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Understanding Exchange Traded Funds ETFs
By Gerry Wollert | On November 13, 2007 | In Stocks-Mutual-Funds | 55 Viewings | Rated
Understanding the differences in Exchange Traded Funds and Mutual Funds will help you in your long term investment strategy.

Exchange Traded Funds:
*Are listed on the various stock exchanges and trade just like a stock
*They are priced continuously throughout the trading day
*ETFs can be sold short
*You pay a commission when buying and selling just like when buying an individual stock.

ETFs offer all of the advantages of a mutual fund without some of the disadvantages:

Diversification:
A typical ETF will hold many individual stocks within its portfolio.

Professional Management:
ETFs are managed by highly professional investment specialist that make the buy and sell decisions for their individual ETF portfolios.

Economies of Scale:
ETFs take advantage of their size to minimize transaction cost associated with buying and selling individual stocks within their respective portfolios.

Advantages over Mutual Funds:
With ETFs there are no minimum holding periods and no early redemption fees.

Types of Exchange Traded Funds:
*Growth oriented (Smaller growth stocks)
*Value oriented (Large cap value stocks)
*Income oriented (Bond funds or dividend paying stocks)
*Specific country focused (China, Singapore, Germany, etc.)
*Regional focused (Latin America, Europe, Asia, etc)
*Foreign exchange (Forex related vs. the U.S. Dollar)
*Specific market segments (energy, healthcare, consumer products, etc.)
*Precious Metals (Gold, silver, etc.)

How to build an Exchange Traded Funds ETF Portfolio
*You could buy and hold a diverse number of individual ETFs. While this would give you good diversification there is a better way to invest in Exchange Traded Funds to maximize your return on investment.
*The preferred alternative is to follow a time-tested system for buying and selling a portfolio of ETFs.

Rebound Trading Systems

With so many diverse ETFs to choose from it is important to have a sound system for building a portfolio of Exchange Traded Funds. The Rebound trading systems I have developed consistently out-perform the S&P 500 by a wide margin. To learn more visit: http://www.reboundtrading.com.



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