trades as a Stock Because it trades on a stock exchange investors can sell short, buy on the margin, and own single shares rather than blocks of shares. Low Expense Ratios Overhead or management expense ratio (MER) is lower and therefore returns to the investor are higher. Commissions are the same as any stock.
4
ETF Sponsors ETF Sponsors are financial institutions that create ETFs. Process to creating an ETF: Create the underlying index for the fund. Securities for the fund are then delivered to the sponsor from other financial institutions. In return, the sponsors issue them creation units – blocks of 100,000 shares – to distribute to investors through the stock exchanges. The sponsor is responsible for managing the fund (passively) and for updating it when changes occur in the underlying index.
5
Types of ETFs Index ETF Fund that tracks a Market Index Bond ETF Fund comprised of a basket of bonds Currency ETF Funds that contain currency-debt instruments Leveraged ETF Funds that contain derivatives and debt in order to amplify changes in the underlying markets (theoretically) – 2:1 and 3:1 ratios. Works both ways – so returns and losses are amplified (dangerous?). Inverse ETF Comprised of derivative meant to create a put position against an underlying market.
6
Popular ETFs Ultra ETFs – a Leveraged ETF with a 2:1 ratio. Spider (SPDR) - tracks the S&P 500 and is traded under the symbol SPY – each share is worth 1/10 of the NAV of the S&P 500. ProShares – ETFs designed as Leveraged ETFs for investors who want to hedge positions without entering the derivatives market. iShares – BlackRock ETFsBlackRock ETFs Vipers - Vanguard ETFsVanguard ETFs
7
Chris Quick ‘06 and Kevin Walsh ETFs and iShares September 28 @ 6:30 pm Colgate Inn Presented by The Investor Studies Program and the Colgate Finance Club. More information to come.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.