This week and the next

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This week and the next

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Index Funds : Open-End Mutual Funds that track an index (Vanguard S&P500 Index Funds, 1976) ... ETFs are listed like any stock, with a ticker symbol. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: This week and the next


1
This week and the next
  • Test 3 Next Tuesday 1030 AM
  • Covers Chapters 13, 14 15 on the Web.
  • Review for the whole semester this Thursday

2
Index InvestingIndex Funds Vs ETFs
  • Index Funds Open-End Mutual Funds that track an
    index (Vanguard SP500 Index Funds, 1976)
  • ETFs (exchange traded funds) Closed end Funds
    whose traded shares track an index.
  • SPDR (93) VIPER iSHARES QQQQ

3
The ABCs of ETFs
  • "E" is for exchange. ETFs are listed like any
    stock, with a ticker symbol. Also, options are
    available on about half of listed ETFs.
  • "T" is for traded. ETFs are bought and sold
    throughout a trading day, whereas mutual funds
    are priced once daily at the market close.
  • "F" is for fund -- in this case an index fund.
    ETFs track segments of the U.S. and global
    securities markets by following benchmarks like
    the SP 500 (SPX news, chart, profile), the Dow
    Jones Industrial Average (DJI news, chart,
    profile), and the Lehman Aggregate Bond Index. If
    you want exposure to health-care, mid-cap value,
    or Brazilian stocks, there is an ETF to
    accommodate your needs.

4
Rapid Growth
  • Back in 1993, there was just one -- SPDRs (AMEX
    SPY). By 2001, there were roughly 90 ETFs
    available, with approximately 83 billion in
    assets.
  • In September 2006, there were 290 ETFs with 350
    billion in combined assets. And things are not
    slowing down. As BusinessWeek reported "Upwards
    of 5 billion in new assets flowed into ETFs in
    the second week of October alone."

5
Recent Updates
  • According to the Investment Company Institute,
    ETF assets totaled more than 568.7 billion of
    the more than 1 trillion in stock index funds as
    of Jan. 31, 2008 -- a 32 increase over last
    year, but down 39.7 billion from December.

6
New Trends
  • Originally modeled after index funds, ETFs have
    gradually narrowed to target specialized slices
    of the market.
  • It also concentrates the risks of specialization,
    tilting a portfolio away from the diversification
    that makes index investing attractive.

7
Best Performers in 2008
  • UltraShort Semiconductor ProShares 
  • (SSG) YTD 40.33
  • UltraShort QQQ ProShares  (AMEX QID) 39.95
  • UltraShort Technology ProShares  (AMEX REW)
    38.29
  • iShares Silver Trust  (AMEX SLV) 32.83

8
Risk - Down Market
  • Most of the betrs-performers rely on the bear
    market. UltraShort QQQ from ProShares As the
    market declines, this ETF seeks to double the
    fall as a gain.
  • For example, if the "Cubes" -- a.k.a. PowerShares
    QQQ (Nasdaq QQQQ) -- falls 10, the UltraShort
    QQQ would like to make a 20 gain on that
    decline.
  • That's similar to the performance the ProShares
    counterpart UltraShort SP 500 (AMEX SDS) seeks
    out.

9
A basket of opinions
  • Although ETFs have been around since the 1990s,
    investors should exercise caution with any ETF
    lacking a long track record.
  • A few of these don't have a one-year performance
    record, let alone a three-year record -- arguably
    an important milestone -- so only time will tell
    whether they can build solid track record over
    longer time periods

10
Merits of ETFs I
  • ETFs are continuously priced throughout the
    trading day, whereas mutual fund sales take place
    at the end of the day price.
  • In theory, ETFs should be able to more closely
    track an index than a mutual fund. Index fund
    managers are confronted with the need to provide
    liquidity to buyers and sellers of their fund's
    shares, which requires them to hold a percentage
    of their assets in cash.

11
Merits of ETFs II
  • Because ETFs trade like a stock, an investor can
    employ a wider range of trading techniques with
    them, such as stop loss and limit orders, and
    short sales.
  • Increasingly, futures and options are becoming
    available on the more liquid ETFs, which creates
    more potential trading strategies.

12
Merits of ETFs III
  • The operating expenses on many ETFs tend to be
    lower than on index mutual funds which track the
    same index, because ETFs don't provide the same
    level of service to their owners that mutual fund
    owners receive (e.g., telephone service centers,
    free fund transfers, check writing privileges,
    etc.).

13
Merits of Index Funds I
  • Operating expenses are only part of the story.
    When you buy an ETF, you also pay a brokerage
    commission, which you usually avoid when you buy
    an index mutual fund (which rarely carry front
    end sales loads).
  • For people who dollar cost average -- investing
    an amount of money each month into the index fund
    or funds they own, the ability to avoid trading
    commissions makes mutual funds a much better deal
    over time.

14
Merits of Index funds II
  • If you are a long term, buy and hold investor,
    the ability to trade ETFs throughout the day, and
    to employ a wide range of trading strategies
    really isn't very useful.
  • Mutual fund companies provide a range of services
    that many discount brokerages do not (this
    assumes that, in order to minimize sales
    commissions, people buy ETFs through discount
    rather than full service stockbrokers).
  • In practice, many ETFs have had larger tracking
    errors versus the index than comparable mutual
    funds.

15
Index Tracking Model
  • To construct an index fund with a subset of the
    index assets.
  • For example, can we construct a SP500 index fund
    with 100 stocks?
  • Benefits less transaction costs more focus on
    smaller numbers of stocks.
  • Goal a fund behaving similar to an index with
    better performance (See an example on the Web)

16
Index tracking Model
  • RI b1S1 b2S2 . . . BnSn E
  • Where
  • RI is an Index return
  • Bn is investment weight
  • Sn is a stock
  • E is error or residual.

17
Solution (Solver)
  • Min Var (E)
  • Choosing (changing) b1 .. bn
  • Constraints
  • Sum of b1 thru bn is one.
  • and others
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