What You Need to Know About Low-Volatility ETFs | ETF Trends

Conservative investors who want to limit risk in their portfolios are taking a look at low-volatility ETFs. They need to understand how these funds will perform in various market climates and be aware of their concentration in certain sectors.

“I wouldn’t recommend anyone engage in this strategy because the [back-tested] returns have been higher in the past,” Craig Lazzara, senior director at S&P Indices, said in a Bloomberg story.

“In a year where the market is doing really badly, it’s highly likely you’ll be down much less,” he said in the report. “You’ll get sufficient participation on the upside but a reduced amount.” [ETF Spotlight: Low-Volatility Funds]

The largest of these new funds is the $1.3 billion PowerShares S&P Low Volatility Portfolio (NYSEArca: SPLV), which has an expense ratio of 0.25%.

The ETF gives investors “the flexibility to reduce risk in flat or bear markets by adding low volatility strategies to their portfolios,” said Ben Fulton, Invesco PowerShares managing director of global ETFs. [Sizing Up a Low-Volatility ETF]