ETFs

Exchange traded funds trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. Investors can buy them on margin, or sell them short. The best exchange-traded funds offer well-diversified, tax-efficient portfolios with exceptionally low management ETF fees. They are also very liquid.

Investors use ETFs in a variety of ways, and some investors work only with ETFs and no other type of investment in portfolio creation.

An amazing aspect of ETFs is their diversity. Some investors may create an entire portfolio solely from a few well-diversified ETFs.

ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. That’s different from mutual funds, which you can only buy at the end of the day at a price that reflects the fund’s value at the close of trading.

Prices of ETFs are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell them, but their low management fees give them a cost advantage over most mutual funds.

As well, shares are only added or removed when the underlying index changes. As a result of this low turnover, you won’t incur the regular capital gains taxes generated by the yearly distributions most conventional mutual funds pay out to unitholders.

ETFs have a place in every investor’s portfolio, at TSI Network we also recommend using our three-part Successful Investor strategy:

  1. Invest mainly in well-established companies;
  2. Spread your money out across most if not all of the five main economic sectors (Manufacturing & Industry; Resources & Commodities; the Consumer sector; Finance; Utilities);
  3. Downplay or avoid stocks in the broker/media limelight.

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ETFs Library Archives
Three main factors continue to drive demand for health-care products and services: the rapid aging of the population in the developed countries; the expansion of medical services in developing countries; and significant new developments in the field of medical technology and innovation.


The aging of the population in developed markets


A combination of declining fertility rates and increasing life expectancy has resulted in a rapidly aging global population.


According to the latest U.N....
Value investing is just one of a number of investing styles or methodologies. In the last couple decades, some researchers have tried to pinpoint which of those styles outperforms the others over time.


Apart from “Value” stocks, these researchers have identified factors including “Growth,” “Momentum” and “Size.”


Value investors focus on the price that they pay for a stock relative to the company’s earnings or assets and would prefer to pay prices that reflect low price-to-earnings or price-to-book-value ratios....

After a rough final quarter of 2018, most asset classes saw significant gains in the first month of 2019 as investors became less concerned about high stock valuations and the China-U.S. trade dispute. Fears about a rapid rise in U.S. interest rates for 2019 also eased.


The Vanguard Total Bond Index ETF (BND.O) gained 0.8% in January while the Vanguard Total World Stocks ETF (VT) gained 6.6%....
A major change in the Canadian ETF landscape took place in January, with BlackRock Inc. and RBC Global Asset Management joining forces. The #1 and #5 Canadian providers will jointly offer 150 Canadian-listed ETFs under the RBC iShares brand with a combined $60 billion in assets under management....
Japan has a less-than-favorable demographic profile: the population is shrinking as the death rate exceeds the birth rate, and the average age of the population is rising due to longer life expectancy.


The median age of the Japanese population is now 47.7, the second highest in the world....
The Japanese economy ranks among the top 5 in the world and hosts some of the most profitable global corporations. The economy is, however, hamstrung by a declining and rapidly aging population. Still, an older population also present opportunities, and Japanese companies are already coming up with innovative and technology-driven aids.


Here is one ETF that provides exposure to the top Japanese public companies.


JP MORGAN BETABUILDERS JAPAN ETF $22.40 (New York symbol BBJP; TSINetwork ETF Rating: Aggressive; Market cap: $3.9 billion) tracks the performance of the largest publicly listed Japanese companies.


Industrial companies account for 19.6% of the fund’s assets, while Consumer Cyclical (17.6%), Technology (13.9%), Financial Services (11.6%), Consumer Defensive (8.6%) and Health care (8.2%) are other key segments.


The ETF holds a large portfolio of 383 stocks; the top 10 make up only 18.0% of overall assets....
Canadian-listed exchange-traded funds continue to attract assets previously invested in mutual funds. By the end of 2018, Canadian ETFs had assets under management of $157 billion, or 6.6% more than a year earlier. The value of ETF assets has also doubled over the past 3 years.


By the end of 2018, the Canadian ETF universe had 660 listings....

The health-care industry continues to benefit from the aging populations of most developed markets. While the growing number of elderly continues to spur demand for health-care products and technology, the expanding middle class of developing nations also contributes....
ETF fees have continued to drop over the past several years as fund providers increase their efforts to attract ETF investors in an increasingly competitive marketplace.


Fund investors looking for an ETF focused on Canadian stocks can now buy units of a fund holding the country’s top 60 companies by market cap for an MER as low as 0.03%.


In the U.S., Fidelity recently cut its fees on selected index funds to zero....
BMO US PUT WRITE ETF $16.99 (Toronto symbol ZPW) sells put options on a range of U.S. large-cap stocks to generate income for the ETF. These options give the put buyers the right to sell specific stocks to the ETF at a pre-determined price....