ETF's

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Replied by FrankN on topic ETF

I actually invest a lot of ETFs, but mostly use them for index funds. Any one else use them?
7 years 9 months ago #1
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Replied by FrankN on topic ETF

ETFs are "exchange-traded funds" and they are huge in today's investing market. The article Wanderer posted is discussing commodity and currency ETFs. There are millions of articles and whitepapers on all kinds of ETFs. I would just google ETF.
7 years 10 months ago #2
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Replied by Curry on topic ETF

Do these even exist anymore? Google won't find anything for me under "esoterically traded funds" that are younger than this thread. Even the "exchange traded funds" articles are 5 years old. I'm interested in finding out more, but not from 5 year old sources.
7 years 10 months ago #3
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Replied by Finance Globe on topic Re: EFT's

Very good info Wanderer. I will have Mary write up about this more.
13 years 8 months ago #4
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was created by Wanderer

Watch Out for Hidden Tax Traps Inside ETFs
  • By JASON ZWEIG
Does ETF stand for "esoterically taxed fund"?

Many investors may just have finished wading through the tax reporting on commodity or currency funds for the first time and found it a slog. They also may have learned that an investment's taxation can by itself make the difference between a winner and a loser. Exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, are bundles of assets that resemble a mutual fund but trade on an exchange like a stock. Their structure has enabled many of them to avoid distributing taxable capital gains, earning a reputation for minimizing investors' tax bills. But the mad dash in ETFs lately has been into "alternative assets" like currencies and commodities. The investment researchers at Morningstar track 108 such ETFs with a total of $80 billion in assets; 42 are less than two years old. These funds are taxed so differently, and at such higher rates than traditional investments, that many investors now wish they had looked before they leaped.

You shouldn't invest in a commodity or currency ETF at all unless you "thoroughly understand what type of income the transaction will generate and what your tax rate will be," says Robert Keebler, a CPA at Baker Tilly Virchow Krause in Appleton, Wis. That means plowing through the "Income Tax Considerations" section in the ETF's prospectus. If necessary, get a tax adviser or someone at your brokerage house to explain it. With tax rates on the rise, you can't afford not to know whether you are getting into a can of worms.

:white-flag:

This article is a "head's up" on EFT's. They seem very interesting but unlike mutual funds, may equal a mix of taxing situations that the purchaser is liable for and responsible to handle. Caution is the name of the game.

:moneybag:
13 years 11 months ago #5