Oct 30, 2015
According to Morningstar, ETFs are getting more costly to own.
Average ETF fees once averaged 0.4 percent but have now jumped to
over 0.6 percent. Some new exchange-traded products are charging
over 1.0 percent in fees annually.
Increasingly, ETFs are seeing such volume that a new cost has crept
into the math, known as “Tracking Errors”: ETF managers are
supposed to keep their funds’ investment performance in line with
the indexes they track. That mission is not as easy as it sounds,
says Morningstar. Throughout the trading day, the spread between
underlying securities and the ETF can be significant. For example,
on August 24 when the market opened down 5.3%, the Vanguard
Dividend Appreciation fund VIG, was down a whopping 38% for more
than an hour. Steve and Sinclair breakdown some of the pros and
cons of ETFs.
In a nutshell, the price you see for the ETF may not be equal to the sum of the shares inside the ETF and fees for ETFs are rising.
In the Q & A, Steve reviews a more effective approach to reducing risks on the bond side of the portfolio.