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Exchange traded funds
1. Exchange traded funds
2. The appeal of ETFs
3. Making money with ETFs
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5. Risks of ETFs
Risk management with ETFs
 
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Risks of ETFs

ETFs may help you manage investment risk since they simplify the process of effective asset allocation and diversification. But that doesn't mean that they are always low-risk investments.

Because ETFs — like index mutual funds — are passively managed, the risk associated with a particular ETF corresponds closely to the risk of the asset subclass the fund is tracking. So, for example, an emerging-market stock ETF would most likely be more volatile — and higher risk — than a long-term government bond ETF. You should also be aware that some ETFs are more thinly traded than others, which could make it difficult to sell at the price you want, especially in a market downturn, or to sell short if that's what you are trying to do.

An ETF will perform well when the index it tracks is making gains, but it will perform poorly when that index is falling. An actively managed mutual fund manager, on the other hand, can tailor portfolio holdings to outperform the fund's benchmark in a down market. That's why ETFs may be less attractive to investors in bear markets than they are in bull markets.





 

         
   
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