Topic: How To Invest

What is Pat’s commentary for the week of October 14, 2015

Article Excerpt

This week’s first question helps illustrate a common practice in today’s investment business, particularly in ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds). ETFs are a little like conventional mutual funds, but with two key differences. First, ETFs trade on a stock exchange throughout the day, much like ordinary stocks. So you can buy them through a broker whenever the stock market is open, and generally you pay the same commission rate that you pay to buy stocks. In contrast, you can only buy most conventional mutual funds at the end of the day. Commissions vary widely, depending on negotiation with your broker for fund dealer. Second, the MER (Management Expense Ratio) is generally much lower on ETFs than on conventional mutual funds. That’s because most ETFs take a much simpler approach to investment. Instead of actively managing their clients’ investments, they generally try to invest so as to mirror the holdings and performance of a particular stock-market index. ETF fans refer to this as…