<ul>
<li class="spanHeading"><span>First ETF listings in Hong Kong and Shanghai under Hong Kong-Mainland ETF Cross-listing Scheme</span></li>
<li class="spanHeading"><span>Hong Kong-listed ETF AUM continues to grow, standing at over $400 billion as at 28 May 2021</span></li>
</ul>
Online Brokerage Tiger Brokers Adopts Alibaba Cloud Technologies to Provide Superior Trading Experience to Its Online Investors jcnnewswire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jcnnewswire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ETF vs Index Fund: Which Should Canadians Invest In?
By Iain Butler: Chief Investment Advisor, Motley Fool Canada Fool
At first glance, it can be tough to distinguish exchange-traded funds (ETFs) from index funds. Both offer you a basket of securities (stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, to name a few). Both passively follow an underlying index market (like the S&P/TSX), rather than a fund manager’s investing strategy. And both enjoy relatively low operating fees.
But beyond these similarities, ETFs and index funds have significant differences. A savvy investor knows the difference between these two investment vehicles and knows which one will help them build long term wealth based on their strategy.
What is an Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF)?
By Iain Butler: Chief Investment Advisor, Motley Fool Canada Fool
It’s no secret: when you’re a DIY investor, figuring out the right diversification of your investments can be
tough.
Not only do you have to pick stocks from companies and industries that you’re probably unfamiliar with, but you also have to balance those stocks with
other investments (bonds, real estate, commodities) to create the right risk portfolio. On top of that, buying and selling individual stocks can start to get costly, as management fees and commissions add up, putting additional pressure to “get it right” fast.