Exchange Traded Fund Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Exchange Traded Fund stocks.

Exchange Traded Fund Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 18 SPY Wall Street forecasts 'normal' year for stocks in 2025 after historic rally
Nov 18 SPY Weekly ETF Flows: SPY records inflows, bitcoin funds see large influx of capital
Nov 18 SPY Global companies with at least 50% U.S. revenue exposure as Trump eyes tariffs: BofA
Nov 18 SPY ETFs Investors Have Been Buying Since the Election
Nov 18 SPY Exchange-Traded Funds Higher, Equity Futures Mixed Pre-Bell Monday as Investors Refocus on Earnings
Nov 18 SPY Trump Victory-Led Rally In Stocks Shrugged Off Rise In Yields, But Analyst Says If Treasuries 'Don't Find A Ceiling…It Will Become A Problem': Here's What It Means For Investors
Nov 17 SPY Post-Election Reversal Tests Support After Confirming Bearish Signal – The Market Breadth
Nov 17 SPY This momentum indicator says the S&P won't peak until next year
Nov 17 SPY Stock rally stumbles with Nvidia earnings on tap: What to know this week
Nov 17 SPY Legendary Investor Rob Arnott Says Stock Market 'Looks And Feels Like The Year 2000' As Wall Street Rallies After Trump's Win: '...Likely To See A Bear Market'
Nov 15 SPY Wall Street slips to weekly loss as post-election jubilation ends, focus back on rate cuts
Nov 15 SPY No Trippin’: Trump Trade Pushes PSIL, VCAR Higher
Nov 15 SPY The most overbought and oversold assets around the world
Nov 15 SPY Catalyst Watch: Nvidia earnings, Microsoft Ignite, crypto confidence, and P&G event
Nov 15 SPY Stocks Tumble As Traders Rethink Fed's Action, VIX Spikes 17%, Nasdaq Erases Back Post-Trump Gains: What's Driving Markets Friday?
Nov 15 SPY Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) Still Has Room for Improvement Before Buying
Nov 15 SPY Powell Speaks The Truth - Market Does Not Like It, Consternation About Kennedy, Gaetz, And Hegseth
Nov 15 SPY Continuously high dispersion in the markets could make it a ‘picker’s market’
Nov 15 SPY Exchange-Traded Funds, Equity Futures Lower Pre-Bell Friday After Fed Chair Powell Says No Hurry to Cut Interest Rates
Nov 15 SPY SPY: Seek Shelter As P/E Nears All-Time High Amid Post-Election Rallies
Exchange Traded Fund

An exchange-traded fund (ETF) is an investment fund traded on stock exchanges, much like stocks. An ETF holds assets such as stocks, commodities, or bonds and generally operates with an arbitrage mechanism designed to keep it trading close to its net asset value, although deviations can occasionally occur. Most ETFs track an index, such as a stock index or bond index. ETFs may be attractive as investments because of their low costs, tax efficiency, and stock-like features.ETF distributors only buy or sell ETFs directly from or to authorized participants, which are large broker-dealers with whom they have entered into agreements—and then, only in creation units, which are large blocks of tens of thousands of ETF shares, usually exchanged in-kind with baskets of the underlying securities. Authorized participants may wish to invest in the ETF shares for the long-term, but they usually act as market makers on the open market, using their ability to exchange creation units with their underlying securities to provide liquidity of the ETF shares and help ensure that their intraday market price approximates the net asset value of the underlying assets. Other investors, such as individuals using a retail broker, trade ETF shares on this secondary market.
An ETF combines the valuation feature of a mutual fund or unit investment trust, which can be bought or sold at the end of each trading day for its net asset value, with the tradability feature of a closed-end fund, which trades throughout the trading day at prices that may be more or less than its net asset value. Closed-end funds are not considered to be ETFs, even though they are funds and are traded on an exchange. ETFs have been available in the US since 1993 and in Europe since 1999. ETFs traditionally have been index funds, but in 2008 the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission began to authorize the creation of actively managed ETFs.ETFs offer both tax efficiency as well as lower transaction and management costs. More than US$2 trillion were invested in ETFs in the United States between when they were introduced in 1993 and 2015. By the end of 2015, ETFs offered "1,800 different products, covering almost every conceivable market sector, niche and trading strategy".

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