Although ETFs have become more well-known and prevalent among
financial circles, there are still a host of misconceptions
regarding the products. Incorrect assumptions are made in
premium/discount issues, the role of leveraged ETFs in a portfolio,
and especially in regards to ETF trading.
Many investors incorrectly assume that volume is the key
determinant in a fund’s liquidity. This isn’t true; the underlying
volume of securities in the ETF’s basket is the real key for most
products.
However, with that being said, a low volume can often promote a
wide bid ask spread ratio, which measures the difference between
the lowest price investors are willing to sell for and the most
buyers are willing to pay for a particular fund or note.
In most of the big ETF products—such as SPY,
GLD, or BND—this ratio is
extremely small and often times a penny wide in price terms. This
means that investors can often get in or out of a product right at
the current level without having to adjust their price too much,
helped along by volumes that often put the major products on par
with many of the top stocks in the country (read Five Cheaper ETFs
You Probably Overlooked).
Unfortunately, in obscure products tracking little known or
illiquid segments, penny wide spreads are hard to come by. In fact,
in the vast majority of products that have less than $10 million in
AUM, spreads can be more than 1% and can often stretch to truly
prohibitive levels.
This isn’t to say that investors can’t buy these products, just
that the total trading costs—due to these spreads—make it nearly
intolerable for most. For example, one of the worst
offenders—the iPath Long Enhanced MSCI Emerging Markets ETN
(EMLB)—is currently seeing (at time of writing) a bid of
74.68 and an ask of 88.90, forcing investors to drastically change
their expectations if they want to cycle into this product (see
more in the Zacks ETF Center).
While this is an extreme example, a whole host of products have
spreads that are still quite wide, especially when compared to
their more liquid and easy to trade counterparts. While the most
egregious offenders tend to be in the sub $10 million AUM club,
there are still a few ETFs that have more than $50 million under
management and are suffering from these problems.
Below, we highlight three of these serial offenders so that if
investors want to take part in these products they are well aware
of the risks involved. Just remember, this isn’t to say that these
ETFs need to be avoided just that extreme caution—and a realization
that more trading costs will be required—need to be taken into
account:
GS Connect S&P GSCI Enhanced Commodity ETN
(GSC)
For those looking to make a bet on the commodity space in ETN
form, there is GSC, a reasonably popular ETN from Goldman Sachs.
The product has over $70 million in AUM and trades about 16,000
shares a day.
Currently, the product is heavily exposed to energy products,
with a massive holding in WTI crude (32%), Brent crude (13%), and
natural gas (8%). However, beyond this, the product also has a
significant agriculture component and puts about 10% to the broad
metals segment as well.
Unfortunately, current bid ask spread ratios come in at 1.17%
representing a huge cost for investors looking to trade this
product beyond the already high 1.25% expense ratio. Clearly, the
product is one of the more expensive, less liquid, and heavily
concentrated products that are currently available to investors in
the commodity space (see Hard Times In Soft Commodity ETFs).
Instead, investors have a wealth of other options in the
commodity world which can provide similar exposure without the
significant bid ask spread. For example, the PowerShares DB
Commodity Index Tracking Fund (DBC) currently has an
average bid ask ratio of just 0.03%-- a penny wide spread—which
charging less in fees and providing access to a similar host of
commodities.
ETF Securities Physical Asian Gold Shares (AGOL)
In the physically-backed gold ETF space, investors have a host
of options. For those looking to have their gold stored in the
island nation of Singapore instead of Western nations, AGOL could
be an interesting choice.
The product currently has over $70 million in assets but sees a
paltry volume of just 790 shares a day, far less than many other
funds in the space. However, the expense ratio is quite reasonable,
coming in at 39 basis points per year, in line with other products
in the space (read Three Best Gold ETFs).
Unfortunately for this fund, the product has the widest average
bid ask spread ratio out of any of the physically-backed gold ETFs,
even including those that have far less in assets than AGOL.
Currently, the spread comes in at about 0.8%, a rate that is nearly
four times higher than any other product in the physically-backed
commodity ETF world.
Instead, investors have a host of options in this space, several
of which are approaching penny wide spreads. In particular, the
enormous SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) could be an
interesting choice as the product currently sees volume of about 12
million shares a day and has an average bid ask spread of just
0.01%.
iShares MSCI Kokusai Index Fund (TOK)
In one of the more puzzling examples of the average bid ask
spread phenomenon, investors shouldn’t look any further than the
Japan excluding TOK. This popular iShares ETF has exposure to a
host of developed countries from around the world, including the
U.S., and has over half a billion in AUM.
However, the product suffers from low trading volume with only
about 10,000 shares changing hands each day despite the product’s
relatively low expense ratio of 25 basis points. Seemingly, some
traders are put off by the ex-Japan global model that this fund
incorporates, preferring to trade via any other number of funds
instead (see Five Great Global ETFs For Complete Equity
Exposure).
In fact, the current bid ask spread ratio average comes in above
0.8% for TOK, a truly remarkable figure given the liquid nature of
many of its underlying holdings. Yet with that being said, the
product does still have a significant foreign security component
including assets in markets such as Australia, Sweden, and Ireland,
nations where trading might not be nearly as liquid as in the
American market.
While there aren’t a whole lot of direct competitors to TOK,
there are still a number of products which can provide similar
exposure without such a wide bid ask spread. In particular, ACWI
has a spread of just 0.04% while targeting the global markets while
Vanguard’s Total World Stock ETF (VT) has a 0.08%
spread while charging just 22 basis points a year for its global
exposure.
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