Some people think buying individual stocks is too risky. Others find mutual funds too expensive. An ETF is something in between.
An Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) is a basket of investments like stocks, bonds, futures, etc. It enables you to invest in a broad stock market, a specific industry or sector, currency, or commodity.
ETFs are just like mutual funds in structure. However, most ETFs track an index and are passively managed. In this way, the expense ratio of ETFs is usually much lower than mutual funds.
ETFs trade like stocks. Anything you can do with stocks, you can do with ETFs.
The value of an ETF share is calculated every trading day after market close, based on the closing prices of the securities in its portfolio. This is known as the net asset value (NAV).
ETFs usually trade at a price close to the NAV, but are affected by demands in the market. When demands are high, ETFs trade at a premium to (a higher price than) the NAV. Conversely, when demands are low, ETFs trade at a discount to (a lower price than) the NAV.
An ETF that receives dividends from its portfolio must pass the dividends to investors in the fund.
However, an ETF does not pay dividend payments immediately as it receives them. Most ETFs pay a quarterly dividend. Just like stocks, investors should buy the shares before the ex-dividend date to receive dividends.
Dividend-paying ETFs are usually characterized by their names. Type "dividend" to search for dividend-paying ETFs.
ETFs are suitable for investors who want to build a diversified portfolio with low costs. You may want to buy ETFs for the following reasons:
ETFs trade like stocks, so they carry similar risks.
Interested in learning more about ETFs? Join our ETFs Group in Webull community!
What's More
-Try it out on paper trading on our latest mobile version
-Take a quiz on our latest mobile version to evaluate your technique