Worst Exchange Traded Funds for Investors to Buy
Worst Exchange-Traded Funds for Investors to Buy
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts Lesson 3: Hot funds can quickly turn cold. Not long before the beginning of the three years being measured, these funds were hot, making them attractive to investors. Yet buying funds after outstanding performance is merely buying high. If you want to see what's hot today, look at the list of the over the past three years. Not only are they hot, but because they are dominated by health care and pharmaceutical companies, buying them appears to be logical since Americans are aging and will need more health care and prescription drugs.
Lessons From the 20 Worst-Performing ETFs
Think long term and don' t try to outsmart the market
Istock Diversify investments so you don't lose big by buying the wrong exchange-traded fund. Most of us know that individual companies can go bankrupt, taking their down with them. That's one key reason to diversify and own funds that own many stocks. But you can also lose plenty by buying the wrong fund. Just take a look at the chart of exchange-traded funds below. According to Financial Planning Magazine, if you held one of these 20 funds over the past three years, you lost somewhere between 43 and 76 percent of your . They all had losses averaging 17 to 38 percent a year. Here are some lessons for how to avoid owning a fund that winds up on the worst-performer list in future years. Lesson 1: Don't buy narrow funds. By my count, 10 of the funds in the list of 20 are emerging-market stock funds and they mostly focus on specific countries or regions. Of the remaining 10, half focus on the energy sector, and half specialize in precious metals and mining companies. Trying to pick the best-performing part of the globe or even the best-performing industry increases risk, and that risk can come back to bite you. Lesson 2: Compelling logic often backfires. A few years ago, many people told me that stock markets in developed countries were overvalued, as growth would be so much slower than in emerging-market countries. Though they were right, that was common knowledge already priced into the markets. Then there was the somewhat fear-based logic that high deficit spending would cause the demise of paper currency and push the higher. Or the seemingly logical belief that energy resources will only get scarcer, so what could be safer than energy stocks? Some experts told me that the attractive dividends energy companies paid were merely better and safer alternatives to bonds. Wrong!More From Allan Roth
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts Lesson 3: Hot funds can quickly turn cold. Not long before the beginning of the three years being measured, these funds were hot, making them attractive to investors. Yet buying funds after outstanding performance is merely buying high. If you want to see what's hot today, look at the list of the over the past three years. Not only are they hot, but because they are dominated by health care and pharmaceutical companies, buying them appears to be logical since Americans are aging and will need more health care and prescription drugs.