The Seeking Alpha ETF Investing Guide
Sick of poor returns, tax bills, mutual fund scandals, biased research, bad advice from brokers and excessive fees? Seeking Alpha's ETF Investing Guide is a free, unbiased online investment guide for mainstream and wealthy individuals that shows you how to lower your risk and slash your investment costs using exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
It's arranged right here in short chapters to make it easy to read online. For a quick overview, read the one-page summary. It presents the key points from each chapter, and links to them for fuller explanation.
One-Page Summary of the Entire Guide
Introduction - Why You Should Read This
What Not To Do
- The Three Goals of Investing
- Was Peter Lynch Really Right?
- Your Stock Picks Aren't As Good As They Seem
- The Problem With Tech Stocks
- Did Stock Picking Distract You?
- How To Beat the Market
- The Challenge of Trying to Pick Small Cap Stocks
- Measuring Stock Pickers’ Underperformance
- Why You Shouldn’t Buy Mutual Funds
- Mutual Fund Ratings
- How to Run a Mutual Fund Company
- So You Thought Mutual Funds Help You Diversify?
- Summary: What Not To Do
A Better Approach
- Why Indexing Wins
- Do You Really Need Help With Asset Allocation?
- A 1-Page ETF Primer
- The 7 Advantages of ETFs Over Index Mutual Funds
- ETFs Are Cheaper Than Index Mutual Funds
- The Single (But Serious) Disadvantage of ETFs
- Summary: A Better Approach
- A Core ETF Portfolio
- Understanding the Core Portfolio
- The Low-Maintenance ETF Portfolio
- Why You Shouldn't Own DIA, SPY or QQQQ
- What to Buy in Which Account
- The 4 Criteria for Picking a Brokerage
- Summary: How to Assemble an ETF Portfolio
- Turning Taxes to Your Advantage
- How to Make Money By Rebalancing
- Rebalancing Rules
- Should You Use Sector ETFs?
- Combining Tax Loss Selling & Rebalancing
- Summary: How to Manage Your Portfolio
- Why You May Want Exposure to Emerging Markets
- Why Use Closed-End Funds?
- Buying Closed-End Funds in Practice
- Closed-End Funds to Consider
- Summary: Emerging Markets & Closed-End Funds
- My Broker's an Honest Fox
- Asset-Based Fees to the Rescue
- Me, Use an Online Broker? But I'm Rich!
- But What if You Saved $275k Annually?
- Financial Advisors
- Separately Managed Accounts (SMAs)
- The Quirks of Market Segmentation
- What to Do With What's Left?
- Summary: Brokers, FAs & Investing For the Wealthy
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- Full list of Cramers Picks »
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This article has 22 comments:
Thank you,
Harris
16-June-2007
Thanks
Jackson
We've just published a completely updated listing of ETFs with commentary -- the <b>ETF Selector</b>. Let me know if you have any feedback on it or suggestions.
The Guide is basically up to date, because it discusses investment strategy rather than individual ETFs. The core portfolio probably needs updating though as some lower cost alternatives are now available, such as the new bond ETFs.
Best,
David
iiix
Will really appreciate it if you add a section on non-resident aliens (NRA) buying ETFs (or maybe stocks in general) in the US using US online brokerage. What are the possible tax implications of a NRA constructing an ETF portfolio?
Thanks
Jackson
I must admit -- I know nothing about that subject, and I've tried to cushion all tax discussion in the Guide with a disclaimer of "check with your accountant". Sorry not to be more helpful.
If you find someone to write that chapter, send them my way!
David
Brown
Difference key: invest more 1,234 Goal Stock 0.70 324,800 Bonds 0.30 139,20
invest less (1,234) Actual 0.69 318,700 0.29 145,300
Difference 6,100 (6,100)
ETF Fund Name Category Expense Percent Theoretical Actual Difference
IVV iShares S&P 500 Ind Fund Large Cap 0.09 17.50 81,200 212700 (131,500)
IJH iShares S&P Mid Cap 400 Mid Cap 0.20 17.50 81,200 11000 70,200
IWM iShares Russell 2000 In Small Cap 0.20 17.50 81,200 35000 46,200
EFA Ishares MSCI EAFE Ind Foreign 0.35 4.38 20,300 60000 (39,700)
EEM Ishares MSCI Emerging Mk Emerging 0.75 4.38 20,300 0 20,300
RWR street TRACTKS Wilshire REIT 0.25 4.38 20,300 0 20,300
CASH Cash Cash 0.00 4.38 20,300 0 20,300
LQD iShares GS Investop Corp Bd Bond Crp 0.15 12.00 55,680 74000 (18,320)
SHY iShares Lehman 1-3 yr Tr Bd Bond Sh 0.15 12.00 55,680 44300 11,380
IEF iShares Lehman 7-10 yr Tr Bond Lng 0.15 6.00 27,840 27000 840
100.00 464,000 464000
--Charlie
Brown
--Charlie
Zirotti
Do you have a copy of that Excel doc (minus all of your personal info, obviously)? I would appreciate if you could shoot it my way!
Cheers,
zirotti at gmail dot com
ua
Thanks for putting together this guide.
I realize this is targeted mostly at my core portfolio, but I wonder what your views are with regards to retirement investments. Does the same apply, i. e. favor ETFs over mutuals? It seems that for most IRA accounts available now (Vanguard etc.) ETF seems (to me at least) to be a rather unconventional route. Is there a reason that retirement funds are focusing more on mutuals?
Jackson
Thanks for your kind comment.
ETFs for retirement accounts are a fascinating issue. Most plan administrators don't offer ETFs, so you don't even have the option to use them. One reason might be that if you're adding small amounts regularly to your retirement account, the trading fees would take too large a bite out of your capital. On the other hand, since ETF fees are so low, they're well suited for long term investing like retirement accounts. For that reason, some companies are trying to pool ETF trades among multiple accounts to reduce or eliminate the trading fees.
Not sure if that answers your question though...
David
I'm looking for a tool that I can pretty closely match a mutual fund's performace to a ETF in the same catagory and style. For example, I looking for an ETF that closely matches the mutual fund ECIGX.
Thanks For The Help
Dennis
I'm looking for a tool that I can pretty closely match a mutual fund's performace to a ETF in the same catagory and style. For example, I looking for an ETF that closely matches the mutual fund ECIGX.
Thanks For The Help
Dennis
Now if I could just read something that would teach me discipline.... I would be all set..
hotels
What about adding new contributions into the portfolio? If you add new funds in during rebalancing, then your percentages are thrown off and your triggers are no longer valid. Any recommendations on how to handle this? (other than buying a small amount of every ETF owned.)
Thanks!