How to Profit From ETFs (2024)

Exchange-traded funds have never been hotter. Investors are pouring a record amount of money into ETFs, which hold baskets of securities like mutual funds do but trade like stocks. “It’s just explosive growth,” says Armando Senra, head of iShares America at BlackRock. Nearly as much new money has flowed into ETFs over the first half of 2021 than in all of 2020—which itself was a record year for inflows. “The pace has smashed the prior record to smithereens,” says Ben Johnson, director of global exchange-traded fund research for Morningstar.

ETFs vs. Mutual Funds: Why Investors Who Hate Fees Should Love ETFs

In this age of skyrocketing “meme” stocks, it’s notable that much of the new ETF money is going—sensibly—into “boring, broadly diversified products,” such as S&P 500 index funds, says Todd Rosenbluth, head of ETF research at Wall Street firm CFRA. Investors use these ETFs as primary portfolio holdings; they spice up returns with sector or “thematic” ETFs, he says. Interest is broad: Individuals, advisers and institutions are all buying ETFs.

Some of the draw, as always, stems from how these funds work. Compared with mutual funds, ETFs charge lower annual fees. They also have no initial investment minimum, and they trade like stocks—meaning you can buy and sell shares throughout the day, buy on margin, and even sell them short. And because they dish out less in capital gains distributions to shareholders than mutual funds do, ETFs tend to be more tax efficient (more on that later). But a new batch of investing trends—including the growing prominence of environmental, social and corporate governance concerns and the increasing number of actively managed and specialized ETFs—are also fueling interest in these funds.

Subscribe to Kiplinger’s Personal Finance

Be a smarter, better informed investor.

Save up to 74%
How to Profit From ETFs (1)

Sign up for Kiplinger’s Free E-Newsletters

Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and more - straight to your e-mail.

Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice - straight to your e-mail.

Sign up

Against this backdrop, we conducted our annual review of the ETF industry and the Kiplinger ETF 20, the list of our favorite exchange-traded funds (and made some changes).

For investors just getting to know ETFs, we’ve included a guide to different types of exchange-traded products, as well as a few tips for trading these funds, below. All returns and data are through July 9, unless otherwise noted.

Setting trends

ETFs aren’t just a side dish anymore. For many investors, especially those between 25 and 39 years old, they’re the main course. These funds make up nearly one-third of millennial investors’ portfolios today, according to the latest annual Charles Schwab ETF Investor Study. Looking ahead, nearly 70% of millennial investors who have bought or sold an ETF over the past two years said they think these funds will be a primary investment type in their portfolio. Only 30% of investors between 56 and 74 who have held an ETF shared that sentiment—but that’s changing, too. Wider acceptance combined with innovative new funds are making ETFs more attractive to older investors, too. And new developments are drawing investors of all sorts to the explosive ETF industry.

Bond investors are embracing ETFs. Investors—including the U.S. government—are increasingly buying bond ETFs in place of bond mutual funds and individual bonds. Last year, the Federal Reserve snapped up shares in 16 corporate bond ETFs to shore up the fixed-income market. At last report, the government’s ETF holdings had a market value of $8.6 billion.

7 Great Growth ETFs to Get Your Portfolio Going

In 2020, for the second year in a row, bond ETFs picked up more new money—$186.4 billion—than did stock ETFs. “As we were in the throes of COVID-19, bond ETFs became a go-to vehicle for investors for the liquidity that they provide,” says CFRA’s Rosenbluth, referring to the ease with which shareholders can buy and sell shares in ETFs. “These bond ETFs are still in demand in 2021, even as stock products have become more popular.”

They’re attracting an ESG crowd. In 2020, the pandemic, climate-change worries and the movement for racial justice intensified an already healthy interest in ESG funds, which focus on companies that meet distinct environmental, social and corporate governance measures.

Inflows into ESG-focused and sustainability-oriented mutual funds and ETFs more than doubled in 2020 from the previous year, to $51 billion. ETFs took in most of that new money (nearly $34 billion). Naturally, a profusion of new ESG funds sprang up to meet demand. Over the past 18 months, nearly 50 new ETFs have launched with a focus on ESG or sustainability.

There’s an ETF for every theme. Thematic ETFs offer investors a way to invest in long-term trends that will change the way we live and work. You can choose among funds that focus on online shopping, for example, or machine learning and robotics, or genetics and immunology. Occasionally, a new, attuned-to-the-zeitgeist fund comes along that’s even more nichey. “From space to cannabis to veganism, we’ve seen continued interest in all things thematic,” says Johnson.

The pandemic lockdown, for instance, spawned a number of work-from-home funds. Even buzzy meme stocks are getting their day with the FOMO ETF (for “fear of missing out”). Other times, says Johnson, “the themes are a reflection of where the economy might be headed.” Since April, a number of ETFs focused on hotels, restaurants, airlines and cruises have launched as a way to play the economic reopening.

These funds are popular, but they can be volatile, and some don’t survive for long. The Obesity ETF, which invested in companies focused on fighting fatness, opened in 2016, but it closed earlier this year.

Some are using hedge-fund strategies. Techniques once accessible principally to wealthy individuals are now available in ETFs. “It’s part of the democratization of investing,” says Simplify Asset Management cofounder Paul Kim. Simplify has launched 12 ETFs since last September. All of the strategies use options to enhance returns or to protect against losses. Kim says the firm’s biggest fund, Simplify US Equity PLUS Downside Convexity ETF, is “an S&P 500 index fund with seat belts.”

Searching for Yield? Making a Case for High-Yield Bonds

Then there are buffered ETFs, which use strategies once limited to so-called “structured” products usually sold by banks. Like those products, buffered ETFs track an index and use options to protect capital against a portion of market losses in exchange for a slice of upside returns. Says Morningstar’s Johnson, “They’re not as costly as structured products, you can get out when you want and you still maintain tax efficiency.” The ETFs appeal to retirees who want to hold stocks but also want to limit the risk. All told, 74 buffered funds are now available—most launched over the past 12 months—and they have garnered a total of $6.1 billion in assets.

But these strategies take some explaining (see Buffered ETFs Can Limit Your Losses). For now, they are selling mostly through advisers, who can explain the risks and benefits to their clients before they buy.

Active ETFs arrive. The world of actively managed ETFs is opening up, thanks to an SEC rule adopted in 2019 that enabled certain active ETFs to be “nontransparent.” In other words, unlike most ETFs, nontransparent ETFs don’t have to disclose detailed portfolio holdings every day. Instead, full reports are made quarterly. “Having to disclose portfolio holdings daily was preventing active managers from offering ETFs to investors because they had to share too much of their stock-selection process,” says Rosenbluth.

Now a number of well-known mutual fund firms have launched active ETFs, both transparent and nontransparent. Fidelity has launched 11 new active ETFs over the past 18 months. Three are clones of well-known mutual funds, including Fidelity Blue Chip Growth ETF (symbol FBCG), whose similarl named mutual fund sibling (FBGRX) is a member of the Kiplinger 25, the list of our favorite no-load funds). T. Rowe Price launched new ETF versions of its mutual funds Blue Chip Growth, Dividend Growth (another Kiplinger 25 fund), Equity Income and Growth Stock late last summer. Putnam and American Century also recently launched active, nontransparent ETFs. “The growing supply of active ETFs has made it easier for investors who believe in active management to have strong choices to consider,” says Rosenbluth.

They’re tax efficient. Tax efficiency has always been a draw for investors to ETFs. Some of that efficiency is due to low portfolio turnover, at least for many index ETFs. But it also has to do with the way ETF shares are created and redeemed. Mutual funds must sometimes sell underlying securities to meet shareholder redemptions. This can trigger a capital gains distribution, which is shared by all fund shareholders. But ETF sponsors don’t actually buy and sell the underlying securities in their portfolios. Third parties—institutional investors and market makers called authorized participants—do that for them, making money on the transactions they complete.

This process is called an in-kind transaction because no cash changes hands between the ETF and the authorized participants. Instead, the ETFs hand over baskets of securities to the authorized participants for redemptions (or the funds receive baskets of securities when new shares are created). Because the ETF itself doesn’t make any cash transactions, it isn’t as likely as a mutual fund to make a capital gains distribution. (You’re still liable for capital gains taxes when you sell shares.)

The SEC now allows portfolio managers to customize the baskets of securities they give to the authorized participants, choosing which share lots of certain securities in their portfolio the authorized participants will sell. “This gives them a chance to dramatically improve tax efficiency,” says Johnson.

Other exchange-traded products

Exchange-traded investment products come in a few different flavors, with important differences. For example, ETFs, shorthand for exchange-traded funds, and ETNs, the acronym for exchange-traded notes, sure sound a lot alike. But they’re very different products.

ETFs invest in a basket of securities and trade on an exchange like a stock. Your main risk is the assets in the ETF declining in value. But ETFs are structured in a way that keeps your investment safe even if the company behind the ETF runs into financial trouble.

ETNs don’t offer that protection. An ETN is a bond, or unsecured debt, issued by a bank or financial firm. Unlike traditional bonds, ETNs don’t pay interest, nor do they invest in the underlying securities of the indexes they track. The bank promises to pay the ETN holder the return on a market index, minus fees.

10 Best Value ETFs to Buy for Bundled Bargains

That promise comes with risk. The issuer’s creditworthiness is key. If the bank goes bankrupt (a rarity) or breaks its promise to pay in full, you could be stuck with a worthless investment, or one worth a lot less. The ETN’s value could fall if the issuer’s credit rating is downgraded. ETNs may also be thinly traded, which can make it harder to get favorable pricing when you buy or sell. And if the ETN is closed before its maturity date, you could end up receiving the current market price, which could be less than your purchase price. Closures have been on the rise: 98 ETNs shuttered last year, according to CFRA Research.

On the plus side, many ETN issuers are financially strong—such as JPMorgan and Barclays, to name a couple—and run ETNs that have been around a dozen years or more. And ETNs offer the ability to invest in niche asset classes, such as commodities or currencies, and deliver a tax break (because ETNs don’t distribute dividend or interest income).

A name you can trust? You might also wonder about ETFs that have “trust” in their names, such as SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, the largest diversified U.S. stock fund in the country. They’re among the earliest ETFs and are structured as unit investment trusts (as opposed to today’s more common registered investment company structure), says Matthew Bartolini, head of SPDR Americas Research at State Street Global Advisors. “There’s a different set of rules, but the differences are minor, and performance variations are minimal,” he says. UITs have less flexibility than RICs, as they are bound to hold every security in an index, they can’t lend out shares to short sellers, and they can’t reinvest dividends paid out by the underlying companies, to name a few examples.

Tips on buying and selling ETFs

Exchange-traded funds trade commission-free at most online brokers these days. But placing actual trades takes some care. Here are a few tips.

Use limit orders. Limit orders allow you to specify the price at which you are willing to buy or sell shares. It doesn’t guarantee instant execution, but it ensures that your order will be filled at the price you designate or better, an important protection during periods of unexpected price volatility. A buy limit order will only be executed at the limit price that you set or lower. For example, if iShares Core S&P 500 has a current market price of $425, set your limit price at $425. On the flip side, when you set a limit order to sell shares, the order will only be executed at the limit price or higher. Market orders are filled at the next available price—whatever it is.

Be mindful of the fund’s premium/discount, especially when you’re deciding to buy or sell. ETFs have two prices—the market price per share and the net asset value (or NAV) per share, which is the value of the underlying securities in the fund. These prices can diverge. If the share price is above the NAV, the ETF trades at a premium. If the price is below the NAV, it trades at a discount. The premium/discount can shift, especially when market volatility is high. The iShares Core S&P 500 ETF had a typical premium/discount of 0.02% recently, but during the early 2020 sell-off, it rose to 0.43%. Foreign-stock ETFs are vulnerable to a high premium/discount because the underlying securities trade on exchanges in different time zones. So, too, are active ETFs that don’t disclose holdings on a daily basis.

Time your trades well. Don’t trade on volatile days. “Waiting until the chaos ends will be worth it,” says CFRA’s Todd Rosenbluth. Also avoid trading within the first or last half-hour of the trading day because volatility tends to be higher then. And never buy or sell when the market is closed. That may be okay to do with a mutual fund, which settles at the end of every trading day, but opening prices might catch you off guard if you do that with an ETF.

Topics

FeaturesFinancial PlanningBecoming An InvestorMorningstar, Inc.Wall Street

How to Profit From ETFs (2024)

FAQs

How to Profit From ETFs? ›

By investing the same dollar amount in an ETF every month you will accumulate more units at a low price and fewer units at a high price. Over time, this approach can pay off handsomely, as long as you stick to it.

How do you earn money on ETFs? ›

How do ETFs make money for investors?
  1. Interest distributions if the ETF invests in bonds.
  2. Dividend. + read full definition distributions if the ETF invests in stocks that pay dividends.
  3. Capital gains distributions if the ETF sells an investment. + read full definition for more than it paid.
Sep 25, 2023

Is it profitable to invest in ETF? ›

Why Invest in ETFs Rather Than Mutual Funds? ETFs can be less expensive to own than mutual funds. Plus, they trade continuously throughout exchange hours, and such flexibility may matter to certain investors. ETFs also can result in lower taxes from capital gains, since they're a passive security that tracks an index.

How to generate passive income with ETFs? ›

Investing in dividend ETFs. Dividend ETFs are another option for investors to seek consistent income. A dividend stock aims to pay a portion of the company's earnings to its shareholders on a regular basis, typically quarterly. Dividends are usually distributed as cash or additional shares of stock.

How much can you make from an ETF? ›

Average ETF returns vary, but on average, you should expect to generate an annualized return of 7-10% over a ten-year period. Investors must also understand that ETFs will not always produce positive returns each year.

What are the disadvantages of ETFs? ›

For instance, some ETFs may come with fees, others might stray from the value of the underlying asset, ETFs are not always optimized for taxes, and of course — like any investment — ETFs also come with risk.

Do ETFs pay annually? ›

If you own shares of an exchange-traded fund (ETF), you may receive distributions in the form of dividends. These may be paid monthly or at some other interval, depending on the ETF. It's important to know that not all dividends are treated the same from a tax perspective.

How much should a beginner invest in ETF? ›

Exchange-traded funds are similar to mutual funds in that they hold a collection of stocks and bonds in a single fund. Unlike mutual funds, they are bought and sold on stock exchanges, can be traded anytime the exchange is open, and you can start your ETF investing even if all you have to invest is $50.

Which ETF gives the highest return? ›

Performance of ETFs
SchemesLatest PriceReturns in % (as on May 22, 2024)
CPSE Exchange Traded Fund92.16117.65
Kotak PSU Bank ETF719.0082.34
Nippon ETF PSU Bank BeES80.1882.23
SBI - ETF Nifty Next 5068.38
33 more rows

How long should I keep an ETF for? ›

Holding an ETF for longer than a year may get you a more favorable capital gains tax rate when you sell your investment.

How to make $100,000 per year in passive income? ›

Ways to Make $100,000 Per Year in Passive Income
  1. Invest in Real Estate. Rental properties generate income through tenants who pay rent each month to live in a property you own. ...
  2. CD Laddering. ...
  3. Dividend Stocks. ...
  4. Fixed-Income Securities. ...
  5. Start a Side Hustle.
Jul 28, 2023

How to make 10k passive income? ›

Passive income ideas:
  1. Create a course.
  2. Write an e-book.
  3. Rental income.
  4. Affiliate marketing.
  5. Flip retail products.
  6. Sell photography online.
  7. Buy crowdfunded real estate.
  8. Peer-to-peer lending.
May 1, 2024

What if I invested $1000 in S&P 500 10 years ago? ›

Over the past decade, you would have done even better, as the S&P 500 posted an average annual return of a whopping 12.68%. Here's how much your account balance would be now if you were invested over the past 10 years: $1,000 would grow to $3,300. $5,000 would grow to $16,498.

How much is $100 a month for 18 years? ›

This chart shows that a monthly contribution of $100 will compound more if you start saving earlier, giving the money more time to grow. If you save $100 a month for 18 years, your ending balance could be $35,400. If you save $100 a month for 9 years, your ending balance could be about $13,900.

Is investing $400 a month good? ›

Historically, a diversified stock portfolio has earned an average of 10%. But even if you only got 7%, by investing $400 a month for 40 years, you'd have over $1 million to spend in retirement. A good rule of thumb is to invest a minimum of 10% to 15% of your gross income for retirement.

How do ETFs grow in value? ›

The value of an ETF can appreciate if the underlying assets appreciate. In addition, investments that incur cash flow such as interest or dividends may automatically be reinvested into the fund.

How does ETF work for dummies? ›

A cross between an index fund and a stock, they're transparent, easy to trade, and tax-efficient. They're also enticing because they consist of a bundle of assets (such as an index, sector, or commodity), so diversifying your portfolio is easy. You might have even seen them offered in your 401(k) or 529 college plan.

How much of my salary should I invest in ETFs? ›

Generally, experts recommend investing around 10-20% of your income. But the more realistic answer might be whatever amount you can afford. If you're wondering, “how much should I be investing this year?”, the answer is to invest whatever amount you can afford!

Which ETF has the highest return? ›

100 Highest 5 Year ETF Returns
SymbolName5-Year Return
FNGOMicroSectors FANG+ Index 2X Leveraged ETNs50.00%
TECLDirexion Daily Technology Bull 3X Shares42.20%
GBTCGrayscale Bitcoin Trust40.63%
SOXLDirexion Daily Semiconductor Bull 3x Shares36.15%
93 more rows

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Otha Schamberger

Last Updated:

Views: 6369

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Otha Schamberger

Birthday: 1999-08-15

Address: Suite 490 606 Hammes Ferry, Carterhaven, IL 62290

Phone: +8557035444877

Job: Forward IT Agent

Hobby: Fishing, Flying, Jewelry making, Digital arts, Sand art, Parkour, tabletop games

Introduction: My name is Otha Schamberger, I am a vast, good, healthy, cheerful, energetic, gorgeous, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.