High Interest ETFs | Advantages & Disadvantages of ETFs | Ratehub.ca (2024)

What are the advantages of high-interest savings ETFs?

There are several advantages to owning a high-interest savings ETF:

  • Competitive interest rates. The ETF invests their assets in deposit accounts at major banks, which offer interest rates that are similar to high-interest savings accounts.
  • Liquidity. Generally speaking, much like a stock, a high-interest savings ETF can be bought and sold fairly quickly on a stock exchange. You can easily get your money out and invest it elsewhere.
  • Diversification. Although modest, most ETF managers will invest the assets into a few banks’ high-interest savings accounts in order to provide some interest rate and default risk diversification.
  • No minimum balance, no holding period and no penalty for early redemption. That’s three advantages in one!

What are the disadvantages of high-interest savings ETFs?

While there are advantages, there are also disadvantages:

  • Past performance doesn’t help you. Unfortunately, how an ETF has performed in the past can’t help you predict how it will perform in the future.
  • Unlike high-interest savings accounts, an ETF is not CDIC-insured. If something were to happen to the assets of the ETF for whatever reason, there’s no government insurance to secure your investment. For instance, if the ETF placed its money with a bank that failed, the ETF’s shareholders could lose a significant amount of their principal.
  • The second risk may seem technical but it’s worth discussing. ETFs represent underlying investments, whether in stocks, bonds, currencies, etc. At the end of every trading day, there is a value per share calculated, which is called the net asset value (NAV). In addition, there is the actual value of the shares on the stock exchange. In almost all cases, the NAV and the value per share will be nearly identical. This is because large market players stand ready to profit if they see a large difference between the NAV and the price per share. However, it’s also possible that the price per share of a high-interest savings ETF could be significantly less than the NAV of its investments. If this happens, an investor in the ETF will suffer a loss when they sell their shares. This wouldn’t happen with comparable investments like high-interest savings accounts or guaranteed investment certificates (GICs), where the bank is legally obligated to pay you back your principal plus interest.

What fees are associated with high-interest savings ETFs?

With any ETF, you must be prepared to pay two fees: trading commissions and management fees.

When you purchase a high-interest savings ETF, you’ll have to pay trading commissions to your brokerage whenever you buy and sell the shares. Even if you’re using a discount brokerage (which doesn’t provide advice but merely processes the transaction), you’ll still probably pay around $9.95 when you buy the ETF and another $9.95 when you sell the ETF. That $20 may not seem like much, but if you only purchased $2,000 of the ETF to begin with, that commission would represent 1.00% of your principal ($20 / $2,000). If the return on the ETF was only 1.35%, commissions would almost completely wipe out what you would’ve earned in interest.

For this reason, it makes more sense to buy a high-interest savings ETF with a more substantial amount of money. The commission is usually a fixed amount so the commission will represent less of your investment. In addition, keep in mind that high-interest savings accounts can come with transaction fees, so depending how you use them, they could end up costing more than the commission you would pay to buy and own the ETF instead.

That said, the company that operates the high-interest savings ETF charges a management fee. Looking at Purpose Investments again, they charge a 0.10% management fee (the 1.35% figure we used above is net2 of this expense). Think of this as the convenience charge for not opening up a high-interest savings account yourself.

Depending on how much you have to invest, this fee may or may not be worth it. For example, let’s say you have $300,000 to save; the management fee on this balance would be $300 ($300,000 x 0.10%). To save that amount of money, most people would be happy to give up an hour to open an account by themselves. But if you only had $20,000 to save, you might be happy to pay the $20 ($20,000 x 0.10%) management fee, in order to save your time and effort.

Lots of risk for little extra gain?

If you shop around, you can earn as much in a high-interest savings account or GIC as you can in the high-interest savings ETF. The main difference is that with the savings account and GIC, your principal is insured and you won’t be hit with trading commissions.

However, it may make sense for people with larger deposits to consider a high-interest savings ETF. Since the commission is fixed (i.e. $9.95 per trade), the more shares of the ETF you purchase, the less you’ll pay in costs as a percentage of your investment. And there is something to be said for the ease of buying ETFs. Because they trade like stocks, you can buy and sell them very quickly without the hassle of opening up another bank account.

References and Notes

  1. As of July 24, 2015.
  2. The net yield is the interest earned by the ETF on the savings accounts minus a 0.10% management fee paid to the ETF provider.
High Interest ETFs | Advantages & Disadvantages of ETFs | Ratehub.ca (2024)

FAQs

What is the downside to an ETF? ›

The single biggest risk in ETFs is market risk. Like a mutual fund or a closed-end fund, ETFs are only an investment vehicle—a wrapper for their underlying investment. So if you buy an S&P 500 ETF and the S&P 500 goes down 50%, nothing about how cheap, tax efficient, or transparent an ETF is will help you.

What is the primary disadvantage of an ETF? ›

Buying high and selling low

At any given time, the spread on an ETF may be high, and the market price of shares may not correspond to the intraday value of the underlying securities. Those are not good times to transact business.

How does a high interest ETF work? ›

This amount is placed in high-interest savings accounts with major financial institutions (such as National Bank and Manulife Bank of Canada). The banks pay interest to the ETF, which in turn pays out this interest income to its shareholders.

Should I put all my savings in ETFs? ›

You expose your portfolio to much higher risk with sector ETFs, so you should use them sparingly, but investing 5% to 10% of your total portfolio assets may be appropriate. If you want to be highly conservative, don't use these at all.

What happens if an ETF goes bust? ›

Liquidation of ETFs is strictly regulated; when an ETF closes, any remaining shareholders will receive a payout based on what they had invested in the ETF. Receiving an ETF payout can be a taxable event.

Why don't I invest in ETFs? ›

Commissions and Expenses

Every time you buy or sell a stock, you might pay a commission. This is also the case when it comes to buying and selling ETFs. Depending on how often you trade an ETF, trading fees can quickly add up and reduce your investment's performance.

Why do ETFs lose value? ›

Leveraged ETFs use various financial instruments such as futures, options and swaps to achieve their leverage. These instruments have associated costs, including transaction costs, bid/ask spreads and management fees. These costs can eat into the returns of the ETF and contribute to its decay.

Do you have to pay taxes on ETFs? ›

Dividends and interest payments from ETFs are taxed similarly to income from the underlying stocks or bonds inside them. For U.S. taxpayers, this income needs to be reported on form 1099-DIV. 2 If you earn a profit by selling an ETF, they are taxed like the underlying stocks or bonds as well.

How safe are high interest ETFs? ›

Very Low Risk: These ETFs have virtually no market or credit risk because they do not invest in stocks or bonds, which are subject to market fluctuations and credit risk. Instead, the funds are held in cash, making them a much safer investment.

How much of your money should be in ETFs? ›

"A newer investor with a modest portfolio may like the ease at which to acquire ETFs (trades like an equity) and the low-cost aspect of the investment. ETFs can provide an easy way to be diversified and as such, the investor may want to have 75% or more of the portfolio in ETFs."

Is it better to have multiple ETFs or one? ›

Experts agree that for most personal investors, a portfolio comprising 5 to 10 ETFs is perfect in terms of diversification. But the number of ETFs is not what you should be looking at.

Is it better to hold mutual funds or ETFs? ›

The choice comes down to what you value most. If you prefer the flexibility of trading intraday and favor lower expense ratios in most instances, go with ETFs. If you worry about the impact of commissions and spreads, go with mutual funds.

Are ETFs FDIC insured? ›

Stocks, bonds, mutual funds and ETFs aren't covered by the FDIC, but instead, the SIPC. But for accounts that are protected by the FDIC, the limit goes up to $250,000 per account per depositor up to a total of $1.5 million in coverage.

Is investing in ETF good or bad? ›

Advantages of investing in ETFs

ETFs tend to be less volatile than individual stocks, meaning your investment won't swing in value as much. The best ETFs have low expense ratios, the fund's cost as a percentage of your investment. The best may charge only a few dollars annually for every $10,000 invested.

Are ETFs riskier than funds? ›

In terms of safety, neither the mutual fund nor the ETF is safer than the other due to its structure. Safety is determined by what the fund itself owns. Stocks are usually riskier than bonds, and corporate bonds come with somewhat more risk than U.S. government bonds.

Is an ETF safer than a stock? ›

Passive, or index, ETFs generally track and aim to outperform a benchmark index. They provide access to many companies or investments in one trade, whereas individual stocks provide exposure to a single firm. As such, ETFs remove single-stock risk, or the risk inherent in being exposed to just one company.

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