6/ Follow for more personal finance topics.
Sources:
β’ Morningstar (t.co/TCCGohXFzu)
β’ Wisdomtree (wisdomtree.com/-/media/us-m...)
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6/ Follow for more personal finance topics.
Sources:
β’ Morningstar (t.co/TCCGohXFzu)
β’ Wisdomtree (wisdomtree.com/-/media/us-m...)
5/ But theyβre not for a lot of people, including
β’ Aggressive growth seekers
β’ Long-term investors seeking compounding growth over many years.
4/ Buffer ETFs may be worth considering if youβre:
β’ Risk-averse
β’ Looking for a safe place to park money for a year or so
β’ Near retirement and looking for growth while still being protected from downturns
3/ Buffer ETFs are actively managed, which means they tend to have higher maintenance fees.
First Trustβs, for example, comes tagged with a 0.85% fee, meaning the upside is effectively 8.39% after costs incurred.
2/ For example, First Trustβs buffer ETF offers investors 100% downside protection with an upside cap of 9.23% annually.
So if the S&P 500 drops 10%, great β but if it gains 23%, youβve exchanged certainty for a 14% gain.
Source: ftportfolios.com/Retail/Etf/E...
1/ Buffer ETFs seek to insure investors against losses β which sounds great, but thereβs a catch.
By reducing risk, the tradeoff is that thereβs also a ceiling on gains (thanks to financial mechanisms called put and call options).
Specialized ETFs have skyrocketed in recent years, rising from $54 billion in assets under management in 2019 to almost $150 billion this year.
Among these new types is something called a buffer ETF. Never heard of them? Letβs dig into it π
Worried about your holiday budget? We talked to Originβs financial planners about the biggest holiday spending mistakes they see β and how you can easily avoid them.
Read on: www.useorigin.com/resources/bl...