From
Your Perspective:
Comparing mutual funds, ETFs & UITs
Comparing
mutual funds, ETFs & UITs
Hundreds of
indexes
track changes in the financial markets. Some are narrow measures of a specific
sector
or industry, such as indexes that track clean technology or consumer goods stocks or the securities of a particular country. Others are broad gauges of overall market activity and are considered
bellwethers
of the health of the economy. For example, the market value change in the
benchmarkStandard & Poor’s 500 Index,
or S&P 500, which follows 500 widely held U.S. stocks in leading industries, is one of the ten components of the
Index of Leading Economic Indicators,
the primary measure for forecasting changes in the economy.
With the important role that indexes play in the financial markets, it’s no wonder some people think that an index might be the perfect investment. The trouble is, you can’t invest in an index. It’s a statistical calculation, not a security. And it’s not for sale. But there are some investment alternatives.
Index-based investment products, including
index mutual funds,exchange traded funds (ETFs),
and unit investment trusts (UITs), are all designed to mirror the performance of a stock or bond index, from the very narrowly focused to the very broad. While these investment products are each constructed differently, they share some basic characteristics that can make them attractive to investors:
Easy diversification: By purchasing a single investment, you gain exposure to the entire segment of the market covered by the underlying index.
Transparency: Investment in an index-based product means you know what underlying stocks or bonds make up your investment.
Cost efficiency: Because most index investments are
passively managed,
their holdings change only when the securities in the underlying index change. That means they incur fewer management, research, and trading costs than
actively managed
funds making similar investments.
Because indexes aren't
securities, and they aren't investments, you're likely to hear them called investment products, investment instruments, and investment vehicles. That's the same language used to describe
futures and
options.