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Glossary

What is an ETF? Definition, Types & How to Invest

Learn what an ETF (exchange-traded fund) is, how ETFs work, different types of ETFs, and how they compare to mutual funds and individual stocks.

What is an ETF?

An ETF (exchange-traded fund) is an investment fund that trades on stock exchanges like a regular stock. ETFs hold a basket of assets (stocks, bonds, commodities, etc.) and allow investors to buy diversified exposure with a single purchase.

How ETFs Work

  1. Fund creation: Asset manager creates fund tracking an index or strategy
  2. Asset purchase: Fund buys underlying securities
  3. Share issuance: ETF shares are created and listed on exchanges
  4. Trading: Investors buy/sell shares throughout the day
  5. Price tracking: ETF price closely follows underlying assets

ETF vs. Stocks vs. Mutual Funds

Feature ETF Stock Mutual Fund
Diversification Yes No Yes
Intraday Trading Yes Yes No (end of day)
Minimum Investment 1 share 1 share Often $1,000+
Expense Ratio Low None Varies
Tax Efficiency High Varies Lower

Types of ETFs

By Asset Class

Type Examples
Stock ETFs SPY, QQQ, VTI
Bond ETFs BND, AGG, LQD
Commodity ETFs GLD, USO, SLV
Real Estate ETFs VNQ, IYR
Currency ETFs FXE, UUP

By Strategy

Type Description
Index ETFs Track market indices (S&P 500, Nasdaq)
Sector ETFs Focus on specific industries
Thematic ETFs Target trends (AI, clean energy)
Dividend ETFs High-yield dividend stocks
Growth ETFs Growth-oriented companies
Value ETFs Undervalued companies

By Geography

Type Coverage
U.S. ETFs American stocks
International ETFs Non-U.S. developed markets
Emerging Market ETFs Developing economies
Global ETFs Worldwide coverage
ETF Tracks Expense Ratio
SPY S&P 500 0.09%
QQQ Nasdaq 100 0.20%
VTI Total U.S. Stock Market 0.03%
VOO S&P 500 0.03%
IWM Russell 2000 0.19%
VWO Emerging Markets 0.08%

Advantages of ETFs

1. Diversification

One ETF can hold hundreds or thousands of stocks.

2. Low Costs

Index ETFs often have expense ratios under 0.10%.

3. Tax Efficiency

ETF structure minimizes capital gains distributions.

4. Transparency

Holdings are disclosed daily.

5. Flexibility

Trade anytime during market hours.

6. No Minimum Investment

Buy as little as one share.

Disadvantages of ETFs

1. Trading Costs

Bid-ask spreads and commissions (though often $0 now).

2. Tracking Error

May not perfectly match index performance.

3. Complexity

Some ETFs use leverage or derivatives.

4. Overtrading Temptation

Easy trading can lead to excessive activity.

Expense Ratios

The annual fee charged by the fund:

Range Classification
Under 0.10% Very low (index funds)
0.10-0.50% Low
0.50-1.00% Moderate
Over 1.00% High (actively managed)

Example: 0.03% expense ratio on $10,000 = $3/year

How to Invest in ETFs

  1. Open brokerage account (Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard, etc.)
  2. Research ETFs matching your goals
  3. Check expense ratios and trading volume
  4. Place order (market or limit)
  5. Monitor and rebalance as needed

Leveraged and Inverse ETFs

Type Example Risk Level
2x Leveraged 2x daily S&P return Very High
3x Leveraged 3x daily S&P return Extremely High
Inverse Opposite of index return High

⚠️ These are for short-term trading only—not long-term investing.

ETF Tax Advantages

  • In-kind redemptions avoid capital gains
  • Lower turnover than active mutual funds
  • Tax-loss harvesting opportunities between similar ETFs

This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.