Mutual Funds which are listed and traded on stock exchanges like shares are known as Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs). Read more for a better understanding of what are ETFs, how do they work, advantages of ETFs and more-
Table of Contents :
What are Exchange Traded Funds
ETFs or Exchange Traded Funds are a type of pooled investment funds which invest in diversified securities such as equities, bonds, commodities that track an underlying index.
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An ETF passively tracks an index like the Sensex or Nifty by holding securities in the same weights as the Nifty/Sensex. ETFs can be traded anytime in the market but you need a demat account to invest in an ETF and execute buying or selling transactions.
Benefits of Investing in ETFs
- Low Cost
The biggest advantage of investing in ETFs is cost efficiency. The expense ratio of an ETF is usually less than 0.5% compared to 2-2.5% for actively managed equity funds. A lower fund management fee generates incremental savings which can result in increased payouts in the long-run.
- Liquid
Since ETFs are marketable securities, they can be traded on registered bourses. Since an ETF can be bought and sold at any time in the day (during trading hours) it is more liquid compared to other investment products such as mutual funds or PPF. One reason is that the price/NAV of an ETF can fluctuate throughout the day. On the other hand, a mutual fund is usually bought/sold directly with the fund house at the declared NAV of the day.
- Transparent
As ETFs track an underlying index, you know beforehand which stocks it will hold and in what proportion. For example, the Nifty 50 is composed of the 50 largest listed companies in India by market capitalisation. An ETF tracking the Nifty 50 will hold these exact companies and in the same weights as the Nifty. It will also rebalance its holdings when the Index composition changes.
- No Fund Manager Error Problem
Since an Exchange Traded Fund tracks an Index, it does not rely on active investment calls provided by a fund manager. Hence it is not affected by the errors that a fund manager might make. It can sometimes have an error in tracking the index (called tracking error), but this is usually small in magnitude and therefore, can be ignored.
- Efficient Market Hypothesis
According to the Efficient Market Hypothesis, no fund manager can outperform the market forever and outperforming strategies are quickly imitated and arbitraged away. Hence in the long run, simply investing in the whole market passively tends to outperform active stock picking. If you believe in this financial theory, ETFs are a better product than actively manages funds.
- Diverse Products
ETFs in India track diverse products like the Nifty, Gold, Nifty Next 50, Nifty Low Vol 20 Index and several others. You may not find active mutual funds tracking all these products.
Also Read:- 10 Common Mutual Fund Investment Mistakes to Avoid
Limitations of ETFs
- Giving up Alpha
An ETF investor is giving up the potential to outperform (called alpha) since he is only passively tracking the index. An actively managed fund can not only give you the index return but also beat it especially in emerging markets such as India.
- Limited Growth Upside
Usually, only mature companies make it to indices like the Nifty or Sensex. Such indices only include the largest companies by size and many of these companies have put their best years of growth behind them. So ETF investments cannot tap the opportunities to earn higher returns in high growth potential companies in small and mid-cap space.
- Need Demat and Trading Account
Since ETFs require demat and trading accounts, investing in them is not practical for investors who do not have such accounts. Many mutual fund investors do not have such accounts since they are not required for investing in ordinary mutual funds.
Equity ETFs
ETF Name | Index Tracked | 3 Year Returns |
Nippon India ETF Nifty BeES | Nifty 50 | 14.46% |
Nippon India ETF Bank BeES | Nifty Bank | 19.11% |
Motilal Oswal Midcap 100 | Nifty Midcap 100 | 4.02% |
Motilal Oswal Nasdaq 100 | Stocks listed in the Nasdaq (US tech companies) | 21.59% |
(Data as on December 10, 2019; Source: Value Research)
Debt ETFs
These ETFs hold liquid debt securities as the underlying asset which are less riskier but provide moderate returns.
ETF Name | 3 Year Returns | 5 Year Returns |
Nippon India ETF Liquid BeES | 4.90% | 5.45% |
(Data as on December 10, 2019; Source: Value Research)
Gold ETFs
These ETFs typically hold physical gold as the underlying asset. Despite being low on returns it is popular because investing in gold has been considered to be a safe investment option for decades.
ETF Name | 1 Year Returns | 3 Year Returns |
HDFC Gold Exchange Traded Fund | 8.99% | 6.13% |
UTI Gold Exchange Traded Fund | 9.02% | 6.21% |
Nippon India ETF Gold BeES | 8.87% | 6.16% |
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Also Know What is Difference Between ETF vs Index Funds
List of Exchange Traded Funds to Invest
UTI Sensex ETF |
Canara Robeco Gold ETF |
Motilal Oswal Nasdaq 100 ETF |
Reliance ETF Liquid BeES |
SBI – ETF Nifty Bank |
Nippon ETF Bank BeES |
SBI – ETF Gold |
Quantum Gold Fund |
LIC MF ETF – Sensex |
Nippon ETF Sensex |
Kotak Sensex ETF |
Invesco India Nifty ETF |
SBI – ETF Nifty 50 |
ABSL Nifty ETF |
SBI – ETF BSE 100 |
Nippon ETF Nifty 100 |
Nippon ETF Infra BeES |
Nippon ETF NV20 |
Kotak NV 20 ETF |
SBI – ETF Nifty Next 50 |
Nippon ETF Junior BeES |
Nippon ETF Hang Seng BeES |
Nippon ETF Consumption |
Nippon ETF Dividend Opportunities |
Nippon ETF Liquid BeES |
IIFL Nifty ETF |
Reliance Shares Gold ETF |
Axis Gold ETF |
Invesco India Gold ETF |
IDBI Gold Exchange Traded Fund |
Kotak Gold ETF |
ICICI Prudential Gold ETF |
UTI Gold Exchange Traded Fund |
Nippon ETF Gold BeES |
SBI – ETF Gold |
Birla Sun Life Gold ETF (G) |
HDFC Gold Exchange Traded Fund |
SBI – ETF Nifty Bank |
UTI Sensex Exchange Traded Fund |
HDFC Sensex ETF |
Nippon ETF Long Term Gilt |
Nippon ETF Nifty BeES |
ICICI Prudential Nifty ETF |
SBI – ETF Nifty 50 |
UTI Nifty Exchange Traded Fund |
HDFC Nifty 50 ETF |
Kotak Nifty ETF |
IDFC NIFTY ETF |
SBI-ETF 10Y Gilt |
ICICI Prudential Nifty 100 ETF |
SBI – ETF BSE 100 |
ICICI Prudential NV20 ETF |
SBI – ETF Nifty Next 50 |
ICICI Pru Midcap Select ETF |
Nippon ETF PSU Bank BeES |
(Data as on December 10, 2019; Source: Value Research)
22 Comments
Very useful.Thanks for posting.
Nice data
Are ETFs good for intraday? If so, which are the TOP 5 choices?
Hi Triveni,
ETFs have very low trading volume in the markets. Hence, we advise you against using ETFs for intraday trading.
Good morning,
Dear Anam, how could i buy ETF , is it same like buying stocks.
regards
Hi Joseph,
ETFs or Exchange Traded Funds are passively-managed mutual funds, which replicate the portfolio and performance of its benchmark index. These funds can be traded in stock exchanges and hence, you can buy ETFs through Demat and trading accounts just like stocks. However, a lack of liquidity can be a concern in ETFs. While HNIs and large investors can purchase or redeem directly from the fund houses, the minimum number of units for such purchases/redemption has to be equal or multiples of creation unit size (which can go up to several thousands of units depending on the fund).
If your aim is to benefit from passive investment style, then investing in index funds would be a better alternative. These funds also replicate the portfolios and performances of their benchmark indices and can be redeemed directly from the fund houses without any restriction. Hence, index funds will benefit you from a passive style of investing at much higher liquidity.
Pls comment whether nifty bees is good investment for a period of 5 years
Yes, NIFTY BEES is a good long-term investment if you are bullish on the entire market. It is suggested that you should invest in such instruments systematically implying that a fixed amount must be invested every month so that even when the market is in downturns, you will get a good average price in long run.