Buying ETFs accelerates returns

Mutual fund owners that switch to ETFs accelerate their returns!

Mutual fund investors can switch to buying ETFs and boost their bottom line. That happens because EFTs have much lower costs for sales and management. Those cost savings happen because ETFs are designed for the technical efficiency of modern markets. In contrast, mutual funds were designed for a long gone era. Their outdated design, old management organization, and obsolete sales structure has high costs. And those costs come from investor pockets. As a result, investors switching to ETFs give themselves a very nice bottom line boost! 

What you learn:

For some, switching to Exchange Traded Funds or ETFs offers more than double returns! As a result, that is a change worth making!

FAQs investors asked about buying ETFs to accelerate investment returns

These questions and answers about buying ETFs to accelerate investment returns have overlapping answers which help investors understand how stock markets, investing, and money-making interrelates.

Are ETFs a good investment?

ETFs offer excellent investment opportunities with higher returns than comparable mutual funds.

Investors can immediately boost returns and gain flexibility by switching from mutual funds to similar ETFs.

Besides excellent liquidity, ETFs offer tax advantages, a more flexible portfolio, and exposure to virtually every market, index, or investment possibility.

Still, compared to mutual funds, ETFs' most significant investment advantage remains their lower and fully disclosed cost
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How do ETFs improve returns over mutual funds?

Investing in ETFs holding the same stocks as mutual funds can deliver up to twice the returns! The design of ETFs uses technology and market efficiency to offer lower sales, administration, and management costs.

In contrast, the centuries-old design of mutual funds generates more recurring revenue streams for their sales and management teams. But because those higher costs matter, investors get lower net returns.

Investors who switch to ETFs avoid those costs, keep their investment exposure, and enjoy the higher returns of lower fees. ETF investors also benefit from more investment options, liquidity, and tax efficiency. 

Can you lose all your money in an ETF?

The vast majority of ETFs hold shares or assets that offer reasonable risk and the prospect of safe returns. However, specialty ETFs are a different story. If used badly, a specialty ETF can quickly eat capital! Some specialty ETFs come with high to extreme risks. They may be highly leveraged, rebalance daily, and may hold options or futures contracts. Those are powerful specialty features that can produce spectacular results when knowledgeable investors use them well. However, in inexperienced hands, they can destroy capital! Carefully research and understand how to control the risks before considering or using any specialty ETF.

What ETF should I buy?

Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) are easy-to-understand investment funds offering excellent investment choices that investors buy like stock.

Buy the one that is the best fit for your investment plan. ETFs hold various stocks or stock and bond combinations according to each fund's objective.

For instance, the S&P 500 ETF is a solid initial choice, as it holds all 500 stocks in the index over the long term and outperforms 80% + of the market, including large fund managers.

Other ETFs focus on specific industries, sectors, investment styles, and strategies. Although similar to mutual funds, ETFs have fewer and lower costs and restrictions, resulting in better investment returns.

Will EFTs cause the market to crash?

ETFs track or follow the market. As market followers, these transparent and liquid investments are not capable of causing a market crash.

Short-term mispricing caused by market fluctuations does affect ETFs. Most ETFs are collections of assets that also trade on the same market. As a result, any supply-and-demand-driven price change of an ETF or any underlying asset can create an instant price and liquidity mismatch.

When a liquidity mismatch affects ETFs or their underlying assets, it creates opportunities for arbitrage, which quickly realigns prices.

Although ETFs can impact market dynamics and be affected by market conditions, they are subject to price fluctuations driven by supply and demand and do not lead the marke
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Are ETFs safe in a market crash?

In equity markets, ETFs are secure, with Index ETFs among the safest choices.

ETFs are not safer than stocks as they carry the same risks and follow the market value of the stocks held in each fund. The risk of each depends on the sector or industry tracked.

As for crashes, through the long history of markets, recovery follows even the worst downturn. That happens after any minor or significant downturn.

For portfolio crash protection, well-selected ETFs can provide a diversification cushion to lessen the impact of a crash. 

Investors lower costs while keeping market exposure

An ETF with exactly the same holdings as a mutual fund can double investor returns! And even greater improvements are possible! In most cases, ETFs have a huge cost advantage over mutual funds. And lower costs make all the difference for better investment returns!

The key point in the comparison between mutual funds and ETFs is the real net liquidated return. That means the money that actually gets into the investor’s pocket after all costs. So investors must be aware, the real net returns are not the progressive annual numbers mutual funds have reported. In fact, some mutual fund company reports are close to nonsense. Too often, mutual fund purveyors obscure the real costs and they do that on purpose. Unfortunately, regulators let this clever legal ripoff scheme continue.

But informed investors do not have to put up with it. In fact, superior investors that inform themselves can take action to avoid these financial traps. But be warned, few investors are capable of seeing through the dense smoke. It seems forever, mutual fund companies have done an excellent job of keeping costs well obscured. That happens because the mutual fund and financial service industry enjoy the financial feast provided by high fees. From top to bottom, mutual fund players feast on this booty. And because so many dine on that money, there is little chance of any change. That means, year after year, little change happens to the ripoff scheme.

Times do change… but not now or fast

Anyone wanting change in the mutual fund scheme has a mountain of work cut out for them. And it will be up to you, any mutual fund investor, to make enough noise. Regulators are well aware of the issue. But they will do little. In fact, some regulators are chattering as they did the year before and the year before that, and…well you get the idea! Don’t expect much to happen. Although proposed regulations require clear reports on compensation and performance, not much of substance has happened.

Like other sellers, Canadian banks harvest huge returns from mutual fund-related fees. So that revenue accounts for much of the stellar banking and wealth management sector returns. And that is the case across the wealth management sectors. There, the returns are outstanding for the sellers and service providers. However, the net returns for investors typically show underperformance across the majority of mutual funds. That happens because those fat fees come out of investor pockets. So banks will fight any proposed change to protect those fat profits. As always, banks want nothing to do with full, plain,  or clear disclosure. They prefer to have the returns in their pockets rather than those of the investor.

To make sure that keeps happening, banks turn loose legions of lawyers to fight any change. So any possible change will take some time. Just as they want it. That will happen because those fine legal minds will see to it that obscuring full costs remains legal. As a result, don’t expect any real help from regulators.

If they were required, full clear cost reports would shock many mutual fund holders. But that is a dream. However, it would benefit everyone except the financial advisors milking mutual fund fees from clients. It could mean some awkward meetings between advisors and clients. But the market, not regulators offers hope to meet the needs of the investing public. And that gives investors an easy way out of the fee jungle.

The ETF Difference

A market innovation, ETFs offer all the advantages of mutual funds at a fraction of the cost. And they provide far better reports to investors. So take advantage, and avoid the outrageous cost of mutual funds. Do that by buying ETFs for a practical, available, and lower-cost alternative.

That’s a big difference! ETFs have a huge cost advantage that gets passed on to investors as better returns. That result means an ETF with a sharp cost reduction puts the difference into your pocket. Do that for a few years and the compound difference has a huge impact on your wealth!

Most basic ETF holdings are very much like mutual funds. That means ETFs can give exactly the same market exposure. And as the ETF industry grows, compared to mutual funds, ETFs offer greater numbers of market opportunities. As a result, for those holding the same equities, the performance and participation will be the same. But at a fraction of the costs for a mutual fund and investors get the difference put on their bottom line.

As with mutual funds, there are thousands of ETFs offered. And more are coming all the time. As a result, for investors ETFs present two major and important differences:

  1. Public Listing: ETF shares or units trade on stock exchanges
  2. Management Expense: ETFs have exceptionally low costs

1. Public Listing

Being listed means that ETF shares trade like any stock on a stock exchange. That makes them easy for any investor to buy. It also makes them easy to sell. Unlike mutual funds, any buyer or seller can see minute-by-minute price action on exchanges. At best, mutual funds price once a day in a process only seen by the mutual fund company personal.

Investors can buy or sell their full position anytime during market hours. There are no selling restrictions or limits as happens with some mutual funds.

Any investor can gain access to the market with an investment account. In Canada, that means dealing with one of the bank-owned dealers or the handful of independents. In America, retail investors have a much wider choice among dealers to select from.

The markets of both nations offer investors many choices. In future conversations, we discuss the process of selecting a dealer or financial advisor.

The best part of this is avoiding the sales structure and costs of the mutual fund industry. In the case of ETFs those outdated structures and old-fashioned sale methods can be completely avoided. To the advantage of investors, that avoids the costs as well. Most importantly, missing the annual recurring costs.

2. Management Expenses

The design and structure of mutual funds began centuries ago. Before electronics, their base was built on paper records and face-to-face transfers. The deal structure fits the times. A cutting-edge idea for that time involved man people and all the associated costs. That meant management, bureaucracy, and space to accommodate them all. All that brings costs.

In contrast, ETFs are a product of the digital age. They have cost and efficiency advantages that lower expenses. Their sales channel bypasses the obsolete mutual fund distribution model. They need few people, little space, and a simple management structure.  Those differences bring far less cost.

You can take advantage of these huge cost savings! Put the ETF advantages to work building your wealth. The next lesson in this course details those huge cost differences. The details will shock your wallet!

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About the Author Bryan Kelly

Bryan Kelly shares decades of experience to make stock market investing accessible to everyone. His knowledge guides investors to make money work for them and avoid mistakes seeking personal empowerment, independence, and retirement comfort. The About page tells the story of how a question from his daughter began White Top Investor.

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