All About Exchange-Traded Funds
$14.76
Author(s) | |
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Format |
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Pages |
304 |
Published Date |
2003 |
All About Exchange-Traded Funds is one of the first introductory guides to provide investors with the nuts-and-bolts aspects of ETFs, from various types and basic trading rules to effective trading strategies for building core assets. All About Exchange-Traded Funds gives you the nuts-and-bolts information you need to understand ETFs. Spiders … Diamonds … QQQ … With well over 200 ETFs to choose from, you can find one to track virtually any major index or industry and efficiently round out any portfolio. Look to All About Exchange-Traded Funds for detailed information on this exciting new investment class, including:
- Tax advantages of ETFs over traditional mutual funds
- Diversification advantages of ETFs over individual stocks
- Names, holdings and other reference information for popular ETFs
Whether you are an experienced stock market investor or a beginner, look to All About Exchange-Traded Funds to learn more about:
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- Three basic categories of ETFs
- How and where to buy ETFs
- ETFs versus index funds
- Short-selling ETFs
- Investment approaches to avoid
- ETFs and asset allocation
- ETFs and retirement accounts
- And much more
Contents:
- What Are ETFs?
- Spreading Risks
- Mutual Funds
- The Basics of Exchange-Traded Funds
- Keeping ETFs on the Straight and Narrow
- The Costs of Exchange-Traded Funds
- Balancing Short-Term and Long-Term Goals
- Setting up a Brokerage Account to Buy ETFs
- Investment Approaches to Avoid
- The Ins and Outs of Day Trading ETFs
- The Best Way to Go About It—Asset Allocation
- A Brief on IRAs and Variable Annuities
- Hedging Risk
- Final Comparisons, Suggestions, and Summary
All About Exchange-Traded Funds By Archie Richards pdf
1 review for All About Exchange-Traded Funds
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Nelson Contreras (verified owner) –
Despite the previous reader reviews, I appreciated this book. It describes the ETFs as a tool to use and It explains why. The problem is, I think, that there isn’t that much to say about ETFs to fill 280 pages (they are basically a simple idea), so the author has been “forced” to make a wide discourse about investment philosophy and asset allocation to write the book. Probably this approach disappointed the expert readers, who expected something more sophisticated, but it’s coherent with the title: “the easy way to get started”. Concluding: a good book for beginners, not a comprehensive reference text for sophisticated investors.