On this page
How ETFs Work
An ETF company (like Vanguard, iShares, or Invesco) creates a fund tracking an index or pursuing a strategy, then divides it into shares that trade on exchanges.
Example: SPY (S&P 500 ETF)
- Holds all 500 stocks in the S&P 500 index
- You buy one share of SPY; you own fractional interests in 500 companies
- SPY trades on the NYSE like any other stock
- The price fluctuates throughout the day
Traditional alternative: Mutual funds
- Also hold baskets of securities
- Trade once daily at the end of day (net asset value)
- Often have higher costs and tax inefficiency
Index ETFs vs. Actively Managed ETFs
Index ETFs (passive):
- Track an index (S&P 500, total market, bonds, etc.)
- No active manager trying to beat the market
- Very low costs (0.03-0.20% annually)
- Guaranteed to match the index returns
Examples: SPY, VOO (Vanguard S&P 500), VTI (Vanguard total market), BND (Vanguard bonds)
Actively managed ETFs:
- A manager picks holdings trying to beat an index
- Higher costs (0.50-1.50% annually)
- May outperform or underperform the index
- More complexity
Key Advantages
1. Instant diversification: Owning one ETF share gives you exposure to 500+ stocks. You can't be as diversified owning individual stocks without enormous effort.
2. Low costs: Index ETFs charge 0.03-0.10% annually. Mutual funds charge 0.50-1.00%. Over 40 years, this cost difference is enormous.
Example: $100,000 invested 40 years at 8% return
- 0.10% ETF cost: $1,024,000 final balance
- 0.50% mutual fund cost: $893,000 final balance
- Cost difference: $131,000 (13% less money due to fees)
3. Tax efficiency: ETFs have lower capital gains distributions than mutual funds. Passive investing means low portfolio turnover; when there's low turnover, there are fewer taxable events.
4. Flexibility: ETFs trade throughout the day at market prices. You can sell immediately (unlike mutual funds, which settle end-of-day).
5. Liquidity: Popular ETFs trade billions of dollars daily. You can buy or sell instantly without worrying about finding a buyer.
ETF Structure: In-Kind Creation/Redemption
ETFs have a unique structure called "in-kind creation/redemption" that contributes to their tax efficiency:
When you buy ETF shares, you're not directly buying shares from the ETF creator. Instead:
- Authorized market makers buy all the underlying securities
- They exchange these securities for new ETF shares
- These shares are sold on the market
When you sell ETF shares:
- Market makers buy your ETF shares
- They exchange them for the underlying securities
- These securities are sold on the market
This structure means: the ETF company doesn't need to sell underlying securities to pay redemptions. Existing shareholders avoid capital gains taxes. This is why ETFs are more tax-efficient than mutual funds.
ETF Selection: Which Ones to Own
For a simple portfolio, consider these core ETFs:
U.S. stock exposure:
- VOO (Vanguard S&P 500) 0.03% expense ratio
- VTI (Vanguard Total Market) 0.03% expense ratio
International stock exposure:
- VXUS (Vanguard Total Intl Stock) 0.08% expense ratio
- IEFA (iShares MSCI EAFE) 0.07% expense ratio
Bond exposure:
- BND (Vanguard Total Bond Market) 0.03% expense ratio
- AGG (iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond) 0.03% expense ratio
All-in-one portfolios:
- VTI + VXUS + BND (custom allocation)
- VTSAX (all stocks)
- Vanguard target-date funds (automatically adjust risk over time)
ETF Risks
1. Tracking error: The ETF return may not perfectly match the index. This is usually minimal for large ETFs.
2. Concentration risk: Broad market ETFs concentrate in mega-cap companies. The S&P 500 is roughly 25% concentrated in the top 10 stocks (Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, etc.).
3. Leverage risk: Some ETFs use leverage (borrowed money) to enhance returns. This amplifies losses too. Avoid leveraged ETFs unless you understand them.
4. Emerging market risk: International ETFs are geopolitical bets on countries. China risk, Russia risk, etc.
ETF vs. Mutual Funds: Quick Comparison
| Feature | ETF | Mutual Fund |
|---|---|---|
| Trading | Continuous during market hours | Once daily at close |
| Costs | 0.03-1.50% | 0.50-2.00% |
| Tax efficiency | High | Lower |
| Minimum investment | 1 share | Often $1,000-3,000 |
| Ease of use | Very easy | Easy |
The Bottom Line
For modern investors, ETFs are the optimal vehicle. They combine low costs, diversification, tax efficiency, and simplicity. A simple portfolio of 2-3 broad-based ETFs (U.S. stocks, international stocks, bonds) provides global diversification at minimal cost and beats most professional investors.
The combination of compound interest, diversification, and low costs through ETFs is a proven wealth-building machine for ordinary people.





