There really is no competition between ETFs and mutual funds, the majority of advisors expect Trump-driven volatility and E*Trade adds more index funds to its platform.
The popularity and, perhaps, utility of beta is being eclipsed. That’s led ETF issuers recently to go active, trying to beat the broader market. Does it work, and at what cost?
Instead of piling into the asset that’s offered the biggest gain among 22 raw materials on the Bloomberg Commodity Index this year, ETF investors are retreating.
Speculators can bet on whether the Winklevoss Bitcoin Trust (COIN) will be approved as the first ETF to track a digital currency by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.