Nearly 70 new ETFs made their market debuts in September. That included 21 bond ETFs, one commodities ETF, 41 equities-based ETFs and six target date/multi-asset ETFs.
The aim is to exploit the tax efficiency of the ETF wrapper, which means funds rarely incur capital gains tax, instead transferring the burden to investors when they exit.
In-tandem moves between stocks and bonds in recent months are reigniting a debate over the hedging power of Treasuries in an era where both asset classes are both prone to selloffs amid concerns of further Federal Reserve tightening.
You are subscribed to this newsletter as [email protected] To ensure uninterrupted delivery of this critical eNewsletter alert be sure to add Wealthmanagement.com and the reply address [email protected] to your list of safe sender contacts.