jspilot
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jspilot
(To be clear here, we are talking about index funds and ETFs, most of which are index funds.)No. An index fund's holdings are based on an "index" like the S&P 500 (example: SPY) or on holding the total US market (Example: VTSMX), 3600 stocks. No index fund uses "performance based measures." That is the complete opposite of what they do. Funds that chase performance are called "actively managed funds" or, commonly, as "stock pickers.Yes. Fund holdings are based on a stock's market capitalization; the number of shares outstanding times the market price. Stocks with a big price and a big float are held in larger quantities. This is in fact one of the criticisms of straight S&P 500 funds; there are a few large companies that dominate.Nope. All shares in the underlying index are are bought and sold only as as investors buy or sell the funds. If you want the details for ETFs, google "ETF authorized participant." For conventional mutual funds, the fund manager does the buying and selling.Nope. Actually they do very little trading. That is a big cost advantage and one of the reasons they routinely beat the stock pickers' performance. There is occasionally trading if, for example, S&P drops a stock from the 500 and substitutes anther one. Then the fund manager must sell the dear departed and buy the new kid. But that is infrequent.You always get exactly what is included in the fund's index, which is described in the fund's prospectus.Happy to. I teach an Adult-Ed investing course, actually. Six hours just to cover the very basic stuff.
Actually you are not correct. The page you read lists only SPY's top 15 holdings. That's why the table is titled: "Top 15 Holdings." You really need to learn to read more carefully. SPY actually holds every stock in the S&P 500 on a cap weighted basis.Allocations change only as the stock prices change and drive the cap weighting. Holdings change only if the index creator changes his list. There is a small number of funds that are not cap weighted; allocations there are a little more complicated but you would just be confused by trying to understand them since you don't understand the basics of index funds.
Sheese! Where did you get these goofy ideas, anyway?
So while we are throwing credentials out there- I teach high school economics. Now that we got that out of the way— I made a point to mention that you buy “at least” these holdings. Not that the top 15 are the entire list of holdings Second, the SPY attempts to track the performance of the S and P 500. To me, what that means is, the efforts of the fund must meet the returns of the S and P 500- which means the fund will adjust its holdings to at the very least, meet the returns you can make just by having the 500 individual stocks.
So let’s move away from the SPY because it’s a poor example because it is designed to mimic the S and P 500.
If you go to Sector ETF’s my original point stands. If you buy these ETF’s you are forced to have stocks that make up that sector. So let’s take the one industry we all know pretty well— aviation. If you look at the JETS ETF( linked below) you will see exactly what I’m trying to say. The ETF is made up of a whole load of airlines that, as we know, are not all created equally. To me, if you are saying that ETF’s are a way for investors to lower costs since you don’t pay a manager to actively manage your accounts you are misleading those you are trying to educate. ETF’s are passive investments but they also limit your returns when the market goes up. It’s honestly not hard to understand.
Back to the JETS ETF for a moment. If you were advising people right now, I’d really say that buying this ETF would be a terrible idea. Some airlines may never recover from this, some will do much better and some will go bankrupt. If you can’t fogure out which those are then I’m sorry to say you should not be investing in anything.
You are also misleading people by saying these are not managed funds— they are— someone sets up the allocation amounts and someone decides which stocks get the most money in them. I never said that thes ETF’s we’re actively managed( which actually could be way worse in times of struggle- but that’s another discussion.) The difference being that the ETF funds are not “actively managed”( as you correctly said) but that does not mean the investor in the ETF gets to decide how they want their particular contribution to the fund allocated. So again in the JETS ETF if you believe United Airlines will recover quicker and do better than say, Delta, you can’t allocate more of your funds to United. You get both( which means if you are correct and United recovers quicker and the stock goes up quicker your investment in the JETS ETF is weighed down by the fact that it also allocates funds to Delta( which was my entire original point that ETF’s contain both the bad and the good.) The degree to which these funds are “managed” misses the entire point which is, you— as the investor have no say in how your ETF allocates the total money in the fund.
Again, if people are comfortable with that— cool. It’s not really my thing as I like to be in control of my own money.
JETS Holdings in 2020
https://www.usglobaletfs.com/fund/jets/#holdings
JETS holdings in 2020