Alabamaâ€(tm)s Educational Trust Fund, the agent to which funds for educational purposes are appropriated by the state legislature.
Exchange traded funds. It trades like a stock, but it's a sector. ...
Exchange Traded Fund. Baskets of securities, usually representing some underlying index, that are traded, like individual stocks, on an exchange. Unlike an Index Fund, it is easier to manage taxes with ETFs, but you also have to pay brokerage fees whenever purchasing ETFs.
EXCHANGE TRADED FUND. ETFs are an emerging class of low cost index funds that trade like stocks. Inexpensive, tax-efficient, and flexible, they offer investors instantaneous exposure to local or global indexes via a single trade. Sometimes referred to as “tracking stocks.
Exchange-Traded Fund. A basket of stocks that is bought and sold on a stock exchange as if it were a single stock.
exchange traded fund. a passively managed, open-end mutual fund that trades similarly to a stock
Exchange Traded Fund. A mutual fund that trades on a stock market. Non-ETF mutual funds are priced at their Net Asset Value at the end of the day.
An exchange traded fund, or ETF, is a type of investment company whose investment objective is to achieve the same return as a particular market index. An ETF is similar to an index fund in that it will primarily invest in the securities of companies that are included in a selected market index (in either all or a representative sampling of the index).
Department of Employee Trust Funds administers the pension fund
Exchange Traded Fund. A type of mutual fund that trades like stocks on public exchanges. ETFs specialize in specific products or stock types, including real estate. Investors can buy or sell shares with the same liquidity as with stocks.
See Exchange Traded Fund.
A security that tracks an index and represents a basket of stocks like an index mutual fund, but trades like a stock on an exchange, thus experiencing price changes throughout the day as it is bought and sold. By trading an ETF, you get the diversification of an index fund as well as the ability to sell short, buy on margin and purchase as little as one share. Another advantage is that the expense ratios for most ETFs are lower than the average mutual fund. When buying and selling ETFs, you have to pay the same commission to your broker that you\'d pay on any regular order. The most widely known ETFs are QQQQ, which tracks the Nasdaq-100 Trust and SPDR (Spider), which tracks the S&P 500 index.