| HOW ETFs WORK While an ETF is registered with the SEC
as an investment companyeither as an
open-end fund or a UITit differs from a
mutual fund both in how shares or units are
issued and redeemed and in how they are traded.
(See the exhibit at the
end of this article.) Unlike mutual funds and
UITs, ETF shares are created when an
institutional investor (someone who manages money
for institutions and corporate investors such as
retirement plans or endowment trusts) deposits a
block of securities with the ETF. In return for
this deposit, the investor receives a fixed
number of ETF shares, some or all of which it may
then sell on a stock exchange.
| Whats
in a Name? ETFs are
known by a variety of sometimes quirky
namesSpiders, Diamonds, OPALs, WEBS
(now iShares), Qubes, VIPERs, HOLDRs and
StreetTracks are just a few. The biggest
institutional players in ETFs are State
Street Global Advisors, the Bank of New
York and Barclays Global Investors. The
American Stock Exchange launched the
first ETF in 1993, with Standard and
Poors Depository Receipt Trust,
called SPDR 500 or Spiders. Currently
there are 90 ETFs listed on the AMEX with
nearly $75 billion under management, not
including HOLDRs.
Morgan Stanley created
OPALsOptimized Portfolios of Listed
Securitiesin 1994. Listed on the
Luxembourg Stock Exchange, they represent
Morgan Stanleys Capital
International (MSCI) indexes and are
marketed primarily to institutional
investors.
The SPDR is the most widely traded and
well-known ETF. Created in 1995, the
mid-cap SPDR tracks the S&P Mid-Cap
400 Index. Diamonds, which track the Dow
Jones Industrial Average, were added in
1998. NASDAQ later introduced Qubes,
named after its ticker symbol, QQQ, to
track the NASDAQ 100 Index. WEBS (World
Equity Benchmark Shares now called
iShares), mirror foreign equity market
indices. HOLDRs, a new product trading on
the AMEX, issues depository receipts that
represent individual and undivided
ownership interests in the common stock
of companies involved in a specific
segment of a particular industry.
In May 2001 Vanguard began offering
its exchange-traded class of shares
called Vanguard Total Stock Market
VIPERs. The only fund to track the
Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index,
Vanguard expects its VIPERs to have an
annual expense ratio of 0.15% ($15 per
year on a $10,000 investment)the
lowest of any ETF tracking the broad U.S.
stock market.
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The
institutional investor can get its deposited
securities back by redeeming the same number of
ETF shares it got from the fund. (See Creating
an ETF below for
more details.) Individual investors can buy and
sell ETF shares only when they are listed on an
exchange. Unlike an institutional investor, an
individual investor cannot purchase or redeem
shares directly from the ETF as he or she could
with a mutual fund.
| Creating an ETF Exchange-traded
funds are generally created in response
to anticipated demand for a fund to track
a particular market index or industry
such as the Nasdaq 100 or the Wilshire
5000. When this happens, an institutional
investor or large intermediary such as
Barclays Global Investors or State Street
Global Advisorsknown as an
authorized participant
(AP)transfers a portfolio of stock
that closely approximates the specified
index to a fund manager. The manager
places the stock in a trust and issues
ETF shares to the AP. It is free to hold
the new securities or sell them to other
investors.
The ETF shares trade freely between
investors on established stock exchanges
(the American Stock Exchange is a major
player in ETFs). Small investors
generally sell their shares for cash to
another investor. When an institutional
investor with large ETF holdings decides
to exit an ETF, the securities are
retired in block-sized units. The
institution gets shares of the stock or
stocks underlying the ETF plus some cash
representing accumulated dividends.
Depending on the kind of ETF or the
index being tracked there may be minimum
requirements to create the fund. For
example a unit of 50,000 shares is
required to create Diamonds while a
25,000-share unit is required to create
mid-cap SPDRs.
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Investors can
buy ETFs on margin (subject to the same rules
that apply to common stocks) at limit prices and
sell them short in a brokerage account. Certain
ETF products are even exempt from the rule that
requires shares to be sold short only on an
uptick in price. None of this holds true for a
mutual fund.
Creation units. Unlike
mutual fund distributors, ETF sponsors do not
sell shares to the public for cash. Instead they
exchange large blocks of ETF sharescalled
creation unitsfor the securities of the
companies that make up the underlying index plus
a cash component representing mostly accumulated
dividends. Some institutional investors or
wealthy individuals may hold the creation units
in their own portfolios. Others, generally
broker-dealers, break up the units and offer the
ETF shares on the exchanges where individual
investors can buy them in their brokerage
accounts through a broker or an online trading
account.
ETFs are redeemed in a way that
is the opposite of how they are created.
Broker-dealers buy enough ETF shares from
individual investors to make a creation unit
block. They then exchange the block with the ETF
sponsor for a basket of securities
and a small amount of cash. Other institutional
investors simply trade back the creation units in
their portfolio to the ETF sponsor for securities
and cash.
Sponsors continually create and
redeem creation units based on investor demand
and for arbitrage purposes. An ETFs value
tracks closely but does not match exactly the
value of the underlying security, so
institutional investors can measure the price of
the underlying securities in the index against
the price of the ETF. If the price of the
underlying securities is higher than the ETF, the
institutional investors will trade a lower priced
creation unit back to the sponsor in exchange for
the higher priced securities. Conversely, if the
price of the underlying securities is lower than
the ETF, the institutional investor will trade
the lower priced securities back to the fund in
exchange for a creation unit. This arbitrage
mechanism eliminates a problem sometimes
associated with closed-end mutual fundsthe
funds trading for more or less than the
value of the underlying portfolio.
THE
TAX CONSEQUENCES
As with any investment, CPAs
should consider the tax consequences of ETFs to
individual investors. Essentially, the tax
implications are identical to those for ordinary
stock. If a client sells in less than one year,
any gain will be taxed as ordinary income. If the
client sells at a gain after a year, he or she
will be taxed at lower capital gains rates. If
the fund loses value, investors can write off the
loss against other capital gains (and up to
$3,000 annually of ordinary income) when they
sell.
In taxable accounts, ETFs are
more tax efficient than ordinary mutual funds.
Investor sales can force mutual fund managers to
sell stock to meet redemption requests. This can
result in the funds paying a taxable
capital gain to shareholderseven at a time
when the overall market is trending down. In an
ETF, nothing in the underlying portfolio changes
when an investor buys or sells individual shares.
Most trading takes place between shareholders.
The fund doesnt need to sell stock to meet
redemptions so it avoids realizing a gain on its
holdings. During periods of heavy redemptions,
ETFs avoid selling the underlying stock holdings
by transferring securities to redeeming
shareholders, typically large investors or
institutions. Because these investors are paid
in kind with stock, not cash, other
shareholders are protected from a taxable event.
However, ETFs can and do make capital gains
distributions. These usually result when the ETF
must buy and sell stocks to adjust for changes in
its underlying benchmark (the index the ETF
tracks).
Current shareholders of mutual
funds pay taxes on distributions, while former
shareholderswho may have benefited from the
gains that created the distributionsdo not.
ETFs, on the other hand, use a swapping feature
to eliminate embedded capital gains from the
portfolio. Each security the ETF holds has a tax
basis, and the fund distributes the
lowest-cost-basis securities in its portfolio
during the redemption process. The redeeming
investor is responsible for taxes, and the ETF
ends up with a higher-tax-basis portfolio and
fewer capital gains to distributereducing
capital gains exposure for investors when the
fund must sell a particular stock during
rebalancing. Whenever an investor redeems a
basket of securities, the fund gives that
redeemer the lowest-cost-basis stock. It
doesnt matter to the redeemer, which pays
taxes based on its individual cost basis, not the
basis of the underlying stock.
TOO
GOOD TO BE TRUE?
So whats the catch? Is
there a downside for investors CPAs should know
about? To begin with, greater tax efficiency
doesnt necessarily mean 100% tax
efficiency. ETFs still pay out dividends and any
gains that arise from changes in the composition
of the indexes they trackjust as open-end
mutual funds do. While some ETFssuch as
Qubeshave made few or no distributions so
far, others make distributions annually.
The biggest catch for investors
stems from one of the major attractions of these
fundsthat they can be bought and sold so
easily by calling a broker or accessing an online
trading account. An investor who is tempted to
buy and sell often could eliminate any tax or
cost advantages. Unfortunately, statistics
suggest ETF investors are doing just that. While
the typical mutual fund is held three years, the
average holding period for SPDRs in the first
five months of 2001 was just 19 days and for
Qubes only 4 days. In addition, share prices can
diverge from the funds net asset value and
trade at a premium or a discountwhich means
a buyer could end up paying more for shares than
they were worth. Combined with a brokerage
commission, this could negate the lower expenses.
In summary ETFs are a good idea for index
investors but, just as with mutual funds, CPAs
should recommend them only as part of a balanced
portfolio and advise clients to acquire them on a
long-term, buy-and-hold basis.
Some investors never should use
ETFs: If a client makes periodic investments or
periodically rebalances his or her portfolio, he
or she could end up being eaten alive
by commissions. From a cost perspective the
client would be better off with a mutual fund. If
he or she plans to make a single large
investment, assuming a low commission (on the buy
and sell transactions), CPAs may want to do the
math to determine whether the client would be
better off putting that money in an index mutual
fund.
THE
BOTTOM LINE
Why are ETFs so hot? In a
nutshell, they are easy to buy, inexpensive to
own and tax efficient. Unlike mutual funds, they
can be bought and sold throughout the day at
real-time prices, sold short and purchased on
margin. They can be bought through any broker,
which means an investor can further control his
or her expenses by using a discount broker. In
advising clients, CPAs should caution them to
beware of steep sales charges. Initial charges
and exit fees typically amount to 2% to 5%. But
annual operating expenses are very low. Compare
Qubes with an expense ratio of .18% to Rydex OTC,
a mutual fund that also seeks to track the Nasdaq
100, at 1.15%, or Vanguards Index 500 Trust
at .18% with Barclays iShares S&P 500
fund at .0945%. ETFs can be significantly more
tax efficient than open-end mutual funds because
they arent subject to the cash flow
fluctuations. This is helping generate
significant investor interest in this relatively
new investment vehicle.
When the mad hatter is running
the tea party, the best CPAs can do is follow the
white rabbit and recommend ETFs where
appropriate. But dont let the excitement of
the moment replace good judgment. Once CPAs have
completed the asset allocation portion of the
financial planning process, they can help clients
select a mix of ETFs that meet their goals, risk
tolerance and time horizons.
Is there an ETF in your
clients future? ETFs initially will cut
more into sales of individual securities than
mutual funds, at least on the retail side. Mutual
fund buyers tend to be conservative buy-and-hold
investors who dont have brokerage accounts.
It will take time for them to become ETF-savvy,
whereas those who actively purchase individual
securities will find it more natural to buy ETFs.
But perhaps the most interesting angle is that
ETFs will bring passive investing to active
securities investors. 
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