ETF Terms Word Search
Find 10 essential ETF vocabulary words hidden in the grid. Click any term to learn its full definition with a real US market example.
Exchange-Traded Funds have democratized investing — giving everyday investors access to instant diversification at near-zero cost. NAV, expense ratio, tracking error, liquidity: this puzzle builds the foundational knowledge every ETF investor needs.
How ETFs Differ from Mutual Funds
ETFs and mutual funds both pool investor capital to hold a basket of securities, but differ in three critical ways. ETFs trade on exchanges throughout the day at market prices; mutual funds price once daily at NAV. ETFs are typically more tax-efficient because the in-kind creation/redemption mechanism avoids capital gains events. ETFs almost universally carry lower expense ratios — broad index ETFs like VTI (0.03%) vs. actively managed mutual funds averaging 0.66%. For buy-and-hold investors, these differences compound significantly over decades.
Net Asset Value, Market Price, and the Premium/Discount
An ETF's Net Asset Value (NAV) is the per-share value of the underlying holdings, calculated daily. The market price fluctuates throughout the trading day. Most of the time, ETF market prices track NAV closely due to the arbitrage mechanism involving Authorized Participants. For major ETFs like SPY or QQQ, premium/discount is typically less than 0.02%. For illiquid or niche ETFs, premiums/discounts can be much wider.
Expense Ratio and Tracking Error: The True Cost of ETF Ownership
The expense ratio is the annual percentage charged as a management fee — 0.03% means $3/year per $10,000 invested, automatically deducted from returns. The tracking error measures how closely an ETF follows its benchmark index. A low expense ratio does not guarantee low tracking error. When comparing similar ETFs (VOO vs. IVV vs. SPY, all tracking the S&P 500), expense ratio and tracking error are the key differentiators.
Want to go deeper? Read our full guide: What Is an ETF?
Frequently Asked Questions About ETF Terms
What is the difference between an index ETF and an active ETF?
Index ETFs passively track a predetermined index, buying and selling only when the index composition changes. They carry very low expense ratios (0.03-0.20%). Active ETFs are managed by portfolio managers attempting to outperform a benchmark, with higher expense ratios (0.50-1.00%+). Over 15 years, approximately 85-90% of active managers underperform their benchmark index after fees, per the S&P SPIVA scorecard.
How do I choose between ETFs tracking the same index?
When multiple ETFs track the same index, evaluate: (1) Expense ratio — lower is better. (2) Tracking error — how closely does it follow the index? (3) Liquidity — assets under management and average daily volume affect bid-ask spreads. (4) Tax efficiency — the fund's history of capital gain distributions. For most long-term investors, differences between major index ETFs are minimal.
Can I lose all my money in an ETF?
An ETF itself cannot go to zero unless every underlying security becomes worthless — essentially impossible for broad market index ETFs. Single-sector ETFs or leveraged ETFs carry much higher risk and can lose 80-90%+ in adverse conditions. Leveraged ETFs suffer from volatility decay and are not suitable for long-term holding. ETF sponsor bankruptcy is not a meaningful risk — assets are legally segregated from the sponsor's balance sheet.
What is a sector ETF and how is it different from a total market ETF?
A total market ETF (like VTI) holds all publicly traded US companies weighted by market cap, providing broad diversification. A sector ETF concentrates holdings in one industry: XLK (Technology), XLF (Financials), XLE (Energy). Sector ETFs allow tactical bets but sacrifice diversification. Research consistently shows broad market ETFs outperform sector rotation strategies for most individual investors over long time horizons.
What is dollar-cost averaging into ETFs?
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) means investing a fixed dollar amount on a regular schedule regardless of market price. When prices are high, you buy fewer shares; when prices are low, you buy more. Over time, this reduces the average cost per share below the average market price. For regular investors contributing from a paycheck, DCA happens naturally through 401(k) contributions.
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